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<h2> XX. </h2>
<p>On the day when the last of the harvest is saved in the Isle of Man, the
farmer gives a supper to his farm-people, and to the neighbours who have
helped him to cut and house it. This supper, attended by simple and
beautiful ceremonies, is called the Melliah. The parson may be asked to
it, and if there is a friend of position and free manners, he also is
invited. C�sar's Melliah fell within a week of the rope-making in the
mill, and partly to punish Kate, partly to honour himself, he asked Philip
to be present.</p>
<p>"He'll come," thought Kate with secret joy, "I'm sure he'll come;" and in
this certainty, when the day of Melliah came, she went up to her room to
dress for it. She was to win Philip that day or lose him for ever. It was
to be her trial day—she knew that. She was to fight as for her life,
and gain or lose everything. It was to be a battle royal between all the
conventions of life, all the network of female custom, all the inferiority
of a woman's position as God himself had suffered it to be, and one poor
girl.</p>
<p>She began to cry, but struggling with her sadness, she dashed the tears
from her glistening eyes. What was there to cry about? Philip <i>wanted</i>
to love her, and he should, he must.</p>
<p>It was a glorious day, and not yet more than two o'clock. Nancy had washed
up the dinner things, the fire-irons were polished, the boots and spare
whips were put up on, the lath, the old hats like lines of heads on a city
gate were hung round the kitchen walls, the hearthrug was down, the turf
was piled up on the fire, the kettle was singing from the slowrie, and the
whole house was taking its afternoon nap.</p>
<p>Kate's bedroom looked over the orchard and across the stackyard up the
glen. She could see the barley stack growing in the haggard; the laden
cart coming down the glen road with the driver three decks up over the
mare, now half smothered and looking suddenly little, like a snail under
the gigantic load; and beyond the long meadow and the Bishop's bridge, the
busy fields dotted with the yellow stooks and their black shadows like a
castle's studded doors.</p>
<p>When she had thrown off her blue-black dress to wash her arms and
shoulders and neck were bare. She caught sight of herself in the glass,
and laughed with delight. The years had brought her a fuller flow of life.
She was beautiful, and she knew it. And Philip knew it too, but he should
know it to day as he had never known it before. She folded her arms in
their roundness over her bosom in its fulness and walked up and down the
little room over the sheep-skin rugs, under the turfy scraas, glowing in
the joy of blooming health and conscious loveliness. Then she began to
dress.</p>
<p>She took from a drawer two pairs of stockings, one black and the other
red, and weighed their merits with moral gravity—which? The red had
it, and then came the turn of the boots. There was a grand new pair, with
countless buttons, two toecaps like two flowers, and an upward curve like
the arm of a glove. She tried them on, bent back and forward, but
relinquished them with a sigh in favour of plain shoes cut under the
ankles and tied with tape.</p>
<p>Her hair was a graver matter. Its tangled curls had never satisfied her.
She tried all means to bring them into subjection; but the roll on top was
ridiculous, and the roll behind was formal. She attempted long waves over
the temples. It was impossible. With a lash-comb she dragged her hair back
to its natural lawlessness, and when it fell on her forehead and over her
ears and around her white neck in little knowing rings that came and went,
and peeped out and slid back, like kittens at hide-and-seek, she laughed
and was content.</p>
<p>From a recess covered by a shawl running on a string she took down her
bodice. It was a pink blouse, loose over the breast, like hills of red
sand on the shore, and loose, too, over the arms, but tight at the wrist.
When she put it on it lit up her head like a gleam from the sunset, and
her eyes danced with delight.</p>
<p>The skirt was a print, with a faint pink flower, the sash was a band of
cotton of the colour of the bodice, and then came the solemn problems of
the throat. It was round, and full, and soft, and like a tower. She would
have loved to leave it bare, but dared not. Out of a drawer under the
looking-glass she took a string of pearls. They were a present from
Kimberley, and they hung over her fingers a moment and then slipped back.
A white silk handkerchief, with a watermark, was chosen instead. She tied
it in a sailor's knot, with the ends flying loose, and the triangular
corner lying down her back.</p>
<p>Last of all, she took out of a box a broad white straw hat, like an oyster
shell, with a silver-grey ribbon, and a sweeping ostrich feather.. She
looked at it a moment, blew on it, plucked at its ribbon, lifted it over
her head, held it at poise there, dropped it gently on to her hair, stood
back from the glass to see it, and finally tore it off and sent it
skimming on to the bed.</p>
<p>The substitute was her everyday sun-bonnet, which had been lying on the
floor by the press. It was also of pale pink, with spots on its print like
little shells on a big scallop. When she had tossed it over her black
curls, leaving the strings to fall on her bosom, she could not help but
laugh aloud.</p>
<p>After all, she was dressed exactly the same as on other days of life,
except Sunday, only smarter, perhaps, and fresher maybe.</p>
<p>The sun-bonnet was right though, and she began to play with it. It was so
full of play; it lent itself to so many moods. It could speak; it could
say anything. She poked it to a point, as girls do when the sun is hot, by
closing its mouth over the tip of her nose, leaving only a slumberous dark
cave visible, through which her black eyes gleamed and her eyelashes
shone. She tied the strings under her chin, and tipped the bonnet back on
to her neck, as girls will when the breeze is cool, leaving her hair
uncovered, her mouth twitching merrily, and her head like a nymph-head in
an aureole. She took it off and tossed it on her arm, the strings still
knotted, swinging it like a basket, then wafting it like a fan, and
walking as she did so to and fro in the room, the floor creaking, her
print frock crinkling, and she herself laughing with the thrill of passion
vibrating and of imagined things to come.</p>
<p>Then she went downstairs with a firm and buoyant step, her fresh lithe
figure aglow with young blood and bounding health.</p>
<p>At the gate of the "haggard" she met Nancy Joe coming out of the
washhouse.</p>
<p>"Lord save us alive!" exclaimed Nancy. "If I ever wanted to be a man until
this day!"</p>
<p>Kate kissed and hugged her, then fled away to the Melliah field.</p>
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