[Sevenoaks by J. G. Holland]@TWC D-Link bookSevenoaks CHAPTER XVIII 19/26
It was beautiful all the way, but it was going down, down, down.
It was seeking the level of its death; and the little boat that rode so buoyantly over the crests which betrayed the hidden rocks, would be but a chip among the waves of the broad, wild sea that waited at the end. Out of the fascinating roar that filled her ears; out of the sparkling rapids and sheeny reaches, and misty cataracts that enchanted her eyes; and out of the relentless drift toward the bottomless sea, she could be lifted! The sun shone overhead.
There were rocks to climb where her hands would bleed; there were weary heights to scale; but she knew that on the top there were green pastures and broad skies, and the music of birds--places where she could rest, and from which she could slowly find her way back, in loving companionship, to the mountains of purity from which she had come. She revolved the possibilities of the future; and, provided the little paper in her hand should verify her expectations, she resolved to realize them.
During the long hour in which she sat thinking, she discounted the emotion which the little paper in her hand held for her, so that, when she unfolded it and read it, she only kissed it, and placed it in her bosom. After dinner, she ordered her carriage.
Then, thinking that it might be recognized by Mr.Belcher, she changed her order, and sent to a public stable for one that was not identified with herself; and then, so disguising her person that in the evening she would not be known, she ordered the driver to take her to Mr.Balfour's. Mrs.Dillingham had met Mr.Balfour many times, but she had never, though on speaking terms with her, cultivated Mrs.Balfour's acquaintance, and that lady did not fail to show the surprise she felt when her visitor was announced. "I have made the acquaintance of your little ward," said Mrs. Dillingham, "and we have become good friends.
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