Rilla of Ingleside - Lucy Maud Montgomery (the gingerbread man read aloud .TXT) š
- Author: Lucy Maud Montgomery
- Performer: 1594624275
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āYou and Ingleside seem strangely near me tonight. Itās the first time Iāve felt this since I came. Always home has seemed so far awayāso hopelessly far away from this hideous welter of filth and blood. But tonight it is quite close to meāit seems to me I can almost see youā hear you speak. And I can see the moonlight shining white and still on the old hills of home. It has seemed to me ever since I came here that it was impossible that there could be calm gentle nights and unshattered moonlight anywhere in the world. But tonight somehow, all the beautiful things I have always loved seem to have become possible againāand this is good, and makes me feel a deep, certain, exquisite happiness. It must be autumn at home nowāthe harbour is a-dream and the old Glen hills blue with haze, and Rainbow Valley a haunt of delight with wild asters blowing all over itāour old āfarewell-summers.ā I always liked that name better than āasterāāit was a poem in itself.
āRilla, you know Iāve always had premonitions. You remember the Pied Piperābut no, of course you wouldnātāyou were too young. One evening long ago when Nan and Di and Jem and the Merediths and I were together in Rainbow Valley I had a queer vision or presentimentāwhatever you like to call it. Rilla, I saw the Piper coming down the Valley with a shadowy host behind him. The others thought I was only pretendingābut I saw him for just one moment. And Rilla, last night I saw him again. I was doing sentry-go and I saw him marching across No-manās-land from our trenches to the German trenchesāthe same tall shadowy form, piping weirdlyāand behind him followed boys in khaki. Rilla, I tell you I saw himāit was no fancyāno illusion. I heard his music, and thenāhe was gone. But I had seen himāand I knew what it meantāI knew that I was among those who followed him.
āRilla, the Piper will pipe me āwestā tomorrow. I feel sure of this. And Rilla, Iām not afraid. When you hear the news, remember that. Iāve won my own freedom hereāfreedom from all fear. I shall never be afraid of anything againānot of deathānor of life, if after all, I am to go on living. And life, I think, would be the harder of the two to faceāfor it could never be beautiful for me again. There would always be such horrible things to rememberāthings that would make life ugly and painful always for me. I could never forget them. But whether itās life or death, Iām not afraid, Rilla-my-Rilla, and I am not sorry that I came. Iām satisfied. Iāll never write the poems I once dreamed of writingābut Iāve helped to make Canada safe for the poets of the futureāfor the workers of the futureāay, and the dreamers, tooāfor if no man dreams, there will be nothing for the workers to fulfilāthe future, not of Canada only but of the worldāwhen the āred rainā of Langemarck and Verdun shall have brought forth a golden harvestānot in a year or two, as some foolishly think, but a generation later, when the seed sown now shall have had time to germinate and grow. Yes, Iām glad I came, Rilla. It isnāt only the fate of the little sea-born island I love that is in the balanceānor of Canada nor of England. Itās the fate of mankind. That is what weāre fighting for. And we shall winānever for a moment doubt that, Rilla. For it isnāt only the living who are fighting āthe dead are fighting too. Such an army cannot be defeated.
āIs there laughter in your face yet, Rilla? I hope so. The world will need laughter and courage more than ever in the years that will come next. I donāt want to preachāthis isnāt any time for it. But I just want to say something that may help you over the worst when you hear that Iāve gone āwest.ā Iāve a premonition about you, Rilla, as well as about myself. I think Ken will go back to youāand that there are long years of happiness for you by-and-by. And you will tell your children of the Idea we fought and died forāteach them it must be lived for as well as died for, else the price paid for it will have been given for nought. This will be part of your work, Rilla. And if youāall you girls back in the homelandādo it, then we who donāt come back will know that you have not ābroken faithā with us.
āI meant to write to Una tonight, too, but I wonāt have time now. Read this letter to her and tell her itās really meant for you bothāyou two dear, fine loyal girls. Tomorrow, when we go over the topāIāll think of you bothāof your laughter, Rilla-my-Rilla, and the steadfastness in Unaās blue eyesāsomehow I see those eyes very plainly tonight, too. Yes, youāll both keep faithāIām sure of thatāyou and Una. And soāgoodnight. We go over the top at dawn.ā
Rilla read her letter over many times. There was a new light on her pale young face when she finally stood up, amid the asters Walter had loved, with the sunshine of autumn around her. For the moment at least, she was lifted above pain and loneliness.
āI will keep faith, Walter,ā she said steadily. āI will workāand teach āand learnāand laugh, yes, I will even laughāthrough all my years, because of you and because of what you gave when you followed the call.ā
Rilla meant to keep Walterās letter as a a sacred treasure. But, seeing the look on Una Meredithās face when Una had read it and held it back to her, she thought of something. Could she do it? Oh, no, she could not give up Walterās letterāhis last letter. Surely it was not selfishness to keep it. A copy would be such a soulless thing. But UnaāUna had so littleāand her eyes were the eyes of a woman stricken to the heart, who yet must not cry out or ask for sympathy.
āUna, would you like to have this letterāto keep?ā she asked slowly.
āYesāif you can give it to me,ā Una said dully.
āThenāyou may have it,ā said Rilla hurriedly.
āThank you,ā said Una. It was all she said, but there was something in her voice which repaid Rilla for her bit of sacrifice.
Una took the letter and when Rilla had gone she pressed it against her lonely lips. Una knew that love would never come into her life nowāit was buried for ever under the bloodstained soil āSomewhere in France.ā No one but herselfāand perhaps Rillaāknew itāwould ever know it. She had no right in the eyes of her world to grieve. She must hide and bear her long pain as best she couldāalone. But she, too, would keep faith.
The autumn of 1916 was a bitter season for Ingleside. Mrs. Blytheās return to health was slow, and sorrow and loneliness were in all hearts. Every one tried to hide it from the others and ācarry onā cheerfully. Rilla laughed a good deal. Nobody at Ingleside was deceived by her laughter; it came from her lips only, never from her heart. But outsiders said some people got over trouble very easily, and Irene Howard remarked that she was surprised to find how shallow Rilla Blythe really was. āWhy, after all her pose of being so devoted to Walter, she doesnāt seem to mind his death at all. Nobody has ever seen her shed a tear or heard her mention his name. She has evidently quite forgotten him. Poor fellowāyouād really think his family would feel it more. I spoke of him to Rilla at the last Junior Red meetingāof how fine and brave and splendid he wasāand I said life could never be just the same to me again, now that Walter had goneāwe were such friends, you knowā why I was the very first person he told about having enlistedāand Rilla answered, as coolly and indifferently as if she were speaking of an entire stranger, āHe was just one of many fine and splendid boys who have given everything for their country.ā Well, I wish I could take things as calmlyābut Iām not made like that. Iām so sensitiveāthings hurt me terriblyāI really never get over them. I asked Rilla right out why she didnāt put on mourning for Walter. She said her mother didnāt wish it. But every one is talking about it.ā
āRilla doesnāt wear coloursānothing but white,ā protested Betty Mead.
āWhite becomes her better than anything else,ā said Irene significantly. āAnd we all know black doesnāt suit her complexion at all. But of course Iām not saying that is the reason she doesnāt wear it. Only, itās funny. If my brother had died Iād have gone into deep mourning. I wouldnāt have had the heart for anything else. I confess Iām disappointed in Rilla Blythe.ā
āI am not, then,ā cried Betty Meade, loyally, āI think Rilla is just a wonderful girl. A few years ago I admit I did think she was rather too vain and gigglesome; but now she is nothing of the sort. I donāt think there is a girl in the Glen who is so unselfish and plucky as Rilla, or who has done her bit as thoroughly and patiently. Our Junior Red Cross would have gone on the rocks a dozen times if it hadnāt been for her tact and perseverance and enthusiasmāyou know that perfectly well, Irene.ā
āWhy, I am not running Rilla down,ā said Irene, opening her eyes widely. āIt was only her lack of feeling I was criticizing. I suppose she canāt help it. Of course, sheās a born managerāeveryone knows that. Sheās very fond of managing, tooāand people like that are very necessary I admit. So donāt look at me as if Iād said something perfectly dreadful, Betty, please. Iām quite willing to agree that Rilla Blythe is the embodiment of all the virtues, if that will please you. And no doubt it is a virtue to be quite unmoved by things that would crush most people.ā
Some of Ireneās remarks were reported to Rilla; but they did not hurt her as they would once have done. They didnāt matter, that was all. Life was too big to leave room for pettiness. She had a pact to keep and a work to do; and through the long hard days and weeks of that disastrous autumn she was faithful to her task. The war news was consistently bad, for Germany marched from victory to victory over poor Rumania. āForeignersāforeigners,ā Susan muttered dubiously. āRussians or Rumanians or whatever they may be, they are foreigners and you cannot tie to them. But after Verdun I shall not give up hope. And can you tell me, Mrs. Dr. dear, if the Dobruja is a river or a mountain range, or a condition of the atmosphere?ā
The Presidential election in the United States came off in November, and Susan was red-hot over thatāand quite apologetic for her excitement.
āI never thought I would live to see the day when I would be interested in a Yankee election, Mrs. Dr. dear. It only goes to show we can never know what we will come to in this world, and therefore we should not be proud.ā
Susan stayed up late on the evening of the eleventh, ostensibly to finish a pair of socks. But she āphoned down to Carter Flaggās store at intervals, and when the first report came through that Hughes had been elected she stalked solemnly upstairs to Mrs. Blytheās room
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