Patience, Barbara Hofland [readict books TXT] 📗
- Author: Barbara Hofland
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one whom as a child he had loved “and borne on his back a thousand
times,” thus situated, without being penetrated with the sincerest pity;
and the sight of his tall commanding form, the flash of his eye, as he
stepped forward to rescue the victim, inspired silence and awe. After
driving to his inn, he procured a surgeon, by whom Stancliffe was bled,
and consigned to a low regimen, during which time his papers were
examined, and the securities not yet turned into cash preserved; and Mr.
Hemingford not knowing the real situation of his affairs, therefore
concluded that he had been the mere loser of loose cash taken from home
for his expences.
Even under this persuasion, Mr. Hemingford felt it his duty to impress
upon Stancliffe’s mind the utter ruin of character and property his
conduct must lead to, and press him to promise, and legally bind
himself, to abstain for ever from such pursuits; and under the
consciousness that he had actually thrown away almost three thousand
pounds, the sum he had originally advanced to Mr. Masterman, he became
so depressed as to yield unquestioning assent to every proposition.
Using the pretext of illness for declining all conversation not
immediately necessary, he yet agreed to travel as soon as Mr. Hemingford
was ready, and they proceeded homeward accordingly, both parties
probably relieved by the presence of Harriett, whose many enquiries, and
artless exhibition of pleasure, relieved the tedium of their journey.
From the time Stancliffe had established himself in his own bed, his
harrassed mind began to take repose, it was the sanctum where he
admitted no intruder,—the solitude, where “a ministering angel”
supplied his wants, endured his rebukes, or soothed his
self-upbraidings, assisted his plans of improvement, and revived his
hopes for the future.
Mr. Hemingford, too busy to waste time in fruitless messages, and
unheeded expostulation, took his old station in the counting-house,
busied in preparing himself to return with a large cargo, happy in that
he could, from time to time, gaze on the face of his son, assign him
some easy task, and remark with delighted admiration, on his
improvement. His evening hours were claimed by many old friends, and the
company of Harriet was so frequently sought by the companions of her
childhood, that Dora was enabled to give every moment of her time to her
husband, her child, and Mrs. Judy; but as each required or desired it
all, she had constant uneasiness in the distribution.
At length all things were ready for Mr. Hemingford’s departure, and Dora
hoped that her invalid husband would exert himself to bid him farewell;
but this he positively refused, although he sent a kind message, and a
proposal of exchanging situations with him the following year, provided
his health permitted it.
“That is out of the question,” replied the father, “for a constitution
was never yet found, which could resist the system of slow but certain
suicide, he has adopted:—but when I am gone, he will be better, I
trust; and since we have destroyed our worst enemy, all things may come
round. I have heard much, and seen a good deal too, of what time and
patience may do, so I hope you won’t despair, Dora;—only remember this,
that when I am gone, you must see after things—my sleeping partner
must have an active representative; at the end of my term you will have
a double release, so keep up your spirits.”
Mr. Hemingford uttered this farewel exhortation in the hearing of Mrs.
Aylmer; and when he was set out, accompanied by his youngest children,
who hung round him to the last moment, Dora, wiping her eyes, looked
wistfully in the face of her best friend, and said,
“I am willing to do all in my power, but surely Stancliffe will soon be
better!—it is hope alone which can enable me to increase my duties.”
“But, my dear child, you must not live on hope, for it will only lead to
disappointment; remember constantly, that though duty and prudence
prescribe the best means of securing earthly happiness, and that
forsaking their dictates never fails to produce misery—yet this is not
the Christian’s rest; it is the scene of his trial, not of his
reward—in early life, hope is indeed the natural stimulus for all
exertion; and patient expectation of good will enable us to endure much
evil—but those who “continue in well-doing and faint not,” because they
receive all trials as preparatives for another state of being—who hold
them as purifiers, and receive them not as from man, but God, are less
liable to the agony of disappointment, and the weariness, the soul
sickness, which arises from hope deferred.
“Ah!” exclaimed Dora, “but how can my heart ascend to heaven and
expatiate on its future happiness so long as it takes not my husband in
its flight? I am compelled to live in hope, that I may enjoy the
blessings of faith, for are we not one? must we not be one for
ever?”
“That must depend on himself, not you—the ties of marriage are sacred
and strong, but not indissoluble, even in this world; still less can
they be carried into another—to deem them eternal, to look to their
re-union, is indeed the greatest, sweetest, contemplation of the
bereaved heart; but if it is denied, we must not murmur, since we know
it can be abundantly supplied to us.”
“True; but surely we should struggle hard and long, ere we resigned the
hope to snatch from perdition, to win to virtue, one so closely bound:
seventy times seven should the erring brother be forgiven and ‘drawn
with the cords of love.’—To man belongs the glory and the reward, of
turning many to righteousness; but since woman can only move in the
narrow circle of her own family, she ought to make up in perseverance
what she wants in extent; and since the use of remonstrance and
exhortation are denied, she should preach by example, and by
forbearance, submission, and godly sincerity, so impress her husband’s
mind, that he may be led to seek the same fold and the same shepherd
with herself.”
“It is certainly right that every woman should so endeavour, and so act,
Dora; for I consider it a positive fact, that woman will never attain
the blessings you speak of by any other means; but since man ought to be
her guide, as he is her head, in general there is little reason to
expect that he who is neither led by love, nor bound by duty, will be
moved much by example he never studies, and with which he has no
sympathy—but it is certain we should ‘pray and faint not;’ therefore go
on, my love, and may your reward be abundant.”
CHAP. XI.
After Mr. Hemingford had set out, and that pressure of business had
subsided, which he had caused, Mrs. Aylmer hoped to enjoy a little of
the society of Dora, which she had yet caught only by starts; for as
after the strictest enquiry from his medical attendant, she found that
Mr. Stancliffe had no complaint to which a name could be given, she
concluded that he would leave his chamber now the person had departed
whose presence from personal dislike or other cause had annoyed him.
This circumstance not taking place, and Dora being so closely confined,
from her attendance on him, as to render all easy intercourse
impracticable, she took her departure for Crickhowel, but had not
decided on remaining there. Although unenlightened on the particular
state of her beloved young friend’s actual situation, she unavoidably
saw so much of suffering in it, as to render her uncertain whether it
was best to fix her residence near her or not.
At the name of Crickhowel the eyes of Dora filled with tears, she
eagerly wished “she could see it once more;” and she began to speak of
her youthful companions, her happy occupations—suddenly stopping, she
exclaimed, “I must not dare to think on these subjects, they would
lead me out of the path in which I am called to walk; but yet I would
not be quite forgotten by those who used to love me—the Sydenhams’.”
“They will continue to love you, Dora,—some of them”—Mrs. Aylmer had
nearly dropt the words “too well;” but she did not, and changing the
conversation, she accepted from Dora, (poor as she was,) various little
presents for her old neighbours and Sunday scholars, and forced upon her
with a parental command, a present in money which she but too evidently
had occasion for, and would have accepted with more ease, if she had not
been conscious of wanting it, and felt that in that want, was a reproach
to him on whom she could not endure that blame should rest.
Bitter as was the pang of parting, yet Dora believed that Stancliffe
would exert himself when a person was gone, whom he always appeared to
consider in the light of a parent or future benefactor, whom he feared
to offend, lest his interest should suffer, but was too proud to
conciliate from a false conception of her character, which was full of
kindness and indulgence. In this respect, however, Dora found herself
mistaken; Stancliffe turned a deaf ear alike to her suggestions and
those of his medical attendant, who pressed him to remove to country
lodgings, use gentle exercise, and step by degrees back again into the
world which he had now quitted for the space of three long months—the
victim in fact of shame, sullenness, and self-reproach, aided by
indolence and that tyranny of temper, which found great powers of
self-indulgence in a situation which forbade the approach of all who
were not in a state of servitude or dependance.
It will be easily supposed that in this situation Stancliffe soon
completely lost his appetite, that he became pale, emaciated, and
nervous; and that excluding himself from the usual topics of
conversation and subjects of interest, he was naturally thrown upon
recollections of the most painful kind, which in his present
disposition, failed to awaken the sorrows of a penitent heart, but
renewed perpetually the irritation of temper which in his state of
self-subjugated health, was seriously injurious to him. When his wife
had parted from her father and her friend, he then told her fully all
his losses by play, the “ill usage and the ill luck” which had attended
him, and in “fighting all his battles o’er again,” frequently worked
himself into a state of agitation so terrible, as to render him an
object of the sincerest pity to a heart so tender as that of Dora. At
such moments, she would weep over, embrace him, re-assure him by every
motive which could suggest consolation, or awaken hope; and there were
times when he appeared moved by her tenderness, and aware that
notwithstanding what he termed his misfortunes, no man could have
escaped with lighter punishment for heavy sins. He well knew that in a
great commercial town like that which he inhabited, the conduct of any
individual occupies but short attention, that the house of which he was
the first partner was in high credit, and flourishing circumstances, and
that as he had had no open breach with his partner on his late visit,
but on the contrary they had travelled together in friendly and family
compact, there appeared always a power of stepping out of his nominal
sick room without attracting attention, or exciting observation. But in
vain did his own mind suggest, or Dora in the gentlest manner display
these advantages; he allowed them, but from caprice, indolence,
irresolution, which were now indeed aided by bodily weakness, he
continued in his chamber.
One point at length Dora gained, which was that of admitting
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