The Hohenzollerns in America eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 190 pages of information about The Hohenzollerns in America.

The Hohenzollerns in America eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 190 pages of information about The Hohenzollerns in America.

And once it was not so.  The morning dawned and he did not come from the darkened room:  only there came to our listening ears at times the sound of a sob or moan, and the doctor’s voice, firm and low, but with all hope gone from it.

And when at last he came, his face seemed old and sad as we had never seen it.  He paused a moment on the threshold and we heard him say, “I have done all that I can.”  Then he beckoned us into the darkened room, and, for the first time, we knew Death.

All that is forty years ago.

They tell me that, since then, the practice of medicine has been vastly improved.  There are specialists now, I understand, for every conceivable illness and for every subdivision of it.  If I fall ill, there is a whole battery of modern science to be turned upon me in a moment.  There are X-rays ready to penetrate me in all directions.  I may have any and every treatment—­hypnotic, therapeutic or thaumaturgic—­for which I am able to pay.

But, oh, my friends, when it shall come to be my lot to be ill and stricken—­in the last and real sense, with the Great Fear upon me, and the Dark Phantom at the pane—­then let some one go, fast and eager—­though it be only in the paths of an expiring memory—­fast and eager, through the driving snow to bring him to my bedside.  Let me hear the sound of his hurrying sleighbells as he comes, and his strong voice without the door—­and, if that may not be, then let me seem at least to feel the clasp of his firm hand to guide me without fear to the Land of Shadows, where he has gone before.

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The Hohenzollerns in America from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.