Darkness and Daylight

Mary J. Holmes
Darkness and Daylight, by Mary
J. Holmes

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Title: Darkness and Daylight
Author: Mary J. Holmes
Release Date: December, 2003 [Etext #4721] [Yes, we are more than
one year ahead of schedule] [This file was first posted on March 7,
2002]
Edition: 10
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
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DARKNESS AND DAYLIGHT.
A Novel
BY
MRS. MARY J. HOLMES,
AUTHOR OF "LENA RIVERS," "MARIAN GREY," "MEADOW
BROOK," "HOMESTEAD," "DORA DEANE," "COUSIN MAUDE,"
"TEMPEST AND SUNSHINE," "ENGLISH ORPHANS," ETC.

CONTENTS.
CHAPTER I.
COLLINGWOOD II. EDITH HASTINGS GOES TO
COLLINGWOOD III. GRACE ATHERTON IV. RICHARD AND
EDITH V. VISITORS AT COLLINGWOOD AND VISITORS AT
BRIER HILL VI. ARTHUR AND EDITH VII. RICHARD AND
ARTHUR VIII. RICHARD AND EDITH IX. WOMANHOOD X.
EDITH AT HOME XI. MATTERS AT GRASSY SPRING XII.
LESSONS XIII. FRIDAY XIV. THE MYSTERY AT GRASSY
SPRING XV. NINA XVI. ARTHUR'S STORY XVII. NINA AND
MIGGIE XVIII. DR. GRISWOLD XIX. EX OFFICIO XX. THE
DECISION XXI. THE DEERING WOODS XXII. THE DARKNESS
DEEPENS XXIII. PARTING XXIV. THE NINETEENTH
BIRTHDAY XXV. DESTINY XXVI. EDITH AND THE WORLD
XXVII. THE LAND OF FLOWERS XXVIII. SUNNYBANK XXIX.
THE SISTERS XXX. ARTHUR AND NINA XXXI. LAST DAYS
XXXII. PARTING WITH THE DEAD AND PARTING WITH THE
LIVING XXXIII. HOME XXXIV. NINA'S LETTER XXXV. THE
FIERY TEST XXXVI. THE SACRIFICE XXXVII. THE BRIDAL
XXXVIII. SIX YEARS LATER

DARKNESS AND DAYLIGHT.
CHAPTER I.
COLLINGWOOD.
Collingwood was to have a tenant at last. For twelve long years its
massive walls of dark grey stone had frowned in gloomy silence upon
the passers-by, the terror of the superstitious ones, who had peopled its
halls with ghosts and goblins, saying even that the snowy-haired old
man, its owner, had more than once been seen there, moving restlessly
from room to room and muttering of the darkness which came upon
him when he lost his fair young wife and her beautiful baby Charlie.
The old man was not dead, but for years he had been a stranger to his
former home.
In foreign lands he had wandered--up and down, up and down--from
the snow-clad hills of Russia to where the blue skies of Italy bent softly
over him and the sunny plains of France smiled on him a welcome. But
the darkness he bewailed was there as elsewhere, and to his son he said,
at last, "We will go to America, but not to Collingwood--not where
Lucy used to live, and where the boy was born."
So they came back again and made for themselves a home on the shore
of the silvery lake so famed in song, where they hoped to rest from
their weary journeyings. But it was not so decreed.
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