PREPARATION was at once made for the
proposed removal. Mr. Walker went back to the
city, and the new owner of the cottage, Mr. Willet,
set carpenters and painters at work to make certain
additions which he thought needful to secure the comfort
of his tenants, and to put every thing in the most
thorough repair. Even against the remonstrance
of Mr. Markland, who saw that his generous-minded
neighbour was providing for his family a house worth
almost double the rent that was to be paid, he carried
out all his projected improvements.
“You will embarrass me with
a sense of obligation,” said Mr. Markland, in
seeking to turn him from a certain purpose regarding
the cottage.
“Do not say so,” answered
Mr. Willet; “I am only offering inducements
for you to remain with us. If obligation should
rest anywhere, it will be on our side. I make
these improvements because the house is now my own
property, and would be defective, to my mind, without
them. Pray, don’t let your thoughts dwell
on these things.”
Thus he strove to dissipate the feeling
of obligation that began to rest on the mind of his
unfortunate neighbour, while he carried out his purpose.
In due time, under the assignment which had been made,
Woodbine Lodge and a large part of the elegant and
costly furniture contained in the mansion, were sold,
and the ownership passed into other hands. With
a meagre remnant of their household goods, the family
retired to a humbler house. Some pitied, and stood
at a distance; some felt a selfish pleasure in their
fall; and some, who had courted them in their days
of prosperity, were among the foremost to speak evil
against them. But there were a few, and they
the choicest spirits of the neighbourhood, who only
drew nearer to these their friends in misfortune.
Among them was Mr. Allison, one of those wise old
men whose minds grow not dim with advancing years.
He had passed through many trying vicissitudes, had
suffered, and come up from the ordeal purer than when
the fire laid hold upon the dross of nature.
A wise monitor had he been in Markland’s
brighter days, and now he drew near as a comforter.
There is strength in true words kindly spoken.
How often was this proved by Mr. and Mrs. Markland,
as their venerable friend unlocked for them treasures
of wisdom!
The little parlour at “Lawn
Cottage,” the name of their new home, soon became
the scene of frequent reunions among choice spirits,
whose aspirations went higher and deeper than the external
and visible. In closing around Mr. Markland,
they seemed to shut him out, as it were, from the
old world in which he had hoped, and suffered, and
struggled so vainly; and to open before his purer
vision a world of higher beauty. In this world
were riches for the toiler, and honour for the noble—riches
and honour far more to be desired than the gems and
gold of earth or its empty tributes of praise.
A few months of this new life wrought
a wonderful change in Markland. All the better
elements of his nature were quickened into activity.
Useful daily employment tranquillized his spirits;
and not unfrequently he found himself repeating the
words of Longfellow—
“Something attempted, something done,
Had earned a night’s repose.”
So entirely was every thing of earthly
fortune wrecked, and so changed were all his relations
to the business world, that hope had yet no power
to awaken his mind to ambition. For the present,
therefore, he was content to receive the reward of
daily toil, and to be thankful that he was yet able
to supply the real wants of his family. A cheerful
tone of feeling gradually succeeded the state of deep
depression from which he had suffered. His spirit,
which had walked in darkness, began to perceive that
light was breaking in through the hitherto impenetrable
gloom, and as it fell upon the path he was treading,
a flower was seen here and there, while the roughness
his imagination had pictured became not visible.
Nearly a year had glided away since
the wreck of Markland’s fortune, and little
or no change in his worldly prospects was visible.
He was sitting late, one evening, reading aloud to
his wife from a book which the latter had received
from Mrs. Willet. The rest of the family had
retired. Mrs. Markland was plying her needle busily.
Altered circumstances had made hourly industry on her
part a necessity; yet had they in no way dimmed the
cheerful brightness of her spirits.
“Come, Agnes,” said her
husband, closing the book, “it is growing late;
and you have worked long enough. I’m afraid
your health will suffer.”
“Just a few minutes longer,”
replied Mrs. Markland, smiling. “I must
finish this apron for Frank. He will want it in
the morning.” And her hand moved quicker.
“How true is every word you
have been reading!” she added, after a few moments.
“Manifold indeed are the ways in which a wise
Providence dispenses good to the children of men.
Mercy is seen in the cloud as well as in the sunshine.
Tears to the spirit are like rain to the earth.”
“The descent looked frightful,”
said Markland, after a pause—“but
we reached the lower ground uninjured. Invisible
hands seemed to bear us up.”
“We have found the land far
pleasanter than was imagined; and the sky above of
a purer crystal.”
“Yes—yes. It
is even so. And if the flowers that spring up
at our feet are not so brilliant, they have a sweeter
perfume and a diviner beauty.”
“In this land,” said Mrs.
Markland, “we see in the visible things that
surround us what was rarely seen before—types
of the invisible things they represent.”
“Ah, yes, yes! Scales have
fallen from my eyes. I have learned a new philosophy.
In former times, Mr. Allison’s words seemed full
of beautiful truths, yet so veiled, that I could not
see their genuine brightness. Now they are like
sudden gleams of sunlight on a darkened landscape.”
“Seekers after happiness, like
the rest of the world,” said Mrs. Markland,
resting her hands upon the table by which she sat,
and, gazing earnestly into her husband’s face,
“we had lost our way, and were moving with swift
feet in the wrong direction. Suddenly, our kind
Father threw up before us an impassable mountain.
Then we seemed shut out from the land of promise forever,
and were in despair. But he took his weeping,
murmuring children by the hand, and led them gently
into another path!”
“Into a narrower way”—Mr.
Markland took up the words of his wife—“and
sought by few; yet, it has already brought us into
a pleasant region.”
“To speak in less ideal language,”
said Mrs. Markland, “we have been taught an
all-important lesson. It is this: That there
is over each one of us an intimate providential care
which ever has regard to our eternal good. And
the reason of our many and sad disappointments lies
in the fact, that we seek only the gratification of
natural life, in which are the very elements of dissatisfaction.
All mere natural life is selfish life; and natural
ends gained only confirm this selfish life, and produce
misery instead of happiness.”
“There is no rest,” said
Markland, “to the striving spirit that only
seeks for the good of this world. How clearly
have I seen this of late, as well in my own case as
in that of others! Neither wealth nor honour
have in themselves the elements of happiness; and their
increase brings but an increase of trouble.”
“If sought from merely selfish
ends,” remarked his wife. “Yet their
possession may increase our happiness, if we regard
them as the means by which we may rise into a higher
life.”
There followed a thoughtful pause.
Mrs. Markland resumed her work, and her husband leaned
his head back and remained for some minutes in a musing
attitude.
“Don’t you think,”
he said at length, “that Fanny is growing more
cheerful?”
“Oh, yes. I can see that
her state of mind is undergoing a gradual elevation.”
“Poor child! What a sad
experience, for one so young, has been hers!
How her whole character has been, to all seeming, transformed.
The light-hearted girl suddenly changed to a thoughtful,
suffering woman!”
“She may be a happier woman
in the end,” said Mrs. Markland.
“Is that possible?”
“Yes. Suffering has given her a higher
capacity for enjoyment.”
“And for pain, also,” said Mr. Markland.
“She is wiser for the first experience,”
was replied.
“Yes, there is so much in her
favour. I wish,” added Mr. Markland, “that
she would go a little more into company. It is
not good for any one to live so secluded a life.
Companionship is necessary to the spirit’s health.”
“She is not without companions, or, at least,
a companion.”
“Flora Willet?”
“Yes.”
“Good, as far as it goes.
Flora is an excellent girl, and wise beyond her years.”
“Can we ask a better companion
for our child than one with pure feelings and true
thoughts?”
“No. But I am afraid Flora
has not the power to bring her out of herself.
She is so sedate.”
“She does not lack cheerfulness of spirit, Edward.”
“Perpetual cheerfulness is too passive.”
“Her laugh, at times, is delicious,”
said Mrs. Markland, “going to your heart like
a strain of music, warming it like a golden sunbeam.
Flora’s character is by no means a passive one,
but rather the reverse.”
“She is usually very quiet when I see her,”
replied Markland.
“This arises from an instinctive deference to
those who are older.”
“Fanny is strongly attached to her, I think.”
“Yes; and the attachment I believe to be mutual.”
“Would not Flora, at your suggestion,
seek to draw her gradually forth from her seclusion?”
“We have talked together on
that subject several times,” replied Mrs. Markland,
“and are now trying to do the very thing you
suggest.”
“With any prospect of accomplishing the thing
desired?”
“I believe so. There is
to be company at Mr. Willet’s next week, and
we have nearly gained Fanny’s consent to be present.”
“Have you? I am indeed gratified to learn
this.”
“Flora has set her heart on
gaining Fanny’s consent, and will leave no influence
untried.”
“Still, Fanny’s promise to go is withheld?”
“Yes; but I have observed her
looking over her drawers, and showing more interest
in certain articles therein than she has evinced for
a long, long time.”
“If she goes, she will require a new dress,”
said Mr. Markland.
“I think not. Such preparation
would be too formal at present. But, we can make
that all right.”
“Oh! it will give me so much
pleasure! Do not leave any influence untried.”
“You may be sure that we will
not,” answered Mrs. Markland; “and, what
is more, you have little to fear touching our success.”