(Reading time: 9 - 17 minutes)
The Mountain Girl
The Mountain Girl

beauty without. His bed was placed so that he might face the open space, and that Cassandra could kneel at his right side. His writing-table, draped with a white cloth and covered with green hemlock boughs, formed the altar. It was all very quickly and simply done, and then David lay quiet, with closed eyes, listening to his musicians in the tree-tops, fluting their own [Pg 193]gladness, while Hoke Belew went down below, and the bishop sat out on the rock and meditated.

  

Cassandra came up to the cabin alone and sat with David, while the bishop donned his priestly vestments, and the wedding procession wound slowly up the trail from the Fall Place, decorously and gravely, clad in their best. Azalea and Betty came, side by side, the mother rode Sally's speckled white horse, and little Hoyle ran on ahead; Hoke carried his baby in his arms. Behind them all rode Uncle Jerry Carew, full of the liveliest interest and curiosity.

  

Said David: "This is May-day. I know what they're doing at home now, if the weather will let them. They're having gay times with out-of-door fêtes. The country girls are wearing their prettiest gowns, and the men are wearing sprigs of May in their buttonholes. Where did you get your roses?"

  

"Azalie brought them."

  

"And who put them in your hair?"

  

"Mrs. Towahs did that. Do you like me this way, David?"

  

No comments

Leave your comment

In reply to Some User

Copyright © 2009 - 2024 Chillzee.in. All Rights Reserved.