The Catholic World, Vol. 20, October 1874‐March 1875
Part VI.
They Sang.
I.
The people met me at the rescued gate, On streaming in the immeasurable joy, Warriors with wounds, gray priests, old men sedate, The wife, the child, the maiden, and the boy.
Then followed others—some as from a tomb, Their face a blank, and vacant; blinded some; Some that had whitened in the dungeon’s gloom; Some, from long years of lonely silence, dumb.
Anatomies of children with wild glare, Like beasts new caught; and man‐like spectres pale; And shapes like women, fair, or one time fair (Unhappiest these), that would not lift the veil.
Then saw I what is wrought on man by men: Then saw I woman’s glory and her shame: Then learned I that which freedom is—till then The soldier, not of her, but of her name.
The meaning then of Country, Virtue, Faith, Flashed on me, lightning‐like: I pressed my brow Down on the wayside dust, and vowed till death My life to these. _That_ was my bridal vow.
II.
A dream was mine that not for long Our joy should have its home on earth; That love, by anguish winged, and wrong, Should early seek its place of birth;
That all thy hand hath done and dared Should scantlier serve our country’s need Than some strange suffering ’twixt us shared Her last great harvest’s sanguine seed.
I saw false friends their treaties snap Like osiers in a giant’s hand; Saw sudden flames our cities wrap; Saw, drowned in blood, our Christian land.
I saw from far the nations come To avenge the lives they scorned to save, Till, ransomed by our martyrdom Our country carolled o’er our grave!
III.
Still to protect the lowly in their place, The power unjust to meet, defiant still, Is ours; and ours to subjugate the base In our own hearts to God’s triumphant will.
We, playmates once amid the flowers and rills, Are now two hunters chasing hart and hind, Two shepherds guarding flocks on holy hills, Two eaglets launched along a single wind.
What next? Two souls—a husband and a wife— Bearing one cross o’er heights the Saviour trod;— What last? Two spirits in the life of life Singing God’s love‐song under eyes of God.
IV.
I dreamed a dream when six years old:— Against my mother’s knee one day, Protected by her mantle’s fold, All weary, weak, and wan I lay.
Then seemed it that in caverns drear I roamed forlorn. The weeks went by From month to month, from year to year: At last I laid me down to die.
An angel by me stood, and smiled; He wrapt me round; aloft he bore; He wafted me o’er wood and wild; He laid me at my mother’s door.
How oft in sleep with heart that yearned Have I not seen that face! Ah! me, How slowly, seeing, I discerned That likeness strange it bears to thee!
V.
If some great angel thus bespake, “Near, and thy nearest, he shall be, Yet thou—a dreamer though awake— But thine own thought in him shalt see”;
If some great angel thus bespake, “Near, and his nearest, thou shalt be, Yet still his fancy shall mistake That beauty he but dreams, for thee”;
If, last, some pitying angel spake, “Through life unsevered ye shall be, And fancy’s dreams suffice to slake Your thirst for immortality”;
Then would I cry for love’s great sake, “O Death! since truth but dwells with thee, Come quick, and semblance substance make— In heaven abides Reality.”
VI.
Upon my gladness fell a gloom: Thee saw I—on some far‐off day— My husband, by thy loved one’s tomb: I could not help thee where I lay.
Ah! traitress I, to die the first! Ah! hapless thou, to mourn alone! Sudden that truth upon me burst, Confessed so oft; till then unknown.
There _lives_ Who loves him!—loves and loved Better a million‐fold than I! That Love with countenance unremoved Looked on him from eternity.
That Love, all Wisdom and all Power, Though I were dust, would guard him still, And, faithful at the last dread hour, Stand near him, whispering, “Fear no ill!”
VII.
“Fear not to love; nor deem thy soul too slight To walk in human love’s heroic ways: Great Love shall teach thee how to love aright, Though few the elect of earth who win his praise.
“Fear not, O maid! nor doubt lest wedded life Thy childhood’s heavenward yearnings blot or blur; There needs the vestal heart to make the wife; The best that once it hoped survives in her.
“All love is Sacrifice—a flame that still Illumes, yet cleanses as with fire, the breast: It frees and lifts the holier heart and will; A heap of ashes pale it leaves the rest.”
Thus spake the hermit from his stony chair; Then long time watched her speeding towards her home, As when a dove through sunset’s roseate air Sails to her nest o’er crag and ocean’s foam.
VIII.
“We knew thee from thy childhood, princely maid; We watched thy growing greatness hour by hour: Palm‐like thy Faith uprose: beneath its shade Successive every virtue came to flower.
“Good‐will was thine, like fount that overflows Its marge, and clothes with green the thirsty sod: Good thoughts, like angels, from thy bosom rose, And winged through golden airs their way to God.
“To Goodness, Reverence, Honor, from the first Thy soul was vowed. It was that spiritual troth That fitted maid for wife, and in her nursed The woman’s heart—not years nor outward growth.
“Walk with the holy women praised of old Who served their God and sons heroic bore:—” Thus sang the minstrels, touching harps of gold While maidens wreathed with flowers the bridal door.
IX.
“Holy was love at first, all true, all fair, Virtue’s bright crown, and Honor’s mystic feast, Purer than snows, more sweet than morning air, More rich than roses in the kindling east.
“Then were the hearts of lovers blithe and glad, And steeped in freshness like a dew‐drenched fleece: Then glittered marriage like a cloud sun‐clad Or flood that feeds the vale with boon increase
“Then in its innocence great love was strong— Love that with innocence renews the earth: Then Faith was sovran, Right supreme o’er wrong: Then sacred as the altar was the hearth.
“With hope’s clear anthem then the valleys rang; With songs celestial thrilled the household bowers:—” Thus to the newly wed the minstrels sang As home they paced, while children scattered flowers.
X.
Circling in upper airs we met, Singing God’s praise, and spring‐tide new:— On two glad spirits fell one net Inwoven of sunbeams and of dew.
One song we sang; at first I thought Thy voice the echo of mine own; We looked for nought; we met unsought: We met, ascending toward the Throne.
XI.
Life of my better life! this day with thee I stand on earthly life’s supremest tower; Heavenward across the far infinity With thee I gaze in awe, yet gaze in power.
Love first, then Fame, illumed that bygone night: How little knew I then of God or man! Now breaks the morn eternal, broad and bright; My spirit, franchised, bursts its narrow span.
Sweet, we must suffer! Joys, thou said’st, like these Make way for holy suffering. Let it come. Shall that be suffering named which crowns and frees? The happiest death man dies is martyrdom.
Never were bridal rites more deeply dear Than when of old to bridegroom and to bride That Pagan Empire cried, “False gods revere!”— They turned; they kissed each other; and they died.
XII.
Fair is this land through which we ride To that far keep, our bridal bower: A sacred land of strength and pride, A land of beauty and of power.
A mountain land through virtue bold, High built, and bordering on the sun; A prophet‐trodden land, and old; Our own unvanquished Lebanon!
The hermit’s grot her gorges guard— The patriarch’s tomb. There snowy dome And granite ridges sweet with nard O’er‐gaze and fence the patriot’s home.
No realm of river‐mouth and pelf; No traffic realm of corn and wine; God keeps, and lifts her, to Himself:— His bride she is, as I am thine.
When down that Moslem deluge rolled, The Faith, enthroned ’mid ruins, sat Here, in her Lebanonian hold, Firm as the ark on Ararat.
War still is hers, though loving peace; War—not for empire, but her Lord;— A lion land of slow increase; For trenchant is the Moslem sword.
XIII.
Alas! that sufferer weak and wan Whom, yester‐eve, our journey o’er, Deserted by the caravan, We found upon our gallery floor!
How long she gasped upon my breast! We bathed her brows in wine and myrrh;— How death‐like sank at last to rest While rose the sun! I feared to stir.
All night I heard our bridal bells That chimed so late o’er springing corn: Half changed they seemed to funeral knells— She, too, had had her bridal morn!
Revived she woke. The pang was past: She woke to live, to smile, to breathe: Oh! what a look was that she cast, Awaking, on my nuptial wreath
XIV.
High on the hills the nuptial feast was spread: Descending, choir to choir the maidens sang, “Safe to her home our beauteous bride is led,” While, each to each, the darkening ledges rang.
From vale and plain came up the revellers’ shout: Maidens with maidens danced, and men with men; Till, one by one, the festal fires burned out By lonely waters. There was silence then.
Keen flashed the stars, with breath that came and went, Through mountain chasms:—around, beneath, above, They whispered, glancing through the bridal tent, “We too are lovers: heaven is naught but love!”
Assunta Howard. III. In Extremis.
How slowly and drearily the time drags on, through all the weary length of hours and days, in a household where one has suddenly been stricken down from full life and health to the unconscious delirium of fever—when in hushed silence and with folded hands the watchers surround the sufferer with a loving anxiety; whose agony is in their helplessness to stay for one moment the progress of the disease, which seems possessed of a fiend‐ like consciousness of its own fatal power to destroy; when life and death hang in the balance, and at any moment the scale may turn, and in its turning may gladden loving hearts or break them; and, oh! above and beyond all, when through the clouding of the intellect no ray from the clear light of faith penetrates the soul, and the prostrate body, stretched upon its cross, fails to discern the nearness of that other cross upon this Calvary of suffering, from which flows in perennial streams the fountain of salvation! Oh! if in the ears, heedless of earthly sounds and words, there could be whispered those blessed words from Divine lips, “This day thou shalt be with me,” what heart that loves would not rejoice even in its anguish, and unselfishly exclaim, “Depart, O Christian soul! I will even crush down my poor human love, lest its great longing should turn thy happy soul away from the contemplation of its reward, exceeding great—to be in Paradise, to be with Christ”? But, alas! there were two crucified within reach of those precious, saving drops, and one alone said, “Lord, remember me.”
When the family of Mr. Carlisle first realized that the master of the house had indeed been prostrated by the fever which had proved so fatal in its ravages, they were stunned with surprise and grief. It was just the calamity, of all others the least expected, the heaviest to endure.
Mrs. Grey’s affection for her brother was the deepest sentiment of her superficial nature, and for the time she was bowed down with sorrow; which, however, constantly found vent in words and tears. She would rise from it soon, but not until the emergency had passed. She lived only in the sunshine; she lost herself when the clouds gathered. Assunta was the first to recover her calmness and presence of mind. Necessity made her strong; not so much for the sake of the sick man—that might come by and by—but for his sister, who clung to the young girl as to the last plank from the shipwreck of her bright, happy life. The physician was in constant attendance, and at the first he had proposed sending a nurse. But the faithful Giovanni had pleaded with so much earnestness to be allowed the privilege of attending his master that he was installed in the sick‐ room. And truly no better choice could have been made, for he combined the physical strength of the man with the gentleness of woman, and every service was rendered with the tenderness of that love which Mr. Carlisle had the rare power of inspiring and retaining in dependents. But only Assunta was able to quiet his wandering mind, and control the wild vagaries of delirium. It was a painful duty to strive to still the ringing of those bells, once so full of harmony, now “jangled, out of tune, and harsh.” But, once recognizing where her duty lay, she would have performed it at any cost to herself.
Her good and devoted friend, F. du Pont, came to see her the second day of the illness, and brought sympathy and consolation in his very presence. She had so longed for him that his coming seemed an echo of her earnest wish—his words of comfort an answer to her prayers.
“Father,” she said at length, “you know all—the past and the present circumstances. May I not, in the present necessity, and in spite of the past, forget all but the debt of gratitude I owe, and devote myself to my dear friend and guardian? You know,” she added, as if there were pain in the remembrance, “it was Mr. Carlisle’s care for me that exposed him to the fever. I would nurse him as a sister, if I might.”
“My dear child,” replied the priest, “I do not see how you could do less. From my knowledge of Mrs. Grey, I should consider her entirely unfit for the services of a sick‐room. It seems, therefore, your plain duty to perform this act of charity. I think, my child, that the possible nearness of death will calm all merely human emotion. Give that obedient little heart of yours into God’s keeping, and then go to your duty as in his sight, and I am not afraid. The world will probably look upon what it may consider a breach of propriety with much less leniency than the angels. But human respect, always bad enough as a motive, is never so wholly bad as when it destroys the purity of our intention, and consequently the merit of our charity, at a time when, bending beneath the burden of some heavy trial, we are the more closely surrounded by God’s love and protection. Follow the pillar of the cloud, my child. It is leading you away from the world.”
“Father,” said Assunta, and her voice trembled, while tears filled her eyes, “do you think he will die? Indeed, it is not for my own sake that I plead for his life. He is not prepared to go. Will you not pray for him, father? Oh! how gladly would I give my life as the price of his soul, and trust myself to the mercy of God!”
“And it is to that mercy you must trust him, my poor child. Do you, then, think that his soul is dearer to you than to Him who died to save it? You must have more confidence. But I have not yet told you the condition I must impose upon your position as nurse. It is implicit obedience to the physician, and a faithful use of all the precautions he recommends. While charity does sometimes demand the risk or even the sacrifice of life, we have no right to take the matter into our own hands. I do not apprehend any danger for you, if you will follow the good doctor’s directions. I will try to see him on my way home. Do you promise?”
“Yes, father,” said Assunta, with a faint smile; “you leave me no alternative.”
“But I have not yet put a limit to your obedience. You are excited and worn out this afternoon, and I will give you a prescription. It is a lovely day, almost spring‐like; and you are now, this very moment, to go down into the garden for half an hour—and the time must be measured by your watch, and not by your feelings. Take your rosary with you, and as you walk up and down the orange avenue let no more serious thoughts enter your mind than the sweet companionship of the Blessed Mother may suggest. You will come back stronger, I promise you.”
“You are so kind, father,” said Assunta gratefully. “If you knew what a blessing you bring with you, you would take compassion on me, and come soon again.”
“I shall come very soon, my child; and meanwhile I shall pray for you, and for all, most fervently. But, come, we will walk together as far as the garden.” And summoning the priest who had accompanied him, and who had been looking at the books in the library during this conversation, they were about to descend the stairs, when Mrs. Grey came forward to meet them.
“O F. du Pont!” she exclaimed impetuously, “will you not come and look at my poor brother, and tell me what you think of him? They say priests know so much.” And then she burst into tears.
F. Joseph tried to soothe her with hopeful words, and, when they reached the door of the darkened chamber, she was again calm. The good priest’s face expressed the sympathy he felt as they entered softly, and stood where they would not attract the attention of those restless eyes. Mr. Carlisle was wakeful and watchful, but comparatively quiet. It was pitiful to see with what rapid strides the fever was undermining that manly strength, and hurrying on towards the terrible moment of suspense when life and death confront each other in momentary combat. With an earnest prayer to God, the priest again raised the heavy damask curtain, and softly retired, followed by Mrs. Grey.
“Will he recover?” was her eager question.
“Dear madam,” replied he, “I think there is much room for hope, though I cannot deny that he is a very sick man. For your encouragement, I can tell you that I have seen many patients recover in such cases when it seemed little short of miraculous. It will be many days yet before you must think of giving up good hope. And remember that all your strength will be needed.”
“Oh!” said Mrs. Grey impulsively, “I could not live if it were not for Assunta. She is an angel.”
“Yes, she is a good child,” said the priest kindly; “and she is now going to obey some orders that I have given her, that she may return to you more angelic than ever. Dear madam, you have my deepest sympathy. I wish that I could serve you otherwise than by words.”
The two priests bade Assunta good‐by at the garden gate. F. Joseph’s heart was full of pity for the young girl, whose act of sacrifice in surrendering human happiness for conscience’ sake had been followed by so severe a trial. But, remembering the blessed mission of suffering to a soul like hers, he prayed—not that her chalice might be less bitter, but that strength might be given her to accept it as from the hand of a loving Father.
And so Assunta, putting aside every thought of self, took her place in the sick‐room. She had a double motive in hanging her picture of St. Catherine, from which she was never separated, at the foot of the bed. It was a favorite with Mr. Carlisle, and often in his delirium his eyes would rest upon it, in almost conscious recognition; while to Assunta it was a talisman—a constant reminder of her mother, and of those dying words which now seemed stamped in burning letters on her heart and brain.
Mrs. Grey often visited the room; but she controlled her own agitation so little, and was so unreasonable in the number of her suggestions, that she generally left the patient worse than she found him. Assunta recognized her right to come and go as she pleased, but she could not regret her absence when her presence was almost invariably productive of evil consequences.
The first Sunday, Assunta thought she might venture to assist at Mass at the nearest church; it would be strength to her body as well as her soul. She was not absent from the house an hour, yet she was met on her return by Clara, in a state of great excitement.
“Assunta, we have had a dreadful time,” she said. “Severn woke up just after you left, and literally screamed for help, because, he said, a great black cross had fallen on you, and you would be crushed to death unless some one would assist him to raise it. In his efforts, he was almost out of bed. I reasoned with him, and told him it was all nonsense; that there was no cross, and that you had gone to church. But the more I talked and explained, the worse he got; until I was perfectly disheartened, and came to meet you.” And with the ready tears streaming down her pretty face, she did look the very picture of discouragement.
“Poor Clara,” said Assunta, gently embracing her, “it is hard for you to bear all this, you are so little accustomed to sickness. But you ought not to contradict Mr. Carlisle, for it is all real to him, and opposition only excites him. I can never soothe him except by agreeing with him.”
“But where does he get such strange ideas?” asked the sobbing Clara.
“Where do our dreams come from?” said Assunta. “I think, however, that this fancy can be traced to the night when we visited the Colosseum, and sat for a long time on the steps of the cross in the centre. You know it is a black one,” she added, smiling, to reassure her friend. “And now, Clara, I really think you ought to order the close carriage, and take a drive this morning. It would do you good, and you will not be needed at all for the next two or three hours.”
Mrs. Grey’s face brightened perceptibly. It was the very thing for which she was longing, but she would not propose it herself for fear it would seem heartless. To _seem_, and not to _be_, was her motto.
“But would not people think it very strange,” she asked, “and Severn so sick?”
“I do not believe that people will know or think anything about it,” answered Assunta patiently. “You can take Amalie with you for company, and drive out on the Campagna.” And having lightened one load, she turned towards her guardian’s room.
“Are you not coming to breakfast?” said Mrs. Grey.
“Presently.” And Assunta hastened to the bedside. Giovanni had been entirely unable to control the panic which seemed to have taken possession of Mr. Carlisle. He continued his cries for assistance, and the suffering he evidently endured showed how real the fancy was to him.
“Dear friend,” said the young girl, pushing back the hair from his burning forehead, “look at me. Do you not see that I am safe?”
Mr. Carlisle turned towards her, and, in sudden revulsion of feeling, burst into a wild laugh.
“I knew,” he said, “that, if they would only come and help me, I should succeed. But it was very heavy; it has made me very tired.”
“Yes, you have had hard work, and it was very kind in you to undertake it for me. But now you must rest. It would make me very unhappy if I thought that my safety had caused any injury to you.”
And while she was talking, Assunta had motioned to Giovanni to bring the soothing medicine the doctor had left, and she succeeded in administering it to her patient, almost without his knowledge, so engrossed was he in his present vagary.
“But there was a cross?” he asked.
“Yes,” she answered, in a meaning tone, “a very heavy one; but it did not crush me.”
“Who lifted it?” he asked eagerly.
“A powerful hand raised its weight from my shoulders, and I have the promise of His help always, if I should ever be in trouble again, and only will cry to Him.”
“Well, whoever he is,” said Mr. Carlisle, “he did not hurry much when I called—and now I am so tired. And Clara said there was no cross; that I was mistaken. I am _never_ mistaken,” he answered, in something of his old, proud voice. “She ought to know that.”
Assunta did not answer, but she sat patiently soothing her guardian into quiet at least, if not sleep. Once he looked at her, and said, “My precious child is safe;” but, as she smiled, he laughed aloud, and then shut his eyes again.
An hour she remained beside the bed, and then she crept softly from the room, to take what little breakfast she could find an appetite for, and to assist Mrs. Grey in preparing for her drive.
With such constant demands upon her sympathy and strength, it is not strange that Assunta’s courage sometimes failed. But, when the physician assured her that her guardian’s life was, humanly speaking, in her hands, she determined that no thought or care for herself should interfere with the performance of her duty.
Mrs. Grey’s drive having proved an excellent tonic, she was tempted to repeat it often—always with a protest and with some misgivings of conscience, which were, however, set aside without difficulty.
It was a singular coincidence that Mr. Sinclair should so often be found riding on horseback in the same direction. A few words only would be exchanged—of enquiry for the sufferer, of sympathy for his sister. But somehow, as the days went by, the tone in which the words of sympathy were expressed grew more tender, and conveyed the impression of something held back out of respect and by an effort. The manner, too—which showed so little, and yet seemed to repress so much—began to have the effect of heightening the color in Mrs. Grey’s pretty face, and softening a little the innocent piquancy of her youthful ways. It was no wonder that, loving the brightness and sunshine of life, and regarding with a sort of dread the hush and solemnity which pervade the house of sickness, and which may at any moment become the house of mourning, she should have allowed her anxiety for her brother to diminish a little under the influence of the new thought and feeling which were gaining possession now, in the absence of all other excitement. And yet she loved her brother as much as such hearts can love—as deeply as any love can penetrate in which there is no spirit of sacrifice—love’s foundation and its crown. If the illness had lasted but a day, or at the most two, she could have devoted herself with apparent unselfishness and tender assiduity to the duties of nursing. But, as day after day went on without much perceptible change in Mr. Carlisle, her first emotion subsided into a sort of graceful perplexity at finding herself out of her element. And by the time the second week was drawing towards its close—with the new influence of Mr. Sinclair’s sympathy seconding the demands of her own nature—she began to act like any other sunflower, when it “turns to the god that it loves.” And yet she continued to be very regular in her visits to the sick‐room, and very affectionate to Assunta; but it may be greatly doubted whether she lost many hours’ sleep. Surely it would be most unjust to judge Clara Grey and Assunta Howard by the same standard. Undine, before and after the possession of a human soul, could hardly have been more dissimilar.
It was the fifteenth day of Mr. Carlisle’s illness when Assunta was summoned from his bedside by Mrs. Grey, who desired to see her for a few moments in her own room. As the young girl entered, she found her sitting before a bright wood‐fire; on her lap was an exquisite bouquet fresh from fairy‐land, or—what is almost the same thing—an Italian garden. In her hand she held a card, at which she was looking with a somewhat perturbed expression.
“Assunta, love,” she exclaimed, “I want you to tell me what to do. See these lovely flowers that Mr. Sinclair has just sent me, with this card. Read it.” And as she handed her the dainty card, whose perfume seemed to rival that of the flowers, the color mounted becomingly into her cheeks. There were only these words written:
“I have brought a close carriage, and hope to persuade you to drive a little while this afternoon. I will anxiously await your reply in the garden. Yours, S——.”
“Well?” questioned Clara, a little impatiently, for Assunta’s face was very grave.
“Dear Clara,” she replied, “I have no right to advise you, and I certainly shall not question the propriety of anything you do. I was only thinking whether I had not better tell you that I see a change in your brother this afternoon, and I fear it is for the worse. I am longing for the doctor’s visit.”
“Do you really think he is worse?” exclaimed Clara. “He looks to me just the same. But perhaps I had better not go out. I had a little headache, and thought a drive might do me good. But, poor Severn! of course I ought not to leave him.”
“You must not be influenced by what I say,” said Assunta. “I may be entirely mistaken, and so I should not alarm you. God knows, I hope it may be so!”
“Then you think I might go for an hour or two, just to get a breath of air,” said Mrs. Grey. “Mr. Sinclair will certainly think I have found it necessary to call a papal consistory, if I keep him much longer on the promenade.”
Poor Assunta, worn out with her two weeks of watching and anxiety, looked for a moment with a sort of incredulous wonder at the incarnation of unconscious selfishness before her. For one moment she looked “upon this picture and on that”—the noble, devoted brother, sick unto death; and that man, the acquaintance of a few days, now walking impatiently up and down the orange avenue. The flush of indignation changed her pale cheeks to scarlet, and an almost pharisaical thanksgiving to God that she was not like _some_ women swept across her heart, while a most unwonted sarcasm trembled on her lips. She instantly checked the unworthy feeling and its expression; but she was so unstrung by care and fatigue that she could not so easily control her emotion, and, before the object of unusual indignation had time to wonder at the delay of her reply, she had thrown herself upon the sofa, and was sobbing violently. Mrs. Grey was really alarmed, so much so that she dropped both card and flowers upon the floor, and forgot entirely her waiting cavalier, as she knelt beside the excited girl, and put her arms about her.
“Assunta dear, what is the matter? Are you ill? Oh! what have I done?” she exclaimed.
“My poor guardian—my dear, kind friend, he is dying! May God have mercy on him and on me!” were the words that escaped Assunta’s lips between the sobs.
A shudder passed through Mrs. Grey at this unexpected putting into words of the one thought she had so carefully kept from her mind; and her own tears began to flow. Just at this moment the physician’s step sounded in the hall, and she went hastily to summon him. He took in the whole scene at a glance, and, seating himself at once upon the sofa beside Assunta, he put his hand gently and soothingly upon her head, as a father might have done.
“Poor child!” said he kindly, “I have been expecting this.”
The action expressing sympathy just when she needed it so much caused her tears to flow afresh, but less tumultuously than before. The remains of Mrs. Grey’s lunch were standing on a side‐table, and the good doctor poured out a glass of wine, which Assunta took obediently. Then, making an effort at self‐control, she said:
“Please do not waste a moment on me. Do go to Mr. Carlisle; he seems very