Chapter 147: Adeline's Story

Adeline was not Franklin's biological child, and when Franklin settled in the moor for some years, he stumbled upon a sunflower field deep in the moor. At that time, Franklin was enjoying the beauty www.biquge.info of love, and he and his wife were like glue, often taking her to explore the mysterious moor.

This time, however, they were inadvertently lost, but they did not panic, and his wife trusted her husband, who she believed to be the master of the swamp, and could roam the mysterious and terrifying land as he pleased.

When Franklin entered a clearing through a cloud of fog, he saw sunflowers, stars in the sky, and birds in the distance calmly spreading their wings. Franklin observed the stars in the sky and remembered his way out of the moor, as if he were recalling a beautiful and brilliant dream. That night, Franklin and his wife chose to rest in the sunflower field, ready to go after dawn to find the road. They confide in each other what they have seen and heard, but they hear crying, and that night, Franklin sees Adeline roaming in the Kwai Garden.

Franklin's wife looked at the crying lovely child with pity, and she persuaded Franklin to take the girl who was crying in the dark. The child doesn't remember anything but Adeline, she says she's looking for her sister, she says her parents have left the two sisters, and she doesn't say anything about it. Franklin sighed, and he roughly guessed Adeline's background: abandoned by her parents.

Adeline said that she had a sister, and that Franklin and his wife had been searching back and forth in the sunflower field for a long time, but they didn't see anything, and that there might have been a younger girl who had crossed the sunflower field and got lost in the fog and disappeared completely. After searching to no avail, a tired Franklin could only admit the terrible result: Adeline's sister must have been completely swallowed up by the moor.

Franklin's wife knelt on the ground and prayed earnestly to God for the poor little girl to survive.

A psalmist once said, "God has compassion on the world and for all the weak." "May God see that little girl.

After Franklin thought for a moment, he squatted down gently: "Little girl, why don't Mom and Dad take you away?" ”

Adeline...... Adeline looks...... I can't see anything. Daddy doesn't like ...... Don't like Adeline, too...... Don't like his sister, he said she thought she was ...... After...... Nor invisible. My sister could see ......, and she would smile every time I approached her cradle, what she could see, wasn't as ...... as Adeline's," Franklin noticed that Adeline's eyes were blank.

Adeline saw a white shadow everywhere, her vision was limited to her arm, and as she stretched her arm as far as she could, she saw her arm disappear into a cloud of white mist, just like Franklin looking at a cloud of grass in a foggy moor.

Franklin and his wife eventually adopted the little girl, treating her as if she were their own child, and his wife did not produce offspring, and in their disappointment, they became more and more convinced that Adeline was their God-given child.

Franklin discovers that excessive fear and pain seal away parts of Adeline's memories. But Adeline's love for sunflowers seems to have been precipitated in her genes. Adeline had been following her gardener since she was a child, and she could only follow the old man with an iron kettle, listening to the old man's clattering of branches and leaves. Listen to the old man with his hoe to pick out the hard clods of earth and crumble them; Listen to the old man spend the last afternoon building a flower garden out of bricks. Adeline couldn't see it, she just sat quietly and listened to the old gardener at work. Hand him the kettle to the old man when he summons. Once the gardener forgot to hang his scissors on a branch while building a branch, and after a while the old man looked for his scissors from side to side, not knowing where he had left the tool. Adeline suddenly said, "Grandpa, the scissors are hanging on the south branch of the second tree on the right." ”

The surprised old gardener followed Adeline's words and looked at it, and sure enough, he saw his own scissors. Thinking it was a coincidence, he deliberately lost his tool a few more times, and found that as long as the tool had ever made a sound, Adeline had always remembered it, and knew where it stopped the moment its sound disappeared.

The astonished old gardener told Franklin of his discovery: "The young lady's sense of hearing and orientation is so acer that she can almost completely substitute her hearing for ordinary people's eyesight." ”

Franklin experimented with the gardener's words a few times, and found that it was so. After discovering Adeline's talent, he began to learn something from Adeline, teaching him geography, which he was good at, and later, he taught himself law and astronomy, which he taught Adeline. His wife, on the other hand, passed on to Adeline manners and all the virtues she possessed—kindness, gentleness, and strength.

Doctors have said that Adeline must exercise regularly to maintain good health, which is essential to regain her vision one day. Franklin spent the afternoon taking Adeline to explore the moor. Adeline was a quick learner, and although she could not normally walk freely through the moor, her hearing completely replaced her eyesight, and she felt the rhythm of the wind to understand the rules of the moor. Although Franklin was still worried when Adeline first entered the moor, and quietly followed behind him to protect him, after a while, he was relieved to sleep at home.

Adeline's life is simple, reading poetry, studying scientific texts, and then exploring the moor, enjoying all that the moor has to offer—every time she goes to the moor, her bird friends and butterfly friends come to accompany her and bring her stories about the moor.

That afternoon, Adeline had just seen a doctor, and the doctor prescribed Adeline some medicine as usual, and told her to take it on time.

She listened to the wind, the rustle of sunflowers rubbing against each other, and the quiet fall of autumn leaves. Then she heard the steady footsteps of the butler, who knew her well always knew where to find her, and brought the news of the visit of Sir Henry and Jackdaw Lowe. (To be continued.) )