[Mary’s Meadow by Juliana Horatia Ewing]@TWC D-Link book
Mary’s Meadow

CHAPTER IV
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And being weary as he waited, he fell asleep.
Now before sunrise, whilst it was yet early, he was awakened by the voice of the hermit crying, "My Son, my dear Son!" and he jumped up, saying, "My Father!" But as he spoke the hermit passed him.

And as he passed he turned, and the boy saw that his eyes were open.

And the hermit fixed them long and tenderly on him.
Then the boy cried, "Ah, tell me, my Father, dost thou see ?" And he answered, "_I see now!_" and so passed on down the walk.
And as he went through the garden, in the still dawn, the boy trembled, for the hermit's footsteps gave no sound.

And he passed beyond the rosemary bush, and came not again.
And when the day wore on, and the hermit did not return, the boy went into his cell.
Without, the sunshine dried the dew from paths on which the hermit's feet had left no prints, and cherished the Spring flowers bursting into bloom.

But within, the hermit's dead body lay stretched upon his pallet, and the Trinity Flower was in his hand.
LADDERS TO HEAVEN.
A LEGEND.[8] There was a certain valley in which the grass was very green, for it was watered by a stream which never failed; and once upon a time certain pious men withdrew from the wide world and from their separate homes, and made a home in common, and a little world for themselves, in the valley where the grass was green.
[Footnote 8: "Ladders to Heaven" was an old name for Lilies of the Valley.] The world outside, in those days, was very rough and full of wars; but the little world in the Green Valley was quiet and full of peace.


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