Gently that following midsummer the old president's crutch thumped
the sidewalk leading to the college. Between the pillars of the
gateway he paused, lifted his undimmed keen blue eyes, and more
gently still the crutch thumped on the gravelled road as he passed
slowly on under the trees. When he faced the first deserted
building, he stopped quite still. The campus was deserted and the
buildings were as silent as tombs. That loneliness he had known
many, many years; but there was a poignant sorrow in it now that
was never there before, for only that morning he had turned over
the reins of power into a pair of younger hands. The young men and
young women would come again, but now they would be his no longer.
There would be the same eager faces, dancing eyes, swift coming
and going, but not for him. The same cries of greeting, the tramp
of many feet, shouts from the playgrounds-but not for his ears.
The same struggle for supremacy in the class-room--but not for his
favor and his rewarding hand. That hand had all but upraised each
building, brick by brick and stone by stone. He had started alone,
he had fought alone, and in spite of his Scotch shrewdness,
business sagacity, indomitable pluck and patience, and a
nationwide fame for scholarship, the fight had been hard and long.
He had won, but the work was yet unfinished, and it was his no
longer. For a little while he stood there, and John Burnham,
coming from his class-room with a little bag of books, saw the
still figure on crutches and paused noiselessly on the steps. He
saw the old scholar's sensitive mouth quiver and his thin face
wrenched with pain, and he guessed the tragedy of farewell that
was taking place. He saw the old president turn suddenly, limp
toward the willow-trees, and Burnham knew that he could not bear
at that moment to pass between those empty beloved halls. And
Burnham watched him move under the willows along the edge of the
quiet pond, watched him slowly climbing a little hill on the other
side of the campus, and then saw him wearily pass through his own
gate-home. He wished that the old scholar could know how much
better he had builded than he knew; could know what an exchange
and clearing-house that group of homely buildings was for the
human wealth of the State. And he wondered if in the old
thoroughbred's heart was the comfort that his spirit would live on
and on to help mould the lives of generations unborn, who might
perhaps never hear his name.
There was a youthful glad light in John Burnham's face when he
turned his back on the deserted college, for he, too, was on his
way at last to the hills--and St. Hilda. As he swept through the
Blue-grass he almost smiled upon the passing fields. The
betterment of the tobacco troubles was sure to come, and only that
summer the farmer was beginning to realize that in the end the
seed of his blue-grass would bring him a better return than the
leaf of his troublesome weed-king. There were groaning harvests
that summer and herds of sheep and hogs and fat cattle. There was
plenty of wheat and rye and oats and barley and corn yet coming
out of the earth, and, as woodland after woodland reeled past his
window, he realized that the trees were not yet all gone. Perhaps
after all his beloved Kentucky would come back to her own, and
there was peace in his grateful heart.
Two nights later, sitting on the porch of her little log cabin, he
told St. Hilda about Gray and Marjorie, as she told him about
Mavis and Jason Hawn. Gray and Jason had gone back, each to his
own, having learned at last what Mavis and Marjorie, without
learning, already knew--that duty is to others rather than self,
to life rather than love. But John Burnham now knew that in the
dreams of each girl another image would live always; just as
always Jason would see another's eyes misty with tears for him and
feel the comforting clutch of a little hand, while in Gray's heart
a wood-thrush would sing forever.
And, looking far ahead, both could see strong young men hurrying
up from the laggard Blue-grass into the lagging hills and strong
young men hurrying down from them, and could hear the heart of the
hills beating as one with the heart of the Bluegrass, and both
beating as one with the heart of the world.
THE END