[{"node":{"title":"Hanna213","Collections":"Part Three","Contributor":"Linen Hall Library","Coverage":"1951","Creator":"Linen Hall Library","Date":"Thursday, April 7, 2016","Format":"TIFF","Identifier":"Hanna213","Item Description":"Manuscript","Keywords":"Father, Time","Language":"English","Path":"https://www.niliteraryarchive.com/content/hanna213","Publisher":"Linen Hall Library","Relation":"Linen Hall Library","Rights":"Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike CC BY-NC-SA","Scanned image":{"src":"https://www.niliteraryarchive.com/sites/default/files/Hanna213_0.jpg","alt":""},"Source":"LHL Archive","Transcript":"\ufeff206\n\ninto the shadows of Rathard. Everything was silent and\nblind about him now, except his groans at night as he\nlay in his single bed, and the implacable hostility\nof his eyes when he watched Sarah. But on her side\nwas the strong unbroken man and the growing lad.\nNo one could dispute Hamilton as her husband and as\nfather to the children. He would have been the better\nman of the two, even if Frank had not wandered away\nfrom her and got himself broken. When a woman is\nforty and the faint colour that time has left on her\nface and bones is burned into her body like enamel,\nwhat does it matter if a man is clumsy and uncouth\nwhen they were alone? Time had solved many problems\nfor her, it would solve that one too.\n","Type":"Text"}}]