Sylvia's Lovers - Page 257/290

Mrs. Robson was very poorly all night long. Uneasy thoughts seemed

to haunt and perplex her brain, and she neither slept nor woke, but

was restless and uneasy in her talk and movements.

Sylvia lay down by her, but got so little sleep, that at length she

preferred sitting in the easy-chair by the bedside. Here she dropped

off to slumber in spite of herself; the scene of the evening before

seemed to be repeated; the cries of the many people, the heavy roar

and dash of the threatening waves, were repeated in her ears; and

something was said to her through all the conflicting noises,--what

it was she could not catch, though she strained to hear the hoarse

murmur that, in her dream, she believed to convey a meaning of the

utmost importance to her.

This dream, that mysterious, only half-intelligible sound,

recurred whenever she dozed, and her inability to hear the words

uttered distressed her so much, that at length she sate bolt

upright, resolved to sleep no more. Her mother was talking in a

half-conscious way; Philip's speech of the evening before was

evidently running in her mind.

'Sylvie, if thou're not a good wife to him, it'll just break my

heart outright. A woman should obey her husband, and not go her own

gait. I never leave the house wi'out telling father, and getting his

leave.' And then she began to cry pitifully, and to say unconnected things,

till Sylvia, to soothe her, took her hand, and promised never to

leave the house without asking her husband's permission, though in

making this promise, she felt as if she were sacrificing her last

pleasure to her mother's wish; for she knew well enough that Philip

would always raise objections to the rambles which reminded her of

her old free open-air life.

But to comfort and cherish her mother she would have done anything;

yet this very morning that was dawning, she must go and ask his

permission for a simple errand, or break her word.

She knew from experience that nothing quieted her mother so well as

balm-tea; it might be that the herb really possessed some sedative

power; it might be only early faith, and often repeated experience,

but it had always had a tranquillizing effect; and more than once,

during the restless hours of the night, Mrs. Robson had asked for it;

but Sylvia's stock of last year's dead leaves was exhausted. Still

she knew where a plant of balm grew in the sheltered corner of

Haytersbank Farm garden; she knew that the tenants who had succeeded

them in the occupation of the farm had had to leave it in

consequence of a death, and that the place was unoccupied; and in

the darkness she had planned that if she could leave her mother

after the dawn came, and she had attended to her baby, she would

walk quickly to the old garden, and gather the tender sprigs which

she was sure to find there.