“No, no, mother. Don’t you fret yourself. It’s all right. But you can see how hard it is. I like Elias, for he can speak so well, and is so sure and masterful. And I like Adam because—well, because I know very well that Adam loves me.”
“Well, bless my heart, you can’t marry them both. You’d like all the pears in the basket.”
“No, mother, but I know how to choose. You see this bit of a flower, dear.”
“It’s a common dog-rose.”
“Well, where d’you think I found it?”
“In the hedge likely.”
“No, but on my window-ledge.”
“Oh, but when?”
“This morning. It was six when I got up, and there it lay fresh and sweet, and new-plucked. ‘Twas the same yesterday and the day before. Every morning there it lies. It’s a common flower, as you say, mother, but it is not so common to find a man who’ll break short his sleep day after day just to show a girl that the thought of her is in his heart.”
“And which was it?”