Page 322 - The snake's pass
P. 322

310   —     THE SNAKE'S PASS.
      he  will have  too much other wickedness on hand to
                           "
      have time to meddle with us
                          !
        " That's thrue enough  Well  ! we'll wait an' see what
                      !
      happens—but we'll be mighty careful all the same."
        "Quite right," I said, "we cannot be too careful in
      such a matter  ! "  Then we went back to the house, and
      met Norah coming into the room in her red petticoat,
      which she knew I liked.  She whispered to me  ! oh so
      sweetly  :
        " I thought, dear, you would
                            like me to be the old
      Norah, to-day.  It  is our last day together  in the old
      way."  Then hand-in-hand we went down to the Cliff
      Fields, and sat on the table-rock for the last time, and
      feasted our eyes on the glorious prospect, whilst we told
      each other our bright dreams of the future.
        In the autumn twilight we came back to the house
                                           ;
      Dick  had,  *in  the meantime,  come  in, and we both
      stayed for tea.  I saw that Dick had something to tell
      me, but he waited until we were going home before he
      spoke.
        It was a sad parting with Norah that night  ; for it was
      the  last day together  before  she went  off  to  school.
      For myself, I felt that whatever might be in the future
      —and I hoped for much—it was the  last time that  I
      might sit by the firelight with the old Norah.  She, too,
      was sad, and when she told me the cause of her sadness,
      I found that it was the same as my own.
        " But oh  ! Arthur, my darling, I shall try—I shall try
      to be worthy of my great good fortune—and of you!"
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