Sylvia's Lovers - Page 123/290

'I mun be back at t' whaler, where I'm engaged,' continued he.

'She's fitting up after a fresh fashion, and as I've been one as

wanted new ways, I mun be on the spot for t' look after her. Maybe I

shall take a run down here afore sailing in March. I'm sure I shall

try.' There was a good deal meant and understood by these last few words.

The tone in which they were spoken gave them a tender intensity not

lost upon either of the hearers. Kester cocked his eye once more,

but with as little obtrusiveness as he could, and pondered the

sailor's looks and ways. He remembered his coming about the place

the winter before, and how the old master had then appeared to have

taken to him; but at that time Sylvia had seemed to Kester too

little removed from a child to have either art or part in Kinraid's

visits; now, however, the case was different. Kester in his

sphere--among his circle of acquaintance, narrow though it was--had

heard with much pride of Sylvia's bearing away the bell at church

and at market, wherever girls of her age were congregated. He was a

north countryman, so he gave out no further sign of his feelings

than his mistress and Sylvia's mother had done on a like occasion.

'T' lass is weel enough,' said he; but he grinned to himself, and

looked about, and listened to the hearsay of every lad, wondering

who was handsome, and brave, and good enough to be Sylvia's mate.

Now, of late, it had seemed to the canny farm-servant pretty clear

that Philip Hepburn was 'after her'; and to Philip, Kester had an

instinctive objection, a kind of natural antipathy such as has

existed in all ages between the dwellers in a town and those in the

country, between agriculture and trade. So, while Kinraid and Sylvia

kept up their half-tender, half-jesting conversation, Kester was

making up his slow persistent mind as to the desirability of the

young man then present as a husband for his darling, as much from

his being other than Philip in every respect, as from the individual

good qualities he possessed. Kester's first opportunity of favouring

Kinraid's suit consisted in being as long as possible over his

milking; so never were cows that required such 'stripping,' or were

expected to yield such 'afterings', as Black Nell and Daisy that

night. But all things must come to an end; and at length Kester got

up from his three-legged stool, on seeing what the others did

not--that the dip-candle in the lantern was coming to an end--and

that in two or three minutes more the shippen would be in darkness,

and so his pails of milk be endangered. In an instant Sylvia had

started out of her delicious dreamland, her drooping eyes were

raised, and recovered their power of observation; her ruddy arms

were freed from the apron in which she had enfolded them, as a

protection from the gathering cold, and she had seized and adjusted

the wooden yoke across her shoulders, ready to bear the brimming

milk-pails to the dairy.