"Be certain what you do, sir; lest your justice
Prove violence."

Winter's Tale.


The designs of the celebrated Metacom had been betrayed to the Colonists,
by the treachery of a subordinate warrior, named Sausaman. The punishment
of this treason led to inquiries, which terminated in accusations against
the great Sachem of the Wampanoags. Scorning to vindicate himself before
enemies that he hated, and perhaps distrusting their clemency, Metacom no
longer endeavored to cloak his proceedings; but, throwing aside the
emblems of peace he openly appeared with an armed hand.

The tragedy had commenced about a year before the period at which the tale
has now arrived. A scene, not unlike that detailed in the foregoing pages,
took place; the brand, the knife, and the tomahawk, doing their work of
destruction, without pity and without remorse. But, unlike the inroad of
the Wish-Ton-Wish, this expedition was immediately followed by others,
until the whole of New-England was engaged in the celebrated war, to which
we have before referred.

The entire white population of the Colonies of New-England had shortly
before been estimated at one hundred and twenty thousand souls. Of this
number, it was thought that sixteen thousand men were capable of bearing
arms. Had time been given for the maturity of the plans of Metacom, he
might have readily assembled bands of warriors who, aided by their
familiarity with the woods, and accustomed to the privations of such a
warfare, would have threatened serious danger to the growing strength of
the whites. But the ordinary and selfish feelings of man were as active,
among these wild tribes, as they are known to be in more artificial
communities. The indefatigable Metacom, like that Indian hero of our own
times, Tecumthè, had passed years in endeavoring to appease ancient
enmities and to lull jealousies, in order that all of red blood might
unite in crushing a foe that promised, should he be longer undisturbed in
his march to power, soon to be too formidable for their united efforts to
subdue. The premature explosion in some measure averted the danger. It
gave the English time to strike several severe blows against the tribe of
their great enemy, before his allies had determined to make common cause
in his design. The summer and autumn of 1675 had been passed in active
hostilities between the English and Wampanoags, without openly drawing any
other nation into the contest. Some of the Pequots, with their dependent
tribes, even took sides with the whites: and we read of the Mohegans being
actively employed in harassing the Sachem, on his well-known retreat from
that neck of land, where he had been hemmed in by the English, with the
expectation that he might be starved into submission.

The warfare of the first summer was, as might be expected, attended by
various degrees of success, fortune quite as often favoring the red-men,
in their desultory attempts at annoyance, as their more disciplined
enemies. Instead of confining his operations to his own circumscribed and
easily environed districts, Metacom had led his warriors to the distant
settlements on the Connecticut; and it was during the operations of this
season, that several of the towns on that river were first assailed and
laid in ashes. Active hostilities had in some measure ceased, between the
Wampanoags and the English, with the cold weather, most of the troops
retiring to their homes, while the Indians apparently paused to take
breath for their final effort.

It was, however, previously to this cessation of activity, that the
Commissioners of the United Colonies, as they were called, met to devise
the means of a concerted resistance. Unlike their former dangers from the
same quarter, it was manifest, by the manner in which a hostile feeling
was spreading around their whole frontier, that a leading spirit had given
as much of unity and design to the movements of the foe, as could probably
ever be created among a people so separated by distance and so divided in
communities. Right or wrong, the Colonists gravely decided that the war on
their part was just. Great preparations were therefore made to carry it
on, the ensuing summer, in a manner more suited to their means, and to the
absolute necessities of their situation. It was in consequence of the
arrangements made for bringing a portion of the inhabitants of the Colony
of Connecticut into the field, that we find the principal characters of
our legend in the warlike guise in which they have just been re-introduced
to the reader.

Although the Narragansetts had not at first been openly implicated in the
attacks on the Colonists, facts soon came to the knowledge of the latter,
which left no doubt of the state of feeling in that nation. Many of their
young men were discovered among the followers of Metacom, and arms taken
from whites, who had been slain in the different encounters, were also
seen in their villages. One of the first measures of the Commissioners,
therefore, was to anticipate more serious opposition, by directing an
overwhelming force against this people. The party collected on that
occasion was probably the largest military body which the English, at
that early day, had ever assembled in their Colonies. It consisted of a
thousand men, of whom no inconsiderable number was cavalry--a species of
troops that, as all subsequent experience has shown, is admirably adapted
to operations against so active and so subtle a foe.

The attack was made in the depth of winter, and it proved fearfully
destructive to the assailed. The defence of Conanchet, the young Sachem of
the Narragansetts, was every way worthy of his high character for courage
and mental resources, nor was the victory gained without serious loss to
the Colonists. The native chief had collected his warriors, and taken post
on a small area of firm land, that was situated in the centre of a densely
wooded swamp; and the preparations for resistance betrayed a singular
familiarity with the military expedients of a white man. There had been a
palisadoed breast-work, a species of redoubt, and a regular block-house,
to overcome, ere the Colonists could penetrate into the fortified village
itself. The first attempts were unsuccessful, the Indians having repulsed
their enemies with loss. But better arms and greater concert finally
prevailed, though not without a struggle that lasted for many hours, and
not until the defendants were, in truth, nearly surrounded.

The events of that memorable day made a deep impression on the minds of
men who were rarely excited by any incidents of a great and moving
character. It was still the subject of earnest and not unfrequently of
melancholy discourse, around the fire-sides of the Colonists; nor was the
victory achieved without accompaniments which, however unavoidable they
might have been, had a tendency to raise doubts in the minds of
conscientious religionists concerning the lawfulness of their cause. It is
said that a village of six hundred cabins was burnt and that hundreds of
dead and wounded were consumed in the conflagration. A thousand warriors
were thought to have lost their lives in this affair, and it was believed
that the power of the nation was broken for ever. The sufferers among the
Colonists themselves were numerous, and mourning came into a vast many
families, with the tidings of victory.

In this expedition most of the men of the Wish-Ton-Wish had been
conspicuous actors, under the orders of Content. They had not escaped with
impunity; but it was confidently hoped that their courage was to meet its
reward in a long continuance of peace, which was the more desirable on
account of their remote and exposed situation.

In the mean time, the Narragansetts were far from being subdued.
Throughout the whole continuance of the inclement season, they had caused
alarms on the frontiers; and, in one or two instances their renowned
Sachem had taken signal vengeance for the dire affair in which his people
had so heavily suffered. As the spring advanced, the inroads became still
more frequent, and the appearances of danger so far increased as to
require a new call on the Colonists to arm. The messenger, introduced in
the last chapter, was charged with matter that had a reference to the
events of this war; and it was with an especial communication of great
urgency that he had now demanded his secret audience with the leader of
the military force of the valley.

"Thou hast affairs of moment to deal with, Captain Heathcote," said the
hard-riding traveller, when he found himself alone with Content. "The
orders of his Honor are to spare neither whip nor spur until the chief men
of the borders shall be warned of the actual situation of the Colony."

"Hath aught of moving interest occurred, that his Honor deemeth there is
necessity for unusual watchfulness. We had hoped that the prayers of the
pious were not in vain; and that a time of quiet was about to succeed to
that violence, of which, bounden by our social covenants, we have
unhappily been unwilling spectators. The bloody assault of Pettyquamscott
hath exercised our minds severely--nay, it hath even raised doubts of the
lawfulness of some of our deeds."

"Thou hast a commendable spirit of forgiveness Captain Heathcote, or thy
memory would extend to other scenes than those which bear relation to the
punishment of an enemy so remorseless. It is said on the river, that the
valley of Wish-Ton-Wish hath been visited by the savage in its day, and
men speak freely of the wrongs suffered by its owners on that pitiless
occasion."

"The truth may not be denied, even that good should come thereof. It is
certain that much suffering was inflicted on me and on mine, by the
inroad of which you speak: nevertheless we have ever striven to consider
it as a merciful chastisement inflicted for manifold sins, rather than as
a subject that might be remembered, in order to stimulate passions that,
in all reason as in all charity, should slumber as much as a weak nature
will allow."

"This is well, Captain Heathcote, and in exceeding conformity with the
most received doctrines," returned the stranger, slightly gaping, either
from want of rest the previous night, or from disinclination to so grave a
subject; "but it hath little connexion with present duties. My charge
beareth especial concern with the further destruction of the Indians,
rather than to any inward searchings into the condition of our own mental
misgivings, concerning any right it may be thought proper to question,
that hath a reference to the duty of self-protection. There is no unworthy
dweller in the Connecticut Colony, sir, that hath endeavored more to
cultivate a tender conscience, than the wretched sinner who standeth
before you; for I have the exceeding happiness to sit under the
outpourings of a spirit that hath few mortal superiors in the matter of
precious gifts. I now speak of Dr. Calvin Pope; a most worthy and
soul-quieting divine; one who spareth not the goad when the conscience
needeth pricking, nor hesitateth to dispense consolation to him who seeth
his fallen estate; and one that never faileth to deal with charity, and
humbleness of spirit, and forbearance with the failings of friends, and
forgiveness of enemies, as the chiefest signs of a renovated moral
existence; and, therefore, there can be but little reason to distrust the
spiritual rightfulness of all that listen to the riches of his discourse.
But when it cometh to be question of life or death, a matter of dominion
and possession of these fair lands, that the Lord hath given--why, sir,
then I say that, like the Israelites dealing with the sinful occupants of
Canaan, it behoveth us to be true to each other, and to look upon the
heathen with a distrustful eye."

"There may be reason in that thou utterest," observed Content,
sorrowfully. "Still it is lawful to mourn even the necessity which
conduceth to all this strife. I had hoped that they who direct the
Councils of the Colony might have resorted to less violent means of
persuasion, to lead the savage back to reason, than that which cometh from
the armed hand. Of what nature is thy especial errand?"

"Of deep urgency, sir, as will be seen in the narration," returned the
other, dropping his voice like one habitually given to the dramatic part
of diplomacy, however unskilful he might have been in its more
intellectual accomplishments. "Thou wast in the Pettyquamscott scourging,
and need not be reminded of the manner in which the Lord dealt with our
enemies on that favor-dispensing day; but it may not be known to one so
remote from the stirring and daily transactions of Christendom, in what
manner the savage hath taken the chastisement. The restless and still
unconquered Conanchet hath deserted his towns and taken refuge in the open
woods; where it exceedeth the skill and usage of our civilized men of war,
to discover, at all times the position and force of their enemies. The
consequences may be easily conjectured. The savage hath broken in upon,
and laid waste, in whole or in part, firstly--Lancaster, on the tenth,"
counting on his fingers, "when many were led into captivity; secondly,
Marlborough, on the twentieth; on the thirteenth, ultimo, Groton; Warwick,
on the seventeenth; and Rehoboth, Chelmsford, Andover, Weymouth, and
divers other places, have been greatly sufferers, between the latter
period and the day when I quitted the abode of his Honor. Pierce of
Scituate, a stout warrior, and one practised in the wiles of this nature
of warfare, hath been cut off with a whole company of followers; and
Wadsworth and Brockleband, men known and esteemed for courage and skill,
have left their bones in the woods, sleeping in common among their
luckless followers."

"These are truly tidings to cause us to mourn over the abandoned condition
of our nature," said Content, in whose meek mind there was no affectation
of regrets on such a subject. "It is not easy to see in what manner the
evil may be arrested without again going forth to battle."

"Such is the opinion of his Honor, and of all who sit with him in Council;
for we have sufficient knowledge of the proceedings of the enemy, to be
sure that the master-spirit of wickedness, in the person of him called
Philip, is raging up and down the whole extent of the borders, awakening
the tribes to what he calleth the necessity of resisting further
aggression, and stirring up their vengeance, by divers subtle expedients
of malicious cunning."

"And what manner of proceeding hath been ordered, in so urgent a strait,
by the wisdom of our rulers?"

"Firstly, there is a fast ordained, that we come to the duty as men
purified by mental struggle and deep self-examination; secondly, it is
recommended that the congregations deal with more than wonted severity
with all backsliders and evil-doers, in order that the towns may not
fall under the divine displeasure, as happened to them that dwelt in the
devoted cities of Canaan; thirdly, it is determined to lend our feeble
aid to the ordering of Providence, by calling forth the allotted number
of the trained bands; and, fourthly, it is contemplated to counteract
the seeds of vengeance, by setting a labor-earning price on the heads of
our enemies."

"I accord with the three first of these expedients, as the known and
lawful resorts of Christian men," said Content. "But the latter seemeth a
measure that needeth to be entertained with great wariness of manner, and
some distrust of purpose."

"Fear not, since all suiting and economical discretion is active in the
minds of our rulers, who have pondered sagaciously on so grave a policy.
It is not intended to offer more than half the reward that is held forth
by our more wealthy and elder sister of the Bay; and there is some acute
question about the necessity of bidding at all for any of tender years.
And now, Captain Heathcote, with the good leave of so respectable a
subject, I will proceed to lay before you the details of the number and
the nature of the force that it is hoped you will lead in person in the
ensuing campaign."

As the result of that which followed will be seen in the course of the
legend, it is not necessary to accompany the Messenger any further in his
communication. We shall therefore leave him and Content busied with the
matter of their conference, and proceed to give some account of the other
personages connected with our subject.

When interrupted, as already related, by the arrival of the stranger,
Faith had endeavored, by a new expedient, to elicit some evidences of a
more just remembrance from the dull mind of her brother. Accompanied by
most of the dependants of the family, she had led him to the summit of
that hill which was now crowned with the foliage of a young and thrifty
orchard, and, placing him at the foot of the ruin, she tried to excite a
train of recollections that should lead to deeper impressions, and,
possibly, by their aid, to a discovery of the important circumstance that
all so much longed to have explained.

The experiment produced no happy result. The place, and indeed the whole
valley, had undergone so great a change, that one more liberally gifted
might have hesitated to believe them those that have been described in
our earlier pages. This rapid alteration of objects, which elsewhere know
so little change in a long course of ages, is a fact familiar to all who
reside in the newer districts of the Union. It is caused by the rapid
improvements that are made in the first stages of a settlement. To fell
the forest alone, is to give an entirely new aspect to the view; and it
is far from easy to see in a village and in cultivated fields, however
recent the existence of the one or imperfect the other, any traces of a
spot that a short time before was known is the haunt of the wolf or the
refuge of the deer.

The features, and more particularly the eye of his sister, had stirred
long-dormant recollections in the mind of Whittal Ring; and though these
glimpses of the past were detached and indistinct, they had sufficed to
quicken that ancient confidence which was partially exhibited in their
opening conference. But it exceeded his feeble powers to recall objects
that would appeal to no very lively sympathies, and which had themselves
undergone so material alterations. Still, the witless youth did not look
on the ruin entirely without some stirrings of his nature. Although the
sward around its base was lively in the brightest verdure of early
summer, and the delicious odor of the wild clover saluted his senses,
still there was that in the blackened and ragged walls, the position of
the tower, and the view of the surrounding hills, shorn as so much of
them now were, that evidently spoke to his earliest impressions. He
looked at the spot, as a hound gazes at a master who has been so long
lost as even to deaden his instinct; and at times, as his companions
endeavored to aid his faint images, it would seem as if memory were
likely to triumph, and all those deceptive opinions, which habit and
Indian wiles had drawn over his dull mind, were about to vanish before
the light of reality. But the allurements of a life in which there was so
much of the freedom of nature mingled with the fascinating pleasures of
the chase and of the woods, were not to be dispossessed so readily. When
Faith artfully led him back to those animal enjoyments of which he had
been so fond in boyhood, the fantasy of her brother seemed most to waver;
but whenever it became apparent that the dignity of a warrior, and all
the more recent and far more alluring delights of his later life, were to
be abandoned ere his being could return into its former existence, his
dull faculties obstinately refused to lend themselves to a change that,
in his case, would have been little short of that attributed to the
transmigration of souls.

After an hour of anxious, and frequently, on the part of Faith, of angry
efforts to extract some evidences of his recollection of the condition of
life to which he had once belonged, the attempt for the moment was
abandoned. At times, it seemed as if the woman were about to prevail. He
often called himself Whittal, but he continued to insist that he was also
Nipset, a man of the Narragansetts, who had a mother in his wigwam, and
who had reason to believe that he should be numbered among the warriors of
his tribe, ere the fall of another snow.

In the mean time, a very different scene was passing at the place where
the first examination had been held, and which had been immediately
deserted by most of the spectators, on the sudden arrival of the
Messenger. But a solitary individual was seated at the spacious board,
which had been provided alike for those who owned and presided over the
estate, and for their dependants to the very meanest. The individual who
remained had thrown himself into a seat, less with the air of him who
consults the demands of appetite, than of one whose thoughts were so
engrossing as to render him indifferent to the situation or employment of
his more corporeal part. His head rested on his arms, the latter
effectually concealing the face, as they were spread over the plain but
exquisitely neat table of cherry-wood, which, by being placed at the side
of one of less costly material, was intended to form the only distinction
between the guests, as, in more ancient times and in other countries, the
salt was known to mark the difference in rank among those who partook of
the same feast.

"Mark," said a timid voice at his elbow, "thou art weary with this
night-watching, and with the scouting on the hills. Dost not think of
taking food before seeking thy rest?"

"I sleep not" returned the youth, raising his head, and gently pushing
aside the basin of simple food that was offered by one whose eye looked
feelingly on his flushed features, and whose suffused cheek perhaps
betrayed there was secret consciousness that the glance was kinder than
maiden diffidence should allow. "I sleep not, Martha, nor doth it seem to
me, that I shall ever sleep again."

"Thou frightest me by this wild and unhappy eye. Hast suffered aught in
the march on the mountains?"

"Dost think one of my years and strength unable to bear the weariness of a
few hours' watching in the forest? The body is well, but the mind endureth
grievously."

"And wilt not say what causeth this vexation? Thou knowest, Mark, that
there are none in this dwelling--nay, I am certain, I might add in this
valley, that do not wish thee happiness."

"'Tis kind to say it, good Martha--but, thou never hadst a sister!"

"'Tis true, I am all of my race; and yet to me it seemeth that no tie of
blood could have been nearer than the love I bore to her who is lost."

"Nor mother! Thou never knew'st what 'tis to reverence a parent."

"And is not thy mother mine?" answered a voice that was deeply melancholy,
and yet so soft that it caused the young man to gaze intently at his
companion, for a moment, ere he again spoke.

"True, true," he said hurriedly. "Thou must and dost love her who hath
nursed thy infancy, and brought thee, with care and tenderness, to so fair
and happy a womanhood." The eye of Martha grew brighter, and the color of
her healthful cheek deepened, as Mark unconsciously uttered this
commendation of her appearance; but as she shrunk, with female
sensitiveness, from his observation, the change was unnoticed, and he
continued: "Thou seest that my mother is drooping, hourly, under this
sorrow for our little Ruth; and who can say what may be the end of a grief
that endureth so long?"

"'Tis true that there hath been reason to fear much in her behalf; but, of
late, hope hath gotten the better of apprehension. Thou dost not well,
nay, I am not assured thou dost not evil, to permit this discontent with
Providence, because thy mother yieldeth to a little more than her usual
mourning, on account of the unexpected return of one so nearly connected
with her that we have lost."

"'Tis not that, girl--'tis not that!"

"If thou refusest to say what 'tis that giveth thee this pain, I can do
little more than pity."

"Listen, and I will say. It is now many years, as thou knowest, since the
savage Mohawk, or Narragansett, Pequot, or Wampanoag, broke in upon our
settlement, and did his vengeance. We were then children, Martha; and 'tis
as a child, that I have thought of that merciless burning. Our little Ruth
was, like thyself, a blooming infant of some seven or eight years; and, I
know not how the folly hath beset me, but it hath been ever as one of that
innocence and age, that I have continued to think of my sister."

"Surely thou knowest that time cannot stay; the greater therefore is the
reason that we should be industrious to improve--"

"'Tis what our duty teacheth. I tell thee, Martha, that at night, when
dreams come over me, as they sometimes will, and I see our Ruth wandering
in the forest, it is as a playful, laughing child, such as we knew her;
and even while waking, do I fancy my sister at my knee, as she was wont to
stand when listening to those idle tales with which we lightened our
childhood."

"But we had our birth in the same year and month--dost think of me too,
Mark, as one of that childish age?"

"Of thee! That cannot well be. Do I not see that thou art grown into the
condition of a woman, that thy little tresses of brown have become the
jet-black and flowing hair that becomes thy years, and that thou hast the
stature, and, I say it not in idleness of speech, Martha, for thou knowest
my tongue is no vain flatterer, but do I not see that thou hast grown into
all the excellence of a most comely maiden? But 'tis not thus, or rather
'twas not thus, with her we mourn; for till this hour have I ever pictured
my sister the little innocent we sported with, that gloomy night she was
snatched from our arms by the cruelty of the savage."

"And what hath changed this pleasing image of our Ruth?" asked his
companion, half-covering her face to conceal the still deeper glow of
female gratification which had been kindled by the words just heard. "I
often think of her as thou hast described, nor do I now see why we may not
still believe her, if she yet live, all that we could desire to see."

"That cannot be--The delusion is gone, and in its place a frightful truth
has visited me. Here is Whittal Ring, whom we lost a boy; thou seest he is
returned a man, and a savage! No, no; my sister is no longer the child I
loved to think her, but one grown into the estate of womanhood."

"Thou thinkest of her unkindly, while thou thinkest of others far less
endowed by nature with too much indulgence; for thou rememberest, Mark,
she was ever of more pleasing aspect than any that we knew."

"I know not that--I say not that--I think not that. But be she what
hardships and exposure may have made her, still must Ruth Heathcote be far
too good for an Indian wigwam. Oh! 'tis horrible to believe that she is
the bond-woman, the servitor, the wife of a savage!"

Martha recoiled, and an entire minute passed, during which she made no
reply. It was evident that the revolting idea for the first time crossed
her mind, and all the natural feelings of gratified and maiden pride
vanished before the genuine and pure sympathies of a female bosom.

"This cannot be," she at length murmured--"it can never be! Our Ruth
must still remember the lessons taught her in infancy. She knoweth she
is born of Christian lineage! of reputable name! of exalted hope! of
glorious promise!"

"Thou seest by the manner of Whittal, who is of greater age, how little of
that taught, can withstand the wily savage."

"But Whittal faileth of Nature's gifts; he hath ever been below the rest
of men in understanding."

"And yet to what degree of Indian cunning hath he already attained!"

"But Mark," rejoined his companion, timidly, as if, while she felt all its
force, she only consented to urge the argument in tenderness to the
harassed feelings of the brother, "we are of equal years; that which hath
happened to me, may well have been the fortune of our Ruth."

"Dost mean that being unespoused thyself, or that having, at thy years,
inclinations that are free, my sister may have escaped the bitter curse of
being the wife of a Narragansett, or what is not less frightful, the slave
of his humors?"

"Truly, I mean little else than the former."

"And not the latter," continued the young man, with a quickness that
showed some sudden revolution in his thoughts. "But though with opinions
that are decided, and with kindness awakened in behalf of one favored,
thou hesitatest, Martha, it is not like that a girl left in the fetters of
savage life would so long pause to think. Even here in the settlements,
all are not difficult of judgment as thou!"

The long lashes vibrated above the dark eyes of the maiden, and, for an
instant, it seemed as if she had no intention to reply. But looking
timidly aside, she answered in a voice so low, that her companion scarcely
gathered the meaning of that she uttered.

"I know not how I may have earned this false character among my friends,"
she said; "for to me it ever seemeth that what I feel and think is but too
easily known."

"Then is the smart gallant from the Hartford town, who cometh and goeth so
often between this distant settlement and his father's house, better
assured of his success than I had thought. He will not journey the long
road much oftener, alone!"

"I have angered thee, Mark, or thou wouldst not speak with so cold an eye,
to one who hath ever lived with thee in kindness."

"I do not speak in anger, for 'twould be both unreasonable and unmanly to
deny all of thy sex right of choice; but yet it doth seem right, that,
when taste is suited and judgment appeased, there should be little motive
for withholding speech."

"And wouldst thou have a maiden, of my years, in haste to believe that she
was sought, when haply it may be, that he of whom you speak is in quest of
thy society and friendship, rather than of my favor?"

"Then might he spare much labor and some bodily suffering, unless he finds
great pleasure in the saddle; for I know not a youth in the Connecticut
Colony, for whom I have smaller esteem. Others may see matter of approval
in him, but, to me, he is of bold speech, ungainly air, and great
disagreeableness of discourse."

"I am happy that at last we find ourselves of one mind; for that, thou
say'st of the youth, is much as I have long considered him."

"Thou! Thou thinkest of the gallant thus! Then why dost listen to his
suit? I had believed thee a girl too honest, Martha, to affect such
niceties of deception. With this opinion of his character, why not refuse
his company?"

"Can a maiden speak too hastily?"

"And if here, and ready to ask thy favor, the answer would be----"

"No!" said the girl, raising her eyes for an instant, and bashfully
meeting the eager look of her companion, though she uttered the
monosyllable firmly.

Mark seemed bewildered. An entirely new and a novel idea took possession
of his brain. The change was apparent by his altering countenance and a
cheek that glowed like flame. What he might have said, most of our
readers over fifteen may presume; but, at that moment, the voices of
those who had accompanied Whittal to the ruin were heard on their return,
and Martha glided away so silently as to leave him for a moment ignorant
of her absence.