Susan Lenox, Her Rise and Fall by David Graham Phillips
page 86 of 1239 (06%)
page 86 of 1239 (06%)
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meals a day in that room all those years--was, indeed, actually
the same, for character is not an overnight creation. Yet it was an amazingly different Susan Lenox, too. The first crisis had come; she had been put to the test; and she had not collapsed in weakness but had stood erect in strength. After breakfast she went down Main Street and at Crooked Creek Avenue took the turning for the cemetery. She sought the Warham plot, on the western slope near the quiet brook. There was a clump of cedars at each corner of the plot; near the largest of them were three little graves--the three dead children of George and Fanny. In the shadow of the clump and nearest the brook was a fourth grave apart and, to the girl, now thrillingly mysterious: LORELLA LENOX BORN MAY 9, 1859 DIED JULY 17, 1879 Twenty years old! Susan's tears scalded her eyes. Only a little older than her cousin Ruth was now--Ruth who often seemed to her, and to everybody, younger than herself. "And she was good--I know she was good!" thought Susan. "_He_ was bad, and the people who took his part against her were bad. But _she_ was good!" She started as Sam's voice, gay and light, sounded directly behind her. "What are you doing in a graveyard?" cried he. "How did you find me?" she asked, paling and flushing and paling again. |
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