Destiny eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 466 pages of information about Destiny.

Destiny eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 466 pages of information about Destiny.

“Perhaps Paul, with the golden pattern of his dreams, may often have mused upon what the outer world could have given him.  Perhaps he thought of himself as swaying audiences with his fingers on the keys and dreamed of lips that parted and eyes that grew misty—­because they listened to the voices he could send pealing to their hearts.  But he stayed here and the audiences that sat spellbound were those little neighborhood audiences, who stood a long way off from a full understanding of his soul’s ethereal web and woof.

“Perhaps Thomas Burton, whose hands were calloused with toil, sometimes permitted himself to think, at the end of his day’s labors, of the ease and comfort which might have come to him, had his son’s great ambition actually drawn him into mighty battles and victories instead of only beckoning him.

“Perhaps the woman, who must have felt that her children were not ordinary children, may have shed a tear at times, because she was denied the triumph of beholding their triumph. But they stayed—­and if their peaceful lives were troubled with misgivings, at least they knew that this was certain and that doubtful—­and that, while they might miss much of achievement, they also missed much of peril, for none can say what a journey means along an untried road.  Who knows what an epic their lives might have spelled—­or what tragedy?  But they stayed.

“And now we are gathered to do homage by the grave of the woman whose quiet life ran its course with theirs—­the woman who bore these children and taught them, at her knee, those lessons which made them benefactors—­and although we stand in the presence of death, it seems to me that we stand, too, in the presence and the glory of that life which is above death—­and we stand on hallowed ground.”

He ended, and about him was the solemnity of simple hearts, stirred and responsive, and over him was the serenity of June, and the warmth of the earth pregnant with fruitfulness.

When it was over, the crowd scattered to their vehicles and the wheels clattered over the metaled roads, but in the burial ground, when all the rest were gone, two figures tarried.

For a moment the minister also stayed after the crowd had left.  He went over to the girl and spoke softly, with a hand laid tenderly on her shoulder.

“My daughter,” he said simply, “you, too, have conquered.  Every woman has something of restless yearning in her eyes at some time.  To a woman with great charm and beauty the world sings a siren song.  I saw this thing in your eyes—­and soul.  I saw it come and go—­and I knew that you had won your fight, and won through to life’s sweetest benison.  You have love.  These lives are ended, but yours is beginning.”  Then he, too, turned away, and only the girl and young man were left.

Mary’s beautiful eyes were bright with tears, and, as she stood there slim and straight, her companion came close and his arm slipped about her.  For a moment she seemed unconscious of his presence, then she turned and her eyes looked steadfastly into his, and as they looked they smiled through their mistiness.

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Project Gutenberg
Destiny from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.