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the trouble to think, my dear Letitia, you will doubtless be able to bring to mind the fact that once a very distinguished and reasonable person called Hood wrote a song about it. Besides which----" "She is looking now!" cries Molly, triumphantly. "Sarah--Sa--rah!" "The 'bells they go ringing for Sarah,'" quotes Mr. Luttrell, irrelevantly. But Sarah has heard, and is hastening toward them, and wrath is for the present averted from his unlucky head. Smiling, panting, rubicund, comes Sarah, ready for anything. "Some more tea, Sarah," says Molly, with a smile that would corrupt an archbishop. Molly is a person adored by servants. "That's my cup." "And that's mine," says Tedcastle, turning his upside down on his saucer. "I am particular about getting my own cup, Sarah, and hope you will not mistake mine for Miss Massereene's. Fill it, and bring it back to me just like this." "Yes, sir," says Sarah, in perfect good faith. "And, Sarah--next time we would like the tea-pot," puts in Mr. Massereene, mildly. CHAPTER VI. "Oh, we fell out,--I know not why,-- And kissed again with tears." --Tennyson. They are now drawing toward the close of July. To Luttrell it appears as though the moments are taking to themselves wings to fly away; to more prosaic mortals they drag. Ever since that first day in the garden when he betrayed his love to Molly, he had been silent on the subject, fearful lest he gain a more decided repulse. Yet this enforced silence is to him a lingering torture; and as a school-boy with money in his pocket burns till he spend it, so he, with his heart brimful of love, is in torment until he can fling its rich treasures at his mistress's feet. Only a very agony of doubt restrains him. Not that this doubt contains all pain; there is blended with it a deep ecstasy of joy, made to be felt, not spoken; and all the grace and poetry and sweetness of a first great passion,--that thing that in all the chilling after-years never wholly dies,--that earliest, purest dew that falls from the awakening heart. "O love! young love! Let saints and cynics cavil as they will, One throb of yours is worth whole years of ill." So thinks Luttrell; so think I. To-day Molly has deserted him, and left him to follow his own devices. John has gone into the next town on some important errand connected with the farm: so perforce our warrior shoulders his gun and s
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