Invisible Links eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 251 pages of information about Invisible Links.

Invisible Links eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 251 pages of information about Invisible Links.

Yes, Mamsell Fredrika understood it now.  It was all the old maids who had passed away in the land of Sweden who were keeping midnight mass in the Oesterhaninge church.

Her dead sister leaned towards her.

“Sister, do you repent of what you have done for these your sisters?”

“No,” said Mamsell Fredrika.  “What have I to be glad for if not that it has been bestowed upon me to work for them?  I once sacrificed my position as an authoress to them.  I am glad that I knew what I sacrificed and yet did it.”

“Then you may stay and hear more,” said the sister.

At the same moment some one was heard to speak far away in the choir, a mild but distinct voice.

“My sisters,” said the voice, “our pitiable race, our ignorant and despised race will soon exist no more.  God has willed that we shall die out from the earth.

“Dear friends, we shall soon be only a legend.  The old Mamsells’ measure is full.  Death rides about on the road to the church to meet the last one of us.  Before the next midnight mass she will be dead, the last old Mamsell.

“Sisters, sisters!  We are the lonely ones of the earth, the neglected ones at the feast, the unappreciated workers in the homes.  We are met with scorn and indifference.  Our way is weary and our name is ridicule.

“But God has had mercy upon us.

“To one of us He gave power and genius.  To one of us He gave never-failing goodness.  To one of us He gave the glorious gift of eloquence.  She was everything we ought to have been.  She threw light on our dark fate.  She was the servant of the homes, as we had been, but she offered her gifts to a thousand homes.  She was the caretaker of the sick, as we had been, but she struggled with the terrible epidemic of habits of former days.  She told her stories to thousands of children.  She lead her poor friends in every land.  She gave from fuller hands than we and with a warmer spirit.  In her heart dwelt none of our bitterness, for she has loved it away.  Her glory has been that of a queen’s.  She has been offered the treasures of gratitude by millions of hearts.  Her word has weighed heavily in the great questions of mankind.  Her name has sounded through the new and the old world.  And yet she is only an old Mamsell.

“She has transfigured our dark fate.  Blessings on her name!”

The dead joined in, in a thousandfold echo:  “Blessings on her name!”

“Sister,” whispered Mamsell Fredrika, “can you not forbid them to make me, poor, sinful being, proud?”

“But, sisters, sisters,” continued the voice, “she has turned against our race with all her great power.  At her cry for freedom and work for all, the old, despised livers on charity have died out.  She has broken down the tyranny that fenced in childhood.  She has stirred young girls towards the wide activity of life.  She has put an end to loneliness, to ignorance, to joylessness.  No unhappy, despised old Mamsells without aim or purpose in life will ever exist again; none such as we have been.”

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Project Gutenberg
Invisible Links from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.