She had
known Nature then, now she knew men. And knowing them, and having
suffered, and sick at heart as she was, standing by this window in the
dead of night, the cry that shook her softly was not of her new life,
but of the old, primitive, child-like.
'Pasagathe, omarki kethose kolokani vorgantha pestorondikat Oni.'
"A spear hath pierced me, and the smart of the nettle is in my wound.
Maker of the soft night, bind my wounds with sleep, lest I cry out and be
a coward and unworthy."
Again and again, unconsciously, the words passed from her lips
'Vorganthe, pestorondikat Oni.'
At last she let down the blind, came to the bed, and once more gathered
her child in her arms with an infinite hunger. This love was hers--rich,
untrammelled, and so sacred. No matter what came, and she did not know
what would come, she had the child. There was a kind of ecstasy in it,
and she lay and trembled with the feeling, but at last fell into a
troubled sleep.
She waked suddenly to hear footsteps passing her door.
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