Daisy In The Field - Page 14/231

She stopped her work to look at me.

"I am going Saturday. My guardian has sent for me. It is very

strange, Miss Cardigan; but I must go; and I thought I would

like to know in what part of the city Christian is."

"Will you write to let him know? You will, of course. Write

just as usual, child; the letter will reach him."

"Why should I, Miss Cardigan? what use? He cannot come to see

me."

"Why not?"

"I would not dare. My guardian watches me well; and he would

not like my seeing Mr. Thorold of all people."

"Why not? Ah, child! there is a rose leaf in each of your

cheeks this minute. That tells the story. Then, Daisy, you had

better not go to Washington. Christian will not bear that very

well; and it will be hard for you too. My dear, it will be

hard."

"Yes, ma'am - and hard not to go. I shall go, Miss Cardigan."

"And mayn't I tell him you are there?"

"No, ma'am. If I can, I will let him know somehow."

But a sense of the difficulties, dangers, doubts and

uncertainties, thronging my way, therewith pressed heavily

upon me; and I sat in silence and weariness, while Miss

Cardigan put up her work and ordered tea, and finally went off

to her greenhouse. Presently she came back with a rose in her

hand and held it under my face. It was a full dewy sweet

damask rose, rich and fragrant and lovely as such a rose can

be. I took it and looked at it.

"Do ye mind," my old friend said, "how the flowers spoke to

you and brought you messages, when Daisy was a child yet and

first came to see me?"

"I know - I remember," I said.

"Does that no tell you something?"

"What does it tell me?" I said, scarce able to command my

words, under the power of association, or memory, which was

laying its message on my heart, though it was a flower that

bore the message. Inanimate things do that sometimes - I

think, often, - when the ear of the soul is open to hear them;

and flowers in especial are the Lord's messengers and speak

what He gives them. I knew this one spoke to me.

"Listen, and see," Miss Cardigan said.

I looked, and as I looked, these words came up in my mind "Why are ye fearful, O ye of little faith?"