THE ANGEL OVER THE RIGHT SHOULDER
“There! a woman’s work
is never done,” said Mrs. James; “I thought,
for once, I was through; but just look at that lamp,
now! it will not burn, and I must go and spend half
an hour over it.”
“Don’t you wish you had
never been married?” said Mr. James, with a
good-natured laugh.
“Yes” rose
to her lips, but was checked by a glance at the group
upon the floor, where her husband was stretched out,
and two little urchins with sparkling eyes and glowing
cheeks, were climbing and tumbling over him, as if
they found in this play the very essence of fun.
She did say, “I should like
the good, without the evil, if I could have it.”
“You have no evils to endure,” replied
her husband.
“That is just all you gentlemen
know about it. What would you think, if you could
not get an uninterrupted half hour to yourself, from
morning till night? I believe you would give
up trying to do anything.”
“There is no need of that; all
you want, is system. If you arranged your
work systematically, you would find that you could
command your time.”
“Well,” was the reply,
“all I wish is, that you could just follow me
around for one day, and see what I have to do.
If you could reduce it all to system, I think you
would show yourself a genius.”
When the lamp was trimmed, the conversation
was resumed. Mr. James had employed the “half
hour,” in meditating on this subject.
“Wife,” said he, as she
came in, “I have a plan to propose to you, and
I wish you to promise me beforehand, that you will
accede to it. It is to be an experiment, I acknowledge,
but I wish it to have a fair trial. Now to please
me, will you promise?”
Mrs. James hesitated. She felt
almost sure that his plan would be quite impracticable,
for what does a man know of a woman’s work? yet
she promised.
“Now I wish you,” said
he, “to set apart two hours of every day for
your own private use. Make a point of going to
your room and locking yourself in; and also make up
your mind to let the work which is not done, go undone,
if it must. Spend this time on just those things
which will be most profitable to yourself. I
shall bind you to your promise for one month then,
if it has proved a total failure, we will devise something
else.”
“When shall I begin?”
“To-morrow.”
The morrow came. Mrs. James had
chosen the two hours before dinner as being, on the
whole, the most convenient and the least liable to
interruption. They dined at one o’clock.
She wished to finish her morning work, get dressed
for the day, and enter her room at eleven.
Hearty as were her efforts to accomplish
this, the hour of eleven found her with her work but
half done; yet, true to her promise, she left all,
retired to her room and locked the door.
With some interest and hope, she immediately
marked out a course of reading and study, for these
two precious hours; then, arranging her table, her
books, pen and paper, she commenced a schedule of her
work with much enthusiasm. Scarcely had she dipped
her pen in ink, when she heard the tramping of little
feet along the hall, and then a pounding at her door.
“Mamma! mamma! I cannot
find my mittens, and Hannah is going to slide without
me.”
“Go to Amy, my dear; mamma is busy.”
“So Amy busy too; she say she can’t leave
baby.”
The child began to cry, still standing
close to the fastened door. Mrs. James knew the
easiest, and indeed the only way of settling the trouble,
was to go herself and hunt up the missing mittens.
Then a parley must be held with Frank, to induce him
to wait for his sister, and the child’s tears
must be dried, and little hearts must be all set right
before the children went out to play; and so favorable
an opportunity must not be suffered to slip, without
impressing on young minds the importance of having
a “place for everything and everything in its
place;” this took time; and when Mrs. James returned
to her study, her watch told her that half
her portion had gone. Quietly resuming her work,
she was endeavoring to mend her broken train of thought,
when heavier steps were heard in the hall, and the
fastened door was once more besieged. Now, Mr.
James must be admitted.
“Mary,” said he, “cannot
you come and sew a string on for me? I do believe
there is not a bosom in my drawer in order, and I am
in a great hurry. I ought to have been down town
an hour ago.”
The schedule was thrown aside, the
workbasket taken, and Mrs. James followed him.
She soon sewed on the tape, but then a button needed
fastening and at last a rip in his glove,
was to be mended. As Mrs. James stitched away
on the glove, a smile lurked in the corners of her
mouth, which her husband observed.
“What are you laughing at?” asked he.
“To think how famously your plan works.”
“I declare!” said he,
“is this your study hour? I am sorry, but
what can a man do? He cannot go down town without
a shirt bosom!”
“Certainly not,” said his wife, quietly.
When her liege lord was fairly equipped
and off, Mrs. James returned to her room. A half
an hour yet remained to her, and of this she determined
to make the most. But scarcely had she resumed
her pen, when there was another disturbance in the
entry. Amy had returned from walking out with
the baby, and she entered the nursery with him, that
she might get him to sleep. Now it happened that
the only room in the house which Mrs. James could
have to herself with a fire, was the one adjoining
the nursery. She had become so accustomed to the
ordinary noise of the children, that it did not disturb
her; but the very extraordinary noise which master
Charley sometimes felt called upon to make, when he
was fairly on his back in the cradle, did disturb the
unity of her thoughts. The words which she was
reading rose and fell with the screams and lulls of
the child, and she felt obliged to close her book,
until the storm was over. When quiet was restored
in the cradle, the children came in from sliding,
crying with cold fingers and just as she
was going to them, the dinner-bell rang.
“How did your new plan work this morning?”
inquired Mr. James.
“Famously,” was the reply,
“I read about seventy pages of German, and as
many more in French.”
“I am sure I did not hinder you long.”
“No yours was only one of a dozen
interruptions.”
“O, well! you must not get discouraged.
Nothing succeeds well the first time. Persist
in your arrangement, and by and by the family will
learn that if they want anything of you, they must
wait until after dinner.”
“But what can a man do?”
replied his wife; “he cannot go down town without
a shirt-bosom.”
“I was in a bad case,”
replied Mr. James, “it may not happen again.
I am anxious to have you try the month out faithfully,
and then we will see what has come of it.”
The second day of trial was a stormy
one. As the morning was dark, Bridget over-slept,
and consequently breakfast was too late by an hour.
This lost hour Mrs. James could not recover. When
the clock struck eleven, she seemed but to have commenced
her morning’s work, so much remained to be done.
With mind disturbed and spirits depressed, she left
her household matters “in the suds,” as
they were, and punctually retired to her study.
She soon found, however, that she could not fix her
attention upon any intellectual pursuit. Neglected
duties haunted her, like ghosts around the guilty
conscience. Perceiving that she was doing nothing
with her books, and not wishing to lose the morning
wholly, she commenced writing a letter. Bridget
interrupted her before she had proceeded far on the
first page.
“What, ma’am, shall we
have for dinner? No marketing ha’n’t
come.”
“Have some steaks, then.”
“We ha’n’t got none, ma’am.”
“I will send out for some, directly.”
Now there was no one to send but Amy,
and Mrs. James knew it. With a sigh, she put
down her letter and went into the nursery.
“Amy, Mr. James has forgotten
our marketing. I should like to have you run
over to the provision store, and order some beef-steaks.
I will stay with the baby.”
Amy was not much pleased to be sent
out on this errand. She remarked, that “she
must change her dress first.”
“Be as quick as possible,”
said Mrs. James, “for I am particularly engaged
at this hour.”
Amy neither obeyed, nor disobeyed,
but managed to take her own time, without any very
deliberate intention to do so. Mrs. James, hoping
to get along with a sentence or two, took her German
book into the nursery. But this arrangement was
not to master Charley’s mind. A fig did
he care for German, but “the kitties,”
he must have, whether or no and kitties
he would find in that particular book so
he turned its leaves over in great haste. Half
of the time on the second day of trial had gone, when
Amy returned and Mrs. James with a sigh, left her nursery.
Before one o’clock, she was twice called into
the kitchen to superintend some important dinner arrangement,
and thus it turned out that she did not finish one
page of her letter.
On the third morning the sun shone,
and Mrs. James rose early, made every provision which
she deemed necessary for dinner, and for the comfort
of her family; and then, elated by her success, in
good spirits, and with good courage, she entered her
study precisely at eleven o’clock, and locked
her door. Her books were opened, and the challenge
given to a hard German lesson. Scarcely had she
made the first onset, when the door-bell was heard
to ring, and soon Bridget coming nearer and nearer then
tapping at the door.
“Somebodies wants to see you in the parlor,
ma’am.”
“Tell them I am engaged, Bridget.”
“I told ’em you were to-home,
ma’am, and they sent up their names, but I ha’n’t
got ’em, jist.”
There was no help for it Mrs.
James must go down to receive her callers. She
had to smile when she felt little like it to
be sociable when her thoughts were busy with her task.
Her friends made a long call they had nothing
else to do with their time, and when they went, others
came. In very unsatisfactory chit-chat, her morning
slipped away.
On the next day, Mr. James invited
company to tea, and her morning was devoted to preparing
for it; she did not enter her study. On the day
following, a sick-head-ache confined her to her bed,
and on Saturday the care of the baby devolved upon
her, as Amy had extra work to do. Thus passed
the first week.
True to her promise, Mrs. James patiently
persevered for a month, in her efforts to secure for
herself this little fragment of her broken time, but
with what success, the first week’s history can
tell. With its close, closed the month of December.
On the last day of the old year, she
was so much occupied in her preparations for the morrow’s
festival, that the last hour of the day was approaching,
before she made her good night’s call in the
nursery. She first went to the crib and looked
at the baby. There he lay in his innocence and
beauty, fast asleep. She softly stroked his golden
hair she kissed gently his rosy cheek she
pressed the little dimpled hand in hers, and then,
carefully drawing the coverlet over it, tucked it
in, and stealing yet another kiss she left
him to his peaceful dreams and sat down on her daughter’s
bed. She also slept sweetly, with her dolly hugged
to her bosom. At this her mother smiled, but soon
grave thoughts entered her mind, and these deepened
into sad ones. She thought of her disappointment
and the failure of her plans. To her, not only
the past month but the whole past year, seemed to
have been one of fruitless effort all broken
and disjointed even her hours of religious
duty had been encroached upon, and disturbed.
She had accomplished nothing, that she could see,
but to keep her house and family in order, and even
this, to her saddened mind, seemed to have been but
indifferently done. She was conscious of yearnings
for a more earnest life than this. Unsatisfied
longings for something which she had not attained,
often clouded what, otherwise, would have been a bright
day to her; and yet the causes of these feelings seemed
to lie in a dim and misty region, which her eye could
not penetrate.
What then did she need? To see
some results from her life’s work?
To know that a golden cord bound her life-threads
together into unity of purpose notwithstanding
they seemed, so often, single and broken?
She was quite sure that she felt no
desire to shrink from duty, however humble, but she
sighed for some comforting assurance of what was
duty. Her employments, conflicting as they
did with her tastes, seemed to her frivolous and useless.
It seemed to her that there was some better way of
living, which she, from deficiency in energy of character,
or of principle, had failed to discover. As she
leaned over her child, her tears fell fast upon its
young brow.
Most earnestly did she wish, that
she could shield that child from the disappointments
and mistakes and self-reproach from which the mother
was then suffering; that the little one might take
up life where she could give it to her all
mended by her own experience. It would have been
a comfort to have felt, that in fighting the battle,
she had fought for both; yet she knew that so it could
not be that for ourselves must we all learn
what are those things which “make for our peace.”
The tears were in her eyes, as she
gave the good-night to her sleeping daughter then
with soft steps she entered an adjoining room, and
there fairly kissed out the old year on another chubby
cheek, which nestled among the pillows. At length
she sought her own rest.
Soon she found herself in a singular
place. She was traversing a vast plain.
No trees were visible, save those which skirted the
distant horizon, and on their broad tops rested wreaths
of golden clouds. Before her was a female, who
was journeying towards that region of light.
Little children were about her, now in her arms, now
running by her side, and as they travelled, she occupied
herself in caring for them. She taught them how
to place their little feet she gave them
timely warnings of the pit-falls she gently
lifted them over the stumbling-blocks. When they
were weary, she soothed them by singing of that brighter
land, which she kept ever in view, and towards which
she seemed hastening with her little flock. But
what was most remarkable was, that, all unknown to
her, she was constantly watched by two angels, who
reposed on two golden clouds which floated above her.
Before each was a golden book, and a pen of gold.
One angel, with mild and loving eyes, peered constantly
over her right shoulder another kept as
strict watch over her left. Not a deed, not a
word, not a look, escaped their notice. When
a good deed, word, look, went from her, the angel over
the right shoulder with a glad smile, wrote it down
in his book; when an evil, however trivial, the angel
over the left shoulder recorded it in his book then
with sorrowful eyes followed the pilgrim until he
observed penitence for the wrong, upon which he dropped
a tear on the record, and blotted it out, and both
angels rejoiced.
To the looker-on, it seemed that the
traveller did nothing which was worthy of such careful
record. Sometimes she did but bathe the weary
feet of her little children, but the angel over the
right shoulder wrote it down.
Sometimes she did but patiently wait to lure back
a little truant who had turned his face away from the
distant light, but the angel over the right shoulder wrote it down.
Sometimes she did but soothe an angry feeling or raise a drooping eye-lid, or
kiss away a little grief; but the angel over the right shoulder wrote
it down.
Sometimes, her eye was fixed so intently
on that golden horizon, and she became so eager to
make progress thither, that the little ones, missing
her care, did languish or stray. Then it was that
the angel over the left shoulder, lifted his
golden pen, and made the entry, and followed her with
sorrowful eyes, until he could blot it out. Sometimes
she seemed to advance rapidly, but in her haste the
little ones had fallen back, and it was the sorrowing
angel who recorded her progress. Sometimes so
intent was she to gird up her loins and have her lamp
trimmed and burning, that the little children wandered
away quite into forbidden paths, and it was the angel
over the left shoulder who recorded her diligence.
Now the observer as she looked, felt
that this was a faithful and true record, and was
to be kept to that journey’s end. The strong
clasps of gold on those golden books, also impressed
her with the conviction that, when they were closed,
it would only be for a future opening.
Her sympathies were warmly enlisted
for the gentle traveller, and with a beating heart
she quickened her steps that she might overtake her.
She wished to tell her of the angels keeping watch
above her to entreat her to be faithful
and patient to the end for her life’s
work was all written down every item of
it and the results would be known
when those golden books should be unclasped.
She wished to beg of her to think no duty trivial
which must be done, for over her right shoulder and
over her left were recording angels, who would surely
take note of all!
Eager to warn the traveller of what
she had seen, she touched her. The traveller
turned, and she recognized or seemed to recognize herself.
Startled and alarmed she awoke in tears. The gray
light of morning struggled through the half-open shutter,
the door was ajar and merry faces were peeping in.
“Wish you a happy new year,
mamma,” “Wish you a Happy
new Year” “a happy noo
ear.”
She returned the merry greeting most
heartily. It seemed to her as if she had entered
upon a new existence. She had found her way through
the thicket in which she had been entangled, and a
light was now about her path. The Angel over
the Right Shoulder whom she had seen in her dream,
would bind up in his golden book her life’s work,
if it were but well done. He required of her
no great deeds, but faithfulness and patience to the
end of the race which was set before her. Now
she could see plainly enough, that though it was right
and important for her to cultivate her own mind and
heart, it was equally right and equally important,
to meet and perform faithfully all those little household
cares and duties on which the comfort and virtue of
her family depended; for into these things the angels
carefully looked and these duties and cares
acquired a dignity from the strokes of that golden,
pen they could not be neglected without
danger.
Sad thoughts and sadder misgivings undefined
yearnings and ungratified longings seemed to have
taken their flight with the Old Year, and it was with
fresh resolution and cheerful hope, and a happy heart,
she welcomed the Glad New Year. The Angel
over the Right Shoulder would go with her, and
if she were found faithful, would strengthen and comfort
her to its close.