IT was near the close of the fifth
day since Mr. Markland left his home to commence a
long journey southward; and yet, no word had come
back from him. He had promised to write from Baltimore,
and from other points on his route, and sufficient
time had elapsed for at least two letters to arrive.
A servant, who had been sent to the city post-office,
had returned without bringing any word from the absent
one; and Mrs. Markland, with Fanny by her side, was
sitting near a window sad and silent.
Just one year has passed since their
introduction to the reader. But what a change
one year has wrought! The heart’s bright
sunshine rested then on every object. Woodbine
Lodge was then a paradise. Now, there is scarcely
a ray of this warm sunshine. Yet there had been
no bereavement—no affliction; nothing that
we refer to a mysterious Providence. No,—but
the tempter was admitted. He came with specious
words and deceiving pretences. He vailed the present
good, and magnified the worth of things possessing
no power to satisfy the heart. Too surely has
he suceeded in the accomplishment of his evil work.
At the time of the reader’s
introduction to Woodbine Lodge, a bright day was going
down in beauty; and there was not a pulse in nature
that did not beat in unison with the hearts of its
happy denizens. A summer day was again drawing
to its close, but sobbing itself away in tears.
And they were in tears also, whose spirits, but a single
year gone by, reflected only the light and beauty of
nature.
By the window sat the mother and daughter,
with oppressed hearts, looking out upon the leaden
sky and the misty gusts that swept across the gloomy
landscape. Sad and silent, we have said, they
were. Now and then they gazed into each other’s
faces, and the lips quivered as if words were on them.
But each spirit held back the fear by which it was
burdened—and the eyes turned wearily again
from the open window.
At last, Fanny’s heavy heart
could bear in silence the pressure no longer.
Hiding her face in her mother’s lap, she sobbed
out violently. Repressing her own struggling
emotions, Mrs. Markland spoke soothing, hopeful words;
and even while she sought to strengthen her daughter’s
heart, her own took courage.
“My dear child,” she said,
in a voice made even by depressing its tone, “do
you not remember that beautiful thought expressed by
Mrs. Willet yesterday? ‘Death,’ said
she, ’signifies life; for in every death there
is resurrection into a higher and purer life.
This is as true,’ she remarked, ’of our
affections, which are but activities of the life,
as of the natural life itself.’”
The sobs of the unhappy girl died
away. Her mother continued, in a low, earnest
voice, speaking to her own heart as well as to that
of her child, for it, too, needed strength and comfort.
“How often have we been told,
in our Sabbath instructions, that natural affections
cannot be taken to heaven; that they must die, in
order that spiritual affections may be born.”
Fanny raised herself up, and said,
with slight warmth of manner—
“Is not my love for you a natural
affection for my natural mother? And must that
die before I can enter heaven?”
“May it not be changed into
a love of what is good in your mother, instead of
remaining only a love of her person?”
“Dear mother!” almost
sobbed again the unhappy child,—clasping
eagerly the neck of her parent,—“it
is such a love now! Oh! if I were as good, and
patient, and self-denying as you are!”
“All our natural affections,”
resumed Mrs. Markland, after a few moments were given
to self-control, “have simple regard to ourselves;
and their indulgence never brings the promised happiness.
This is why a wise and good Creator permits our natural
desires to be so often thwarted. In this there
is mercy, and not unkindness; for the fruition of
these desires would often be most exquisite misery.”
“Hark!” exclaimed Fanny,
starting up at this moment, and leaning close to the
window. The sound that had fallen upon her ear
had also reached the ears of the mother.
“Oh! it’s father!”
fell almost wildly from the daughter’s lips,
and she sprang out into the hall, and forth to meet
him in the drenching rain. Mrs. Markland could
not rise, but sat, nerveless, until the husband entered
the room.
“Oh, Edward! Edward!”
she then exclaimed, rising, and staggering forward
to meet him. “Thank our kind Father in heaven
that you are with us again!” And her head sunk
upon his bosom, and she felt his embracing arms drawn
tightly around her. How exquisitely happy she
was for the moment! But she was aroused by the
exclamation of Fanny:—
“Oh, father! How pale you look!”
Mrs. Markland raised herself quickly,
and gazed into her husband’s face. What
a fearful change was there! He was pale and haggard;
and in his bloodshot eyes she read a volume of wretchedness.
“Oh, Edward! what has happened?”
she asked, eagerly and tenderly.
“More than I dare tell you!”
he replied, in a voice full of despair.
“Perhaps I can divine the worst.”
Markland had turned his face partly
away, that he might conceal its expression. But
the unexpected tone in which this sentence was uttered
caused him to look back quickly. There was no
foreboding fear in the countenance of his wife.
She had spoken firmly—almost cheerfully.
“The worst? Dear Agnes!”
he said, with deep anguish in his voice. “It
has not entered into your imagination to conceive the
worst!”
“All is lost!” she answered, calmly.
“All,” he replied, “but
honour, and a heart yet brave enough and strong enough
to battle with the world for the sake of its beloved
ones.”
Mrs. Markland hid her face on the
breast of her husband, and stood, for some minutes,
silent. Fanny approached her father, and laid
her head against him.
“All this does not appal me,”
said Mrs. Markland, and she looked up and smiled faintly
through tears that could not be repressed.
“Oh, Agnes! Agnes! can
you bear the thought of being driven out from this
Eden?”
“Its beauty has already faded,”
was the quiet answer. “If it is ours no
longer, we must seek another home. And home, you
know, dear Edward, is where the heart is, and the
loved ones dwell.”
But not so calmly could Fanny bear
this announcement. She had tried hard, for her
father’s sake, to repress her feelings; but now
they gave way into hysterical weeping. Far beyond
his words her thoughts leaped, and already bitter
self-reproaches had begun. Had she at once informed
him of Mr. Lyon’s return, singular interview,
and injunction of secrecy, all these appalling consequences
might have been saved. In an instant this flashed
upon her mind, and the conviction overwhelmed her.
“My poor child,” said
Mr. Markland, sadly, yet with great tenderness,—“would
to heaven I could save you from the evil that lies
before us! But I am powerless in the hands of
a stern necessity.”
“Oh, father!” sobbed the
weeping girl, “if I could bear this change alone,
I would be happy.”
“Let us all bear it cheerfully
together,” said Mrs. Markland, in a quiet voice,
and with restored calmness of spirit. “Heaven,
as Mrs. Willet says, with so much truth, is not without,
but within us. The elements of happiness lie
not in external, but in internal things. I do
not think, Edward, even with all we had of good in
possession, you have been happy for the past year.
The unsatisfied spirit turned itself away from all
that was beautiful in nature—from all it
had sought for as the means of contentment, and sighed
for new possessions. And these would also have
lost their charms, had you gained them, and your restless
heart still sighed after an ideal good. It may
be—nay, it must be—in mercy,
that our heavenly Father permitted this natural evil
to fall upon us. The night that approaches will
prove, I doubt not, the winter night in which much
bread will grow.”
“Comforter!” He spoke the word with emotion.
“And should I not be?”
was the almost cheerful answer. “Those who
cannot help should at least speak words of comfort.”
“Words! They are more than
words that you have spoken. They have in them
a substance and a life. But, Fanny, dear child!”
he said, turning to his still grieving daughter—“your
tears distress me. They pain more deeply than
rebuking sentences. My folly”—
“Father! exclaimed Fanny—“it
is I—not you—that must bear
reproach. A word might have saved all. Weak,
erring child that I was!, Oh! that fatal secret which
almost crushed my heart with its burden! Why
did I not listen to the voice of conscience and duty?”
“Let the dead past rest,”
said Mr. Markland. “Your error was light,
in comparison with mine. Had I guarded the approaches
to the pleasant land, where innocence and peace had
their dwelling-place, the subtle tempter could never
have entered. To mourn over the past but weakens
the spirit.”
But of all that passed between these
principal members of a family upon whom misfortune
had come like a flood, we cannot make a record.
The father’s return soon became known to the
rest, and the children’s gladness fell, like
a sunny vail, over the sterner features of the scene.