A VISION OF CONSOLATION.
The tempest of grief which, for
a time, had raged so wildly in the heart of Mrs. Freeland,
exhausted by its own violence, sobbed itself away,
and the stricken mother passed into the land of dreams.
To the afflicted, sleep comes with
a double blessing—rest is given to the
wearied body and to the grieving spirit. Often,
very often, the Angel of Consolation bends to the
dreaming ear, and whispers words of hope and comfort
that from no living lips had yet found utterance.
And it was so now with the sleeping
mother. A few hours only had passed since she
stood looking down, for the last time, on the fair
face of her youngest born. Over his bright, blue
eyes, into whose heavenly depths she had so loved
to gaze, the pale lids had closed for ever. Still
lingered around his lips the smile left there by the
angels, as, with a kiss of love, they received his
parting spirit. In the curling masses of his
rich, golden hair, the shadows nestled away, as of
old, while his tiny fingers held a few white blossoms,
as with a living grasp. Was it death or sleep?
So like a sleeping child the sweet boy lay, that it
seemed every moment as if his lips would unclose,
his eyes open to the light, and his voice come to the
listening ear with its tones of music.
If to the mother had come this illusion,
it remained not long. Wild with grief, she turned
away as the sweet face she had so loved to gaze upon
was hidden from her straining eyes for ever.
Hidden from her eyes, did we say?
Only hidden from her natural eyes. Still he was
before the eyes of her spirit in all his living beauty.
But, to her natural affections, he was lost—even
as he had faded from before her natural eyes; and,
in the agony of bereavement, it seemed that her heart
would break. Back to her darkened chamber she
went. Her nearest and dearest friends gathered
around, seeking lovingly to sustain her in her great
affliction; but she refused to be comforted.
At length, as at first said, the tempest
of grief, which, for a time, raged so violently in
the heart of Mrs. Freeland, sobbed itself away, and
the stricken mother passed into the land of dreams.
For the most part, dreams are fantastic.
Yet they are not always so. In states of deep
sorrow or strong trial, when the heart turns from
the natural world, hopeless of aid or consolation,
truth often comes in dreams and similitudes.
The mother found herself in the company
of two beautiful maidens, in the very flower of youth;
and as she gazed earnestly into their faces, which
seemed transparent from an inward celestial light,
she saw expectation therein—loving expectation.
They stood beneath the eastern portico of a pleasant
dwelling, around which stately trees—the
branches vocal with the song of feathered minstrels—lifted
their green tops far up into the crystal air.
Flowers of a thousand hues and sweet odours were woven
into forms and figures of exquisite beauty upon the
carpet of living green spread over the teeming earth,
while groups of little children sported one with another,
and mingled their happy voices with the melody of
birds.
Yet, amid all this external joy and
beauty, the hand of grief still lay upon the mother’s
heart; and when she looked upon the sportive infants
around her, she sighed for her own babe. Even
as she sighed, one of the maidens turned to her and
said, while her whole countenance was lit up with
a glow of delight—
“It has come. A new babe is born unto heaven.”
And, as she spoke, she gathered her
arms quickly to her bosom, and the wondering mother
saw lying thereon her own child. The other maiden
was already bending over the infant—already
had she greeted its coming with a kiss of love.
Quickly both retired within the dwelling, and the
bereaved mother went with them, eager to receive the
babe she had lost.
“Oh, my child! my child!”
she said. “Give me my child.”
And ere the words had died upon her
lips, the maiden who had received the babe gave it
into her arms, when she clasped it with a wild delight,
and rained tears of gladness upon its face.
For a time, the two maidens looked
upon the mother in silence, and in their bright countenances
love and pity were blended. At length, one of
them said to her, (and she smiled sweetly, and spoke
with an exquisite, penetrating tenderness,)—
“Your heart is full of love for your babe?”
“He is dearer to me than life—dearer
than a thousand lives,” replied the mother quickly,
drawing the babe closer to her bosom.
“Love seeks to bless the object of its regard.”
There was a meaning in the words and
tone of the maiden, as she said this, that caused
the mother to look into her face earnestly.
“This is not the land of sickness,
of sorrow, of death,” resumed the maiden, “but
the land of eternal life and blessedness. Into
this land your babe has been born. You are here
only as a visitant, and must soon return to bear a
few more trials and pains, a few more conflicts with
evil; but the end is your preparation for these heavenly
regions.”
A shadow fell instantly upon the mother’s
heart. Tears rushed to her eyes, and she drew
her arms more tightly about her babe.
“Shall we keep this babe in
our heavenly home, or will you bear it with you back
to the dark, cold, sad regions of mortality?”
“Do not take from me my more
than life!” sobbed the mother wildly. “Oh!
I cannot give you my child;” and more eagerly
she hugged it to her breast.
For a time there was silence.
Then one of the maidens laid gently her hand upon
the mother, and she lifted her bowed head.
“Come,” said the maiden.
The mother arose, and the two walked
into the open air, and passing through the group of
children sporting on the lawn and in the gardens,
went for what seemed the space of a mile, until they
came to a forest, into the depths of which they penetrated;
and, for a time, the farther they went the darker
and more gloomy it became, until scarcely a ray of
light from the arching sky came down through the dense
and tangled foliage. At last they were beyond
the forest.
“Look,” said the companion.
The mother lifted her eyes—the
babe had strangely passed from her arms. A dwelling,
familiar in aspect, stood near, and through an open
window she saw a sick child lying upon a bed, and knew
it as her own. Its little face was distorted
by pain and flushed with fever; and as it tossed restlessly
to and fro, its moans filled her ears. She stretched
forth her hands, yearning to give some relief; even
as she did so, the scene faded from her view, and next
she saw an older child, bearing still the linaments
of her own. There was the same broad, white forehead
and clustering curls; the same large, bright eyes
and full, ruddy lips; but, alas! not the soft vail
of innocence which had given the features of the babe
such a heavenly charm. The fine brow was contracted
with passion; the eyes flashed with an evil light;
and the lips were tightly drawn, and with something
of defiance, against the teeth. The boy was resisting,
with a stern determination, the will of the parents—was
setting at naught those early salutary restraints
which are the safeguard of youth.
“Oh! my unhappy boy!” cried the mother.
The scene changed as she spoke.
The boy, now grown up to manhood, once more stood
before her. Alas! how had the light of innocence
faded from his countenance, giving place to a shadow
of evil, the very darkness of which caused a cold
shudder to pass through the mother’s frame.
“Look again,” said the
maiden, as this scene was fading.
But the mother hid her face in her
hands, and turned weeping away.
“Look again.” And
this time there was something so heart-cheering in
the maiden’s voice, that the mother lifted her
tearful eyes. She was back again in the beautiful
place from which she had gone forth a little while
before, and her babe, beautiful as innocence itself,
lay sweetly sleeping in the arms of the lovely maiden
who had received it on its first entrance into heaven.
With a heart full of joy, the mother now bent over
the slumbering babe, kissing it again and again.
“Grieving mother,” said
the angel-maiden, in tones of flute-like softness,
“God saw that it would not be good for your child
to remain on earth, and he therefore removed it to
this celestial region, where no evil can ever penetrate.
To me, as an angel-mother, it has been given; and
I will love it and care for it with a love as pure
and tender as the love that yearns in your bosom.
As its infantile mind opens, I will pour in heavenly
instruction, that it may grow in wisdom and become
an angel. Will you not let me have it freely?”
“But why may I not remain here
and be its heavenly mother? Oh! I will love
and care for it with a tenderness and devotion equal
to, if not exceeding yours.”
Even while the mother spoke there
was a change. She saw before her other objects
of affection. There was her husband, sitting in
deep dejection, sorrowing for the loss of one who
was dear as his own life; while three children, the
sight of whom stirred her maternal heart to its profoundest
depths, lay sleeping in each other’s arms, the
undried tears yet glistening on their lashes.
The wife and mother stretched forth
her hands toward these beloved ones, eager to be with
them again and turn their grief into gladness.
But, in a moment, there passed another change.
The pleasant home in which her children had been sheltered
for years, no longer held them; the fold had been
broken up and the tender lambs scattered. One
of these little ones the mother saw, sitting apart
from a group of sportive children, weeping over some
task work. The bloom on her cheek had faded—its
roundness was gone—the light of her beautiful
eyes was quenched in tears. And, as she looked,
a woman came to the child and spoke to her harshly.
She was about springing forward, when another scene
was presented. Her first-born, a noble-spirited
boy, to whose future she had ever looked with pride
and pleasure, stood before her. Alas! how changed.
Every thing about him showed the want of a mother’s
care and considerate affection; and from his dear,
young face had already vanished the look of joyous
innocence she had so loved to contemplate.
Again the mother was in the presence
of the angel-maiden, to whose loving arms a good God
had confided the babe, which, in his wisdom, he had
removed from the earth. And the angel-maiden,
as she looked first at the babe in her arms and then
at the mother, smiled sweetly and said—
“He is safe here; will you not let him remain?”
And, with a gushing heart, the mother
answered, “Not for worlds would I take him with
me into the outer life of nature. Oh, no!
He is safe—let him remain.”
“And you will return to those
who still need your love and care?”
“Yes, yes,” said the mother,
earnestly. “Let me go to them again.
Let me be their angel on earth.”
And she bent hastily to the heaven-born
babe, kissing it with tearful fondness.
There came now another change.
The mother was back again in her chamber of sorrow;
and undried tears were yet upon her cheeks. But
she was comforted and reconciled to the great affliction
which had been sent for good from heaven.
Those who saw Mrs. Freeland in the
first wild grief that followed the loss of her babe,
wondered at her serene composure when she came again
among them. And they wondered long, for she spoke
not of this Vision of Consolation. It was too
sacred a thing to be revealed, to any save the companion
of her life.