|
Meanwhile I was carried swiftly into the country. The lamp in my carriage was too dim to permit of reading; I therefore wrapped myself in my rug and indulged in pleasant meditations.
It was past midnight when I arrived at the station for Bingley Manor, where I found a gig awaiting me. A sharp drive of half an hour and I was at the mansion door.
Dr McTougall was right. There was little the matter with old Mrs Gordon, but the family were nervous, and rich—hence my visit. I did what was necessary for the patient, comforted the rest by my presence, had a sound night's rest, an early breakfast, a pleasant drive in the fresh frosty air, and a brief wait of five minutes, when the punctual train came up.
There is something inexpressibly delightful in a ride, on a sharp frosty morning, in an express train. I have always felt a wild bounding sensation of joy in rapid motion. The pace at which we went that morning was exceptionally charming. Had I known that the engine-driver was intoxicated perhaps it might not have been quite so exhilarating, but I did not know that. I sat comfortably in my corner thinking of Edith, and gazing with placid benignity at the frosted trees and bushes which sparkled in the red wintry sun.
Yes, it was a glorious ride! I never had a better. The part of the country through which we passed was lovely. One can always gaze comfortably at the distant landscape from a railway carriage, however great the speed. As for the immediate foreground, it reminded me of a race—houses, trees, farms, towns, villages, hamlets, horses, sheep, cattle, poultry, hayricks, brickfields, were among the competitors in that race. They rushed in mad confusion to the rear. I exulted in the pace. Not so a stout elderly gentleman in the opposite corner, who evidently disliked it—so true is it that "one man's meat is another's poison."
"There is no reason to fear, sir," said I, with a smile, by way of reassuring him. "This is a most excellently managed line—one never hears of accidents on it."
"Too fast just now, anyhow," returned the elderly gentleman testily.
Just then the whistle was heard sounding violently.
"That is a sign of safety," said I; "shows that they are on the alert."
A severe application of the brakes caused me to stop abruptly, and the elderly man to seize the arms of his seat with a convulsive grasp.
Suddenly there was a mighty crash. The sensations in my mind that followed were suggestive of cannons, rockets, bombs, fireworks, serpents, shooting-stars, and tumbling debris. Then—all was dark and silent as the grave!
CHAPTER THIRTEEN.
A WONDERFUL DISCOVERY.
Slowly recovering consciousness, I found myself lying on the floor of a waiting-room, with a gentleman bending over me. Instantly recollecting what had occurred, I endeavoured to start up, but was obliged to fall back again.
"You must lie quiet sir," said the gentleman. "You're not much hurt. We will send you on, if you choose, by the train that is expected in a few minutes."
"Is the elderly gentleman safe?" I asked eagerly.
"Which elderly gentleman? There were several in the train, but none are injured, I believe, though some are much shaken. Nobody has been killed. It has been quite a miraculous escape."
"Merciful—call it merciful, my dear sir," said I, looking upwards and thanking God with all my heart for sparing my life.
Two days after that I lay on the drawing-room sofa in Hoboy Crescent. Mr and Mrs McTougall had gone out. So had the children, the forenoon being fine. Edith had remained at home, for reasons which she did not see fit to divulge. She sat beside me with one of her hands in mine. It was all arranged between us by that time.
"Edith," said I after a short pause in our conversation, "I have long wanted to tell you about a dear little old lady with whom Robin Slidder and I have had much to do. She's one of my poor patients, whom I have not mentioned to you before, but I've heard something about her lately which makes me wish to ask your advice—perhaps your aid—in a rather curious search which I've been engaged in for a long time past."
"I will go for my work, John, and you shall tell me all about it," she replied, rising. "I shall be five or ten minutes in preparing it. Can you wait patiently?"
"Well, I'll try, though of course it will be like a separation of five or ten years, but Dumps and I will solace each other in your absence.— By the way, touch the bell as you pass. I should like to see Robin, not having had a talk with him since the accident."
When Robin appeared I asked him if he had seen the Slogger.
"No, sir, I 'aven't," replied Robin, with a somewhat cross look. "That there Slogger has played me false these two times. Leastwise, though he couldn't 'elp it the fust time, he's got to clear 'isself about the second."
"You know where the Slogger lives, don't you?" I asked.
"Oh yes, but it's a long, long way off, an' I durstn't go without leave, an' since you was blowed up i' the train I've scarce 'ad a word with the doctor—he's bin that busy through 'avin' your patients on 'is 'ands as well as is own."
"Well, Robin, I give you leave to go. Be off within this very hour, and see that you bring me back some good news. Now that we have reason to believe the poor girl is in London, perhaps near us, I cannot rest until we find her—or prove the scent to have been a false one. Away with you!"
As the boy went out, Edith came back with her work basket.
"I've been thinking," said I, as she sat down on a stool beside me, "that before beginning my story, it would be well that you should unburden your dear little heart of that family secret of yours which you thought at first was a sufficient bar to our union. But before you begin, let me solemnly assure you that your revelations, whatever they are, will utterly fail to move me. Though you should declare yourself to be the daughter of a thief, a costermonger, or a chimpanzee monkey— though you should profess yourself to have been a charwoman, a foundling, a Billingsgate fish-woman, or a female mountebank—my feelings and resolves will remain the same. Sufficient for me to know that you are you, and that you are mine!—There, go on."
"Truly, then, if such be your feelings, there is no need of my going on, or even beginning," she replied, with a smile, and yet with a touch of sadness in her tone which made me grasp her hand.
"Ah, Edith! I did not mean to hurt you by my jesting, and yet the spirit of what I say is true—absolutely true."
"You did not hurt me, John; you merely brought to my remembrance my great sorrow and—"
"Your great sorrow!" I exclaimed in surprise, gazing at her smooth young face.
"Yes, my great sorrow, and I was going to add, my loss. But you shall hear. I have no family mystery to unfold. All that I wished you to know on that head was that I am without family altogether. All are dead. I have no relation on earth—not one."
She said this with such deep pathos, while tears filled her eyes, that I could not have uttered a word of comfort to save my life.
"And," she continued, "I am absolutely penniless. These two points at first made me repel you—at least, until I had explained them to you. Now that you look upon them as such trifles I need say no more. But the loss to which I have referred is, I fear, irreparable. You won't think me selfish or tiresome if I go back to an early period of my history?"
"Selfish! tiresome!" I repeated, "oh, Edith!"
"Well, then, many years ago my father and mother lived by the seashore not far from Yarmouth. They were poor. My father gave lessons in French, my mother taught music. But they earned sufficient to support themselves and my grandmother and me in comfort. We were a very happy family, for we all loved God and tried to follow in the footsteps of Jesus. I gave them, indeed, a great deal of trouble at first, but He overcame my stubborn heart at last, and then there was nothing to mar the happiness of our lives. But sickness came. My father died. My mother tried to struggle on for a time, but could not earn enough; I tried to help her by teaching, but had myself need of being taught. At last we changed our residence, in hopes of getting more remunerative employment, but in this we failed. Then my mother fell sick and died."
She stopped at this point.
"Oh, Edith! this makes you doubly dear," said I, drawing her nearer to me.
In a few minutes she continued—
"Being left alone now with my grandmother, I resolved to go to London and try to find employment in the great city. We had not been long here, and I had not yet obtained employment when an extraordinary event occurred which has ever since embittered my life. I went out for a walk one day, and was robbed."
"How strange!" I exclaimed, half rising from the sofa. "What a curious coincidence!"
"What! How? What do you mean?" she asked, looking at me in surprise.
"Never mind just now. When I come to tell you my story you will understand. There is a robbery of a young girl in it too.—Go on.—"
"Well, then, as I said, I was robbed by a man and a boy. I had dear little Pompey with me at the time, and that is the way I came to lose him. But the terrible thing was that an accident befell me just after I was robbed, and I never saw my darling grandmother again—"
"Coincidence!" I exclaimed, starting up, as a sudden thought was forced upon my mind, and my heart began to beat violently, "this is more than a coincidence; and yet—it cannot be—pooh! impossible! ridiculous! My mind is wandering."
I sank back somewhat exhausted, for I had been considerably weakened by my accident. Edith was greatly alarmed at my words and looks, and blamed herself for having talked too much to me in my comparatively weak condition.
"No, you have not talked too much to me. You cannot do that, dear Edie," I said.
It was now her turn to look bewildered.
"Edie!" she echoed. "Why—why do you call me Edie?"
I covered my eyes with my hand, that she might not see their expression.
"There can be no doubt now," I thought; "but why that name of Blythe?" Then aloud:
"It is a pretty contraction for Edith, is it not? Don't you like it?"
"Like it? Yes. Oh, how much! But—but—"
"Well, Edie," I said, laying powerful restraint on myself, and looking her calmly in the face, "you must bear with me to-night. You know that weakness sometimes causes men to act unaccountably. Forgive me for interrupting you. I won't do it again, as the naughty boys say.—Go on, dear, with your story."
I once more covered my eyes with my hand, as if to shade them from the light, and listened, though I could scarcely conceal my agitation.
"The name of Edie," she continued, "is that by which my darling granny always called me, and it sounded so familiar—yet so strange—coming from your lips. But, after all, it is a natural abbreviation. Well, as I said, an accident befell me. I had burst away from the thieves in a state of wild horror, and was attempting to rush across a crowded thoroughfare, when a cab knocked me down. I felt a sharp pang of pain, heard a loud shout and then all was dark.
"On recovering I found myself lying in one of the beds of a hospital. My collar-bone had been broken, and I was very feverish—scarcely understood where I was, and felt a dull sense of oppression on my brain. They spoke to me, and asked my name. I don't remember distinctly how I pronounced it, but I recollect being somewhat amused at their misunderstanding what I said, and calling me Miss Eva Bright! I felt too ill to correct them at the time, and afterwards became so accustomed to Eva—for I was a very long time there—that I did not think it worth while to correct the mistake. This was very foolish and unfortunate, for long afterwards, when I began to get well enough to think coherently, and sent them to let granny know where I was, they of course went with the name of Eva Bright. It was very stupid, no doubt, but I was so weak and listless after my long and severe illness that this never once occurred to me. As it turned out, however, there would have been no difference in the result, for my darling had left her lodging and gone no one knew where. This terrible news brought on a relapse, and for many weeks, I believe, my life hung on a thread. But that thread was in the hand of God, and I had no fear."
"What is the name, Edie, of the grandmother you have lost?" I asked, in a low, tremulous voice.
"Willis—but—why do you start so? Now I am quite sure you have been more severely hurt than you imagine, and that my talking so much is not good for you."
"No—Edie—no. Go on," I said firmly.
"I have little more to tell," she continued. "Dear Dr McTougall had attended me in the hospital, and took a fancy to me. When I was well enough to leave, he took me home to be governess to his children. But my situation has been an absolute sinecure as yet, for he says I am not strong enough to work, and won't let me do anything. It was not till after I had left the hospital that I told my kind friend the mistake that had been made about my name, and about my lost grandmother. He has been very kind about that, and assisted me greatly at first in my search for her. But there are so many—so many people of the name of Willis in London—old ladies too! We called together on so many that he got tired of it at last. Of course I wrote to various people at York, and to the place where we had lived before going there, but nothing came of it, and now—my hopes have long ago died out—that is to say, almost—but I still continue to make inquiries."
She paused here for some time, and I did not move or speak, being so stunned by my discovery that I knew not what to say, and feared to reveal the truth to Edith too suddenly. Then I knew by the gentle way in which she moved that she thought I had fallen asleep. I was glad of this, and remained quietly thinking.
There was no doubt now in my mind that Edie Blythe was this lost granddaughter of old Mrs Willis, but the name still remained an insoluble mystery.
"Edie," said I abruptly, "is your name Blythe?"
"Of course it is," she said, in startled surprise, "why should you doubt it?"
"I don't doubt it," said I, "but I'm sorely puzzled. Why is it not Willis?"
"Why?" exclaimed Edie, with a little laugh, "because I am the daughter of Granny Willis's daughter—not of her son. My father's name was Blythe!"
The simplicity of this explanation, and my gross stupidity in quietly assuming from the beginning, as a matter of course, that the lost Edie's name was the same as her grandmother's, burst upon me in its full force. The delusion had been naturally perpetuated by Mrs Willis never speaking of her lost darling except by her Christian name. For a few seconds I was silent, then I exploded in almost an hysterical fit of laughter, in the midst of which I was interrupted by the sudden entrance of my doggie, who had returned from a walk with Robin, and began to gambol round his mistress as if he had not seen her for years.
"Oh, sir! I say! I've diskivered all about—"
Little Slidder had rushed excitedly into the room, but stopped abruptly on observing Miss Blythe, who was looking from him to me with intense surprise.
Before another word could be said, a servant entered:—
"Please, Miss Blythe, Doctor McTougall wishes to see you in his study."
She left us at once.
"Now, Robin," said I, with emphasis, "sit down on that chair, opposite me, and let's hear all about it."
The excited boy obeyed, and Dumps, leaping on another chair beside him, sat down to listen, with ears erect, as if he knew what was coming.
"Oh, sir! you never—such a go!" began Robin, rubbing his hands together slowly as he spoke. "The Slogger! he twigged 'er at once. You'll open your eyes so wide that you'll never git 'em shut again, w'en you hears. No, I never did see such a lark! Edie's found! I've seen her! She ain't the Queen—oh no; nor yet one o' the Queen's darters—by no means; nor yet a duchess—oh dear no, though she's like one. Who d'ye think she is? But you'll never guess."
"I'll try," said I, with a quiet smile, for I had subdued myself by that time.
"Try away then—who?"
"Miss Edith Blythe!"
On hearing this, little Slidder's eyes began to open and glisten till they outshone his own buttons.
"Why—how—ever—did you come to guess it?" gasped the boy, on recovering himself.
"I did not guess it, I found it out. Do you suppose that nobody can find out things except Sloggers and pages in buttons?"
"Oh, sir, do tell!" entreated the boy.
I did tell, and after we had each told all that we knew, we mentally hugged ourselves, and grew so facetious over it that we began to address Dumps personally, to that intelligent creature's intense satisfaction.
"Now, Robin," said I, "we must break this very cautiously to the old lady and Miss Blythe."
"Oh, in course—we-r-y cautiously," assented the urchin, with inconceivable earnestness.
"Well, then, off you go and fetch my greatcoat. We'll go visit Mrs Willis at once."
"At vunce," echoed Robin, as he ran out of the room, with blazing cheeks and sparkling eyes.
"Lilly," said Dr McTougall, as Edith entered his consulting-room. "I'm just off to see a patient who is very ill, and there is another who is not quite so ill, but who also wants to see me. I'll send you to the latter as my female assistant, if you will go. Her complaint is chiefly mental. In fact, she needs comfort more than physic, and I know of no one who is comparable to you in that line. Can you go?"
"Certainly, with pleasure. I'll go at once."
"Her name," said the doctor, "is Willis.—By the way, that reminds me of your loss, dear girl," he continued in a lower tone, as he gently took her hand, "but I would not again arouse your hopes. You know how many old women of this name we have seen without finding her."
"Yes, I know too well," returned poor Edith, while the tears gathered in her eyes. "I have long ago given up all hope."
But notwithstanding her statement Edith had not quite given way to despair. In spite of herself her heart fluttered a little as she sped on this mission to the abode of another old Mrs Willis.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN.
THE LAST.
When Robin and I reached the abode of our old friend—in a state, let me add, of almost irrepressible excitement—we found her seated in the old arm-chair by the window, gazing sadly out on the prospect.
It was not now the prospect of red brick and water-spout, with a remote distance of chimney—cans and cats, which had crushed the old lady's spirit in other days—by no means. There was a picturesque little court, with an old pump in the centre to awaken the fancy, and frequent visits from more or less diabolical street-boys, to excite the imagination. Beyond that there was the mews, in which a lively scene of variance between horses and men was enacted from morning till night—a scene which derived much additional charm from the fact that Mrs Willis, being short-sighted, formed fearfully incorrect estimates of men, and beasts, and things in general.
"Well, granny, how are you?" said I, seating myself on a stool beside her, and thinking how I should begin.
"Pretty griggy—eh?" inquired little Slidder.
"Ah! there you are, my dear boys," said the old lady, who had latterly got to look upon me and my protege as brothers. "You are always sure to come, whoever fails me."
"Has any one failed you to-day, granny?" I asked.
"Yes, Dr McTougall has," she replied as petulantly as it was possible for her to speak. "I've been feeling very low and weak to-day, and sent for him; but I suppose he thinks it's only imagination. Well, well, perhaps it is," she added, after a pause, and with a little sigh. "I'm very foolish, no doubt."
"No, granny," said I, "you're not foolish,"—("Contrariwise, wery much the reverse," interrupted Slidder)—"and I'm glad that I chanced to come in, because, perhaps, I may be able to prescribe for you as well as he."
"Better, dear boy, better"—("That's it, cheer up!" from Slidder)—"and it always does me a world of good to see your handsome face."
"Well, granny," said I, with a flutter at my heart, as I looked up at her thin careworn face, and began to break the ice with caution, "I've come—I—there's a little piece of—of—"
"Now then, dig in the spurs, doctor, an' go at it—neck or nuffin'," murmured my impatient companion.
"What are you saying, Robin?" asked Mrs Willis, with a slightly anxious look. "There's nothing wrong, I hope?"
"No, no; nothing wrong, granny," said I, hastening to the point; "very much the reverse. But—but—you heard of my accident, of course?" I said, suddenly losing heart and beating about the bush.
"Stuck again!" murmured Slidder, in a tone of disgust.
"Yes, yes; I heard of it. You don't mean to say that you're getting worse?" said the old lady, with increasing anxiety.
"Oh no! I'm better—much better. Indeed, I don't think I ever felt so well in my life; and I've just heard a piece of good news, which, I'm quite sure, will make you very glad—very glad indeed!"
"Go it, sir! Another burst like that and you'll be clear out o' the wood," murmured Slidder.
"In fact," said I, as a sudden thought struck, "I'm going to be married!"
"Whew! you never told me that!" exclaimed Slidder, with widening eyes.
"Will you be quiet, Robin?" said I, rather sternly; "how can I get over this very difficult matter if you go on interrupting me so?"
"Mum's the word!" returned the boy, folding his hands, and assuming a look of ridiculous solemnity.
At that moment we heard a noise of pattering feet on the landing outside. The door, which had not been properly closed, burst open, and my doggie came into the room all of a heap. After a brief moment lost in apparently searching for his hind-legs, he began to dance and frisk about the room as if all his limbs were whalebone and his spirit quicksilver.
"Oh, there's that dog again! Put it out! put it out!" cried Mrs Willis, gathering her old skirts around her feet.
"Get out, Dumps! how dare you come here, sir, without leave?"
"I gave him leave," said a sweet voice in the passage.
Next moment a sweeter face was smiling upon me, as Edith entered the room.
There was a feeble cry at the window. I observed that the sweet smile vanished, and a deadly pallor overspread Edith's face, while her eyes gazed with eager surprise at the old lady for a few seconds. Mrs Willis sat with answering gaze and outstretched arms.
"Edie!"
"Granny!" was all that either could gasp, but there was no need for more—the lost ones were mutually found! With an indescribable cry of joy Edith sprang forward, fell on her knees, and enfolded granny in her arms.
"'Ere you are, doctor," whispered Robin, touching me on the elbow and presenting a tumbler of water.
"How? What?"
"She'll need it, doctor. I knows her well, an' it's the on'y thing as does her good w'en she's took bad."
Slidder was right. The shock of joy was almost too much for the old lady. She leaned heavily on her granddaughter's neck, and if I had not caught her, both must have fallen to the ground. We lifted her gently into bed, and in a few minutes she recovered.
For some time she lay perfectly still. Edith, reclining on the lowly couch, rested her fair young cheek on the withered old one.
Presently Mrs Willis moved, and Edith sat up.
"John," said the former to me, looking at the latter, "this is my Edie, thanks be to the Lord."
"Yes, granny, I know it, and she's my Edie too!"
A surprised and troubled look came on her old face. She evidently was pained to think that I could jest at such a moment. I hastened to relieve her.
"It is the plain and happy truth that I tell you, granny. Edith is engaged to marry me.—Is it not so?"
I turned towards the dear girl, who silently put one of her hands in mine.
Old Mrs Willis spoke no word, but I could see that her soul was full of joy. I chanced to glance at Robin, and observed that that waif had retired to the window, and was absolutely wiping his eyes, while Dumps sat observant in the middle of the room, evidently much surprised at, but not much pleased with, the sudden calm which had succeeded the outburst.
"Come, Robin," said I, rising, "I think that you and I will leave them— Good-bye, granny and Edie; I shall soon see you again."
I paused at the door and looked back.
"Come, Dumps, come."
My doggie wagged his scrumpy tail, cocked his expressive ears, and glanced from me to his mistress, but did not rise.
"Pompey prefers to remain with me," said Edie; "let him stay."
"Punch is a wise dog," observed Robin, as we descended the stairs together; "but you don't ought to let your spirits go down, sir," he added, with a profoundly sagacious glance, "'cause, of course, he can't 'elp 'isself now. He'll 'ave to stick to you wotever 'appens—an' to me too!"
I understood the meaning of his last words, and could not help smiling at the presumptuous certainty with which he assumed that he was going to follow my fortunes.
Is it needful to say that when I mentioned what had occurred to Dr McTougall that amiable little man opened his eyes to their widest?
"You young dog!" he exclaimed, "was it grateful in you to repay all my kindness by robbing me in this sly manner of my governess—nay, I may say, of my daughter, for I have long ago considered her such, and adopted her in my heart?"
"It was not done slily, I assure you," said I; "indeed, I fought against the catastrophe with all my might—but I—I could not help it at last; it came upon me, as it were, unexpectedly—took me by surprise."
"Humph!" ejaculated the doctor.
"Besides," I added, "you can scarcely call it robbery, for are not you and I united as partners, so that instead of robbing you, I have, in reality, created another bond of union between you and Edie?"
"H'm!" said the doctor.
"Moreover," I continued, "it happens most opportunely just now that the house opposite this one is to let. It is a much smaller and lower-rented house than this, and admirably suited for a very small family, so that if I secure it we will scarcely, I may say, have to quit your roof."
"Ah! to be sure," returned the doctor, falling in with my humour, "we will have the pleasure of overlooking and criticising each other and our respective households. We may sit at the windows and converse across the street in fine weather, or flatten our noses on the glass, and make faces at each other when the weather is bad. Besides, we can have a tunnel cut under the street and thus have subterranean communication at any time of the day or night—and what a charming place that would be for the children to romp in! Of course, we would require to have it made of bricks or cast-iron to prevent the rats connecting it with the sewers, but—"
A breeze of pattering feet overhead induced the doctor to pause. It increased to a gale on the staircase, to a tempest in the lobby. The door was burst open, and Jack, and Harry, and Job, and Jenny, and Dolly, with blazing cheeks and eyes, tumbled tumultuously into the room.
"Oh papa!" screamed Harry, "Lilly's been out an' found her mother!"
"No, it's not—it's her gan-muver," shrieked Dolly.
"Yes, an' Dr Mellon's going to marry her," cried Jenny.
"Who?—the grandmother?" asked the doctor, with a surprised look.
"No—Lilly," they all cried, with a shout of laughter, which Jack checked by stoutly asserting that it was her great-grandmother that Lilly had found. This drew an emphatic, "No, it's not," from Job, and a firmly reiterated assertion that it was "only her gan-muver" from Dolly.
"But Robin said so," cried Jack.
"No, he didn't," said Job.
"Yes, he did," cried Harry.
"Robin said she's found 'er gan-muver," said Dolly.
"I'll go an' ask him," cried Jenny, and turning round, she rushed out of the room. The others faced about, as one child, and the tempest swept back into the lobby, moderated to a gale on the staircase, and was reduced to a breeze—afterwards to a temporary calm—overhead.
Before it burst forth again the doctor and I had put on our hats and left the house.
From that date forward, for many weeks, the number of lost grandmothers that were found in the McTougall nursery surpasses belief. They were discovered in all sorts of places, and in all imaginable circumstances— under beds, tables, upturned baths, and basin-stands; in closets, trunks, and cupboards, and always in a condition of woeful weakness and melancholy destitution. The part of grandmother was invariably assigned to Dolly, because, although the youngest of the group, that little creature possessed a power of acting and of self-control which none of the others could equal. At first they were careful to keep as close to the original event as possible; but after a time, thirsting for variety, they became lax, and the grandmothers were found not only by granddaughters, but by daughters, and cousins, and nieces, and nephews; but the play never varied in the points of extreme poverty and woe, because Dolly refused, with invincible determination, to change or modify her part.
After a time they varied the performance with a wedding, in which innumerable Dr Mellons were united to endless Lilly Blythes; but after the real wedding took place, and the cake had been utterly consumed, they returned to their first love—Lost and Found, as they termed it or, the Gan-muver's Play.
So, in course of time, the house over the way was actually taken and furnished. Edie was installed therein as empress; I as her devoted slave—when not otherwise engaged. And, to say truth, even when I was otherwise engaged I always managed to leave my heart at home. Anatomists may, perhaps, be puzzled by this statement. If so—let them be puzzled! Gan-muver was also installed as queen-dowager, in a suite of apartments consisting of one room and a closet.
It was not in Dr McTougall's nursery alone that the game of Lost and Found was played.
In a little schoolroom, not far distant from our abode, that game was played by Edie—assisted by Robin Slidder and myself—with considerable success.
Robin crossed the street to me—came over, as it were—with Edith the conqueror and our doggie, and afterwards became a most valuable ally in searching for, drawing forth, tempting out and gathering in the lost. He and I sought for them in some of the lowest slums of London. Robin's knowledge of their haunts and ways, and, his persuasive voice, had influence where none but himself—or some one like him—could have made any impression. We tempted them to our little hall with occasional feasts, in which buns, oranges, raisins, gingerbread, and tea played prominent parts, and when we had gathered them in, Edith came to them, like an angel of light and preached to them the gospel of Jesus, at once by example, tone, look, and word.
Among others who came to our little social meetings was the Slogger. That unpunished criminal not only launched with, apparently, heart and soul into the good cause, but he was the means of inducing many others to come, and when, in after years, his old comrade, Mr Brassey, returned from his enforced residence in foreign parts, the Slogger sought for and found him, and stuck to him with the pertinacity of his bulldog nature until he fairly brought him in.
Thus that good work went on with us. Thus it is going on at the present time in many, many parts of our favoured land, and thus it will go on, with God's blessing, until His people shall all be gathered into the fold of the Good Shepherd—until that day when the puzzlements and bewilderments of this incomprehensible life shall be cleared up; when we shall be enabled to understand why man has been so long permitted to dwell in the midst of conflicting good and evil, and why he has been required to live on earth by faith and not by sight, trusting in the unquestionable goodness and wisdom of Him who is our Life and our Light.
In all our work, whether temporal or spiritual, we had the help and powerful sympathy of our friend Dr McTougall and his family; also of his friend Dobson, the City man, who was a strong man in more ways than one, and a zealous champion of righteousness—or "rightness," as he was fond of calling it, in contradistinction to wrongness.
I meant to let fall the curtain at this point but something which I cannot explain induces me to keep it up a few minutes longer, in order to tell you that the little McTougalls grew up to be splendid men and women; that dear old granny is still alive and well, insomuch that she bids fair to become a serene centenarian; that my sweet Edie is now "fair, fat, and forty;" that I am grey and hearty; that Dumps is greyer, and so fat, as well as stiff, that he wags his ridiculous tail with the utmost difficulty; that Brassey and the Slogger have gone into partnership in the green-grocery line round the corner; and that Robin Slidder is no longer a boy, but has become a man and a butler. He is still in our service, and declares that he will never leave it. My firm conviction is that he will keep his word as long as he can.
So now, amiable reader, with regret and the best of wishes, we make our final bow-"wow"—and:
Bid you good-bye, My doggie and I.
THE END. |
|