The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 02, No. 12, October, 1858 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 310 pages of information about The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 02, No. 12, October, 1858.

The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 02, No. 12, October, 1858 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 310 pages of information about The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 02, No. 12, October, 1858.

By-and-by, while he stood at the window, looking forth upon the strange scenes before him, this new heaven and new earth, the landscape became alive.  The first human creature he had seen outside his cell since he became an inmate of this prison appeared before his eyes,—­the young girl skipping through the garden till she came to the flower-bed and plucked the scarlet blossom.  If she had been a spirit or an angel, he could hardly have beheld her with greater surprise.

She was singing when she came.  He thought he recognized that voice,—­that it was the same he had often heard from the cell below.  Many a time the horrible stillness of that cell had been broken by the sound of a child’s voice, which, like a spirit, swept unhindered through the walls,—­an essence of life, and a power.

It was but a moment that she paused before the flower; she plucked it, and was gone.  But his eyes could follow her.  She did not really, with her disappearing, vanish.  And yet this vision had not to him the significance of the bow seen in the cloud, whose interpreter, and whose interpretation, was the Almighty Love.

All day he stood before that window.  The keeper hailed the symptom.  The Governor was satisfied with the report.  Towards sunset the rain was over, and with the sun came forth abundant indications of the island life.  The gardener walked among the garden-beds and measured his morrow’s work, calculating time and means within his reach,—­and vouchsafing some attention to the flower-garden, as was evident when he paused before it and made his thoughtful survey.  The prisoner saw him smile when he took hold of the broken stalk which had been flower-crowned.  And Sandy saw the prisoner.

The next day Elizabeth came out with the gardener, and they began their day’s work together.  They seemed to be in the best spirits.  The smell of the fresh-turned earth, the sight of the fresh shoots of tender green springing from bulb and root and branch, acted upon them like an inspiration.  The warm sun also held them to their task.  Sandy was generous in bestowing aid and counsel,—­and also in the matter of his land,—­trenching farther on the ground allotted to the vegetables than he had ever done before.

“The land must pay for it,” said he.  “We’ll make a foot give us a yard’s worth.  Cram a bushel into a peck, though ‘The Doctor’ said you never could do that!  I know how to coax.”

“Yes, and you know how to order, if you have not forgotten, Sandy.  You frightened me once for taking an inch over my share.”

“That was a long while back,” answered honest Sandy,—­“before I knew what the little girl could do.  I’ve seen young folk work at gardening afore, but you do beat ’em all.  How could I tell you would, though?  You don’t look it.  Yes,—­may-be you do, though.  But you’ve changed since I first knew you.”

“Why, I was nothing but a baby then, Sandy.”

“Yes, yes,—­I know; but you’re changed since then!”

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The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 02, No. 12, October, 1858 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.