by T. S. Arthur
Every aspect of nature—and all her aspects were beautiful there—had a new charm for the eyes of Fanny Markland. The silvery waters cast upward by the fountain fell back in rainbow showers, ruffling the tiny lake beneath, and filling the air with a low, dreamy murmur. Never had that lovely creation of art, blending with nature, looked so like an ideal thing as now—a very growth of fairy-land. The play of the waters in the air was as the glad motions of a living form.
Around this fountain was a rosary of white and red roses, encircled again by arbor-vitae; and there were statues of choice workmanship, the ideals of modern art, lifting their pure white forms here and there in chastened loveliness. All this was shut in from observation by a stately grove of elms. And here it was that the maiden had come to hide herself from observation, and dream her waking dream of love. What a world of enchantment was dimly opening before her, as her eye ran down the Eden-vistas of the future! Along those aisles of life she saw herself moving, beside a stately one, who leaned toward her, while she clung to him as a vine to its firm support. Even while in the mazes of this delicious dream, a heavy footfall startled her, and she sprang to her feet with a suddenly-stilled pulsation. In the next instant a manly form filled the door of the summer-house, and a manly voice exclaimed:
“Miss Markland! Fanny! do I find you here?”
The colour left the maiden’s cheeks for an instant. Then they flushed to deep crimson. But her lips were sealed. Surprise took away, for a time, the power of speech.
“I turned aside,” said the intruder, “as I came up the avenue, to have a look at this charming spot, so well remembered; but dreamed not of finding you here.”
He had already approached Fanny, and was holding one of her hands tightly in his, while he gazed upon her face with a look of glowing admiration.
“Oh, Mr. Lyon! How you have startled me!” said Fanny, as soon as she could command her voice.
“And how you tremble! There, sit down again, Miss Markland, and calm yourself. Had I known you were here, I should not have approached so abruptly. But how have you been since my brief absence? And how is your good father and mother?”
“Father is in New York,” replied Fanny.
“In New York! I feared as much.” And a slight shade crossed the face of Mr. Lyon, who spoke as if off of his guard. “When did he go?”
“Yesterday.”
“Ah! Did he receive a letter from me?”
“Yes, sir.” Fanny’s eyes drooped under the earnest gaze that was fixed upon her.
“I hoped to have reached here as soon as my letter. This is a little unfortunate.” The aspect of Mr. Lyon became grave.
“When will your father return?” he inquired.
“I do not know.”
Again Mr. Lyon looked serious and thoughtful. For some moments he remained abstracted; and Fanny experienced a slight feeling of timidity, as she looked upon his shadowed face. Arousing himself, he said:
“This being the case, I shall at once return South.”
“Not until to-morrow,” said Fanny.
“This very night,” answered Mr. Lyon.
“Then let us go to the Lodge at once,” and Fanny made a motion to rise. “My mother will be gratified to see you, if it is only for a few moments.”
But Mr. Lyon placed a hand upon her arm, and said:
“Stay, Miss Markland—that cannot now be. I must return South without meeting any other member of your family. Did you receive my letter?” he added, abruptly, and with a change of tone and manner.
Fanny answered affirmatively; and his quick eye read her heart in voice and countenance.
“When I wrote, I had no thought of meeting you again so soon. But a few hours after despatching the letter to your father, enclosing yours—a letter on business of importance, to me, at least—I received information that led me to wish an entire change in the programme of operations about to be adopted, through your father’s agency. Fearing that a second letter might be delayed in the mails, I deemed it wisest to come on with the greatest speed myself. But I find that I am a day too late. Your father has acted promptly; and what he has done must not be undone. Nay, I do not wish him even to know that any change has been contemplated. Now, Miss Markland,” and his voice softened as he bent toward the girlish form at his side, “may one so recently a stranger claim your confidence?”
“From my father and my mother I have no concealments,” said Fanny.
“And heaven forbid that I should seek to mar that truly wise confidence,” quickly answered Mr. Lyon. “All I ask is, that, for the present, you mention to no one the fact that I have been here. Our meeting in this place is purely accidental—providential, I will rather say. My purpose in coming was, as already explained, to meet your father. He is away, and on business that at once sets aside all necessity for seeing him. It will now be much better that he should not even know of my return from the South—better for me, I mean; for the interests that might suffer are mine alone. But let me explain a little, that you may act understandingly. When I went South, your father very kindly consented to transact certain business left unfinished by me in New York. Letters received on my arrival at Savannah, advised me of the state of the business, and I wrote to your father, in what way to arrange it for me; by the next mail other letters came, showing me different aspect of affairs and rendering a change of plan very desirable. It was to explain this fully to your father, that I came on. But as it is too late, I do not wish him even to know, for the present, that a change was contemplated. I fear it might lessen, for a time, his confidence in my judgment—something I do not fear when he knows me better. Your since, for the present, my dear Miss Markland, will nothing affect your father, who has little or no personal interest in the matter, but may serve me materially. Say, then, that, until you hear from me again, on the subject, you will keep your own counsel.”
“You say that my father has no interest in the business, to which you refer?” remarked Fanny. Her mind was bewildered.
“None whatever. He is only, out of a generous good-will, trying to serve the son of an old business friend,” replied Mr. Lyon, confidently. “Say, then, Fanny,”—his voice was insinuating, and there was something of the serpent’s fascination in his eyes—”that you will, for my sake, remain, for the present, silent on the subject of this return from the South.”
As he spoke, he raised one of her hands to his lips, and kissed it. Still more bewildered—nay, charmed—Fanny did not make even a faint struggle to withdraw her hand. In the next moment, his hot lips had touched her pure forehead—and in the next moment, “Farewell!” rung hurriedly in her ears. As the retiring form of the young adventurer stood in the door of the summer-house, there came to her, with a distinct utterance, these confidently spoken words—”I trust you without fear.”—And “God bless you!” flung toward her with a heart-impulse, found a deeper place in her soul, from whence, long afterwards, came back their thrilling echoes. By the time the maiden had gathered up her scattered thoughts, she was alone.
CHAPTER IX.
THE maiden’s thoughts were yet bewildered, and her heart beating tumultuously, when her quick ears caught the sound of other footsteps than those to whose retreating echoes she had been so intently listening. Hastily retreating into the summer-house, she crouched low upon one of the seats, in order, if possible, to escape observation. But nearer and nearer came the slow, heavy footfall of a man, and ere she had time to repress, by a strong effort, the agitation that made itself visible in every feature, Mr. Allison was in her presence. It was impossible for her to restrain an exclamation of surprise, or to drive back the crimson from her flushing face.
“Pardon the intrusion,” said the old gentleman, in his usual mild tone. “If I had known that you were here, I would not have disturbed your pleasant reveries.”
Some moments elapsed, ere Fanny could venture a reply. She feared to trust her voice, lest more should be betrayed than she wished any one to know. Seeing how much his presence disturbed
her, Mr. Allison stepped back a pace or two, saying, as he did so, “I was only passing, my child; and will keep on my way. I regret having startled you by my sudden appearance.”
He was about retiring, when Fanny, who felt that her manner must strike Mr. Allison as very singular, made a more earnest effort to regain her self-possession, and said, with a forced smile:
“Don’t speak of intrusion; Mr. Allison. Your sudden coming did startle me. But that is past.”
Mr. Allison, who had partly turned away, now advanced toward Fanny, and, taking her hand, looked down into her face, from which the crimson flush had not yet retired, with an expression of tender regard.
“Your father is still absent, I believe?” said he.
“Yes, sir.”
“He will be home soon.”
“We hope so. His visit to New York was unexpected.”
“And you therefore feel his absence the more.”
“Oh, yes,” replied Fanny, now regaining her usual tone of voice and easy address; “and it seems impossible for us to be reconciled to the fact.”
“Few men are at home more than your father,” remarked Mr. Allison. “His world, it might be said, is included in the circle of his beloved ones.”
“And I hope it will always be so.”
Mr. Allison looked more earnestly into the young maiden’s face. He did not clearly understand the meaning of this sentence, for, in the low tones that gave it utterance, there seemed to his ear a prophecy of change. Then he remembered his recent conversation with her father, and light broke in upon his mind. The absence of Mr. Markland had, in all probability, following the restless, dissatisfied state, which all had observed, already awakened the concern of his family, lest it should prove only the beginning of longer periods of absence.
“Business called your father to New York,” said Mr. Allison.
“Yes; so he wrote home to mother. He went to the city in the morning, and we expected him back as usual in the evening, but he sent a note by the coachman, saying that letters just received made it necessary for him to go on to New York immediately.”
“He is about entering into business again, I presume.”
“Oh, I hope not!” replied Fanny.
Mr. Allison remained silent for some moments, and then said—
“I thought your visitor, Mr. Lyon, went South several days ago.”
“So he did,” answered Fanny, in a quickened tone of voice, and with a manner slightly disturbed.
“Then I was in error,” said Mr. Allison, speaking partly to himself. “I thought I passed him in the road, half an hour ago. The resemblance was at least a very close one. You are certain he went South?”
“Oh! yes, sir,” replied Fanny, quickly.
Mr. Allison looked intently upon her, until her eyes wavered and fell to the ground. He continued to observe her for some moments, and only withdrew his gaze when he saw that she was about to look up. A faint sigh parted the old man’s lips. Ah! if a portion of his wisdom, experience, and knowledge of character, could only be imparted to that pure young spirit, just about venturing forth into a world where mere appearances of truth deceive and fascinate!
“Does Mr. Lyon design returning soon from the South?”
“I heard him say to father that he did not think he would be in this part of the world again for six or eight months.”
And again the eyes of Fanny shunned the earnest gaze of Mr. Allison.
“How far South does he go?”
“I am not able to answer you clearly; but I think I heard father say that he would visit Central America.”
“Ah! He is something of a traveller, then?”
“Yes, sir; he has travelled a great deal.”
“He is an Englishman?”
“Yes, sir. His father is an old business friend of my father’s.”
“So I understood.”
There was a pause, in which Mr. Allison seemed to be thinking intently.
“It is a little singular, certainly,” said he, as if speaking only to himself.
“What is singular?” asked Fanny, looking curiously at her companion.
“Why, that I should have been so mistaken. I doubted not, for a moment, that the person I saw was Mr. Lyon.”
Fanny did not look up. If she had done so, the gaze fixed upon her would have sent a deeper crimson to her cheek than flushed it a few moments before.
“Have you any skill in reading character, Fanny?” asked Mr. Allison, in a changed and rather animated voice, and with a manner that took away the constraint that had, from the first, oppressed the mind of the young girl.
“No very great skill, I imagine,” was the smiling answer.
“It is a rare, but valuable gift,” said the old man. “I was about to call it an art; but it is more a gift than an art; for, if not possessed by nature, it is too rarely acquired. Yet, in all pure minds, there is something that we may call analogous—a perception of moral qualities in those who approach us. Have you never felt an instinctive repugnance to a person on first meeting him?”
“Oh, yes.”
“And been as strongly attracted in other cases?”
“Often.”
“Have you ever compared this impression with your subsequent knowledge of the person’s character?”
Fanny thought for a little while, and then said—
“I am not sure that I have, Mr. Allison.”
“You have found yourself mistaken in persons after some acquaintance with them?”
“Yes; more than once.”
“And I doubt not, that if you had observed the impression these persons made on you when you met them for the first time, you would have found that impression a true index to their character. Scarcely noticing these first impressions, which are instinctive perceptions of moral qualities, we are apt to be deceived by the exterior which almost every one assumes on a first acquaintance; and then, if we are not adepts at reading character, we may be a long time in finding out the real quality. Too often this real character is manifested, after we have formed intimate relations with the person, that may not be dissolved while the heart knows a life-throb. Is that not a serious thought, Fanny?”
“It is, Mr. Allison,—a very serious, and a solemn thought.”
“Do you think that you clearly comprehend my meaning?”
“I do not know that I see all you wish me to comprehend,” answered Fanny.
“May I attempt to make it clearer?”
“I always listen to you with pleasure and profit, Mr. Allison,” said Fanny.
“Did you ever think that your soul had senses as well as your body?” inquired the old man.
“You ask me a strange question. How can a mere spirit—an airy something, so to speak—have senses?”
“Do you never use the words—’I see it clearly’—meaning that you see some form of truth presented to your mind. As, for instance,—if I say, ‘To be good is to be happy,’ you will answer, ‘Oh, yes; I see that clearly.’ Your soul, then, has, at least, the sense of sight. And that it has the sense of taste also, will, I think, be clear to you, when you remember bow much you enjoy the reading of a good book, wherein is food for the mind. Healthy food is sometimes presented in so unpalatable a shape, that the taste rejects it; and so it is with truth, which is the mind’s food. I instance this, to make it clearer to you. So you see that the soul has at least two senses—sight and taste. That it has feeling needs scarcely an illustration. The mind is hurt quite as easily as the body, and, the path of an injury is usually more permanent. The child who has been punished unjustly feels the injury inflicted on his spirit, days, months, and, it may be, years, after the body has lost the smarting consciousness of stripes. And you know that sharp words pierce the mind with acutest pain. We may speak daggers, as well as use them. Is this at all clear to you, Miss Markland?”
“Oh, very clear! How strange that I should never have thought of this myself! Yes—I see, hear, taste, and feel with my mind, as well as with my
body.”
“Think a little more deeply,” said the old man. “If the mind have senses, must it not have a body?”
“A body! You are going too deep for me, Mr. Allison. We say mind and body, to indicate that one is immaterial, and the other substantial.”
“May there not be such a thing as a spiritual as well as a material substance?”
“To say spiritual substance, sounds, in my ears, like a contradiction in terms,” said Fanny.
“There must be a substance before there can be a permanent impression. The mind receives and retains the most lasting impressions; therefore, it must be an organized substance—but spiritual, not material. You will see this clearer, if you think of the endurance of habit. ‘As the twig is bent, the tree’s inclined,’ is a trite saying that aptly illustrates the subject about which we are now conversing. If the mind were not a substance and a form, how could it receive and retain impressions?”
“True.”
“And to advance a step further—if the mind have form, what is that form?”
“The human form, if any,” was the answer.
“Yes. And of this truth the minds of all men have a vague perception. A cruel man is called a human monster. In thus speaking, no one thinks of the mere physical body, but of the inward man. About a good man, we say there is something truly human. And believe me, my dear young friend, that our spirits are as really organized substances as our bodies—the difference being, that one is an immaterial and the other a material substance; that we have a spiritual body, with spiritual senses, and all the organs and functions that appertain to the material body, which is only a visible and material outbirth from the spiritual body, and void of any life but what is thence derived.”