“But there be million hearts accurst,
where no sweet sunbursts shine,
And there be million hearts athirst for
Love’s immortal wine;
This world is full of beauty, as other
worlds above,
And if we did our duty, it might be full
of love.”
Peace had unbroken reign at Plassy
from that time. Eleanor threw herself again eagerly
into all her aunt’s labours and schemes for the
good and comfort of those around her. There was
plenty to do; and she was Mrs. Caxton’s excellent
helper. Powis came into requisition anew; and
as before, Eleanor traversed the dales and the hills
on her various errands, swift and busy. That
was not the only business going. Her aunt and
she returned to their old literary habits, and read
books and talked; and it was hard if Eleanor in her
rides over the hills and over the meadows and along
the streams did not bring back one hand full of wild
flowers. She dressed the house with them, getting
help from the garden when necessary; botanized a good
deal; and began to grow as knowing in plants almost
as Mrs. Caxton herself. She would come home loaded
with wild thyme and gorse and black bryony and saxifrage
and orchis flowers, having scoured hill and meadow
and robbed the hedge-rows for them, which also gave
her great tribute of wild roses. Then later came
crimson campion and eyebright, dog roses and honeysuckles,
columbine and centaury, grasses of all kinds, and
harebell, and a multitude impossible to name; though
the very naming is pleasant. Eleanor lived very
much out of doors, and was likened by her aunt to
a rural Flora or Proserpine that summer; though when
in the house she was just the most sonsy, sensible,
companionable little earthly maiden that could be
fancied. Eleanor was not under size indeed; but
so much like her own wild flowers in pure simpleness
and sweet natural good qualities that Mrs. Caxton
was sometimes inclined to bestow the endearing diminutive
upon her; so sound and sweet she was.
“And what are all these?”
said Mrs. Caxton one day stopping before an elegant
basket.
“Don’t you like them?”
“Very much. Why you have got a good many
kinds here.”
“That is Hart’s Tongue,
you know that is wall spleenwort, and that
is the other kind; handsome things are they not?”
“And this?”
“That is the forked spleenwort.
You don’t know it? I rode away, away up
the mountain for it yesterday That is where I got those
Woodsia’s too aren’t they beautiful?
I was gay to find those; they are not common.”
“No. And this is not common, to me.”
“Don’t you know it, aunt
Caxton? It grows just it the spray of a waterfall this
and this; they are polypodies. That is another that
came from the old round tower.”
“And where did you get these? these
waterfall ferns?”
“I got them at the Bandel of Helig.”
“There? My dear child! how could you, without
risk?”
“Without much risk, aunty.”
“How did you ever know the Bandel?”
“I have been there before, aunt Caxton.”
“I think I never shewed it to you?”
“No ma’am; but Mr. Rhys did.”
His name had scarcely been mentioned
before since Eleanor had come to the farm. It
was mentioned now with a cognizance of that fact.
Mrs. Caxton was silent a little.
“Why have you put these green
things here without a rose or two? they are all alone
in their greenness.”
“I like them better so, aunty.
They are beautiful enough by themselves; but if you
put a rose there, you cannot help looking at it.”
Mrs. Caxton smiled and turned away.
One thing in the midst of all these
natural explorations, remained unused; and that a
thing most likely, one would have thought, to be applied
to for help. The microscope stood on one side
apparently forgotten. It always stood there,
in the sitting parlour, in full view; but nobody seemed
to be conscious of its existence. Eleanor never
touched it; Mrs. Caxton never spoke of it.
From home meantime, Eleanor heard
little that was satisfactory. Julia was the only
one that wrote, and her letters gave painful subjects
for thought. Her father was very unlike himself,
Julia said, and growing more feeble and more ill every
day; though by slow degrees. She wished Eleanor
would write her letters without any religion in them;
for she supposed that was what her mother would
not let her read; so she never had the comfort of
seeing Eleanor’s letters for herself, but Mrs.
Powle read aloud bits from them. “Very little
bits, too,” added Julia, “I guess your
letters have more religion in them than anything else.
But you see it is no use.” Eleanor read
this passage aloud to Mrs. Caxton.
“Is that true, Eleanor?”
“No, ma’am. I write
to Julia of everything that I do, all day long, and
of everything and everybody that interests me.
What mamma does not like comes in, of course, with
it all; but I do very little preaching, aunt Caxton.”
“I would go on just so, my dear.
I would not alter the style of my letters.”
So the flowers of June were replaced
by the flowers of July; and the beauties of July gave
place to the purple “ling” of August, with
gentian and centaury and St. John’s wort; and
then came the Autumn changes, with the less delicate
blossoms of that later time, amidst which the eclipsed
meadow-sweet came quite into favour again. Still
Eleanor brought wild things from the hills and the
streams, though she applied more now to Mrs. Caxton’s
home store in the garden; wild mints and Artemisias
and the Michaelmas daisy still came home with her from
her rides and walks; the rides and walks in which Eleanor
was a ministering angel to many a poor house, many
an ignorant soul and many a failing or ailing body.
Then came October; and with the first
days of October the news that her father was dead.
It added much bitterness to Eleanor’s
grief, that Mrs. Powle entirely declined to have her
come home, even for a brief stay. If she chose
to submit to conditions, her mother wrote, she would
be welcome; it was not too late; but if she held to
her perversity, she must bear the consequences.
She did not own her nor want her. She gave her
up to her aunt Caxton. Her remaining daughter
was in her hands, and she meant to keep her there.
Eleanor, she knew, if she came home would come to sow
rebellion. She should not come to do that, either
then or at all.
Mildly quiet and decided Mrs. Powle’s
letter was; very decided, and so cool as to give every
assurance the decision would be persisted in.
Eleanor felt this very much. She kept on her usual
way of life without any variation; but the radiant
bright look of her face was permanently saddened.
She was just as sweet and companionable an assistant
to her aunt as ever; but from month to month Mrs.
Caxton saw that a shadow lay deep upon her heart.
No shadow could have less of anything like hard edges.
They had been sitting at work one
night late in the winter, those two, the aunt and
the niece; and having at last put up her work Eleanor
sat gravely poring into the red coals on the hearth;
those thought-provoking, life-stirring, strange things,
glowing and sparkling between life and death like
ourselves. Eleanor’s face was very sober.
“Aunt Caxton,” she said
at length, “my life seems such a confusion
to me!”
“So everything seems that we
do not understand,” Mrs. Caxton said.
“But is it not, aunty?
I seem taken from everything that I ought most naturally
to do papa, Julia, mamma. I feel like
a banished person, I suppose; only I have the strange
feeling of being banished from my place in the world.”
“What do you think of such a
life as Mr. Rhys is leading?”
“I think it is straight, and
beautiful,” Eleanor answered, looking
still into the fire. “Nothing can be further
from confusion. He is in his place.”
“He is in a sort of banishment, however.”
“Not from that! And it
is voluntary banishment for his Master’s
sake. That is not sorrowful, aunt Caxton.”
“Not when the Lord’s banished
ones make their home in him. And I do not doubt
but Mr. Rhys does that.”
“Have you ever heard from him, aunt Caxton.”
“Not yet. It is almost time, I think.”
“It is almost a year and a half since he went.”
“The communication is slow and
uncertain,” said Mrs. Caxton. “They
do not get letters there, often, till they are a year
old.”
“How impossible it used to be
to me,” said Eleanor, “to comprehend such
a life; how impossible to understand, that anybody
should leave home and friends and comfort, and take
his place voluntarily in distance and danger and heathendom.
It was an utter enigma to me.”
“And you understand it now?”
“O yes, aunty,” Eleanor
went on in the same tone; and she had not ceased gazing
into the coals; “I see that Christ
is all; and with him one is never alone, and under
his hand one can never be in danger. I know now
how his love keeps one even from fear.”
“You are no coward naturally.”
“No, aunt Caxton not
about ordinary things, except when conscience made
me so, some time ago.”
“That is over now?”
Eleanor took her eyes from the fire,
to give Mrs. Caxton a smile with the words “Thank
the Lord!”
“Mr. Rhys is among scenes that
might try any natural courage,” said Mrs. Caxton.
“They are a desperate set of savages to whom
he is ministering.”
“What a glory, to carry the name of Christ to
them!”
“They are hearing it, too,”
said Mrs. Caxton. “But there is enough of
the devil’s worst work going on there to try
any tender heart; and horrors enough to shock stout
nerves. So it has been. I hope Mr. Rhys
finds it better.”
“I don’t know much about
them,” said Eleanor. “Are they much
worse than savages in general, aunt Caxton?”
“I think they are, and
better too, in being more intellectually developed.
Morally, I think I never read of a lower fallen set
of human beings. Human life is of no account;
such a thing as respect to humanity is unknown, for
the eating of human bodies has gone on to a most wonderful
extent, and the destroying them for that purpose.
With all that, there is a very careful respect paid
to descent and rank; but it is the observance of fear.
That one fact gives you the key to the whole.
Where a man is thought of no more worth than to be
killed and eaten, a woman is not thought worth anything
at all; and society becomes a lively representation
of the infernal regions, without the knowledge and
without the remorse.”
“Poor creatures!” said Eleanor.
“You comprehend that there must
be a great deal of trial to a person of fine sensibilities,
in making a home amongst such a people, for an indefinite
length of time.”
“Yes, aunty, but the Lord will make
it all up to him.”
“Blessed be the name of the
Lord!” it was Mrs. Caxton’s turn to answer;
and she said it with deep feeling and emphasis.
“It seems the most glorious
thing to me, aunt Caxton, to tell the love of Christ
to those that don’t know it. I wish I could
do it.”
“My love, you do.”
“I do very little, ma’am. I wish
I could do a thousand times more!”
The conversation stopped there.
Both ladies remained very gravely thoughtful a little
while longer and then separated for the night.
But the next evening when they were seated at tea
alone, Mrs. Caxton recurred to the subject.
“You said last night, Eleanor,
that you wished you could do a great deal more work
of a certain kind than you do.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“Did your words mean, my love,
that you are discontented with your own sphere of
duty, or find it too narrow?”
Eleanor’s eyes opened a little
at that. “Aunt Caxton, I never thought
of such a thing. I do not remember that I was
considering my own sphere of duty at all. I was
thinking of the pleasure of preaching Christ yes,
and the glory and honour to such poor wretches
as those we were talking of, who have never had a
glimpse of the truth before.”
“Then for your part you are satisfied with England?”
“Why yes, ma’am.
I am satisfied, I think, I mean to be, with
any place that is given me. I should be sorry
to choose for myself.”
“But if you had a clear call,
you would like it, to go to the Cape of Good Hope
and teach the Hottentots?”
“I do not mean that, aunty,”
said Eleanor laughing a little. “Surely
you do not suspect me of any wandering romantic notion
about doing the Lord’s work in one place rather
than in another. I would rather teach English
people than Hottentots. But if I saw that my place
was at the Cape of Good Hope, I would go there.
If my place were there, some way would be possible
for me to get there, I suppose.”
“You would have no fear?” said Mrs. Caxton.
“No aunty; I think not.
Ever since I can say ’The Lord is my Shepherd ’
I have done with fear.”
“My love, I should be very sorry
to have you go to the Cape of Good Hope. I am
glad there is no prospect of it. But you are right
about not choosing. As soon as we go where we
are not sent, we are at our own charges.”
The door here opened, and the party
and the tea-table received an accession of one to
their number. It was an elderly, homely gentleman,
to whom Mrs. Caxton gave a very cordial reception and
whom she introduced to Eleanor as the Rev. Mr. Morrison.
He had a pleasant face, Eleanor saw, and as soon as
he spoke, a pleasant manner.
“I ought to be welcome, ma’am,”
he said, rubbing his hands with the cold as he sat
down. “I bring you letters from Brother
Rhys.”
“You are welcome without that,
brother, as you know,” Mrs. Caxton answered.
“But the letters are welcome. Of how late
date are they?”
“Some pretty old some
not more than nine or ten months ago; when he had
been stationed a good while.”
“How is he?”
“Well, he says; never better.”
“And happy?”
“I wish I was as happy!”
said Mr. Morrison. “He had got fast
hold of his work already.”
“He would do that immediately.”
“He studied the language on
shipboard, all the way out; and he was able to hold
a service in it for the natives only a few weeks after
he had landed. Don’t you call that energy?”
“There is energy wherever he is,” said
Mrs. Caxton.
“Yes, you know him pretty well.
I suppose they never have it so cold out there as
we have it to-night,” Mr. Morrison said rubbing
his hands. “It’s stinging! That
fire is the pleasantest thing I have seen to-day.”
“Where is Mr. Rhys stationed?”
“I forget one of
the islands down there, with an unintelligible name.
Horrid places!”
“Is the place itself disagreeable?” Eleanor
asked.
“The place itself, ma’am,”
said Mr. Morrison, his face stiffening from its genial
unbent look into formality as he turned to her, “the
place itself I do not understand to be very disagreeable;
it is the character of the population which must make
it a hard place to live in. They are exceedingly
debased. Vile people!”
“Mr. Rhys is not alone on his station?”
said Mrs Caxton.
“No, he is with Mr. and Mrs. Lefferts.
His letters will tell you.”
For the letters Mrs. Caxton was evidently
impatient; but Mr. Morrison’s refreshment had
first to be attended to. Only fair; for he had
come out of his way on purpose to bring them to her;
and being one of a certain Committee he had it in
his power to bring for her perusal and pleasure more
than her own letters from Mr. Rhys, and more than Mr.
Rhys’s own letters to the Committee. It
was a relief to two of the party when Mr. Morrison’s
cups of tea were at last disposed of, and the far-come
despatches were brought out on the green table-cloth
under the light of the lamp.
With her hand on her own particular
packet of letters, as if so much communication with
them could not be put off, Mrs. Caxton sat and listened
to Mr. Morrison’s reading. Eleanor had got
her work. As the particular interest which made
the reading so absorbing to them may possibly be shared
in a slight degree by others, it is fair to give a
slight notion of the character of the news contained
in those closely written pages. The letters Mr.
Morrison read were voluminous; from different persons
on different stations of the far-off mission field.
They told of difficulties great, and encouragements
greater; of their work and its results; and of their
most pressing wants; especially the want of more men
to help. The work they said was spreading faster
than they could keep up with it. Thousands of
heathen had given up heathenism, who in miserable
ignorance cried for Christian instruction; children
as wild as the wild birds, wanted teaching and were
willing to have it; native teachers needed training,
who had the will without the knowledge to aid in the
service. Thirty of them, Mr. Lefferts said, he
had under his care. With all this, they told of
the wonderful beauty of the regions where their field
of labour was. Mr. Lefferts wrote of a little
journey lately taken to another part of his island,
which had led him through almost every variety of
natural luxuriance. Mountains and hills and valleys,
rivers and little streams, rich woods and mangrove
swamps. Mr. Lefferts’ journey had been,
like Paul’s of old, to establish the native
churches formed at different small places by the way.
There he married couples and baptized children and
met classes and told the truth. At one place
where he had preached, married several couples, baptized
over thirty, young and old, and met as many in classes,
Mr. Lefferts told of a walk he took. It led him
to the top of a little hill, from which a rich view
was to be had, while a multitude of exquisite shrubs
in flower gave another refreshment in their delicious
fragrance. A little stream running down the side
of the hill was used by the natives to water their
plantations of taro, for which the side hill was formed
into terraced beds. Paroquets and humming birds
flew about, and the sun was sinking brilliantly in
the western ocean line as he looked. So far,
everything was fair, sweet, lovely; a contrast to
what he met when he reached the lower grounds again.
There the swarms of mosquitos compelled Mr. Lefferts
to retreat for the night within a curtain canopy for
protection; and thither he was followed by a fat savage
who shared the protection with him all night long.
Another sort of experience! and another sort of neighbourhood
from that of the starry white Gardenia flowers
on the top of the hill.
Nevertheless, of a neighbouring station
Mr. Rhys wrote that the people were at war, and the
most horrible heathen practices were going on.
At the principal town, he said, more people were eaten
perhaps than anywhere else in the islands. The
cruelties and the horrors were impossible to be told.
A few days before he wrote, twenty-eight persons had
been killed and eaten in one day. They had been
caught fishing taken prisoners and brought
home half killed, and in that state thrown
into the ovens; still having life enough left to try
to get away from the fire.
“The first time I saw anything
of this kind,” wrote Mr. Rhys, “was one
evening when we had just finished a class-meeting.
The evening was most fair and peaceful as we came
out of the house; a fresh air from the sea had relieved
the heat of the day; the leaves of the trees were
glittering in the sunlight; the ocean all sparkling
under the breeze; when word came that some bodies
of slain people were bringing from Lauthala.
I could hardly understand the report, or credit it;
but presently the horrible procession came in sight,
and eleven dead bodies were laid on the ground immediately
before us. Eleven only were brought to this village;
but great numbers are said to have been killed.
Their crime was the killing of one man; and when they
would have submitted themselves and made amends, all
this recompense of death was demanded by the offended
chief. The manner in which these wretched creatures
were treated is not a thing to be described; they were
not handled with the respect which we give to brute
animals. The natives have looked dark upon us
since that time, and give us reason to know that as
far as they are concerned our lives are not safe.
But we know in whose hands our lives are; they are
the Lord’s; and he will do with them what he
pleases not what the heathen please.
So we are under no concern about it.”
That storm appeared to have passed
away; for in later letters Mr. Rhys and Mr. Lefferts
spoke of acceptable services among the people and an
evidently manifested feeling of trust and good will
on their part towards the missionaries. Indeed
these were often able to turn the natives from their
devilish purposes and save life. Not always.
The old king of that part of the country had died,
and all the influence and all the offers of compensation
made by the missionaries, could not prevent the slaughter
of half a dozen women, his wives, to do him honour
in his burial. The scene as Mr. Lefferts described
it was heart-sickening.
As he drew near the door of the king’s
house, with the intent to prevail for the right or
to protest against the wrong, he saw the biers standing
ready; and so knew that all the efforts previously
made to hinder the barbarous rites had been unavailing.
The house as he entered was in the hush of death.
One woman lay strangled. Another sitting on the
floor, covered with a large veil, was in the hands
of her murderers. A cord was passed twice round
her neck, and the ends were held on each side of her
by a group of eight or ten strong men, the two groups
pulling opposite ways. She was dead, the poor
victim underneath the veil, in a minute or two after
the missionaries entered; and the veil being taken
off they saw that it was a woman who had professed
Christianity. Her sons were among those who had
strangled her. Another woman came forward with
great shew of bravery when her name was called; offered
her hand to the missionaries as she passed them; and
with great pride of bearing submitted herself to the
death which probably she knew she could not avoid.
Everybody was quiet and cheerful, and the whole thing
went on with the undisturbed order of a recognized
and accustomed necessity; only the old king’s
son, the reigning chief for a long time back, was
very uneasy at the part he was playing before the
missionaries; he was the only trembling or doubtful
one there. Yet he would not yield the point.
Pride before all; his father must not be buried without
the due honours of his position. Mr. Rhys and
Mr. Lefferts had staid to make their protest and offer
their entreaties and warnings, to the very last; and
then heart-sick and almost faint with the disgusting
scene, had returned home.
Yet the influence of the truth was
increasing and the good work was spreading and growing
around them, steadily and in every direction.
A great many had renounced heathenism; not a small
number were earnest Christians and shewed the truth
of their religion in their changed lives. A great
number of reports proved this.
“It is work that tries what
stuff men’s hearts are of, however,” remarked
Mr. Morrison as he folded up one packet of letters.
Neither of his hearers made him any answer. Mrs.
Caxton sat opposite to him, deeply attentive but silent,
with her hand always lying upon her own particular
packet. Eleanor had turned a little away and sat
with her side face towards Mr. Morrison, looking into
the fire. Her work was dropped; she sat motionless.
“I have a letter to read you
now of a later date,” Mr. Morrison went on, “from
Mr. Rhys, which shews how well he has got hold of the
people and how much he is regarded by them already.
It shews the influence gained by the truth, too, which
is working there fast.”
After giving some details of business
and of his labours, Mr. Rhys wrote “My
last notable piece of work, has been in the character
of an ambassador of peace not heavenly
but earthly. News was brought four or five days
ago that the heathen inhabitants of two neighbouring
districts had engaged in open hostilities. Home
business claimed me one day; the next morning I set
out on my mission, with one or two Christian natives.
The desolations of war soon met our eyes, in destroyed
crops and a deserted village. Nobody was to be
seen. I and those who were with me sat down in
the shade of some trees, while a native went to find
the inhabitants who had hid themselves in a thicket
of mangroves. As soon as the chief heard
that I was there, and what I had come for, he declared
he would be a Christian forthwith; and four or five
of his principal men followed his example. They
came to me, and entered fully into my object; and
it was decided that we should go on immediately to
the fortress where those who wished to carry on war
had intrenched themselves. We got there just
as the sun was setting; and from that time till midnight
I was engaged in what I saw now for the first time;
a savage council of war. Grim black warriors covered
with black powder sat or stood about, on a little
clear spot of ground where the moon shone down; muskets
and clubs and spears lay on the glass and were scattered
about among the boles of the trees; a heathen-looking
scene. Till midnight we talked, and hard talking
too; then it was ended as I had prayed it might.
The party with whom I was had suffered already in
battle and had not had their revenge; it was difficult
to give that up; but at last the chief got up and
put his hand in mine. ’I should like to
be a heathen a little longer,’ he said, ’but
I will lotu as you so earnestly entreat me.’
Lotu is their name for embracing Christianity.
Another young warrior joined him; and there under
the midnight moon, we worshipped God; those two and
those who were with me. In another part of the
village a dozen women for the first time bowed the
knee in the same worship.
“So far was well; but it yet
remained to induce the opposite hostile party to agree
to peace; you understand only one side was yet persuaded.
Early the next morning I set about it. Here a
difficulty met me. The Christian chiefs made
no objection to going with me to parley with their
enemies; but I wanted the company also of another,
the chief of this district; knowing it very important.
And he was afraid to go. He told me so plainly.
‘If I do as you ask me,’ said he, ’I
am a dead man this day.’ I did my best
to make him think differently; a hundred men declared
that they would die in defence of him; and at last
I gained my point. Tui Mbua agreed to go to the
neighbourhood of the hostile town, if I would bring
its principal men to meet him at an appointed place.
So we went. This chosen place was a fine plot
of ground enclosed by magnificent chestnut trees.
I went on to the town, with a few unarmed men.
The people received us well; but it was difficult
to make the old heathen, brought up on treachery and
falsehood, believe that I was to be trusted. But
in the end the chief and twenty of his men consented
to go with us, and left their arms at home. They
did it with forebodings, for I overheard an old man
say, as we set out from the place, ’We
shall see death to-day.’ I lifted my voice
and cried, ‘To-day we live!’ They took
up the words, and heart at the same time, and repeated,
’To-day we live’ to encourage
themselves, I suppose, as we went towards the chestnut-tree
meeting ground.
“I felt that the peace of the
whole region depended on what was to be done there,
and for my part went praying that all might go well.
It was an anxious moment when we entered the open
place; any ill-looks in either party would chase away
trust front the other. As we went in I watched
the chief who accompanied me. He gently bowed
to Tui Mbua and approached him with due and evidently
honest respect. My heart leaped at that moment.
Tui Mbua looked at him keenly, sprang to his feet,
and casting his arms about his enemy’s neck
gave him a warm embrace. The people around shouted
for joy; I was still, I believe, for the very depth
of mine. One of the Christian chiefs spoke out
and cried, ’We thank thee, O Lord, for thus
bringing thy creatures into the way of life;’
and he wept aloud for very gladness.
“After that we had speechifying;
and I returned home very full of thankful joy.”
This was the last letter read.
Mr. Morrison folded up his packet amid a great silence.
Mrs. Caxton seemed thoughtful; Eleanor was motionless.
“He is doing good work,”
remarked Mr. Morrison; “but it is hard work.
He is the right sort of man to go there fears
nothing, shirks nothing. So are they all, I believe;
but almost all the rest of them have their wives with
them. How came Rhys to go alone?”
“He does not write as if he
felt lonely,” said Mrs. Caxton.
“It is better for a man to take
a wife, though,” said Mr. Morrison. “He
wants so much of comfort and home as that. They
get tired, and they get sick, and to have no woman’s
hand about is something to be missed at such times.
O we are all dependent. Mr. Rhys is domesticated
now with Brother Lefferts and his family. I suppose
he feels it less, because he has not had a home of
his own in a good while; that makes a difference.”
“He knows he has a home of his
own too,” said Mrs. Caxton; “though he
has not reached it yet. I suppose the thought
of that makes him content.”
“Of course. But in a heathen
land, with heathen desolation and dark faces all around
one, you have no idea how at times one’s soul
longs for a taste of England. Brother Rhys too
is a man to feel all such things. He has a good
deal of taste, and what you might call sensitiveness
to externals.”
“A good deal,” said Mrs.
Caxton quietly. “Then he has some beautiful
externals around him.”
“So they say. But the humanity
is deplorable. Well, they will get their reward
when the Master comes. A man leaves everything
indeed when he goes to the South Seas as Rhys has
done. He would have been very popular in England.”
“So he will in the islands.”
“Well so it seems,” said
Mr. Morrison. “He has got the ear of those
wild creatures evidently. That’s the man.”
It was time for evening prayers; and
afterwards the party separated; Mrs. Caxton carrying
off with her her packet of letters unbroken. The
morning brought its own business; the breakfast was
somewhat hurried; Mr. Morrison took his departure;
and nothing more was said on the subject of South
Sea missionaries till the evening. Then the two
ladies were again alone together.
“Are you well to-day, Eleanor?”
was Mrs. Caxton’s first question at the tea-table.
“Some headache, aunt Caxton.”
“How is that? And I have noticed that your
eyes were heavy all day.”
“There is no harm, ma’am. I did not
sleep very well.”
“Why not?”
“I think the reading of those letters excited
me, aunt Caxton.”
Mrs. Caxton looked at a line of faint
crimson which was stealing up into Eleanor’s
cheeks, and for a moment stayed her words.
“My dear, there is as good work to be done here,
as ever in Polynesia.”
“I do not know, aunt Caxton,”
said Eleanor leaning her head on her hand in thoughtful
wise. “England has had the light a great
while; it must be grand to be the first torch-bearers
into the darkness.”
“So Mr. Rhys feels. But
then, my dear, I think we are to do the work given
us one here and one there; and
let the Lord place his servants, and our service,
as he will.”
“I do not think otherwise, aunt Caxton.”
“Would you like, to hear some
of what Mr. Rhys has written to me? there is a little
difference between what is sent to a Committee and
what is for the private eye of a friend.”
“Yes ma’am, I would like
it,” Eleanor said; but she did not say so at
all eagerly; and Mrs. Caxton looked at her once or
twice before she changed the subject and spoke of
something else. She held to her offer, however;
and when the green cloth and the lamp were again in
readiness, she brought out the letters. Eleanor
took some work and bent her head over it.
“This is one of the latest dates,”
Mrs. Caxton said as she opened the paper; “written
after he had been there a good many months and had
got fairly acquainted with the language and with the
people. It seems to me he has been very quick
about it.”
“Yes, I think so,” Eleanor
answered; “but that is his way.”
Mrs. Caxton read.
“My dear friend,
“In spite of the world of ocean
rolling between us, I yet have a strange and sweet
feeling of taking your hand, when I set myself to
write to you. Spirit and matter seem at odds;
and far away as I am, with the vegetation and the
air of the tropics around me, as soon as I begin upon
this sheet of paper I seem to stand in Plassy again.
The dear old hills rear their wild outlines before
me; the green wealth of vegetation is at my feet,
but cool and fresh as nothing looks to me under the
northerly wind which is blowing now; and your image
is so distinct, that I almost can grasp your hand,
and almost hear you speak; see you speak, I
do. Blessed be the Lord for imagination, as well
as for memory! Without it, how slowly we should
mount to the conception of heavenly things and the
understanding of himself; and the distance between
friends would be a sundering of them indeed. But
I must not waste time or paper in telling you what
you know already.
“By which you will conclude
that I am busy. I am as busy as I can possibly
be. That is as I wish it. It is what I am
here for. I would not have a moment unused.
On Sunday I have four or five services, of different
sorts. Week days I have an English school, a writing
school, one before and the other after mid-day; and
later still, a school for regular native instruction.
Every moment of time that is free, or would be, is
needed for visiting the sick, whose demands upon us
are constant. But this gives great opportunity
to preach the gospel and win the hearts of the people.
“Some account of a little preaching
and teaching journey in which I took part some few
months ago, I have a mind to give you. Our object
was specially an island between one and two hundred
miles away, where many have become Christians, and
not in name only; but where up to this time no missionary
has been stationed. We visit them when we can.
This time we had the advantage of a brig to make the
voyage in; the mission ship was here with the Superintendent
and he desired to visit the place. We arrived
at evening in the neighbourhood; at a little island
close by, where all the people are now Christian.
Mr. Lefferts went ashore in a canoe to make arrangements;
and the next day we followed. It was a beautiful
day and as beautiful a sight as eyes could see.
We visited the houses of the native teachers, who
were subjects of admiration in every respect; met
candidates for baptism and examined them; married
a couple; and Bro. Griffiths preached. There
is a new chapel, of very neat native workmanship;
with a pulpit carved out of a solid piece of wood,
oiled to give it colour and gloss. In the chapel
the whole population of the island was assembled, dressed
in new dresses, attentive, and interested. So
were we, you may believe, when we remembered that
only two years ago all these people were heathens.
O these islands are a glorious place now and then,
in spots where the devil’s reign is broken.
I wish you could have seen us afterwards, my dear
friend, at our native feast spread on the ground under
the trees; you who never saw a table set but with
exact and elegant propriety. We had no table;
believe me, we were too happy and hungry to mind that.
I do not think you would have quarrelled with our
dishes; they were no other and no worse than the thick
broad glossy leaves of the banana. No fault could
be found with their elegance; and our napkins were
of the green rind of the same tree. Cocoanut
shells were our substitute for flint glass, and I
like it very well; especially when cocoanut milk is
the refreshment to be served in them. Knives and
forks we had none! What would you have said to
that? Our meat was boiled fowls and baked yams
and fish dressed in various ways; and the fingers of
the natives, or our own, were our only dividers.
But I have seen less pleasant entertainments; and
I only could wish you had been there, so
you might have whisked back to England the next minute
after it was over, on some convenient fairy carpet
such as I used to read of in Eastern tales when I
was a boy. For us, we had to make our way in haste
back to the ship, which lay in the offing, and could
not come near on account of the reef barrier.
We got on board safely, passing the reefs where once
an American ship was wrecked and her crew killed and
eaten by the people of these parts.
“The next day we made the land
we sought; and got ashore through a tremendous surf.
Here we found the island had lately been the seat of
war some of the heathen having resolved
to put an end by violence to the Christian religion
there, or as they call it, the lotu. The
Christians had gained the victory, and then had treated
their enemies with the utmost kindness; which had
produced a great effect upon them. The rest of
the day after our landing was spent in making thorough
inquiry into this matter; and in a somewhat extended
preaching service. At night we slept on a mat
laid for us, or tried to sleep; but my thoughts were
too busy; and the clear night sky was witness to a
great many restless movements, I am afraid, before
I lost them in forgetfulness. The occasion of
which, I suppose, was the near prospect of sending
letters home to England by the ship. At any rate,
England and the South Seas were very near together
that night; and I was fain to remember that heaven
is nearer yet. But the remembrance carne, and
with it sleep. The next day was a day of business.
Marrying couples (over forty of them) baptizing converts,
preaching; then meeting the teachers and class-leaders
and examining them as to their Christian experience,
etc. From dawn till long past mid-day we
were busy so; and then were ready for another feast
in the open air like that one I described to you for
we had had no breakfast. We had done all the work
we could do at that time at One, and sought our ship
immediately after dinner; passing through a surf too
heavy for the canoes to weather.
“Let me tell you some of the
testimony given by these converts from heathenism;
given simply and heartily, by men who have not learned
their religion by book nor copied it out of other men’s
mouths. It was a very thrilling thing to hear
them, these poor enterers into the light, who have
but just passed the line of darkness. One said,
’I love the Lord, and I know he loves me; not
for anything in me, or for anything I have done; but
for Christ’s sake alone. I trust in Christ
and am happy. I listen to God, that he may do
with me as he pleases. I am thankful to have
lived until the Lord’s work has begun. I
feel it in my heart! I hold Jesus! I am
happy! My heart is full of love to God!’
“Another said, ’One good
thing I know, the sacred blood of Jesus.
I desire nothing else.’
“Another, ’I
know that God has justified me through the sacred blood
of Jesus. I know assuredly that I am reconciled
to God. I know of the work of God in my soul.
The sacred Spirit makes it clear to me. I wish
to preach the gospel, that others also may know Jesus.’
“All these have been engaged
the past year in teaching or proclaiming the truth
in various ways. Another of their number who was
dying, one or two of us went to see. One of us
asked him if he was afraid to die? ‘No,’
he said, ’I am sheltered. The great Saviour
died for me. The Lord’s wrath is removed.
I am his.’ And another time he remarked,
’Death is a fearfully great thing, but I fear
it not. There is a Saviour below the skies.’
“So there is a helmet of salvation
for the poor Fijian as well as for the favoured people
at home. Praise be to the Lord! Did I tell
you, my dear friend, I was restless at the thought
of sending letters home? Let me tell you now,
I am happy; as happy as I could be in any place in
the world; and I would not be in any other place,
by my own choice, for all the things in the world.
I need only to be made more holy. Just in proportion
as I am that, I am happy and I am useful. I want
to be perfectly holy. But there is the same way
of trusting for the poor Fijian and for me; and I
believe in that same precious blood I shall be made
clean, even as they. I want to preach Christ a
thousand times more than I do. I long to make
his love known to these poor people. I rejoice
in being here, where every minute may tell actively
for him. My dear friend, when we get home, do
what we will, we shall not think we have done enough.
“Our life here is full of curious
contrasts. Within doors, what our old habits
have stereotyped as propriety, is sadly trenched upon.
Before the ship came, Mrs. Lefferts’ stock of
comfort in one line was reduced to a single tea-cup;
and in other stores, the demands of the natives had
caused us to run very short. You know it is only
by payment of various useful articles that we secure
any service done or purchase any native produce.
Money is unknown. Fruit and vegetables, figs,
fish, crabs, fowls, we buy with iron tools, pieces
of calico, and the like; and if our supply of these
gives out, we have to draw upon the store of things
needed by ourselves; and blankets and hardware come
to be minus. Then, forgetting this, which it
is easy to do, all the world without is a world of
glorious beauty. How I wish I could shew it to
you! These islands are of very various character,
and many of them like the garden of Eden for natural
loveliness; shewing almost every kind of scenery within
a small area. Most of them are girdled more or
less entirely by what is called a barrier reef an
outside and independent coral formation, sometimes
narrow, sometimes miles in width, on the outer edge
of which the sea breaks in an endless line of white
foam. Within the reef the lagoon, as it is called,
is perfectly still and clear; and such glories of
the animal and vegetable world as lie beneath its
surface I have no time to describe to you now.
I have had little time to examine them; but once or
twice I have taken a canoe and a piece of rest, gliding
over this submarine garden, and rejoicing in the Lord
who has made everything so beautiful in its time.
My writing hour is over for to-day. I am going
five or six miles to see a man who is said to be very
ill.
“Fe. The man had very
little the matter with him. I had my walk for
nothing, so far as my character of doctor or nurse
was concerned.
“I will give you a little notion
of the beauty of these islands, in the description
of one that I visited a short time ago. It is
one of our out-stations too small to have
a teacher given it; so it is visited from time to
time by Mr. Lefferts and myself. With a fair wind
the distance is hardly a day’s journey; but
sometimes as in this case it consumes two days.
The voyage was made in a native canoe, manned by native
sailors, some Christian, some heathen. They are
good navigators, for savages; and need to be, for
the character of the seas here, threaded with a network
of coral reefs, makes navigation a delicate matter.
Our voyage proceeded very well, until we got to the
entrance of the island. That seems a strange
sentence; but the island itself is a circle, nearly;
a band of volcanic rock, not very wide, enclosing a
lake or lagoon within its compass. There is only
a rather narrow channel of entrance. Here we
were met by difficulty. The surf breaking shorewards
was tremendously high; and meeting and struggling with
it came a rush of the current from within. Between
the two opposing waters the canoe was tossed and swayed
like a reed. It was, for a few moments, a scene
to be remembered, and not a little terrific. The
shoutings and exertions of the men, who felt the danger
of their position, added to the roar and the power
of the waters, which tossed us hither and thither
as a thing of no consequence, made it a strange wild
minute, till we emerged from all that struggle
and roar into the still beautiful quiet of the lagoon
inside. Imagine it, surrounded with its border
of rocky land covered with noble trees, and spotted
with islets covered in like manner. The whole
island is of volcanic formation, and its rocks are
of black scoria. The theory is, I believe, that
a volcano once occupied the whole centre of such islands;
which sinking afterwards away left its place to the
occupancy of a lake instead. However produced,
the effect is singular in its wild beauty. The
soil of this island is poor for any purpose but growing
timber; the inhabitants consequently are not many,
and they live on roots and fish and what we should
think still poorer food a great wood maggot,
which is found in plenty. There are but four
villages, two of them Christian. I staid there
one night and the next day, giving them all I could;
and it was a good time to me. The day after I
returned home. O sweet gospel of Christ! which
is lighting up these dark places; and O my blessed
Master, who stands by his servants and gives them his
own presence and love, when they are about his work
and the world is far from them, and men would call
them lonely. There is no loneliness where Christ
is. I must finish this long letter with giving
you the dying testimony of a Tongan preacher who has
just gone to his home. He came here as a missionary
from his own land, and has worked hard and successfully.
He said to Mr. Calvert the day before his death, ’I
have long enjoyed religion and felt its power.
In my former illness I was happy; but now I am greatly
blessed. The Lord has come down with mighty power
into my soul, and I feel the blessedness of full
rest of soul in God. I feel religion to be
peculiarly sweet, and my rejoicing is great. I
see more fully and clearly the truth of the word and
Spirit of God, and the suitableness of the Saviour.
The whole of Christianity I see as exceedingly excellent.’
“With this testimony I close,
my dear friend. It is mine; I can ask no better
for you than that it may be yours.”
Mrs. Caxton ended her reading and
looked at Eleanor. She had done that several
times in the course of the reading. Eleanor was
always bent over her work, and busily attentive to
it; but on each cheek a spot of colour had been fixed
and deepening, till now it had reached a broad flush.
Silence fell as the reading ceased; Eleanor did not
look up; Mrs. Caxton did not take her eyes from her
niece’s face. It was with a kind of subdued
sigh that at last she turned from the table and put
her papers away.
“Mr. Morrison is not altogether
in the wrong,” she remarked at length.
“It is better for a man in those far-off regions,
and amidst so many labours and trials, to have the
comfort of his own home.”
“Do you think Mr. Rhys writes as if he felt
the want?”
“It is hard to tell what a man
wants, by his writing. I am not quite at rest
on that point.”
“How happened it that he did
not marry, like everybody else, before going there?”
“He is a fastidious man,”
said Mrs. Caxton; “one of those men that are
rather difficult to please, I fancy; and that are apt
enough to meet with hindrances because of the very
nice points of their own nature.”
“I don’t think you need
wish any better for him, aunt Caxton, than to judge
by his letters he has and enjoys as he is. He
seems to me, and always did, a very enviable person.”
“Can you tell why?”
“Good happy and
useful,” said Eleanor. But her voice was
a little choked.
“You know grace is free,”
said Mrs. Caxton. “He would tell you so.
Ring the bell, my dear. And a sinner saved in
England is as precious as one saved in Fiji.
Let us work where our place is, and thank the Lord!”