LEONARD Dobbin
had a humble cottage upon Squire Courtenay’s
estate; but although the cottage was humble, it was
always kept neat and clean, and was a pattern of everything
that a poor man’s dwelling should be. The
white-washed walls, the smoothly raked gravel walk,
and the sanded floor, were so many evidences that Leonard
was a careful and a thrifty man; and while some of
his poorer neighbours laughed, and asked where was
the use of being so precise, they could not help respecting
Dobbin, nevertheless.
The great, and, indeed, almost the
only pleasure upon which the labourer allowed
himself to spend any time, was the little flower garden
in front of the house. The garden was Dobbin’s
pride; and the pride of the garden was a moss-rose
tree, which was the peculiar treasure of the labourer’s
little crippled son, who watched it from the window,
and whenever he was well enough, crept out to water
it, and pick off any stray snail which had ventured
to climb up its rich brown leaves. No mother
ever watched her little infant with more eager eyes
than Jacob Dobbin did his favourite rose; and no doubt
he thought all the more of it because he had so few
pleasures in life. Jacob Dobbin had no fine toys,
he could not take any long walks, nor could he play
at cricket, or any such games, therefore his rose
tree was all the more precious; in fact, in his estimation
there was nothing to compare with it in the world.
There was a great difference between
poor Jacob’s lot and that of Squire Courtenay’s
son. James Courtenay had plenty of toys; he had
also a pony, and a servant to attend him whenever
he rode out; when the summer came, he used often to
go out sailing with the squire in his yacht; and there
was scarce anything on which he set his heart which
he was not able to get.
With all these pleasures, James Courtenay
was not, however, so happy a youth as poor Jacob Dobbin.
Jacob, though crippled, was contented his
few pleasures were thoroughly enjoyed, and “a
contented mind is a continual feast;” whereas
James was spoiled by the abundance of good things
at his command; he was like the full man that loatheth
the honeycomb; and he often caused no little trouble
to his friends, and, indeed, to himself also, by the
evil tempers he displayed.
Many a time did James Courtenay’s
old nurse, who was a God-fearing woman, point out
to him that the world was not made for him alone; that
there were many others to be considered as well as
himself; and that although God had given him many
things, still he was not of a bit more importance
in His sight than others who had not so much.
All this the young squire would never have listened
to from any one else; but old Aggie had reared him,
and whenever he was laid by with any illness, or was
in any particular trouble, she was the one to whom
he always fled. “God sometimes teaches
people very bitter lessons,” said old Aggie one
day, when James Courtenay had been speaking contemptuously
to one of the servants; “and take care, Master
James, lest you soon have to learn one.”
Jacob Dobbin had been for some time
worse than usual, his cough was more severe, and his
poor leg more painful, when his father and he held
a long conversation by the side of their scanty fire.
Leonard had made the tea in the old
black pot with the broken spout, and Jacob lay on
his little settle, close up to the table.
“Father,” said Jacob,
“I saw the young squire ride by on his gray pony
to-day, and just then my leg gave me a sore pinch,
and I thought, How strange it is that there should
be such a difference between folk; he’s almost
always galloping about, and I’m almost always
in bed.”
“Poor folk,” answered
Jacob’s father, “are not always so badly
off as they suppose; little things make them happy,
and little things often make great folk unhappy;
and let us remember, Jacob, that whatever may be our
lot in life, we all have an opportunity of pleasing
God, and so obtaining the great reward, which of his
mercy, and for Christ’s sake, he will give to
all those who please him by patient continuance in
well-doing. The squire cannot please God any more
than you.”
“Oh,” said Jacob, “the
squire can spend more money than I can; he can give
to the poor, and do no end of things that I cannot:
all I can do is to lie still on my bed, and at times
keep myself from almost cursing and swearing when
the pain is very bad.”
“Exactly so, my son,”
answered Leonard Dobbin; “but remember that
patience is of great price in the sight of God; and
he is very often glorified in the sufferings of his
people.”
“The way I should like to glorify
God,” said Jacob, “would be by going about
doing good, and letting people see me do it, so that
I could glorify him before them, and not in my dull
little corner here.”
“Ah, Jacob, my son,” replied
old Leonard Dobbin, “you may glorify God more
than you suppose up in your little dull corner what
should you think of glorifying him before angels and
evil spirits?”
“Ah, that would be glorious!” cried Jacob.
“Spirits, good and bad, are
ever around us,” said old Leonard, “and
they are watching us; and how much must God be glorified
before them, when they see his grace able to make
a sufferer patient and gentle, and when they know
that he is bearing everything for Christ’s sake.
When a Christian is injured, and avenges not himself;
when he is evil spoken of, and answers not again;
when he is provoked, yet continues long-suffering:
then the spirits, good and bad, witness these things,
and they must glorify the grace of God.”
That night Jacob Dobbin seemed to
have quite a new light thrown upon his life.
“Perhaps,” said he to himself, as he lay
upon the little settle, “I’m afflicted
in order that I may glorify God. I suppose he
is glorified by his people bearing different kinds
of pain; perhaps some other boy is glorifying him
with a crippled hand, while I am with my poor crippled
leg: but I should like to be able even to bear
persecution from man for Christ’s sake, like
the martyrs in father’s old book; as I have
strength to bear such dreadful pain in my poor leg,
I daresay I might bear a great deal of suffering of
other kinds.”
The spring with its showers passed
away, and the beautiful summer came, and Jacob Dobbin
was able to sit at his cottage door, breathing in the
pure country air, and admiring what was to him the
loveliest object in nature namely, one
rich, swelling bud upon his moss-rose tree. There
was but one bud this year upon the tree, the
frosts and keen spring winds had nipped all the rest;
and this one was now bursting into beauty; and it
was doubly dear to Jacob, because it was left alone.
Jacob passed much of his time at the cottage door,
dividing his admiration between the one moss-rose
and the beautiful white fleecy clouds, which used
to sail in majestic grandeur over his head; and often
he used to be day-dreaming for hours, about the white
robes of all who suffered for their Lord.
While thus engaged one day, the young
squire came running along, and his eye fell upon Jacob’s
rose. “Hallo,” cried he with delight “a
moss-rose! Ha, ha! the gardener said
we had not even one blown in our garden; but here’s
a rare beauty!” and in a moment James Courtenay
had bounded over the little garden gate, and stood
beside the rose bush. In another instant his
knife was out of his pocket, and his hand was approaching
the tree.
“Stop, stop!” cried Jacob
Dobbin; “pray don’t cut it, ’tis
our only rose; I’ve watched it I don’t
know how long; and ’tisn’t quite come out
yet,” and Jacob made an effort to
get from his seat to the tree; but before the poor
little cripple could well rise from his seat, the young
squire’s knife was through the stem, and with
a loud laugh he jumped over the little garden fence,
and was soon lost to sight.
The excitement of this scene had a
lamentable effect upon poor Jacob Dobbin. When
he found his one moss-rose gone, he burst into a violent
fit of sobbing, and soon a quantity of blood began
to pour from his mouth he had broken a
blood-vessel; and a neighbour, passing that way a
little time after, found him lying senseless upon the
ground. The neighbouring doctor was sent for,
and he gave it as his opinion that Jacob could never
get over this attack. “Had it been an ordinary
case,” said the doctor, “I should not
have apprehended a fatal result; but under present
circumstances I fear the very worst; poor Jacob has
not strength to bear up against this loss of blood.”
For many days Jacob Dobbin lay in
a darkened room, and many were the thoughts of the
other world which came into his mind; amongst them
were some connected with the holy martyrs. “Father,”
said he to his aged parent as he sat by his side,
“I have been learning a lesson about the martyrs.
I see now how unfit I was to be tried as they were;
if I could not bear the loss of one moss-rose patiently
for Christ’s sake, how could I have borne fire
and prison, and such like things?”
“Ah, Jacob,” said the
old man, “’tis in little common trials
such as we meet with every day, that, by God’s
grace, such a spirit is reared within us as was in
the hearts of the great martyrs of olden time; tell
me, can you forgive the young squire?”
“The blessed Jesus forgave his
persecutors,” whispered Jacob faintly, “and
the martyrs prayed for those who tormented them in
this at least I may be like them. Father, I do
forgive the young squire; and, father,” said
Jacob, as he opened his eyes after an interval of a
few minutes’ rest, “get your spade, and
dig up the tree, and take it with my duty to the young
squire. Don’t wait till I’m dead,
father; I should not feel parting with it then; but
I love the tree, and I wish to give it to him now.
And if you dig up a very large ball of earth with it,
he can have it planted in his garden at once; and ;”
but poor Jacob could say no more; he sank back quite
exhausted, and he never returned to the subject again,
for in a day or two afterwards he died.
When old Leonard Dobbin appeared at
the great house with his wheel-barrow containing the
rose tree and its ball of earth, there was no small
stir amongst the servants. Some said that it was
fine impudence in him to come troubling the family
about his trumpery rose, bringing the tree, as if
he wanted to lay Jacob Dobbin’s blood at their
young master’s door; others shook their heads,
and said it was a bad business, and that that tree
was an ugly present, and one that they should not
care to have; and as to old Aggie, she held her tongue,
but prayed that the child she had reared so anxiously
might yet become changed, and grow up an altered man.
Old Leonard could not get audience
of the squire or his son; but the gardener, who was
in the servants’ hall when he arrived with his
rose, told him to wheel it along, and he would plant
it in Master James’s garden, and look after
it until it bloomed again; and there the rose finally
took up its abode.
Meanwhile the young squire grew worse
and worse; he respected no one’s property, if
he fancied it himself; and all the tenants and domestics
were afraid of imposing any check upon his evil ways.
He was not, however, without some stings of conscience;
he knew that Jacob Dobbin was dead he had
even seen his newly-made grave in the churchyard on
Sunday; and he could not blot out from his memory the
distress of poor Jacob when last he saw him alive;
moreover, some of the whisperings of the neighbourhood
reached his ears; and all these things made him feel
far from comfortable.
As day after day passed by, James
Courtenay felt more and more miserable: a settled
sadness took possession of his mind, varied by fits
of restlessness and passion, and he felt that there
was something hanging over him, although he could
not exactly tell what. It was evident, from the
whispers which had reached his ears, that there had
been some dreadful circumstances connected with poor
Jacob Dobbin’s death, but he feared to inquire;
and so day after day passed in wretchedness, and there
seemed little chance of matters getting any better.
At length a change came in a very
unexpected way. As James Courtenay was riding
along one day, he saw a pair of bantam fowls picking
up the corn about a stack in one of the tenants’
yards. The bantams were very handsome, and he
felt a great desire to possess them; so he dismounted,
and seeing the farmer’s son hard by, he asked
him for how much he would sell the fowls.
“They’re not for sale,
master,” said the boy; “they belong to
my young sister, and she wouldn’t sell those
bantams for any money, there isn’t
a cock to match that one in all the country round.”
“I’ll give a sovereign for them,”
said James Courtenay.
“No, not ten,” answered Jim Meyers.
“Then I’ll take them,
and no thanks,” said the young squire; and so
saying, he flung Jim Meyers the sovereign, and began
to hunt the bantams into a corner of the yard.
“I say,” cried Jim, “leave
off hunting those bantams, master, or I must call
my father.”
“Your father!” cried the
young squire; “and pray, who’s your father?
You’re a pretty fellow to talk about a father;
take care I don’t bring my father to you;”
and having said this, he made a dart at the cock bantam,
that he had by this time driven into a corner.
“Look here,” said Jim,
doubling his fists. “You did a bad job,
young master, by Jacob Dobbin; you were the death
of him, and I won’t have you the death of my
little sister, by, maybe, her fretting herself to death
about these birds, so you look out, and if you touch
one of these birds, come what will of it, I’ll
touch you.”
“Who ever said I did Jacob Dobbin
any harm?” asked James Courtenay, his face as
pale as ashes; “I never laid a hand upon the
brat.”
“Brat or no brat,” answered
Jim Meyers, “you were the death of him; you
made him burst a blood-vessel, and I say you murdered
him.” This was too much for James Courtenay
to bear, so without more ado, he flew upon Jim Meyers,
intending to pommel him well; but Jim was not to be
so easily pommelled; he stood upon his guard, and
soon dealt the young squire such a blow between the
eyes that he had no more power to fight.
“Vengeance! vengeance!”
cried the angry youth. “I’ll make
you pay dearly for this;” and slinking away,
he got upon his pony and rode rapidly home.
It may be easily imagined that on
the young squire’s arrival at the Hall, in so
melancholy a plight, the whole place was in terrible
confusion. Servants ran hither and thither, old
Aggie went off for some ice, and the footman ran to
the stable to send the groom for the doctor, and the
whole house was turned upside down.
In the midst of all this, James Courtenay’s
father came home, and great indeed was his rage when
he heard that his son had received this beating on
his own property, and from the hands of a son of one
of his own tenantry; and his rage became greater and
greater as the beaten boy gave a very untrue account
of what had occurred. “I was admiring a
bantam of Meyers,” said he to his father, “and
his son flew upon me like a tiger, and hit me between
the eyes.”
Squire Courtenay determined to move
in the matter at once, so he sent a groom to summon
the Meyers both father and son. “I’ll
make Meyers pay dearly for this,” said the squire;
“his lease is out next Michaelmas, and I shall
not renew it; and, besides, I’ll prosecute his
son.”
All this delighted the young squire,
and every minute seemed to him to be an hour, until
the arrival of the two Meyers, upon whom ample vengeance
was to be wreaked; and the pain of his eyes seemed
as nothing, so sweet was the prospect of revenge.
In the course of an hour the two Meyers
arrived, and with much fear and trembling were shown
into their landlord’s presence.
“Meyers,” cried the squire,
in great wrath, “you leave your farm at Michaelmas;
and as to that young scoundrel, your son, I’ll
have him before the bench next bench-day, and I’ll
see whether I can’t make him pay for such tricks
as these.”
“What have I done,” asked
old Meyers, “to deserve being turned adrift?
If your honour will hear the whole of the story about
this business, I don’t believe you’ll
turn me out on the cold world, after being on that
land nigh-hand forty years.”
“‘Hear!’ I have
heard enough about it; your son dared to lift a hand
to mine, and and I’ll have no tenant
on my estate that will ever venture upon such an outrage
as that; it was a great compliment to you
for my son to admire your bantams, or anything on
your farm, without his being subjected to such an
assault.”
“I don’t want to excuse
my boy,” said old Meyers, “for touching
the young squire; and right sorry I am that he ever
lifted a hand to him; but begging your honour’s
pardon, the young squire provoked him to it, and he
did a great deal more than just admire my little girl’s
bantams. Come, Jim, speak up, and tell the
squire all about it.”
“Ay, speak up and excuse yourself,
you young rascal, if you can,” said the angry
squire; “and if you can’t, you’ll
soon find your way into the inside of a prison for
this. Talk of poaching! what is it to an assault
upon the person?”
“I will speak up, then, your
honour, since you wish it,” said Jim Meyers,
“and I’ll tell the whole truth of how this
came about.” And then he told the whole
story of the young squire having wanted to buy the
bantams, and on his not being permitted to do so, of
his endeavouring to take them by force. “And
when I wouldn’t let him carry away my sister’s
birds, he flew on me like a game cock, and in self-defence
I struck him as I did.”
“You said I murdered Jacob Dobbin,”
interrupted James Courtenay.
“Yes, I did,” answered
Jim Meyers, “and all the country says the same,
and I only say what every one else says; ask anybody
within five miles of this, and if they’re not
afraid to speak up, they’ll tell just the same
tale that I do.”
“Murdered Jacob Dobbin!”
ejaculated the squire in astonishment; “I don’t
believe my son ever lifted a hand to him, you
mean the crippled boy that died some time ago?”
“Yes, he means him,” said
Jim Meyers’ father; “and ’tis true
what the lad says, that folk for five miles round
lay his death at the young squire’s door, and
say that a day will come when his blood will be required
of him.”
“Why, what happened?”
asked the squire, beginning almost to tremble in his
chair; for he knew that his son was given to very violent
tempers, and was of a very arbitrary disposition;
and he felt, moreover, within the depths of his own
heart, that he had not checked him as he should.
“What is the whole truth about this matter?”
“Come, speak up, Jim,”
said old Meyers; “you were poor Jacob’s
friend, and you know most about it;” the squire
also added a word, encouraging the lad, who, thus
emboldened, took courage and gave the squire the whole
history of poor Jacob Dobbin’s one moss-rose.
He told him of the cripple’s love for the plant,
and how its one and only blossom had been rudely snatched
away by the young squire, and how poor Jacob burst
a blood vessel and finally died.
“And if your honour wants to
know what became of the tree, you’ll find it
planted in the young squire’s garden,”
added Jim, “and the gardener will tell you how
it came there.”
The reader will easily guess what
must have been the young squire’s feelings as
he heard the whole of this tale. Several times
did he endeavour to make his escape, under the plea
that he was in great pain from his face, and once
or twice he pretended to faint away; but his father,
who, though proud and irreligious, was just, determined
that he should remain until the whole matter was searched
out.
When Jim Meyers’ story was ended,
the squire bade him go into the servants’ hall,
and his father also, while old Dobbin was sent for;
and as to James, his son, he told him to go up to
his bed-room, and not come down until he was called.
Poor old Leonard Dobbin was just as
much frightened as Jim Meyers and his father had been,
at the summons to attend the squire. He had a
clear conscience, however; he felt that he had not
wronged the squire in anything; and so, washing himself
and putting on his best Sunday clothes, he made his
way to the Hall as quickly as he could.
“Leonard Dobbin,” said
the squire, “I charge you, upon pain of my worst
displeasure, to tell me all you know about this story
of your late son’s moss-rose tree. You
need not be afraid to tell me all; your only cause
for fear will be the holding back from me anything
connected with the matter.”
Leonard went through the whole story
just as Jim Meyers had done; only he added many little
matters which made the young squire’s conduct
appear even in a still worse light than it had already
done. He was able to add all about his poor crippled
boy’s forgiveness of the one who had wronged
him, and how he had himself wheeled the rose tree up
to the squire’s door, and how it was now to
be found in the young squire’s garden.
“And if I may make so bold as to speak,”
continued old Leonard, “nothing but true religion,
and the love of Christ, and the power of God’s
Spirit in the heart, will ever make us heartily forgive
our enemies, and not only forgive them, but render
to them good for evil.”
When Leonard Dobbin arrived James
Courtenay had been sent for, and had been obliged
with crimsoned cheeks to listen to this story of the
poor crippled boy’s feelings; and now he would
have given all the roses in the world, if they were
his, to restore poor Jacob to life, or never to have
meddled with his flower; but what had been done could
not be undone, and no one could awake the poor boy
from his long cold sleep in the silent grave.
“Leonard Dobbin,” said
the squire, after he had sat for some time moodily,
with his face buried in his hands, “this is the
worst blow I have ever had in life. I would give
L10,000 hard money, down on that table, this very
moment, that my boy had never touched your boy’s
rose. But what is done cannot be undone; go home,
and when I’ve thought upon this matter I’ll
see you again.”
“Meyers,” said the squire,
turning to the other tenant, “I was hasty in
saying a little while ago that I’d turn you out
of your farm next Michaelmas; you need have no fear
about the matter; instead of turning you out, I’ll
give you a lease of it. I hope you won’t
talk more than can be helped about this terrible business.
Now go.”
The two men stood talking together
for a while at the lodge before they left the grounds
of the great house; and old Leonard could not help
wiping his eyes with the sleeve of his rough coat,
as he said to Meyers, “Ah, neighbour, ’tis
sore work having a child without the fear of God before
his eyes. I’d rather be the father of poor
Jacob in his grave, than of the young squire up yonder
at the Hall.”
Bitter indeed were Squire Courtenay’s
feelings and reflections when the two old men had
left, and, his son having been ordered off to his
chamber, he found himself once more alone. The
dusk of the evening came on, but the squire did not
seem to care for food, and, in truth, his melancholy
thoughts had taken all appetite away. At last
he went to the window, which looked out over a fine
park and a long reach of valuable property, and he
began to think: What good will all these farms
do this boy, if the tenants upon them only hate him,
and curse him? Perhaps, with all this property,
he may come to some bad end, and bring disgrace upon
his family and himself. And then the squire’s
own heart began to smite him, and he thought:
Am not I to blame for not having looked more closely
after him, and for not having corrected him whenever
he went wrong? I must do something at once.
I must send him away from this place, where almost
every one lets him do as he likes, until he learns
how to control himself, at least so far as not to do
injustice to others.
Meanwhile the young squire’s
punishment had begun. When left to the solitude
of his room, after having heard the whole of Leonard
Dobbin’s account of Jacob’s death, a great
horror took possession of his mind. Many were
the efforts the young lad made to shake off the gloomy
thoughts which came trooping into his mind; but every
thought seemed to have a hundred hooks by which it
clung to the memory, so that once in the mind, it
could not be got rid of again. At length the young
squire lay down upon his bed, trembling as if he had
the ague, and realizing how true are the words, that
“our sin will find us out,” and that “the
way of transgressors is hard.”
At last, to his great relief, the
handle of his door was turned, and old Aggie made
her appearance.
“O Aggie, Aggie,” cried
James Courtenay, “come here. I’m fit
to die, with the horrid thoughts I have, and with
the dreadful things I see. Jim Meyers said I
murdered Jacob Dobbin; and I believe I have, though
I didn’t intend to do it. I wish I had
never gone that way; I wish I had never seen that
rose; I wish there had never been a rose in the world. O
dear, my poor head, my poor head! I think ’twill
burst;” and James Courtenay put his two hands
upon the two sides of his head, as though he wanted
to keep them from splitting asunder.
Aggie saw that there was no use in
speaking while James Courtenay’s head was in
such a state as this. All she could do was to
help him into bed, and give him something to drink, food
he put from him, but drink he asked for again and
again. Water was all he craved, but Aggie was
at last obliged to give over, and say she was afraid
to give him any more.
James Courtenay’s state was
speedily made known to his father, and in a few minutes,
from old Aggie’s conversation with him, the groom
was on his way to a neighbouring town to hasten the
family physician. The latter soon arrived, and,
after a few minutes with James Courtenay, pronounced
him to be in brain fever the end of which,
of course, no man could foresee.
And a fearful fever indeed it was.
Day after day passed in wild delirium. The burden
of all the poor sufferer’s cries and thoughts
was, that he was a murderer. He used to call
himself Cain, and to try to tear the murderer’s
mark out of his forehead. Sometimes he rolled
himself in the sheet, and thought that he was dressed
in a funeral cloak attending Jacob Dobbin’s
funeral, and all the while knowing that he had caused
his death. At times the poor patient would attempt
to spring from his bed; and now he fancied that he
was being whipped with the thorny branches of rose
trees; and now that he was being put in prison for
stealing from a poor man’s garden. At one
time he thought all the tenants on the estate were
hunting him off it with hounds, while he was fleeing
from them on his gray pony as fast as her legs could
carry her; and the next moment his pony was entangled
hopelessly in the branches of little Dobbin’s
rose tree, and the dogs were on him, and the huntsmen
were halloing, and he was about to be devoured.
All these were the terrible ravings of fever; and
very awful it was to see the young squire with his
hair all shaved off, and vinegar rags over his head,
tossing his arms about, and endeavouring at times
to burst from his nurses, and leap out upon the floor.
The one prevailing thought in all the sick boy’s
ravings was Jacob Dobbin’s rose bush. Jacob,
or his rose bush in some form or other, occupied a
prominent part in every vision.
Ah, how terrible are the lashings
of conscience! how terrible the effects of sin!
For what a small gratification did this unhappy youth
bring so much misery upon himself! And is it not
often thus? The apostle says, “What fruit
had ye then in those things whereof ye are now ashamed?”
And what fruit of pleasure had James Courtenay from
his plunder of Jacob Dobbin’s rose? Where
was that rose? It had long since faded; its leaves
were mingled with the dust upon which it had been
thrown; yet for the sake of the transient enjoyment
of possessing that flower a few days before abundance
would have made their appearance in his own garden,
he had brought upon himself all this woe. Poor,
very poor indeed, are the pleasures of sin; and when
they have been enjoyed, they are like the ashes of
a fire that has burned out. Compare James Courtenay’s
present troubles, his torture of mind, his
pain of body, his risk of losing his life, and the
almost momentary enjoyment which he had in plundering
his poor neighbour of his moss-rose, and
see how Satan cheats in his promises of enjoyment
from sin.
Dear young reader! let not Satan persuade
you that there is any profit in sin momentary
pleasure there may indeed be, but it is soon gone,
and then come sorrow and distress. Sin is a sweet
cup with bitter dregs, and he who drinks the little
sweet that there is, must drink the dregs also.
Moments of sin may cause years of sorrow.
For many days James Courtenay hung
between life and death; night and day he was watched
by skilful physicians, but they could do very little
more than let the disease run its course. At length
a change for the better appeared; the unhappy boy
fell into a long sleep, and when he opened his eyes
his disease was gone. But it had left him in a
truly pitiable state. It was a sad sight to see
the once robust boy now very little better than a
skeleton; to hear the once loud voice now no stronger
than a mere whisper; and instead of the mass of brown
curly hair, to behold nothing but linen rags which
swathed the shaven head.
But all this Squire Courtenay did
not so much mind; his son’s life was spared,
and he made no doubt but that care and attention would
soon fatten him up again, and the curly locks would
grow as luxuriantly as they did before. Old Aggie,
too, was full of joy; the boy that she had nursed
so tenderly, and for whom she had had such long anxiety,
was not cut off in the midst of his sins, and he might
perhaps have his heart changed and grow up to be a
good man. And what an opportunity was this for
trying to impress his mind! Old Aggie was determined
that it should not be lost, and she hoped that the
young squire might yet prove a blessing, and not a
curse, to those amongst whom he lived.
There were not wanting many upon Squire
Courtenay’s estate who would have been very
glad if the young squire had never recovered.
They had tasted a little of his bad character, and
they feared that if he grew up to inherit the property,
he would prove a tyrannical landlord to them.
But amongst these was not to be reckoned old Leonard
Dobbin. True, he had suffered terribly indeed
more than any one else from James Courtenay’s
evil ways; but he did not on that account wish him
dead far from it. It was old Leonard’s
great fear lest the young squire should die in his
sins, and no one asked more earnestly about the invalid
than this good old man.
As it was necessary that the sick
boy should be kept as quiet as possible, no one went
near his room except old Aggie and those whose services
could not be dispensed with. Old Aggie alone was
allowed to talk to the invalid, and a long time would
have elapsed before she could venture to speak of
the circumstances which had brought about this dreadful
illness, had not the young squire himself entered on
the subject.
“Aggie,” said he one morning,
after he had lain a long time quite still, “I
have been dreaming a beautiful dream.”
This was quite delightful to the old
nurse, who for many long days had heard of nothing
but visions of the most frightful kind.
“I saw a rose bush ”
“Hush, hush, Master James,”
said Aggie, terrified lest the dreadful subject should
come uppermost again, and once more bring on the delirium
and a relapse of the fever.
“No, no, Aggie, I cannot hush;
it was a beautiful dream, and it has done me more
good than all the doctor’s medicine. I saw
a rose bush a moss-rose and
it had one bud upon it, and sitting under the bud was
little Jacob Dobbin. O Aggie, it was the same
Jacob that used to be down at the cottage, for I knew
his face; but he was beautiful, instead of sickly-looking;
and instead of being all ragged, he was dressed in
something like silver. I wanted to run away from
him, but he looked so kindly at me that I could not
stir; and at last he beckoned to me, and I stood quite
close to him; and only he looked so softly at me, I
must have been dazzled by the light on his face and
his silvery clothes.
“I did not feel as though I
dared to speak to him; but at last he spoke to me,
and his voice was as soft as a flute, and he said,
’All the roses on earth fade and wither, but
nothing fades or withers in the happy place where
I now live; and oh, do not be anxious to possess the
withering, fading flowers, but walk on the road that
leads to my happy home, where everything is bright
for ever and ever.’
“Aggie, Aggie,” said James
Courtenay, who saw his nurse’s anxious face,
and that she was about to stop his speaking any more,
“it is no use to try to stop my telling you
all about it. My head has been so strange of
late, that I forget everything, and I am afraid of
forgetting this dream; so I must tell it now, and
you are to write it down, that I may have it to read,
if it should slip out of my mind. Jacob Dobbin
said, ’You are not now in the right
road; but ask Jesus to pardon your sins, and then
go and love everybody just as Jesus loved you; and
try to make every one happy, and do good morning,
noon, and night, and try to scatter some flowers of
happiness in every place to which you go; and then
you shall be with me in the land where all is bright.’
And I thought Jacob pulled the one moss-rose, and
gave it to me, and said, ’This is an earthly
rose; keep it as long and as carefully as you will,
it will fade at last; but our flowers never fade:
try, O try, to come to them.’ I heard music,
Aggie, or something like music, or perhaps like a
stream flowing along, and I felt something like the
summer breeze upon my cheeks, and Jacob was gone,
and there I stood with the rose in my hand.
“Write it down, Aggie,”
said the invalid, “exactly as I have told you;”
and having said this, James Courtenay dropped off into
a doze again.
Some days intervened between this
reference to what had passed and the next conversation
upon the subject, in which James Courtenay told Aggie who
had to listen much against her will what
he thought about this wonderful dream.
“I know the meaning of that
dream,” said James Courtenay to his nurse.
“I do not want any one to explain it to me; I
can tell all about it. The meaning is, that I
must become a changed boy, or I shall never go to
heaven when I die; and all the good things which I
have here are not to be compared with those which
are to be had there. What Jacob said was, that
all these things are fading, and I must seek for what
is better than anything here.
“Aggie,” said James Courtenay,
“you often think I am asleep when I am not;
and you think I scarcely have my mind about me yet,
when I lie so long quite still, looking away into
the blue sky: but I am thinking; I am always
thinking, and very often I am praying asking
forgiveness for the past, and hoping that I shall
be changed for the future.”
“But we can’t do much
by hoping,” said Aggie, “and we can’t
do anything by ourselves.”
“I mean to do more than hope,”
said James Courtenay; “I mean to try.”
“And you mean, I trust, to ask
God’s Spirit to help you?” said Aggie.
“Yes, every day,” said
James. “He helped Jacob, and he’ll
help me; and I hope to be yet where Jacob is now.”
“Ay, he helps the poor,”
said Aggie, “and he’ll help the rich.
Jacob had his trials, and you’ll have yours;
and perhaps yours are the hardest, so far as going
to heaven is concerned; for the rich have a temptation
in every acre of land and in every guinea they have.
Our Lord says that ‘’tis hard for a rich
man to enter into the kingdom of heaven.’”
For many days James Courtenay thus
pondered and prayed, with Aggie as his chief companion
and instructor, and at length he was able to leave
his room. But he was a different James Courtenay
from the one who had entered that room some months
before. The young squire was still pale and thin;
but this was not the chief change observable in him, he
was silent and thoughtful in his manner, and gentle
and kind to every one around. The loud voice
which once rang so imperiously and impatiently through
the corridors was now heard no more; the hand was not
lifted to strike, and often gratitude was expressed
for any attention that was shown. The servants
looked at each other and wondered; they could scarcely
hope that such a change would last; and when their
young master returned to full health and strength,
they quite expected the old state of things to return
again. But they were mistaken. The change
in James Courtenay was a real one; it was founded
on something more substantial than the transient feelings
of illness, he was changed in his heart.
And very soon he learnt by experience
the happiness which true religion brings with it.
Instead of being served unwillingly by the servants
around, every one was anxious to please him; and he
almost wondered at times whether these could be the
servants with whom he had lived all his life.
They now, indeed, gave a service of love; and a service
of love is as different from a service of mere duty
as day is from night.
Wherever the young squire had most
displayed his passionate temper, there he made a point
of going, for the sake of speaking kindly, and undoing
so far as he could the evil he had already done.
He kept ever in mind what he had heard from Jacob
Dobbin in his dream, that there was not
only a Saviour by whom alone he could be saved from
his sins, but also that there was a road on which
it was necessary to walk; a road which ran through
daily life; a road on which loving deeds were to be
done, and loving words spoken; the road
of obedience to the mind of Christ. James Courtenay
well knew that obedience could not save him; but he
well knew also that obedience was required from such
as were saved by pure grace.
Altered as James Courtenay undoubtedly
was, and earnest as he felt to become different to
what he had been in olden time, he could not shake
off from his mind the sad memory of the past.
His mind was continually brooding upon poor little
Dobbin’s death, and upon the share which he
had in it. For now he knew all the truth.
He had seen old Leonard, and sat with him for many
hours; and at his earnest request the old man had
told him all the truth. “Keep nothing back
from me,” said the young squire, as he sat by
old Leonard’s humble fire-place, with his face
covered with his hands; and over and over again had
the old man to repeat the same story, and to call
to mind every word that his departed son had said.
“What shall I do, Leonard, to
show my sorrow?” asked James Courtenay one day.
“Will you go and live in a new house, if I get
papa to build one for you?”
“Thank you, young squire,”
said Leonard; “it was here that Jacob was born
and died, and this will do for me well enough as long
as I’m here. And it don’t distress
me much, Master James, about its being a poor kind
of a place, for I’m only here for a while, and
I’ve a better house up yonder.”
“Ay,” said James Courtenay,
“and Jacob is up yonder; but I fear, with all
my striving, I shall never get there; and what good
will all my fine property do me for ever so many years,
if at the end of all I am shut out of the happy land?”
“Master James, you need not
be shut out,” said old Dobbin; and he pulled
down the worn Bible from the shelf; “no, no;
you need not be shut out. Here is the verse that
secured poor Jacob’s inheritance, and here is
the verse that by God’s grace secures mine,
and it may secure yours too;” and the old man
read out the passage in 1 John , “The blood
of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all
sin.” “All, all!” cried old
Dobbin, his voice rising as he proceeded, for his heart
was on fire; “from murder, theft, lying, stealing, everything,
everything! Oh, what sinners are now in glory! sinners
no longer, but saints, washed in the precious blood!
Oh, how many are there now on earth waiting to be taken
away and be for ever with the Lord! I am bad,
Master James; my heart is full of sin in itself; but
the blood of Jesus cleanseth from all sin; and
whatever you have done may be all washed out; only
cast yourself, body and soul, on Christ.”
“But how could I ever meet Jacob
in heaven?” murmured the young squire from between
his hands, in which he had buried his face; “when
I saw him, must not I feel I murdered him? ay, I was
the cause of his misery and death, all for the sake
of one fading, worthless flower!”
“Don’t call it worthless,
Master James; ’twas God’s creature, and
very beautiful while it lasted; and you can’t
call a thing worthless that gave a human being as
much pleasure as that rose gave poor Jacob. But
whatever it was, it will make no hindrance to Jacob
meeting you in heaven, ay, and welcoming
you there, too. If you reach that happy place,
I’ll be bound Jacob will meet you with a smile,
and will welcome you with a song into the happy land.”
“Well, ’tis hard to understand,”
said James Courtenay.
“Yes, yes, Master James, hard
to our poor natures, but easy to those who are quite
like their Saviour, as Jacob is now. When He was
upon earth he taught his followers to forgive, and
to love their enemies, and to do good to such as used
them despitefully; and we may be sure that, now they
are with him, and are made like him, they carry out
all he would have them do, and they are all he would
have them be. I don’t believe that there
is one in heaven that would be more glad to see you,
Master James, than my poor boy, if I may
call him my poor boy, seeing he’s now in glory.”
Many were the conversations of this
kind which passed between old Leonard and the young
squire, and gradually the latter obtained more peace
in his mind. True, he could never divest himself
of the awful thought that he had been the immediate
cause of his humble neighbour’s death; but he
dwelt very much upon that word “all,” and
Aggie repeated old Leonard’s lessons, and by
degrees he was able to lay even his great trouble
upon his Saviour.
But all that James Courtenay had gone
through had told fearfully upon his health. His
long and severe illness, followed by so much mental
anxiety and trouble, laid in him the seeds of consumption.
His friends, who watched him anxiously, saw that as
weeks rolled on he gained no strength, and at length
it was solemnly announced by the physician that he
was in consumption. There were symptoms which
made it likely that the disease would assume a very
rapid form. And so it did. The young squire
began to waste almost visibly before the eyes of those
around, and it soon became evident, not only that
his days were numbered, but that they must be very
few. And so they were. Three weeks saw the
little invalid laid upon his bed, with no prospect
of rising from it again. At his own earnest request
he was told what his condition really was; and when
he heard it, not a tear started in his eye, not a
murmur escaped his lips. One request, and one
only, did the dying boy prefer; and that was, that
Leonard Dobbin should be admitted to his room as often
as he wished to see him. And this was very often;
as James had only intervals of wakefulness, it became
necessary that the old man should be always at hand,
so as to be ready at any hour of the day or night,
and at length he slept in a closet off the sick boy’s
room. And with Leonard came the old worn Bible.
The good old labourer was afraid, with his rough hands,
to touch the richly bound and gilt volume that was
brought up from the library; he knew every page in
his own well-thumbed old book, and in that he read,
and from that he discoursed. The minister of the
parish came now and again; but when he heard of what
use old Leonard had been to the young squire, he said
that God could use the uneducated man as well as the
one that was well-learned, and he rejoiced that by
any instrumentality, however humble, God had in grace
and mercy wrought upon the soul of this wayward boy.
At length the period of the young
squire’s life came to be numbered, not by days,
but hours, and his father sat by his dying bed.
“Papa,” said the dying
boy, “I shall soon be gone, and when I am dying
I shall want to think of Christ and of holy things
alone; you will do, I know, what I want
when I am gone.”
Squire Courtenay pressed his son’s
hand, and told him he would do anything, everything
he wished.
“You remember that grandmamma
left me some money when she died; give Leonard Dobbin
as much every year as will support him; and give him
my gray pony that he may be carried about, for he
is getting too old to work; and” and
it seemed as though the dying boy had to summon up
all his strength to say it “bury
me, not in our own grand vault, but by Jacob Dobbin’s
grave; and put up a monument in our church to Jacob,
and cut upon it a broken rose; and let the rose bush
be planted close to where poor Jacob lies ”
The young squire could say no more,
and it was a long time before he spoke again; when
he did, it was evident that he was fast departing to
another world. With the little strength at his
command, the dying boy muttered old Leonard’s
name; and in a moment the aged Christian, with his
Bible in his hand, stood by the bedside.
“Read, read,” whispered
Aggie the nurse; “he is pointing to your Bible, he
wants you to read; and read quickly, Leonard, for he
soon won’t be able to hear.”
And Leonard, opening his Bible at
the well-known place, read aloud, “The blood
of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin.”
“All, all,” whispered the dying
boy.
“All, all,” responded the old man.
“All, all,” faintly
echoed the dying boy, and in a few moments no sound
was heard in the sick-room James Courtenay
had departed to realize the truth of the words, that
“the blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth from all
sin.”
Next to the chief mourners at the
funeral walked old Leonard Dobbin; and close by the
poor crippled Jacob’s grave they buried James
Courtenay so close that the two graves
seemed almost one. And when a little time had
elapsed, the squire had a handsome tomb placed over
his son, which covered in the remains of poor Jacob
too, and at the head of it was planted the moss-rose
tree. And he put up a tablet to poor Jacob’s
memory in the church, and a broken rose was sculptured
in a little round ornament at the bottom of it.
And now the old Hall is without an
heir, and the squire without a son. But there
is good hope that the squire thinks of a better world,
and that he would rather have his boy safe in heaven
than here amid the temptations of riches again.
Oh, what a wonder that there is mercy
for the greatest sinners! but oh, what misery comes
of sin! “The wages of sin is death; but
the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ
our Lord.”