[John Ward, Preacher by Margaret Deland]@TWC D-Link book
John Ward, Preacher

CHAPTER XIX
5/25

Look at Henry Dale.

I'm sure there were--_others_, who would have made him happier, and been quite as good housekeepers, too." Miss Ruth mentioned her suspicion of the "nice girl in Lockhaven" to Lois, while Miss Deborah added that it was really no pleasure to cook for dear Giff; he was so out of spirits he didn't seem to care for anything; he did not even eat the whigs, and Lois knew how fond he was of whigs.
Very likely dear Ruth was right.
This made Lois's interest in Gifford still deeper, though she said, tossing her head with airy impatience, that she did not believe there were any nice girls in Lockhaven; there were only working people there.
Then she thought of that talk with Gifford at the stone bench, and recalled the promise she had made, and how she had sealed it.

Her cheeks burned till they hurt her.
"He has forgotten it all, long ago," she said to herself; "men never remember such things.

Well, he sha'n't think I remember!" But how often Gifford remembered! One afternoon he walked over to the stone bench, and sat down on the very same sunken step from which he had looked up into Lois's face that June evening.

He saw a bunch of violets growing just where her foot must have rested, and what was more natural--for Gifford was still young--than that pencil and note-book should appear, and, with a long-drawn sigh, he should write hastily,-- O Violet, Dost thou forget?
and then stop, perhaps to sharpen his pencil, and, if the truth be told, to cast about for a rhyme.
Alas, that love and poetry should be checked by anything so commonplace as syllables! Let--wet--yet,--one can fit in the sense easily when the proper rhyme has been decided upon; and who knows but that Gifford, lying there in the grass, with the old lichen-covered step for a desk, might have written a sonnet or a madrigal which would have given him his heart's desire before the moon rose! But an interruption came.
The rector and Mr.Denner were coming back from fishing, along the road on the other side of the hedge, and Dr.Howe turned in here to follow the garden path home, instead of taking the longer way.


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