To obtain relief she often went out of London for the day; sometimes

her mother and sister went with her; sometimes she insisted on going

alone. One autumn morning, she found herself at Letherhead, the

longest trip she had undertaken, for there were scarcely any railways

then. She wandered about till she discovered a footpath which took

her to a mill-pond, which spread itself out into a little lake. It

was fed by springs which burst up through the ground. She watched at

one particular point, and saw the water boil up with such force that

it cleared a space of a dozen yards in diameter from every weed, and

formed a transparent pool just tinted with that pale azure which is

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peculiar to the living fountains which break out from the bottom of

the chalk. She was fascinated for a moment by the spectacle, and

reflected upon it, but she passed on. In about three-quarters of an

hour she found herself near a church, larger than an ordinary village

church, and, as she was tired, and the gate of the church porch was

open, she entered and sat down. The sun streamed in upon her, and

some sheep which had strayed into the churchyard from the adjoining

open field came almost close to her, unalarmed, and looked in her

face. The quiet was complete, and the air so still, that a yellow

leaf dropping here and there from the churchyard elms--just beginning

to turn--fell quiveringly in a straight path to the earth. Sick at

heart and despairing, she could not help being touched, and she

thought to herself how strange the world is--so transcendent both in

glory and horror; a world capable of such scenes as those before her,

and a world in which such suffering as hers could be; a world

infinite both ways. The porch gate was open because the organist was

about to practise, and in another instant she was listening to the

Kyrie from Beethoven's Mass in C. She knew it; Frank had tried to

give her some notion of it on the piano, and since she had been in

London she had heard it at St Mary's, Moorfields. She broke down and

wept, but there was something new in her sorrow, and it seemed as if

a certain Pity overshadowed her.

She had barely recovered herself when she saw a woman, apparently

about fifty, coming towards her with a wicker basket on her arm. She

sat down beside Madge, put her basket on the ground, and wiped her

face with her apron.

'Marnin' miss! its rayther hot walkin', isn't it? I've come all the

way from Darkin, and I'm goin' to Great Oakhurst. That's a longish

step there and back again; not that this is the nearest way, but I

don't like climbing them hills, and then when I get to Letherhead I

shall have a lift in a cart.'




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