Bylow Hill

George Washington Cable
Bylow Hill

The Project Gutenberg eBook, Bylow Hill, by George Washington
Cable, Illustrated by F. C. Yohn
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Title: Bylow Hill
Author: George Washington Cable
Release Date: January 3, 2005 [eBook #14575]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
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HILL***
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BYLOW HILL
by
GEORGE W. CABLE
With Illustrations by F. C. Yohn
Charles Scribner's Sons New York
MCMII

[Illustration: "Father," laughed the daughter, "isn't this rather

youngish?"]

CONTENTS
I. RUTH AND GODFREY II. ISABEL III. ARTHUR AND
LEONARD IV. AND BRING DOWN THE REMAINDER V. SKY
AND POOL VI. IN THE PUBLIC EYE VII. THE HOUR STRIKES
VIII. GIVE YOU FIVE MINUTES IX. THE YOUNG YEAR SMILES
X. THE STORM REGATHERS XI. HAS IT COME TO THIS? XII.
THE LANTERN QUENCHED XIII. BABY XIV. THE TALKATIVE
LEONARD XV. THE THIN ICE BREAKS XVI. MUST GIVE YOU
UP XVII. SLEEP, OF A SORT XVIII. MISSING XIX. A DOUBLE
STILL HUNT XX. A DOUBLE RETURN XXI. EVENING RED XXII.
MORNING GRAY

ILLUSTRATIONS
"Father," laughed the daughter, "isn't this rather youngish?"
(Frontispiece)
Indeed it was clear that to go away would be unfair.
"Arthur Winslow, I give you five minutes."
"But to know every day and hour that I'm watched."
"I am waiting busily for her slayer."
"Arthur! Arthur! can't you speak?"

I
RUTH AND GODFREY
The old street, keeping its New England Sabbath afternoon so decently
under its majestic elms, was as goodly an example of its sort as the late
seventies of the century just gone could show. It lay along a
north-and-south ridge, between a number of aged and unsmiling
cottages, fronting on cinder sidewalks, and alternating irregularly with
about as many larger homesteads that sat back in their well-shaded
gardens with kindlier dignity and not so grim a self-assertion. Behind,
on the west, these gardens dropped swiftly out of sight to a hidden
brook, from the farther shore of which rose the great wooded hill whose
shelter from the bitter northwest had invited the old Puritan founders to
choose the spot for their farming village of one street, with a Byington

and a Winslow for their first town officers. In front, eastward, the land
declined gently for a half mile or so, covered, by modern prosperity,
with a small, stanch town, and bordered by a pretty river winding
among meadows of hay and grain. At the northern end, instead of this
gentle decline, was a precipitous cliff side, close to whose brow a
wooden bench, that ran half-way round a vast sidewalk tree,
commanded a view of the valley embracing nearly three-quarters of the
compass.
In civilian's dress, and with only his sea-bronzed face and the polished
air of a pivot gun to tell that he was of the navy, Lieutenant Godfrey
Winslow was slowly crossing the rural way with Ruth Byington at his
side. He had the look of, say, twenty-eight, and she was some four
years his junior. From her father's front gate they were passing toward
the large grove garden of the young man's own home, on the side next
the hill and the sunset. On the front porch, where the two had just left
him, sat the war-crippled father of the girl, taking pride in the placidity
of the face she once or twice turned to him in profile, and in the
buoyancy of her movements and pose.
His fond, unspoken thought went after her, that she was hiding some
care again,--her old, sweet trick, and her mother's before her.
He looked on to Godfrey. "There's endurance," he thought again. "You
ought to have taken him long ago, my good girl, if you want him at all."
And here his reflections faded into the unworded belief that she would
have done so but for his, her own father's, being in the way.
The pair stopped and turned half about to enjoy the green-arched vista
of the street, and Godfrey said, in a tone that left his companion no
room to overlook its personal intent, "How often, in my long absences,
I see this spot!"
"You wouldn't dare confess you didn't," was her blithe reply.
"Oh yes, I should. I've tried not to see it, many a time."
"Why, Godfrey Winslow!" she laughed. "That was very wrong!"
"It was very useless," said the
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