"You feel lonely?" said the voice of the man, low, and broken with sympathy.
"All, all alone," sighed the woman.
"I can do nothing for you. I can only love you."
"Yes, yes," said the woman hopelessly.
"You are slipping away from me, but my master is stronger than me, and can help you yet. He is not far from you though you can't see him. He loves you too, and only wants you to ask him to help you. He can cure death as easy as any other disease."
No reply came for a moment. Then, moulded of all-but dying breath, came the cry,
"O Christ, save me!"
Then Hester was seized with a sudden impulse: she thought afterwards the feeling of it might be like what men and women of old had when the Spirit of God came upon them: it seemed she had not intended song when the sounds issuing from her mouth entered her ears. The words she uttered were those and no more, over and over again, which the poor dying woman had just spoken: "O Christ, save me!" But the song-sounds in which they were lapt and with which they came winged from her lips, seemed the veriest outpouring of her whole soul. They seemed to rise from some eternal deep within her, yet not to be of her making. She was as in the immediate presence of Christ, pleading with him for the consolation and strength which his poor dying creature so sorely needed.
The holy possession lasted but a minute or so, and left her dumb. She turned away, and passed up the stair.
"The angels! the angels! I'm going now!" said the woman feebly.