“OUR Father in heaven never
leaves us in a pathless desert,” said Mrs. Markland,
light breaking through her tear-filled eye. Her
husband had just related the conversation held with
Mr. Willet. “When the sun goes down, stars
appear.”
“A little while ago, the desert
seemed pathless, and no star glittered in the sky,”
was answered.
“Yet the path was there, Edward;
you had not looked close enough to your feet,”
replied his wife.
“It was so narrow that it would
have escaped my vision,” he said, faintly sighing.
“If it were not the safest way
for you and for all of us, it would not be the only
one now permitted our feet to tread.”
“Safest it may be for me; but
your feet could walk, securely, a pathway strewn with
flowers. Ah me! the thought that my folly—”
“Edward,” Mrs. Markland
interrupted him in a quick, earnest voice, “if
you love me, spare me in this. When I laid my
hand in yours on that happy day, which was but the
beginning of happier ones, I began a new life.
All thought, all affection, all joy in the present
and hope in the future, were thenceforth to be mingled
with your thought, affection, joy, and hope.
Our lives became one. It was yours to mark out
our way through the world; mine to walk by your side.
The path, thus far, has been a flowery one, thanks
to your love and care! But no life-path winds
always amid soft and fragrant meadows. There
are desert places on the road, and steep acclivities;
and there are dark, devious valleys, as well as sunny
hill-tops. Pilgrims on the way to the Promised
Land, we must pass through the Valley and the Shadow
of Death, and be imprisoned for a time in Doubting
Castle, before the Delectable Mountains are gained.
Oh, Edward, murmur not, but thank God for the path
he has shown us, and for the clear light that falls
so warmly upon it. These friends, whom he has
given us in this our darkest hour, are the truest
friends we have yet known. Is it not a sweet compensation
for all we lose, to be near them still, and to have
the good a kind Father dispenses come to us through
their hands? Dear husband! in this night of worldly
life, a star of celestial beauty has already mirrored
itself in my heart, and made light one of its hitherto
darkened chambers.”
“Sweet philosopher!” murmured
her husband, in a softened voice. “A spirit
like yours would illuminate a dungeon.”
“If it can make the air bright
around my husband, its happiness will be complete,”
was softly answered.
“But these reverses are hard
to bear,” said Mr. Markland, soberly.
“Harder in anticipation than
in reality. They may become to us blessings.”
“Blessings? Oh, Agnes!
I am not able to see that. It is no light thing
for a man to have the hard accumulations of his best
years swept from him in a moment, and to find himself,
when just passing the meridian of his life, thrown
prostrate to the earth.”
“There may be richer treasures
lying just beneath the surface where he has fallen,
than in all the land of Ophir toward which he was
pressing in eager haste,” said Mrs. Markland.
“It may be so.” Markland spoke doubtingly.
“It must be so!” was emphatically
rejoined. “Ah, Edward, have I not often
warned you against looking far away into the future,
instead of stooping to gather the pearls of happiness
that a good Providence has scattered so profusely
around us? They are around us still.”
Markland sighed.
“And you may be richer far than
imagination has yet pictured. Look not far away
into the shadowy uncertainties of coming time for the
heart’s fruition. The stones from which
its temple of happiness is to be erected, if ever
built, lie all along the path your feet are treading.
It has been so with you from the beginning—it
is so now.”
“If I build not this temple,
it will be no fault of yours,” said Markland,
whose perceptions were becoming clearer.
“Let us build it together,”
answered his wife. “There will be no lack
of materials.”