Chapter-38 The Strength of Love

Chapter 38

LOVE IS LORD OF ALL

by Mrs. ALEX. McVEIGH MILLER

Two years, and the grass was green on Royall Sherwood’s grave.

Many times had a beautiful form, robed in somber black, knelt by that low, green mound; many times had Daisie hung flowers upon the broken marble shaft, and watered them with her gentle tears.

For “pity is akin to love,” and Daisie did not have to pretend a sorrow she did not feel. Her grief was deep and fervent for the hopeful life cut off in its morning.

Once, when Lutie Fleming had come with her to the grave, she had said mournfully:

“Oh, if he had lived I must have learned to love him by and by—he must have won me by the strength of his own love. Now I will always live single for his sake.”

“No, Daisie, do not say that in your grief and remorse, for there was another who was so cruelly wronged in the past that you must soon begin to[Pg 302] think of his claims. You know whom I mean, dear.”

Yes, Daisie knew. Soon after Royall’s death he had sent her one sympathetic line:

God bless you, my sweet little Daisie!

And so noble and gentle was his heart that he did not, for more than a year, intrude on the quiet mourning for the dead by recalling himself to her memory.

Yet Dallas knew that she would not forget.

When a year had passed, Mrs. Fleming showed how much her heart had changed by saying:

“You ought to lighten your mourning now, Daisie. Lord Werter has been very patient and forgiving, but he will be coming soon.”

And within the month came another short letter:

May I come now, Daisie? Or have you changed?

The answer went back:

Be patient a little longer that we may not seem cold or selfish to the world. But I am the same loving Daisie.

Pretty Annette was married long ago, and had made her wedding tour to Europe. When she[Pg 303] returned she had much to tell of the glories of Lord Werter’s ancestral home, and of the month she had spent as his guest.

“Oh, Daisie, how dearly he loves you, and what a happy bride you will be! Almost as happy as I am with Ray!” she added, with a fond glance at her adoring husband.

Ray Dering was a changed man—purged of his worst fault by sorrow and suffering, and humbly grateful to Heaven that had permitted him to atone for the evil he had wrought.

Lutie Fleming, too, was changed for the better.

She had conquered her love for Lord Werter, realizing at last its hopelessness.

And from hating Daisie Bell with the passion of a jealous rival, she had grown to love her as a sister.

“Who could help from loving you, Daisie? You are so noble and good! No one but an angel could have forgiven me my sins,” she cried over and over.

So when Lord Werter crossed the sea to claim his bonny bride, she was unselfishly glad that the long-parted lovers would be happy at last.

All due respect had been paid the memory of[Pg 304] her cousin, who had been dead two years, and Daisie had a right to her happiness. Even Aunt Alice, who was the most censorious of mortals, agreed that it was so, and she and Doctor Burns came from Gull Beach to the grand June wedding that took place from Mrs. Fleming’s home, where Daisie had lived the most of the time since Royall’s death, to please the repentant woman.

Ah, what a meeting they had, those two fond lovers, once so cruelly parted, now united till death by the marriage vow!

Sorrow had only intensified their love and made their trust in each other’s constancy more perfect. With hearts full of joy they clasped hands at God’s holy altar, and sailed away, leaving sorrowing hearts behind them, but sure of a glad welcome awaiting the bonny bride in her new home.

THE END.

The Strength of Love by Mrs. ALEX. McVEIGH MILLER

Status: Ongoing

Author: Mrs. ALEX. McVEIGH MILLER

Native Language: English

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *