the laxness of small misdemeanors, and felt ill at ease before the
terrifying truth that she was a lady.
Beyond this single trait of hers--which, if it please God that he
inherit it, may he keep though he lose everything else--I set nothing
further down for his remembrance, since naught could come of my
writing. By words I could no more give him an idea of what his mother
was than I could point him to a few measures of wheat and bid him
behold a living harvest.
Upon these fields of cool October greenness there risen out of the
earth a low, sturdy weed. Upon the top of this weed small white
blossoms open as still as stars of frost. Upon these blossoms lies a
fragrance so pure and wholesome that the searching sense is never
cloyed, never satisfied. Years after the blossoms are dried and yellow
and the leaves withered and gone, this wholesome fragrance lasts. The
common people, who often put their hopes into their names, call it
life-everlasting. Sometimes they make themselves pillows of it for its
virtue of bringing a quiet sleep.
This plant is blooming out now, and nightly as I wend homeward I pluck
a handful of it, gathering along with its life the tranquil sunshine,
the autumnal notes of the cardinal passing to better lands, and all the
healthful influences of the fields. I shall make me a tribute of it to
Frank and Fearless or The Fortunes of Jasper Kent
FRANK AND FEARLESS
OR
THE FORTUNES OF JASPER KENT
BY
HORATIO ALGER, JR.
AUTHOR OF "BRAVE AND BOLD SERIES," ETC.
THE JOHN C. WINSTON CO.
PHILADELPHIA
CHICAGO TORONTO
Copyright, 1897 by
the memory of her undying sweetness.
If God wills, when I fall asleep for good I shall lay my head beside
hers on the bosom of the Life Everlasting.