[Fated to Be Free by Jean Ingelow]@TWC D-Link book
Fated to Be Free

CHAPTER V
4/11

Then his love for his children made a naturally sweet temper sweeter still, and in the course of a very few years he had so completely left his wife behind, that it never occurred to him to think of her as a companion for his inner life.
He liked her; she never nagged; he considered her an excellent housekeeper; in fact, they were mutually pleased with one another; their cases were equal; both often thought they might have been worse off, and neither regretted with any keenness what they had never known.
Sometimes, having much sweetness of nature, it would chance that John Mortimer's love for his children would overflow in his wife's direction, on which, as if to recall him to himself, she would say, not coldly, but sensibly, "Don't be silly, John dear." But if he expressed gratitude on her account, as he sometimes did when she had an infant of a few days old in her arms, if his soul appeared to draw nearer to her then, and he inclined to talk of deeper and wider things than they commonly spoke of, she was always distinctly aggrieved.

A tear perhaps would twinkle in her eye.

She was affected by his relief after anxiety, and his gratitude for her safety; but she did not like to feel affected, and brought him back to the common level of their lives as soon as possible.
So they lived together in peace and prosperity till they had seven children, and then, one fine autumn, Mrs.John Mortimer persuaded her father-in-law to do up the house, so far as papering and painting were concerned.

She then persuaded John to take a tour, and went herself to the sea-side with her children.
From this journey she did not return.

Their father had but just gone quite out of her reach when the children took scarlet fever, and she summoned their grandfather to her aid.


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