<h3 class='c001'>CHAPTER XXII</h3></div>
<p class='c015'>One by one thou dost gather the scattered families out of the earthly light into
the heavenly glory, from the distractions and strife and weariness of time to the
peace of eternity. We thank thee for the labours and the joys of these mortal
years. We thank thee for our deep sense of the mysteries that lie beyond our
dust.—<span class='sc'>Rufus Ellis.</span></p>
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<div class='line'>By Thy Rod and Thy Staff comfort us.</div>
<div class='line in28'>—<span class='sc'>Christina Rossetti.</span></div>
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<p class='c010'>Two days later, in response to a note from Pierce
Everett, Anna went to the studio. He wrote that John
Gregory had passed through Fulham and had left the
picture, in which she might still feel some lingering
interest.</p>
<p class='c011'>Anna left Keith and his mother diligently occupied in
their daily task of arranging and copying Keith’s European
letters and journals, interspersing them with careful
and copious notes from Baedeker. From this laborious
undertaking, which absorbed mother and son in mutual
and sympathetic devotion, Anna was self-excluded,
simply because she found the letters of merely passing
interest, but not of marked or lasting value and concern.
Madam Burgess confessed that she could think of no
occupation more graceful or becoming a young wife
than this of putting in permanent form the beautiful
and instructive correspondence of her beloved husband,
and she found a new cause for disapproval in Anna’s
indifference to the work. In her own heart Anna hid
a great protest against the substitution of puerile and
unproductive work like this, for the serious altruistic
<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>endeavour to which she still felt that she and Keith were
both inwardly pledged. But this was an old issue, and
one, indeed, to-day almost forgotten before her passionate
grief concerning Mally, buried yesterday, and the
promise to her which might not be fulfilled. The pitiful
cry of Mally’s baby seemed to sound continually in her
ears.</p>
<p class='c011'>But another, even deeper, consciousness was that of
the condemnation, brief, sharp, conclusive, of herself by
John Gregory. She believed now that his judgment of
her and of the line along which she was developing was
in a measure just—but what then? It had suddenly
become definitely declared in Anna’s thought, with no
further shading or disguise, that a life of worldly ease,
of self and sense-pleasing, of fashionable charity and
conventional religion and of intellectual stagnation, was
the only life which could be lived in harmony with the
spirit of her home. Her soul lay that day in the calm
which often falls upon strong natures when profound
passions and powers are gathering in upheaval just below
the surface. To conform, or to revolt, or to lead the
wretched life of spiritual discord which seeks to avoid
alike conformity and freedom, were the hard alternatives
before Anna, as she thought, that day.</p>
<p class='c011'>Pierce Everett, meeting her at the door of his studio,
was startled by the pallor and sadness of her face, like
that of her earlier years, but forebore to question her.
He had expected to see her in the joyous bloom of his
last view of her; he had looked for her to fulfil his
prophecy.</p>
<p class='c011'>The light tone of badinage and compliment with
which he had involuntarily started to receive her fell
from him now as impossible, seeing her face, and in
<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>almost utter silence he led her across the room and
pointed to the picture of the Girlhood of Mary.</p>
<p class='c011'>After a few moments Anna said simply, without
turning to Everett, her eyes still on the picture:—</p>
<p class='c011'>“Did <em>I</em> once look like that?”</p>
<p class='c011'>“Yes.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“Mr. Gregory said no one could paint this from me
now,” Anna said slowly, as if to herself, not knowing
that tears were falling down her cheeks.</p>
<p class='c011'>“You are older, that is all,” said Everett, gently.</p>
<p class='c011'>“No, that is not all. I have lost something which I
had then.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“We all lose something with our child-soul, Mrs.
Burgess,” cried Everett, earnestly; “but you have gained
more than you have lost. John Gregory was not fair
to you to leave you with a word like that. You were a
child then; now you are a woman. That face in my
picture is not the face of a Madonna, yet. It did not
seek to be, but we do not blame it for that. Should we
blame the Mater Dolorosa that she has no longer the
face of a child?”</p>
<p class='c011'>“Thank you,” Anna said humbly, and held out her
hand, which the young man caught in his and held with
reverence.</p>
<p class='c011'>She left the studio hastily, not daring to say more, a
childless mother of sorrows. The very emptiness of her
grief, since no sweet substitution of motherhood could
be granted her, made it the more intolerable.</p>
<p class='c011'>Instinctively she went from the Everett’s straight
across the city to the unfashionable new quarter and to
the Nicholses’ home. She found Mally’s baby properly
cared for, but coldly, by hired and unloving hands, and
took it into her own arms with yearning motherliness and
<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>cried over it, easing her heart and murmuring the tender
nonsense, the artless art which mothers always know,
but seldom women who have not known motherhood.</p>
<p class='c011'>Mr. Nichols came in and she told him,—leaving the
baby that she might surely control herself,—that on
account of Madam Burgess’s feeble health it had been
found impossible for her to carry out Mally’s wish and
her own. The disappointment of the poor fellow, with
his almost impossible burden and scanty income, was
evident; but he rallied well, and showed a simple dignity
in the matter which made Anna like him even better
than she had before.</p>
<p class='c011'>“I shall watch over the baby, you may depend, and
come as often as I can,” she said in leaving.</p>
<p class='c011'>He thanked her, and she made him promise to send
for her without delay or hesitation if there were illness
among the children or other emergency, and so came
away.</p>
<p class='c011'>The frail little life, unwarmed and unwelcomed by
the love which had been bestowed on the other children,
seemed to feel itself in an alien air, and failed from
week to week. Anna spent every moment she could
with the child, and sought to cherish and shield the tiny,
flickering flame of life, but in vain. The baby lingered
for a month, and then, on a bleak March evening, Anna
was sent for, to speed its spirit back into the unknown
from which it had scarcely emerged. She sat all night
with the child upon her knees, the young father asleep
in the leaden sleep of unutterable weariness on a sofa in
the room adjoining. It is not given to a man to know
the absolute annihilation of the body by love which
makes the endurance of long night watches and the
supreme skill in nursing the prerogative of women.</p>
<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>The nurse came and went at decent intervals with
offers of help and of food, but Anna quietly declined
both. She knew that she was about to partake of the
sacrament of death, and she wished to receive it fasting,
and, if it might be, alone. She knew that she only on
earth loved the little child and longed to keep it, and
she meant that it should die in loving arms, if they had
been denied it for living.</p>
<p class='c011'>In the slow hours which were yet too swift, as she
bent over the small pinched face, brooding tenderly over
the strange perfection of this miniature of humanity, the
delicately pencilled eyebrows, the fine moulding of the
forehead, the exquisite ear with soft fair hair curling
about it, the little, flower-like hands, Anna wondered,
as she never had thought to wonder before, at the
wastefulness of nature. All this exquisite organism
made perfect by months of silent upbuilding, a life of
full strength paid for its faint breath, and then, this too
cut off before the dawn of consciousness!</p>
<p class='c011'>Harder to bear was the thought, which would not
leave her, that if she could have taken the child for her
own its life could have been saved. A photograph of
Mally on the bedroom wall in her wedding-gown
looked down upon her through the yellow gloom of the
night lamp, and the eyes seemed to Anna full of sad
upbraiding.</p>
<p class='c011'>In bitterness of soul she groaned aloud:—</p>
<p class='c011'>“Oh, Mally, Mally, I wanted to keep your baby, but
they would not let me! He is going back to you, dear.
Oh, if I knew that you were glad, that you forgive me!”</p>
<p class='c011'>At the sound of her voice the child on her knees,
which had been asleep or in a stupor, opened its eyes,
and lifted them to hers. They were large blue eyes like
<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>Mally’s, and for a moment their look was fixed upon her
own,—a clear, direct look, and, with a thrill of awe, Anna
felt a <em>conscious</em> look. The instant of that mutual glance
with all of mystery, of joy, and of wonder which it held,
passed; the waxen whiteness of the lids fell again, but,
as it passed, a sense of great peace fell upon Anna’s spirit.
The last look of that newborn soul, pure and undefiled,
had searched her heart, had found her love, had shed the
glory of its passing into her bruised and cabined spirit.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Now go, little child, go to God and be at rest; we
have known each other, and you are mine after all,” she
whispered fondly, her tears falling like spring rains upon
white blossoms.</p>
<p class='c011'>The dawn-light came into the room, dimming the
lamp-light with which it could not blend; a tremor
passed through the tiny frame, the breath fluttered once
or twice upon the lips, and the baby died. Anna had
called the father, and he stood by, watching in heavy
oppression.</p>
<p class='c011'>Quietly, with the great submission of spirit which
death brings, Anna washed and dressed the little body,
putting on the garments of fairylike texture and proportion
which she had seen Mally making with warm, dexterous
fingers, a few weeks before. Then, having prayed,
she left the place and walked home alone through the
silent streets, with the consecration of the hour full upon
her.</p>
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<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>
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