Cassandra wondered at the mind's cruel ability to toss up flecks of the past. Why, as she neared her life's end, her grandmother's head should ring with the voices of people long since gone. Was it always this way? Did those with passage booked on death's silent ship always scan the dock for faces of the long-departed? Kate Morton
About This Quote

In Little Women, Louisa May Alcott wrote a story about a young woman named Cassandra who was dying from cancer. In the story, the character of the narrator asks Cassandra if she has been all over the world since her death. Cassandra answers that no, she hasn't traveled around a lot. As a child she had only been to Boston and Paris.

She had lived in her grandmother's house until her death and then moved to a boarding school. Her grandmother had always been taken with the idea of going to India and going there after she died. The rest of her life was spent as a boarding school student.

Source: The Forgotten Garden

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