Kneel down, Grey, and let me put both hands on your
head."
With a feeling of awe Grey knelt beside the bed, while his grandfather
laid his hands on his head and said:
"May God bless my boy Grey, and make him a good man--not like me, the
chief of sinners, but Christlike and pure, so that he may one day reach
the eternal home where I hope to meet him, through the merits of the
blood of Jesus, which cleanseth from all sin--all sin, even mine. God
bless my boy!"
It seemed like a funeral, and Grey's eyes were full of tears as he rose
from his knees and said:
"Good-by, grandpa. We must go now, but I will come again to-morrow, and
stay all day and all the next, for I do not go back to Andover till
Monday, and next summer I will spend all my vacation with you. Good-by;"
and stooping, he kissed the white forehead and quivering lips, around
which a smile of peace was setting.
Then, he left the room, never dreaming that it was good-by forever.
Once in the open air, with his Aunt Hannah by his side, the cloud which
in the sick-room had settled upon him lifted, and he talked and laughed
merrily as they drove swiftly toward Grey's Park where dinner was
waiting for them.
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