has been known to turn and run at the sight or smell of
rue,--that cassia and even olive-oil have produced deadly faintings in
certain individuals,--in short, that almost everything has seemed to be
a poison to somebody.
"Bring me that basket, Sophy," said the old Doctor, "if you can find
it."
Sophy brought it to him,--for he had not yet entered Elsie's apartment.
"These purple leaves are from the white ash," he said. "You don't know
the notion that people commonly have about that tree, Sophy?"
"I know they say the Ugly Things never go where the white ash grows,"
Sophy answered. "Oh, Doctor dear, what I'm thinkin' of a'n't true, is
it?"
The Doctor smiled sadly, but did not answer. He went directly to Elsie's
room. Nobody would have known by his manner that he saw any special
change in his patient. He spoke with her as usual, made some slight
alteration in his prescriptions, and left the room with a kind, cheerful
look. He met her father on the stairs.
"Is it as I thought?" said Dudley Veneer.
"There is everything to fear," the Doctor said, "and not much, I am
afraid, to hope. Does not her face recall to you one that you remember,
as never before?"
"Yes," her father answered,--"oh, yes! What is the meaning of this
change which has come over her features, and her voice, her temper, her
whole being? Tell me, oh, tell me, what is it? Can it be that the curse
is passing away, and my daughter is to be restored to me,--such as her
mother would have had her,--such as her mother was?"
"Walk out with me into the garden," the Doctor said, "and I will tell
you all I know and all I think about this great mystery of Elsie's
life."
They walked out together, and the Doctor began: "She has lived a double
being, as it were,--the consequence of the blight which fell upon her
in the dim period before consciousness. You can see what she might have
been but for this. You know that for these eighteen years her whole
existence has taken its character from that influence which we need not
name. But you will remember that few of the lower forms of life last as
human beings do; and thus it might have been hoped and trusted with
some show of reason, as I have always suspected you hoped and trusted,
perhaps more confidently than myself, that the lower nature which had
become engrafted on the higher would die out and leave the real woman's
life she inherited to outlive this accidental principle which had so
poisoned her childh
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