There just remain a few creases to
be smoothed out, and our story is done.
The morning after Samuel’s arrival
Betty made her way to the Hall, taking her brother
with her. She knew that the squire and his lady,
and indeed the whole family, would rejoice to hear
that the wanderer was returned, for all loved the
simple-hearted Lancashire girl, and had long sympathised
with her and her father in their sorrow about Samuel.
Mr Collington and his lady having
heard Betty’s statement with the deepest interest,
sent for Samuel, and had a long conversation with him.
“And what do you say to entering
my service?” asked the squire. “We
have learned to prize your father and sister so highly,
that I shall feel perfect confidence in taking you
with no other recommendation than your story and your
relationship to them.”
“Well, sir,” replied Samuel,
“you’re very good. I’m tired
of roving, and shall be glad to settle, if you can
find me a place as’ll suit me; only I mustn’t
forget as there’s others I owe a duty to.”
“You mean the friends you have left behind in
Bolton?”
“Yes, sir,” said Betty;
“he’s bound to be looking arter them.
And there’s Deborah, as he’ll be bringing
to share his home with him.”
“And Old Crow too?” asked Mrs Collington.
“I cannot say, ma’am,”
replied Samuel; “but I must either take his cart
back to him, or bring him over this side to his cart.”
“Well, we’ll see what can be done,”
said the squire.
Let us leave them for a while, and
pass to Greymoor Park. Sir Thomas and Lady Oldfield
have left it for an absence of several years; indeed,
many doubts are expressed in the neighbourhood whether
they will ever come back to reside there again.
There is the stamp of neglect and sorrow upon the
place. Sir Thomas has become a more thoughtful
man he is breaking up, so people say.
His wife has found a measure of comfort at the only
true Fountain, for her religion is now the substance it
was once only the shadow. But the past cannot
be recalled, and a sorrow lies heavy on her heart
which must go with her to her grave; and oh, there
is a peculiar bitterness in that sorrow when she reflects
what her poor boy might have been had she never herself
broken down his resolve to renounce entirely that
drink which proved his after-ruin. And what
of the Oliphants at the Rectory? Bernard
Oliphant still keeps on his holy course, receiving
and scattering light. Hubert is abroad and prospers,
beloved by all who know him.
And Mary, poor Mary, she carries a
sorrow which medicine can never heal. Yet she
sorrows not altogether without hope; for, according
to her promise, she never ceased to pray for the erring
object of her love; and she still therefore clings
to the trust that there may have been light enough
in his soul at the last for him to see and grasp the
outstretched hand of Jesus. And sorrow has not
made her selfish. She has learned to take a
deepening interest in the happiness of others; and
thus, in her self-denying works of faith and labours
of love, she finds the throbbings of her wounded spirit
to beat less fiercely. She has gained all she
hopes for in this life, peace not in gloomy
seclusion, but in holy activity and she
knows that there is joy for her laid up in that bright,
eternal land where the sorrows of the past can cast
no shadows on present glory.
And now let us pass from those who
mourn to those who rejoice. It is a lovely day
in early September, and there is evidently something
more than ordinary going on at Fairmow Park.
In the village itself there is abundance of bustle
and excitement, but all of the most innocent kind,
for alcohol has nothing to do with it. Old and
young are on the move, but the young seem to be specially
interested. In fact, it is the “Annual
Meeting of the Fairmow Band of Hope,” which is
to gather for dinner and recreation, as it always
does, in the Park. So banners are flying, and
children hurrying to and fro, and parents looking proud,
and all looking happy. But to-day there is to
be a double festivity, for Samuel Johnson and Deborah
Cartwright are to be married. Deborah is staying
at John Walters’, and Samuel has got a snug little
cottage no great way on the other side of the brook;
and not far-off, and a little nearer to the Hall,
is still another cottage, where Old Crow is just settled
with Deborah’s mother for housekeeper, for the
old man could not rest content to be so far away from
his adopted son Jacob, for he “means to call
him Jacob and nothing else as long as he lives.”
The old man is not without money of his own, and
he still means to do a little in the knife-grinding
line. So his cart is to be wheeled up for him
to the Park this afternoon, and he is to sharpen just
as many or just as few knives for the squire, and
scissors for the ladies, as he pleases. And
now for it is almost half-past ten o’clock there
is a straggling of various groups up to the neat little
ivy-covered church. Oh, what a joyful day it
is for Thomas Johnson and Betty! They hardly
know how to hold all the love that swells in their
hearts, and every one is so kind to them. Then
the bells ring out joyfully, and the churchyard is
filled with expectant faces of old and young.
The squire, his wife, and daughters are to be there,
and after the wedding there is to be a short service
and an address from the clergyman. And now the
little wedding-party winds up the hill, two and two,
from John Walters’ cottage, all supremely happy
down to little Samuel and the babe, who are to share
in the festivities of the day. All enter the
church; the squire and his party being already seated.
Old Crow is there, of course, for he is to give Deborah
away. He has a Sunday suit on now, the garments
of various eras being only for working days.
Who so full of joy as Samuel, as he passes through
the gazing throng with Deborah on his arm. They
are to drive at once after the wedding to the Park
in the squire’s dog-cart. The marriage-ceremony
is duly performed, and the address delivered.
Then comes the band, with its brazen roar strangely
jangling with the merry bells. The road is all
alive with labourers in clean smocks, and lads with
polished faces. The children in their holiday
attire and Band of Hope ribbons run in and out everywhere.
Fathers and mothers look glad, and old men and women
benevolent. Flowers are to be seen in profusion,
for total abstinence and flowers go everywhere together:
there are flowers in the churchyard, flowers in the
church, flowers in button-holes, belts, and bonnets,
flowers in huge fragrant nosegays, flowers in choice
little bouquets. And so, laughing, smiling, running,
walking, hastening, sauntering, chatting, greeting,
on go young and middle-aged and old, and the sloping
sward of the Park is gained, and the Hall comes into
close view. And there, under a wide expanse of
canvas, is spread the healthful, bountiful repast plenty
of meat, plenty of drink of the right sort, and nothing
to stimulate appetite but those odours which never
tempt any but the gluttonous to excess. All
are now gathered and take their places; young and old
sit side by side. The squire, his lady, his daughters,
and the clergyman are there. Every one is assured
of a hearty welcome, and falls to in earnest when the
grace has been sung. At length the vehement clashing
of knives and forks and clattering of plates has subsided
to a solitary click or two; all have been satisfied,
and the squire rises. He has a word of kindness,
love, and encouragement for each. They know how
he loves them, and they listen with the deepest attention.
And thus he speaks:
“Our kind and beloved pastor
has addressed us all in church this morning, and I
trust we shall remember well the words of truth and
wisdom which he spoke. And now it falls to myself
to speak to you. I can most truthfully declare
how it rejoices myself and my dear wife to see so
many healthy, happy faces at our yearly `Band of Hope’
festivity. But to-day we specially rejoice, because
we see here a happy couple who have just been joined
together as man and wife in our church, with the blessed
prospect of being fellow-partakers of the happiness
of heaven. I am very thankful to number them
among my tenants and people. You all of you
now know something of Samuel Johnson, his trials, temptations,
and struggles as a Christian total abstainer. (`Hear,
hear,’ from Old Crow.) What a truly happy gathering
this is! I have no need to look at any with
misgiving lest their bright faces should owe their
brightness to excess in intoxicating liquors.
We have no false stimulants here we have
no clouded brains, no aching consciences here none
will go home needing to rue the gathering and recreations
of this day. And now, young people of the `Band
of Hope,’ my dear boys and girls, I have just
a parting word for you. Never let any one persuade
you, go where you may, to forsake your pledged total
abstinence. Never care for a laugh or a frown,
they can do you no harm while God is on your side.
Oh, remember what an insidious, what a crafty tempter
the drink is! I have a short story to tell you
that will illustrate this. Many years ago, when
the English and French were at war with one another
in North America, a portion of the English army was
encamped near a dense and trackless forest.
The French were on friendly terms with a tribe of Red
Indians who lived thereabouts, and our men were therefore
obliged to be specially on their guard against these
crafty savage foes. A sentinel was placed just
on the border of the forest, and he was told to be
very watchful against a surprise from the Indians.
But one day, when the sergeant went to relieve guard,
he found the sentinel dead, his scalp, (that is, the
hair with the skin and all), torn from his head, and
his musket gone. This was plainly the work of
an Indian. Strict charge was given to the new
sentinel to fire his musket on the first approach of
an enemy. Again they went to relieve guard,
and again they found the sentinel dead and scalped
as the one before him. They left another soldier
in his place, and after a while, hearing the discharge
of a musket, they hurried to the spot. There
stood the sentinel uninjured, and close at his feet
lay a Red Indian dead. The sentinel’s account
was this. While he was keeping his eyes on the
forest, he saw coming from it a sort of large hog
common in those parts, which rolls itself about in
a peculiarly amusing manner. In its gambols it
kept getting nearer and nearer to him, when all of
a sudden it darted into his mind, `Perhaps this creature
is only an Indian in disguise.’ He fired
at it, and found it was even so. The crafty
savage had thus approached the other sentinels, who
had been thrown off their guard by his skilful imitation
of the animal’s movements, so that the Indian
had sprung up and overpowered them before they could
fire or call for help. Now it is just so, dear
boys and girls, with the drink. It comes, as
it were, all innocence and playfulness: it raises
the spirits, unchains the tongue, makes the eyes bright,
and persuades a man that the last thing he will do
will be to exceed; and then it gets closer and closer,
and springs upon him, and gets the mastery over him,
before he is at all aware. But don’t you
trifle with it, for it comes from the enemy’s
country it is in league with the enemy repel
it at the outset have nothing to do with
it it has surprised and slain millions of
immortal beings never taste, and then you
will never crave. Oh, how happy to show that
you can live without it! Then you may win others
to follow your example. Ay, the young total abstainer
who will not touch the drink because he loves his
Saviour, does indeed stand on a rock that cannot be
moved, and he can stretch out the helping hand to
others, and cry, `Come up here and be safe.’
And now away to your games and your sports, and may
God bless you all!”