The Dreamer eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 366 pages of information about The Dreamer.

The Dreamer eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 366 pages of information about The Dreamer.

Ill as Mrs. Poe, or Miss Arnold, as she was still sometimes called, was, she had managed by a mighty effort of will and the aid of stimulants to appear once or twice before the footlights.  But her acting had been spiritless and her voice weak and it finally became necessary for the manager to explain that she was suffering from “chills and fevers,” from which he hoped rest and skillful treatment would relieve her and make it possible for her to take her usual place.  But she did not appear.  Gradually her true condition became generally known and in the hearts of a kindly public disappointment gave place to sympathy.  Some of the most charitably disposed among the citizens visited her, bringing comforts and delicacies for her and presents for the pretty, innocent babes who all unconscious of the cloud that hung over them, played happily upon the floor of the dark and bare room in which their mother’s life was burning out.  Nurse Betty, an ample, motherly soul, with cheeks like winter apples and eyes like blue china, and a huge ruffled cap hiding her straggly grey locks from view—­versatile Betty, who was not only nurse for the children and lady’s maid for the star, but upon occasion appeared in small parts herself, hovered about the bed and ministered to her dying mistress.

As the hours and days dragged by the patient grew steadily weaker and weaker.  She seldom spoke, but lay quite silent and still save when shaken by the torturing cough.  On a Sunday morning early in December she lay thus motionless, but wide-eyed, listening to the sounds of the church-bells that broke the quiet air.  As the voice of the last bell died away she stirred and requested, in faint accents, that a packet from the bottom of her trunk be brought to her.  When this was done she asked for the children, and when Nurse Betty brought them to the bedside she gave into the hands of the wondering boy a miniature of herself, upon the back of which was written:  “For my dear little son Edgar, from his mother,” and a small bundle of letters tied with blue ribbon.  She clasped the baby fingers of the girl about an enameled jewel-case, of artistic workmanship, but empty, for its contents had, alas, gone to pay for food.  She then motioned that the little ones be raised up and allowed to kiss her, after which, a frail, white hand fluttered to the sunny head of each, as she murmured a few words of blessing, then with a gentle sigh, closed her eyes in her last, long sleep.

The baby girl began to whimper with fright at the suddenness with which she was snatched up and borne from the room, and the boy looked with awe into the face of the weeping nurse who, holding his sister in one arm dragged him away from the bedside and out of the door, by the hand.  There was much hurried tramping to and fro, opening and closing of doors and drawing to of window-blinds.  These unusual sounds filled the boy with a vague fear.

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The Dreamer from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.