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ou head with the silver locks; I cannot be angry with thee! Slumber on gently, wake up cheerfully--I alone will be the sufferer. OLD M. (dreaming). My son! my son! my son! AMELIA (seizes his hand). Hark!--hark! his son is in his dreams. OLD M. Are you there? Are you really there! Alas! how miserable you seem! Fix not on me that mournful look! I am wretched enough. AMELIA (awakens him abruptly). Look up, dear old man! 'Twas but a dream. Collect yourself! OLD M. (half awake). Was he not there? Did I not press his hands? Cruel Francis! wilt thou tear him even from my dreams? AMELIA (aside). Ha! mark that, Amelia! OLD M. (rousing himself). Where is he? Where? Where am I? You here, Amelia? AMELIA. How do you find yourself? You have had a refreshing slumber. OLD M. I was dreaming about my son. Why did I not dream on? Perhaps I might have obtained forgiveness from his lips. AMELIA. Angels bear no resentment--he forgives you. (Seizes his hand sorrowfully.) Father of my Charles! I, too, forgive you. OLD M. No, no, my child! That death-like paleness of thy cheek is the father's condemnation. Poor girl! I have robbed thee of the happiness of thy youth. Oh, do not curse me! AMELIA (affectionately kissing his hand). I curse you? OLD M. Dost thou know this portrait, my daughter? AMELIA. Charles! OLD M. Such was he in his sixteenth year. But now, alas! how changed. Oh, it is raging within me. That gentleness is now indignation; that smile despair. It was his birthday, was it not, Amelia--in the jessamine bower--when you drew this picture of him? Oh, my daughter! How happy was I in your loves. AMELIA (with her eye still riveted upon the picture). No, no, it is not he! By Heaven, that is not Charles! Here (pointing to her head and her heart), here he is perfect; and how different. The feeble pencil avails not to express that heavenly spirit which reigned in his fiery eye. Away with it! This is a poor image, an ordinary man! I was a mere dauber. OLD M. That kind, that cheering look! Had that been at my bedside, I should have lived in the midst of death. Never, never should I have died! AMELIA. No, you would never, never have died. It would have been but a leap, as we leap from one thought to another and a better. That look would have lighted you across the tomb--that look would have lifted you beyond the stars! OLD M. It is hard! it is sad! I am dying, and my son Charles is not here--I am borne
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