Daisy In The Field - Page 109/231

"Mayn't we be friends, Mr. Marshall?" I said somewhat timidly

at last; for I could not bear the silence.

"I can never be anything else," he said. "You may always

command me. But I have not misunderstood you, Daisy? You meant

to tell me that - some one has been more fortunate than I, and

been beforehand with me ?"

"I did not mean to tell you that," I said in a good deal of

confusion.

"But it is true ?" he said, looking searchingly at me.

"Nobody knows it, Hugh," I said. "Not my mother nor my

father."

The silence fell again and again became painful. The others of

our party were well in advance. - We caught no glimpse of them

yet.

"We will be friends, Mr. Marshall?" - I said anxiously.

"Yes, we will be friends, Daisy; but I cannot be a friend near

you. I cannot see you any longer. I shall be a wreck now, I

suppose. You might have made me - anything !"

"You will make yourself a noble name and place in the world,"

I said, laying my hand on his arm. "The name and the place of

a servant of God. Won't you, Hugh? Then you will come to true

joy, and honour - the joy and honour that God gives. Let me

have the joy of knowing that! I have done so much mischief, -

let me know that the mischief is mended."

"What mischief have you done?" he asked, with his voice

roughened by feeling.

"I did not know what I was leading you - and others - into."

"You led to nothing; except as the breath of a rose leads one

to stretch out one's hand for it," he answered. "The rose has

as much design!"

He turned aside hastily, stooped for a little twig that lay on

the roadside, and began assiduously breaking it up. And the

silence was not interrupted again, till we came in sight of

our friends in advance of us, leisurely walking to let us come

up. Then Hugh and I plunged into conversation; but what it was

about I have not the least remembrance. It lasted though, till

we joined company with the rest of our party, and the talk

became general. Still I do not know what we talked about. I

had a feeling of thunder in the air, though the very stillness

of sunlight beauty was on the smooth water and the hilly

shore; and I saw clouds rising and gathering, even though Mont

Blanc as we returned that evening showed rosy hues to its very

summit in the clear heaven. I can hardly tell how, my mother's

manner or something in it, made me sure both of the clouds and

the thunder. It was full of grace, tact and spirit, to such a

point of admiration. Yet I read in it, yes, and in that very

grace and spirit, a certain state of the nervous powers which

told of excitement at work, or a fund of determination

gathering; the electric forces massing somewhere; and this

luminous play only foretold the lightning.