A Little Pilgrim eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 97 pages of information about A Little Pilgrim.

A Little Pilgrim eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 97 pages of information about A Little Pilgrim.

The little Pilgrim could do nothing but talk of it, as one does after a very great event.  “Are you sure, quite sure, it is so?” she said.  “It would be dreadful to find it only a dream, to go to sleep again, and wake up—­there—­” This thought troubled her for a moment.  The vision of the bedchamber came back; but this time she felt it was only a vision.  “Were you afraid too?” she said, in a low voice.

“I never thought of it at all,” the beautiful stranger said; “I did not think it would come to me.  But I was very sorry for the others to whom it came, and grudged that they should lose the beautiful earth, and life, and all that was so sweet.”

“My dear!” cried the Pilgrim, as if she had never died, “oh, but this is far sweeter!  And the heart is so light, and it is, happiness only to breathe.  Is it heaven here?  It must be heaven.”

“I do not know if it is heaven.  We have so many things to learn.  They cannot tell you every thing at once,” said the beautiful lady.  “I have seen some of the people I was sorry for, and when I told them, we laughed—­as you and I laughed just now—­for pleasure.”

“That makes me think” said the little Pilgrim; “if I have died, as you say—­which is so strange, and me so living—­if I have died, they will have found it out.  The house will be all dark, and they will be breaking their hearts.  Oh, how could I forget them in my selfishness, and be happy!  I so light-hearted, while they—­”

She sat down hastily, and covered her face with her hands and wept.  The other looked at her for a moment, then kissed her for comfort, and cried too.  The two happy creatures sat there weeping together, thinking of those they had left behind, with an exquisite grief which was not unhappiness, which was sweet with love and pity.  “And oh,” said the little Pilgrim, “what can we do to tell them not to grieve?  Cannot you send? cannot you speak? cannot one go to tell them?”

The heavenly stranger shook her head.

“It is not well, they all say.  Sometimes one has been permitted; but they do not know you,” she said, with a pitiful look in her sweet eyes.  “My mother told me that her heart was so sick for me, she was allowed to go; and she went and stood by me, and spoke to me, and I did not know her.  She came back so sad and sorry, that they took her at once to our Father; and there, you know, she found that it was all well.  All is well when you are there.”

“Ah,” said the little Pilgrim, “I have been thinking of other things.  Of how happy I was, and of them; but never of the Father,—­just as if I had not died.”

The other smiled upon her with a wonderful smile.

“Do you think he will be offended—­our Father—­as if he were one of us?” she said.

And then the little Pilgrim, in her sudden grief to have forgotten him, became conscious of a new rapture unexplainable in words.  She felt his understanding to envelop her little spirit with a soft and clear penetration, and that nothing she did or said could ever be misconceived more.  “Will you take me to him?” she said, trembling yet glad, clasping her hands.  And once again the other shook her head.

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A Little Pilgrim from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.