FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   183   184   185   186   187   188   189   190   191   192   193   194   195   196   197   198   199   200   201   >>  
o you--I would have warned you--I did not realise that there was any------" "There was, for a little while," Helen said in a low voice, not looking up. "It has passed." "Anything I could say now would only revive a painful memory. Only, I feel as if out of justice to what your mother may have said to you I ought to confirm it. Helen--if you had come to such an impossible act as becoming the wife of Ross Van Shaw, it would have been the ruin of your life. I must say this--Van Shaw was engaged to my sister during his first year at Burrton. She is remarkably like you in many ways. A great lover of wealth and luxury. Van Shaw broke her heart by his conduct. Let us not say any more. I did not mean to say this much." Miss Gray exhibited an agitation that Helen had never seen in her before. "You need not fear for me any more," Helen said earnestly. "I begin to see more and more the danger I was in. I am thankful to escape." She began to tell Miss Gray about the meeting between Mrs. Van Shaw and Bauer. That led naturally to enthusiastic comments on the bravery of Bauer and Clifford. "Your brother Walter said when he left for Milton the day of our arrival here that he would have given anything to have had the courage to do what Bauer did." "It seems to me that Mr. Clifford was just as brave." "Yes, only he insists that he had a lantern and that he was greatly helped when he got down on the ledge by having the lantern to brace his feet against. Did you ever see anyone so absurd or so--brave--as Elijah Clifford?" "No, unless it is yourself." Miss Gray blushed. "I am not brave. I am a coward in many ways. Why, I am down here because I delight to do this work. It is no cross for me. And--in other ways I am a coward. And--I am very proud. Tell me, Helen, do you think of Elijah Clifford as--as an illiterate man? Does he seem to you like--like an ignorant person?" Helen was astonished at the question and could not help noticing her friend's embarrassment. "No. It has always seemed to me that Mr. Clifford was a remarkably intelligent and refined character for one who had never had a college education. I would never think of him as illiterate or ignorant. He uses beautiful language. I have never heard such English as he uses in his prayers. And he is a good linguist. I heard Mr. Masters say only this morning that he didn't know what he would do without Clifford's help in translation." Miss Gray looked pleased
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   183   184   185   186   187   188   189   190   191   192   193   194   195   196   197   198   199   200   201   >>  



Top keywords:

Clifford

 
remarkably
 
ignorant
 

illiterate

 
lantern
 
Elijah
 
coward
 

delight

 

blushed

 

Anything


helped
 
insists
 

greatly

 
passed
 
absurd
 

English

 
prayers
 

language

 

warned

 

beautiful


linguist

 

Masters

 

translation

 

looked

 

pleased

 

morning

 

education

 
noticing
 
friend
 

question


astonished

 

person

 
realise
 

embarrassment

 

college

 

character

 

refined

 

intelligent

 

revive

 
conduct

impossible

 

confirm

 

exhibited

 

agitation

 
luxury
 

Burrton

 

sister

 

engaged

 

wealth

 

mother