FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   139   140   141   142   143   144   145   146   147   148   149   150   151   152   153   154   155   156   157   158   >>  
hilip went to his solitary dinner. In general he was quite alone while eating it; but to-day Alice Rose chose to bear him company. She watched him with cold severe eye for some time, until he had appeased his languid appetite. Then she began with the rebuke she had in store for him; a rebuke the motives to which were not entirely revealed even to herself. 'Thou 're none so keen after thy food as common,' she began. 'Plain victuals goes ill down after feastin'.' Philip felt the colour mount to his face; he was not in the mood for patiently standing the brunt of the attack which he saw was coming, and yet he had a reverent feeling for woman and for age. He wished she would leave him alone; but he only said--'I had nought but a slice o' cold beef for supper, if you'll call that feasting.' 'Neither do godly ways savour delicately after the pleasures of the world,' continued she, unheeding his speech. 'Thou wert wont to seek the house of the Lord, and I thought well on thee; but of late thou'st changed, and fallen away, and I mun speak what is in my heart towards thee.' 'Mother,' said Philip, impatiently (both he and Coulson called Alice 'mother' at times), 'I don't think I am fallen away, and any way I cannot stay now to be--it's new year's Day, and t' shop is throng.' But Alice held up her hand. Her speech was ready, and she must deliver it. 'Shop here, shop there. The flesh and the devil are gettin' hold on yo', and yo' need more nor iver to seek t' ways o' grace. New year's day comes and says, "Watch and pray," and yo' say, "Nay, I'll seek feasts and market-places, and let times and seasons come and go without heedin' into whose presence they're hastening me." Time was, Philip, when thou'd niver ha' letten a merry-making keep thee fra' t' watch-night, and t' company o' the godly.' 'I tell yo' it was no merry-making to me,' said Philip, with sharpness, as he left the house. Alice sat down on the nearest seat, and leant her head on her wrinkled hand. 'He's tangled and snared,' said she; 'my heart has yearned after him, and I esteemed him as one o' the elect. And more nor me yearns after him. O Lord, I have but one child! O Lord, spare her! But o'er and above a' I would like to pray for his soul, that Satan might not have it, for he came to me but a little lad.' At that moment Philip, smitten by his conscience for his hard manner of speech, came back; but Alice did not hear or see him till he was clo
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   139   140   141   142   143   144   145   146   147   148   149   150   151   152   153   154   155   156   157   158   >>  



Top keywords:

Philip

 

speech

 

fallen

 

making

 

company

 

rebuke

 
throng
 

places

 
feasts
 
market

seasons

 
gettin
 
deliver
 

esteemed

 
yearns
 

manner

 
smitten
 

moment

 
conscience
 

yearned


letten

 
hastening
 

heedin

 

presence

 

wrinkled

 

tangled

 

snared

 

nearest

 

sharpness

 

common


victuals

 

revealed

 

standing

 
patiently
 
attack
 

feastin

 

colour

 

motives

 

eating

 

general


solitary

 

dinner

 
languid
 

appeased

 
appetite
 
watched
 

severe

 
coming
 
Mother
 

impatiently