MY FATHER.
I HAVE a very early recollection
of my father as a cheerful man, and of our home as
a place full of the heart’s warmest sunshine.
But the father of my childhood and the father of my
more advanced years wore a very different exterior.
He had grown silent, thoughtful, abstracted, but not
morose. As his children sprang up around him,
full of life and hope, he seemed to lose the buoyant
spirits of his earlier manhood. I did not observe
this at the time, for I had not learned to observe
and reflect. Life was a simple state of enjoyment.
Trial had not quickened my perceptions, nor suffering
taught me an unselfish regard for others.
The home provided by my father was
elegant—some would have called it luxurious.
On our education and accomplishments no expense was
spared. I had the best teachers—and,
of course, the most expensive; with none others would
I have been satisfied, for I had come naturally to
regard myself as on a social equality with the fashionable
young friends who were my companions, and who indulged
the fashionable vice of depreciating everything that
did not come up to a certain acknowledged standard.
Yearly I went to Saratoga or Newport with my sisters,
and at a cost which I now think of with amazement.
Sometimes my mother went with us, but my father never.
He was not able to leave his business. Business!
How I came to dislike the word! It was always
“business” when we asked him to go anywhere
with us; “business” hurried him away from
his hastily-eaten meals; “business” absorbed
all his thoughts, and robbed us of our father.
“I wish father would give up
business,” I said to my mother one day, “and
take some comfort of his life. Mr. Woodward has
retired, and is now living on his income.”
My mother looked at me strangely and
sighed, but answered nothing.
About this time my father showed some
inclination to repress our growing disposition to
spend money extravagantly in dress. Nothing but
hundred-dollar shawl would suit my ideas. Ada
White had been presented by her father with a hundred-dollar
cashmere, and I did not mean to be put off with anything
less.
“Father, I want a hundred dollars,”
said I to him one morning as he was leaving the house,
after eating his light breakfast. He had grown
dyspeptic, and had to be careful and sparing in his
diet.
“A hundred dollars!” He
looked surprised; in fact, I noticed that my request
made him start. “What do you want with so
much money?”
“I have nothing seasonable to
wear,” said I, very firmly; “and as I
must have a shawl, I might as well get a good one while
I am about it. I saw one at Stewart’s yesterday
that is just the thing. Ada White’s father
gave her a shawl exactly like it, and you must let
me have the money to buy this one. It will last
my lifetime.”
“A hundred dollars is a large
price for a shawl,” said my father, in his sober
way.
Oh, dear, no!” was my emphatic
answer; “a hundred dollars is a low price for
a shawl. Jane Wharton’s cost five hundred.”
“I’ll think about it,”
said my father, turning from me rather abruptly.
When he came home at dinner-time,
I was alone in the parlor, practicing a. new piece
of music which my fashionable teacher had left me.
He was paid three dollars for every lesson. My
father smiled as he laid a hundred-dollar bill on
the keys of the piano. I started up, and kissing
him, said, with the ardor of a pleased girl—
“What a dear good father you are!”
The return was ample. He always
seemed most pleased when he could gratify some wish
or supply some want of his children. Ah! if we
had been less selfish—less exacting!
It was hardly to be expected that
my sisters would see me the possessor of a hundred-dollar
shawl, and not desire a like addition to their wardrobes.
“I want a hundred dollars,”
said my sister Jane, on the next morning, as my father
was about leaving for his store.
“Can’t spare it to-day,
my child,” I heard him answer, kindly, but firmly.
“Oh, but I must have it,” urged my sister.
“I gave you twenty-five dollars
only day before yesterday,” my father replied
to this. “What have you done with that?”
“Spent it for gloves and laces,”
said Jane, in a light way, as if the sum were of the
smallest possible consequence.
“I am not made of money, child.”
The tone of my father’s voice struck me as unusually
sober—almost sad. But Jane replied
instantly, and with something of reproach and complaint
in her tones—“I shouldn’t think
you were, if you find it so hard to part with a hundred
dollars.”
“I have a large payment to make
to-day”—my father spoke with unusual
decision of manner—“and shall need
every dollar that I can raise.”
“You gave sister a hundred dollars
yesterday,” said Jane, almost petulantly.
Not a word of reply did my father
make. I was looking at him, and saw an expression
on his countenance that was new to me—an
expression of pain, mingled with fear. He turned
away slowly, and in silence left the house.
“Jane,” said my mother,
addressing her from the stairway, on which she had
been standing, “how could you speak so to your
father?”
“I have just as good right to
a hundred dollar shawl as Anna,” replied my
sister, in a very undutiful tone. “And what
is more, Im going to have one.”
“What reason did your father
give for refusing your request to-day?” asked
my mother.
“Couldn’t spare the money!
Had a large payment to make! Only an excuse!”
“Stop, my child!” was
the quick, firm remark, made with unusual feeling.
“Is that the way to speak of so good a father?
Of one who has ever been so kindly indulgent?
Jane! Jane! You know not what you are saying!”
My sister looked something abashed
at this unexpected rebuke, when my mother took occasion
to add, with an earnestness of manner that I could
not help remarking as singular,
“Your father is troubled about
something. Business may not be going on to his
satisfaction. Last night I awoke, and found him
walking the floor. To my questions he merely
answered that he was wakeful. His health is not
so good as formerly, and his spirits are low.
Don’t, let me pray you, do anything to worry
him. Say no more about this money, Jane; you
will get it whenever it can be spared.”
I did not see my father again until
tea-time. Occasionally, business engagements
pressed upon him so closely that he did not come home
at the usual hour for dining. He looked pale—weary—almost
haggard.
“Dear father, are you sick?”
said I, laying a hand upon him, and gazing earnestly
into his countenance.
“I do not feel very well,”
he replied, partly averting his face, as if he did
not wish me to read its expression too closely.
“I have had a weary day.”
“You must take more recreation,”
said I. “This excessive devotion to business
is destroying your health. Why will you do it,
father?”
He merely sighed as he passed onwards,
and ascended to his own room. At tea-time I observed
that his face was unusually sober. His silence
was nothing uncommon, and so that passed without remark
from any one.
On the next day Jane received the
hundred dollars, which was spent for a shawl like
mine. This brought the sunshine back to her face.
Her moody looks, I saw, disturbed my father.
From this time, the hand which had
ever been ready to supply all our wants real or imaginary,
opened less promptly at our demands. My father
talked occasionally of retrenchment and economy when
some of our extravagant bills came in; but we paid
little heed to his remarks on this head. Where
could we retrench? In what could we economize?
The very idea was absurd. We had nothing that
others moving in our circle did not have. Our
house and furniture would hardly compare favorably
with the houses and furniture of many of our fashionable
friends. We dressed no better—indeed,
not so well as dozens of our acquaintances. Retrenchment
and economy! I remember laughing with my sisters
at the words, and wondering with them what could be
coming over our father. In a half-amused way,
we enumerated the various items of imaginary reform,
beginning at the annual summer recreations, and ending
with our milliner’s bills. In mock seriousness,
we proposed to take the places of cook, chambermaid,
and waiter, and thus save these items of expense in
the family. We had quite a merry time over our
fancied reforms.
But our father was serious. Steadily
he persisted in what seemed to us a growing penuriousness.
Every demand for money seemed to give him a partial
shock, and every dollar that came to us was parted
with reluctantly. All this was something new;
but we thought less than we felt about it. Our
father seemed to be getting into a very singular state
of mind.
Summer came round—I shall
never forget that summer—and we commenced
making our annual preparations for Saratoga. Money
was, of course, an indispensable prerequisite.
I asked for fifty dollars.
“For what purpose?” inquired my father.
“I haven’t a single dress fit to appear
in away from home,” said I.
“Where are you going?” he asked.
I thought the question a strange one, and replied,
a little curtly,
“To Saratoga, of course.”
“Oh!” It seemed new to
him. Then he repeated my words, in a questioning
kind of a way, as if his mind were not altogether
satisfied on the subject.
“To Saratoga?”
“Yes, sir. To Saratoga.
We always go there. We shall close the season
at Newport this year.”
“Who else is going?” My
father’s manner was strange. I had never
seen him just in the mood he then appeared to be.
“Jane is going, of course; and
so is Emily. And we are trying to persuade mother,
also. She didn’t go last year. Won’t
you spend a week or two with us? Now do say yes.”
My father shook his head at this last
proposal, and said, “No, child!” very
decidedly.
“Why?” I asked.
“Because I have something of
more importance to think about than Saratoga and its
fashionable follies.”
“Business! business!”
said I, impatiently. “It is the Moloch,
father, to which you sacrifice every social pleasure,
every home delight, every good! Already you have
laid health and happiness upon the bloody altars of
this false god!”
A few quick flushes went over his
pale face, and then its expression became very sad.
“Anna,” he said, after
a brief silence, during which even my unpracticed
eyes could see that an intense struggle was going on
in his mind, “Anna, you will have to give up
your visit to Saratoga this year.”
“Why, father!” It seemed
as if my blood were instantly on fire. My face
was, of course, all in a glow. I was confounded,
and, let me confess it, indignant; it seemed so like
a tyrannical outrage.
“It is simply as I say, my daughter.”
He spoke without visible excitement. “I
cannot afford the expense this season, and you will,
therefore, all have to remain in the city.”
“That’s impossible!”
said I. “I couldn’t live here through
the summer.”
“I manage to live!”
There was a tone in my father’s voice, as he
uttered these simple words, partly to himself, that
rebuked me. Yes, he did manage to live, but how?
Witness his pale face, wasted form, subdued aspect,
brooding silence, and habitual abstraction of mind!
“I manage to live!”
I hear the rebuking words even now—the tones
in which they were uttered are in my ears. Dear
father! Kind, tender, indulgent, long-suffering,
self-denying! Ah, how little were you understood
by your thoughtless, selfish children!
“Let my sisters and mother go,”
said I, a new regard for my father springing up in
my heart; “I will remain at home with you.”
“Thank you, dear child!”
he answered, his voice suddenly veiled with feeling.
“But I cannot afford to let any one go this season.”
“The girls will be terribly
disappointed. They have set their hearts on going,”
said I.
“I’m sorry,” he
said. “But necessity knows no law.
They will have to make themselves as contented at
home as possible.”
And he left me, and went away to his
all-exacting “business.”
When I stated what he had said, my
sisters were in a transport of mingled anger and disappointment,
and gave utterance to many unkind remarks against
our good, indulgent father. As for my oldest sister,
she declared that she would go in spite of him, and
proposed our visiting the store of a well-known merchant,
where we often made purchases, and buying all we wanted,
leaving directions to have the bill sent in.
But I was now on my father’s side, and resolutely
opposed all suggestions of disobedience. His manner
and words had touched me, causing some scales to drop
from my vision, so that I could see in a new light,
and perceive things in a new aspect.
We waited past the usual time for
my father’s coming on that day, and then dined
without him. A good deal to our surprise he came
home about four o’clock, entering with an unusual
quiet manner, and going up to his own room without
speaking to any one of the family.
“Was that your father?”
We were sitting together, still discussing the question
of Saratoga and Newport. It was my mother who
asked the question. We had heard the street door
open and close, and had also heard footsteps along
the passage and up the stairs.
“It is too early for him to come home,”
I answered.
My mother looked at her watch, and
remarked, as a shade of concern flitted over her face,
“It certainly was your father.
I cannot be mistaken in his step. What can have
brought him home so early? I hope he is not sick.”
And she arose and went hastily from the room.
I followed, for a sudden fear came into my heart.
“Edward! what ails you?
Are you sick?” I heard my mother ask, in an
alarmed voice, as I came into her room. My father
had laid himself across the bed, and his face was
concealed by a pillow, into which it was buried deeply.
“Edward! Edward! Husband!
What is the matter? Are you ill?”
“Oh, father! dear father!”
I cried, adding my voice to my mother’s, and
bursting into tears. I grasped his hand; it was
very cold. I leaned over, and, pressing down
the pillow, touched his face. It was cold also,
and clammy with perspiration.
“Send James for the doctor,
instantly,” said my mother.
“No, no—don’t.”
My father partially aroused himself at this, speaking
in a thick, unnatural voice.
“Go!” My mother repeated
the injunction, and I flew down stairs with the order
for James, our waiter, to go in all haste for the family
physician. When I returned, my mother, her face
wet with tears, was endeavoring to remove some of
my father’s outer garments. Together we
took off his coat, waistcoat and boots, he making no
resistance, and appearing to be in partial stupor,
as if under the influence of some drug. We chafed
his hands and feet, and bathed his face, that wore
a deathly aspect, and used all the means in our power
to rekindle the failing spark of life. But he
seemed to grow less and less conscious of external
things every moment.
When the physician came, he had many
questions to ask as to the cause of the state in which
he found my father. But we could answer none
of them. I watched his face intently, noting every
varying expression, but saw nothing to inspire confidence.
He seemed both troubled and perplexed. Almost
his first act was to bleed copiously.
Twice, before the physician came,
had my father been inquired for at the door, a thing
altogether unusual at that hour of the day. Indeed,
his presence in the house at that hour was something
which had not occurred within a year.
“A gentleman is in the parlor,
and says that he must see Mr. W——,”
said the waiter, speaking to me in a whisper, soon
after the physician’s arrival.
“Did you tell him that father was very ill,”
said I.
“Yes; but he says that he must see him, sick
or well.”
“Go down and tell him that father
is not in a state to be seen by any one.”
The waiter returned in a few moments,
and beckoned me to the chamber door.
“The man says that he is not
going to leave the house until he sees your father.
I wish you would go down to him. He acts so strangely.”
Without stopping to reflect, I left
the apartment, and hurried down to the parlor.
I found a man walking the floor in a very excited
manner.
“I wish to see Mr. W.——,”
said he, abruptly, and in an imperative way.
“He is very ill, sir,”
I replied, “and cannot be seen.”
“I must see him, sick or well.”
His manner was excited.
“Impossible, sir.”
The door bell rang again at this moment,
and with some violence. I paused, and stood listening
until the servant answered the summons, while the
man strode twice the full length of the parlor.
“I wish to see Mr. W——.”
It was the voice of a man.
“He is sick,” the servant replied.
“Give him my name—Mr.
Walton—and say that I must see him for just
a moment.” And this new visitor came in
past the waiter, and entered the parlor.
“Mr. Arnold!” he ejaculated, in evident
surprise.
“Humph! This a nice business!”
remarked the first visitor, in a rude way, entirely
indifferent to my presence or feelings. “A
nice business, I must confess!”
“Have you seen Mr. W.——?”
was inquired.
“No. They say he’s sick.”
There was an unconcealed doubt in the voice that uttered
this.
“Gentlemen,” said I, stung
into indignant courage, “this is an outrage!
What do you mean by it?”
“We wish to see your father,”
said the last comer, his manner changing, and his
voice respectful.
“You have both been told,”
was my firm reply, “that my father is too ill
to be seen.”
“It isn’t an hour, as
I am told, since he left his store,” said the
first visitor, “and I hardly think his illness
has progressed so rapidly up to this time as to make
an interview dangerous. We do not wish to be
rude or uncourteous, Miss W——, but
our business with your father is imperative, and we
must see him. I, for one, do not intend leaving
the house until I meet him face to face!”
“Will you walk up stairs?”
I had the presence of mind and decision to say, and
I moved from the parlor into the passage. The
men followed, and I led them up to the chamber where
our distressed family were gathered around my father.
As we entered the hushed apartment the men pressed
forward somewhat eagerly, but their steps were suddenly
arrested. The sight was one to make its own impression.
My father’s face, deathly in its hue, was turned
towards the door, and from his bared arm a stream
of dark blood was flowing sluggishly. The physician
had just opened a vein.
“Come! This is no place
for us,” I heard one of the men whisper to the
other, and they withdrew as unceremoniously as they
had entered. Scarcely had they gone ere the loud
ringing of the door bell sounded through the house
again.
“What does all this mean!”
whispered my distressed mother.
“I cannot tell. Something
is wrong,” was all that I could answer; and
a vague, terrible fear took possession of my heart.
In the midst of our confusion, uncertainty
and distress, my uncle, the only relative of my mother,
arrived, and from him we learned the crushing fact
that my father’s paper had been that day dishonored
at bank. In other words, that he had failed in
business.
The blow, long suspended over his
head; and as I afterwards learned, long dreaded, and
long averted by the most desperate expedients to save
himself from ruin, when it did fall, was too heavy
for him. It crushed the life out of his enfeebled
system. That fearful night he died!
It is not my purpose to draw towards
the survivors any sympathy, by picturing the changes
in their fortunes and modes of life that followed
this sad event. They have all endured much and
suffered much. But how light has it been to what
my father must have endured and suffered in his long
struggle to sustain the thoughtless extravagance of
his family—to supply them with comforts
and luxuries, none of which he could himself enjoy!
Ever before me is the image of his gradually wasting
form, and pale, sober, anxious face. His voice,
always mild, now comes to my ears, in memory, burdened
with a most touching sadness. What could we have
been thinking about? Oh, youth! how blindly selfish
thou art! How unjust in thy thoughtlessness!
What would I not give to have my father back again!
This daily toil for bread, those hours of labor, prolonged
often far into the night season—how cheerful
would I be if they ministered to my father’s
comfort. Ah! if we had been loving and just to
him, we might have had him still. But we were
neither loving nor just. While he gathered with
hard toil, we scattered. Daily we saw him go
forth hurried to his business, and nightly we saw him
come home exhausted; and we never put forth a hand
to lighten his burdens; but, to gratify our idle and
vain pleasures, laid new ones upon his stooping shoulders,
until, at last, the cruel weight crushed him to the
earth!
My father! Oh, my father!
If grief and tearful repentance could have restored
you to our broken circle, long since you would have
returned to us. But tears and repentance are vain.
The rest and peace of eternity is yours!