登陆注册
19625200000065

第65章 XXV ROSES OF JOY(1)

The day before Rebecca started for the South with Miss Maxwell she was in the library with Emma Jane and Huldah, consulting dictionaries and encyclopaedias. As they were leaving they passed the locked cases containing the library of fiction, open to the teachers and townspeople, but forbidden to the students.

They looked longingly through the glass, getting some little comfort from the titles of the volumes, as hungry children imbibe emotional nourishment from the pies and tarts inside a confectioner's window.

Rebecca's eyes fell upon a new book in the corner, and she read the name aloud with delight:

"_The Rose of Joy_. Listen, girls; isn't that lovely?

_The Rose of Joy_. It looks beautiful, and it sounds beautiful. What does it mean, I wonder?"

"I guess everybody has a different rose," said Huldah shrewdly. "I know what mine would be, and I'm not ashamed to own it. I'd like a year in a city, with just as much money as I wanted to spend, horses and splendid clothes and amusements every minute of the day; and I'd like above everything to live with people that wear low necks." (Poor Huldah never took off her dress with-out bewailing the fact that her lot was cast in Riverboro, where her pretty white shoulders could never be seen.)

"That would be fun, for a while anyway," Emma Jane remarked. "But wouldn't that be pleasure more than joy? Oh, I've got an idea!"

"Don't shriek so!" said the startled Huldah.

"I thought it was a mouse."

"I don't have them very often," apologized Emma Jane,--"ideas, I mean; this one shook me like a stroke of lightning. Rebecca, couldn't it be success?"

"That's good," mused Rebecca; "I can see that success would be a joy, but it doesn't seem to me like a rose, somehow. I was wondering if it could be love?"

"I wish we could have a peep at the book! It must be perfectly elergant!" said Emma Jane.

"But now you say it is love, I think that's the best guess yet."

All day long the four words haunted and possessed Rebecca; she said them over to herself continually.

Even the prosaic Emma Jane was affected by them, for in the evening she said, "I don't expect you to believe it, but I have another idea,--that's two in one day; I had it while I was putting cologne on your head. The rose of joy might be helpfulness."

"If it is, then it is always blooming in your dear little heart, you darlingest, kind Emmie, taking such good care of your troublesome Becky!"

"Don't dare to call yourself troublesome! You're --you're--you're my rose of joy, that's what you are!" And the two girls hugged each other affectionately.

In the middle of the night Rebecca touched Emma Jane on the shoulder softly. "Are you very fast asleep, Emmie?" she whispered.

"Not so very," answered Emma Jane drowsily.

"I've thought of something new. If you sang or painted or wrote,--not a little, but beautifully, you know,--wouldn't the doing of it, just as much as you wanted, give you the rose of joy?"

"It might if it was a real talent," answered Emma Jane, "though I don't like it so well as love. If you have another thought, Becky, keep it till morning."

"I did have one more inspiration," said Rebecca when they were dressing next morning, "but I didn't wake you. I wondered if the rose of joy could be sacrifice? But I think sacrifice would be a lily, not a rose; don't you?"

The journey southward, the first glimpse of the ocean, the strange new scenes, the ease and delicious freedom, the intimacy with Miss Maxwell, almost intoxicated Rebecca. In three days she was not only herself again, she was another self, thrilling with delight, anticipation, and realization. She had always had such eager hunger for knowledge, such thirst for love, such passionate longing for the music, the beauty, the poetry of existence! She had always been straining to make the outward world conform to her inward dreams, and now life had grown all at once rich and sweet, wide and full.

She was using all her natural, God-given outlets; and Emily Maxwell marveled daily at the inexhaustible way in which the girl poured out and gathered in the treasures of thought and experience that belonged to her. She was a lifegiver, altering the whole scheme of any picture she made a part of, by contributing new values. Have you never seen the dull blues and greens of a room changed, transfigured by a burst of sunshine? That seemed to Miss Maxwell the effect of Rebecca on the groups of people with whom they now and then mingled; but they were commonly alone, reading to each other and having quiet talks. The prize essay was very much on Rebecca's mind. Secretly she thought she could never be happy unless she won it. She cared nothing for the value of it, and in this case almost nothing for the honor; she wanted to please Mr. Aladdin and justify his belief in her.

"If I ever succeed in choosing a subject, I must ask if you think I can write well on it; and then I suppose I must work in silence and secret, never even reading the essay to you, nor talking about it."

Miss Maxwell and Rebecca were sitting by a little brook on a sunny spring day. They had been in a stretch of wood by the sea since breakfast, going every now and then for a bask on the warm white sand, and returning to their shady solitude when tired of the sun's glare.

"The subject is very important," said Miss Maxwell, "but I do not dare choose for you. Have you decided on anything yet?"

"No," Rebecca answered; "I plan a new essay every night. I've begun one on What is Failure? and another on He and She. That would be a dialogue between a boy and girl just as they were leaving school, and would tell their ideals of life.

Then do you remember you said to me one day, `Follow your Saint'? I'd love to write about that.

I didn't have a single thought in Wareham, and now I have a new one every minute, so I must try and write the essay here; think it out, at any rate, while I am so happy and free and rested. Look at the pebbles in the bottom of the pool, Miss Emily, so round and smooth and shining."

"Yes, but where did they get that beautiful polish, that satin skin, that lovely shape, Rebecca?

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 云动九空

    云动九空

    卧看满天云不动云翻腾舞浪九空不求强权在手,但求无愧于心。四大家族,三大门派,我皆不惧。上天给我废材之身,那我便改变,逆天而上,翱翔九天!
  • 鸿蒙之初

    鸿蒙之初

    前世,傲忆作为那莽莽苍生一员,一世挣扎!今生,在这乱世的洪荒天地之中,逆天而上,腥风血雨,踏碎鸿蒙,问鼎不朽!
  • 三国枭霸

    三国枭霸

    穿越成八岁曹操,奋斗在东汉末年。逃学堂,斗鳄鱼,逛青楼,抢新娘……这是曹操童年?平黄巾,刺董卓,挟天子,争天下……看枭雄崛起!和貂蝉暧昧,让蔡琰倒追……要全初全收??且看曹操:醒掌天下权,醉卧美人膝!喜欢三国、曹操的兄弟可以进群:251490401.
  • 重生之精灵舞者

    重生之精灵舞者

    无尽循环的夏日,寒蝉鸣泣之时。不断轮回的宿命,命运石之门的抉择。春之想念,秋之追忆,夏之繁音,冬之凋零。以黄泉之神乐,舞四季之芳华。为您讲述一名精灵舞者的传奇,为您讲述一个变身萌妹子收11的传奇。声明:本书内一切人名地名均是虚构,如有雷同,纯属巧合(笑)。本书企鹅群⑨群:253093781入群注明本书即可,欢迎大家吐槽~
  • 宿东岩寺晓起

    宿东岩寺晓起

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 龙游苍穹

    龙游苍穹

    少年游龙,身世隐秘;十年隐忍,从未放弃!战雷家,解镇危,出蟠龙,创龙盟,坚毅少年闯天下!探黑石,进圣光,怀苍生,建帝国,痴情少年有傲魂!脚踏九州,声振寰宇;九鼎齐聚,龙游苍穹。邪魔来袭生灵毁,守护之战惊天地!经此一役,幸存万民皆呼己为:龙的传人!
  • 中国十大皇帝

    中国十大皇帝

    本书介绍了中国古代十大名帝的故事,包括秦始皇、刘邦、唐太宗、武则天、赵匡胤、朱元璋、康熙、乾隆等。
  • 腹黑冥少的拒婚夭妻

    腹黑冥少的拒婚夭妻

    雇佣兵头目桃小夭做梦也没有想到,她堂堂一个在国际上被勒令重金悬赏通缉的“桃夭杀手”,竟是闲来无事去古董店买了块玉,在然后这破玉居然引了天雷,最后浑身黑焦堪比非洲难民的桃小妖朝天竖着中指轰然倒地。再次睁开眼,她居然被一群穿着古装的怪人围了一圈,众人都用热切的目光盯着她,周围摆放着各种形状的玉器,桃小夭一拍脑门,是的,桃小夭穿越了,正穿在了人家周岁抓阄的时候。一阵尿意袭来,桃小夭不能说话,着急的四处乱爬,哪个小孩要上厕所,带上她啊!桃小夭突然眸光一闪,一个身穿黑色锦袍的小鬼精致的小脸上微微有些不耐之色。高高的台子上,桃小夭像只发疯的小狮子狗般飞爬而出,在众人的叫喊声中扑向了那个小鬼。
  • 道理:中国道路中国说

    道理:中国道路中国说

    必然的路,谓之道;当然的话,谓之理。走中国道路,说中国理念,有了“道理”。道理是伴随发展而来的。发展必有道理,大国发展有大道理。何谓中国发展大道理?一以贯之,半步风流。
  • 有个圆咕隆咚的家伙叫地球

    有个圆咕隆咚的家伙叫地球

    神秘的百慕大、金字塔,神奇的恐龙世界,千奇百怪的动植物,还有遥远的太空及外星人,以及历史上数不清的传奇人物和故事,对孩子来说,都有着莫大的吸引力。 根据调查研究表明,中、小学生对历史知识、生物知识、未解之谜等特别感兴趣,而探究这方面的知识,有利于孩子增加阅读量,加强知识的储备,更重要的是孩子能主动寻找问题的答案,对小学生思维的训练和潜能开发起着重要的影响。