"I believe she was a remarkably still, silent person."
"One would scarcely have expected, my dear, that your uncle's choice should have fallen on a partner of that description. Is he not fond of being amused by lively chat?"
"In company he is. But he always says he could never do with a talking wife. He must have quiet at home. You go out to gossip, he affirms; you come home to read and reflect."
"Mrs. Matthewson lived but a few years after her marriage, I think I have heard?"
"About five years."
"Well, my dear," pursued Mrs. Pryor, rising to go, "I trust it is understood that you will frequently come to Fieldhead. I hope you will. You must feel lonely here, having no female relative in the house; you must necessarily pass much of your time in solitude."
"I am inured to it. I have grown up by myself. May I arrange your shawl for you?"
Mrs. Pryor submitted to be assisted.
"Should you chance to require help in your studies," she said, "you may command me."
Caroline expressed her sense of such kindness.