"Would your daughter say so?"

"No," I answered; for I was born at Magnolia. "But I think

home is where we have lived, - is it not?"

"Melbourne?" Mr. Dinwiddie suggested.

"No," said I; "it is not Melbourne now, to be sure; but

neither could it be possibly any place in Europe, or Asia."

"Are you sure? Not in any circumstances?"

I cannot tell what, in his tone or look, drove his meaning

home. But I felt the colour rise in my face and I could not

answer.

"It is where the heart is, after all," Mr. Dinwiddie resumed.

"The Syrian sky does not make much difference. My home is

waiting for me."

"But we speak of home here, and properly."

"Properly, for those who have it."

"I think, Mr. Dinwiddie, that we say 'home' sometimes, when we

speak only of where the heart was."

"Better not," he said. "Let us have a living home, not a dead

one. And that we can, always."

"What do you know of places where the heart was?" said papa,

looking at me curiously.

"Not much, papa; but I was thinking; and I think people mean

that sometimes."

"We will both trust she will never come nearer to the

knowledge," said Mr. Dinwiddie, with one of his bright looks

at papa and at me. It was assuming a little more interest in

our affairs than I feared papa would like; but he took it

quietly. More quietly than I could, though my reason for

disquietude was different. Mr. Dinwiddie's words had set

vibrating a chord in my heart which could not just then give a

note of pleasure. I wanted it to lie still. The wide fair

landscape took a look to me instantly, which indeed belonged

to it, of "places where the heart was;" and the echo of broken

hopes came up to my ear from the gray ruins near and far. Yet

the flowers of spring were laughing and shouting under my

feet. Was it hope, or mockery?

"What are you questioning, Miss Daisy ?" said Mr. Dinwiddie,

as he offered me some fruit.

"I seemed to hear two voices in nature, Mr. Dinwiddie; - I

wanted to find out which was the true."

"What were the voices? - and I will tell you."

"One came from the old heap of Ekron yonder, and the ruins of

Ramleh, and Jerusalem, and Gibeon, and Bethel; - the other

voice came from the flowers."

"Trust the flowers."

"Why, more than the ruins?"

"Remember," - said he. "One is God's truth; the other is man's

falsehood."

"But the ruins tell truth too, Mr. Dinwiddie."

"What truth? They tell of man's faithlessness, perversity,

wrongheadedness, disobedience; persisted in, till there was no

remedy. And now, to be sure, they are a desolation. But that

is not what God willed for the land."




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