[Fated to Be Free by Jean Ingelow]@TWC D-Link book
Fated to Be Free

CHAPTER III
8/14

They'll look grand in their scarves and cloaks at my funeral." It was not ordained, however, that the funeral should take place yet awhile.
The summer flushed into autumn, then the apples and pears dropped and were wasted in the garden, even the red-streak apples, that in all the cider country are so highly prized.

Then snow came and covered all.
Madam Melcombe had been heard to say that she liked her garden best in winter.

She could wish to leave it for good when it was lapped up under a thick fall of snow.

Yet she saw the snow melt again and the leaves break forth, and at last she saw the first pale-green spires shoot up out of the bed of lilies.
But the longest life must end at last, the best little boys will sometimes be disobedient.
It appears strange to put these things together; but if they had anything to do with one another, Peter did not know it.
He knew and felt one day that he had been a naughty boy, very naughty, for in fact he had got down into the garden, but he also knew that he had not found the top he went to look for, and that his grandmother had taken from him what he did find.
This punishment he deserved; he had it and no other.

It came about in this wise.
It was a sweet April day, almost the last of the month.


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