170 can't be mended.' So he helped her to carry the mattress up into the attic, and it was put in Uncle Frans's little room. For days after he could be seen peering at the walls and ceilings, he fingered .them and scratched at the paint. It was obvious that his thoughts were perpetually occupied with the accident. c Wouldn't it be better to pull the whole house down and build a new one ?' he asked. Werendonk answered, without looking at him : c You don't know what you're talking about.' And when they were alone. Uncle Frans said : ' No, indeed, you don't know what you're talking about, the house where your Uncle Gerbrand and your mother were born, and your grandfather and your great-grandfather, and their fathers and grandfathers. Maybe it's a bit dark and not so convenient as the new houses, but we must put up with that considering all the good things that an ancestral home brings us.3 The first evenings he only stayed out for an hour or so, and then he sat for a while with Stien in the kitchen. With the Bible open in front of her, she would chatter to him as though she knew he needed cheering up, but she found it difficult, for there were things she couldn't mention, and when she asked him questions, he answered gruffly. There was something weighing on his heart, and she daren't ask about that. Sometimes he looked at her as though he would like to tell her something. She