At length I got unto the gladsome hill,
Where lay my hope;
Where lay my heart; and, climbing still,
When I had gained the brow and top,
A lake of brackish waters on the ground,
Was all I found.
--GEORGE HERBERT.
Late in the evening of the same snowy 24th of December, a little
daughter awoke to life at Abbotstoke Grange, and, not long after,
Mrs. Arnott came to summon Dr May from the anxious vigil in the
sitting-room. "Come and see if you can do anything to soothe her,"
she said, with much alarm. "The first sight of the baby has put her
into such a state of agitation, that we do not know what to do with
her."
It was so, when he came to her bedside; that fixed stony look of
despair was gone; the source of tears, so long dried up, had opened
again; and there she lay, weeping quietly indeed, but profusely, and
with deep heaving sobs. To speak, or to leave her alone, seemed
equally perilous, but he chose the first--he kissed and blessed her,
and gave her joy. She looked up at him as if his blessing once more
brought peace, and said faintly, "Now it is pardon--now I can die!"
"The cloud is gone! Thanks for that above all! said. Dr. May
fervently. "Now, my dear, rest in thankful gladness--you are too
weak to talk or think."
"I am weak--I am tired of it all," said Flora. "I am glad to be
going while I am so happy--there are Margaret--my own darling--rest--
peace--"
"You are not going, dearest," said her father; "at least, I trust
not, if you will not give way; here is a darling given to you,
instead of the first, who needs you more."
He would have taken the infant from the nurse and held her to her
mother, but, recollecting how little Leonora had drawn her last
breath in his arms, he feared the association, and signed to Mrs.
Arnott to show her the child; but she seemed as yet only able to feel
that it was not Leonora, and the long sealed-up grief would have its
way. The tears burst out again. "Tell Ethel she will be the best
mother to her. Name her Margaret--make her a Daisy of your own--
don't call her after me," she said, with such passionate caresses,
that Mrs. Arnott was glad to take the babe away.
Dr. May's next expedient was to speak to her of her husband, who
needed her more than all, and to call him in. There seemed to be
something tranquillising in his wistful manner of repeating, "Don't
cry, Flora;" and she was at last reduced, by her extreme exhaustion,
to stillness; but there were still many fears for her.
Dr. May's prediction was accomplished--that she would suffer for
having over-exerted herself. Her constitution had been severely
tried by the grief and despondency that she had so long endured in
silence, and the fresh sorrow for her favourite sister coming at such
a crisis. There was a weariness of life, and an unwillingness to
resume her ordinary routine, that made her almost welcome her
weakness and sinking; and now that the black terror had cleared away
from the future, she seemed to long to follow Margaret at once, and
to yearn after her lost child; while appeals to the affection that
surrounded her often seemed to oppress her, as if there were nothing
but weariness and toil in store.
The state of her mind made her father very anxious, though it was but
too well accounted for. Poor Flora had voluntarily assumed the
trammels that galled her; worldly motives had prompted her marriage,
and though she faithfully loved her husband, he was a heavy weight on
her hands, and she had made it more onerous by thrusting him into a
position for which he was not calculated, and inspiring him with a
self-consequence that would not recede from it. The shock of her
child's death had taken away the zest and energy which had rejoiced
in her chosen way of life, and opened her eyes to see what Master she
had been serving; and the perception of the hollowness of all that
had been apparently good in her, had filled her with remorse and
despair. Her sufferings had been the more bitter because she had not
parted with her proud reserve. She had refused council, and denied
her confidence to those who could have guided her repentance. Her
natural good sense, and the sound principle in which she had been
brought up, had taught her to distrust her gloomy feelings as
possibly morbid; and she had prayed, keeping her hold of faith in the
Infinite Mercy, though she could not feel her own part in it; and
thus that faith was beginning at last to clear her path.
It was the harder to deal with her, because her hysterical agitation
was so easily excited, that her father hardly dared to let a word be
spoken to her; and she was allowed to see no one else except her aunt
and the dear old nurse, whose tears for her child Margaret had been
checked by the urgent requirements of another of her nurslings; and
whom George Rivers would have paid with her weight in gold, for
taking care of his new daughter, regarding her as the only woman in
the world that could be trusted.
Those were heavy days with every one, though each brought some shade
of improvement. They were harder to bear than the peaceful days that
had immediately followed the loss of Margaret; and Ethel was
especially unhappy and forlorn under the new anxiety, where she could
be of no service; and with her precious occupation gone; her father
absent, instead of resting upon her; and her room deserted. She was
grieved with herself, because her feelings were unable to soar at the
Christmas Feast, as erst on St. Andrew's Day; and she was bewildered
and distressed by the fear that she had then been only uplifted by
vanity and elation.
She told Richard so, and he said, kindly, that he thought a good deal
of that she complained of arose from bodily weariness.
This hurt her a little; but when he said, "I think that the blessings
of St. Andrew's Day helped us through what was to follow," she owned
that it had indeed been so, and added, "I am going to work again!
Tell me what will be most useful to you at Cocksmoor."
Sick at heart as she was, she bravely set herself to appropriate the
hours now left vacant; and manfully walked with Richard and Harry to
church at Cocksmoor on St. Stephen's Day; but the church brought back
the sense of contrast. Next, she insisted on fulfilling their
intention of coming home by Abbotstoke to hear how Flora was, when
the unfavourable account only added lead to the burden that weighed
her down. Though they were sent home in the carriage, she was so
completely spent, that the effect of returning home to her room,
without its dear inhabitant, was quite overwhelming, and she sat on
her bed for half an hour, struggling with repinings. She came
downstairs without having gained the victory, and was so physically
overcome with lassitude, that Richard insisted on her lying on the
sofa, and leaving everything to him and Mary.
Richard seemed to make her his object in life, and was an unspeakable
help and comforter to her, not only by taking every care for her for
her sake, but by turning to her as his own friend and confidante, the
best able to replace what they had lost. There were many plans to be
put in operation for Cocksmoor, on which much consultation was
needed, though every word reminded them sadly of Margaret's ever
ready interest in those schemes. It was very unlike Ethel's vision
of the first weeks of St. Andrew's Church; but it might be safer for
her than that aught should tempt her to say, "See what my
perseverance has wrought!" Perhaps her Margaret had begun to admire
her too much to be her safest confidante--at any rate, it was good
still to sow in tears, rather than on earth to reap in confident joy.
Norman was as brotherly and kind as possible; but it was one of the
dreary feelings of those days, that Ethel then first became aware of
the difference that his engagement had made, and saw that he resorted
elsewhere for sympathy. She was not jealous, and acquiesced
submissively and resolutely; but they had been so much to each other,
that it was a trial, especially at such a time as this, when freshly
deprived of Margaret.
Norman's own prospect was not cheerful. He had received a letter
from New Zealand, begging him to hasten his coming out, as there was
educational work much wanting him, and, according to his original
wish, he could be ordained there in the autumnal Ember Week.
He was in much perplexity, since, according to this request, he ought
to sail with his aunt in the last week of February, and he knew not
how to reconcile the conflicting claims.
Meta was not long in finding out the whole of his trouble, as they
paced up and down the terrace together on a frosty afternoon.
"I ought," said Norman, "I believe I ought, and if it had only been
at any other time, it would have been easy. My aunt's company would
have been such a comfort for you."
"Considering the circumstances," began Norman, with lingering looks
at the little humming-bird on his arm, "I believe I should be
justified in waiting till such time as you could go with me. I could
see what Mr. Wilmot thinks."
"You don't think so yourself," said Meta. "Nobody else can give a
judgment. In a thing like this, asking is, what you once called,
seeking opinions as Balaam inquired."
"Turning my words against me?" said Norman, smiling. "Still, Meta,
perhaps older heads would be fitter to judge what would be right for
a little person not far off."
"She can be the best judge of that herself," said Meta. "Norman,"
and her dark eyes were steadfastly fixed, "I always resolved that,
with God's help, I would not be a stumbling-block in the way of your
call to your work. I will not. Go out now--perhaps you will be
freer for it without me, and I suppose I have a longer apprenticeship
to serve to all sorts of things before I come to help you."
"What? when I am going to stay by my own fireside?" said Meta, trying
to laugh, but not very successfully. "Seriously, I have much to do
here. When poor Flora gets well, she must be spared all exertion for
a long time to come; and I flatter myself that they want me at
Stoneborough sometimes. If your father can bear to spare you, there
is no doubt that you ought to go."
"My father is as unselfish as you are, Meta. But I cannot speak to
him until he is more easy about Flora. We always think the required
sacrifice the hardest, but I must own that I could not grieve if he
laid his commands on me to wait till the autumn."
"Oh, that would make it a duty and all easy," said Meta, smiling;
"but I don't think he will; and Aunt Flora will be only too glad to
carry you out without encumbrance."
"Has not Aunt Flora come to her senses about you?"
"I believe she would rather I belonged to any of her nephews but you.
She is such a dear, sincere, kind-hearted person, and we are so
comfortable together, that it will be quite like home to come out to
her! I mean there, to convince her that I can be of something like
use."
Meta talked so as to brighten and invigorate Norman when they were
together, but they both grew low-spirited when apart. The humming-
bird had hardly ever been so downcast as at present--that is,
whenever she was not engaged in waiting on her brother, or in
cheering up Dr. May, or in any of the many gentle offices that she
was ever fulfilling. She was greatly disappointed, and full of fears
for Norman, and dread of the separation, but she would not give way;
and only now and then, when off her guard, would the sadness reign on
her face without an effort. Alone, she fought and prayed for
resignation for herself, and protection and strength for him, and
chid herself for the foolish feeling that he would be safer with her.
She told Aunt Flora how it was one evening, as they sat over the fire
together, speaking with a would-be tone of congratulation.
"Indeed!" exclaimed Mrs. Arnott. "But that is a great pity!"
Meta looked quite brightened by her saying so. "I thought you would
be glad," she rejoined.
"I thought you believed he would be better without me."
"My dear, we have not kept house and nursed together for a month for
nothing," said Mrs. Arnott, smiling.
"Thank you," said Meta, trying to answer the smile. "You have taken
a load off me!"
"I don't like it at all," said Mrs. Arnott. "It is a very
uncomfortable plan for every one. And yet when I know how great is
the want of him out there, I can say nothing against it without high
treason. Well, my dear, I'll take all the care I can of Norman, and
when you come, I shall be almost as glad as if we were coming home
for good. Poor Flora! she is one person who will not regret the
arrangement."
"Poor Flora!--you think her really better this evening?"
"Much better, indeed; if we could only raise her spirits, I think she
would recover very well; but she is so sadly depressed. I must try
to talk to Ethel--she may better understand her."
"I have never understood Flora," said Meta. "She has been as kind to
me as possible, and I very soon came to a certain point with her, but
I never have known her thoroughly. I doubt whether any one did but
dear Margaret."
Flora was, however, much softened and less reserved than she had
been. She found great repose in her aunt's attendance, retracing, as
it did, her mother's presence, and she responded to her tenderness
with increasing reliance and comfort; while as her strength began to
revive, and there was more disposition to talk, she became gradually
drawn into greater confidence.
The seeing of Ethel was one of the difficult questions. Flora had
begun to wish it very much, and yet the bare idea threw her into a
nervous tremor, that caused it to be put off again and again. Her
aunt found her one day almost faint with agitation--she had heard
Ethel's voice in the next room, and had been winding up her
expectations, and now was as much grieved as relieved, to find that
she had been there seeing the baby, but was now gone.
"How does the dear Ethel look?" asked Flora presently.
"She is looking better to-day; she has looked very worn and harassed,
but I thought her brighter to-day. She walked over by Aubrey on his
pony, and I think it did her good."
"Dear old Ethel! Aunt, it is a thing that no one has told me yet.
Can you tell me how she bore the news of Norman Ogilvie's
engagement?"
"Do you mean--" and Mrs. Arnott stopped short in her interrogation.
"In running away as soon as she found what was likely to happen;" and
Flora, in a few words, told what had passed at Oxford.
"Then it was entirely out of devotion to your father?"
"Entirely," said Flora. "No one could look at her without seeing
that she liked him. I had left her to be the only effective one at
home, and she sacrificed herself."
"I am glad that I have seen her," said Mrs. Arnott. "I should never
have understood her by description. I always said that I must come
home to set my correspondence going rightly."
"Aunt Flora," said her niece, "do you remember my dear mother's
unfinished letter to you?"
"Nothing ever was more true," said Flora. "I read it over some
little time ago, when I set my papers in order, and understood it
then. I never did before. I used to think it very good for the
others."
"Do you recollect the comparison between Norman, Ethel, and me? It
is so curious. Norman, who was ambitious and loved praise, but now
dreads nothing so much; Ethel, who never cared for anything of the
kind, but went straight on her own brave way; and oh! Aunt Flora--me-
-"
"Indeed, my dear, I should have thought you had her most full
approbation."
"Ah! don't you see the tone, as if she were not fully satisfied, as
if she only could not see surface faults in me," said Flora; "and how
she said she dreaded my love of praise, and of being liked. I wonder
how it would have been if she had lived. I have looked back so often
in the past year, and I think the hollowness began from that time.
It might have been there before, but I am not so sure. You see, at
that dreadful time, after the accident, I was the eldest who was able
to be efficient, and much more useful than poor Ethel. I think the
credit I gained made me think myself perfection, and I never did
anything afterwards but seek my own honour."
Mrs. Arnott began better to understand Flora's continued depression,
but she thought her self-reproach exaggerated, and said something at
once soothing and calculated to encourage her to undraw the curtain
of reserve.
"You do not know," continued Flora, "how greedy I was of credit and
affection. It made me jealous of Ethel herself, as long as we were
in the same sphere; and when I felt that she was more to papa than I
could be, I looked beyond home for praise. I don't think the things
I did were bad in themselves--brought up as I have been, they could
hardly be so. I knew what merits praise and blame too well for that-
-but oh! the motive. I do believe I cared very much for Cocksmoor.
I thought it would be a grand thing to bring about; but, you see, as
it has turned out, all I thought I had done for it was in vain; and
Ethel has been the real person and does not know it. I used to think
Ethel so inferior to me. I left her all my work at home. If it had
not been for that, she might have been happy with Norman Ogilvie--for
never were two people better matched, and now she has done what I
never thought to have left to another--watched over our own Margaret.
Oh! how shall I ever bear to see her?"
"My dear, I am sure nothing can be more affectionate than Ethel. She
does not think these things."
"She does," said Flora. "She always knew me better than I did
myself. Her straightforward words should often have been rebukes to
me. I shall see in every look and tone the opinion I have deserved.
I have shrunk from her steadfast looks ever since I myself learned
what I was. I could not bear them now--and yet--oh, aunt, you must
bring her! Ethel! my dear, dear old King--my darling's godmother--
the last who was with Margaret!"
She had fallen into one of those fits of weeping when it was
impossible to attempt anything but soothing her; but, though she was
so much exhausted that Mrs. Arnott expected to be in great disgrace
with Dr. May for having let her talk herself into this condition, she
found that he was satisfied to find that she had so far relieved her
mind, and declared that she would be better now.
The effect of the conversation was, that the next day, the last of
the twelve Christmas days, when Ethel, whose yearning after her
sister was almost equally divided between dread and eagerness--
eagerness for her embrace, and dread of the chill of her reserve,
came once again in hopes of an interview. Dr. May called her at
once. "I shall take you in without any preparation," he said, "that
she may not have time to be flurried. Only, be quiet and natural."
Did he know what a mountain there was in her throat when he seemed to
think it so easy to be natural?
She found him leading her into a darkened room, and heard his
cheerful tones saying, "I have brought Ethel to you!"
"Ethel! oh!" said a low, weak voice, with a sound as of expecting a
treat, and Ethel was within a curtain, where she began, in the
dimness, to see something white moving, and her hands were clasped by
two long thin ones. "There!" said Dr. May, "now, if you will be
good, I will leave you alone. Nurse is by to look after you, and you
know she always separates naughty children."
Either the recurrence to nursery language, or the mere sisterly touch
after long separation, seemed to annihilate all the imaginary mutual
dread, and, as Ethel bent lower and lower, and Flora's arms were
round her, the only feeling was of being together again, and both at
once made the childish gesture of affection, and murmured the old pet
names of "Flossy," and "King," that belonged to almost forgotten
days, when they were baby sisters, then kissed each other again.
"I can't see you," said Ethel, drawing herself up a little. "Why,
Flora, you look like a little white shadow!"
"I have had such weak eyes," said Flora, "and this dim light is
comfortable. I see your old sharp face quite plain."
"Do? Oh, dear Ethel, I have not had much of doing. Papa says I have
three years' rest to make up."
"Poor Flora!" said Ethel; "but I should have thought it tiresome,
especially for you."
"I have only now been able to think again," said Flora; "and you will
say I am taking to quoting poetry. Do you remember some lines in
that drama that Norman admired so much?"
"He that lacks time to mourn, lacks time to mend.
Eternity mourns that."
"I never had time before for either," said Flora. "You cannot think
how I used to be haunted by those, when I was chased from one thing
to another, all these long, long eighteen months. I am in no haste
to take up work again."
"Mending as well as mourning," said Ethel thoughtfully.
"And now you have that dear little Christmas gift to--" Ethel paused.
"She is not nearly so fine and healthy as her sister was," said
Flora, "poor little dear. You know, Ethel, even now, I shall have
very little time with her in that London life. Her papa wants me so
much, and I must leave her to--to the nurses." Flora's voice
trembled again.
"Oh! I wanted to thank you all for sparing her to us," said Flora.
"George wished it so much. But how does poor little Daisy bear it?"
"Very magnanimously," said Ethel, smiling. "In fact, nurse has had
but little to do with Daisy of late, and would have been very forlorn
at home. It is better for Aubrey and for her, not to return to be
babies to comfort poor nurse. I have been breaking up the nursery,
and taking Gertrude to live with me."
"It would not have been better for waiting," said Ethel; "and
Gertrude was so proud to come to me. I could not have done it
without her, but papa must not have vacancy next to him."
"It has been hard on you for me to engross him," said Flora; "but oh,
Ethel, I could not spare him. I don't think even you can tell what
papa is."
"You have found it out," said Ethel, in an odd, dry manner; which in
sound, though not in feeling, was a contrast to the soft, whispering,
tearful murmurs of her sister.
"And my aunt!" continued Flora-- "that I should have taken up such a
great piece of her short visit!"
"Ah! it is coming to an end very fast," said Ethel, sighing; "but you
had the best right to her, and she and Meta have seen so much of each
other. She tells me she is quite satisfied about Meta now."
"I am sorry to see Meta looking out of spirits," said Flora. "I
almost made her cry by saying something about Norman. Is there
anything going wrong?"
Ethel, as usual, blundered into the subject. "Only about Norman's
going out."
Flora asked further questions, and she was obliged to explain. It
roused Flora's energies at once.
"This will never do!" she said. "They must marry, and go with my
aunt."
Ethel was aghast. "They would not hear of it now!"
"They must. It is the only reasonable thing. Why, Norman would be
miserable, and as to Meta-- Imagine his going out and returning--a
year's work, such an expense and loss of time, besides the missing
Aunt Flora."
"The waste would be the wrong thing. Besides--" and she told of
Margaret's wishes.
"But, Flora, think--the last week in February--and you so ill!"
"I am not to marry them," said Flora, smiling. "If it could be in a
fortnight, they could go and get their outfit afterwards, and come
back to us when I am stronger. Let me see--there need be no fuss
about settlements--Mr. Rivers's will arranges everything for her."
"It would be a good thing to get rid of a fine wedding," said Ethel;
"but they will never consent!"
"Papa would be happier about Norman," said Ethel; "but I cannot fancy
his liking it. And you--you can't spare Meta, for Aunt Flora must go
to the Arnotts' in a week or two more."
"Suppose papa was to let me have you," said Flora. "If he wants you,
he must come after you."
Ethel gasped at the thought that her occupation at home was gone, but
she said, "If I am not too awkward for you, dear Flora. You will
miss Meta terribly."
"I can't keep the humming-bird caged, with her heart far away," said
Flora.
Dr. May came in to break up the conversation, and Ethel quickly
guessed from his manner that Norman had been talking to him. Flora
told him that she had been agreeing with Ethel that Meta had much
better not miss this opportunity. He was far less startled than
Ethel had expected; indeed, the proposal was rather a relief to his
mind, and his chief objection was the fear that Flora would be
fatigued by the extra bustle; but she promised not to trouble herself
about it, otherwise than that if Norman could not persuade Meta, she
would. The sisters parted, much more comfortable than before. Ethel
felt as if she had found something like a dim reflection of Margaret,
and Flora's fear of Ethel had fled away from the mere force of
sisterhood.
As to Norman, he declared that he had not the audacity to make the
proposal to Meta, though he was only too grateful; so his father
carried it to the humming-bird; and, as soon as she found that it was
not improper, nor would hurt any one's feelings, she gave ready
consent--only begging that it might be as best suited every one,
especially Flora; and ending by a whisper to her dear fatherly
friend, owning that she was "very glad--she meant she was very glad
there would be nobody there."
So Norman and Meta settled their plans as they walked home together
from evening service, after listening to the prophecies of the
blessings to be spread into the waste and desolate places, which
should yet become the heritage of the Chosen, and with the evening
star shining on them, like a faint reflex of the Star of the East,
Who came to be a Light to lighten the Gentiles.