The Mettle of the Pasture
from lands and ages, grew simultaneously hushed. He crossed the library to a front window opening upon the narrow rocky street and sat with his elbow on the w
was well shaded; and one forest tree, the roots of which bulged up through the mossy bricks of the pavement, hung its boughs before his windows. Throughout life he had found so many companions in the world outside of mere people, and this tree was one. From the month of leaves to the month of no leaves-the period of long hot vacations-when his eyes were tired and his brain and heart a little tired also, many a time it re
other; part disappeared each year in the buying of books-at once his need and his pas
y little boys and girls have nothing
y, "but some day you will
ll be a thrifty old mendicant. And I'll beg for yo
adonna of the Dishes; but at these times, and in truth for all deeper ways, he thought of her as the Madonna of
hall go out; and then-decrepitude, uselessness, penury, unless something has been hoarded. So, Anna, out of the frail uncertain little baske
ooms of a university, he would have been thought at home and his general status had been assumed: there being that about him which bespoke the scholar, one of those quiet self-effacing minds that have long since passed with entir
any. The appreciative observer said at once: "Here is a man who may not himself be gre
hip, while it may bring out what is best in a man, so often wastes up his strength and burns his ambition to ashes in the fierce fight against odd
wn; and now, when past fifty, he had never won anything more. For him ambition was like the deserted martin box in the corner of his yard: returning summers brought no more birds. Had his abilities been even more extraordinary, th
elf become little; feel interested in trivial minds at street corners, yet remain companion and critic of some of the greatest intellects of human kind; contend with occasional malice and jealousy in the college faculty, yet hold himself above these carrion passions; reta
iates the village and becomes a cosmopolitan recluse-lonely toiler among his books. Few possess the breadth and equipoise which will enable them to pass from day to day along mental paths, whi
had lost his wife and two sons-that furrowed the tendency. During the years immediately following he had tried to fill an immense void of the heart with immense labors of the int
niverse in the only world that she had ever known: she walking ever broad-minded through the narrowness of her little town; remaining white though often threading its soiling ways; and from every life wh
ich left him normal in the middle years; the fresh pursuing scholar still but a man pract
mong our kind, without their coming to choose sooner
s. They had discovered each other by drifting as lonely men do in the world; each being without family ties, each loving literature, eac
are states which we gladly choose to leave unlanguaged. Vast and deep-sounding as is the orchestra of words, there are scores which we never fling upon such instru
of the upward slope of life, and the man is already passing down on the sunset side, with lengthening
after years of absence in an eastern college-it was a tradition of her family that its women should be brilliantly educated
aid to himself, "it should not
corruptible wealth. No doubt also the life-long study of the ideals of classic time came to his g
nd there was that which drew her unfathomably to him-all the more securely since in her mind there
ollege course. Afterward he read much more Greek to her. Then they laid Greek aside, and he too
the perfection that went into marble-made her a portion of legend and story, linking her with Nausicaa and Andromache and the lost others. Then quitting antiquity with her altogether, he passed downward with h
ined, faultlessly proportioned in mental and physical health, full of kindness, full of happiness, made for love, made for mothe
see that she was loved and that her nature was turning away from
er a multitude of the ordinary to reach the rare, stand off for a few years! Let them be happy together in their love, their m
and was driven to the door. Isabel got
d them and looked at her without a word. He could scarcely believe that
iver of the lips she turned her face aside
close to hers when s
andmother were going later
is very u
se she is go
am goin
the s
mmer. I suppose
inst the back of the chair, her eyes directed o
re any
ere is t
tell me w
what it is. I cannot te
anything
you can do. There is n
or some time. He s
you what the
. I believe I wish you did
not R
ge of posture and answered at
it is
e and prolonged; the rustling of the le
going to marr
o marry him. I am nev
But of what use is it to have kept faith with high ideals through trying years if they do not reward us at last with stren
iled, to him. Otherwise it will sadden yo
"a summer? It will sadden a life. If the
so se
serious as anyt
earily and turned her face
"I do not believe I can bear this
ne oftenest-little wonder that they are me
can
u were the only person in the world that I could go to. I did n
lace counsel would be bet
are you suffering bec
e you think he
with her hands, "I have not wronged him! I
er wrong y
before. But this covers e
d any great troub
ble before. At times in my life I ma
ooner or later all of us have trou
s not do any good to think of that!
re is any one to whom we
ot tell
you te
but I could not tell you. No,
ou seen
d, "not Kate!" Then she looked up at him with eyes suddenly kindl
ll heard,
whom she never had a secret. How could I go to her about Rowa
, change of scene will
l help me t
s prayer
rayer does not do any good. It
into the pleasures of the
do not wish f
said at last,
ot forg
you
ld only be a change in me: it would not cha
e necessity of
hout lowering myself? Is it a virtue in a woman
u no longer see what he has done as you see it now. That is the beauty of forgiveness: it enables us be
a shudder: "You do not know what yo
alone solves so much. Wait! Do not act! Think and feel as little
ew off her glove which she was putting
ge nothing. I
e steps to the carriage,
y good-by. It is better for you not to come to th
carriage driven
er father. She had furnished it with a young wife's pride and delight and she had lined it throughout with thoughts of incommunicable tenderness abou
eeing Isabel she sprang up and met her at the door, greet
she exclaimed chidingly. "I had not realized how soon
I have never thought o
here
She has begun to feel sorry for me and has be
o the other's eyes, their arms around
t they had taken. "I will send the carriage home. George cannot be here to lunch
in, "I cannot stay. I had only a few moments and drove by
o much nowadays?" she asked, feeling as though the friendship of a
sabel. "I wish we cou
usic. "It seems so long since I heard any music. What has become of it?
at one piece of music af
ouched the pi
a few chords. Isabel stepped quickly to her side and la
rted face: "No; no
to their seat, on whi
a few moments Isabel
d you se
untry," replied Isabel, with
e never com
hould
Ah," she thought to herself, "she will not confide in me any long
it you ar
upon her work. With laughter they struggled over it; Kate released it and I
grown cold and hard. She stooped wi
"I did not know what I was doing!" and she buried her face on the yo
of motherhood: it could not be healed at once. The friends could not look at each
not tell you what was in my heart. Some day you will
"Isabel, why are you
toward you! I shall ne
ppy to care for
happy for anything. Some
rave loyal woman'" she cried, "the men we loved have ruined both our lives; and we who never had a secret from each other meet and
her work. She folded the soft white fabric over the cushions and then laid he