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Stepping heavenward

Chapter 17

CHAPTER XV.

October 4.
Home again, and with my dear Ernest de- lighted to see me. Baby is a year old to-day, and, as usual, father, who seems to abhor any- thing like a merry-making, took himself off to his room. To-morrow he will be all the worse for it, and will be sure to have a theological battle with somebody.
Oct. 5. — The somebody was his daugh- ter Katherine, as usual. Baby was asleep in my lap and I reached out for a book which proved to be a volume of Shakespeare which had done long service as an ornament to the table, but which nobody ever read, on account of the small print. The battle then began thus :
Father. — “ I regret to see that worldly author in your hands, my daughter. ’ ’
Daughter. — a little mischievously. — “Why, were you wanting to talk, father?”
“No, I am too feeble to talk to-day. My pulse is very weak.”
“ Let me read aloud to you, then.”
“ Not from that profane book.”
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“ It would do you good. You never take any recreation. Do let me read a little.”
Father gets nervous.
“ Recreation is a snare. I must keep my soul ever fixed on divine things. ’ ’
‘ ‘ But can you ? ”
“ No, alas, no! It is ni)^ grief and shame that I do not.”
“ But if you would indulge yourself in a little harmless mirth now and then your mind would get rested and you would return to divine things with fresh zeal. Why should not the mind have its seasons of rest as well as the body ? ’ ’
“ We shall have time to rest in heaven. Our business here on earth is to be sober and vigil- ant because of our adversary ; not to be reading plays. ’ ’
“I don’t make reading plays my business, dear father. I make it my rest and amuse- ment.”
“ Christians do not need amusement ; they find rest, refreshment, all they want, in God.”
“ Do you, father ? ”
‘ ‘ Alas, no ! He seems a great way off. ’ ’
“To me He seems very near. So near that He can see every thought of my heart. Dear father, it is your disease that makes everything so unreal to you. God is really so near, really loves us so ; is so sorry for us ! And it seems so hard, when you are so good, and so intent on
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pleasing Him, that you get no comfort out of Him.”
“I am not good, my daughter. I am a vile worm of the dust.”
• “Well, God is good at any rate, and He would never have sent His Son to die for you if He did not love you.” So then I began to sing. Father likes to hear me sing, and the sweet sense I had that all I had been saying was true and more than true, made me sing with joyful heart.
I hope it is not a mere miserable presumption that makes me dare to talk so to poor father. Of course he is ten times better than I am, and knows ten times as much, but his disease, what- ever it is, keeps his mind befogged. I mean to begin now to pray that light may shine into his soul. It would be delightful to see the peace of God shining in that pale, stern face !
March 28. — It is almost six months since
I wrote that. About the middle of October father had one of his ill turns one night, and we were all called up. He asked for me parti- cularly, and Ernest came for me at last. I was a good deal agitated, and would not stop to half dress myself and as I had a slight cold already I suppose I added to it then. At any rate I was taken very sick, and the worst cough I ever had has racked my poor frame almost to pieces. Nearly six months confinement to my room ; six
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months of uselessness during which I have been a mere cumberer of the ground. Poor Ernest ! What a hard time he has had ! Instead of the cheerful welcome home I was to give him when- ever he entered the house, here I have lain ex- hausted, woe-begone and good for nothing. It is the bitterest disappointment I ever had. My ambition is to be the sweetest, brightest and best of wives ; and what with my childish follies, and my sickness, what a weary life my dear husband has had ! But how often- have I prayed that God would do His will in defiance, if need be, of mine ! I have tried to remind myself of that every day. But I am too tired to write any more now.
March 30. — This experience of suffer- ing has filled my mind with new thoughts. At one time I was so sick that Ernest sent for mother. Poor mother, she had to sleep with Martha. It was a great comfort to have her here, but I knew by her coming how sick I was, and then I began to ponder the question whether I was ready to die. Death looked to me as a most solemn, momentous event — but there was some- thing very pleasant in the thought of being no longer a sinner, but a redeemed saint, and of dwelling forever in Christ’s presence. Father came to see me when I had just reached this point.
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“My dear daughter,” he asked, “are you prepared to face the Judge of all the earth ? ” “No, dear father,” I said, “Christ will do that for me.”
‘ ‘ Have you no misgivings ? ’ ’
I could only smile ; I had no strength to talk. Then I heard Ernest — my dear, calm, self- controlled Ernest — burst out crying and rush out of the room. I looked after him, and how I loved him ! But I felt that I loved my Saviour infinitely more, and that if he now let me come home to be with Him I could trust Him to be a thousand fold more to Ernest than I could ever be, and to take care of my darling baby and my precious mother far better than I could. The very gates of heaven seemed open to let me in. And then they were suddenly shut in my face, and I found myself a poor, weak, tempted creature here upon earth. I, who fancied my- self an heir of glory, was nothing but a peevish, human creature — very human indeed, overcome if Martha shook the bed, as she always did, irritated if my food did not come at the right moment, or was not of the right sort, hurt and offended if Ernest put on a tone less anxious and tender than he had used when I was very ill, and in short, my own poor faulty self once more. Oh, what fearful battles I fought for patience, forbearance and unselfishness ! What sorrowful tears of shame I shed over hasty, im-
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patient words and fretful tones ! No wonder I longed to be gone where weakness should be swallowed up in strength, and sin give place to eternal perfection !
But here I am, and suffering and work lie be- fore me, for which I feel little physical or mental courage. But “blessed be the will of God,”
April 5. — I was alone with father last
evening, Ernest and Martha both being out, and soon saw by the way he fidgeted in his chair that he had something on his mind. So I laid down the book I was reading and asked him what it was.
“My daughter,” he began, “can you bear a plain word from an old man ? ”
I felt frightened, for I knew I had been im- patient to Martha of late, in spite of all my efforts to the contrary. I am still so miserably unwell.
‘ ‘ I have seen many death-beds, ’ ’ he went on ; ‘ * but I never saw one where there was not some dread of the King of Terrors exhibited ; nor one where there was such absolute certainty of having found favor with God, as to make the hour of departure entirely free from such doubts and such humility as becomes a guilty sinner about to face his Judge.”
“I never saw such a one either,” I replied; “but there have been many such deaths, and I
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hardly know of any scene that so honors and magnifies the Lord.”
“ Yes,” he said, slowly ; “but they were old, mature, ripened Christians.”
“Not always old, dear father. Let me de- scribe to you a scene that Ernest described to me only yesterday.”
He waved his hand in token that this would delay his coming to the point he was aiming at.
“To speak plainly,” he said, “I feel uneasy about you, my daughter. You are young and in the bloom of life, but when death seemed staring you in the face, you expressed no anxiety, asked for no counsel, showed no alarm. It must be pleasant to possess so comfortable a persuasion of our acceptance with God ; but is it safe to rest on such an assurance, while we know that the human heart is deceitful above all things and desperately wicked?”
“I thank you for the suggestion,” I said; “ and dear father, do not be afraid to speak still more plainly. You live in the house with me, see all my short-comings and my faults, and I cannot wonder that you think me a poor, weak Christian. But do you really fear that I am deceived in believing that notwithstanding this I do really love my God and Saviour and am His child ? ’ ’
“No,” he said, hesitating a little, “I can’t say" that exactly — I can’t say that.”
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This hesitation distressed me. At first it seem- ed to me that my life must have uttered a very uncertain sound, if those who saw it could mis- understand its language. But then I reflected that it was, at best, a very faulty life, and that its springs of action were not necessarily seen by lookers on.
Father saw my distress and perplexity, and seemed touched by them.
Just then Ernest came in with Martha, but seeing that something was amiss, the latter took herself off to her room, which I thought really kind of her.
“What is it, father? What is it, Katy?” asked Ernest, looking from one troubled face to the other.
I tried to explain.
“I think, father, you may safely trust my wife’s spiritual interests to me,” Ernest said, with some warmth. “You do not understand her. I do. Because there is nothing morbid about her, because she has a sweet, cheerful confidence in Christ you doubt and misjudge her. You may depend upon it that people are individual in their piety as in other things, and cannot all be run in one mould. Katy has a playful way of speaking, I know, and often ex- presses her strongest feelings with what seems like levity, and is, perhaps, a little reckless about being misunderstood in consequence.”
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He smiled on me, as he thus took up the cudgels in my defence, and I never felt so grate- ful to him in my life. The truth is, I hate sentimentalism so cordially, and have besides such an instinct to conceal my deepest, most sacred emotions, that I do not wonder people misunderstand and misjudge me.
“ I did not refer to her playfulness,” father returned. ‘ ‘ Old people must make allowances for the young ; they must make allowances. What pains me is, that this child, full of life and gaiety as she is, sees death approach without that becom- ing awe and terror which befits mortal man.”
Ernest was going to reply, but I broke in eagerly upon his answer.
“ It is true that I expressed no anxiety when I believed death to be at hand. I felt none. I had given myself away to Christ, and He had received me, and why should I be afraid to take His hand and go where he led me ? And it is true that I asked for no counsel. I wras too weak to ask questions or to like to have ques- tions asked ; but my mind was bright and wide awake, while my body was so feeble, and I took counsel of God. Oh, let me read to you two passages from the life of Caroline Fry which will make you understand how a poor sinner looks upon death. The first is an extract from a letter written after learning that her days on earth were numbered.
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“ ‘ As many will hear and will not understand, why I want no time for preparation, often de- sired by far holier ones than I, I tell you why, and shall tell others, and so shall you. It is not because I am so holy, but because I am so sinful. The peculiar character of my religious experience has always been a deep, an agonizing sense of sin ; the sin of yesterday, of to-day, confessed with anguish hard to be endured, and cried for pardon that could not be unheard ; each day cleansed anew in Jesus’ blood, and each day more and more hateful in my own sight ; what can I do in death I have not done in life ; What do in this week, when I am told I cannot live, other than I did last week, when I knew it not ? Alas, there is but one thing undone ; to serve Him better ; and the death bed is no place for that. Therefore I say, if I am not ready now, I shall not be by delay, so far as I have to do with it. If He has more to do in me that is His part. I need not ask Him not to spoil His work by too much haste. ’ ’
“And these are her dying words, a few days later.
“ ‘This is my bridal-day, the beginning of my life. I wish there should be no mistake about the reason of my desire to depart and to be with Christ. I confess myself the vilest, chiefest of sinners, and I desire to go to Him that I may be rid of the burden of sin — the sin of my nature —
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not the past, repented of every day, but the present, hourly, momentary sin, which I do com- mit, or may commit — the sense of which at times drives me half mad with grief ! ’ ’ ’
I shall never forget the expression of father’s face, as I finshed reading these remarkable words. He rose slowly from his seat, and came and kissed me 011 the forehead. Then he left the room, but returned with a large volume, and pointing to a blank page, requested me to copy them there. He complains that I do not write legibly, so I printed them as plainly as I could, with my pen.
Junk 20. — On the first of Ma}q there
came to us, with other spring flowers, our little fair-haired, blue-eyed daughter. How rich I felt when I heard Ernest’s voice, as he replied to a question asked at the door, proclaim, “ Mother and children all well.” To think that we, who thought ourselves rich before, are made so much richer now !
But she is not large and vigorous, as little Ernest was, and we cannot rejoice in her without some misgiving. Yet her very frailty makes her precious to us. Tittle Ernest hangs over her with an almost lover-like pride and devotion, and should she live, I can imagine what a pro- tector he will be for her. I have had to give up the care of him to Martha. During my illness I
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do not know what would have become of him but for her. One of the pleasant events of every day at that time, was her bringing him to me in such exquisite order, his face shining with health and happiness, his hair and dress so beautifully neat and clean. Now that she has the care of him, she has become very fond of him, and he certainly forms one bond of union between us, for we both agree that he is the handsomest, best, most remarkable child that ever lived, or ever will live.
July 6. — I have come home to dear
mother with both my children. Ernest says our only hope for baby is to keep her out of the city during the summer months.
What a petite wee maiden she is ? Where does all the love come from ? If I had had her always I do not see how I could be more fond of her. And do people call it living who never had any children ?
July io. — If this darling baby lives, I
shall always believe it is owing to my mother’s prayers.
I find little Ernest has a passionate temper, and a good deal of self-will. But he has fine qualities. I wish he had a better mother. „ I am so impatient with him when he is wayward and perverse ! What he needs is a firm, gentle hand,
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moved by no caprice, and controlled by the con- stant fear of God. He never ought to hear an irritable word, or a sharp tone ; but he does hear
them, I must own with grief and shame. The truth is, it is so long since I really felt strong and well that I am not myself, and cannot do him justice, poor child. Next to being a perfect wife I want to be a perfect mother. How mor- tifying, how dreadful in all things to come short of even one’s own standard ! What approach,
then, does one make to God’s standard ?
Mother seems very happy to have us here,
though we make so much trouble. She encour- ages me in all my attempts to control myself and to control my dear little boy, and the chapters she gives me out of her own experience are as interesting as a novel, and a good deal more instructive.
August. — Dear Ernest has come to spend
a week with us. He is all tired out, as there has been a great deal of sickness in the city, and father has had quite a serious attack. He brought with him a nurse for baby, as one more desperate effort to strengthen her constitution.
I reproached him for doing it without consult- ing me, but he said mother had written to tell him that I was all worn out and not in a state to have the care of the children. It has been a terrible blow to me. One by one I am giving up
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the sweetest maternal duties. God means that I shall be nothing and do nothing ; a mere useless sufferer. But when I tell Ernest so, he says I am everything to him, and that God’s children please Him just as well when they sit patiently with folded hands, if that is His will, as wdien they are hard at work. But to be at work, to be useful, to be necessary to my husband and children, is just what I wrant, and I do find it hard to be set against the wall as it vrere, like an old piece of furniture no longer of any service. I see now that my first desire has not been to please God, but to please myself, for I am rest- less under His restraining hand, and find my prison a very narrow one. I -would be willing to bear any other trial, if I could only have health and strength for my beloved ones. I pray for patience with bitter tears.