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The Good Time Coming

Page 21

by T. S. Arthur


  A few days after this arrangement, Mr. Willet, whose family had gathered closer around their neighbours the moment the fact of their misfortune was known, came over to see Mr. Markland and have some talk with him about his future prospects. A brief conversation which had taken place on the day previous opened the way for him to do so without seeming to intrude. The impossibility of getting into business at the present time was admitted, on both sides, fully. Mr. Willet then said—

  “If the place of salesman in a large jobbing-house would meet your views, I believe I can manage it for you.”

  “I am in no situation,” replied Mr. Markland, “to make my own terms with the world. Standing at the foot of the ladder, I must accept the first means of ascent that offers.”

  “You will, then, take the place?”

  “Yes, if the offer is made.”

  “The salary is not as large as I could wish,” said Mr. Willet.

  “How much?”

  “Twelve hundred dollars.”

  “Get it for me, Mr. Willet, and I will be deeply grateful. That sum will save my children from immediate want.”

  “I wish it were more, for your sake,” replied the kind neighbour. “But I trust it will be the beginning of better things. You will, at least, gain a footing on the first round of the ladder.”

  “But the advantage is only in prospect,” said Mr. Markland. “The place is not yet mine.”

  “You have the refusal,” was the pleased answer. “I had you in my mind when I heard of the vacancy, and mentioned your name. The principal of the firm said, without a word of hesitation, that if you were available, you would just suit him.”

  “I shall not soon forget your real kindness,” responded Markland, grasping the hand of Mr. Willet. “You have proved, indeed, though an acquaintance of recent date, a true friend. Ah, sir! my heart had begun to despond. So many cold looks, changed tones, and discouraging words! I was not prepared for them. When a man is no longer able to stand alone, how few there are to reach out an arm to give him support!”

  “It is the way of the world,” replied Mr. Willet; “and if we give it credit for more virtue than it possesses, a sad disappointment awaits us. But there are higher and better principles of action than such as govern the world. They bring a higher and better reward.”

  “May the better reward be yours,” said Mr. Markland, fervently. His heart was touched by this real but unobtrusive kindness.

  “When do you purpose leaving here?” next inquired Mr. Willet.

  “As early as I can make arrangements for removing my family,” was answered.

  “Where do you think of going?”

  “Into the city.”

  “Would you not prefer remaining in this pleasant neighbourhood? I do not see how my mother and sisters are going to give you all up. Mrs. Markland has already won her way into all their affections, and they have mourned over your misfortunes as deeply, I believe, as if they had been our own. Pardon the freedom of speech which is only a warm heart-utterance, when I say that there is a beauty in the character of Mrs. Markland that has charmed us all; and we cannot think of losing her society. Walker told me to-day that his wife was dissatisfied with a country life, and that he was going to sell his pleasant cottage. I offered him his price, and the title-deeds will be executed to-morrow. Will you do me the favour to become my tenant? The rent is two hundred and fifty dollars.”

  Mr. Willet spoke very earnestly. It was some moments before there was any reply. Then Mr. Markland raised his eyes from the floor, and said, in a low voice, that slightly trembled—

  “I saw a house advertised for rent in the city, to-day, which I thought would suit us. It was small, and the rent three hundred dollars. On learning the owner’s name, I found that he was an old business friend, with whom I had been quite intimate, and so called upon him. His reception of me was not over cordial. When I mentioned my errand, he hesitated in his replies, and finally hinted something about security for the rent. I left him without a word. To have replied without an exposure of unmanly weakness would have been impossible. Keenly, since my misfortunes, have I felt the change in my relations to the world; but nothing has wounded me so sharply as this! Mr. Willet, your generous interest in my welfare touches my heart! Let me talk with my family on the subject. I doubt not that we will accept your offer thankfully.”

  CHAPTER XXXVI.

  “OUR Father in heaven never leaves us in a pathless desert,” said Mrs. Markland, light breaking through her tear-filled eye. Her husband had just related the conversation held with Mr. Willet. “When the sun goes down, stars appear.”

  “A little while ago, the desert seemed pathless, and no star glittered in the sky,” was answered.

  “Yet the path was there, Edward; you had not looked close enough to your feet,” replied his wife.

  “It was so narrow that it would have escaped my vision,” he said, faintly sighing.

  “If it were not the safest way for you and for all of us, it would not be the only one now permitted our feet to tread.”

  “Safest it may be for me; but your feet could walk, securely, a pathway strewn with flowers. Ah me! the thought that my folly—”

  “Edward,” Mrs. Markland interrupted him in a quick, earnest voice, “if you love me, spare me in this. When I laid my hand in yours on that happy day, which was but the beginning of happier ones, I began a new life. All thought, all affection, all joy in the present and hope in the future, were thenceforth to be mingled with your thought, affection, joy, and hope. Our lives became one. It was yours to mark out our way through the world; mine to walk by your side. The path, thus far, has been a flowery one, thanks to your love and care! But no life-path winds always amid soft and fragrant meadows. There are desert places on the road, and steep acclivities; and there are dark, devious valleys, as well as sunny hill-tops. Pilgrims on the way to the Promised Land, we must pass through the Valley and the Shadow of Death, and be imprisoned for a time in Doubting Castle, before the Delectable Mountains are gained. Oh, Edward, murmur not, but thank God for the path he has shown us, and for the clear light that falls so warmly upon it. These friends, whom he has given us in this our darkest hour, are the truest friends we have yet known. Is it not a sweet compensation for all we lose, to be near them still, and to have the good a kind Father dispenses come to us through their hands? Dear husband! in this night of worldly life, a star of celestial beauty has already mirrored itself in my heart, and made light one of its hitherto darkened chambers.”

  “Sweet philosopher!” murmured her husband, in a softened voice. “A spirit like yours would illuminate a dungeon.”

  “If it can make the air bright around my husband, its happiness will be complete,” was softly answered.

  “But these reverses are hard to bear,” said Mr. Markland, soberly.

  “Harder in anticipation than in reality. They may become to us blessings.”

  “Blessings? Oh, Agnes! I am not able to see that. It is no light thing for a man to have the hard accumulations of his best years swept from him in a moment, and to find himself, when just passing the meridian of his life, thrown prostrate to the earth.”

  “There may be richer treasures lying just beneath the surface where he has fallen, than in all the land of Ophir toward which he was pressing in eager haste,” said Mrs. Markland.

  “It may be so.” Markland spoke doubtingly.

  “It must be so!” was emphatically rejoined. “Ah, Edward, have I not often warned you against looking far away into the future, instead of stooping to gather the pearls of happiness that a good Providence has scattered so profusely around us? They are around us still.”

  Markland sighed.

  “And you may be richer far than imagination has yet pictured. Look not far away into the shadowy uncertainties of coming time for the heart’s fruition. The stones from which its temple of happiness is to be erected, if ever built, lie all along the path your feet are treading. It has been so with you from the beginning—it i
s so now.”

  “If I build not this temple, it will be no fault of yours,” said Markland, whose perceptions were becoming clearer.

  “Let us build it together,” answered his wife. “There will be no lack of materials.”

  CHAPTER XXXVII.

  WHEN the offer of Mr. Walker’s cottage was made known in the family, there was a passive acquiescence in the change on the part of all but Aunt Grace. Her pride was aroused.

  “It’s very kind in Mr. Willet,” she said—”very kind, but scarcely delicate under the circumstances.”

  “Why not delicate?” inquired Mr. Markland.

  “Did they think we were going into that little pigeon-box, just under the shadow of Woodbine Lodge. If we have to come down so low, it will not be in this neighbourhood. There’s too much pride in the Markland blood for that!”

  “We have but little to do with pride now,” said Mrs. Markland.

  Her husband sighed. The remark of his sister had quickened his blood.

  “It is the best we can do!” he remarked, sadly.

  “Not by any means,” said Grace. “There are other neighbourhoods than this, and other houses to be obtained. Let us go from here; not remain the observed of all curious observers—objects of remark and pity!”

  Her brother arose while she was speaking, and commenced walking the room in a disturbed manner. The words of Grace had aroused his slumbering pride.

  “Rather let us do what is best under the circumstances,” said Mrs. Markland, in her quiet way. “People will have their own thoughts, but these should never turn us from a right course.”

  “The sight of Woodbine Lodge will rebuke me daily,” said Mr. Markland.

  “You cannot be happy in this neighbourhood.” Grace spoke in her emphatic way. “It is impossible!”

  “I fear that it is even so,” replied her brother.

  “Then,” said Mrs. Markland, in a firm voice, “we will go hence. I place nothing against the happiness of my husband. If the sight of our old home is to trouble him daily, we will put mountains between, if necessary.”

  Markland turned toward his wife. She had never looked more beautiful in his eye.

  “Is self-negation to be all on her part?” The thought, flashing through his mind, changed the current of his feelings, and gave him truer perceptions.

  “No, Agnes,” he said, while a faint smile played around his lips, “we will not put mountains between us and this neighbourhood. Pride is a poor counsellor, and they who take heed to her words, sow the seeds of repentance. In reverse of fortune, we stand not alone. Thousands have walked this rugged road before us; and shall we falter, and look weakly back?”

  “Not so, Edward!” returned his wife, with enthusiasm; “we will neither falter nor look back. Our good and evil are often made by contrasts. We shall not find the way rugged, unless we compare it too closely with other ways our feet have trodden, and sigh vainly over the past, instead of accepting the good that is awarded us in the present. Let us first make the ‘rough paths of peevish nature even,’ and the way will be smooth to our feet.”

  “You will never be happy in this neighbourhood, Edward,” said his sister, sharply; for she saw that the pride her words had awakened was dying out.

  “If he is not happy here, change of place will work no difference.” Mrs. Markland spoke earnestly.

  “Why not?” was the quick interrogation of Grace.

  “Because happiness is rarely, if ever, produced by a change of external relations. We must have within us the elements of happiness; and then the heart’s sunshine will lie across our threshold, whether it be of palace or cottage.”

  “Truer words were never spoken,” said Mr. Markland, “and I feel their better meaning. No, Agnes, we will not go out from this pleasant neighbourhood, nor from among those we have proved to be friends. If Woodbine Lodge ever looks upon me rebukingly, I will try to acknowledge the justice of the rebuke. I will accept Mr. Willet’s kind offer to-morrow. But what have you to say, Fanny?” Mr. Markland now turned to his daughter, who had not ventured a word on the subject, though she had listened with apparent interest to the conference. “Shall we take Mr. Walker’s cottage?”

  “Your judgment must decide that, father,” was answered.

  “But have you no choice in the case, Fanny? We can remove into the city, or go into some other neighbourhood.”

  “I will be as happy here as anywhere. Do as seems best, father.”

  A silence, made in a measure oppressive by Fanny’s apparent indifference to all change, followed. Before other words were spoke, Aunt Grace withdrew in a manner that showed a mind disturbed. The conference in regard to the cottage was again resumed, and ended in the cheerful conclusion that it would afford them the pleasantest home, in their changed circumstances, of any that it was possible for them to procure.

  CHAPTER XXXVIII.

  PREPARATION was at once made for the proposed removal. Mr. Walker went back to the city, and the new owner of the cottage, Mr. Willet, set carpenters and painters at work to make certain additions which he thought needful to secure the comfort of his tenants, and to put every thing in the most thorough repair. Even against the remonstrance of Mr. Markland, who saw that his generous-minded neighbour was providing for his family a house worth almost double the rent that was to be paid, he carried out all his projected improvements.

  “You will embarrass me with a sense of obligation,” said Mr. Markland, in seeking to turn him from a certain purpose regarding the cottage.

  “Do not say so,” answered Mr. Willet; “I am only offering inducements for you to remain with us. If obligation should rest anywhere, it will be on our side. I make these improvements because the house is now my own property, and would be defective, to my mind, without them. Pray, don’t let your thoughts dwell on these things.”

  Thus he strove to dissipate the feeling of obligation that began to rest on the mind of his unfortunate neighbour, while he carried out his purpose. In due time, under the assignment which had been made, Woodbine Lodge and a large part of the elegant and costly furniture contained in the mansion, were sold, and the ownership passed into other hands. With a meagre remnant of their household goods, the family retired to a humbler house. Some pitied, and stood at a distance; some felt a selfish pleasure in their fall; and some, who had courted them in their days of prosperity, were among the foremost to speak evil against them. But there were a few, and they the choicest spirits of the neighbourhood, who only drew nearer to these their friends in misfortune. Among them was Mr. Allison, one of those wise old men whose minds grow not dim with advancing years. He had passed through many trying vicissitudes, had suffered, and come up from the ordeal purer than when the fire laid hold upon the dross of nature.

  A wise monitor had he been in Markland’s brighter days, and now he drew near as a comforter. There is strength in true words kindly spoken. How often was this proved by Mr. and Mrs. Markland, as their venerable friend unlocked for them treasures of wisdom!

  The little parlour at “Lawn Cottage,” the name of their new home, soon became the scene of frequent reunions among choice spirits, whose aspirations went higher and deeper than the external and visible. In closing around Mr. Markland, they seemed to shut him out, as it were, from the old world in which he had hoped, and suffered, and struggled so vainly; and to open before his purer vision a world of higher beauty. In this world were riches for the toiler, and honour for the noble—riches and honour far more to be desired than the gems and gold of earth or its empty tributes of praise.

  A few months of this new life wrought a wonderful change in Markland. All the better elements of his nature were quickened into activity. Useful daily employment tranquillized his spirits; and not unfrequently he found himself repeating the words of Longfellow—

  “Something attempted, something done, Had earned a night’s repose.”

  So entirely was every thing of earthly fortune wrecked, and so changed were all his relations to the business world,
that hope had yet no power to awaken his mind to ambition. For the present, therefore, he was content to receive the reward of daily toil, and to be thankful that he was yet able to supply the real wants of his family. A cheerful tone of feeling gradually succeeded the state of deep depression from which he had suffered. His spirit, which had walked in darkness, began to perceive that light was breaking in through the hitherto impenetrable gloom, and as it fell upon the path he was treading, a flower was seen here and there, while the roughness his imagination had pictured became not visible.

  Nearly a year had glided away since the wreck of Markland’s fortune, and little or no change in his worldly prospects was visible. He was sitting late, one evening, reading aloud to his wife from a book which the latter had received from Mrs. Willet. The rest of the family had retired. Mrs. Markland was plying her needle busily. Altered circumstances had made hourly industry on her part a necessity; yet had they in no way dimmed the cheerful brightness of her spirits.

  “Come, Agnes,” said her husband, closing the book, “it is growing late; and you have worked long enough. I’m afraid your health will suffer.”

  “Just a few minutes longer,” replied Mrs. Markland, smiling. “I must finish this apron for Frank. He will want it in the morning.” And her hand moved quicker.

  “How true is every word you have been reading!” she added, after a few moments. “Manifold indeed are the ways in which a wise Providence dispenses good to the children of men. Mercy is seen in the cloud as well as in the sunshine. Tears to the spirit are like rain to the earth.”

  “The descent looked frightful,” said Markland, after a pause—”but we reached the lower ground uninjured. Invisible hands seemed to bear us up.”

  “We have found the land far pleasanter than was imagined; and the sky above of a purer crystal.”

  “Yes—yes. It is even so. And if the flowers that spring up at our feet are not so brilliant, they have a sweeter perfume and a diviner beauty.”

 

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