glowing
head,--"because you are such a treasure to your grandmother."
He paused a moment, but there was no reply.
"And _Perle_--it is a pretty word, _Perle_--it makes you to think of
the r-radiance of the moon, so pure, so soft. Yes," he went on,
hastily, "_Perle_ r-rhymes with _Erle_--that means an alder-tree--and
that r-reminds me of you."
"I must say I fail to see the resemblance," came an injured voice from
behind the chair.
"Not see? Oh, Miss Sydney, surely--with your cleverness! Listen to
this, then; perhaps you like it better that I call you my--I mean
_a_--_Rose_."
"That's because my hair is red."
"It is a white r-rose that always figures in my mind. A beautiful white
r-rose with a heart of gold."
By a dexterous touch upon one wheel he whirled his chair about so that
he saw her downcast face.
"A heart full of goodness to others is it, and of courage, and of
love."
He was leaning eagerly towards her. She lifted her eyes with an effort,
and met his. Then he remembered.
"Yes," he continued, hurriedly, "full of love for the poor and the
desolate."
Sydney rose.
"Your pretty figures do me too much honor," she said, unsteadily, and
went into the house with lingering tread and look.
Friedrich gazed after her.
"God knows I would be counted among the poor and the desolate," he
cried, softly, to himself. "But I must not speak again of this until I
am more worthy to stand before her--if ever that can be!"
XIV
The Fourth of July
That the settle-_ment_ celebrated the Fourth of July was not due to an
exuberance of patriotism, but to the mercantile spirit of Uncle Jimmy's
son, Pete.
Pete was married, and lived in one of the cottages on the Oakwood
estate, where he worked intermittently, sandwiching between thin slices
of manual labor thick layers of less legitimate emprise.
Independence Day, as the anniversary of the birth of our country's
liberty, is not celebrated with enthusiasm in the South. It meets with
more cordial acceptance when regarded as another opportunity for
knocking off work.
Pete's plan catered to all conditions of conscience, from the seared
commodity that asked no excuse for playing to the scrupulous article
that considered justification necessary, and found it in the
infrequency of such amusement.
He advertised far and wide, by placards in the scattered stores and
post-offices that cling near the railway stations and dot the Haywood
Road on the oth
|