Christmas Outside of Eden eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 40 pages of information about Christmas Outside of Eden.

Christmas Outside of Eden eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 40 pages of information about Christmas Outside of Eden.

You must remember that by now it was the twenty-fifth of December.  To remember that is most extraordinarily important.  What he saw is so exciting that it deserves another chapter.

VII

He saw the Woman—­but not the Woman as he had left her.  She was no longer sick.  She was completely restored.  As in the old days her hair clothed her like a flame.  Her face parted it into waves as though she were a swimmer.  He could see the pink dimples in her knees where she sat and the marble whiteness of her feet, which flashed like jewels.  She was again the darling who had delighted his heart when she had darted like a sunbeam across the shaven lawns of Eden; but now she was ten times more radiant.

What was it that had changed her?  Her tenderness made a golden mist about her which inspired him with awe.  He had had precisely this sense of sunny quietness when he had walked through those long, still afternoons with God.

She was unaware of him.  Her eyes were deep pools of sapphire.  She was smiling gently and brooding above something which nestled in her arms.  He called to her softly; she paid him no attention.  Far below the ridge, in obedience to his commands, the animals were still shouting.  Was it because of them that she was smiling?  Had the robin flown ahead of him to tell her what had happened?  The robin was perched on her shoulder, fluttering his little wings and singing her his finest song.  He called to the robin; like the Woman, the robin was too occupied to hear him.  No, it wasn’t because of him that she was smiling—­he felt sure.  Then why was it?

He gazed back on the dazzling landscape that spread away below him, hoping to find something there that would tell him.  How transformed it was from the gloomy jungle that had been wont to threaten him!  It was like a nest of down.  From its farthest edge where Eden lay, a beam of glory spanned it with an orange path.  It was this beam that made the golden mist about the Woman.  To his amazement he saw that Eden’s gates were open.  Even while he watched they began to close, slowly and slowly, with the beam ever shortening, till at last they were utterly locked and barred.

The memory of lost happiness overwhelmed him.  He turned again to the Woman.  There she sat in the golden mantle of her hair, enthroned on the snow’s pure whiteness.  Creeping to her humbly, he fell to covering her feet with kisses, so great was his need of her.

“My Woman,” he wept, “they are cold—­so cold.  Never again will I leave thee, not even to find God.”

She bent towards him, lifting his chin in her hand.  “I shall feel the cold no more.  Put thy hand in my breast.  Dost thou feel it?  I have that next my heart which, though I grow old, shall keep me forever warm.”

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Project Gutenberg
Christmas Outside of Eden from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.