"I? Why, no! Why should I be unhappy?" Her deep eyes were fixed upon

Ruth.

"I--I didn't know," Ruth answered, in confusion.

"I learned long ago," said Miss Ainslie, after a little, "that we may be

happy or not, just as we choose. Happiness is not a circumstance, nor a

set of circumstances; it's only a light, and we may keep it burning if

we will. So many of us are like children, crying for the moon, instead

of playing contentedly with the few toys we have. We're always hoping

for something, and when it does n't come we fret and worry; when

it does, why there's always something else we'd rather have. We

deliberately make nearly all of our unhappiness, with our own

unreasonable discontent, and nothing will ever make us happy, deary,

except the spirit within."

"But, Miss Ainslie," Ruth objected, "do you really think everybody can

be happy?"

"Of course--everybody who wishes to be. Some people are happier when

they're miserable. I don't mean, deary, that it's easy for any of us,

and it's harder for some than for others, all because we never grow

up. We're always children--our playthings are a little different, that's

all."

"'Owning ourselves forever children,' quoted Ruth, "'gathering pebbles

on a boundless shore.'"

"Yes, I was just thinking of that. A little girl breaks her doll, and

though the new one may be much prettier, it never wholly fills the

vacant place, and it's that way with a woman's dream." The sweet voice

sank into a whisper, followed by a lingering sigh.

"Miss Ainslie," said Ruth, after a pause, "did you know my mother?"

"No, I didn't, deary--I'm sorry. I saw her once or twice, but she went

away, soon after we came here."

"Never mind," Ruth said, hurriedly, for Mrs. Thorne's family had never

forgiven her runaway marriage.

"Come into the garden," Miss Ainslie suggested, and Ruth followed

her, willingly, into the cloistered spot where golden lilies tinkled,

thrushes sang, and every leaf breathed peace.

Miss Ainslie gathered a bit of rosemary, crushing it between her white

fingers. "See," she said, "some of us are like that it takes a blow to

find the sweetness in our souls. Some of us need dry, hard places, like

the poppies "--pointing to a mass of brilliant bloom--"and some of us

are always thorny, like the cactus, with only once in a while a rosy

star.

"I've always thought my flowers had souls, dear," she went on; "they

seem like real people to me. I've seen the roses rubbing their cheeks

together as if they loved each other, and the forget-me-nots are little

blue-eyed children, half afraid of the rest.

"Over there, it always seems to me as if the lavender was a little woman

in a green dress, with a lavender bonnet and a white kerchief. She's one

of those strong, sweet, wholesome people, who always rest you, and her

sweetness lingers long after she goes away. I gather all the flowers,

and every leaf, though the flowers are sweetest. I put the leaves away

with my linen and the flowers among my laces. I have some beautiful

lace, deary."




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