“I SHOULD have been contented
amid so much beauty, and with even more than my share
of earthly blessings.” Thus Mr. Markland
communed with himself, walking about alone, near the
close of the day preceding that on which his appointed
journey was to begin. “Am I not acting
over again that old folly of the substance and shadow?
Verily, I believe it is so. Ah! will we ever be
satisfied with any achievement in this life?
To-morrow I leave all by which I am here surrounded,
and more, a thousand-fold more—my heart’s
beloved ones; and for what? To seek the fortune
I was mad enough to cast from me into a great whirlpool,
believing that it would be thrown up at my feet again,
with every disk of gold changed into a sparkling diamond.
I have waited eagerly on the shore for the returning
tide, but yet there is no reflux, and now my last
hope rests on the diver’s strength and doubtful
fortune. I must make the fearful plunge.”
A cold shudder ran through the frame
of Mr. Markland, as he realized, too distinctly, the
image he had conjured up. A feeling of weakness
and irresolution succeeded.
“Ah!” he murmured to himself,
“if all had not been so blindly cast upon this
venture, I might be willing to wait the issue, providing
for the worst by a new disposition of affairs, and
by new efforts here. But I was too eager, too
hopeful, too insanely confident. Every thing
is now beyond my reach.”
This was the state of his mind when
Mr. Allison, whom he had not met in a familiar manner
for several weeks, joined him, saying, as he came
up with extended hand, and fine face, bright with the
generous interest in others that always burned in
his heart—
“What is this I hear, Mr. Markland?
Is it true that you are going away, to be absent for
some months? Mr. Willet was telling me about
it this morning.”
“It is too true,” replied
Mr. Markland, assuming a cheerful air, yet betraying
much of the troubled feeling that oppressed him.
“The calls of business cannot always be disregarded.”
“No—but, if I understand
aright, you contemplate going a long distance South—somewhere
into Central America.”
“Such is my destination.
Having been induced to invest money in a promising
enterprise in that far-off region, it is no more than
right to look after my interests there.”
“With so much to hold your thoughts
and interests here,” said Mr. Allison, “I
can hardly understand why you should let them wander
off so far from home.”
“And I can hardly understand
it myself,” returned Mr. Markland, in a lower
tone of voice, as if the admission were made reluctantly.
“But so it is. I am but a man, and man
is always dissatisfied with his actual, and always
looking forward to some good time coming. Ah,
sir, this faculty of imagination that we possess is
one of the curses entailed by the fall. It is
forever leading us off from a true enjoyment of what
we have. It has no faith in to-day—no
love for the good and beautiful that really exists.”
“I can show you a person whose
imagination plays no truant pranks like this,”
replied Mr. Allison. “And this shall be
at least one exception to your rule.”
“Name that person,” was the half-incredulous
response.
“Your excellent wife,” said Mr. Allison.
For some moments Mr. Markland stood
with his eyes cast down; then, lifting them to the
face of the old man, he said:
“The reference is true.
But, if she be not the only exception, the number
who, like her, can find the best reward in the present,
are, alas! but few.”
“If not found in the present,
Mr. Markland, will it ever be found? Think!”
“Never!” There was an
utterance of grief in the deep tone that thus responded-for
conviction had come like a quick flash upon his heart.
“But who finds it, Mr. Allison?”
he said, shortly after, speaking with stern energy.
“Who comprehends the present and the actual?
who loves it sufficiently? Ah, sir! is the present
ever what a fond, cheating imagination prefigured
it?”
“And knowing this so well,”
returned the, old man, “was it wise for you
to build so largely on the future as you seem to have
done?”
“No, it was not wise.”
The answer came with a bitter emphasis.
“We seek to escape the restlessness
of unsatisfied desire,” said Mr. Allison, “by
giving it more stimulating food, instead of firmly
repressing its morbid activities. Think you not
that there is something false in the life we are leading
here, when we consider how few and brief are the days
in which we experience a feeling of rest and satisfaction?
And if our life be false—or, in other words,
our life-purposes—what hope for us is there
in any change of pursuit or any change of scene?”
“None—none,” replied Mr. Markland.
“We may look for the good time
coming, but look in vain. Its morning will never
break over the distant mountain-tops to which our eyes
are turned.”
“Life is a mockery, a cheating
dream!” said Mr. Markland, bitterly.
“Not so, my friend,” was the calmly spoken
answer.
“Not so. Our life here
is the beginning of an immortal life. But, to
be a happy life, it must be a true one. All its
activities must have an orderly pulsation.”
Mr. Markland slowly raised a hand,
and, pressing it strongly against his forehead, stood
motionless for some moments, his mind deeply abstracted.
“My thoughts flow back, Mr.
Allison,” he said, at length, speaking in a
subdued tone, “to a period many months gone by,
and revives a conversation held with you, almost in
this very place. What you then said made a strong
impression on my mind. I saw, in clear light,
how vain were all efforts to secure happiness in this
world, if made selfishly, and thus in a direction
contrary to true order. The great social man
I recognised as no mere idealism, but as a verity.
I saw myself a member of this body, and felt deeply
the truth then uttered by you, that just in proportion
as each member thinks of and works for himself alone
will that individual be working in selfish disorder,
and, like the member of the human body that takes more
than its share of blood, must certainly suffer the
pain of inflammation. The truth then presented
to my mind was like a flood of light; but I did not
love the truth, and shut my eyes to the light that
revealed more than I wished to know. Ah, sir!
if I could have accepted all you then advanced—if
I could have overcome the false principle of self-seeking
then so clearly shown to be the curse of life—I
would not have involved myself in business that must
now separate me for months from my home and family.”
“And should you achieve all
that was anticipated in the beginning,” said
Mr. Allison, “I doubt if you will find pleasure
enough in the realization to compensate for this hour
of pain, to say nothing of what you are destined to
suffer during the months of separation that are before
you.”
“Your doubts are my own,”
replied Markland, musingly. “But,”—and
he spoke in a quicker and lighter tone,—“this
is all folly! I must go forward, now, to the
end. Why, then, yield to unmanly weakness?”
“True, sir,” returned
the old man. “No matter how difficult the
way in which our feet must walk, the path must be
trodden bravely.”
“I shall learn some lessons
of wisdom by this experience,” said Mr. Markland,
“that will go with me through life. But,
I fear, they will be all too dearly purchased.”
“Wisdom,” was the answer,
“is a thing of priceless value.”
“It is sometimes too dearly bought, for all
that.”
“Never,” replied the old
man,—“never. Wisdom is the soul’s
true riches; and there is no worldly possession that
compares with it in value. If you acquire wisdom
by any experience, no matter how severe it may prove,
you are largely the gainer. And here is the compensation
in every affliction, in every disappointment, and in
every misfortune. We may gather pearls of wisdom
from amid the ashes and cinders of our lost hopes,
after the fires have consumed them.”
Mr. Markland sighed deeply, but did
not answer. There was a dark sky above and around
him; yet gleams of light skirted a cloud here and
there, telling him that the great sun was shining serenely
beyond. He felt weak, sad, and almost hopeless,
as he parted from Mr. Allison, who promised often
to visit his family during his absence; and in his
weakness, he lifted his heart involuntarily upward,
and asked direction and strength from Him whom he
had forgotten in the days when all was light around
him, and, in the pride and strength of conscious manhood,
he had felt that he possessed all power to effect
the purposes of his own will.