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.

Presently they came into a lane.  It dipped off to the left, into the valley.  It was bordered by low, gray stone walls.  On its right hung a thick wood of second-growth trees—­a New England wood, various beyond the variety of any other forest on earth.  It breathed a mingled essence of faint odors.  The fronds of the trees reached over and embowered the lane.

On the left the view was open to the valley by reason of a pasture.  The low stone wall was topped by a snaky fence of split rails.  They were so old, so gray, that they, too, seemed of stone.  Beyond them sloped the meager pasture-land; brown, almost barren even in the youth of the year.  It was strewn with flat, outcropping rocks.  Here and there rose a mighty oak.  A splotch of green marked a spring.  Below the spring one saw the pale blush of laurel in early June.

Leighton stopped and prodded the road with his stick.  Lewis looked down.  He saw that his father’s hand was trembling.  His eyes wandered to a big stone that peeped from the loam in the very track of any passing wheel.  The stone was covered with moss—­old moss.  It was a long time since wheels had passed that way.

Leighton walked on a few steps, and then paused again, his eyes fixed on a spot at the right of the lane where the old wall had tumbled and brought with it a tangled mass of fox-grape vine.  He left the roadway and sat on the lower wall, his back against a rail.  He motioned to Lewis to sit down too.

“I have brought you here,” said Leighton and stopped.  His voice had been so low that Lewis had understood not a word.  “I have brought you here,” said Leighton again, and this time clearly, “to tell you about your mother.”

Lewis restrained himself from looking at his father’s face.

“Your mother’s name,” went on Leighton, “was Jeanette O’Reilly.  She was a milk-maid.  That is, she didn’t have to milk the cows, but she took charge of the milk when it came into the creamery and did to and with it all the things that women do with milk.  I only knew your mother when she was seventeen.  No one seemed to know where Jeanette came from.  Perhaps Aunt Jed knew.  I think she did, but she never told.  I never asked.  To me Jeanette came straight from the hand of God.

“I have known many beautiful women, but since Jeanette, the beauty of women has not spoken to the soul of me.  There is a beauty—­and it was hers—­that cries out, just as a still and glorious morning cries out, to the open windows of the soul.  To me Jeanette was all sighing, sobbing beauty.  Beauty did not rest upon her; it glowed through her.  She alone was the prism through which my eyes could look upon the Promised Land.  I knew it, and so—­I told my father.

“I was only a boy, not yet of age.  My father never hesitated.  All the power that law and tradition allowed he brought to bear.  He forbade me to visit Aunt Jed’s or to see Jeanette again.  He gave me to understand that the years held no hope for me—­that on the day I broke his command I would cut myself off from him and home.  To clinch things, he sent me away to college a month early, and put me under a tutor.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Through stained glass from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.