The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 10, No. 61, November, 1862 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 327 pages of information about The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 10, No. 61, November, 1862.

The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 10, No. 61, November, 1862 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 327 pages of information about The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 10, No. 61, November, 1862.

“Tea is ready,” said Aaron, peeping in, his face alive with satisfied muscles, playing too merry a tune of joy, I thought, for a grave minister.

“Sophie’s a magician,” I thought for the thousandth time, as, for the millionth, Aaron looked at her sitting so demurely regal at his spread table.

“What would these two good people say,” I asked myself, in thinking, “if they knew all that I have learned in my visit, not yet a week long?”—­and I ran up and down in the scale of semibreves and minims that I had heard, with the one long, sweet trill transfusing life on earth into heavenly existence, and I felt very wingy, very much as if I could take up the tower, standing high and square out there, and carry it, “like Loretto’s chapel, through the air to the green land,” where my spirit would go singing evermore.  I could not tell what my joy was like:  not unto anything that I had seen upon the earth; under the earth I had not yet been; only once above it, and they were calmly celestial there.  I was turbulently joyous, and so I winged a little while around Sophie and Aaron, hummed a good-night in Chloe’s ears, and found that the canny soul was luxuriating in the idea that the icy lady was to be thawed into the acceptance of sundry confections which she was basketing to carry with her when I went out.

“Call me early,” I said; “you know I leave at seven o’clock.”

“I shall be up ever so early, Miss Anna; never fear for Chloe’s sleeping late to-morrow in the morning; you get ever so much,—­’nuff for Chloe and you too; good-night, honey!”—­and Chloe went on her mission, whilst Aloes and Honey went up-stairs, past Aaron’s study, and into a room where the mysterious art of packing must be practised for a little.

I thought of the “breadths of silver and skirts of gold” that I had seen the Day pack away; and, inspired with the thought, fell to folding less amberous raiment, until, my duty done, I pressed the cover down, and locked my treasures in, for the journey of the morrow.  Then I took out my sacred gift to guard, and, laying it before me, looked at it.  It was of dimensions scarcely larger than the moon,—­that is, extremely variant and uncertain:  to one, a planet, larger than Jupiter, moons and all; to another, scarcely more than a bridal ring.  So my packet was of uncertain size:  undoubtedly the tower was packed away in it, Herbert too,—­and I couldn’t help agreeing with my thought, and confessing that this was a better form for conveyance than that I so lately had planned; so I put it safely away, with myself, until the day should come.  The day-star had arisen in my heart.  Would it ever go down?  Not whilst He who holdeth the earth in the hollow of His hand hath me there too.  Reaching out, once more, for the strong protective fibres that had so blessed me, I wandered forth with it into the land whose mural heights are onychites and mocha-stones of mossy mystery.

How long I might have lingered there I know not,—­so delicious was the fragrance and so fair the flowers,—­had not Chloe’s voice broken the mocha-stones, scattering the mosses like autumn-leaves.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 10, No. 61, November, 1862 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.