His Family by Ernest Poole
page 7 of 366 (01%)
page 7 of 366 (01%)
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a boy, had died. But on they had gone and the years had swept by until he
had reached his forties. Absorbed in his growing business and in his thriving family, it had seemed to Roger still as though he were just starting out. But one day, quite suddenly, the house had become a strange place to him with a strange remote figure in it, his wife. For he had learned that she must die. There had followed terrible weeks. Then Judith had faced their disaster. Little by little she had won back the old intimacy with her husband; and through the slow but inexorable progress of her ailment, again they had come together in long talks and plans for their children. At this same chessboard, in this room, repeatedly she would stop the game and smiling she would look into the future. At one such time she had said to him, "I wonder if it won't be the same with the children as it has been with us. No matter how long each one of them lives, won't their lives feel to them unfinished like ours, only just beginning? I wonder how far they will go. And then their children will grow up and it will be the same with them. Unfinished lives. Oh, dearie, what children all of us are." He had put his arm around her then and had held her very tight. And feeling the violent trembling of her husband's fierce revolt, slowly bending back her head and looking up into his eyes she had continued steadily: "And when you come after me, my dear, oh, how hungry I shall be for all you will tell me. For you will live on in our children's lives." And she had asked him to promise her that. |
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