12 THE HESPERIAN ID !! 1 r' (- "AND STILL THE SUN IS SHINING.' And still the sun is shining. Tho birds are singing. Tho grass grows green and the clouds sail on in an ocean of blue, bat over it all the dark angel of death broods and watches. Is ho always so terrible this angel of death? Does he not sometimes come in as angel of mercy, clothed in fair garments of white, with healing in his wings? Oh, ho is often kind to men; and he watches silently and patiently till life has become too hard to bear and the struggle too great to endure. Then he steals in softly when we do not hear him come, and lays a kind hand on eyes that are tired of earth, and breathes his gentle message, and is gone. And men say "Hush I" and hold their breath. But still tho birds sing, tho grass shows green and tho white clouds sail on in an ocean of blue, and over it all tho angel of death, bearing God's sunshine on his wings, broods and watches tenderly. The church bell in the village has just tolled forty-six. Tho tradesmen and farm ers, and the tall, rough boys who do not work have been standing out iu the street listening. They count the strokes silently. They ask each other who is dead, and none knows. They wonder if it is old Grandma Mason, who has been sick for so long. But no one can toll them. When tho bell stops tolling they say, "forty-six," and lounge back into tho stores to talk it over, and to say, "Well, things must bo so, in this world," and then to drift back again to plain farmers' talk of hogs and cattle, and crops. It was a May day, beautiful, with tho bright, warm sunshine, and tho gentle breeze that seemed to tread tho earth softly. The trees wore all in leaf, and tho long winding curves of the little creek trailed like a green serpent through tho newly plowed corn fields. 'It was a May day, fair and lovely, as only May days can be. And yet sunshine, and singing birds, and soft, seductive breezes do not always speak of life. There is a whisper in them that luros one on to rest, in some fair, bright pluco that weary ones dream of. It was such a day as would have roused all tho old longing for freedom in tho heart of poor Mrs. Gates; it would have made her grow cross and snappish to the boys because there was so much work for hor to do; she would have cried perhaps because she was so tired and sick of tho old struggle only now she was lying all calm and untroubled and at rest in the little darkened sitting room she had swept and dusted with hor own hands early that bright May morning. It camo so suddenly, just as she was get ting dinner for the boys. They found her lying on tho floor by the stovo. "If she had not" worked so hard," the doctor and tho neighbor women said. But now it was of no use. And John Gates sat alono in tho little darkened room, alono with tho Presence thinking. How happy they had boon at first down in tho little old house by the crook. If they had just stayed there and not tried to build tho now house, she might have boon with him yot. And now ho had almost paid tho mortgage and yot sho had worked so hard, maybe ho might havo made it easier for hor. He was going to got those parlor chairs sho wanted when ho sold tho colts but now it was pretty hard on hor, to lose everything comfortable and just got tho work. It was just hard for hor and for him. Ho gazed long on hor white, still face and wondered at its calm and poacefulness. Sho looked as if sho wore happy. It carae to him dimly that death must bo kinder to hor than ho had boon, and ho turned away and whispered, "No, it ain't hard fur hor; she's bettor off." Tho village poople hoard that Janet Gates was dead almost with apathy. Sho was a farmer's wife, they said, and like thorn all sho worked too hard. It was a p(ity, just when the boys noodod hor most, and when they were all settled in their now house on tho hill.