A FEW weeks later, and “Lawn
Cottage” was the scene of an event which made
the hearts of its inmates glad even to tears.
That event was the marriage of Fanny. From the
time of her betrothment to Mr. Willet, a new life
seemed born in her spirit and a new beauty stamped
upon her countenance. All around her was diffused
the heart’s warm sunshine. As if from a
long, bewildering, painful dream, she had awakened
to find the morning breaking in serene beauty, and
loving arms gathered protectingly around her.
The desolating tempest had swept by; and so brilliant
was the sunshine, and so clear the bending azure,
that night and storms were both forgotten.
Old Mr. Allison was one of the few
guests, outside of the families, who were present
at the nuptial ceremonies. The bride—in
years, if not in heart-experience, yet too young to
enter upon the high duties to which she had solemnly
pledged herself—looked the embodied image
of purity and loveliness.
“Let me congratulate you,”
said the old man, sitting down beside Mr. Markland,
and grasping his hand, after the beautiful and impressive
ceremony was over and the husband’s lips had
touched the lips of his bride and wife. “And
mine is no ordinary congratulation, that goes scarcely
deeper than words, for I see in this marriage the beginning
of a true marriage; and in these external bonds, the
image of those truer spiritual bonds which are to
unite them in eternal oneness.”
“What an escape she made!”
responded the father, a shudder running through his
frame, as there arose before him, at that instant,
a clear recollection of the past, and of his own strange,
consenting blindness.
“The danger was fearful,”
replied Mr. Allison, who understood the meaning of
the words which had just been uttered. “But
it is past now.”
“Yes, thanks to the infinite
wisdom that leads us back into right paths. Oh!
what a life of unimagined wretchedness would have fallen
to her lot, if all my plans and hopes had been accomplished!
Do you know, Mr. Allison, that I have compared my
insane purposes in the past to that of those men of
old who made their children pass through the fire
to Moloch? I set up an idol—a bloody
Moloch—and was about sacrificing to it
my child!”
“There is One who sits above
the blinding vapours of human passion, and sees all
ends from the beginning; One who loves us with an
infinite tenderness, and leads us, even through struggling
resistance, back to the right paths, let us stray never
so often. Happy are we, if, when the right paths
are gained, we walk therein with willing feet.
Mr. Markland, your experiences have been of a most
painful character; almost crushed out has been the
natural life that held the soaring spirit fettered
to the perishing things of this outer world; but you
have felt that a new and better life has been born
within you, and have tasted some of its purer pleasures.
Oh, sir! let not the life of this world extinguish
a fire that is kindled for eternity.”
“How wonderfully has the infinite
mercy saved me from myself!” returned Mr. Markland.
“Wise, skilful in the ways of the world, prudent,
and far-seeing in my own estimation, yet was I blind,
ignorant, and full of strong self-will. I chose
my own way in the world, dazzled by the false glitter
of merely external things. I launched my bark,
freighted with human souls, boldly upon an unknown
sea, and, but for the storms that drove me into a sheltered
haven, would have made a fearful wreck.”
“Then sail not forth again,”
said Mr. Allison, “unless you have divine truth
as your chart, and heaven’s own pilot on board
your vessel. It is still freighted with human
souls.”
“A fearful responsibility is
mine.” Mr. Markland spoke partly to himself.
“Yes,” replied the old
man; “for into your keeping immortal spirits
have been committed. It is for them, not for yourself,
that you are to live. Their good, not your own
pleasure, is to be sought.”
“Ah, if I had comprehended this
truth years ago!” Markland sighed as he uttered
the words.
“This is too happy an occasion,”
said Mr. Allison, in a cheerful voice, “to be
marred by regrets for the past. They should never
be permitted to bear down our spirits with sadness.
The bright future is all before us, and the good time
awaiting us if we but look for it in the right direction.”
“And where are we to look for
it, Mr. Allison? Which is the right direction?”
“Within and heavenward,”
was answered, with a smile so radiant that it made
the wan face of the old man beautiful. “Like
the kingdom of heaven, this good time comes not by
‘observation;’ nor with a ’lo, here!’
and a ‘lo, there!’ It must come within
us, in such a change of our ruling affections, that
all things good and true, which are real and eternal
verities, shall be the highest objects of love; for
if we love things that are real and abiding, and obtain
as well as love them, our happiness is complete.”
“Thanks for the many lessons
of wisdom I have received from your lips,” replied
Mr. Markland. “Well would it have been for
me if I had earlier heeded them. But the ground
was not hitherto prepared. Now, after the rank
weeds have been removed, the surface broken by many
furrows, and the ground watered with tears, good seed
is falling into its bosom.”
“May it bring forth good fruit—some
thirty, some sixty, and some an hundred-fold!”
was said, low and fervently, by the aged monitor;
and, in the pause that followed, his ear caught a whispered
“Amen.”
And the good seed did spring up in
this good ground, and good fruit came in the harvest
time. Strongly tempted, indeed, was Mr. Markland,
by his love of the world, and the brilliant rewards
it promised to the successful, to enter a bold combatant
in its crowded arena; but there were wise and loving
counsellors around him, and their words were not unheeded.
Instead of aspiring after “Woodbine Lodge,”
he was content to purchase “Lawn Cottage,”
and invest the remainder of what he had received in
property that not only paid him a fair interest, but
was increasing in value. The offer of Mr. Willet
to enter into business was accepted, and in this his
gains were sufficient to give him all needed external
comforts, and a reasonable prospect of moderate accumulation.
How peacefully moved on again the
pure stream of Mrs. Markland’s unambitious life!
If her way through the world was not so thickly bordered
with brilliant flowers, humbler blossoms lined it,
and she gathered as sweet honey from these as ever
from their gayer sisters. She, too, had grown
wiser, and could read the pages of a book whose leaves
she had once turned vainly, searching for truth.
Even Aunt Grace was beginning to feel
that there were some things in the world not dreamed
of in her common-sense philosophy. She looked
on thoughtfully, pondering much of what she heard and
saw, in her heart. She had ceased to speak about
the annoyance of having “Woodbine Lodge”
“forever staring down,” with a kind of
triumph, upon them; though it was hard for her, at
all times, to rise above this weakness. The “Markland
blood,” as she said, was too strong within her.
What puzzled her most was the cheerful heart of her
brother, and the interest he took in many things once
scarcely noticed. Formerly, when thought went
beyond himself, its circumference was limited by the
good of his own family; but now, he gave some care
to the common good, and manifested a neighbourly regard
for others. He was looking in the right direction
for “that good time coming,” and the light
of a better morning was breaking in upon his spirit.
As years progressed, the day grew
broader, and the light of the morning became as the
light of noonday. And as it was with him and
his, so may it be with us all. In each of our
hearts is a dissatisfied yearning toward the future,
and a looking for a brighter day than any that has
yet smiled down upon us. But this brighter day
will never dawn except in the world of our spirits.
It is created by no natural sun of fire, but by the
sun of divine love. In vain, then, do we toil
and struggle, and press forward in our journey through
the world, fondly believing that in wealth, honour,
or some more desired external good, the soul’s
fruition will be gained. The immortal spirit
will ever be satisfied with these things; and the
good time will never come to the erring seeker.
THE END.