Through stained glass eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 297 pages of information about Through stained glass.

Through stained glass eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 297 pages of information about Through stained glass.

Suddenly Shenton’s mood changed to sullen stupor, and Manoel, whose gait was also unsteady, picked him up and carried him to a spigot, where he carefully unbuttoned the child’s waist and soaked his head in cold water.  The charm was broken.  Lewis fled.

CHAPTER IV

Routine is the murderer of time.  Held by the daily recurring duties of her household, Ann Leighton awoke with a gasp to the day that Natalie’s hair went into pigtails and the boys shed kilts for trousers.  At the evening hour she gathered the children to her with an increased tenderness.  Natalie, plump and still rosy, sat in her lap; Shenton, a mere wisp of a boy, his face pale with a pallor beyond the pallor of the tropics, pressed his dark, curly head against her heart.  Her other arm encircled Lewis and held him tight, for he was prone to fidget.

They sat on the west veranda and watched the sun plunge to the horizon from behind a bank of monster clouds.  Before them stretched a valley, for Consolation Cottage was set upon a hill.  Beyond the valley, and far away, rose a line of hills.  Suddenly that line became a line of night.  Black night seized upon all the earth; but beyond there arose into the heavens a light that was more glorious than the light of day.  A long sea of gold seemed to slope away ever so gently, up and up, until it lost itself beneath the slumberous mass of clouds that curtained its farther shore.  Here and there within the sea hung islets of cloud, as still as rocks in a waveless ocean.

Natalie stretched out her hand, with chubby fingers outspread, and squinted between the black bars they made against the light.

“Mother, what’s all that?”

Mrs. Leighton was silent for a moment.  The children looked up expectantly into her face, but she was not looking down at them.  Her gaze was fixed upon the afterglow.

“Why,” she said at last, “it’s a painting of heaven and earth.  You see the black plain that stretches away and away?  That’s our world, so dark, so full of ruts, so ugly; but it is the rough plain we all must travel to reach the shore of light.  When life is over, we come to the end of night—­over there.  Then we sail out on the golden sea.”

“Are those islands?” asked Lewis, pointing to the suspended cloudlets.

“Yes, islands.”

“D’you see that biggest one—­the one with a castle and smoke and trees?” continued Lewis.  “That’s the one I’m going to sail to.”

“Me, too,” said Natalie.

“No, Natalie, you can’t.  Not to that one, because you’re littlest.  You must sail to that littlest one ’way, ’way over there.”  Lewis pointed far to the south.

Natalie shook her head solemnly.

“No.  I’ll sail to the big island, too.”

“And you, dear?” said Mrs. Leighton to Shenton, looking down at his motionless head.  Shenton did not answer.  He was held by a sudden, still, unhealthy sleep.

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Through stained glass from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.