Infelice eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 654 pages of information about Infelice.

Infelice eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 654 pages of information about Infelice.

Hannah had spread the alarm, while searching for the doctor, and very soon Mr. Hargrove’s personal friends and some of the members of the congregation thronged the library, into which the body of the minister had been removed.

An hour afterward Dr. Melville, having searched for the girl all over the house, found her crouched on the steps leading down to the flower garden.  She sat with her arm around Hero’s neck, and her head bowed against him.  Seating himself beside her, the physician said: 

“Poor child, this is an awful ordeal for you, and in Dr. Hargrove’s death you have lost a friend whom the whole world cannot replace.  He was the noblest man, the purest Christian, I ever knew, and if the church has a hundred pastors in future, none will ever equal him.  He married me, he baptized my children, and when I buried my wife, his voice brought me the most comfort, the——­”

His tone faltered, and a brief silence ensued.

“Regina, I wish you would tell me as nearly as you can how he seemed to-day, and how it all happened.  I could get nothing satisfactory put of old Hannah.”

She described the occurrences of the morning, his debility and entire lack of appetite, and the long walk in the afternoon, followed by the attack of vertigo and palpitation, to which he alluded after his return.  When she concluded her recital of the last terrible scene in the melancholy drama, Dr. Melville sighed, and said: 

“It has ended just as I feared, and predicted.  His heart has been affected for some time, and not a month ago I urged him to give up his pulpit work for a while at least, and try rest and change of air.  But he answered that he considered his work imperative, and when he died it would be with the harness on.  He would not permit me to allude to the subject in the presence of his family, because he told me he did not wish to alarm his sister, who is so devoted to him, or render the parting with his nephew more painful, by adding apprehensions concerning his health.  I fear his grief at the loss of Douglass has hastened the end.”

“When Mrs. Lindsay comes to-morrow it will kill her,” groaned Regina, whose soul seemed to grow sick, as she thought of the devoted fond sister, and the anguish that awaited her already bruised and aching heart.

“No, sorrow does not kill people, else the race would become extinct.”

“It has killed Mr. Hargrove.”

“Not sorrow, but the disease, which sorrow may have aggravated.”

“Mrs. Lindsay would not go to India with her son, because she said she could not leave her brother whose sight was failing, and who needed her most.  Now she has lost both.  Oh, I wish I could run away to-morrow, somewhere, anywhere, out of sight of her misery!”

“Some one must meet her at the train, and prepare her for the sad news.  My dear child, you would be the best person for that melancholy task.”

“I?  Never!  I would cut off my tongue before it should stab her heart with such awful news!  Are people ever prepared for trouble like this?”

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Infelice from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.