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Point Pleasant, Mason County, West Virginia
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In a recent English colliery accident that killed many miners, a consoling visitor finds a young widow grieving silently not for lost support, but for parting with her husband Jim in anger that morning, denying him a kiss before his death. She laments, 'Oh, if I had only spoke fair at the last!' The story warns against letting the sun go down on wrath.
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A tender-hearted woman, who went round among the bereaved homes on a mission of consolation found a wife whose grief seemed of a different nature from that of the others. Some of them mourned their bread-winner, the father of their children; and, the cry of "What shall I do now?" went up from almost every desolate house.
This young wife uttered no cry. She only sat swaying herself to and fro, with no tears in her eyes, but with a look of set, white anguish on her face, a thousand times more pitiful than sobs and tears.
The visitor could not bear to go away and leave her to her silent anguish. She lingered beside her, and tried to comfort her. She spoke of the grief of some of the women who were left helpless with large families to provide for.
"That's not the worst," said the woman, gloomily.
"You mean you could bear it better if you had children to keep up your thoughts?"
"No, no!" the wife cried, in a sort of despair, "nothing could help me now. Nothing ever can help me; but I could have borne it all if I'd only spoke to him fair at the end."
And then at last the story came. They had been married a year, she and Jim; and they both "had tempers;" but Jim, he was always the first to make up, because he had the best heart. And this very morning they had trouble.
It began because breakfast was not ready, and the fire wouldn't burn; and they had said hard words, both of them. But at the very last, though breakfast had not been fit to eat, Jim had turned round at the door and said—
"Gi'e me a kiss, lass. You know you love me, and we won't part in ill blood;" and she had been in her temper still and answered—
"No, I don't know as I do love you," and let him go, with never a kiss and never a fair word; and now— and there she stopped, and awful, tearless sobs shook her; and the visitor could only say:
"Do not grieve so hopelessly; perhaps he knows what you feel now." But the mourner's ears were deaf to all comfort, and the wailing cry came again and again—
"Oh, if I had only spoke fair at the last!"
It is not a common story, this We quarrel with those we love, and we part and we meet and make up again; and death is merciful and waits till we are at peace; yet how possible is such an experience to any one of us, who parts with some dear one in anger, or who lets the sun go down upon our wrath!
But it is always the noblest nature, most loyal heart, which is first to cry, "I was wrong; forgive me."
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Location
England Colliery
Event Date
Recent
Story Details
A young wife regrets denying her husband Jim a farewell kiss after an argument on the morning he died in a mining accident, grieving her parting in anger more than the loss itself.