he went to the shop, and released at his return; and
grim and repulsively ugly though he was, the only
playmate Edna had ever known; had gamboled around her
cradle, slept with her on the sheepskin, and frolicked
with her through the woods, in many a long search
for Brindle. He alone remained of all the happy
past; and as precious memories crowded mournfully up,
she sat upon the steps of the dreary homestead, with
her arms around his neck, and wept bitterly.
After an hour she left the house, and, followed by
the dog, crossed the woods in the direction of the
neighborhood graveyard. In order to reach it she
was forced to pass by the spring and the green hillock
where Mr. and Mrs. Dent slept side by side, but no
nervous terror seized her now as formerly; the great
present horror swallowed up all others, and, though
she trembled from physical debility, she dragged herself
on till the rude, rough paling of the burying-ground
stood before her. Oh, dreary desolation; thy
name is country graveyard! Here no polished sculptured
stela pointed to the Eternal Rest beyond; no classic
marbles told, in gilded characters, the virtues of
the dead; no flowery-fringed gravel-walks wound from
murmuring waterfalls and rippling fountains to crystal
lakes, where trailing willows threw their flickering
shadows over silver-dusted lilies; no spicy perfume
of purple heliotrope and starry jasmine burdened the
silent air; none of the solemn beauties and soothing
charms of Greenwood or Mount Auburn wooed the mourner
from her weight of woe. Decaying head-boards,
green with the lichen-fingered touch of time, leaned
over neglected mounds, where last year’s weeds
shivered in the sighing breeze, and autumn winds and
winter rains had drifted a brown shroud of shriveled
leaves; while here and there meek-eyed sheep lay sunning
themselves upon the trampled graves, and the slow-measured
sound of a bell dinged now and then as cattle browsed
on the scanty herbage in this most neglected of God’s
Acres. Could Charles Lamb have turned from the
pompous epitaphs and high-flown panegyrics of that
English cemetery, to the rudely-lettered boards which
here briefly told the names and ages of the sleepers
in these narrow beds, he had never asked the question
which now stands as a melancholy epigram on family
favoritism and human frailty. Gold gilds even
the lineaments and haunts of Death, making Pere la
Chaise a favored spot for fetes champetres; while
poverty hangs neither veil nor mask over the grinning
ghoul, and flees, superstition-spurred, from the
hideous precincts.
In one corner of the inclosure, where Edna’s parents slept, she found the new mounds that covered the remains of those who had nurtured and guarded her young life; and on an unpainted board was written in large letters:
“To the memory of Aaron Hunt: an honest blacksmith, and true Christian; aged sixty-eight years and six months.”