But neither the house nor its furnishing makes the _home_; and the charm of _ours_ lay in the sympathy that linked the nine that called it "home" to one another. Father, mother, and seven children--five of them gay-hearted girls, and two boys, petted just enough to be spoiled--not one link had ever dropped from the chain of love, or one corroding drop fallen, upon its brightness.
"One star differeth from another in glory," even in the firmament of home. Thus--though we could not have told a stranger which sister or brother was dearest--from our gentlest "eldest," an invalid herself, but the comforter and counsellor of all beside, to the curly-haired boy, who romped and rejoiced in the appellation of "baby," given five years before--still an observing eye would soon have singled out sister Ellen as the sunbeam of our heaven, the "morning star" of our constellation. She was the second in age, but the first in the inheritance of that load of responsibility, which in such a household falls naturally upon the eldest daughter. Eliza, as I have said, was ill from early girlhood; and Ellen had shouldered all her burden of care and kindness, with a light heart and a lighter step.
Up stairs and down cellar, in the parlour, nursery, or kitchen--at the piano or the wash-tub--with pen, pencil, needle, or ladle--sister Ellen was always busy, always with a smile on her cheek and a warble on her lip.
Quietly, happily, the months and years went by. We never realized that change was to come over our band. To be sure, when mother would look in upon us, seated together with our books, paintings, and needle-work, and say, in her gentle way, with only a half-sigh, "Ah, girls, you are living your happiest days!" we would glance into each other"s eyes, and wonder who would go first. But it was a wonder that pa.s.sed away with the hour, and ruffled not even the surface of our sisterly hearts. It could not be always so--and the change came at last!
_Sister Ellen_ was to be married!
It was like the crash of a thunderbolt in a clear summer sky! Sister Ellen--the fairy of the hearthstone, the darling of every heart--which of us _could_ spare her? _Who_ had been so presumptuous as to find out her worth? For the first moment, _this_ question burst from each surprised, half-angry sister of the blushing, tearful, Ellen! It was only for a moment; for our hearts told us that n.o.body could help loving her, who had looked through her loving blue eyes, into the clear well-spring of the heart beneath. So we threw our arms around her and sobbed without a word!
We knew very well that the young clergyman, whose Sunday sermons and gentle admonitions had won all hearts, had been for months a weekly visiter to our fireside circle. With baby Georgie on his knee, and Georgie"s brothers and sisters cl.u.s.tered about him, he had sat through many an evening charming the hours away, until the clock startled us with its unwelcome nine o"clock warning; and the softly spoken reminder, "Girls, it is bed-time!" woke more than one stifled sigh of regret. Then sister Ellen must always go with us to lay Georgie in his little bed; to hear him and Annette repeat the evening prayer and hymn her lips had taught them; to comb out the long brown braids of Emily"s head; to rob Arthur of the story book, over which he would have squandered the "midnight oil;" and to breathe a kiss and a blessing over the pillow of each other sister, as she tucked the warm blankets tenderly about them.
We do not know how often of late she had stolen down again, from these sisterly duties, after our senses were locked in sleep; or if our eyes and ears had ever been open to the fact, we could never have suspected the _minister_ to be guilty of such a plot against our peace! That name was a.s.sociated, in our minds, with all that was superhuman. The gray-haired pastor, who had gone to his grave six months previous, had sat as frequently on that same oaken arm-chair, and talked with us. We had loved him as a father and friend, and had almost worshipped him as the embodiment of all attainable goodness.
And when Mr. Neville came among us, with his high, pale forehead, and soul-kindled eye, we had thought his face also "the face of an angel"--too glorious for the print of mortal pa.s.sion! Especially after, in answer to an urgent call from the people among whom he was labouring, he had frankly told them that his purpose was not to remain among them, or anywhere on his native sh.o.r.e; that he only waited the guidance of Providence to a home in a foreign clime.
After this much--bewailed disclosure of his plans, we placed our favourite preacher on a higher pinnacle of saintship!
But sister Ellen was to be married--and married to Mr. Neville. And then--"Oh, sister, you are not going away, to India!" burst from our lips, with a fresh gush of sobs.
I was the first to look up into Ellen"s troubled face. It was heaving with emotions that ruffled its calmness, as the tide-waves ruffle the sea. Her lips were firmly compressed; her eyes were fixed on some distant dream, gla.s.sed with two tears, that stood still in their chalices, forbidden to fall. I almost trembled as I caught her glance.
"Sister! Agnes--Emily!" she exclaimed, in a husky whisper. "Hush! be calm! _Don"t_ break my heart! Do I love home less than--"
The effort was too much; the words died on her lips. We lifted her to bed, frightened into forgetfulness of her own grief. We soothed her until she, too, wept freely and pa.s.sionately, and, in weeping, grew strong for the sacrifice to which she had pledged her heart.
We never spoke another word of remonstrance to her tender heart, though often, in the few months that flitted by us together, we used to choke with sobbing, in some speech that hinted of the coming separation, and hurry from her presence to cry alone.
Our mother has told us the tidings with white lips that quivered tenderly and sadly. No love is so uniformly unselfish as a mother"s, surely; for though she leaned on Ellen as the strong staff of her declining years, she sorrowed not as we did, that she was going.
She, to, was happy in the thought that her child had found that "pearl of price" in a cold and evil world--a true, n.o.ble, loving heart to guide and protect her.
Father sat silently in the chimney-corner, reading in the family Bible. _He_ was looking farther than any of us--to the perils that would environ his dearest daughter, and the privations that might come upon her young life, in that unhealthy, uncivilized corner of the globe, whither she was going. Both our parents had dedicated their children to G.o.d; and they would not cast even a shadow on the path of self-sacrifice and duty their darling had chosen.
To come down to the unromantic little details of wedding preparations; how we st.i.tched and trimmed, packed and prepared--stoned raisins with tears in our eyes, and seasoned the wedding cake with sighs. But there is little use in thinking over these things. Ellen was first and foremost in all, as she had always been in every emergency, great or small. Nothing could be made without her. Even the bride"s cake was taken from the oven by her own fair hands, because no one--servant, sister, or even mother--was willing to run the risk of burning sister Ellen"s bride"s cake; and "_she_ knew _just_ how to bake it."
We were not left alone in our labours: for Ellen had been loved by more than the home-roof sheltered. Old and young, poor and rich, united in bringing their gifts, regrets, and blessings to the chosen companion of the pastor they were soon to lose. There is something in the idea of missionary life that touches the sympathy of every heart which mammon has not too long seared. To see one, with sympathies and refinements like our own, rend the strong ties that bind to country and home, comfort and civilization, for the good of the lost and degraded heathen, brings too strongly into relief, by contrast, the selfishness of most human lives led among the gayeties and luxuries of time.
The day, the hour came. The ship was to sail from B. on the ensuing week; and it must take away an idol.
She stood up in the village church, that all who loved her, and longed for another sight of her sweet face, might look upon her, and speak the simple words that should link hearts for eternity. We sisters stood all around her, but not too near; for our hearts were overflowing, and we could not wear the happy faces that should grace a train of bridesmaids. She had cheered us through the day with sunshine from her own heart, and even while we are arraying her in her simple white muslin, like a lamb for sacrifice, she had charmed our thoughts into cheerfulness. It seemed like some dream of fairy land, and she the embodiment of grace and loveliness, acting the part of some Queen t.i.tania for little while. The dream changed to a far different reality, when, at the door of her mother"s room, she put her hand into that of Henry Neville, and lifted her eye with a look that said, "Where thou goest will I go," even from all beside!
Tears fell fast in that a.s.sembly; though the good old matrons tried to smile, as they pa.s.sed around the bride, to bless her, and bid her good--bye. A little girl, in a patched but clean frock, pushed forward, with a bouquet of violets and strawberry-blossoms in her hand.
"Here, Miss Nelly--please, Miss Nelly," she cried, half-laughing, half-sobbing, "I picked them on purpose for you!"
Ellen stooped and kissed the little eager face. The child burst into tears, and caught the folds of her dress, as though she would have buried her face there. But a strong-armed woman, mindful of the bride"s attire, s.n.a.t.c.hed the child away.
"And for what would ye be whimpering in that style, as if _you_ had any right to Miss Ellen?"
"She was always good to me, and she"s my Sunday-school teacher,"
pleaded the little girl, in a subdued undertone.
Agnes drew her to her side, and silently comforted her.
"Step aside--Father Herrick is here!" said one, just then.
The crowd about the bridal pair opened, to admit a white-haired, half-blind old man, who came leaning on the arm of his rosy grand-daughter. Farther Herrick was a superannuated deacon, whose good words and works had won for him a place in every heart of that a.s.sembly.
"They told me she was going," he murmured to himself; "they say "tis her wedding. I want to see my little girl again--bless her!"
Ellen sprang forward, and laid both her white trembling hands in the large hand of the good old man. He drew her near his failing eyes; and looked searchingly into her young, soul-lit countenance.
"I can just see you, darling; and they tell me I shall never see you again! Well, well, if we go in G.o.d"s way we shall all get to Heaven, and it"s all light _there_!" He raised his hand over her head, and added, solemnly, "The blessing of blessings be upon thee, my child.
Amen!"
"Amen!" echoed the voice of Henry Neville.
And Ellen looked up with the look of an angel.
So she went from us! Oh! the last moment of that parting hour has burnt itself into my being for ever! _Could_ the human heart endure the agony of parting like that, _realized_ to be indeed the last--lighted by no ray of hope for eternity! Would not reason reel under the pressure?
It was hard to bear; but I have no words to tell of its bitterness.
She went to her missionary life, and we learned at last to live without her, though it was many a month before the little ones could forget to call on "Sister Ellen" in any impulse of joy, grief, or childish want. Then the start and the sigh, "Oh, dear, she"s gone--sister is gone!" And fresh tears would flow.
Gone, but not lost; for that First Marriage in the family opened to us a fountain of happiness, pure as the spring of self-sacrifice could make it. Our household darling has linked us to a world of needy and perishing spirits--a world that asks for the energy and the aid of those who go from us, and those who remain in the dear country of their birth. G.o.d bless her and her charge! Dear sister Ellen! there may be many another breach in the family--we may all be scattered to the four winds of heaven-but no change can come over us like that which marked the FIRST MARRIAGE.
ONLY A FEW WORDS.
MR. JAMES WINKLEMAN shut the door with a jar, as he left the house, and moved down the street, in the direction of his office, with a quick, firm step, and the air of a man slightly disturbed in mind.
"Things are getting better fast," said he, with a touch of irony in his voice, as he almost flung himself into his leather-cushioned chair. "It"s rather hard when a man has to pick his words in his own house, as carefully as if he were picking diamonds, and tread as softly as if he was stepping on eggs. I don"t like it. Mary gets weaker and more foolish every day, and puts a breadth of meaning on my words that I never intended them to have. I"ve not been used to this conning over of sentences and picking out of all doubtful expressions ere venturing to speak, and I"m too old to begin now.
Mary took me for what I am, and she must make the most of her bargain. I"m past the age for learning new tricks."
With these and many other justifying sentences, did Mr. Winkleman seek to obtain a feeling of self-approval. But, for all this, he could not shut out the image of a tearful face, nor get rid of an annoying conviction that he had acted thoughtlessly, to say the least of it, in speaking to his wife as he had done.
But what was all this trouble about? Clouds were in the sky that bent over the home of Mr. Winkleman, and it is plain that Mr.
Winkleman himself had his own share in the work of producing these clouds. Only a few unguarded words had been spoken. Only words! And was that all?
Words are little things, but they sometimes strike hard. We wield them so easily that we are apt to forget their hidden power. Fitly spoken, they fall like the sunshine, the dew, and the fertilizing rain; but, when unfitly, like the frost, the hail, and the desolating tempest. Some men speak as they feel or think, without calculating the force of what they say; and then seem very much surprised if any one is hurt or offended. To this cla.s.s belonged Mr.
Winkleman. His wife was a loving, sincere woman, quick to feel.
Words, to her, were indeed things. They never fell upon her ears as idle sounds. How often was her poor heart bruised by them!
On this particular morning, Mrs. Winkleman, whose health was feeble, found herself in a weak, nervous state. It was only by an effort that she could rise above the morbid irritability that afflicted her. Earnestly did she strive to repress the disturbed beatings of her heart, but she strove in vain. And it seemed to her, as it often does in such cases, that everything went wrong. The children were fretful, the cook dilatory and cross, and Mr. Winkleman impatient, because sundry little matters pertaining to his wardrobe were not just to his mind.
"Eight o"clock, and no breakfast yet," said Mr. Winkleman, as he drew out his watch, on completing his own toilet. Mrs. Winkleman was in the act of dressing the last of five children, all of whom had pa.s.sed under her hands. Each had been captious, cross, or unruly, sorely trying the mother"s patience. Twice had she been in the kitchen, to see how breakfast was progressing, and to enjoin the careful preparation of a favourite dish with which she had purposed to surprise her husband.