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THE THIRD HARVEST.
As the days went by, Cosmo saw his engagement to Mr. Henderson
drawing near, nor had the smallest inclination to back out of it.
The farmer would have let him off at once, no doubt, but he felt,
without thinking, that it would be undignified, morally speaking,
to avoid, because he was now in plenty, the engagement granted by
friendship to his need. Nor was this all, for, so doing, he would
seem to allow that, driven by necessity, he had undertaken a thing
unworthy, or degrading; for Cosmo would never have allowed that any
degree of hunger could justify a poor man in doing a thing
disgraceful to a rich man. No true man will ever ask of fellow
creature, man or woman, on terms however extravagant, the doing of
a thing he could not do himself without a sense of degradation.
There is no leveller like Christianity--but it levels by lifting to
a lofty table-land, accessible only to humility. He only who is
humble can rise, and rising lift.
In thus holding to what he had undertaken, a man of lower nature
might have had respect to the example he would so give: Cosmo
thought only of honourable and grateful fulfilment of his contract.
Not only would it have been a poor return for Mr. Henderson's
kindness to treat his service as something beneath him now, but,
worst of all, it would have been to accept ennoblement at the hands
of Mammon, as of a power able to alter his station in God's world.
To change the spirit of one's ways because of money, is to confess
onesself a born slave, a thing of outsides, a knight of Riches,
with a maggot for his crest.
When the time came, therefore, Cosmo presented himself. With a look
of astonishment shadowed by disappointment, the worthy farmer held
out his hand.
"Laird," he said, "I didna expec' YOU!"
"What for no?" returned Cosmo. "Haena I been yer fee'd man for
months!"
"Ye put me in a kin' o' a painfu' doobt, laird. Fowk tellt me ye
had fa'en heir til a sicht o' siller!"
"But allooin', hoo sud that affec' my bargain wi' you Mr.
Henderson? Siller i' the pooch canna tak obligation frae the back."
"Drivin' things to the wa', nae doobt!" returned the farmer. "I
micht certainly hae ta'en the law o' ye, failin' yer appearance.
But amo' freen's, that cudna be; an' 'deed, Mr. Warlock, gien a
body wad be captious, michtna he say it wad hae been mair freen'ly
to beg aff?"
"A bargain's a bargain," answered Cosmo; "an' to beg aff o' ane
'cause I was nae langer i' the same necessity as whan I made it,
wad hae been a mere shame. Gien my father hed been wi' me, an' no
weel eneuch to like me oot o' 's sicht, I wad hae beggit aff fest
eneuch, but wi' no rizzon it wad hae been ill-mainnert, no to say
dishonest an' oongratefu'. Gien ye hae spoken to ony ither i' my
place, he s' hae the fee, an' Is' hae the wark. Lat things stan',
Mr. Henderson."
"Laird!" answered the farmer, not a little moved, "there's no a man
I wad raither see at my wark nor yersel'. A' o' them, men an'
women, work the better whan ye're amo' them. They wad be affrontit
no to haud up wi' a gentleman! Sae come awa' an' walcome!--ye'll
tak something afore we fa'tu?"
Cosmo accepted a jug of milk, half cream, from the hand of Elsie.
The girl was much improved, having partially unlearned a good deal
of the nonsense gathered at school, and come to take a fair share
with her sisters in the work of the house and farm--enlightened
thereto doubtless by her admiration for Cosmo. It is not from those
they marry people always learn most.
When Cosmo reached the end of the first bout, and stood to sharpen
his scythe, he was startled to see, a little way off, gathering
after one of the scythes, a form he could not mistake. SHE had
known he would keep his troth! She did not look up, but he knew her
figure and every motion of it too well to take her for another than
Aggie.
That she thus exposed herself to misrepresentation, Aggie was well
enough aware, but with the knowledge of how things stood between
her and Cosmo, she was far above heeding the danger. Those who do
the truth are raised even above defying the world. Defiance betrays
a latent respect, but Aggie gave herself no more trouble about the
opinion of the world than that of a lower animal. Those who are of
the world may defy, but they cannot ignore it.
She had declined being a party to Cosmo's marrying his mother, but
was not therefore prepared to expose him undefended to any one
whatever who might wish to take him, even should she be of age
unobjectionable; and she knew one who would at least be hampered by
no scruples arising from conscious unfitness. Agnes might well have
thought it better he should marry the cottar's than the farmer's
daughter! Anyhow she was resolved to keep an eye on the young woman
so long as Cosmo was within her swoop. He was chivalrous and
credulous, and who could tell what Elsie might not dare! Her
refusal to be his wife did not deprive her of antecedent rights.
And there she was, gathering behind Cosmo, as two years ago!
The instant she was free, Aggie set out for home, not having
exchanged a word with Cosmo, but intending to linger on the way in
the hope of his overtaking her. The Hendersons would have had him
stay the night, but he had given his man orders to wait him with
his horse at a certain point on the road; and Aggie had not gone
far before he got up with her.
Whatever was or had been the state of her feelings towards Cosmo,
she had never mistaken his towards her; neither had she failed to
see that his heart was nowise wounded by her refusal of his offer:
it would have been a little comfort to her, having to be severe
with herself, to see some sign of suffering in him, but she had got
over much, and now was nowise annoyed at the cheery unembarrassed
tone in which he called out when he saw her, and turning greeted
him with the same absence of constraint.
"An' sae ye're gaein' to tak the bairnies un'er yer wing, Aggie!"
said Cosmo, as they walked along. "They're lucky little things
'at'll gang to your schuil! What pat it i' yer heid?"
"Mr. Simon advised it," answered Aggie; "but I believe I pat it in
his heid first, sayin' hoo little was dune for the bairnies jist at
the time they war easiest to guide. Rouch wark maks the han's
rouch, and rouch words maks the hert rouch."
"The haill country-side 'ill be gratefu' to ye, Aggie.--Ye'll lat
me come an' see ye whiles?"
"Nane sae welcome," answered Aggie. "But wull ye be bidin' on, noo
'at ye haena him 'at's gane? Winna ye be gaein' awa', to write
buiks, an' gar fowk fin' oot what's the maitter wi' them?"
"I dinna ken what I'm gaein' to du," answered Cosmo. "But for
writin' buiks, I could do that better at hame nor ony ither gait,
wi' a'thing min'in' me o' my father, an' you nearhan' to gie me
coonsel."
"I hae aye been yours to comman', Cosmo," replied Aggie, looking
down for one moment, then immediately up again in his face.
"An' ye're no angert wi' me, Aggie?"
"Angert!" repeated Aggie, and looked at him with a glow angelic in
her honest, handsome face, and her eyes as true as the heavens. "It
was only 'at ye didna ken what ye war aboot, an' bein' sae muckle
yoonger nor mysel', I was b'un' to tak care o' ye; for a wuman as
weel's a man maun be her brither's keeper. Ye see yersel' I was
richt!"
"Ay was ye, Aggie," answered Cosmo, ashamed and almost vexed at
having to make the confession.
He did not see the heave of Aggie's bosom, nor how she held back
and broke into nothing the sigh that would have followed.
"But," she resumed, after a moment's pause, "a' lasses michtna ken
sae weel what was fittin' them, nor care sae muckle what was guid
for you; naebody livin' can ken ye as I du! an' gien ye war to lat
a lass think ye cared aboot her--it micht be but as a freen', but
she micht be sae ta'en' wi' ye--'at--'at maybe she micht gar ye
think 'at hoo she cudna live wantin' ye--an' syne, what ye du than,
Cosmo?"
It was a situation in which Cosmo had never imagined himself, and
he looked at Aggie a little surprised.
"I dinna freely un'erstan' ye," he said.
"Na, I reckon no! Hoo sud ye! Ye're jist ower semple for this
warl', Cosmo! But I'll put it plainer:--what wad ye du gien a lass
was to fa' a greitin', an' a wailin', an' fling hersel' i' yer
airms, an' mak as gien she wad dee?--what wad ye du wi' her,
Cosmo?"
"'Deed I dinna ken," replied Cosmo with some embarrassment. "What
wad ye hae me du, Aggie?"
"I wad hae ye set her doon whaur ye stude, gien upo' the ro'd, than
upo' the dyke, gien i' the hoose, than upo' the nearest chair, and
tak to yer legs an' rin. Bide na to tak yer bonnet, but rin an' rin
till ye're better nor sure she can never win up wi' ye. An'
specially gien the name o' the lass sud begin wi' an' E an' gang on
till an L, I wad hae ye rin as gien the auld captain was efter ye."
"I hae had sma' occasion," said Cosmo, "to rin fra HIM."
And therewith, partly to change the subject, for he now understood
Aggie, and did not feel it right to talk about any girl as if she
could behave in the manner supposed, partly because he had long
desired an opportunity of telling her, he began, and gave her the
whole history of the discovery of the diamonds, omitting nothing,
even where the tale concerned Lady Joan. Before he got to the end
of it, they were at the place where the man was waiting with his
horse, and as that was the place where Aggie had to turn off to go
to Muir o' Warlock, there they parted.
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