A Daughter of the Land - Page 232/249

She and her mother had agreed that there was "something." Now

Kate tried as never before to understand what, and where, and why,

that "something" was. Many days she would sit for an hour at a

time, thinking, and at last she arrived at fixed convictions that

settled matters forever with her. One day after she had arranged

the fall roses she had grown, and some roadside asters she had

gathered in passing, she sat in deep thought, when a car stopped

on the road. Kate looked up to see Robert coming across the

churchyard with his arms full of greenhouse roses. He carried a

big bunch of deep red for her mother, white for Polly, and a large

sheaf of warm pink for Nancy Ellen. Kate knelt up and taking her

flowers, she moved them lower, and silently helped Robert place

those he had brought. Then she sat where she had been, and looked

at him.

Finally he asked: "Still hunting the 'why,' Kate?"

"'Why' doesn't so much matter," said Kate, "as 'where.' I'm

enough of a fatalist to believe that Mother is here because she

was old and worn out. Polly had a clear case of uric poison,

while I'd stake my life Nancy Ellen was gloating over the picture

she carried when she ran into that loose sand. In each of their

cases I am satisfied as to 'why,' as well as about Father. The

thing that holds me, and fascinates me, and that I have such a

time being sure of, is 'where.'"

Robert glanced upward and asked: "Isn't there room enough up

there, Kate?"

"Too much!" said Kate. "And what IS the soul, and HOW can it

bridge the vortex lying between us and other worlds, that man

never can, because of the lack of air to breathe, and support

him?"

"I don't know," said Robert; "and in spite of the fact that I do

know what a man CANNOT do, I still believe in the immortality of

the soul."

"Oh, yes," said Kate. "If there is any such thing in science as a

self-evident fact, that is one. THAT is provable."

Robert looked at her eager face. "How would you go about proving

it, Kate?" he asked.

"Why, this way," said Kate, leaning to straighten and arrange the

delicate velvet petalled roses with her sure, work-abused fingers.

"Take the history of the world from as near dawn as we have any

record, and trace it from the igloo of the northernmost Esquimo,

around the globe, and down to the ice of the southern pole again,

and in blackest Africa, farthest, wildest Borneo, you will never

discover one single tribe of creatures, upright and belonging to

the race of man, who did not come into the world with four primal

instincts. They all reproduce themselves, they all make something

intended for music, they all express a feeling in their hearts by

the exercise we call dance, they all believe in the after life of

the soul. This belief is as much a PART of any man, ever born in

any location, as his hands and his feet. Whether he believes his

soul enters a cat and works back to man again after long

transmigration, or goes to a Happy Hunting Ground as our Indians,

makes no difference with the fact that he enters this world with

belief in after life of some kind. We see material evidence in

increase that man is not defeated in his desire to reproduce

himself; we have advanced to something better than tom-toms and

pow-wows for music and dance; these desires are fulfilled before

us, now tell me why the very strongest of all, the most deeply

rooted, the belief in after life, should come to nothing. Why

should the others be real, and that a dream?"