She gently laid herself down, with a deep sigh, and closed her eyes. "She is weak, and will sleep long," said Mr. Marchdale. "You sigh," said Henry. "Some fearful thoughts, I feel certain, oppress your heart." "Hush-hush!" said Mr. Marchdale, as he pointed to Flora. "Hush! not here--not here." "I understand," said Henry. "Let her sleep." There was a silence of some few minutes duration. Flora had dropped into a deep slumber. That silence was first broken by George, who said,-- "Mr. Marchdale, look at that portrait." He pointed to the portrait in the frame to which we have alluded, and the moment Marchdale looked at it he sunk into a chair as he exclaimed,-- "Gracious Heaven, how like!" "It is--it is," said Henry. "Those eyes--" "And see the contour of the countenance, and the strange shape of the mouth." "Exact--exact." "That picture shall be moved from here. The sight of it is at once sufficient to awaken all her former terrors in poor Flora's brain if she should chance to awaken and cast her eyes suddenly upon it." "And is it so like him who came here?" said the mother."It is the very man himself," said Mr. Marchdale. "I have not been in this house long enough to ask any of you whose portrait that may be?" "It is," said Henry, "the portrait of Sir Runnagate Bannerworth, an ancestor of ours, who first, by his vices, gave the great blow to the family prosperity." "Indeed. How long ago?" "About ninety years." "Ninety years. 'Tis a long while--ninety years."