The Two Sides of the Shield
en path enjoying the contrast with the heat, glare, and noise of the day. The central one was a tall, slender lady, with a light shawl hung round her s
coming!' th
e has answered my
uld be very much obli
when you made me a sign not to go on asking questions before the little ones. And yo
warned, and perhaps it is best that you should know ho
the higher regions, but I think that was more from he
nce you were only six ye
here I never saw him or his wife in the holidays except once, when I believe she wa
ady?' cried Gillian. 'Aunt Emily
he same by Aunt Em
t she wasn't a lady; and Aunt Jane that she
hatter so, how is mamma t
e all been hard on
has done it, jus
poor who got kil
n't say poor when
at I was thinking of her death as of her having come into a family whe
to do very well withou
now?' cried Gillian,
om all I ever heard of her, I should think she was, a
pretension that exasperated them all at
t!' said Gillian. 'I suppose she
en had to go to the bar. It somehow always gave him a thwarted, injured feeling of working against the grain, and he cultivated all these scientific pursuits to the utmost, getting more and more into opinions and society that distressed grandpapa and Uncle William. So he fell in with Mr. Hay, a professor at a German university. I can hear William's tone of utter contempt and disgust. I believe this poor man was exceedingly learned, and had made some remarkable discoveries, but he was very poor, and lived in lodgings at Bonn with his daughter in the small way people are content to do in G
re at the Cape, wa
e was much excuse. Maurice had learnt that the old professor was dying, and his daughter had nothing, and w
ry kind and noble in h
h. Claude did his best to close the breach, but there had been something to forgive on both sides, and perhaps SHE was prouder than the Mohuns themselves. Oh! my dears, I hope you
e quite out
nd when I wrote to him and to his wife, I only received stiff, formal answers. They were abroad when we were in London on coming home, and they would not come to see us at Belfast, so that I could never make acq
ins. I have been trying to remember Dolores on that dreadful Sunday at the hotel, when Uncle Maurice came to see us, just when papa was setting off for Bombay, but it all seems confusion. I
she was thankful,
as you would be done by. It might have worried her then perhaps, but it would have made it easier for her
e happy with such a number to play wit
all merry enough as children and young people, there always seems to have been a lack of something fostering and repressing. There was a kind of desolateness in our life, though we did not understand it at th
very full, as the perception swept over them in one flash what their lives would
id Gillian presently. 'It seems as if
ds supplying her with a real home, wandering
is as bad as Peter Grievous! How
ncy your Aunt Jane told me she was called at home. I hope Wilfred will n
illian; 'but Wilfre
d to the verge of distraction yesterday bec
xed his ears!'
o him well,' sai
than any one else can be. Wilfred is the only one of you all who ever seemed
ot quite certain to be nice
he mother. 'If we show him our anxiety to shield her
al, 'and if she is any way rationa
sh he could go to s
nother year, and I can only hope that as he grows stronger, he may become more manly. Meantime w
e qua
n, or we shall not have fi
nvenience of daily governess, tutor, and masters. She herself had grown up on the old system which made education depend more on the family than on the governess, and she preferred honestly the company and training of her children to going into society in her husband's absence. Therefore she arranged her habits with a view to being constantly with them, and though exchanging calls, and occasionally accept
the five-year-old baby of the establishment-sufficient reasons to detain Lady Merrifield in England after more than twenty years of travels as a soldier's wife, so that scarcely three of her children had the same birthplace. She had been able to see very little of her English relations, being
ent abode, the whole family had stayed there for three months. Her brother Maurice, however, she had scarcely seen, and she had been much pained at being included in his persistent avoidance of the whole family, who felt that he resented their displeasure at his marriage even more s