The appearance, manner, and bearing
of the two strangers impressed me strongly. The
elder had evidently moved in refined and cultivated
society all her life. There was about her the
air of “a lady, born and bred”—dignified,
calm, easy, and courteous. The daughter was a
lovely blossom on this stately stem—delicate,
beautiful, sweet with the odors of innocence.
I see her now as I saw her on that first night of
our meeting—to my eyes a new born vision
of loveliness.
I found Constance awaiting, with curious
interest, my return. I was going right into the
heart of this new wonder, and could not fail to bring
back some revelation that would satisfy, in a measure,
the excitement of mind produced by so singular an
intrusion of strangers upon our quiet town. I
answered her first look of inquiry by the words:—
“It is over. Another book
of life is sealed up here to be opened in eternity.”
“Dead! Not dead?”
“Yes, Constance, Mrs. Allen
is dead. Her spirit had passed away before my
arrival.”
“How did she die?—from what cause?”
“From what I can learn she died
in a fit of passion.” I then related all
that I had seen and heard.
“But who can they be?”
This query came as a natural sequence. “What
right have they in the Allen House?”
“Whoever they may be,”
I replied, “they act, or, at least, the elder
of the two ladies acts as if her right there was not
even open to a question. And, perhaps, it is
not.”
“But what can they be to the Allens?”
“I will give you,” said
I, “the benefit of my guessing on the subject.
You recollect the story told about Captain Allen’s
mother; how she went off a great many years ago with
a stranger—an Englishman.”
Constance remembered all about this
family history, for it was the romance of our town.
“My conclusion is that this
lady is the sister of Captain Allen—the
child that his mother took with her when she fled from
her husband’s house. I am strengthened
in this belief from the first impression of her voice,
as if the tones had in them something familiar.”
We talked this matter over, looking
at it in every way, until we satisfied ourselves that
my conjectures must be true. The quiet manner
in which they had intruded themselves, and taken possession
of the house—unheralded as far as we knew—could
not but present itself to our minds as a matter of
special wonder. The more we conned it over the
more we were puzzled. Before coming home I had
called at an undertaker’s, and notified him that
his services were wanted at the Allen House.
Early on the next day I took the liberty of calling
there myself. I sent up my name, and awaited,
with some interest, my reception. The visit might
be regarded as an intrusion, and I was prepared to
receive a message from the lady asking to be excused.
Not so, however. I had been seated only a few
moments, when I heard the rustle of her garments on
the stairs. My first glance at her face assured
me that I was no unwelcome visitor.
“Thank you, Doctor,” she
said, as she extended her hand, “for this early
call. Our meeting last night for the first time
can hardly be called a pleasant one—or
the associations connected with it such as either
of us might wish to recall.”
“Our control over events is
so slight,” I made answer as I resumed my seat,
“that we should separate unpleasant feelings
as far as possible from any memories connected with
them.”
A faint, sad smile just lightened
up her placid face as she said, in reply to the remark.
“Ah, Doctor, that may not be.
Lives are too intimately blended here for any one
to suffer or do wrong without leaving a burden of
sadness on other memories.”
“True; but the burden will be
light or heavy according to our strength.”
She looked at me without replying,
for the remark was so palpable, that it seemed to
involve nothing beyond a literal fact.
“Or rather,” I said, “the
burden will be heavy or light according to our state
or quality.”
There was a sign of awakening interest
in her countenance as if my remark had touched some
hidden spring of thought.
“If we are right with ourselves,”
I went on, “the disturbance produced by others’
misconduct will not reach very far down. The
pressure of sadness may lie upon us for a season; but
cannot long remain; for the pure heart will lift itself
into serene atmospheres.”
“But, who is right with himself?”
she said. “Whose heart is pure enough to
dwell in these serene atmospheres? Not mine, alas!”
I looked into the suddenly illuminated
face as she put these questions, in surprise at the
quick change which had passed over it. But the
tone in which she uttered the closing sentence was
touched with tender sadness.
“Rather let me say,” I
made answer, “in the degree that we are
right with ourselves. None attain unto perfection
here.”
“Yet,” said the lady,
with a sweet calmness of manner that made her look
beautiful, “is it not pleasant to imagine a state
of perfection—or rather a state in which
evil is quiescent, and the heart active with all good
and loving impulses? How full of inspiration
is such an ideal of life! But the way by which
we must go, if we would rise into this state, is one
of difficulty and perpetual warfare. The enemies
of our peace are numbered by myriads; and they. seek
with deadly hatred to do us harm.”
“And yet are powerless,”
said I, “if we keep the outworks of our lives
in order.”
“Yes,” she answered, “it
is the very ultimate or last things of our lives where
the power of repulsion resides. We can, in temptation,
be it ever so strong, refuse to act in the wrong
direction—refuse to do an evil thing, because
it is sinful. And this is our bulwark; this is
our tower of safety; for it is only in wrong doing
that our enemies gain the victory over us. They
may assault us never so fiercely—may dazzle
our eyes with the glitter of this world’s most
alluring things—may stir the latent envy,
malice, pride, or dishonesty, that lurks in every
heart; but if we stand still, hold back our hands
and stay our feet—if we give our resolute
‘No’ to all enticements, and keep our
actions free from evil, all hell cannot prevail
against us. God will take care of the interior
of our lives, and make them pure and heavenly, if
we resist evil in the exterior. But, pardon me;
I did not mean to read you a homily.”
She smiled with a grave sort of smile,
and then sat silent.
“I like your way of talking,”
said I. There was something about the lady that put
me at ease with her, and I said this without reserve,
as if I were speaking to a friend. “It looks
to higher things in life than people usually regard
as worthy of our chief consideration. To most
of us, the outer world offers the highest attractions;
only the few turn inwardly to the more beautiful world
of mind.”
“Outward things fade—change—die;
only spiritual things dwell in unfading beauty.
We are in a world of mere effects as to our bodies;
but the soul lives in the world of causes. Do
we not spend a vain and unprofitable life, then, if
we go on building, day after day, our tabernacle on
the ever-shifting sands of time, instead of upon the
immoveable Rock of Ages? But who is guiltless
of this folly? Not I! not I!”
Again that calm, earnest voice fell
to a lower key, and was veiled by a tender sadness.
“It is something gained,”
she added, with returning firmness of tone, “if,
even after the sharp lessons of many years, we get
glimpses of Truth, and are willing to follow, though
it be at a far distance, the light she holds aloft.
Yes, it is something gained—something gained!”
She spoke the last words as if merely
thinking aloud, and not addressing an auditor.
“Can I aid you in anything,
madam?” said I, breaking in upon a state of
reverie into which her mind seemed to be falling.
“The circumstances under which you find yourself
are peculiar—I refer to the death of Mrs.
Allen, following so quickly on your arrival among
strangers—and you may stand in need of friendly
service from one who knows the people and their ways.
If so, do not hesitate to command me.”
“I thank you sincerely,”
she answered, unbending still more from her almost
stately manner. “Friendly consideration
I shall need, of course—as who does not
in this world? And I repeat my thanks, that you
have so kindly and so promptly anticipated my needs
So far as the remains of my unhappy kinswoman are
concerned, I have referred all to the undertaker.
He will carry out my wishes. To-morrow the interment
will take place. On the day following, if it it
is altogether agreeable to yourself, I would esteem
a call as a particular favor.”
I arose, as she concluded the last
sentence, saying as I did so,
“I will be sure to call, madam;
and render any service in my power. You may regard
me as a friend.”
“Already you have extorted my
confidence,” she answered, faintly smiling.
I bowed low, and was retiring when she said—
“A moment, Doctor!”
I turned toward her again.
“Doctor, it may be well for you to see my daughter.”
“Is she indisposed?” I asked.
“Not exactly that. But
the excitement and alarm of the last two or three
days have been, I fear, rather too much for her nerves.
I say alarm, for the poor girl was really frightened
at Mrs. Allen’s wild conduct—and
no wonder. Death following in so sad a way, shocked
her painfully. She did not sleep well last night;
and this morning she looks pale and drooping.
In all probability, quiet of mind and body will soon
adjust the balance of health; still, it may be safest
for you to see her.”
“A mere temporary disturbance,
no doubt, which, as you suggest, quiet of mind and
body will, in all probability, overcome. Yet it
will do no harm for me to see her; and may save trouble.”
“Excuse me a moment,”
she said, and left the room. In a little while
she returned, and asked me to accompany her up stairs,
I found the daughter in a black and
gray silk wrapper, seated on a lounge. She arose
as I entered, a slight flush coming into her face,
which subsided in a few moments, leaving it quite pale,
and weary looking. After we were all seated,
I took her hand, which was hot in the palm, but cold
at the extremities. Her pulse was feeble, disturbed,
and quick.
“How is your head?” I asked.
“It feels a little strangely,”
she replied, moving it two or three times, as if to
get some well defined sensation.
“Any pain?”
“Yes; a dull kind of pain over
my left eye, that seems to go deep into my head.”
“What general bodily sensation
have you? Any that you can speak of definitely?”
“None, except a sense of oppression
and heaviness. When I raise my arm, it seems
to fall like lead; if I move about, I am weary, and
wish to be at rest.”
“Rest is, by all means, the
most desirable condition for you now,” said
I. Then addressing her mother, I added—“I
think your daughter had better lie down. Let
her room be shaded and kept quiet. She needs
rest and sleep. Sleep is one of nature’s
great restorers.”
“Will you make no prescription,
Doctor?” the mother asked.
I reflected on the symptoms exhibited,
for a few moments, and then said,
“Nothing beyond repose, now.
I trust that nature, as the pressure is removed, will
work all right again.”
“You will call in again to-day.”
“Yes; towards evening I will
see your daughter, when I hope to find her improved
in every way.”
I spoke with a cheerfulness of manner
that did not altogether express my feelings in the
case; for, there were some indications, not yet clear
enough for a diagnosis, that awakened slight concern.
As I did not wish to go wrong in my first prescription,
I deemed it better to wait a few hours, and see how
nature would succeed in her efforts to repel the enemy.
So I went away, with a promise to call again early
in the afternoon.