CONCLUSION
The summer had waned away; the autumn
tints were already on the trees, and the light of
the September afternoon was growing feeble and uncertain,
as a dainty little figure scrambled out of the low
carriage that had drawn up before the neatest and
most ideal of English cottage homes. Lady Eleanor
More stood at the garden wicket to receive her friend,
and behind her in the doorway was to be seen a tidy,
white-capped little old woman.
“So we have got you at last,
Elsie; and here is the prison where you are to be
confined at hard labour, and this is your gaoler, Mrs.
Nugent. How do you like it all?”
Elsie was delighted, and could find
no words in which to thank her kind patron.
Everything was charming, and everything had been arranged
with that thoughtful consideration which nothing but
real affection produce.
The old man and woman with whom Elsie
was to be lodged, for the present at least, were established
pensioners of the Waterham family. They had
known and sorrowed for Elsie’s mother, who had
stayed with them for a few weeks after her unfortunate
marriage. Thus the orphan felt almost at home,
and was rejoiced to find that a little room had been
set apart for her private and special use.
Nor was it designed that Elsie should
become a mere dependent. Fortunately enough a
vacancy had recently occurred (by marriage) in the
mistress-ship of a small school situated close to the
gate of Burnham Park, and almost opposite Nugent’s
cottage. This was the sphere of labour for which
Elsie was destined. The school was a neat, well-cared-for
place the special hobby of Lady Eleanor,
who seldom let a day pass when at home without visiting
it. Here Elsie Damer at once commenced her labours.
The children were bright and clean, and had evidently
been carefully taught by her predecessor. Miss
Damer was also a welcome acquisition to the village
choir; and those were among the happiest moments of
her life when she let her rich, clear voice ascend
in songs of praise to the throne of Him who had guided
her all her journey through, while her dear friend
and second mother presided at the organ.
Elsie’s only care was about
Jim. She had seen him in Belfast looking worn
and anxious. His letters had never been complaining,
nor were his words so then; yet he could not conceal
the fact that his position was by no means satisfactory.
But this cloud too was soon to be cleared away.
The earl had been favourably impressed with the lad,
and was highly amused when he heard from his daughter
a somewhat toned down version of the foolish conduct
which had resulted in his resigning his situation.
In the course of a year after Elsie’s establishment
at Burnham, a post of some responsibility in the earl’s
rent office became vacant, in which we find Jim shortly
afterwards comfortably installed.
And here ends our tale. Elsie
Damer’s life is after all only beginning, and
doubtless she will have her trials and sorrows.
Not for ever can she be the young girl living in
that sweet rose-covered cottage. Indeed, before
we lose sight of Elsie, there is rumour of a coming
change. Mrs. Nugent said, “It’s a
shame to take you from us, Missie, but every one likes
a spot of their own, I suppose; I know I did in my
time.” And Robert Everley, the head-gamekeeper’s
strapping son, who was settled now in one of the home
farms of Burnham, blushed and looked apologetic as
the earl hailed him one day, “Hey, Bob! what’s
this I hear about you, lad? I wonder what Lady
Eleanor will say to it, stealing her godchild from
her.”
“I couldn’t help it, your
lordship,” replied the embarrassed Bob.
“Well, all I say is you are
a lucky fellow, and Elsie might have done worse too.”
But whatever lies before our Elsie, she has deep stored
within her that hidden peace that the world knoweth not, and which can smooth
over, as with holy oil, the roughest and most sudden-rising of lifes stormy
waves. The discipline of the past had moulded and set, without unduly
hardening, the lines of her simple, cheerful character. Looking back to
the earliest dawn of her recollection, she believed herself able to trace a
golden thread through all. The ideal of calm beauty and purity which the
childs vivid imagination had developed out of the dim memory of her drowned
mothers face had been her good angel, and had led her, by sweet, insensible
gradations, up to Him of whose glory all earthly beauties are but the far-off
reflection. From first to last she had lived in the consciousness of the
Unseen Presence, and no words better expressed her simple faith for the present
and for the future than those of her favourite hymn
“The King of Love my Shepherd is,
Whose goodness faileth never,
I nothing lack if I am His
And He is mine for ever.
“And so, through all the length
of days,
Thy goodness faileth never;
Good Shepherd, may I sing Thy praise
Within Thy house for ever.”