CHAPTER XI. NATURAL CONSEQUENCES.

2672 Words

CHAPTER XI. NATURAL CONSEQUENCES. It is summer again—“the leafy month of June”—and in the spacious, well-kept grounds of Richard Howland hundreds of roses are blossoming, but none so fair and beautiful to the owner of these grounds as the rose which blossoms within the house—the brighthaired, gentle Alice, who, when the grief-laden clouds of adversity were overshadowing her life, did not dream that she could ever be as happy as she is in her new home. The grass-grown grave in the quiet valley is not neglected, nor he who rests there forgotten, but though her tears fall often on the sod, she cannot wish the blind man back in a world which was so truly dark to him. And Alice has learned to be happy in her luxurious home—happy in the tender love which Miss Elinor ever lavishes upon her, an

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