YOUNG, BUT WISE.
THE night had passed wearily
for Mr. Delancy, broken by fitful dreams, in which
the image of his daughter was always present—dreams
that he could trace to no thoughts or impressions of
the day before; and he arose unrefreshed, and with
a vague sense of trouble in his heart, lying there
like a weight which no involuntary deep inspirations
would lessen or remove. No June day ever opened
in fresher beauty than did this one, just four years
since the actors in our drama came smiling before
us, in the flush of youth and hope and confidence
in the far-off future. The warmth of early summer
had sent the nourishing sap to every delicate twig
and softly expanding leaf until, full foliaged, the
trees around Ivy Cliff stood in kingly attire, lifting
themselves up grandly in the sunlight which flooded
their gently-waving tops in waves of golden glory.
The air was soft and of crystal clearness; and the
lungs drank it in as if the draught were ethereal
nectar.
On such a morning in June, after a
night of broken and unrefreshing sleep, Mr. Delancy
walked forth, with that strange pressure on his heart
which he had been vainly endeavoring to push aside
since the singing birds awoke him, in the faint auroral
dawn, with their joyous welcome to the coming day.
He drew in long draughts of the delicious air; expanded
his chest; moved briskly through the garden; threw
his arms about to hurry the sluggish flow of blood
in his veins; looked with constrained admiration on
the splendid landscape that stretched far and near
in the sweep of his vision; but all to no purpose.
The hand still lay heavy upon his heart; he could not
get it removed.
Returning to the house, feeling more
uncomfortable for this fruitless effort to rise above
what he tried to call an unhealthy depression of spirits
consequent on some morbid state of the body, Mr. Delancy
was entering the library, when a fresh young face
greeted him with light and smiles.
“Good-morning, Rose,”
said the old gentleman, as his face brightened in
the glow of the young girl’s happy countenance.
“I am glad to see you;” and he took her
hand and held it tightly.
“Good-morning, Mr. Delancy.
When did you hear from Irene?”
“Ten days ago.”
“She was well?”
“Oh yes. Sit down, Rose;
there.” And Mr. Delancy drew a chair before
the sofa for his young visitor, and took a seat facing
her.
“I haven’t had a letter
from her in six months,” said Rose, a sober
hue falling on her countenance.
“I don’t think she is
quite thoughtful enough of her old friends.”
“And too thoughtful, it may
be, of new ones,” replied Mr. Delancy, his voice
a little depressed from the cheerful tone in which
he had welcomed his young visitor.
“These new friends are not always
the best friends, Mr. Delancy.”
“No, Rose. For my part,
I wouldn’t give one old friend, whose heart
I had proved, for a dozen untried new ones.”
“Nor I, Mr. Delancy. I
love Irene. I have always loved her. You
know we were children together.”
“Yes, dear, I know all that;
and I’m not pleased with her for treating you
with so much neglect, and all for a set of—”
Mr. Delancy checked himself.
“Irene,” said Miss Carman,
whom the reader will remember as one of Mrs. Emerson’s
bridemaids, “has been a little unfortunate in
her New York friends. I’m afraid of these
strong-minded women, as they are called, among whom
she has fallen.”
“I detest them!” replied
Mr. Delancy, with suddenly aroused feelings.
“They have done my child more harm than they
will ever do good in the world by way of atonement.
She is not my daughter of old.”
“I found her greatly changed
at our last meeting,” said Rose. “Full
of vague plans of reforms and social reorganizations,
and impatient of opposition, or even mild argument,
against her favorite ideas.”
“She has lost her way,”
sighed the old man, in a low, sad voice, “and
I’m afraid it will take her a long, long time
to get back again to the old true paths, and that
the road will be through deep suffering. I dreamed
about her all night, Rose, and the shadow of my dreams
is upon me still. It is foolish, I know, but I
cannot get my heart again into the sunlight.”
And Rose had been dreaming troubled
dreams of her old friend, also; and it was because
of the pressure that lay upon her feelings that she
had come over to Ivy Cliff this morning to ask if Mr.
Delancy had heard from Irene. She did not, however,
speak of this, for she saw that he was in an unhappy
state on account of his daughter.
“Dreams are but shadows,”
she said, forcing a smile to her lips and eyes.
“Yes—yes.”
The old man responded with an abstracted air.
“Yes; they are only shadows. But, my dear,
was there ever a shadow without a substance?”
“Not in the outside world of
nature. Dreams are unreal things—the
fantastic images of a brain where reason sleeps.”
“There have been dreams that came as warnings,
Rose.”
“And a thousand, for every one of these, that
signified nothing.”
“True. But I cannot rise
out of these shadows. They lie too heavily on
my spirit. You must bear with me, Rose. Thank
you for coming over to see me; but I cannot make your
visit a pleasant one, and you must leave me when you
grow weary of the old man’s company.”
“Don’t talk so, Mr. Delancy.
I’m glad I came over. I meant this only
for a call; but as you are in such poor spirits I must
stay a while and cheer you up.”
“You are a good girl,”
said Mr. Delancy, taking the hand of Rose, “and
I am vexed that Irene should neglect you for the false
friends who are leading her mind astray. But
never mind, dear; she will see her error one of these
days, and learn to prize true hearts.”
“Is she going to spend much
of her time at Ivy Cliff this summer?” asked
Rose.
“She is coming up in July to
stay three or four weeks.”
“Ah? I’m pleased
to hear you say so. I shall then revive old-time
memories in her heart.”
“God grant that it may be so!”
Rose half started at the solemn tone in which Mr.
Delancy spoke. What could be the meaning of his
strangely troubled manner? Was anything seriously
wrong with Irene? She remembered the confusion
into which her impulsive conduct had thrown the wedding-party;
and there was a vague rumor afloat that Irene had
left her husband a few months afterward and returned
to Ivy Cliff. But she had always discredited
this rumor. Of her life in New York she knew
but little as to particulars. That it was not
making of her a truer, better, happier woman, nor a
truer, better, happier wife, observation had long
ago told her.
“There is a broad foundation
of good principles in her character,” said Miss
Carman, “and this gives occasion for hope in
the future. She will not go far astray, with
her wily enticers, who have only stimulated and given
direction, for a time, to her undisciplined impulses.
You know how impatient she has always been under control—how
restively her spirit has chafed itself when a restraining
hand was laid upon her. But there are real things
in life of too serious import to be set aside for
idle fancies, such as her new friends have dignified
with imposing names—real things, that take
hold upon the solid earth like anchors, and hold the
vessel firm amid wildly rushing currents.”
“Yes, Rose, I know all that,”
replied Mr. Delancy. “I have hope in the
future of Irene; but I shudder in heart to think of
the rough, thorny, desolate ways through which she
may have to pass with bleeding feet before she reaches
that serene future. Ah! if I could save my child
from the pain she seems resolute on plucking down and
wearing in her heart!”
“Your dreams have made you gloomy,
Mr. Delancy,” said Rose, forcing a smile to
her sweet young face. “Come now, let us
be more hopeful. Irene has a good husband.
A little too much like her in some things, but growing
manlier and broader in mental grasp, if I have read
him aright. He understands Irene, and, what is
more, loves her deeply. I have watched them closely.”
“So have I.” The
voice of Mr. Delancy was not so hopeful as that of
his companion.
“Still looking on the darker side.”
She smiled again.
“Ah, Rose, my wise young friend,”
said Mr. Delancy, “to whom I speak my thoughts
with a freedom that surprises even myself, a father’s
eyes read many signs that have no meaning for others.”
“And many read them, through
fond suspicion, wrong,” replied Rose.
“Well—yes—that
may be.” He spoke in partial abstraction,
yet doubtfully.
“I must look through your garden,”
said the young lady, rising; “you know how I
love flowers.”
“Not much yet to hold your admiration,”
replied Mr. Delancy, rising also. “June
gives us wide green carpets and magnificent draperies
of the same deep color, but her red and golden broideries
are few; it is the hand of July that throws them in
with rich profusion.”
“But June flowers are sweetest
and dearest—tender nurslings of the summer,
first-born of her love,” said Rose, as they stepped
out into the portico. “It may be that the
eye gets sated with beauty, as nature grows lavish
of her gifts; but the first white and red petals that
unfold themselves have a more delicate perfume—seem
made of purer elements and more wonderful in perfection—than
their later sisters. Is it not so?”
“If it only appears so it is
all the same as if real,” replied Mr. Delancy,
smiling.
“How?”
“It is real to you. What
more could you have? Not more enjoyment of summer’s
gifts of beauty and sweetness.”
“No; perhaps not.”
Rose let her eyes fall to the ground, and remained
silent.
“Things are real to us as we
see them; not always as they are,” said Mr.
Delancy.
“And this is true of life?”
“Yes, child. It is in life
that we create for ourselves real things out of what
to some are airy nothings. Real things, against
which we often bruise or maim ourselves, while to
others they are as intangible as shadows.”
“I never thought of that,” said Rose.
“It is true.”
“Yes, I see it. Imaginary
evils we thus make real things, and hurt ourselves
by contact, as, maybe, you have done this morning,
Mr. Delancy.”
“Yes—yes. And
false ideas of things which are unrealities in the
abstract—for only what is true has actual
substance—become real to the perverted
understanding. Ah, child, there are strange contradictions
and deep problems in life for each of us to solve.”
“But, God helping us, we may
always reach the true solution,” said Rose Carman,
lifting a bright, confident face to that of her companion.
“That was spoken well, my child,”
returned Mr. Delancy, with a new life in his voice;
“and without Him we can never be certain of our
way.”
“Never—never.”
There was a tender, trusting solemnity in the voice
of Rose.
“Young, but wise,” said Mr. Delancy.
“No! Young, but not wise.
I cannot see the way plain before me for a single
week, Mr. Delancy. For a week? No, not for
a day!”
“Who does?” asked the old man.
“Some.”
“None. There are many who
walk onward with erect heads and confident bearing.
They are sure of their way, and smile if one whisper
a caution as to the ground upon which they step so
fearlessly. But they soon get astray or into
pitfalls. God keeping and guiding us, Rose, we
may find our way safely through this world. But
we will soon lose ourselves if we trust in our own
wisdom.”
Thus they talked—that old
man and gentle-hearted girl—as they moved
about the garden-walks, every new flower, or leaf,
or opening bud they paused to admire or examine, suggesting
themes for wiser words than usually pass between one
so old and one so young. At Mr. Delancy’s
earnest request, Rose stayed to dinner, the waiting-man
being tent to her father’s, not far distant,
to take word that she would not be at home until in
the afternoon.