"Why were you afraid?"

"Papa, I knew you and mamma would not be I pleased; that it

would not be what you would wish; and I feared mamma, and

perhaps you, would forbid him at once."

"Does he write to you?"

"I would not let him, papa, without your permission; and I was

afraid I could not get that."

"What did you expect to do then, Daisy, if I was never to be

told?"

"I thought to wait only till the war should be over, papa, -

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when he might see you himself and you might see him. I thought

that would be the best way."

"He did not?"

"No; he insisted on writing."

"He was right. What is the young man's name, Daisy? you have

not told me yet."

"Christian Thorold."

"Thorold," said papa. "It is an English name. Have you heard

nothing from him, Daisy, since you came to Switzerland?"

"Nothing," - I said.

Papa came over again to where I sat on the divan, bent down

and kissed me.

"Am I such a terror to you, Daisy?"

"Oh, no, papa," I said, bursting into tears at last; - "but

mamma - you know if mamma said a word at first, she would

never go back from it."

"I know," he said. "And I choose, for the present, that this

matter should remain a secret between you and me. You need not

tell your mother until I bid you."

"Yes, papa. Thank you."

"And, Daisy," said he stroking my hair fondly, - "the war is

not ended in America yet, and I am afraid we have a long time

to wait for it. Poor child! - But for the present there are no

storms ahead."

I rose up and kissed papa, with a very tender good-night given

and exchanged; and then I went to my room. The Jerusalem

lights were out. But a peace, deep and wide as the blue arch

of the sky, seemed to have spanned my life and my heart.




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