Daisy In The Field - Page 143/231

The spot where our tents were pitched commands a view, I think

one of the loveliest in the world. Perhaps with me association

has something to do with the feeling. That broad sweep of the

plains of Jericho, bright with their groves of Zizyphus trees;

the lake waters coming in at the south; the great line of the

Moab horizon, and the heights of the western shore; and then

the constant changes which the light makes in revealing all

these; I found it a study of beauty, from the morning till the

night. From the time when the sun rose over the Moab mountains

and brightened our dôm trees and kissed our spring, to the

evening when the shadow of Quarantania stretched over all our

neighbourhood, as it stretched over Jericho of old, and the

distant hills and waters and thickets glowed in colours and

lights of their own.

The next morning after my walk I was up early, and going a

little way from my tent door, I sat down to enjoy it. The

servants were but just stirring; my father and Mr. Dinwiddie

safe within their canvas curtains. It was very nice to be

alone, for I wanted to think. The air was deliciously balmy

and soft; another fair day had risen upon us in that region of

tropical summer; the breath of the air was peace. Or was it

the speech of the past? It is difficult to disentangle things

sometimes. I had troublesome matters to think about, yet

somehow I was not troubled. I did not lay hold of trouble, all

the while I was in Palestine. Mr. Dinwiddie's words had

revealed to me that it might be my duty to tell my father all

that was in my heart. Suspicions of the fact, only, had

crossed my thought before; but "as iron sharpeneth iron, so a

man sharpeneth the countenance of his friend." I saw more

clearly. And the longer I sat there on my stone looking over

to the line of the Jordan and to the hills through which the

armies of Israel had once come down to cross it, the clearer

it grew to my mind, that the difficulty before me was one to

be faced, not evaded. I saw that papa had a right to know my

affairs, and that he would think it became me as a Christian

not to make a mystery of them. I saw I must tell papa about

myself. And yet, it did not appal me, as the idea had often

appalled me. I was hardly afraid. At any rate, there before me

the hosts of the Israelites had passed over dry shod; though

the river was swift and strong; and the appeal of Elisha, -

"Where is the Lord God of Elijah?" - came home to my ear like

a blast of the priests' silver trumpets. I felt two hands on

my shoulders.