To the opinion of her sister-in-law,
Mrs. Markland made no dissent. She was, also,
favourably impressed with Mr. Willet, and looked forward
with pleasure to making the acquaintance of his mother
and sisters.
On the following morning the carriage
was ordered, and about eleven o’clock Mrs. Markland,
Aunt Grace, and Fanny, were driven over to “Sweetbrier,”
the fanciful name which Mr. Ashton, the former owner,
had given to the beautiful seat, now the property of
Mr. Willet.
The day was cloudless, the air cool
and transparent, the sky of the deepest cerulean.
These mirrored themselves in the spirits of our little
party. Mrs. Markland looked calm and cheerful;
Fanny’s thoughts were drawn out of herself,
and her heart responded to the visible beauty around
her. Even Aunt Grace talked of the sky, the trees,
and the flowers, and saw a new charm in every thing.
“I presume we shall not meet
Mr. Willet,” she remarked, as the carriage drove
within the elegant grounds of their neighbour.
“He probably goes to the city
every day,” said Mrs. Markland. “I
believe he is engaged in business.”
“Yes; I think I heard Edward say that he was.”
“Our visit might be a pleasant
one in some respects,” observed Mrs. Markland,
“if he were at home. To him, we are not
entire strangers.”
“I see him in the portico,”
said Fanny, leaning toward the carriage window.
They were now in sight of the house.
“Yes, there he is,” added
Aunt Grace, in a pleased tone of voice.
In a few minutes the carriage drew
up at the beautiful mansion, in the portico of which
were Mr. Willet and his mother and sisters, waiting
to receive them. The welcome was most cordial,
and the ladies soon felt at home with each other.
Flora, the youngest sister of Mr.
Willet, was a lovely girl about Fanny’s age.
It did not take them long to know and appreciate each
other. The mind of Flora was naturally stronger
than that of Fanny, partaking slightly of the masculine
type; but only sufficient to give it firmness and
self-reliance. Her school education had progressed
farther, and she had read, and thought, and seen more
of the world than Fanny. Yet the world had left
no stain upon her garments, for, in entering it, she
had been lovingly guarded. To her brother she
looked up with much of a child’s unwavering confidence.
He was a few years her senior, and she could not remember
the time when she had not regarded him as a man whose
counsels were full of wisdom.
“Where have you been for the
last hour?” Mr. Willet inquired of the young
maidens, as they entered, arm-in-arm, their light forms
gently inclined to each other.
“Wandering over your beautiful
grounds,” replied Fanny.
“I hardly thought you would
see them as beautiful,” said Mr. Willet.
“Do you think that I have no
eye for the beautiful?” returned Fanny, with
a smile.
“Not so,” quickly answered
Mr. Willet. “Woodbine Lodge is so near
perfection that you must see defects in Sweetbrier.”
“I never saw half the beauty
in nature that has been revealed to my eyes this morning,”
said Fanny. “It seemed as if I had come
upon enchanted ground. Ah, sir, your sister has
opened a new book for me to read in—the
book of nature.”
Mr. Willet glanced, half-inquiringly, toward Flora.
“Fanny speaks with enthusiasm,” said the
sister.
“What have you been talking
about? What new leaf has Flora turned for you,
Miss Markland?”
“A leaf on which there is much
written that I already yearn to understand. All
things visible, your sister said to me, are but the
bodying forth in nature of things invisible, yet in
harmony with immutable laws of order.”
“Reason will tell you that this
is true,” remarked Mr. Willet.
“Yes; I see that it must be
so. Yet what a world of new ideas it opens to
the mind! The flower I hold in my hand, Flora
says, is but the outbirth, or bodily form, of a spiritual
flower. How strange the thought!”
“Did she not speak truly?”
asked Mr. Willet, in a low, earnest voice.
“What is that?” inquired
Mrs. Markland, who was not sure that she had heard
her daughter correctly.
“Flora say that this flower
is only the bodily form of a spiritual flower; and
that, without the latter, the former would have no
existence.”
Mrs. Markland let her eyes fall to
the floor, and mused for some moments.
“A new thought to me,”
she at length said, looking up. “Where did
you find it, Flora?”
“I have believed this ever since
I could remember any thing,” replied Flora.
“You have?”
“Yes, ma’am. It was
among the first lessons that I learned from my mother.”
“Then you believe that every
flower has a spirit,” said Mrs. Markland.
“Every flower has life,” was calmly answered.
“True.”
“And every different flower
a different life. How different, may be seen
when we think of the flower which graces the deadly
nightshade, and of that which comes the fragrant herald
of the juicy orange. We call this life the spiritual
flower.”
“A spiritual flower! Singular
thought!” Mrs. Markland mused for some time.
“There is a spiritual world,”
said Mr. Willet, in his gentle, yet earnest way.
“Oh, yes. We all believe
that.” Mrs. Markland fixed her eyes on the
face of Mr. Willet with a look of interest.
“What do we mean by a world?”
Mrs. Markland felt a rush of new ideas,
though seen but dimly, crowding into her mind.
“We cannot think of a world,”
said Mr. Willet, “except as filled with objects,
whether that world be spiritual or natural. The
poet, in singing of the heavenly land, fails not to
mention its fields of ‘living green,’
and ‘rivers of delight.’ And what
are fields without grass, and flowers, and tender
herb? If, then, there be flowers in the spiritual
world, they must be spiritual flowers.”
“And that is what Flora meant?” said Mrs.
Markland.
“Nothing more,” said Flora;
“unless I add, that all flowers in the natural
world derive their life from flowers in the spiritual
world; as all other objects in nature have a like
correspondent origin.”
“This comes to me as an entirely
new idea,” said Mrs. Markland, in a thoughtful
way. “Yet how beautiful! It seems to
bring my feet to the verge of a new world, and my
hand trembles with an impulse to stretch itself forth
and lift the vail.”
“Do not repress the impulse,”
said Mrs. Willet, laying a hand gently upon one of
Mrs. Markland’s.
“Ah! But I grope in the dark.”
“We see but dimly here, for
we live in the outward world, and only faint yet truthful
images of the inner world are revealed to us.
No effort of the mind is so difficult as that of lifting
itself above the natural and the visible into the
spiritual and invisible—invisible, I mean,
to the bodily eyes. So bound down by mere sensual
things are all our ideas, that it is impossible, when
the effort is first made, to see any thing clear in
spiritual light. Yet soon, if the effort be made,
will the straining vision have faint glimpses of a
world whose rare beauties have never been seen by
natural eyes. There is the natural, and there
is the spiritual; but they are so distinct from each
other, that the one by sublimation, increase, or decrease,
never becomes the other. Yet are they most intimately
connected; so intimately that, without the latter,
the former could have no existence. The relation
is, in fact, that of cause and effect.”
“I fear this subject is too
grave a one for our visitors,” said Mr. Willet,
as his mother ceased speaking.
“It may be,” remarked
the lady, with a gentle smile that softened her features
and gave them a touch of heavenly beauty. “And
Mrs. Markland will forgive its intrusion upon her.
We must not expect that others will always be attracted
by themes in which we feel a special interest.”
“You could not interest me more,”
said Mrs. Markland. “I am listening with
the deepest attention.”
“Have you ever thought much
of the relation between your soul and body; or, as
I would say, between your spiritual body and your
natural body?” asked Mrs. Willet.
“Often; but with a vagueness
that left the mind wearied and dissatisfied.”
“I had a long talk with Mr.
Allison on that subject,” said Fanny.
“Ah!” Mrs. Willet looked
toward Fanny with a brightening face. “And
what did he say?”
“Oh! a great deal—more than I can
remember.”
“You can recollect something?”
“Oh yes. He said that our
spiritual bodies were as perfectly organized as our
material bodies, and that they could see, and hear,
and feel.”
“He said truly. That our
spirits have vision every one admits, when he uses
the words, on presenting some idea or principle to
another—’Can’t you see it?’
The architect sees the palace or temple before he
embodies it in marble, and thus makes it visible to
natural eyes. So does the painter see his picture;
and the sculptor his statue in the unhewn stone.
You see the form of your absent father with a distinctness
of vision that makes every feature visible; but not
with the eyes of your body.”
“No, not with my bodily eyes,”
said Fanny. “I have thought a great deal
about this since I talked with Mr. Allison; and the
more I think of it, the more clearly do I perceive
that we have spiritual bodies as well as natural bodies.”
“And the inevitable conclusion
is, that the spiritual body must live, breathe, and
act in a world above or within the natural world,
where all things are adapted to its functions and quality.”
“In this world are the spiritual
flowers we were speaking about?” said Mrs. Markland,
smiling.
“Yes, ma’am; in this world
of causes, where originate all effects
seen in the world of nature,” answered Mrs. Willet;—“the
world from which flowers as well as men are born.”
“I am bewildered,” said
Mrs. Markland, “by these suggestions. That
a volume of truth lies hidden from common eyes in
this direction, I can well believe. As yet my
vision is too feeble to penetrate the vail.”
“If you look steadily in this
direction, your eyes will, in time, get accustomed
to the light, and gradually see clearer and clearer,”
said Mrs. Willet.