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    Chapter 10

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    ART THOU AFRAID HIS POWER SHALL FAIL?

    For years I had been trying to prepare myself for my mother's
    death, trying to foresee how she would die, seeing myself when she
    was dead. Even then I knew it was a vain thing I did, but I am
    sure there was no morbidness in it. I hoped I should be with her
    at the end, not as the one she looked at last but as him from whom
    she would turn only to look upon her best-beloved, not my arm but
    my sister's should be round her when she died, not my hand but my
    sister's should close her eyes. I knew that I might reach her too
    late; I saw myself open a door where there was none to greet me,
    and go up the old stair into the old room. But what I did not
    foresee was that which happened. I little thought it could come
    about that I should climb the old stair, and pass the door beyond
    which my mother lay dead, and enter another room first, and go on
    my knees there.

    My mother's favourite paraphrase is one known in our house as
    David's because it was the last he learned to repeat. It was also
    the last thing she read-

    Art thou afraid his power shall fail
    When comes thy evil day?
    And can an all-creating arm
    Grow weary or decay?

    I heard her voice gain strength as she read it, I saw her timid
    face take courage, but when came my evil day, then at the dawning,
    alas for me, I was afraid.

    In those last weeks, though we did not know it, my sister was dying
    on her feet. For many years she had been giving her life, a little
    bit at a time, for another year, another month, latterly for
    another day, of her mother, and now she was worn out. 'I'll never
    leave you, mother.' - 'Fine I know you'll never leave me.' I
    thought that cry so pathetic at the time, but I was not to know its
    full significance until it was only the echo of a cry. Looking at
    these two then it was to me as if my mother had set out for the new
    country, and my sister held her back. But I see with a clearer
    vision now. It is no longer the mother but the daughter who is in
    front, and she cries, 'Mother, you are lingering so long at the
    end, I have ill waiting for you.'

    But she knew no more than we how it was to be; if she seemed weary
    when we met her on the stair, she was still the brightest, the most
    active figure in my mother's room; she never complained, save when
    she had to depart on that walk which separated them for half an
    hour. How reluctantly she put on her bonnet, how we had to press
    her to it, and how often, having gone as far as the door, she came
    back to stand by my mother's side. Sometimes as we watched from
    the window, I could not but laugh, and yet with a pain at my heart,
    to see her hasting doggedly onward, not an eye for right or left,
    nothing in her head but
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