It is nine years since Mrs. Howland
looked her last look on her wayward, wandering boy,
and eight years since any tidings came from him to
bless her yearning heart. She appears older by
almost twenty years, and moves about with a quiet
drooping air, as if her heart were releasing itself
from its hold on earthly objects, and reaching out
its tendrils for a higher and surer support. With
the exception of Martha, the youngest, all her children
have given her trouble. Scarcely one of the sweet
hopes cherished by her heart, when they first lay
in helpless innocence upon her bosom, have been realized.
Disappointment—disappointment—has
come at almost every step of her married life.
The iron hand of her husband has crushed almost every
thing. Ah! how often and often, as she breathed
the chilling air of her own household, where all was
constrained propriety, would her heart go back to
the sunny home in which were passed the happy days
of girlhood, and wish that something of the wisdom
and gentleness that marked her father’s intercourse
with his children could be transferred to her uncompromising
husband. But that was a vain wish. The two
men had been cast in far different moulds.
Martha, now in her eighteenth year,
was more like her mother than any of the children,
and but for the light of her presence Mrs. Howland
could hardly have kept her head above the waters that
were rushing around her. Toward Martha the conduct
of her father had, from the first, been of a mild
character compared with his action toward the other
children; and this received a still farther modification,
when it become apparent even to himself, that by his
hardness he had estranged the affections of his elder
children, and driven them away. Gentle and loving
in all her actions, she gradually won her way more
and more deeply into the heart of her father, until
she acquired a great influence over him. This
influence she had tried to make effectual in bringing
about a reconciliation between him and her sister’s
husband; but, up to this time, her good offices were
not successful. The old man’s prejudices
remained strong—he was not prepared to yield;
and Markland’s self-love having been deeply
wounded by Mr. Howland, he was not disposed to make
any advances toward healing the breach that existed.
As for Mary, she cherished too deeply the remembrance
of her father’s unbending severity toward his
children—in fact his iron hand had well
nigh crushed affection out of her heart—to
feel much inclined to use any influence with her husband.
And so the separation, unpleasant and often painful
to both parties, continued. To Mrs. Howland it
was a source of constant affliction. Much had
she done toward affecting a reconciliation; but the
materials upon which she tried to impress something
of her own gentle and forgiving spirit were of too
hard a nature.
On the afternoon of the day on which
Andrew returned so unexpectedly, almost like one rising
from the dead, Mrs. Howland was alone, Martha having
gone out to visit a friend. She was sitting in
her chamber thinking of the long absent one—she
had thought of him a great deal of late—when
she heard the street door open and shut, and then
there came the sound of a man’s feet along the
passage. She bent her head and listened.
It was not the sound of her husband’s feet—she
knew his tread too well. Soon the man, whoever
he was, commenced ascending the stairs; then he came
toward her door, and then there was a gentle tap.
The heart of Mrs. Howland was, by this time, beating
violently. A moment or two passed before she had
presence of mind sufficient to go to the door and open
it.
“Andrew! Andrew! Oh,
Andrew, my son!” she cried, in a glad, eager
voice, the instant her eyes rested on the fine figure
of a tall, sun-burnt man, and as she spoke, she flung
her arms around his neck, and kissed him with all
the fondness of a mother caressing her babe.
“Mother! dear, dear mother!”
came sobbing from the lips of Andrew, as he returned
her embrace fervently.
“Am I dreaming? or, is this
all really so?” murmured the happy mother, pushing
her son from her, yet clinging to him with an earnest
grasp, and gazing fondly upon his face.
“It is no dream, mother,”
returned Andrew, “but a glad reality. After
a long, long absence I have come back.”
“Long—long!
Oh, it has been an age, my son! How could you?
But hush, my chiding heart! My wandering one
has returned, and I will ask no questions as to his
absence. Enough that I look upon his face again.”
Andrew now led his mother to a seat,
and taking one beside her, while he still held her
hand tightly, and gazed with a look of tenderness
into her face, said—
“You have grown old in nine
years, mother; older than I had thought.”
“Do you wonder at it, my son?”
significantly inquired Mrs. Howland.
“I ought not to wonder, perhaps,”
replied Andrew, a touch of sadness in his voice.
“There is such a thing as living too fast for
time.”
“You may well say that,”
answered Mrs. Howland, with visible emotion, “Years
are sometimes crowded into as many days. This
has been my own experience.”
Both were now silent for a little while.
“And how are all the rest, mother?”
asked Andrew, in a more animated voice.
“Your father has failed a good
deal of late,” replied Mrs. Howland, as she
partly averted her eyes, doubtful as to the effect
such reference might have.
“He has failed almost as much
as you have, mother,” was the unexpected reply.
“I saw him a little while ago.”
“Did you!” ejaculated
Mrs. Howland, a light of pleasure and surprise breaking
over her face.
“Yes; I called first at his store.”
“I’m glad you did.
Poor man! He has had his own troubles, and, I’m
afraid, is falling into difficulties again. He
has looked very unhappy for a week or two. Last
night I hardly think he slept an hour at a time, and
to-day he scarcely tasted food.”
“I found him in trouble,”
said Andrew, “and fortunately was able to give
him the relief he needed.”
Mrs. Howland looked wonderingly into her son’s
face.
“I have not come back empty-handed,
mother,” said Andrew. “A year ago,
when thousands of miles from home, I heard of father’s
troubles. I was about returning to see you all
again, and to make P—my future abiding
place, if I could find any honest employment; but
this intelligence caused me to change my mind.
News had just been received of the wonderful discoveries
of gold in California, and I said to myself, ’If
there is gold to be had there, I will find it.’
I was not thinking of myself when I made this resolution,
but of you and father. In this spirit I made
the long and wearisome overland journey, and for more
than eight, months worked amid the golden sands of
that far off region. And my labor was not in vain.
I accumulated a large amount of grains and lumps of
the precious metal, and then hurried homeward to lay
the treasures at your feet. Happily, I arrived
at the most fitting time.”
Mrs. Howland was deeply affected by
this relation, so strange and so unlooked for in every
particular.
“And now, mother, what of Mary?”
said Andrew, before time was given for any remark
upon this brief narrative. “Has she and
her husband yet been reconciled to father?”
“No; and my heart has grown
faint with hope deferred in relation to this matter.
I think Mary’s husband is too (sic) unyieldiug.
Your father, I know, regrets the unkind opposition
he made to their marriage; and has seen many good
reasons for changing his opinion of Mr. Markland’s
character. But you know his unbending disposition.
If they would yield a little—if they would
only make the first step toward a reconciliation,
he would be softened in a moment. And then, oh,
how much happier would all be!”
“They must yield; they must
take the first step,” said Andrew, rising from
his chair.
That reconciliation would be the top
sheaf of my happiness, today,” replied Mrs.
Howland.
“It shall crown your rejoicing,”
said Andrew, in a positive tone. “Where
do they live?”
Mrs. Howland gave the direction asked
by her son, who departed immediately on his errand
of good will.
For a time after Andrew left the store
of his father, Mr. Howland sat half bewildered by
the strange occurrence that had just taken place,
while his heart felt emotions of tenderness going deeper
and deeper toward its centre. Though confessed
to no one, he had felt greatly troubled in regard
to the iron discipline to which he had subjected his
wayward boy, and had tried for years, but in vain,
to force from his mind the conviction that upon his
own head rested the sin of his ruin. Long since
had he given him up as lost to this world, and, he
sadly feared, lost in the next. To have him return,
as he did, without even a foreshadowing sign of his
coming, was an event that completely broke down his
feelings. Moreover, he was touched by the spirit
in which his son came back; a spirit of practical
forgiveness; the first act flowing from which was the
conference of a great benefit.
“There was good in the boy,”
sighed the old man, as he mused on what had just occurred.
“Alas! that it should have been so long overshadowed.
A milder course might have done better. Ah, me!
we are weak and shortsighted mortals.”
Mr. Howland remained in his store
until the late mails were distributed at the post-office,
when, unexpectedly, a letter came from Edward.
It contained a draft for a thousand dollars, and was
in these words—
“Dear father—I
received your two letters. To the first returned
no answer; I need hardly give you the reason.
It was a hard, harsh, insulting letter, charging me
with extensive frauds on you and others, assuming
that I was in possession of large sums of money thus
obtained, and imperiously demanding restitution.
As to your sources of information, I know nothing;
but I trust, that before you take such stories for
granted, you will, at least, look well to their authenticity.
Your second letter was in a different tone, and awoke
in me a far different spirit from that awakened by
the one first received. I am pained to hear of
your great embarrassment, which I did not anticipate.
I thought that the extension of time you received,
would enable you to meet all demands, and deeply regret
that such has not proved to be the case. Enclosed,
I send you a draft for one thousand dollars, which
I have raised with great difficulty; I wish, for your
sake, that it were ten times the amount. But
it is the best I can do. When I came here I had
about fifteen hundred dollars in money; upon this
I commenced business, and have done tolerably well,
but I am still on the steep up-hill side, and it is
far from certain whether I will go up or down from
the point I now occupy. Give my love to mother
and Martha,
Affectionately yours,
Edward.”
Mr. Howland mused for (sic) sometime
after receiving the letter; then he turned to his
desk, and wrote briefly, as follows—
“My dear son—I
have your letter enclosing a draft for one thousand
dollars. I thank you for the remittance, but,
happily, have received aid from an unexpected quarter,
and do not now need the money. With this I return
the draft you sent. I regret any injustice I may
have done you in a former letter, and hope you will
forgive a too warm expression of my feelings.
Yours, &c.,
Andrew Howland.”
This letter was dispatched by the
Southern mail, and then Mr. Howland turned his steps
homeward. He felt strangely. There was a
pressure on his bosom; but it was not the pressure
of trouble that had rested upon it so long, but a
pressure of conflicting emotions, all tending to soften
and subdue his feelings, to bend the iron man, and
to mould his spirit into a new and better form.
With a lively pleasure was he looking forward to the
second meeting with Andrew in the presence of his
mother, but he did not know how great a pleasure,
beyond his anticipations, was in store for him.
On arriving at his house, Mr. Howland
opened the door and went in. He had passed along
the entry but a few paces, when some one stepped from
the parlor. He paused, and looked up. It
was his daughter Mary who stood before him. In
her arms was a sweet little girl, and on her face
was a smile, the warmth and light of which were on
his heart in an instant.
“Father!”
It was the only word she uttered.
The tone of her voice, and the expression of her face
told all he wished to know.
“My dear child!” fell
warmly from the lips of Mr. Howland, as he grasped
his daughter’s hand, and then kissed tenderly
both her own lips and those of her babe.
“Dear father!” murmured
Mary, as she leaned her head, in tears, upon his breast.
At this moment there was a movement
of feet in the parlor, and the husband of Mary presented
himself. An open, frank, forgiving expression
was on his face, as he came forward and offered his
hand, which was instantly seized by Mr. Howland, in
a hearty pressure. Andrew and his mother joined
the group, and, with smiles and pleasant words, made
perfect the sphere of happiness.
“My children,” said Mr.
Howland, at length, speaking in a trembling voice,
“my cup is full to-night. I must leave you
a little while, or it will run over.”
And saying this, he gently disengaged
himself, and passed up to his chamber, where he remained
alone for over half an hour. When he joined the
family, his manner was greatly subdued, and in his
speech there was a softness which none had known before.
In the glad reunion of that evening,
how many heart-wounds were healed, how many old scars
covered over and hidden!