It was the same thing over at the new schoolhouse. Mr. Todd and the men

worked miracles with their stone and mortar and wood and iron when he

was standing by or lending a hand. The school was built partly of stone

like the chapel and partly of old purple-pink brick like Mother

Spurlock's Little House, and it was beamed with heavy timbers. It was

roofed with heavy colonial clapboards which made it look as if it had

already stood a century before the floors were laid or the very modern

desks installed. It was built to house increasing generations, though

only about fifty children would open its portals of education.

"It speaks of education de luxe, doesn't it?" Billy asked as Nell and

Harriet and I stood with him and Nickols and the parson watching Mr.

Todd directing the men in screwing down the desks just a few days before

the opening.

"There is scarcely a village in England to compare with old Goodloets

now, and nothing at all like it," said Nickols, as he looked first up

the hill to the Town and down the hill to the Settlement. "I know that

it is the first spot in America to express what the full grown nation is

going to be. When we add beauty to the materially perfected mode of

existence we are enjoying, life will be too short in the living. That

schoolhouse ought to produce some results in art cultures in the infant

mind of Goodloets."

"Yes, America is learning that the foundation of its national existence,

trait upon trait, must be laid in the lives of the children," said Mr.

Goodloe, slowly, and he smiled as across from the Little House came wee

Susan's exquisite treble in a waltz song which was backed up by Mother

Spurlock's bumble and Charlotte's none too accurate accompaniment. And

we all smiled with him.

Always it seemed to me I was with him and a part of a number of people

who felt the radiance of his loveliness, and not once had I for a second

come into personal touch with him. I had, like the rest, got my smiles

and friendliness from the dark eyes under dull gold, but the door to the

land in which I had been with Tristan when he sang his death song had

vanished and there were no traces of its portals. The only sign that was

between him and me was his continued evasion of setting a date for the

dedication of the chapel. He always answered inquiries by saying that

the opening of the school must come first and when the dedication was

mentioned he never looked in my direction. My soul seemed to be standing

still and listening for something that never came.

And then Mr. Jeffries arrived on the scene of action.




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