The Wings of Icarus eBook

Lawrence Alma-Tadema
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 127 pages of information about The Wings of Icarus.

The Wings of Icarus eBook

Lawrence Alma-Tadema
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 127 pages of information about The Wings of Icarus.

“Silly, big thing, how can you talk so?  You are going to be so happy!”

“Why, yes,” I replied; “that’s true.”

Poor little Constance!  To-day I may say it, to-day she is still the poorer.  Soon ’twill be poor Emilia.

July 11th.—­To-day they met again.  I am not schooled, I have not learned my lesson, and now I know that I shall never learn it.  We were out together; again I let them walk ahead, and kept far behind them, saying to myself:  “This is my life!” But it was unendurable.  I rejoined them, and slipped in between them; I cannot yet look upon them side by side, neither actually nor in my imagination.

This does not mean that I shall not abide by my decision.  Only three days more; I must hasten.  Yet these are the last days I have to live; mingled with my pain is the last drop of joy I may taste upon this earth.  And yet, having their love, I dare not think of death.

It dawned upon me to-day that Constance knows; she is pale, and much troubled.  Poor little one.

July 12th.—­To-morrow it must be.  I meant to tell him to-night, but I could not.

It is half-past ten.  Aunt Caroline has just been to my room, bless her!  I thought she was in bed.

“Have you room for this in your trunk, Milly?” she said.  “I should like you to hang it up in your room wherever you go.”

It was a text she had painted for me.  Written in gold among sprays of lilies-of-the-valley shone “God is Love.”  Poor soul! she ought to know.

Yes, to-morrow I shall tell him.  I should have told him to-night.  I stayed at the Cottage until late; after supper he brought me home.  We were very silent.  I kept on trying to begin, wondering how to say it, and he had something, no doubt, in his thoughts.  I knew all the while that it was our last walk across the heath together; perhaps I wanted to keep it entirely my own.  I walked a step or two behind him, so that my eyes might gaze their fill, and he did not seem to feel my watching.  I wanted to print his form forever in my memory.

We were in sight of the blue gate; we had not spoken for half-a-mile, and had fallen very far apart.  I turned suddenly giddy, and spread my hands towards him, crying: 

“Gabriel!  Gabriel!”

He was very kind to me; he turned back and put his arm about my waist, and we went on more slowly still, as silent as before.  But, all the while, something within me said:  “Do you know where you are?  Do you know who holds you?  In a few weeks, oh! in one hour, you would sell your soul for one of these seconds.”

Yet I could not feel; it seems to me now that I did not feel.

Within a few yards of the blue door we stood still.  I said: 

“Come no further, Gabriel.”

But I held his hand to my side; I knew that I might never do so again.  We stood thus a few seconds, then I turned my face up suddenly, and he kissed me on the eyes.  And then he left me.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Wings of Icarus from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.