'Twas a long doubt; we never heard
Exactly how the ship went down.--ARCHER GURNEY.
The tidings came at last, came when the heart-sickness of hope
deferred had faded into the worse heart-sickness of fear deferred,
and when spirits had been fain to rebel, and declare that they would
be almost glad to part with the hope that but kept alive despair.
The Christmas holidays had come to an end, and the home party were
again alone, when early in the forenoon, there was a tap at the
drawing-room door, and Dr. Spencer called, "Ethel, can you come and
speak to me?"
Margaret started as if those gentle tones had been a thunderclap.
"Go! go, Ethel," she said, "don't keep me waiting."
Dr. Spencer stood in the hall with a newspaper in his hand. Ethel
said, "Is it?" and he made a sorrowful gesture. "Both?" she asked.
"Both," he repeated. "The ship burned--the boat lost."
"Take it," said Dr. Spencer, putting the paper into her hand; "I will
wait."
She obeyed. She could not speak, but kneeling down by her sister,
they read the paragraph together; Ethel, with one eye on the words,
the other on Margaret.
No doubt was left. Captain Gordon had returned, and this was his
official report. The names of the missing stood below, and the list
began thus:--
Lieutenant A. H. Ernescliffe.
Mr. Charles Owen, Mate.
Mr. Harry May, Midshipman.
The Alcestis had taken fire on the 12th of April of the former year.
There had been much admirable conduct, and the intrepid coolness of
Mr. Ernescliffe was especially recorded. The boats had been put off
without loss, but they were scantily provisioned, and the nearest
land was far distant. For five days the boats kept together, then
followed a night of storms, and, when morning dawned, the second
cutter, under command of Mr. Ernescliffe, had disappeared. There
could be no doubt that she had sunk, and the captain could only
record his regrets for the loss the service had experienced in the
three brave young officers and their gallant seamen. After infinite
toil and suffering, the captain, with the other boats' crews, had
reached Tahiti, whence they had made their way home.
"He never had the pain. It is unbroken!" continued Margaret, her
eyes brightening, but her breath, in long-drawn gasps that terrified
Ethel into calling Dr. Spencer.
Mary was standing before him, with bloodless face and dilated eyes;
but, as Ethel approached, she turned and rushed upstairs.
Dr. Spencer entered the drawing-room with Ethel, who tried to read
his face as he saw Margaret--restored, as it seemed, to all her
girlish bloom, and her eyes sparkling as they were lifted up, far
beyond the present scene. Ethel had a moment's sense that his
expression was as if he had seen a death-blow struck, but it was gone
in a moment, as he gently shook Margaret by the hand, and spoke a
word of greeting, as though to recall her.
"Thank you," she said, with her own grateful smile.
"Either at the hospital, or at Mr. Ramsden's," said Ethel, with a
ghastly suspicion that he thought Margaret in a state to require him.
"Papa!" said Margaret. "If he were but here! But--ah! I had
forgotten."
She turned aside her head, and hid her face. Dr. Spencer signed
Ethel nearer to him. "This is a more natural state," he said.
"Don't be afraid for her. I will find your father, and bring him
home." Pressing her hand he departed.
Margaret was weeping tranquilly--Ethel knelt down beside her, without
daring at first to speak, but sending up intense mental prayers to
Him, who alone could bear her or her dear father through their
affliction. Then she ventured to take her hand, and Margaret
returned the caress, but began to blame herself for the momentary
selfishness that had allowed her brother's loss and her father's
grief to have been forgotten in her own. Ethel's "oh! no! no!" did
not console her for this which seemed the most present sorrow, but
the flow of tears was so gentle, that Ethel trusted that they were a
relief. Ethel herself seemed only able to watch her, and to fear for
her father, not to be able to think for herself.
The front door opened, and they heard Dr. May's step hesitating in
the hall, as if he could not bear to come in.
"Go to him!" cried Margaret, wiping off her tears. Ethel stood a
moment in the doorway, then sprang to him, and was clasped in his
arms.
He threw one arm round Ethel, and laid his hand on her head. "How
much there is to be thankful for!" he said, then advancing, he hung
over Margaret, calling her his own poor darling.
"Papa, you must forgive me. You said sending him to sea was giving
him up."
"Did I. Well, Margaret, he did his duty. That is all we have to
live for. Our yellow-haired laddie made a gallant sailor, and--"
Tears choked his utterance--Margaret gently stroked his hand.
"No, papa," said Margaret, "I am content and thankful. He is spared
pain and perplexity."
"You are right, I believe," said Dr. May. "He would have been
grieved not to find you better."
"I ought to grieve for my own selfishness," said Margaret. "I cannot
help it! I cannot be sorry the link is unbroken, and that he had not
to turn to any one else."
"I tried to think he ought," said Margaret. "His life would have
been too dreary. But it is best as it is."
"It must be," said the doctor. "Where are the rest, Ethel? Call
them all down."
Poor Mary, Ethel felt as if she had neglected her! She found her
hanging over the nursery fire, alternating with old nurse in fond
reminiscences of Harry's old days, sometimes almost laughing at his
pranks, then crying again, while Aubrey sat between them, drinking in
each word.
Blanche and Gertrude came from the schoolroom, where Miss Bracy
seemed to have been occupying them, with much kindness and judgment.
She came to the door to ask Ethel anxiously for the doctor and Miss
May, and looked so affectionate and sympathising, that Ethel gave her
a hearty kiss.
"Dear Miss Ethel! if you can only let me help you."
"Thank you," said Ethel with all her heart, and hurried away.
Nothing was more in favour of Miss Bracy, than that there should be a
hurry. Then she could be warm, and not morbid.
Dr. May gathered his children round him, and took out the great
Prayer-book. He read a psalm and a prayer from the Burial Service,
and the sentence for funerals at sea. Then he touched each of their
heads, and, in short broken sentences, gave thanks for those still
left to him, and for the blessed hope they could feel for those who
were gone; and he prayed that they might so follow in their
footsteps, as to come to the same holy place, and in the meantime
realise the Communion of Saints. Then they said the Lord's Prayer,
he blessed them, and they arose.
"Mary, my dear," he said, "you have a photograph."
He went to the study, where he found Dr. Spencer awaiting him.
"I am only come to know where I shall go for you."
"Thank you, Spencer. Thank you for taking care of my poor girls."
"They took care of themselves. They have the secret of strength."
"They have--" He turned aside, and burst out, "Oh, Spencer! you have
been spared a great deal. If you missed a great deal of joy, you
have missed almost as much sorrow!" And, covering his face, he let
his grief have a free course.
"Dick! dear old Dick, you must bear up. Think what treasures you
have left."
"I do. I try to do so," said poor Dr. May; "but, Spencer, you never
saw my yellow-haired laddie, with his lion look! He was the flower
of them all! Not one of these other boys came near him in manliness,
and with such a loving heart! An hour ago, I thought any certainty
would be gain, but now I would give a lifetime to have back the hope
that I might see my boy's face again! Oh, Spencer! this is the first
time I could rejoice that his mother is not here!"
"She would have been your comforter," sighed his friend, as he felt
his inability to contend with such grief.
"There, I can be thankful," Dr. May said, and he looked so. "She has
had her brave loving boy with her all this time, while we little
thought--but there are others. My poor Margaret--"
"Her patience must be blessed," said Dr. Spencer. "I think she will
be better. Now that the suspense no longer preys on her, there will
be more rest."
"Rest," repeated Dr. May, supporting his head on his hand; and,
looking up dreamily--"there remaineth a rest--"
The large Bible lay beside him on the table, and Dr. Spencer thought
that he would find more rest there than in his words. Leaving him,
therefore, his friend went to undertake his day's work, and learn,
once more, in the anxious inquiries and saddened countenances of the
patients and their friends, how great an amount of love and sympathy
that Dr. May had won by his own warmth of heart. The patients seemed
to forget their complaints in sighs for their kind doctor's troubles;
and the gouty Mayor of Stoneborough kept Dr. Spencer half an hour to
listen to his recollections of the bright-faced boy's droll tricks,
and then to the praises of the whole May family, and especially of
the mother.
Poor Dr. Spencer! he heard her accident described so many times in
the course of the day, that his visits were one course of shrinking
and suffering; and his only satisfaction was in knowing how his
friend would be cheered by hearing of the universal feeling for him
and his children.
Ethel wrote letters to her brothers; and Dr. May added a few lines,
begging Richard to come home, if only for a few days. Margaret would
not be denied writing to Hector Ernescliffe, though she cried over
her letter so much that her father could almost have taken her pen
away; but she said it did her good.
When Flora came in the afternoon, Ethel was able to leave Margaret to
her, and attend to Mary, with whom Miss Bracy's kindness had been
inefficacious. If she was cheered for a few minutes, some
association, either with the past or the vanished future, soon set
her off sobbing again. "If I only knew where dear, dear Harry is
lying," she sobbed, "and that it had not been very bad indeed, I
could bear it better."
The ghastly uncertainty was too terrible for Ethel to have borne to
contemplate it. She knew that it would haunt their pillows, and she
was trying to nerve herself by faith.
"Mary," she said, "that is the worst; but, after all, God willed that
we should not know. We must bear it like His good children. It
makes no differences to them now--"
"And, you know, we are all in the same keeping. The sea is a
glorious great pure thing, you know, that man cannot hurt or defile.
It seems to me," said Ethel, looking up, "as if resting there was
like being buried in our baptism-tide over again, till the great new
birth. It must be the next best place to a churchyard. Anywhere,
they are as safe as among the daisies in our own cloister."
"Say it again--what you said about the sea," said Mary, more
comforted than if Ethel had been talking down to her.
By and by Ethel discovered that the sharpest trouble to the fond
simple girl was the deprivation of her precious photograph. It was
like losing Harry over again, to go to bed without it, though she
would not for the world seem to grudge it to her father.
Ethel found an opportunity of telling him of this distress, and it
almost made him smile. "Poor Mary," he said, "is she so fond of it?
It is rather a libel than a likeness."
"Don't say so to her, pray, papa. It is all the world to her. Three
strokes on paper would have been the same, if they had been called by
his name."
"Yes; a loving heart has eyes of its own, and she is a dear girl!"
He did not forget to restore the treasure with gratitude
proportionate to what the loan had cost Mary. With a trembling
voice, she proffered it to him for the whole day, and every day, if
she might only have it at night; and she even looked black when he
did not accept the proposal.
"It can't help being so, in a certain sense," he answered kindly,
"but after all, Mary dear, he did not pout out his chin in that way."
Mary was somewhat mortified, but she valued her photograph more than
ever, because no one else would admire it, except Daisy, whom she had
taught to regard it with unrivalled veneration.
A letter soon arrived from Captain Gordon, giving a fuller account of
the loss of his ship, and of the conduct of his officers, speaking in
the highest terms of Alan Ernescliffe, for whom he said he mourned as
for his own son, and, with scarcely less warmth, of Harry, mentioning
the high esteem all had felt for the boy, and the good effect which
the influence of his high and truthful spirit had produced on the
other youngsters, who keenly regretted him.
Captain Gordon added that the will of the late Captain Ernescliffe
had made him guardian of his sons, and that he believed poor Alan had
died intestate. He should therefore take upon himself the charge of
young Hector, and he warmly thanked Dr. May and his family for all
the kindness that the lad had received.
Though the loss of poor Hector's visits was regretted, it was, on the
whole, a comforting letter, and would give still more comfort in
future time.
Richard contrived to come home through Oxford and see Norman, whom he
found calm, and almost relieved by the cessation from suspense; not
inclined, as his father had feared, to drown sorrow in labour, but
regarding his grief as an additional call to devote himself to
ministerial work. In fact, the blow had fallen when he first heard
the rumour of danger, and could not recur with the same force.
Richard was surprised to find that Margaret was less cast down than
he could have dared to hope. It did not seem like an affliction to
her. Her countenance wore the same gentle smile, and she was as
ready to participate in all that passed, finding sympathy for the
little pleasures of Aubrey and Gertrude, and delighting in Flora's
baby; as well as going over Cocksmoor politics with a clearness and
accuracy that astonished him, and asking questions about his parish
and occupations, so as fully to enjoy his short visit, which she
truly called the greatest possible treat.
If it had not been for the momentary consternation that she had seen
upon Dr. Spencer's face, Ethel would have been perfectly satisfied;
but she could not help sometimes entertaining a dim fancy that this
composure came from a sense that she was too near Alan to mourn for
him. Could it be true that her frame was more wasted, that there was
less capability of exertion, that her hours became later in the
morning, and that her nights were more wakeful? Would she fade away?
Ethel longed to know what her father thought, but she could neither
bear to inspire him with the apprehension, nor to ask Dr. Spencer's
opinion, lest she should be confirmed in her own.
The present affliction altered Dr. May more visibly than the death of
his wife, perhaps, because there was not the same need of exertion.
If he often rose high in faith and resignation, he would also sink
very low under the sense of bereavement and disappointment. Though
Richard was his stay, and Norman his pride, there was something in
Harry more congenial to his own temper, and he could not but be bowed
down by the ruin of such bright hopes. With all his real submission,
he was weak, and gave way to outbursts of grief, for which he blamed
himself as unthankful; and his whole demeanour was so saddened and
depressed, that Ethel and Dr. Spencer consulted mournfully over him,
whenever they walked to Cocksmoor together.
This was not as often as usual, though the walls of the school were
rising, for Dr. Spencer had taken a large share of his friend's work
for the present, and both physicians were much occupied by the
condition of Mr. Ramsden who was fast sinking, and, for some weeks,
seemed only kept alive by their skill. The struggle ended at last,
and his forty years' cure of Stoneborough was closed. It made Dr.
May very sad--his affections had tendrils for anything that he had
known from boyhood; and though he had often spoken strong words of
the vicar, he now sat sorrowfully moralising and making excuses.
"People in former times had not so high an estimate of pastoral duty-
-poor Mr. Ramsden had not much education--he was already old when
better times came in--he might have done better in a less difficult
parish with better laity to support him, etc." Yet after all, he
exclaimed with one of his impatient gestures, "Better have my Harry's
seventeen years than his sixty-seven!"
"Better improve a talent than lay it by!" said Ethel.
"Hush! Ethel. How do you know what he may have done? If he acted up
to his own standard, he did more than most of us."
"Which is best," said Ethel, "a high standard, not acted up to, or a
lower one fulfilled?"