The End of the World eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 250 pages of information about The End of the World.

The End of the World eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 250 pages of information about The End of the World.

In fact, Julia need not have hurried so much.  For August Wehle had kept one eye on his horses and the other on the house all that day.  It was the quick look of intelligence between the two at dinner that had aroused the mother’s suspicions.  And Wehle had noticed the work on the garden-bed, the call to the house, and the starting of Julia on the path toward Mrs. Malcolm’s.  His face had grown hot, and his hand had trembled.  For once he had failed to see the stone in his way, until the plow was thrown clean from the furrow.  And when he came to the shade of the butternut-tree by which she must pass, it had seemed to him imperative that the horses should rest.  Besides, the hames-string wanted tightening on the bay, and old Dick’s throat-latch must need a little fixing.  He was not sure that the clevis-pin had not been loosened by the collision with the stone just now.  And so, upon one pretext and another, he managed to delay starting his plow until Julia came by, and then, though his heart had counted all her steps from the door-stone to the tree, then he looked up surprised.  Nothing could be so astonishing to him as to see her there!  For love is needlessly crafty, it has always an instinct of concealment, of indirection about it.  The boy, and especially the girl, who will tell the truth frankly in regard to a love affair is a miracle of veracity.  But there are such, and they are to be reverenced—­with the reverence paid to martyrs.

On her part, Julia Anderson had walked on as though she meant to pass the young plowman by, until he spoke, and then she started, and blushed, and stopped, and nervously broke off the top of a last year’s iron-weed and began to break it into bits while he talked, looking down most of the time, but lifting her eyes to his now and then.  And to the sun-browned but delicate-faced young German it seemed, a vision of Paradise—­every glimpse of that fresh girl’s face in the deep shade of the sun-bonnet.  For girls’ faces can never look so sweet in this generation as they did to the boys who caught sight of them, hidden away, precious things, in the obscurity of a tunnel of pasteboard and calico!

This was not their first love-talk.  Were they engaged?  Yes, and no.  By all the speech their eyes were capable of in school, and of late by words, they were engaged in loving one another, and in telling one another of it.  But they were young, and separated by circumstances, and they had hardly begun to think of marriage yet.  It was enough for the present to love and be loved.  The most delightful stage of a love affair is that in which the present is sufficient and there is no past or future.  And so August hung his elbow around the top of the bay horse’s hames, and talked to Julia.

It is the highest praise of the German heart that it loves flowers and little children; and like a German and like a lover that he was, August began to speak of the anemones and the violets that were already blooming in the corners of the fence.  Girls in love are not apt to say any thing very fresh.  And Julia only said she thought the flowers seemed happy in the sunlight In answer to this speech, which seemed to the lover a bit of inspiration, he quoted from Schiller the lines: 

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The End of the World from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.