PAINTED WINDOWS


By Elia W. Peattie



         Will you come with me into the chamber of memory         and lift your eyes to the painted windows where the figures         and scenes of childhood appear? Perhaps by looking with         kindly eyes at those from out my past, long wished-for         visions of your own youth will appear to heal the wounds         from which you suffer, and to quiet your stormy and         restless heart.    






Contents

PAINTED WINDOWS

I. NIGHT
II. SOLITUDE
III.    FRIENDSHIP
IV. FAME
V. REMORSE
VI. TRAVEL






PAINTED WINDOWS





I. NIGHT

YOUNG people believe very little that they hear about the compensations of growing old, and of living over again in memory the events of the past. Yet there really are these compensations and pleasures, and although they are not so vivid and breathless as the pleasures of youth, they have something delicate and fine about them that must be experienced to be appreciated.

Few of us would exchange our memories for those of others. They have become a part of our personality, and we could not part with them without losing something of ourselves. Neither would we part with our own particular childhood, which, however difficult it may have been at times, seems to each of us more significant than the childhood of any one else. I can run over in my mind certain incidents of my childhood as if they were chapters in a much-loved book, and when I am wakeful at night, or bored by a long journey, or waiting for some one in the railway-station, I take them out and go over them again.

Nor is my book of memories without its illustrations. I can see little villages, and a great city, and forests and planted fields, and familiar faces; and all have this advantage: they are not fixed and without motion, like the pictures in the ordinary book. People are walking up the streets of the village, the trees are tossing, the tall wheat and corn in the fields salute me. I can smell the odour of the gathered hay, and the faces in my dream-book smile at me.

Of all of these memories I like best the one in the pine forest.

I was at that age when children think of their parents as being all-powerful. I could hardly have imagined any circumstances, however adverse, that my father could not have met with his strength and wisdom and skill. All children have such a period of hero-worship, I suppose, when their father stands out f

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