Angel Agnes | Page 3

Wesley Bradshaw
went by, and on the day we first introduced her she was
twenty-two years old. Her own mother and Mr. Arnold had passed
away and were laid away to sleep in the dust close by the little Agnes
of old. But like the ivy and the flowers which grew over all their graves,
each advancing year made stouter and stronger the invisible ivy that
bound Agnes' heart and Mrs. Arnold's heart together, and the same
advancing year rendered sweeter and sweeter the fragrance of those
unseen yet ever-present buds and blossoms, that created a perpetual
summer in their minds and affections.
"Mother," said Agnes as she entered the library and drew up a chair
close to Mrs. Arnold's, "I wish to ask your advice about the affair
between George and me. Do you think I ought to take any more notice
of him or Sophia?"
"Well, I scarcely can speak to you advisedly, Agnes, on such a matter,"
said Mrs. Arnold. "You are aware that my first and last thoughts are for
your happiness. But, from what I know of the circumstances, I do not
see that you can make any move either one way or another without
sacrificing your feelings unjustly."
"I have kept back nothing from you, mother," replied Agnes; "you
know all, just as well as I do myself."
"Then I think you did perfectly right, Agnes, darling. Your course has
my emphatic approval. I can appreciate perfectly that it must cause you
to feel wretchedly for some time; but the self-satisfaction it must
eventually bring you, will gradually but surely overcome the first
disappointment and regret, just as the ever-shining sun pierces and
dissipates the heaviest storm cloud."
"Well, mother, I will await the turn of events, and whichever way,
whether for weal or for woe, I shall abide it. But should I lose George

through this, I shall never risk a second such mental agony with any
one else."
"Ah," smiled Mrs. Arnold, kissing Agnes, gayly, "young hearts like
yours are not so brittle as to be easily shattered. Better fish in the sea, et
cetera. You know the old adage--but there's the postman, dear; you run
and get the letters he has."
Agnes did as her mother requested her, and in a few moments more
re-entered the room with four letters in one hand, and one letter in the
other. The single missive was directed to herself, in a chirography
which she well knew. Giving the four to her mother, she sat down and
opened her own. It was couched in cold, formal words, instead of
gushing sentences as usual, and to say that it chilled and crushed her is
to say only the truth. When her mother had finished her's, Agnes
handed this letter to her with the quietly spoken remark:
"That severs George and me forever in this world, mother. With a keen
sword he has cut me off from him, like the gardener ruthlessly cuts the
vine from the oak."
As she spoke, Agnes drew from her bosom a gold locket, and,
springing it open, she gazed for a moment upon a handsome manly face
which it contained. That was George's likeness.
"Till eternity George, till eternity--"
She did not finish the sentence in words; but the fond, artless, fervent
kiss she imprinted upon the picture was such a one as is given to the
dead lips of one we love, and are about to part with forever.
She snapped the lid shut again, replaced the closed trinket in her bosom,
and said:
"Mother, all is over. I shall never open it again. But in case I die before
you, I wish you to have this buried with me."
Mrs. Arnold tried to rally Agnes about this, her first disappointment of

the heart, and had the satisfaction of presently seeing her quite merry.
Suddenly Agnes, as she glanced over the newspaper, exclaimed:
"Mother, what a dreadful thing that yellow fever is! Did you read this?
Whole families are being swept out of existence, and have no one to
help or nurse them. It's frightful, and yet we boast of our Christianity.
It's a sin and a shame!"
She continued to read the fearful despatches that had first attracted her
attention, while her mother remained silent.
"Mother," she resumed, when she had finished, "I am going down to
Shreveport."
"What do you mean, Agnes?" exclaimed Mrs. Arnold, glancing
anxiously at her daughter.
"I am going down to Shreveport, to help to nurse those poor perishing
people."
"Agnes!"
"Yes, dear mother. I believe it to be my duty to go and do what little I
can toward alleviating the distress of those stricken sufferers."
"Why, Agnes, dear, you would surely perish yourself."
"O no, mother, you forget how I waited on papa and you when
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