[Phyllis of Philistia by Frank Frankfort Moore]@TWC D-Link book
Phyllis of Philistia

CHAPTER X
7/9

She had never slept a night for years without reading a chapter; and in order to avert the possibility of her own feelings or fancies of the moment making any invidious distinction between the various component parts of a book which is profitable in every line, she had accustomed herself to read the chapters in consecutive order from The Genesis to The Revelation.

Sometimes, when she found herself face to face of a night with a purely genealogical chapter, Phyllis of Philistia had difficulty in crushing down her unworthy desire to turn to some chapter that seemed to her frail judgment to contain words of wider comfort to the children of men than a genealogical tree of the Children of Israel; but she had never yielded to so unworthy an impulse.

Who was she that she should suggest that one part of the Sacred Book was calculated to be more profitable than another?
Was it not all the Bible?
She had plowed her way through the slough of Hebrew names upon these occasions, and the blessing of the words had been borne to her in the form of a sweet sleep.
Her chapter for this night was that which describes the campaign of David, during which he and his hosts were besieged in their earthworks, and how the three mighty men had made a sortie through the camp of the enemy in order to obtain for their leader a cup of water.
She continued the chapter to the end, but all through it those words were ringing in her ears: "It is the price of blood; it is the price of blood." And as she knelt down beside her bed, her bare white feet peeping out from beneath the drapery of her white night-dress, in a posture that would have made the most human atheist believe in the beauty of devotion, those words were still in her ears: "The price of blood; the price of blood." Good Heavens! How could she carry that feather fan?
How could Ella Linton hold it up to her face--hold her face down to it, flutter its fairy fluff upon her cheeks?
It was the price of blood.

Herbert Courtland had run a greater risk to obtain those feathers than David's mighty men had run to draw the water from the well.

She had heard all about the insatiable savagery of the natives of New Guinea.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books