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"If there is, you children can do something for me that I should like very much," said grandmamma. "Shall I tell you what it is?"
"Yes."
"You can make a snow-man in that field. I am sure Mr Grey will give you leave."
"What good will that do you?" asked Matilda.
"I can sit here and watch you; and I shall like that exceedingly. I shall see you gathering the snow, and building up your man: and if you will turn about and shake your hand this way now and then, I shall be sure to observe it, and I shall think you are saying something kind to me."
"I wish the snow would come," cried George, stamping with impatience.
"I do not believe mamma will let us," observed Matilda. "She prohibits our going into Mr Grey's field."
"But she shall let us, that one time," cried George. "I will ask papa, and Mr Grey, and Sydney, and Uncle Philip, and all. When will Uncle Philip come again?"
"Some time soon, I dare say. But, George, we must do as your mamma pleases about my plan, you know. If she does not wish you to go into Mr Grey's field, you can make your snow-man somewhere else."
"But then you won't see us. But I know what I will do. I will speak to Sydney, and he and f.a.n.n.y and Mary shall make you a snow-man yonder, where we should have made him."
Mrs Enderby pressed the boy to her, and laughed while she thanked him, but said it was not the same thing seeing the Greys make a snow-man.
"Why, George!" said Matilda, contemptuously.
"When _will_ Uncle Philip come?" asked the boy, who was of opinion that Uncle Philip could bring all things to pa.s.s.
"Why, I will tell you how it is, my dear. Uncle Philip is very busy learning his lessons."
The boy stared.
"Yes: grown-up people who mean to be great lawyers, as I believe Uncle Philip does, have to learn lessons like little boys, only much longer and much harder."
"When will he have done them?"
"Not for a long while yet: but he will make a holiday some time soon, and come to see us. I should like to get well before that. Sometimes I think I shall, and sometimes I think not."
"Does he expect you will?"
"He expects nothing about it. He does not know that I am ill. I do not wish that he should know it, my dears; so, when I feel particularly well, and when I have heard anything that pleases me, I ask Phoebe to bring me the pen and ink, and I write to Uncle Philip."
"And why does not mamma tell him how you are?"
"Ah! why, indeed," muttered Phoebe.
"She knows that I do not wish it. Uncle Philip writes charming long letters to me, as I will show you. Bring me my reticule. Here--here is a large sheet of paper, quite full, you see--under the seal and all.
When will you write such long letters, I wonder?"
"I shall when I am married, I suppose," said Matilda, again drawing up her little head.
"You married, my love! And pray when are you to be married?"
"Mamma often talks of the time when she shall lose me, and of what things have to be done while she has me with her."
"There is a great deal to be done indeed, love, before that day, if it ever comes."
"There are more ways than one of losing a child," observed Phoebe, in her straightforward way. "If Mrs Rowland thinks so long beforehand of the one way, it is to be hoped she keeps Miss Matilda up to the thought of the other, which must happen sooner or later, while marrying may not."
"Well, Phoebe," said the old lady, "we will not put any dismal thoughts into this little head: time enough for that: we will leave all that to Miss Young." Then, stroking Matilda's round cheek, she inquired, "My love, did you ever in your life feel any pain?"
"Oh, dear, yes, grandmamma: to be sure I have; twice. Why, don't you remember, last spring, I had a dreadful pain in my head for nearly two hours, on George's birthday? And last week, after I went to bed, I had such a pain in my arm, I did not know how to bear it."
"And what became of it?"
"Oh, I found at last I could bear it no longer, and I began to think what I should do. I meant to ring the bell, but I fell asleep."
Phoebe laughed with very little ceremony, and grandmamma could not help joining. She supposed Matilda hoped it might be long enough before she had any more pain. In the night-time, certainly, Matilda said. And not in the daytime? Is not pain as bad in the daytime? Matilda acknowledged that she should like to be ill in the daytime. Mamma took her on her lap when she was ill; and Miss Young was so very sorry for her; and she had something nice to drink.
"Then I am afraid, my dear, you don't pity me at all," said grandmamma.
"Perhaps you think you would like to live in a room like this, with a sofa and a screen, and Phoebe to wait upon you, and whatever you might fancy to eat and drink. Would you like to be ill as I am?"
"Not at present," said Matilda: "not till I am married. I shall enjoy doing as I like when I am married."
"How the child's head runs upon being married!" said Phoebe. "And to suppose that being ill is doing as one likes, of all odd things!"
"I should often like to fly all over the world," said Mrs Enderby, "and to get anywhere out of this room--I am so tired of it: but I know I cannot: so I get books, and read about all the strange places, far off, that Mungo Park tells us about, and Gulliver, and Captain Parry. And I should often like to sleep at night when I cannot; and then I get up softly, without waking Phoebe, and look out at the bright stars, and think over all we are told about them--about their being all full of men and women. Did you know that, George?" asked she--George being now at the window.
"Oh, yes," answered Matilda for him, "we know all about those things."
"Are falling stars all full of men and women?" asked George.
"There were none on a star that my father saw fall on the Dingleford road," observed Phoebe. "It wasn't big enough to hold men and women."
"Did it fall in the middle of the road?" asked George, turning from the window. "What was it like?"
"It was a round thing, as big as a house, and all bright and crystal like," said Phoebe, with absolute confidence. "It blocked up the road from the great oak that you may remember, close by the second milestone, to the ditch on the opposite side."
"Phoebe, are you sure of that?" asked Mrs Enderby, with a face full of anxious doubt.
"Ma'am, my father came straight home after seeing it fall, and he let my brother John and me go the next morning early, to bring home some of the splinters."
"Oh, well," said Mrs Enderby, who always preferred believing to doubting; "I have heard of stones falling from the moon."
"This was a falling star, ma'am."
"Can you show me any of the splinters?" asked George, eagerly.
"There was nothing whatsoever left of them," said Phoebe, "by the time John and I went. We could not find a piece of crystal so big as my thimble. My father has often laughed at John and me since, for not having been there in time, before it was all gone."
"It is a good thing, my dears, depend upon it, as I was saying,"