An Englishwoman's Home
By Mrs a Burnett Smith
13 Jun, 2019
My Dear: To-day I opened the cedar wood box-I can see the little wrinkle of your level brows over these cryptic words, can almost hear you ask why something so simple should be chronicled as a wartime event. I expect you to remember just where the bo
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My Dear: To-day I opened the cedar wood box-I can see the little wrinkle of your level brows over these cryptic words, can almost hear you ask why something so simple should be chronicled as a wartime event. I expect you to remember just where the box stood on the little very old table on the left side of my study window. It was often between us when we had those wonderful talks in the summer of 1913. Once I remember I removed it gently out of your reach, as you thumped its precious lid rather hard to emphasize your indignation over the accumulated injustices of life. It is far removed now from the delicate setting you so much approved, the red rose of the window hangings no longer accentuates its quaint outline. It now stands bald and bare on the workman-like writing table in the smoking-room of our Kingdom by the Sea. You never achieved acquaintance with this dear place in your extensive yet inadequate travel year, owing to Georges feverish desire to transport you to the particular bit of Germany he had so long idealized. I am thinking now of his chastened demeanor when he brought you back. Something had gone out of his early dream; that elusive essence which once gone can never be recaptured. Youth is ours only once-we may go on pretending, but there comes no second spring. Less