[Sylvia’s Lovers -- Complete by Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell]@TWC D-Link bookSylvia’s Lovers -- Complete CHAPTER VIII 13/17
But her mother came round to look for something in the drawers of the dresser, and as she passed her daughter she said in a low voice-- 'Sylvie, be a good lass.
I set a deal o' store by learning, and father 'ud never send thee to school, as has stuck by me sore.' If Philip, sitting with his back to them, heard these words he was discreet enough not to show that he heard.
And he had his reward; for in a very short time, Sylvia stood before him with her book in her hand, prepared to say her spelling.
At which he also stood up by instinct, and listened to her slow succeeding letters; helping her out, when she looked up at him with a sweet childlike perplexity in her face: for a dunce as to book-learning poor Sylvia was and was likely to remain; and, in spite of his assumed office of schoolmaster, Philip Hepburn could almost have echoed the words of the lover of Jess MacFarlane-- I sent my love a letter, But, alas! she canna read, And I lo'e her a' the better. Still he knew his aunt's strong wish on the subject, and it was very delightful to stand in the relation of teacher to so dear and pretty, if so wilful, a pupil. Perhaps it was not very flattering to notice Sylvia's great joy when her lessons were over, sadly shortened as they were by Philip's desire not to be too hard upon her.
Sylvia danced round to her mother, bent her head back, and kissed her face, and then said defyingly to Philip,-- 'If iver I write thee a letter it shall just be full of nothing but "Abednego! Abednego! Abednego!"' But at this moment her father came in from a distant expedition on the moors with Kester to look after the sheep he had pasturing there before the winter set fairly in.
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