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Aftermath

Creator: Allen, James Lane, 1849-1925
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After a while, with her face aside, she said, slowly, "And you have believed that I knew of this--that I permitted it?" "I have believed nothing. I have waited to understand." A few minutes later she said, as if to herself, "Many a person would have been only too glad to believe it, and to blame me." Then folding her hands over one of mine, she said, with tears in her eyes: "Promise me--promise me, Adam, until we are married, and--yes, _after_ we are married--as long as I live, that you will never believe anything of me until you _know_ that it is true!" "I do promise, dear, dear, dearest one-!" I cried, trying to draw her to me, but she would not permit it. "And you?" "I shall never misunderstand," she replied, as with a flash of white inward light. "I know that you can never do anything that will make me think the less of you." Since the sad, sad day on which I caused the death of the Cardinal, I
History of the United States

HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES BY CHARLES A. BEARD AND MARY R. BEARD New York THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
have paid little heed to the birds. The subject has been a sore one. Besides, my whole life is gradually changing under the influence of Georgiana, who draws me farther and farther away from nature, and nearer and nearer to my own kind. When, two years ago, she moved into this part of the State, I dwelt on the outskirts of the town and of humanity. On the side of them lay the sour land of my prose; the country, nature, rolled away on the other as the sweet deep ocean of my poetry. I called my neighbors my manifestations of prose; my doings with the townspeople, prose passages. The manifestations and passages scarce made a scrimp volume. There was Jacob, who lived on his symptoms and died without any; there was and there is Mrs. Walters--may she last to the age of the eagle. In town, a couple of prose items of cheap quality: an old preacher who was willing to save my soul while my strawberries were ripe, and an old doctor who cared to save my body so long as he could eat my pears--with others interested severally in my asparagus, my rhubarb, my lilies, and sweet-peas. Always not forgetting a few inestimably wholesome, cheery, noble souls, who sought me out on the edge of human life rather than succeeded in drawing me over the edge towards the centre. But this Georgiana has been doing--long without my knowing it. I have become less a woodsman, more a civilian. Unless she relents, it may end in my ceasing to be a lover of birds, and running for the Legislature. Seeing me so much on the streets, one of my fellow-townsmen declared the other day that if I would consent to come