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Illustrator: "Phiz"

LEWIS ARUNDEL

Or, The Railroad Of Life

Author Of "Frank Fairlegh."

The Walter Scott Publishing Co., Ltd.

London And Newcastle-On-Tyne.

"Surely he ought to be here by this time, Rose; it must be past nine o'clock!"

"Scarcely so much, mamma; indeed, it wants a quarter of nine yet. The coach does not arrive till half-past eight, and he has quite four miles to walk afterwards."

"Oh! this waiting, it destroys me," rejoined the first speaker, rising from her seat and pacing the room with agitated steps. "How you can contrive to sit there, drawing so quietly, I do not comprehend!"

"Does it annoy you, dear mamma? Why did you not tell me so before?" returned Rose gently, putting away her drawing-apparatus as she spoke. No one would have called Rose Arundel handsome, or even pretty, and yet her face had a charm about it--a charm that lurked in the depths of her dreamy grey eyes, and played about the corners of her mouth when she smiled, and sat like a glory upon her high, smooth forehead. Both she and her mother were clad in the deepest mourning, and the traces of some recent heartfelt sorrow might be discerned in either face. A stranger would have taken them for sisters, rather than for mother and daughter; for there were lines of thought on Rose's brow which her twenty years scarcely warranted, while Mrs. Arundel, at eight-and-thirty, looked full six years younger, despite her widow's cap.

"I have been thinking, Rose," resumed the elder lady, after a short pause, during which she continued pacing the room most assiduously, "I have been thinking that if we were to settle near some large town, I could give lessons in music and singing: my voice is as good as ever it was--listen;" and, seating herself at a small cottage piano, she began to execute some difficult solfeggi in a rich, clear soprano, with a degree of ease and grace which proved her to be a finished singer; and, apparently carried away by the feeling the music had excited, she allowed her voice to flow, as it were unconsciously, into the words of an Italian song, which she continued for some moments, without noticing a look of pain which shot across her daughter's pale features. At length, suddenly breaking off, she exclaimed in a voice broken with emotion, "Ah! what am I singing?" and, burying her face in her handkerchief, she burst into a flood of tears: it had been her husband's favourite song.

"And do you think, mamma, that I could be content to live in idleness and allow you to work for my support?" replied Rose, while a faint smile played over her expressive features. "Oh, no! Lewis will try to obtain some appointment: you shall live with him and keep his house, while I go out as governess for a few years; and we must save all we can, until we are rich enough to live together again."


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