tion id="ufb5e0024-ac0b-58e5-82b3-2cb49e019bed">
Anna Bartlett Warner, Susan Warner
Wych Hazel Published by Good Press, 2019 EAN 4057664569271 Table of Contents CHAPTER I. MR. FALKIRK CHAPTER II. BEGINNING A FAIRY TALE CHAPTER III. CORNER OF A STAGE-COACH CHAPTER IV. FELLOW-TRAVELLERS CHAPTER V. IN THE FOG CHAPTER VI. THE RED SQUIRREL CHAPTER VII. SMOKE CHAPTER VIII. THE MILL FLOOR CHAPTER IX. CATS CHAPTER X. CHICKAREE CHAPTER XI. VIXEN CHAPTER XII. AT DR. MARYLAND'S CHAPTER XIII. THE GREY COB CHAPTER XIV. HOLDING COURT CHAPTER XV. TO MOSCHELOO CHAPTER XVI. FISHING CHAPTER XVII. ENCHANTED GROUND CHAPTER XVIII. COURT IN THE WOODS CHAPTER XIX. SELF-CONTROL CHAPTER XX. BOUQUETS CHAPTER XXI. MOONSHINE CHAPTER XXII. A REPORT CHAPTER XXIII. KITTY FISHER CHAPTER XXIV. THE LOSS OF ALL THINGS CHAPTER XXV. IN THE GERMAN CHAPTER XXVI. IN THE ROCKAWAY CHAPTER XXVII. THE GERMAN AT OAK HILL CHAPTER XXVIII. BREAKFAST FOR THREE CHAPTER XXIX. JEANNIE DEANS CHAPTER XXX. THE WILL CHAPTER XXXI. WHOSE WILL? CHAPTER XXXII. CAPTAIN LANCASTER'S TEAM CHAPTER XXXIII. HITS AT CROQUET CHAPTER XXXIV. FRIENDLY TONGUES CHAPTER XXXV. FIGURES AND FAVOURS CHAPTER XXXVI. THE RUNAWAY CHAPTER XXXVII. IN A FOG CHAPTER XXXVIII. DODGING CHAPTER XXXIX. A COTTON MILL CHAPTER XL. SOMETHING NEW CHAPTER XLI. A LESSON CHAPTER XLII. STUDY CHAPTER I. MR. FALKIRK. "We may shut our eyes, but we cannot help knowing That skies are clear and grass is growing." When one has in charge a treasure which one values greatly, and which, if once made known one is pretty sure to lose, I suppose the impulse of most men would be towards a hiding- place. So, at any rate, felt one of the men in this history. Schools had done their secluding work for a time; tutors and governors had come and gone under an almost Carthusian vow of silence, except as to their lessons; and now with seventeen years of inexperience on his hands, Mr. Falkirk's sensations were those of the man out West, who wanted to move off whenever another man came within twenty miles of him. Thus, in the forlorn hope of a retreat which yet he knew must prove useless, Mr. Falkirk let the first March winds blow him out of town; and at this present time was snugly hid away in a remote village which nobody ever heard of, and where nobody ever came. So far so good: Mr. Falkirk rested and took breath. Nevertheless the spring came, even there; and following close in her train, the irrepressible conflict. Whoever succeeded in running away from his duties—or his difficulties? There was a flutter of young life within doors as without, and Mr. Falkirk knew it: there were a hundred rills of music, a thousand nameless flowers to which he could not close his senses. There was a soft, indefinable stir and sweetness, that told of the breaking of Winter bonds and the coming of Summer glories; and he could not stay the progress of things in the one case more than in the other. Mr. Falkirk had always taken care of this girl—the few years before his guardianship were too dim to look back to much. From the day when she, a suddenly orphaned child, stood frightened and alone among strangers, and he came in and took her on his knee, and bade her "be a woman, and be brave." That was his ideal of womanhood—to that combination of strength and weakness he had tried to bring Wych Hazel. Yet though she had grown up in Mr. Falkirk's company, she never thoroughly understood him: nature and circumstances had made him a reserved man—and her eyes were young. Of a piece with his reserve was the peculiar fence of separation which he built up between all his own concerns and those of his ward. He was poor—she had a more than ample fortune; yet no persuading would make him live with her. Had he been rich, perhaps she might have lived with him; but as it was, unless when lodgings were the rule, they lived in separate houses; only his was always close at hand. Even when his ward was a little child, living at Chickaree with her nurses and housekeeper, Mr. Falkirk never spent a night in the house. He formally bought and paid for a tiny cottage on the premises, and there he lived: nothing done without his knowledge, nothing undone without his notice. Not a creature came or went unperceived by Mr. Falkirk. And yet this supervision was generally pleasant. As he wrought, nothing had the air of espionage—merely of care; and so I think, Wych Hazel liked it, and felt all the more free for all sorts of undertakings, secured against consequences. Sometimes, indeed, his quick insight was so astonishing to the young mischief-maker, that she was ready to cry out treachery!—and the suspected person in this case was always Gotham. Yet when she charged upon Gotham some untimely frost which had nipped her budding plans, Gotham always replied— 'No, Miss 'Azel. I trust my 'onor is sufficient in his respect.' She and Gotham had a singular sort of league—defensive of Mr. Falkirk, offensive towards each other. She teased him, and Gotham bore it mastiff-wise; shaking his head, and wincing, and when he could bear it no longer going off. Wych Hazel?—yes, she was that. And how did she win her name? Well, in the first place, "the nut-browne mayd" and she were near of kin. But whether her parents, as they looked into the baby's clear dark eyes, saw there anything weird or elfish—or whether the name 'grew,'—of that there remains no record. She had been a pretty quiet witch hitherto; but now— "Once git a scent o' musk into a drawer, And it clings hold, like precerdents in law!" —not Mr. Falkirk could get it out.