Jewel eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 334 pages of information about Jewel.

Jewel eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 334 pages of information about Jewel.

The young voice was unsteady.

Mrs. Evringham heaved a long sigh.  “Give me patience!” she murmured, then added mentally, “It can’t be many days, and she won’t refuse him.”

“Go down to the piano and play yourself good-natured,” she returned.  “Then come up and we’ll go on with that charming story.  It quite refreshed me to read of that coming-out ball.  It was so like my own.”

Eloise, her lips set in a sad curve, rose and left the room.  Once in the hall, she paused for a minute.  Then instead of descending the stairs, she ran noiselessly up the next flight.  The rain was pelting steadily on the dome of golden glass through which light fell to the halls.  She stole, as she had done yesterday, to the door of Jewel’s room.

Again as yesterday she heard a voice, but this time it was singing.  The tones were very sweet, surprisingly strong and firm to proceed from lips which always spoke so gently.  The door was not quite closed, and Eloise pressed her ear to the crack.  Thus she could easily hear the words of Jewel’s song:—­

     “And o’er the earth’s troubled, angry sea
     I see Christ walk;
     And come to me, and tenderly,
     Divinely, talk.”

The hymn stopped for a minute, and the child appeared to be conversing with some one.

Eloise waited, openly, eagerly listening, hoping the singer would resume.  Something in those unexpected words in the sweet child voice stirred her.  Presently Jewel sang on:—­

     “From tired joy, and grief afar,
     And nearer Thee,
     Father, where Thine own children are
     I love to be!”

The lump that rose in the listener’s throat forced a moisture into her eyes.

“I never could hear a child sing without crying,” she said to herself in excuse, as she leaned her forehead on her hand against the jamb of the door and waited for the strange stir at her heart to quiet.

The house was still.  The rain swept against the panes, and tears stole from under the girl’s long lashes—­tears for her empty, vapid life, for the hopelessness of the future, for the humiliations of the present, for the lack of a love that should be without self-interest.

“I like that verse, Anna Belle,” said the voice within.  “Let’s sing that again,” and the hymn welled forth:—­

     “From tired joy, and grief afar,
     And nearer Thee,
     Father, where Thine own children are
     I love to be!”

“Is there a haven?” thought the swelling, listening heart outside.  “Is there a place far alike from tired joy and grief?”

“‘Father, where Thine own children are,’” quoted Jewel.  “We know where a lot of them are, don’t we, Anna Belle, and we do love to be with them.”  A pause, and a light sigh, which did not reach the listener.  “But we’re at grandpa’s now,” finished the child’s voice.

Eloise’s breaths came long and deep drawn, and she stood motionless, her eyes hidden.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Jewel from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.