[Margret Howth A Story of To-day by Rebecca Harding Davis]@TWC D-Link bookMargret Howth A Story of To-day CHAPTER XI 17/20
It may have been chance: yet, let us think it was not chance; let us believe that He, who had made the world warm and happy for her, chose that this best voice of all should bid her good-bye at the last. So the Old Year went out in that music.
The dull eyes, loving to the end, wandered vaguely as the sounds died away, as if losing something,--losing all, suddenly.
She sighed as the clock struck, and then a strange calm, unknown before, stole over her face; her eyes flashed open with a living joy.
Margret stooped to close them, kissing the cold lids; and Tiger, who had climbed upon the bed, whined and crept down. "It is the New Year," said Holmes, bending his head. The cripple was dead; but LOIS, free, loving, and beloved, trembled from her prison to her Master's side in the To-Morrow. I can show you her grave out there in the hills,--a short, stunted grave, like a child's.
No one goes there, although there are many firesides where they speak of "Lois" softly, as of something holy and dear: but they think of her always as not there; as gone home; even old Yare looks up, when he talks of "my girl." Yet, knowing that nothing in God's just universe is lost, or fails to meet the late fulfilment of its hope, I like to think of her poor body lying there: I like to believe that the great mother was glad to receive the form that want and crime of men had thwarted,--took her uncouth child home again, that had been so cruelly wronged,--folded it in her warm bosom with tender, palpitating love. It pleased me in the winter months to think that the worn-out limbs, the old scarred face of Lois rested, slept: crumbled into fresh atoms, woke at last with a strange sentience, and, when God smiled permission through the summer sun, flashed forth in a wild ecstasy of the true beauty that she loved so well.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|