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Dick was right however in one thing; Mr. Newton and his bride did not come to Stanley Hall. But the meeting took place nevertheless, and the day came when Dick and Alice and Ernie and Gerty were once more gathered round Aunt Nesta, and as in days of old Aunt Nesta's opinion was their rule, and her advice their law, and no trouble of boy or girl in after years but received her sympathy, her help, and her counsel.

Nesta found her true vocation in her happy home; not loving God less, but loving Him the more for her deep passionate human love. She is an old woman now with plaits of grey hair instead of brown, and Harry Newton is an elderly man with a wrinkle or two here and there on his pleasant face, and round them are big boys and girls, other Alices and Dicks, who are growing up to be their comfort and delight. And as they talk of the past, and of their long waiting, and even sometimes of the poor sailor boy whose love had stood between them, Harry Newton tells of his discovery in Stanley church on

the day of Rosa's marriage, and of his unlooked for meeting with Nesta in the Mill of the Valley. In his pocket book there still lie the withered heartseases, and as he shows them to Nesta, he imprints a kiss on her forehead and adds, 'Je länger, je lieber.'

It is not often the stagnant lazy stream that catches the blue of heaven and mirrors the objects on its banks; the clearest water is that which, rushing down the mountain side has been percolated from rock to rock, filtered by natural processes, and at last, finding its rightful outlet, flows away, a clear crystal stream, with forget-me-nots on its banks and bright pebbles in its bed. And in human life long dark ways are often those that produce the brightest results;— purification is to be wrought out by sore discipline and trial, and they are the happiest and best whose lifestream has been most tossed and broken, and who carry forget-me-nots in their hearts, dyed in the eternal blue of the Heaven above.

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