<h2><SPAN name="chap40"></SPAN>CHAPTER FORTY<br/> THE VALLEY OF THE SHADOW</h2>
<p>When the first bitterness was over, the family accepted the inevitable, and
tried to bear it cheerfully, helping one another by the increased affection
which comes to bind households tenderly together in times of trouble. They put
away their grief, and each did his or her part toward making that last year a
happy one.</p>
<p>The pleasantest room in the house was set apart for Beth, and in it was
gathered everything that she most loved, flowers, pictures, her piano, the
little worktable, and the beloved pussies. Father’s best books found
their way there, Mother’s easy chair, Jo’s desk, Amy’s finest
sketches, and every day Meg brought her babies on a loving pilgrimage, to make
sunshine for Aunty Beth. John quietly set apart a little sum, that he might
enjoy the pleasure of keeping the invalid supplied with the fruit she loved and
longed for. Old Hannah never wearied of concocting dainty dishes to tempt a
capricious appetite, dropping tears as she worked, and from across the sea came
little gifts and cheerful letters, seeming to bring breaths of warmth and
fragrance from lands that know no winter.</p>
<p>Here, cherished like a household saint in its shrine, sat Beth, tranquil and
busy as ever, for nothing could change the sweet, unselfish nature, and even
while preparing to leave life, she tried to make it happier for those who
should remain behind. The feeble fingers were never idle, and one of her
pleasures was to make little things for the school children daily passing to
and fro, to drop a pair of mittens from her window for a pair of purple hands,
a needlebook for some small mother of many dolls, penwipers for young penmen
toiling through forests of pothooks, scrapbooks for picture-loving eyes, and
all manner of pleasant devices, till the reluctant climbers of the ladder of
learning found their way strewn with flowers, as it were, and came to regard
the gentle giver as a sort of fairy godmother, who sat above there, and
showered down gifts miraculously suited to their tastes and needs. If Beth had
wanted any reward, she found it in the bright little faces always turned up to
her window, with nods and smiles, and the droll little letters which came to
her, full of blots and gratitude.</p>
<p>The first few months were very happy ones, and Beth often used to look round,
and say “How beautiful this is!” as they all sat together in her
sunny room, the babies kicking and crowing on the floor, mother and sisters
working near, and father reading, in his pleasant voice, from the wise old
books which seemed rich in good and comfortable words, as applicable now as
when written centuries ago, a little chapel, where a paternal priest taught his
flock the hard lessons all must learn, trying to show them that hope can
comfort love, and faith make resignation possible. Simple sermons, that went
straight to the souls of those who listened, for the father’s heart was
in the minister’s religion, and the frequent falter in the voice gave a
double eloquence to the words he spoke or read.</p>
<p>It was well for all that this peaceful time was given them as preparation for
the sad hours to come, for by-and-by, Beth said the needle was ‘so
heavy’, and put it down forever. Talking wearied her, faces troubled her,
pain claimed her for its own, and her tranquil spirit was sorrowfully perturbed
by the ills that vexed her feeble flesh. Ah me! Such heavy days, such long,
long nights, such aching hearts and imploring prayers, when those who loved her
best were forced to see the thin hands stretched out to them beseechingly, to
hear the bitter cry, “Help me, help me!” and to feel that there was
no help. A sad eclipse of the serene soul, a sharp struggle of the young life
with death, but both were mercifully brief, and then the natural rebellion
over, the old peace returned more beautiful than ever. With the wreck of her
frail body, Beth’s soul grew strong, and though she said little, those
about her felt that she was ready, saw that the first pilgrim called was
likewise the fittest, and waited with her on the shore, trying to see the
Shining Ones coming to receive her when she crossed the river.</p>
<p>Jo never left her for an hour since Beth had said “I feel stronger when
you are here.” She slept on a couch in the room, waking often to renew
the fire, to feed, lift, or wait upon the patient creature who seldom asked for
anything, and ‘tried not to be a trouble’. All day she haunted the
room, jealous of any other nurse, and prouder of being chosen then than of any
honor her life ever brought her. Precious and helpful hours to Jo, for now her
heart received the teaching that it needed. Lessons in patience were so sweetly
taught her that she could not fail to learn them, charity for all, the lovely
spirit that can forgive and truly forget unkindness, the loyalty to duty that
makes the hardest easy, and the sincere faith that fears nothing, but trusts
undoubtingly.</p>
<p>Often when she woke Jo found Beth reading in her well-worn little book, heard
her singing softly, to beguile the sleepless night, or saw her lean her face
upon her hands, while slow tears dropped through the transparent fingers, and
Jo would lie watching her with thoughts too deep for tears, feeling that Beth,
in her simple, unselfish way, was trying to wean herself from the dear old
life, and fit herself for the life to come, by sacred words of comfort, quiet
prayers, and the music she loved so well.</p>
<p>Seeing this did more for Jo than the wisest sermons, the saintliest hymns, the
most fervent prayers that any voice could utter. For with eyes made clear by
many tears, and a heart softened by the tenderest sorrow, she recognized the
beauty of her sister’s life—uneventful, unambitious, yet full of
the genuine virtues which ‘smell sweet, and blossom in the dust’,
the self-forgetfulness that makes the humblest on earth remembered soonest in
heaven, the true success which is possible to all.</p>
<p>One night when Beth looked among the books upon her table, to find something to
make her forget the mortal weariness that was almost as hard to bear as pain,
as she turned the leaves of her old favorite, Pilgrims’s Progress, she
found a little paper, scribbled over in Jo’s hand. The name caught her
eye and the blurred look of the lines made her sure that tears had fallen on
it.</p>
<p>“Poor Jo! She’s fast asleep, so I won’t wake her to ask
leave. She shows me all her things, and I don’t think she’ll mind
if I look at this”, thought Beth, with a glance at her sister, who lay on
the rug, with the tongs beside her, ready to wake up the minute the log fell
apart.</p>
<p class="letter">
MY BETH</p>
<p class="letter">
Sitting patient in the shadow<br/>
Till the blessed light shall come,<br/>
A serene and saintly presence<br/>
Sanctifies our troubled home.<br/>
Earthly joys and hopes and sorrows<br/>
Break like ripples on the strand<br/>
Of the deep and solemn river<br/>
Where her willing feet now stand.</p>
<p class="letter">
O my sister, passing from me,<br/>
Out of human care and strife,<br/>
Leave me, as a gift, those virtues<br/>
Which have beautified your life.<br/>
Dear, bequeath me that great patience<br/>
Which has power to sustain<br/>
A cheerful, uncomplaining spirit<br/>
In its prison-house of pain.</p>
<p class="letter">
Give me, for I need it sorely,<br/>
Of that courage, wise and sweet,<br/>
Which has made the path of duty<br/>
Green beneath your willing feet.<br/>
Give me that unselfish nature,<br/>
That with charity divine<br/>
Can pardon wrong for love’s dear sake—<br/>
Meek heart, forgive me mine!</p>
<p class="letter">
Thus our parting daily loseth<br/>
Something of its bitter pain,<br/>
And while learning this hard lesson,<br/>
My great loss becomes my gain.<br/>
For the touch of grief will render<br/>
My wild nature more serene,<br/>
Give to life new aspirations,<br/>
A new trust in the unseen.</p>
<p class="letter">
Henceforth, safe across the river,<br/>
I shall see forever more<br/>
A beloved, household spirit<br/>
Waiting for me on the shore.<br/>
Hope and faith, born of my sorrow,<br/>
Guardian angels shall become,<br/>
And the sister gone before me<br/>
By their hands shall lead me home.</p>
<p>Blurred and blotted, faulty and feeble as the lines were, they brought a look
of inexpressible comfort to Beth’s face, for her one regret had been that
she had done so little, and this seemed to assure her that her life had not
been useless, that her death would not bring the despair she feared. As she sat
with the paper folded between her hands, the charred log fell asunder. Jo
started up, revived the blaze, and crept to the bedside, hoping Beth slept.</p>
<p>“Not asleep, but so happy, dear. See, I found this and read it. I knew
you wouldn’t care. Have I been all that to you, Jo?” she asked,
with wistful, humble earnestness.</p>
<p>“<i>Oh</i>, Beth, so much, so much!” and Jo’s head went down
upon the pillow beside her sister’s.</p>
<p>“Then I don’t feel as if I’d wasted my life. I’m not so
good as you make me, but I have tried to do right. And now, when it’s too
late to begin even to do better, it’s such a comfort to know that someone
loves me so much, and feels as if I’d helped them.”</p>
<p>“More than any one in the world, Beth. I used to think I couldn’t
let you go, but I’m learning to feel that I don’t lose you, that
you’ll be more to me than ever, and death can’t part us, though it
seems to.”</p>
<p>“I know it cannot, and I don’t fear it any longer, for I’m
sure I shall be your Beth still, to love and help you more than ever. You must
take my place, Jo, and be everything to Father and Mother when I’m gone.
They will turn to you, don’t fail them, and if it’s hard to work
alone, remember that I don’t forget you, and that you’ll be happier
in doing that than writing splendid books or seeing all the world, for love is
the only thing that we can carry with us when we go, and it makes the end so
easy.”</p>
<p>“I’ll try, Beth.” and then and there Jo renounced her old
ambition, pledged herself to a new and better one, acknowledging the poverty of
other desires, and feeling the blessed solace of a belief in the immortality of
love.</p>
<p>So the spring days came and went, the sky grew clearer, the earth greener, the
flowers were up fairly early, and the birds came back in time to say goodbye to
Beth, who, like a tired but trustful child, clung to the hands that had led her
all her life, as Father and Mother guided her tenderly through the Valley of
the Shadow, and gave her up to God.</p>
<p>Seldom except in books do the dying utter memorable words, see visions, or
depart with beatified countenances, and those who have sped many parting souls
know that to most the end comes as naturally and simply as sleep. As Beth had
hoped, the ‘tide went out easily’, and in the dark hour before
dawn, on the bosom where she had drawn her first breath, she quietly drew her
last, with no farewell but one loving look, one little sigh.</p>
<p>With tears and prayers and tender hands, Mother and sisters made her ready for
the long sleep that pain would never mar again, seeing with grateful eyes the
beautiful serenity that soon replaced the pathetic patience that had wrung
their hearts so long, and feeling with reverent joy that to their darling death
was a benignant angel, not a phantom full of dread.</p>
<p>When morning came, for the first time in many months the fire was out,
Jo’s place was empty, and the room was very still. But a bird sang
blithely on a budding bough, close by, the snowdrops blossomed freshly at the
window, and the spring sunshine streamed in like a benediction over the placid
face upon the pillow, a face so full of painless peace that those who loved it
best smiled through their tears, and thanked God that Beth was well at last.</p>
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