Fate Knocks at the Door eBook

Will Levington Comfort
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 424 pages of information about Fate Knocks at the Door.

Fate Knocks at the Door eBook

Will Levington Comfort
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 424 pages of information about Fate Knocks at the Door.

Bedient had not slept long.  He had not slept for two consecutive hours during the past ten days.  From the open door of her mother’s house in Dunstan his whole life had felt the urge to India.  But that could not be.  It had the look of running away.

The little ocean matter had been happily ended....  The exact impulse to tell David Cairns of his intention to return to Equatoria, and the moment for it, had not offered, so Bedient had parted from his friend, as one going to a different room for the night.  Nor had he seen Mrs. Wordling, the Grey One, Kate Wilkes or Vina Nettleton since the last ride; though for the latter, he left a page of writing she had asked.

Beth he had tried to see, four days after their parting in Dunstan, but she was not at her studio, nor with her mother.  He did not seek further.

Bedient felt that he was needed in Equatoria, but there was another reason for his sudden return, than attention to the large financial interests.  Though his home was there, Equatoria had no imperious call for him that his inner nature answered....  Only India had that.  The very name was like water to a fevered throat.  They would know in India.  Old Gobind had always known: 

You will learn to look within for the woman.  You would not find favor in finding her without.  It is not for you—­the red desire of love.”

How he had rebelled against the authority of those sentences, but his respect for the deep vision of Gobind was complete.  Moreover, the old Sannyasin had said he was not to return to India until he was ready to give up the body.  No sense of the physical end had come to him, even in his darkest hour.  There was much for him to do, and in New York, but the pith was gone from him.  His desolation made the idea of returning to New York one of the hardest things he had ever faced.  He had thought of Beth Truba in his every conception of service.  She inspired a love which held him true to every ideal of woman, and kept the ideals flaming higher.  And what form she had brought to his concepts!  In expressing himself to her, direct world-values had attached to his thoughts.  Through her he had seen the ways of work.  Every hour, he blessed her in his heart—­again and again; and every hour, the anguish deepened.

But work had a different look.  Darkness covered his dreams of service.  He was torn down; some great vitality was disintegrating.  His projects would be carried out; he would continue to give, and continue to produce the things to give—­but the heart, the love of giving, the spirit of outpouring to men—­these were gone from him.  There was a certain emptiness in following the old laws of his fuller nature.  To give and serve now, was like obeying the commands of the dead.  He had never turned to the past before.  He would have been the first to tell another—­that one who looks to his past for the sanction of some act of the present, has reached the end of growth.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Fate Knocks at the Door from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.