[Dahcotah by Mary Eastman]@TWC D-Link bookDahcotah CHAPTER IV 6/8
But the voice said, "Remember the Dahcotahs." Vainly did he struggle with the conflict of duty against inclination. The time has come when the parents must weep for themselves.
No longer do the feet of their children tread among the flowers; fever has paralyzed their strength, and vainly does the mother call upon the child, whose eyes wander in delirium, who knows not her voice from a stranger's.
Nor does the Destroyer depart when one has sunk into a sleep from which there is no awakening until the morn of the resurrection.
He claims another, and who shall resist that claim! As the father looks upon the still forms of his children, as he sees the compressed lips, the closed eyes of the beings who were but a few days ago full of life and happiness, the iron enters his soul; but as the Christian remembers who has afflicted him, his spirit rises above his sorrow.
Nor is there now any obstacle between him and the path of duty. The one child that remains must be put in charge of those who will care for her, and he will go where God directs. But will the mother give up the last of her children? it matters not now where she lives, but she must part with husband or child! Self has no part in her schemes; secure in her trust in God she yields up her child to her friend, and listens not to the suggestions of those who would induce her to remain where she would still enjoy the comforts of life. Nothing should separate her from her husband.
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