On this occasion, however, he had heard no snoring, and Arthur's face,
seen by the morning light, was a sufficient proof of the wakeful hours
he had passed. He, too, had heard the distant crying, and felt
instinctively that it was not Maude's. Starting up in bed to listen, he
said:
'What's that? Is that child here yet?'
'Yes sir: she is to stay till after the funeral,' was Charles' reply,
and Arthur continued:
'Bring me some cotton for my ears. I never can stand that noise. It is a
peculiar cry.'
The cotton was brought. A window in the hall which had a habit of
rattling with every breath of wind was made fast with a bit of shingle
whittled out for that purpose, and then Arthur became tolerably quiet
until morning, when he began to talk to himself in the German language,
which Charles could not understand. But he caught the name Gretchen, and
knew she was the subject of the sick man's thoughts. Suddenly turning to
his attendant, to whom he always spoke in English, Arthur said:
'The funeral is to-day?'
'Yes, sir, at ten o'clock.'
'Well, lock every door leading up this way, and shut out the gossipping
blockheads who will come by hundreds, and, if we would let them, swarm
into my room as thick as the frogs were in the houses of the Egyptians.
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