xpressibly by the lovely voice. Hollyhock, holding her hand,
continued:
'Oh, waly, waly up the bank,
And waly, waly doun the brae,
And waly, waly yon burnside,
Where I and my luve were wont to gae!
'Oh, waly, waly, gin luve be bonnie,
A little time while it is new!
And when 'tis auld it waxeth cauld,
And fades awa' like mornin' dew.'
The voice was now so soft, so altogether enticing, that it seemed to
the feverish girl as though angels were in the room. Hollyhock dropped
her notes to a yet lower key:
'Over the mountains
And over the waves,
Under the fountains
And under the graves;
Under floods that are deepest,
Which Neptune obey,
Over rocks that are steepest,
Love will find out the way!'
There was no sound at all in the room. The sick girl was sleeping
gently, peacefully--the unhappy, miserable girl--for _love had found
out the way_.
When the doctor came in the evening, he was amazed at the change for
the better in his young patient. All the fever had left her, and she
lay very calm and quiet. Hollyhock suggested that a little camp-bed
should be put up in the room, in which she might sleep; and as her
power over Leucha was so remarkable, this suggestion was at once
acceded to both by Dr Maguire and Mrs Macintyre. They had been really
anxious about the girl in the morning; but now, owing to Hollyhock's
wonderful management, Leucha slept all night long, the beautiful sleep
of the weary and the happy.
Once in the middle of the night Hollyhock heard her murmur to herself,
'Love will find out the way,' and she stretched out her hand
immediately, and touched that of Leucha, with a sort of divine
compassion which was part of the instinct of this extraordinary child.
During the next few days Leucha was kept in bed and very quiet, and
Hollyhock was excused lessons, being otherwise occupied. But a girl, a
healthy girl, even though suffering from shock, quickly gets over it if
properly managed, and by the middle of the week Leucha was allowed to
go downstairs and sit in the ingle-nook, while the girls who had
hitherto detested her crowded round to congratulate their beloved
Hollyhock's friend.
'Yes, she's all that,' said Hollyhock; 'and now those who want me to
talk with them and make myself agreeable must be friends with my dear
Leuchy, for where I go, there goes Leuchy. Eh, but she's a bonnie
lass, and she was treated cruel, first by our des
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