No; she would not steal the love for which her soul thirsted, even

though he whom she robbed should not feel the loss. She had stripped him

of much that would doubtless seem to him of far more worth and

importance; but, when it came to taking, under false pretenses, a thing

so sacred as her father's love, Cornelia drew back, and, spite of her

great need, had the grace to make the sacrifice. Let it not be

underrated: a woman who sees honor, reputation, and happiness slipping

away from her, will struggle hardest of all for the little remaining

scrap of love, and only feel wholly forlorn after that, too, has

vanished away.

At length, about daybreak or a little after, Sophie spoke, low, but very

distinctly: "I'm going to sleep; don't wake me or disturb me;" and almost

immediately sank into a profound slumber--so very profound, indeed, that

it rather bore likeness to a trance. Yet, her pulse still beat

regularly, though faintly, and at long intervals, and her breath went

and came, though with a motion almost imperceptible to the eye.

"Is it a good sign? Will she get well now?" asked Cornelia, as she and

her father stood looking down at her.

"She'll never get well, my dear," said Professor Valeyon, very quietly.

"Her mind and body both have had too great a shock--far too great. More

has happened than we know of yet, I suspect. But we shall hear, we shall

hear. Yes, sleep is good for her: it'll make her comfortable. Her nerves

will be the quieter."

"O papa! papa! is our little Sophie going to die?" faltered Cornelia;

and then she broke down completely. She had not fully grasped the idea

until that moment; but the very tone in which her father spoke had the

declaration of death in it. It was not his usual deep, gruff, forcible

voice, shutting off abruptly at the end of his sentences, and beginning

them as sharply. It had lost body and color, was thin, subdued, and

monotonous. Professor Valeyon had changed from a lusty winter into a

broken, infirm, and marrowless thaw.

He stood and watched her weep for a long while, bending his eyes upon

her from beneath their heavy, impending brows. Heavy and impending they

were still, but the vitality--the sort of warm-hearted fierceness--of

his look was gone--gone! A young and bitter grief, like Cornelia's,

coming at a time of life when the feelings are so tender and their

manifestation of pain so poignant--is terrible enough to see, God knows!

but the dry-eyed anguish of the old, of those who no longer possess the

latent, indefinite, all-powerful encouragement of the future to support

them--who can breathe only the lifeless, cheerless air of the

past--grief with them does not convulse: it saps, and chills, and

crumbles away, without noise or any kind of demonstration. The sight

does not terrify or harrow us, but it makes us sick at heart and tinges

our thoughts with a gloomy stain, which rather sinks out of sight than

is worn away.




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