Anne of Windy Poplars - L. M. Montgomery [116]
Tomgallon House is certainly very splendid, especially now, when its grounds are all a-leaf and a-flower, but I wouldn’t give my as yet unfound house of dreams for Tomgallon House and grounds with the ghost thrown in.
Not but what a ghost might be a nice aristocratic sort of thing to have around. My only quarrel with Spook’s Lane is that there are no spooks.
I went to my old graveyard yesterday evening for a last prowl. Walked all round it and wondered if Stephen Pringle had closed his eyes at last, and if Herbert Pringle occasionally chuckled to himself in his grave. And I’m saying goodbye tonight to the old Storm King, with the sunset on its brow, and my little winding valley full of dusk.
I’m a wee bit tired after a month of exams and farewells and ‘last things’. For a week after I get back to Green Gables I’m going to be lazy – do absolutely nothing but run free in a green world of summer lovelinesse. I’ll dream by the Dryad’s Bubble in the twilight; I’ll drift on the Lake of Shining Waters in a shallop shaped from a moonbeam – or in Mr Barry’s flat if moonbeam shallops are not in season; I’ll gather starflowers and June bells in the Haunted Wood; I’ll find plots of wild strawberries in Mr Harrison’s hill pasture; I’ll join the dance of fireflies in Lovers’ Lane, and visit Hester Gray’s old, forgotten garden, and sit out on the back doorstep under the stars and listen to the sea calling in its sleep.
And when the Week is ended you will be home – and I won’t want anything else.
15
When the time came the next day for Anne to say goodbye to the folks at Windy Willows Rebecca Dew was not on hand. Instead Aunt Kate gravely handed Anne a letter.
DEAR MISS SHIRLEY,
I am writing this to bid farewell because I cannot trust myself to say it. For three years you have sojourned under our roof. The fortunate possessor of a spirit and a natural taste for the gaieties of youth, you have never surrendered yourself to the vain pleasures of the giddy and fickle crowd. You have conducted yourself on all occasions and to every one, especially the one who pens these lines, with the most refined delicacy. You have always been most considerate of my feelings, and I find a heavy gloom on my spirits at the thought of your departure. But we must not repine at what Providence has ordained. (First Samuel, 29th and 18th)
You will be lamented by all in Summerside who had the privilege of knowing you, and the homage of one faithful though humble heart will ever be yours, and my prayer will ever be for your happiness and welfare in this world and your eternal felicity in that which is to come.
Something whispers to me that you will not be long ‘Miss Shirley’, but that you will ere long be linked together in a union of souls with the choice of your heart, who, I understand from what I have heard, is a very exceptional young man. The writer, possessed of but few personal charms and beginning to feel her age (not but what I’m good for a good few years yet), has never permitted herself to cherish any matrimonial aspirations. But she does not deny herself the pleasure of an interest in the nuptials of her friends, and may I express a fervent wish that your married life will be one of continued and uninterrupted bliss? (Only do not expect too much of any man.)
My esteem