Great Possessions eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 387 pages of information about Great Possessions.

Great Possessions eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 387 pages of information about Great Possessions.

BOOK I

CHAPTER I

THE AMAZING WILL

The memorial service for Sir David Bright was largely attended.  Perhaps he was fortunate in the moment of his death, for other men, whose military reputations had been as high as his, were to go on with the struggle while the world wondered at their blunders.  It was only the second of those memorial services for prominent men which were to become so terribly usual as the winter wore on.  Great was the sympathy felt for the young widow at the loss of one so brave, so kindly, so popular among all classes.

Lady Rose Bright was quite young and very fair.  She did not put on a widow’s distinctive garments because Sir David had told her that he hated weeds.  But she wore a plain, heavy cloak, and a long veil fell into the folds made by her skirts.  The raiment of a gothic angel, an angel like those in the portico at Rheims, has these same straight, stern lines.  “Black is sometimes as suggestive of white,” was the reflection of one member of the congregation, “as white may be suggestive of mourning.”  Sir Edmund Grosse, who had known Rose from her childhood, felt some new revelation in her movements; there was a fuller development of womanhood in her walk, and there was a reserve, too, as of one consecrated and set apart.  He heaved a deep sigh as she passed near him going down the church, and their eyes met.  She had no shrinking in her bearing; her reserves were too deep for her to avoid an open meeting with other human eyes.  She looked at Sir Edmund for a moment as if giving, rather than demanding, sympathy; and indeed, there was more trouble in his eyes than in hers.

The service had gone perilously near to Roman practices.  It was among the first of those uncontrollable instinctive expressions of faith in prayer for the departed which were a marked note of English feeling during the Boer war.  Questions as to their legality were asked in Parliament, but little heeded, for the heart of the nation, “for her children mourning,” sought comfort in the prayers used by the rest of the Christian world.

Rose’s mother went home with her and they talked, very simply and in sympathy, of the tributes to the soldier’s memory.  Then, when luncheon came and the servants were present, they spoke quietly of the work to be done for soldiers’ wives and of a meeting the mother was to attend that afternoon.  Lady Charlton was the mother one would expect Rose to have—­indeed, such complete grace of courtliness and kindness points to an education.  Afterwards, while they were alone, Lady Charlton, in broken sentences, sketched the future.  She supposed Rose would stay on although the house was too big.  Much good might be done in it.  There could be no doubt as to how money must be spent this winter; and there were the services they both loved in the Church of the Fathers of St. Paul near at hand. 

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Great Possessions from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.