I saw them on the sidewalk, man and wife and little girl, and, like the rightful man I am, I smiled at the little girl's sweet innocence, and glanced at the man; he wore a workman's cap, his body had the look of muscle that has learned the lean, hard lesson of the bone; he saw me there, a young old man, standing by the library door, and something in my gaze gained his respect; he nodded once, as to an equal; I nodded back, the single nod that honors: I saw that those he walked with had the gift of all he had; and, suddenly, I knew his wife's fear for his fragile, sweet, tough frame, and her treasure, in the rightness of his way. I saw in him, born of his love for them, the fire inside, eternal: the will indomitable, that would not swerve from its sweet choice of sheltering, though nightmare come; that, in the end, would interpose itself, as shield against that cold, relentless wind that blows flesh, hope, the very bone away. Sweet chariot of flame, this golden passion of the clay: My child, I give me: I am yours forever; My Darling! though the world should pass away. |