Leona 'S Diary ...
Diary Entry family line 21, 1911
Today was low temperature and wet. run short out for a walkway anyway. The parting are starting to twist and the dampness makes their people of color all the more acute. I so wish Jonathan was here to walk with me. I walked longer than I should and was quite chilled when I returned. I am never cold when he is with me.
journal entry September 22, 1911
Awoke this daybreak very tight in my chest. I know it is just a minor congestion from too much walking in the rain, but female parent insisted on calling Dr. Jamison. He confirmed my diagnosis, prescribed a day in bed and several acid of a filthy elixir. It was another rainy and cold day so I had little desire to go out in any lawsuit. I used the fourth dimension to drop a line a letter to my beloved Jonathan.
***
Mr. Jonathan Douglas
Hotel Central room 238
59 East main Street
boodle Illinois
Dearest Jonathan :
I am forced to bed today by a footling congestion. You know how I hate parturiency. But at least I have time to save and that offers lots consolation. I count the hour till you return and we are forever joined. I can not say decent how happy it makes me knowing that I will soon be your wife.
Yesterday I went for a paseo, in venom of the inclement weather. I walked up to the cemetery and placed prime at the entrance to the family vault where my beloved sister Clarissa lies. It is such a pin-up spot, especially this clip of class as the leaves cover the gage with their blanket of red, chicken and orange. The leg of a great oak spread over the entree, sheltering it. It is such a peaceful, pensive spot, I always feel fresh when I come. I think it is because, for a while, whatever pains I feel or problems are before me, they seem to unfreeze to trivia as I contemplate the perfect eonian peace, that Clarissa now knows and that we too will come up in God 's own clock time. I feel her presence so close as I stand there, beside her resting place. She was always so happy, in nastiness of the vice that plagued her since birthing. She died two year ago, on the day that will be our wedding day. I still recall how, in her final present moment, she took my bridge player and smiled, whispering `` perhaps, when next we meet, I shall finally beat up you at badminton ''. Then a serene expression came to her face and she quietly drifted away.
Oh, Jonathan, I do so wish she could be here to contribution our well-chosen day. Yet I know I will experience her comportment, smiling down from heaven, so well-chosen for my happiness. On lighter bailiwick, the theater is in a commonwealth of such total confusion you would cerebrate the wedding was tomorrow. female parent is running this way and that, double checking on flowers, food for the receipt, accommodations for guests, and on and on. I do bid you were here to lend a calming influence.
Oh Jonathan, please forebode me that you will let nothing stay your takings and that no thing what happens, we will be united on the appointed day.
All my endless dear
Leona
***
Sept. 23
Bright and sunny, some constriction remains, but my mood is as gay as the burnished orange and white-livered leave of absence. Had what should be the final fitting on my gown. I ca n't conceive that in only three workweek I will tire out it down the aisle and become Mrs. Jonathan Douglas ! Words can not utter the joy I feel.
Sept 24
Awoke this morning with horrifying cough. It cleared after a while but the dependable Doctor of the Church ordered me to bed and run me with more of his awful elixir. He seemed quite grave, the old tomfool. None the less, I am glad that almost everything is cook for the wedding, so I can use up a few days to rest and recuperate. In only seven days my beloved Jack returns from his locomotion. I count the hours till he can hold me in his branch again.
September 25
This sunrise was frigidness and damp, I awoke again with practically cough and look chilled. It passed by noon but I remained in bed all day, feeling infirm and hackneyed. The MD came, and went again. He was as reassuring as common, but I noted a touch of business in his voice. Mother too, seemed a bit anxious after speaking with him. I, however, am so sealed that nothing will step in with our happiness, that I discount their headache. I know it is a trivial ailment and I shall be up and about in no fourth dimension. For the gift I shall bask the chance to rest and escape from Mother 's constant flurry.
sept 26
Today started much like yesterday, but it was well past noon before felt well enough to sit up and take a little food. The constriction in my chest persists even yet. Initially I was gladiola of the rest, but now I feel imprisoned. The MD came and went, again, after forcing me to fill Sir Thomas More of his awful medicine. I do so wish this ailment would elapse. I feel I have so much to do. Heaven forbid that my beloved Jonathan should return from his journey and find me still confined to my bed.
Sept 27
Today I confronted the physician about my illness, upon which his foul elixirs seem to experience no outcome. He tried to avoid the question and say it was aught, but I could tell he was not telling all and I persisted. Finally his look took on a serious expression. He told me he thought I was a strong cleaning lady who could present the truth, he proceeded to tell me that I was suffering from the Saami ailment of the pump and lung that claimed my dear Sister. Of row he is a perfect motley fool ! How could he believe such a thing !
kinfolk 28
Still forced to bed. The discomfort seems uncollectible. It is all so unfair ! That I, a woman of such normal vigor, should be struck down in this way. I hate the morbid weeping faces of those convinced of my immanent death ! I hate the whispers outside my door ! What are they hiding from me ? That they are already planning my funeral ? ! The stupid fools ! I wish they would all pass on well enough alone.
folk 29
Oh please God ! If this is too be my fate at least let me be united with my beloved on our appointed day. Please move over me that a good deal time ! Then I can leave this earth contented in my legal brief but sodding happiness. I promise to set a practiced object lesson by my passage as did my beloved sister if only you will give me that much time.
Sep 30
I feel very infirm today. What slight sense of hope I had has washed away in the decelerate drizzle that continues to fall outside. Somehow I know that the doctor was right, and I shall not be the rare exception who survives this disease. My gown was delivered this forenoon, but it brought little joy to the mansion, the package sits in the entrance hall unopened. It all seems so pointless. The week of provision, all for nada. I do n't even know why I bother to keep on this phonograph record that none will profit by.
October 1
My pricy Jonathan arrived today, and while the luck saddened us both, I feel so much better knowing he is here. The sun also returned to clear my elbow room. I no longer hope for recuperation. I can not aid but feel the end is skinny. Yet somehow, today that seems more a blessed relief than tragical end. My only wish is that I come to my end with grace.
Father assured me that I would be laid beside Clarissa. He also assured me that, even though Jonathan was not technically a appendage of the family unit, they consider him as a son already, and that, should he choose, he could be laid beside me, in God 's own time.
Oct 2
I had the most wondrous dream in conclusion Night. I was walking in the burying ground, near the household vault, and there I met my dear sister Clarissa. She was standing by the path, dressed in the beautiful dress in which she was laid to rest. It was obvious that she was waiting for me because, as I approached, she smiled and greeted me, `` Oh, there you are ! cum, I have something to demonstrate you '' She lead me to the burial vault and the threatening atomic number 26 door simply dissolved before us. I followed her in to where three low stone tables stood. The first held a come together coffin, the second held an open coffin lined with beautiful white satin and lace. The third gear was empty.
'' This is my home '' she said, gesturing to the closed casket. `` Here is yours '', she said, stepping to the empty, open coffin. `` And this is for your beloved Jonathan, if he so chooses '' `` Come, take your rest '' I stepped up and into the unfold empty coffin, and lay down. It felt so safety, quiet, and peaceful. When I awoke, I was lying on my book binding, my manus folded as if I were laid for sepulture. I felt more passive and refreshed than I have for many days.
October 3
The undertaker came this morning. I looked through his script and ***********ed a coffin. A rather simple-minded excogitation of Edward White enameled Natalie Wood, lined with satin. He took some measurements, and we discussed the details of the service. I told him that the marriage peak would do for my funeral as well. I told him my wedding gown and veil to be used for my burial garments. I do desire Jonathan to see me in my marriage nightie, even if it is to be as I lie in my coffin. We discussed my funeral as calmly as I discussed my wedding a few calendar week ago. Only now does that seem strange.
Oct 4
I feel so weak today, Jonathan has been here with me all day. It is such a quilt to know he is close. The priest came today as well. For a while we discussed the service, and what would take place to me. He spoke of the smasher of promised land, and did his best to re-assure me. Still, I know the end is near, and I am so afraid. Oh God, please ... please ... give me peace.
***
October 5
Here the diary resume in another paw
I, Jonathan Douglas, resume this diary, that the events concerning the transition of my beloved Leona may be recorded for posterity. Yesterday night she took this from beneath her pillow and pressed it into my hand, saying she could write no more and the contents might offer me some comfort. After she had gone to kip, I did read, and found great comfort in her settle down acceptance of the calamity which has befallen her.
Today I witnessed the passageway, or should I say the glorification, of an angel, for surely she will be among the comely of all the bonny backer in promised land. I pray that I do not blaspheme in this belief.
I was with my dear Leona when she awoke, in often suffering. She was hectic and coughing, and seemed very weak, but then about midmorning a strange and beautiful calmness came over her, and she seemed upstage as if she was watching something far away. Of all the the great unwashed in the way, she seemed to be cognisant of only me. She lay this way for some clip, oblivious to all, even the priest who came to say the last rites. Then about noontide, she squeezed my script and smiled,
'' spirit Jonathan '' she said, `` its Clarissa ! '' `` She 's here for our marriage ceremony ! '' `` I knew she would come ''
Then she turned to me and said `` Oh my beloved Jonathan. Now everything is perfect ! ``
With that she closed her optic and quietly breathed her last. I stayed long by her position, loth to let her go.
October 7th
The Mortician has done his tariff. He took Leona from us, and returned her this morning.
Now she rests in the parlor. My God ! she is beautiful, even in dying. She lies there dressed forever in the gown that she should have worn to our wedding in only three days. She seems so peaceful, so glad, as she lies surrounded by prime, the same white flush that were meant for our happy day. Instead they will adorn her grave.
Tomorrow we will consider her to church, and thence to the vault where she will lie for eternity. Her Father of the Church told me that, there is a stead for me there too, should I desire it in time. I feel now that we will be together again soon. For what is a human lifetime in the face of eternity ! This opinion gives me great peace.
October 11
I pray that this journal may remain secret for many yr that what I record now may not play embarrassment upon my family or the fellowship of any mentioned here. For I have kept my promise to my beloved Leona.
At dusk yesterday, I went to the crypt where she lies at serenity. In my party was the cemetery grounds keeper, who for a few discrete dollars, opened the bank vault that I might accede. Also in my company was a priest, fallen from grace with the church building for his rage for various hell of the build, the extent of which only I know. I swore not to let out my knowledge providing that he assisted me and never revealed these proceedings. Upon entering the bank vault I opened the casket holding the earthly clay of my Brigid, and once again digest silent, amazed at her beauty, as she lay so peaceful and still, in all her wedding finery. Next I opened the jewel casket of her Sister which lay beside her, for if my honey Leona had her wish, Clarissa would hold stood beside us at the communion table as her maiden of award. Clarissa too, lay as if peacefully asleep, still lovely in her repose, despite the musical passage of time since she was laid here.
I stood beside my beloved as the non-Christian priest read the marriage vows, holding her cold, exanimate hand. I pledged to take her as my married woman, and I answered for her as I knew she would pledge to take me for her husband. With the words `` with this ring I do wed '' I placed the golden band on her blench inhuman fingerbreadth. And when the priest pronounced us man and wife, I raised the veil from her face and gently kissed her cold exanimate lips. I then bid the priest depart, and remained alone in the crypt with my beloved. I lifted her from her resting place, and holding her close, we slowly turned about the room. Her adorable Stanford White dress swept the cold Edward Durell Stone as we danced our hymeneals waltz. My own desire steadily grew as I swayed with her body held crocked to mine.
When at last the medicine in my own nous came to a close, I laid her again in her coffin, which was her bridal bed. Not an unfitting bed I thought, admiring the refined white satin and lace on which she lay. Lifting the veil from her grimace, I gently kissed her and caressed her face. I stroked her knocker, so firmly and coolheaded beneath her satin surgical gown. All the while the mania for her grew in me until I could support it no longer. Lifting the skirt of her dress, to reveal her femininity, I opened my pants to expose my maleness. I climbed into the jewel casket and lay atop my beloved, becoming one with her as we would have on our wedding night. Holding her in my passionate embrace, kissing and caressing her cold, still aspect, I gave her the final exam endowment of our beloved, and left her with something of myself to rest with her for the ages. I lay thus with her long after my strong-arm need was satisfied, my nous resting on her satin covered breast, gently stroking her silky tomentum. Somehow I sensed that she was at ataraxis, and for a while at to the lowest degree, I shared that peace.
The break of the day sun was penetrating the small tarnish crank windowpane of the vault door when I reluctantly rose and separated myself from my beloved. I arranged her dress neatly about her peg and folded her hired hand once again at her shank. From the bouquets around the bier I ***********ed a single perfect White person rose and placed it in her custody. I gave her stale lips a final kiss and gently lowered the silky veil over her face. She looked so peaceful, so serene, so beautiful. It was with great difficulty that I closed the jewel casket and left her to her divine final rest. The morning time sun shown brightly as I left the vault. I was filled with a great sentiency of joy that made the day seem all the brighter, for it seemed all around me I sensed the presence of my darling Leona. I saw her smile in the dappled sunlight. I heard her laughter in the rustling leaves. I felt her caress in the gentle picnic. Together we walked from the place and back to my everyday reality. Yet I know my biography, what ever remains of it, will never be the Lapplander, for always I will be remembering her with joy, and longing for our final perfect coupling
Here ends the journal of Leona Zimmerman Stephen Arnold Douglas ...