A Sister to Evangeline
arting must have been visible to all the house. On my return within doors I found Yvonne walk
out on the porch with me for a little wh
er, in a rebuking voice, "wi
o as well as the porch, where the moonlight is, and the smell
t Quebec," sa
would was in his eyes good. But her mother
s a law unto herse
lowing the light figure out upon the
bec Mademoiselle would have been the most formal of the f
ad seen these during a voyage down the Gulf from Quebec, and had so fancied them that her father had been impelled to have one netted for her by the shad-fishers. It was her favour
with a little imperious motion, to a
t it and placed it as close as I dared to the hammo
im and warm and soft. My breath came in a quick gasp, and I drew away my hand in a strange and overwhelming perturbation. The hammock was left to stop of itself-and, indeed, its swinging was b
and darker than ever, deeps of mystery,-and now, I thought, of grave
out here to talk
misgivings were justified. It trembled, beyond a doubt. The
me to Grand Pré certain wonderful dreams. Of these I find some more than realized
hift to tell her a little of my wanderings-of a bush fight here, a night march there, of the foiling of a foe, of the timely succour of a friend-till I saw that I was pleasing her. Her face leaned a little toward me. Her eyes spoke, dilating and contracting. Her lips were slightly par
ked at her, waiting for
This Acadian land, with its wonder and its beauty, has found no interpreter but you, and
erses were no gre
d only through your eyes the great sweep of the Minas tides. And only the other day I heard papa, who cares for no poetry but his old 'Chansons de Gestes,' quoting you to Father Fafard wit
the orchard in summer time without saying o
joy. I was not used to commendation for such things, my verses being wont
oftly, and be
aves, so co
the su
though the w
a bird
st
tly mov
ed expe
e graciou
rm I can
leaves, the
your di
r shadows
d and ha
e
nspoken
look all
he secre
ors would
thought particularly well of; but on her
hose of mine which you honour with your praise. They have had another, a more wonderful, theme-a theme all too high for them, which nevertheless spurred them to their best.
I continued, be
breath, above t
t, un
ah! not
56monsieur; but not to-night. You shall say them to me to-morrow. I must not stay to listen to
fingers reason and judgment flowed from me. I bowed my head over them to the edge of the hammock, and with
ms-but I durst not, and my eyes dropped as I thought of it. By chance they rested upon her feet-upon the tiny, quill-worked, beaded white moccasins, demurely crossed, the one over the other. Her skirt was so closely gathered about her ankles that just an i
athless confusion I sprang to my feet, and found her standing erect at the other side of the hammo
d. "What right did I give you?
illar that supported o
have loved you, worshipped you, so
k so?" she cried.
doggedly. "I forget nothing. You
harply to her face and dropping them a
ast me, with a sob, and disappear