“So kind in you, so like you!” said my mother; “but you see—”
“Well, then, I must be off and find a room. Don’t fret; you know I can breakfast and dine with you all the same,—that is, when my other friends will let me. I shall be dreadfully persecuted.” So saying, Uncle Jack repocketed his prospectus and wished us good-night.
The clock had struck eleven, my mother had retired, when my father looked up from his books and returned his spectacles to their case. I had finished my work, and was seated over the fire, thinking now of Fanny Trevanion’s hazel eyes, now, with a heart that beat as high at the thought, of campaigns, battle-fields, laurels, and glory; while, with his arms folded on his breast and his head drooping, Uncle Roland gazed into the low clear embers. My father cast his eyes round the room, and after surveying his brother for some moments he said, almost in a whisper,—
“My son has seen the Trevanions. They remember us, Roland.”
The Captain sprang to his feet and began whistling,—a habit with him when he was much disturbed.
“And Trevanion wishes to see us. Pisistratus promised to give him our address: shall he do so, Roland?”
“If you like it,” answered the Captain, in a military attitude, and drawing himself up till he looked seven feet high.
“I should like it,” said my father, mildly. “Twenty years since we met.”
“More than twenty,” said my uncle, with a stern smile; “and the season was—the fall of the leaf!”
“Man renews the fibre and material of his body every seven years,” said my father; “in three times seven years he has time to renew the inner man. Can two passengers in yonder street be more unlike each other than the soul is to the soul after an interval of twenty years? Brother, the plough does not pass over the soil in vain, nor care over the human heart. New crops change the character of the land; and the plough must go deep indeed before it stirs up the mother stone.”