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After the Storm

Creator: Arthur, T. S. (Timothy Shay), 1809-1885
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said he. "You may be right in that," said Mr. Delancy, after a moment's reflection. "I am sure that I am," was returned. "You think she will recover soon?" said Mr. Delancy, approaching the doctor. "Yes, at any moment. She is breathing deeper, and her heart beats with a fuller impulse." "Let us, retire, then;" and he drew the doctor from the apartment. Pausing at the door, he called to Margaret in a half whisper. She went out also, Emerson alone remaining. Taking his place by the bedside, he waited, in trembling anxiety, for the moment when her eyes should open and recognize him. At last there came a quivering of the eyelids and a motion about the sleeper's lips. Emerson bent over and took one of her hands in his. "Irene!" He called her name in a voice of the tenderest affection. The sound seemed to penetrate to the region of consciousness, for her lips moved with a murmur of inarticulate words. He kissed her,
Celtic Literature

CELTIC LITERATURE INTRODUCTION The following remarks on the study of Celtic Literature formed the substance of four lectures given by me in the chair of poetry at Oxford. They were first published in the Cornhill Magazine, and are now reprinted from thence. Again and again, in the course of them, I have marked the very humble scope intended; which is, not to treat any special branch of scientific Celtic studies (a task for which I am quite incompetent), but to point out the many directions in which the results of those studies offer matter of general interest, and to insist on the benefit we may all derive from knowing the Celt and things Celtic more thoroughly. It was impossible, however, to avoid touching on certain points of ethnology and philology, which can be securely handled only by those who have made these sciences the
and said again-- "Irene!" There was a sudden lighting up of her face. "Irene, love! darling!" The voice of Emerson was burdened with tenderness. "Oh, Hartley!" she exclaimed, opening her eyes and looking with a kind of glad bewilderment into his face. Then, half rising and drawing her arms around his neck, she hid her face on his bosom, murmuring-- "Thank God that it is only a dream!" "Yes, thank God!" replied her husband, as he kissed her in a kind of wild fervor; "and may such dreams never come again." She lay very still for some moments. Thought and memory were beginning to act feebly. The response of her husband had in it something that set her to questioning. But there was one thing that made her feel happy: the sound of his loving voice was in her ears; and all the while she felt his hand moving, with a soft, caressing touch, over her cheek and temple.