Sylvia's Lovers - Page 14/290

'A watched pot,' said he, 'ne'er boils, I reckon. It's ta'en a vast

o' watter t' cover that stone to-day. Anyhow, I'll have time to go

home and rate my missus for worritin' hersen, as I'll be bound she's

done, for all as I bade her not, but to keep easy and content.'

'We'd better be off too,' said Molly, as an opening was made through

the press to let out the groping old man. 'Eggs and butter is yet to

sell, and tha' cloak to be bought.'

'Well, I suppose we had!' said Sylvia, rather regretfully; for,

though all the way into Monkshaven her head had been full of the

purchase of this cloak, yet she was of that impressible nature that

takes the tone of feeling from those surrounding; and though she

knew no one on board the Resolution, she was just as anxious for the

moment to see her come into harbour as any one in the crowd who had

a dear relation on board. So she turned reluctantly to follow the

more prudent Molly along the quay back to the Butter Cross.

It was a pretty scene, though it was too familiar to the eyes of all

who then saw it for them to notice its beauty. The sun was low

enough in the west to turn the mist that filled the distant valley

of the river into golden haze. Above, on either bank of the Dee,

there lay the moorland heights swelling one behind the other; the

nearer, russet brown with the tints of the fading bracken; the more

distant, gray and dim against the rich autumnal sky. The red and

fluted tiles of the gabled houses rose in crowded irregularity on

one side of the river, while the newer suburb was built in more

orderly and less picturesque fashion on the opposite cliff. The

river itself was swelling and chafing with the incoming tide till

its vexed waters rushed over the very feet of the watching crowd on

the staithes, as the great sea waves encroached more and more every

minute. The quay-side was unsavourily ornamented with glittering

fish-scales, for the hauls of fish were cleansed in the open air,

and no sanitary arrangements existed for sweeping away any of the

relics of this operation.

The fresh salt breeze was bringing up the lashing, leaping tide from

the blue sea beyond the bar. Behind the returning girls there rocked

the white-sailed ship, as if she were all alive with eagerness for

her anchors to be heaved.

How impatient her crew of beating hearts were for that moment, how

those on land sickened at the suspense, may be imagined, when you

remember that for six long summer months those sailors had been as

if dead from all news of those they loved; shut up in terrible,

dreary Arctic seas from the hungry sight of sweethearts and friends,

wives and mothers. No one knew what might have happened. The crowd

on shore grew silent and solemn before the dread of the possible

news of death that might toll in upon their hearts with this

uprushing tide. The whalers went out into the Greenland seas full of

strong, hopeful men; but the whalers never returned as they sailed

forth. On land there are deaths among two or three hundred men to be

mourned over in every half-year's space of time. Whose bones had

been left to blacken on the gray and terrible icebergs? Who lay

still until the sea should give up its dead? Who were those who

should come back to Monkshaven never, no, never more?