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"I
should be so glad. I would give up my doll and all my playthings, if she could
only come here again. Poor Inge! it is so dreadful for her." These pitying words
penetrated to Inge's inmost heart, and seemed to do her good. It was the first
time any one had said, "Poor Inge!" without saying something about her faults. A
little innocent child was weeping, and praying for mercy for her. It made her
feel quite strange, and she would gladly have wept herself, and it added to her
torment to find she could not do so.
And while she thus suffered in a
place where nothing changed, years passed away on earth, and she heard her name
less frequently mentioned. But one day a sigh reached her ear, and the words,
"Inge! Inge! what a grief thou hast been to me! I said it would be so." It was
the last sigh of her dying mother. After this, Inge heard her kind mistress say,
"Ah, poor Inge! shall I ever see thee again? Perhaps I may, for we know not what
may happen in the future." But Inge knew right well that her mistress would
never come to that dreadful place.
But Inge knew right well that her
mistress would never come to that dreadful place. Time-passed- a long bitter
time- then Inge heard her name pronounced once more, and saw what seemed two
bright stars shining above her. They were two gentle eyes closing on earth. Many
years had passed since the little girl had lamented and wept about "poor Inge."
That child was now an old woman, whom God was taking to Himself. In the last
hour of existence the events of a whole life often appear before us; and this
hour the old woman remembered how, when a child, she had shed tears over the
story of Inge, and she prayed for her now.
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