[The Mother’s Recompense, Volume II. by Grace Aguilar]@TWC D-Link book
The Mother’s Recompense, Volume II.

CHAPTER XI
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One lowly grave, beneath a large and spreading yew, was never passed unnoticed.

A plain marble stone denoted that there lay one, who had once been the brightest amid the bright, the brilliant star of a lordly circle.

The name, her age, and two simple verses were there inscribed; but around that humble grave there were sweet flowers flourishing more luxuriantly than in any other part of the churchyard; the climbing honeysuckle twined its odoriferous clusters up the dark trunk of the storm-resisting yew.

Roses of various kinds intermingled with the lowly violet, the snowdrop, lily of the valley, the drooping convolvulus, which, closing its petals for a time, is a fit emblem of that sleep which, closing our eyes on earth, reopens them in heaven, beneath the general warmth of the sun of righteousness.

These flowers were sacred in the eyes of the villagers, and their children were charged not to despoil them; and too deep was their reverence for their minister, and too sacred was that little spot of earth, even to their uncultured eyes, for those commands ever to be disobeyed.


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