CHAPTER XXVI - August eighteenth, 1858
Years hence, if the cable resting
far down in the mermaids’ home shall prove a
bond of perfect peace between the mother and her child,
thousands will recall the bright summer morning when
through the caverns of the mighty deep the first electric
message came, thrilling the nation’s heart,
quickening the nation’s pulse, and, with the
music of the deep-toned bell and noise of the cannon’s
roar, proclaiming to the listening multitude that
the isle beyond the sea, and the lands which to the
westward lie, were bound together, shore to shore,
by a strange, mysterious tie. And two there are
who, in their happy home, will oft look back upon
that day, that 18th day of August, which gave to one
of Britain’s sons as fair and beautiful a bride
as e’er went forth from the New England hills
to dwell beneath a foreign sky.
They had not intended to be married
so soon, for Margaret would wait a little longer;
but an unexpected and urgent summons home made it
necessary for Mr. Carrollton to go, and so by chance
the bridal day was fixed for the 18th. None save
the family were present, and Madam Conway’s
tears fell fast as the words were spoken which made
them one, for by those words she knew that she and
Margaret must part. But not forever; for when
the next year’s autumn leaves shall fall the
old house by the mill will again be without a mistress,
while in a handsome country-seat beyond the sea Madam
Conway will demean herself right proudly, as becometh
the grandmother of Mrs. Arthur Carrollton. Theo,
too, and Rose will both be there, for their husbands
have so promised, and when the Christmas fires are
kindled on the hearth and the ancient pictures on
the wall take a richer tinge from the ruddy light,
there will be a happy group assembled within the Carrollton
halls; and Margaret, the happiest of them all, will
then almost forget that ever in the Hillsdale woods,
sitting at Hagar’s feet, she listened with a
breaking heart to the story of her birth.
But not the thoughts of a joyous future
could dissipate entirely the sadness of that bridal,
for Margaret was well beloved, and the billows which
would roll ere long between her and her childhood’s
home stretched many, many miles away. Still they
tried to be cheerful, and Henry Warner’s merry
jokes had called forth more than one gay laugh, when
the peal of bells and the roll of drums arrested their
attention; while the servants, who had learned the
cause of the rejoicing, struck up “God Save
the Queen,” and from an adjoining field a rival
choir sent back the stirring note of “Hail,
Columbia, Happy Land.” Mrs. Jeffrey, too,
was busy. In secret she had labored at the rent
made by her foot in the flag of bygone days, and now,
perspiring at every pore, she dragged it up the tower
stairs, planting it herself upon the housetop, where
side by side with the royal banner it waved in the
summer breeze. And this she did, not because she
cared aught for the cable, in which she “didn’t
believe” and declared “would never work,”
but because she would celebrate Margaret’s wedding-day,
and so make some amends for her interference when
once before the “Stars and Stripes” had
floated above the old stone house.
And thus it was, amid smiles and tears,
amid bells and drums, and waving flags and merry song,
amid noisy shout and booming guns, that double bridal
day was kept; and when the sun went down it left a
glory on the western clouds, as if they, too, had
donned their best attire in honor of the union.
It is moonlight on the land-glorious,
beautiful moonlight. On Hagar’s peaceful
grave it falls, and glancing from the polished stone
shines across the fields upon the old stone house,
where all is cheerless now, and still. No life-no
sound-no bounding step-no gleeful
song. All is silent, all is sad. The light
of the household has departed; it went with the hour
when first to each other the lonesome servants said,
“Margaret is gone.”
Yes, she is gone, and all through
the darkened rooms there is found no trace of her,
but away to the eastward the moonlight falls upon the
sea, where a noble vessel rides. With sails unfurled
to the evening breeze, it speeds away-away
from the loved hearts on the shore which after that
bark, and its precious freight, have sent many a throb
of love. Upon the deck of that gallant ship there
stands a beautiful bride, looking across the water
with straining eye, and smiling through her tears
on him who wipes those tears away, and whispers in
her ear, “I will be more to you, my wife, than
they have ever been.”
So, with the love-light shining on
her heart, and the moonlight shining on the wave,
we bid adieu to one who bears no more the name of
Maggie Miller.