Daisy In The Field - Page 188/231

"Remembered? What was it you remembered?" she said very

tenderly; for I believe my eyes had filled again.

"When I remembered what I was heir to."

"And ye didn't have your inheritance all in the future, I

trust?" said my old friend. "There's crumbs to be gotten even

now from that feast; ye didn't go starving, my bairn?"

"I hadn't much to help me, Miss Cardigan, except the Lord's

wonderful world which He has made. That helped me."

"And ye had a crumb of joy now and then?"

"I had more than crumbs sometimes," I said, with a sober

looking back over the years.

"And it is my own living Daisy and not an image of her? You

are not spoiled a bit, my bairn?"

"Maybe I am," I said, smiling at her. "How do I know?"

"There's a look in your eyes which says you are not," she said

with a sort of long breath; "and I know not how you have

escaped it. Child! the forces which have assailed you have

beaten down many a one. It's only to be strong in the Lord, to

be sure; but we are lured away from our strength, sometimes,

and then we fall; and we are lured easily."

"Perhaps not when the battle is so very hard to fight, dear

Miss Cardigan."

"Maybe no," she said. "But had ye never a minister to counsel

ye or to help ye, in those parts?"

"Only when I was in Palestine; nowhere else."

"You must have wanted it sorely."

"Yes, but, Miss Cardigan, I had better teaching all the time.

The mountains and the sun and the sky and the beauty, all

seemed to repeat the Bible to me, all the time. I never saw

the top of Mont Blanc rosy in the sunset, nor the other

mountains, without thinking of those words, 'Be ye perfect,

even as your Father in heaven is perfect;' - and, 'They shall

walk with me in white.' -"

Miss Cardigan wiped away a tear or two.

"But you are looking very sober, my love," she said presently,

examining me.

"I have reason," I said. And I went on to give her in detail

the account of the past year's doings in my family, and of our

present position and prospects. She listened with the greatest

sympathy and the most absorbed attention. The story had taken

a good while; it was growing late, and I rose to go. Not till

then was her nephew alluded to.

"I'm thinking," then said Miss Cardigan slowly, "there's one

person you have not asked after, who would ill like to be left

out of our mouths."

I stood still and hesitated and I felt my face grow warm.

"I have not heard from him, Miss Cardigan, since -"