The Waters of Edera eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 259 pages of information about The Waters of Edera.
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The Waters of Edera eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 259 pages of information about The Waters of Edera.

The scene was fair, peaceful, full of placid and tender loveliness.

“And all this is to be changed and ruined in order that some sons of the mammon of unrighteousness may set up their mills to grind their gold,” he thought to himself as he passed over the stepping-stones, which at this shallow place could be crossed dryfoot.

“Where is Adone?” he called to the child.

“He is gone down the river in the punt, most reverend.”

“And his mother?”

“Is at the house, sir.”

Don Silvero went through the pastures under the great olives.  When he reached the path leading to the house he saw Clelia Alba seated before the doorway spinning.  The rose-tree displayed its first crimson buds above her head; on the roof sparrows and starlings were busy.

Clelia Alba rose and dropped a low courtesy to him, then resumed her work at the wheel.

“You have heard, sir?” she said in a low tone.  “They summons him to San Beda.”

“Old Dario told me; but Adone will not go?”

“No sir; he will never go.”

“He is in error.”

“I do not know sir.  He is best judge of that.”

“I fear he is in no state of mind to judge calmly of anything.  His absence will go against him.  Instead of an amicable settlement the question will go to the tribunals, and if he be unrepresented there he will be condemned in contumacium.”

“Amicable settlement?” repeated his mother, her fine face animated and stern, and her deep dark eyes flashing.  “Can you, sir, dare you, sir, name such a thing?  What they would do is robbery, vile robbery, a thousand times worse than aught the men of night ever did when they came down from the hills to harass our homesteads.”

“I do not say this otherwise; but the law is with those who harass you now.  We cannot alter the times, good Clelia; we must take them as they are.  Your son should go to San Beda and urge his rights, not with violence but with firmness and lucidity; he should also provide himself with an advocate, or he will be driven out of his home by sheer force, and with some miserable sum as compensation.”

Clelia Alba’s brown skin grew ashen grey, and its heavy lines deepened.

“You mean... that is possible?”

“It is more than possible.  It is certain.  These things always end so.  My poor dear friend! do you not understand, even yet, that nothing can save your homestead?”

Clelia Alba leaned her elbows on her knees and bowed her face upon her hands.  She felt as women of her race had felt on some fair morn when they had seen the skies redden with baleful fires, and the glitter of steel corslets shine under the foliage, and had heard the ripe corn crackle under the horses’ hoofs, and had heard the shrieking children scream, “The lances are coming, mother!  Mother! save us!”

Those women had had no power to save homestead or child; they had seen the pikes twist in the curling locks, and the daggers thrust in the white young throats, and the flames soar to heaven, burning rooftree and clearing stackyard, and they had possessed no power to stay the steel or quench the torch.  She was like them.

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The Waters of Edera from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.