to join this company; she could not, however, stand alone where all others went in pairs or parties, so she approached a group of her own scholars, great girls, or rather young women, who were standing watching some hundreds of the younger children playing at blind-man’s buff.

Miss Helstone knew these girls liked her, yet she was shy even with them out of school; they were not more in awe of her than she of them. She drew near them now, rather to find protection in their company than to patronize them with her presence. By some instinct they knew her weakness, and with natural politeness they respected it. Her knowledge commanded their esteem when she taught them; her gentleness attracted their regard; and because she was what they considered wise and good when on duty, they kindly overlooked her evident timidity when off. They did not take advantage of it. Peasant girls as they were, they had too much of her own English sensibility to be guilty of the coarse error. They stood round her still, civil, friendly, receiving her slight smiles, and rather hurried efforts to converse, with a good feeling and good breeding, the last quality being the result of the first, which soon set her at her ease.

Mr. Sam Wynne coming up with great haste to insist on the elder girls joining in the game as well as the younger ones, Caroline was again left alone. She was meditating a quiet retreat to the house, when Shirley, perceiving from afar her isolation, hastened to her side.

‘Let us go to the top of the fields,’ she said. ‘I know you don’t like crowds, Caroline.’

‘But it will be depriving you of a pleasure, Shirley, to take you from all these fine people, who court your society so assiduously, and to whom you can, without art or effort, make yourself so pleasant.’

‘Not quite without effort; I am already tired of the exertion; it is but insipid, barren work, talking and laughing with the good gentlefolks of Briarfield. I have been looking out for your white dress for the last ten minutes. I like to watch those I love in a crowd, and to compare them with others. I have thus compared you. You resemble none of the rest, Lina. There are some prettier faces than yours here; you are not a model- beauty, like Harriet Sykes, for instance; beside her your person appears almost insignificant; but you look agreeable—you look reflective—you look what I call interesting.’

‘Hush, Shirley! you flatter me!’

‘I don’t wonder that your scholars like you.’

‘Nonsense, Shirley; talk of something else.’

‘We will talk of Moore, then, and we will watch him; I see him even now.’

‘Where?’

And as Caroline asked the question, she looked not over the fields, but into Miss Keeldar’s eyes, as was her wont whenever Shirley mentioned any object she descried afar. Her friend had quicker vision than herself, and Caroline seemed to think that the secret of her eagle acuteness might be read in her dark gray irids—or, rather, perhaps she only sought guidance by the direction of those discriminating and brilliant spheres.

‘There is Moore,’ said Shirley, pointing right across the wide field, where a thousand children were playing, and now nearly a thousand adult spectators walking about. ‘There—can you miss the tall stature and straight port? He looks, amidst the set that surround him, like Eliab amongst humbler shepherds—like Saul in a war-council; and a war-council it is, if I am not mistaken.’

‘Why so, Shirley?’ asked Caroline, whose eye had at last caught the object it sought. ‘Robert is just now speaking to my uncle, and they are shaking hands; they are, then, reconciled.’

‘Reconciled not without good reason, depend on it, making common cause against some common foe. And why, think you, are Messrs. Wynne and Sykes, and Armitage and Ramsden, gathered in such a


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