[PRb-list] a blow at his benefactor, his ingratitude would have needed

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Dehne Zeleny obtru****@dupe2*****
2010年 9月 15日 (水) 02:42:03 JST


Ime,--never once. Later in the evening

you would see an old man coming along, close by the wall, with his head
down,--a very dark man, with gray, thin

hair,--Joe Yare, Lois's

old father. No one spoke to him,--people always were looking away as he
passed; and if old

Mr. or Mrs. Polston were on the steps when he came up, they would say,
"Good-evening, Mr. Yare," very formally, and go away presently. It hurt
Lois more than anything else

they could have done. But she bustled about noisily,

so that he would not notice
it. If they saw the marks of the ill life he had lived on his old face,
she did not; his sad, uncertain eyes may have been dishonest to them,
but they were nothing but kind to the misshapen

little soul that he kissed so warmly with a "Why, Lo, my little girl!"
Nobody else in the
world ever called her by a pet name. Sometimes he was gloomy and
silent, but generally he told her of all that had happened
in the mill, particularly any little word of notice or praise he might
have
received, watching her anxiously until she laughed at it, and then
rubbing his hands cheerfully.

He need not have doubted Lois's faith in him. Whatever the rest did,
she believed in him; she always had believed in him, through all the
dark, dark years, when he was at home, and in the
penitentiary. They were gone now, never to come back. It had come
right.
She, at least, thought his repentance sincere. If the others wronged
him, and it hurt her

bitterly that they did, that would come right some day too, she would
think, as she looked at the tired, sullen face of the old man bent to
the window-pane, afraid to go out. They had very cheerful little
suppers there by themselves in the odd, bare little room, as homely and
clean as Lois herself.
Sometimes, late at night, when he had gone to bed, she sat alone in the
door, while the moonlight fell in broad patches over the quiet square,
and the great poplars stood like giants whispering together. Still the
far sounds
of the town came up cheerfully, while she folded up her knitting, it
being dark, thinking how happy an ending this was to a happy day. When
it grew quiet, she could hear the solemn whisper

of the poplars,

and sometimes broken strains of music
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