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n slowly from end to end, his head bent, his hands clasped behind him. Each time he reached the wall between the garden and the courtyard, he found himself confronted by two rose trees, a red and a white, climbing so near together that their branches intertwined, crimson blooms resting their rich petals against the fragrant fairness of their white neighbours. Presently these roses became symbolic to the Bishop--the white, of the fair presence of the Prioress; the red, of the high honour awaiting him in Rome. He was seized by the whimsical idea that, were he to close his eyes, beseech the blessed Saint Joseph to guide his hand, take three steps forward, and pluck the first blossom his fingers touched, he might put an end to this tiresome uncertainty. But he smiled at the childishness of the fancy. It savoured of the old lay-sister, Mary Antony, playing with her peas and confiding in her robin. Moreover the Bishop never did anything with his eyes shut. He would have slept with them open, had not Nature decreed otherwise. Once again he paced the full length of the lawn, his hands clasped behind his back, his eyes looking beyond the river to the distant hills. "Will she come, or shall I go? Shall I depart, or will she return?" As he turned at the parapet, a voice seemed to whisper with insistence: "A white rose for her pure presence in the Cloister. A red rose for Rome." And, as he reached the wall again, the bright eyes of a little maiden peeped at him through the archway. He stood quite still and looked at her. Never had he seen so lovely an elf. A sunbeam had made its home in each lock of her tumbled hair. Her little brown face had the soft bloom of a ripe nectarine; her eyes, the timid glance of a startled fawn. The Bishop smiled. The bright eyes lost their look of fear, and sparkled responsive. The Bishop beckoned. The little maid stole through the archway; then, gaining courage flew over the turf, and stood between the Bishop and the roses. "How camest thou here, my little one?" questioned Symon of Worcester, in his softest tones. "The big gate stood open, sir, and I ran in." "And what is thy name, my little maid?" "Verity," whispered the child, shyly, blushing to speak her own name. "Ah," murmured the Bishop. "Hath Truth indeed come in at my open gate?" Then, smiling into the little face lifted so confidingly to his: "Dost thou want something, Angel-child, that I
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