THE NEW DAYS COME
One afternoon in the late autumn Annie
was sitting watching Hyde playing with his dog, a
big mastiff of noble birth and character. The
creature sat erect with his head leaning against Hyde,
and Hyde’s arm was thrown around his neck as
he talked to him of their adventures on the Broad
that day. Annie’s small face, though delicate
and fragile looking was full of peace, and her eyes,
soft, deep and heavenly, held thoughts that linked
her with heaven.
Outside there was in the air that
November feeling which chills like the passing breath
of death, the deserted garden looked sad and closed-in,
and everywhere there was a sense of the languishing
end of the year, of the fading and dropping of all
living things. But in the house Annie and Hyde
and the dog sat within the circle of warmth and light
made by the blazing ash logs, and in that circle there
was at least an atmosphere of sweet content.
Suddenly George looked up and his eyes caught those
of Annie watching him. “What have you been
reading, Annie?” he asked, as he stooped forward
and took a thin volume from her lap. “Why!”
he cried, “’tis Paul and Virginia.
Do you indeed read love stories?”
“Yes. The mystery of a
love affair pleases every one; and I think we shall
not tire of love stories till we tire of the mystery
of spring, or of primroses and daffodils. Every
one I know takes their tale of love to be quite a
new tale.”
“Love has been cruel to me.
It has made a cloud on my life that will help to cover
me in my grave.”
“You still love Cornelia?”
“I cannot cure myself of a passion
so hopeless. However, as I see no end to my unhappiness,
I try to submit to what I cannot avoid. What is
the use of longing for that which I have no hope to
get?”
“My uncle grows anxious for
you to marry. He would be glad to see the succession
of Hyde assured.”
“Oh, indeed, I have no mind
to take a wife. I hear every day that some of
my acquaintance have married, I hear of none that have
done worse.”
“You believe nothing of what
you say. My uncle was much pleased with Sarah
Capel. What did you think of the beauty?”
“Cornelia has made all other
women so indifferent to me, that if I cannot marry
her, my father may dispose of me as he chooses.”
“Cannot you forget Cornelia?”
“It is impossible. Every
day I resolve to think of her no more, and then I
continue thinking; and every day I am more and more
in love with her. Her very name moves me beyond
words.”
“There is no name, George, however
sweet and dear, however lovingly spoken, whose echo
does not at last grow faint.”
“Cornelia will echo in my heart
as long as my heart beats.”
Then they were silent, and Hyde drew
his dog closer and watched the blaze among some lighter
branches, which a servant had just brought in.
At his entrance he had also given Annie a letter, which
she was eagerly reading. Hyde had no speculation
about it; and even when he found Annie regarding him
with her whole soul in her face, he failed to understand,
as he always had done, the noble love which had been
so long and so faithfully his—a love holding
itself above endearments; self-repressed, self-sacrificing,
kept down in the inmost heart-chamber a dignified
prisoner behind very real bars. Yet he was conscious
that the letter was of more than usual interest, and
when the servant had closed the door behind him, he
asked, “Whom is your letter from, Annie?
It seems to please you very much.”
She leaned forward to him with the
paper in her little trembling hand, and said,
“It is from Cornelia.”
“My God!” he ejaculated;
and the words were fraught with such feeling, as could
have found no other vehicle of expression.
“She has sent you, dear George,
a copy of the letter you ought to have received more
than two years ago. Read it.”
His eyes ran rapidly over the sweet
words, his face flamed, his hands trembled, he cried
out impetuously—
“But what does it mean?
Am I quite in my senses? How has this letter
been delayed? Why do I get only a copy ?”
“Because Mr. Van Ariens has the original.”
“It is all incredible.
What do you mean, Annie? Do not keep me in such
torturing suspense.”
“It means that Mr. Van Ariens
asked Cornelia to marry him on the same day that you
wrote to her about your marriage. She answered
both letters in the same hour, and misdirected them.”
“God’s death!
How can I punish so mean a scoundrel? I will have
my letter from him, if I follow him round the world
for it.”
“You have your letter now.
I asked Cornelia to write it again for you; and you
see she has done it gladly.”
“Angel of goodness! But I will have my
first letter.”
“It has been in that man’s
keeping for more than two years. I would not
touch it. ’Twould infect a gentleman, and
make of him a rascal just as base.”
“He shall write me then an apology
in his own blood. I will make him do it, at the
point of my sword.”
“If I were you, I would scorn
to wet my sword in blood so base.”
“Remember, Annie, what this
darling girl suffered. For his treachery she
nearly died. I speak not of my own wrong—it
is as nothing to hers.”
“However, she might have been more careful.”
“Annie, she was in the happy
hurry of love. Your calm soul knows not what
a confusing thing that is—she made a mistake,
and that sneaking villain turned her mistake into
a crime. By a God’s mercy, it is found
out—but how? Annie! Annie, how
much I owe you! What can I say? What can
I do?”
“Be reasonable. Mary Damer
really found it out. His guilty restless conscience
forced him to tell her the story, though to be sure
he put the wrong on people he did not name. But
I knew so much of the mystery of your love sorrow,
as to put the two stories together, and find them
fit. Then I wrote to Cornelia.”
“How long ago?”
“About two months.”
“Why then did you not give me hope ere this?”
“I would not give you hope,
till hope was certain. Two years is a long time
in a girl’s life. It was a possible thing
for Cornelia to have forgotten—to have
changed.”
“Impossible! Quite impossible!
She could not forget. She could not change.
Why did you not tell me? I should have known her
heart by mine own.”
“I wished to be sure,” repeated Annie,
a little sadly.
“Forgive me, dear Annie.
But this news throws me into an unspeakable condition.
You see that I must leave for America at once.”
“No. I do not see that, George.”
“But if you consider—”
“I have been considering for
two months. Let me decide for you now, for you
are not able to do so wisely. Write at once to
Cornelia, that is your duty as well as your pleasure.
But before you go to her, there are things indispensable
to be done. Will you ask Doctor Moran for his
child, and not be able to show him that you can care
for her as she deserves to be cared for? Lawyers
will not be hurried, there will be consultations,
and engrossings, and signings, and love—in
your case— will have to wait upon law.”
“’Tis hard for love, and
harder perhaps for anger to wait. For I am in
a passion of wrath at Van Ariens. I long to be
near him. Oh what suffering his envy and hatred
have caused others!”
“And himself also. Be sure
of that, or he had not tried to find some ease in
a kind of confession. Doctor Roslyn will tell
you that it is an eternal law, that wherever sin is,
sorrow will answer it.”
“The man is hateful to me.”
“He has done a thing that makes
him hateful; but perhaps for all that, he has been
so miserable about it, as to have the pity of the
Uncondemning One. I hear your father coming.
I am sure you will have his sympathy in all things.”
She left the room as the Earl entered
it. He was in unusually high spirits. Some
political news had delighted him, and without noticing
his son’s excitement he said—
“The Commons have taken things
in their own hands, George. I said they would.
They listen to the King and the Lords very respectfully,
and then obey themselves. Most of the men in
the Lower House are unfit to enter it.”
“Well, sir, the Lords as a rule
send them there—you have sent three of
them yourself—and unfit men in public places,
suppose prior unfitness in those who have the places
to dispose of. But the government is not interesting.
I have something else, father, to think about.”
“Indeed, I think the government
is extremely interesting. It is very like three
horses arranged in tandem fashion—first,
you know, the King, a little out of the reach of the
whip; then the Lords follow the King, and the Commons
are in the shafts, a more ignoble position, but yet—as
we see to-day, possessing a special power of upsetting
the coach.”
“Father, I have very important
news from America. Will you listen to it?”
“Yes, if you will tell it to
me straight, and not blunder about your meaning.”
“Sir, I have just discovered that a letter sent
to me more than two years ago, has been knowingly
and purposely detained from me.”
“By whom?”
“A man into whose hands it fell by misdirection.”
“Did the letter contain means of identifying
it, as belonging to you?”
“Ample means.”
“Then the man is outside your
recognition. You might as well go to the Bridewell,
and seek a second among its riff-raff of scoundrels.
Tell me shortly whom it concerns.”
“Miss Moran.”
“Oh indeed! Are we to have that subject
opened again?”
His face darkened, and George, with
an impetuosity that permitted no interruption, told
the whole story. As he proceeded the Earl became
interested, then sympathetic. He looked with moist
eyes at the youth so dear to him, and saw that his
heart was filled with the energy and tenderness of
his love. His handsome face, his piercingly bright
eyes, his courteous, but obstinately masterful manner,
his almost boyish passion of anger and impatience,
his tall, serious figure, erect, as if ready for opposition;
even that sentiment of deadly steel, of being impatient
to toss his sheath from his sword, pleased very much
the elder man; and won both his respect and his admiration.
He felt that his son had rights all his own, and that
he must cheerfully and generously allow them.
“George,” he answered,
“you have won my approval. You have shown
me that you can suffer and be faithful, and the girl
able to inspire such an affection, must be worthy
of it. What do you wish to do?”
“I am going to America by the next packet.”
“Sit down, then we can talk
without feeling that every word is a last word, and
full of hurry and therefore of unreason. You desire
to see Miss Moran without delay, that is very natural.”
“Yes, sir. I am impatient also to get my
letter.”
“I think that of no importance.”
“What would you have done in my case, and at
my age, father?”
“Something extremely foolish.
I should have killed the man, or been killed by him.
I hope that you have more sense. Society does
not now compel you to answer insult with murder.
The noble not caring of the spirit, is beyond the
mere passion of the animal. What does Annie say?”
“Annie is an angel. I walk
far below her—and I hate the man who has
so wronged—Cornelia. I think, sir,
you must also hate him.”
“I hate nobody. God send,
that I may be treated the same. George, you have
flashed your sword only in a noble quarrel, will you
now stain it with the blood of a man below your anger
or consideration? You have had your follies,
and I have smiled at them; knowing well, that a man
who has no follies in his youth, will have in his
maturity no power. But now you have come of age,
not only in years but in suffering cheerfully endured
and well outlived; so I may talk to you as a man, and
not command you as a father.”
“What do you wish me to do, sir?”
“I advise you to write to Miss
Moran at once. Tell her you are more anxious
now to redeem your promise, than ever you were before.
Say to her that I already look upon her as a dear
daughter, and am taking immediate steps to settle
upon you the American Manor, and also such New York
property as will provide for the maintenance of your
family in the state becoming your order and your expectations.
Tell her that my lawyers will go to this business
to-morrow, and that as soon as the deeds are in your
hand, you will come and ask for the interview with
Doctor Moran, so long and cruelly delayed.”
“My dear father! How wise and kind you
are!”
“It is my desire to be so, George.
You cannot, after this unfortunate delay, go to Doctor
Moran without the proofs of your ability to take care
of his daughter’s future.”
“How soon can this business be accomplished?”
“In about three weeks, I should
think. But wait your full time, and do not go
without the credentials of your position. This
three or four weeks is necessary to bring to perfection
the waiting of two years.”
“I will take your advice, sir.
I thank you for your generosity.”
“All that I have is yours, George.
And you can write to this dear girl every day in the
interim. Go now and tell her what I say.
I had other dreams for you as you know—they
are over now—I have awakened.”
“Dear Annie!” ejaculated George.
“Dear Annie!” replied
the Earl with a sigh. “She is one of the
daughters of God, I am not worthy to call her mine;
but I have sat at her feet, and learned how to love,
and how to forgive, and how to bear disappointment.
I will tell you, that when Colonel Saye insulted me
last year, and I felt for my sword and would have
sent him a letter on its point—Annie stepped
before him. ‘Forget, and go on, dear uncle,’
she said; and I did so with a proud, sore heart at
first, but quite cheerfully in a week or two; and
at the last Hunt dinner he came to me with open hand,
and we ate and drank together, and are now firm friends.
Yet, but for Annie, one of us might be dead; and the
other flying like Cain exiled and miserable.
Think of these things, George. The good of being
a son, is to be able to profit from your father’s
mistakes.”
They parted with a handclasp that
went to both hearts, and as Hyde passed his mother’s
loom, he went in, and told her all that happened to
him, She listened with a smile and a heartache.
She knew now that the time had come to say “farewell”
to the boy who had made her life for twenty-seven
years. “He must marry like the rest of the
world, and go away from her,” and only mothers
know what supreme self-sacrifice a pleasant acquiescence
in this event implies. But she bravely put down
all the clamouring selfishness of her long sweet care
and affection, and said cheerfully—
“Very much to my liking is Cornelia
Moran, She is world-like and heaven-like, and her
good heart and sweet nature every one knows. A
loving wife and a noble mother she will make, and
if I must lose thee, my Joris, there is no girl in
America that I like better to have thee.”
“Never will you lose me, mother.”
“Ah then! that is what all sons
say. The common lot, I look for nothing better.
But see now! I give thee up cheerfully. If
God please, I shall see thy sons and daughters; and
thy father has been anxious about the Hydes.
He would not have a stranger here—nor would
I. Our hope is in thee and thy sweet wife, and very
glad am I that thy wife is to be Cornelia Moran.”
And even after Joris had left her
she smiled, though the tears dropped down upon her
work. She thought of the presents she would send
her daughter, and she told herself that Cornelia was
an American, and that she had made for her, with her
own hands and brain, a lovely home wherein her
memory must always dwell. Indeed she let her thoughts
go far forward to see, and to listen to the happy
boys and girls who might run and shout gleefully through
the fair large rooms, and the sweet shady gardens
her skill and taste had ordered and planted. Thus
her generosity made her a partaker of her children’s
happiness, and whoever partakes of a pleasure has
his share of it, and comes into contact—not
only with the happiness—but with the other
partakers of that happiness—a divine kind
of interest for generous deeds, which we may all appropriate.
Nothing is more contagious than joy,
and Hyde was now a living joy through all the house.
His voice had caught a new tone, his feet a more buoyant
step, he carried himself like a man expectant of some
glorious heritage. So eager, so ardent, so ready
to be happy, he inspired every one with his buoyant
gladness of heart. He could at least talk to
Cornelia with his pen every day, yes, every hour if
he desired; and if it had been possible to transfer
in a letter his own light-heartedness, the words he
wrote would have shone upon the paper.
The next morning Mary Damer called.
She knew that a letter from Cornelia was possible,
and she knew also that it would really be as fateful
to herself, as to Hyde. If, as she suspected,
it was Rem Van Ariens who had detained the misdirected
letter, there was only one conceivable result as regarded
herself. She, an upright, honourable English girl,
loving truth with all her heart, and despising whatever
was underhand and disloyal, had but one course to
take—she must break off her engagement
with a man so far below her standard of simple morality.
She could not trust his honour, and what security
has love in a heart without honour?
So she looked anxiously at Annie as
she entered, and Annie would not keep her in suspense.
“There was a letter from Miss Moran last night,”
she said. “She loves George yet. She
re-wrote the unfortunate letter, and this time it
found its owner. I think he has it next his heart
at this very moment.”
“I am glad of that, Annie. But who has
the first letter?”
“I think you know, Mary.”
“You mean Mr. Van Ariens?”
“Yes.”
“Then there is no more to be
said. I shall write to him as soon as possible.”
“I am sorry—”
“No, no! Be content, Annie.
The right must always come right. Neither you
nor I could desire any other end, even to our own love
story.”
“But you must suffer.”
“Not much. None of us weep
if we lose what is of no value. And I have noticed
that the happiness of any one is always conditioned
by the unhappiness of some one else. Love usually
builds his home out of the wrecks of other homes.
Your cousin and Cornelia will be happy, but there
are others that must suffer, that they may be so.
I will go now, Annie, because until I have written
to Mr. Van Ariens, I shall not feel free. And
also, I do not wish him to come here, and in his last
letter he spoke of such an intention.”
So the two letters—that
of Hyde to Cornelia, and that of Mary Darner to Van
Ariens, left England for America in the same packet;
and though Mary Darner undoubtedly had some suffering
and disappointment to conquer, the fight was all within
her. To her friends at the Manor she was just
the same bright, courageous girl; ready for every
emergency, and equally ready to make the most of every
pleasure.
And the tone of the Manor House was
now set to a key of the highest joy and expectation.
Hyde unconsciously struck the note, for he was happily
busy from morning to night about affairs relating either
to his marriage, or to his future as the head of a
great household. All his old exigent, extravagant
liking for rich clothing returned to him. He had
constant visits from his London tailor, a dapper little
artist, who brought with him a profusion of rich cloth,
silk and satin, and who firmly believed that the tailor
made the man. There were also endless interviews
with the family lawyer, endless readings of law papers,
and endless consultations about rights and successions,
which Hyde was glad and grateful to leave very much
to his father’s wisdom and generosity.
At the beginning of this happy period,
Hyde had been sure that the business of his preparations
would be arranged in three weeks; a month had appeared
to be a quite unreasonable and impossible delay; but
the month passed, and it was nearly the middle of
November when all things were ready for his voyage.
His mother would then have urged a postponement until
spring, but she knew that George would brook no further
delay; and she was wise enough to accept the inevitable
cheerfully. And thus by letting her will lead
her, in the very road necessity drove her, she preserved
not only her liberty, but her desire.
Some of these last days were occupied
in selecting from her jewels presents for Cornelia,
with webs of gold and silver tissues, and Spitalfields
silks so rich and heavy, that no mortal woman might
hope to outwear them. To these Annie added from
her own store of lace, many very valuable pieces;
and the happy bridegroom was proud to see that love
was going to send him away, with both arms full for
the beloved.
The best gift however came last, and
it was from the Earl. It was not gold or land,
though he gave generously of both these; but one which
Hyde felt made his way straight before him, and which
he knew must have cost his father much self-abnegation.
It was the following letter to Dr. John Moran.
My dear sir:
It seems then, that our dear children
love each other so well, that it is beyond our right,
even as parents, to forbid their marriage. I ask
from you, for my son, who is a humble and ardent suitor
for Miss Moran’s hand, all the favour his sincere
devotion to her deserves, We have both been young,
we have both loved, accept then his affection as some
atonement for any grievance or injustice you remember
against myself. Had we known each other better,
we should doubtless have loved each other better;
but now that marriage will make us kin, I offer you
my hand, with all it implies of regret for the past,
and of respect for the future. Your servant to
command,
Richard Hyde.
“It is the greatest proof of
my love I can give you, George,” said the Earl,
when the letter had been read; “and it is Annie
you must thank for it. She dropped the thought
into my heart, and if the thought has silently grown
to these written words, it is because she had put many
other good thoughts there, and that these helped this
one to come to perfection.”
“Have you noticed, father, how
small and fragile-looking she is? Can she really
be slowly dying?”
“No, she is not dying; she is
only going a little further away—a little
further away, every hour. Some hour she will be
called, and she will answer, and we shall see her
no more—here. But I do not call
that dying, and if it be dying, Annie will go as calmly
and simply, as if she were fulfilling some religious
rite or duty. She loves God, and she will go
to Him.”
The next morning Hyde left his father’s
home forever. It was impossible that such a parting
should be happy. No hopes, no dreams of future
joy, could make him forget the wealth of love he was
leaving. Nor did he wish to forget. And
woe to the man or woman who would buy composure and
contentment by forgetting!—by really forfeiting
a portion of their existence—by being a
suicide of their own moral nature.
The day was a black winter day, with
a monotonous rain and a dark sky troubled by a ghostly
wind. Inside the house the silence fell on the
heart like a weight. The Earl and Countess watched
their son’s carriage turn from the door, and
then looked silently into each other’s face.
The Earl’s lips were firmly set, and his eyes
full of tears; the Countess was weeping bitterly.
He went with her to her room, and with all his old
charm and tenderness comforted her for her great loss.
At that moment Annie was forgotten,
yet no one was suffering more than she was. Hyde
had knelt by her sofa, and taken her in his arms, and
covered her face with tears and kisses, and she had
not been able to oppose a parting so heart-breaking
and so final. The last tears she was ever to
shed dropped from her closed eyes, as she listened
to his departing steps; and the roll of the carriage
carrying him away forever, seemed to roll over her
shrinking heart. She cried out feebly—a
pitiful little shrill cry, that she hushed with a
sob still more full of anguish. Then she began
to cast over her suffering soul the balm of prayer,
and prostrate with closed eyes, and hands feebly hanging
down, Doctor Roslyn found her. He did not need
to ask a question, he had long known the brave self-sacrifice
that was consecrating the child-heart suffering so
sharply that day; and he said only—
“We are made perfect through suffering, Annie.”
“I know, dear father.”
“And you have found before this,
that the sorrow well borne is full of strange joys—joys,
whose long lasting perfumes, show that they were grown
in heaven and not on earth.”
“This is the last sorrow that can come to me,
father.”
“And my dear Annie, you would
have been a loser without it. Every grief has
its meaning, and the web of life could not be better
woven, if only love touched it.”
“I have been praying, father.”
“Nay, but God Himself prayed
in you, while your soul waited in deep resignation.
God gave you both the resignation and the answer.”
“My heart failed me at the last—then
I prayed as well as I could.”
“And then, visited by the not
yourself in you, your head was lifted up.
Do not be frightened at what you want. Strive
for it little by little. All that is bitter in
outward things, or in interior things, all that befalls
you in the course of a day, is your daily
bread if you will take it from His hand.”
Then she was silent and quite still,
and he sat and watched the gradual lifting of the
spirit’s cloud—watched, until the
pallor of her face grew luminous with the inner light,
and her wide open eyes saw, as in a vision, things,
invisible to mortal sight; but open to the spirit on
that dazzling line where mortal and immortal verge.
And as he went home, stepping slowly
through the misty world, he himself hardly knew whether
he was in the body or out of it. He felt not the
dripping rain, he was not conscious of the encompassing
earthly vapours, he had passed within the veil and
was worshipping
“In dazzling temples opened
straight to Him, Where One who had great lightnings
for His crown Was suddenly made present; vast and dim
Through crowded pinions of the Cherubim.”
And his feet stumbled not, nor was
he aware of anything around, until the Earl met him
at the park gates and touching him said reverently—
“Father, you are close to the
highway. Have you seen Annie?”
“I have just left her.”
“She is further from us than ever.”
“Richard Hyde,” he answered,”
she is on her way to God, and she can rest nothing
short of that.”