SCENE FIRST.
“IT is in vain to urge me, brother
Robert. Out into the world I must go. The
impulse is on me. I should die of inaction here.”
“You need not be inactive.
There is work to do. I shall never be idle.”
“And such work! Delving
in and grovelling close to the very ground. And
for what? Oh no, Robert. My ambition soars
beyond your ’quiet cottage in a sheltered vale.’
My appetite craves something more than simple herbs
and water from the brook. I have set my heart
on attaining wealth; and, where there is a will there
is always a way.”
“Contentment is better than wealth.”
“A proverb for drones.”
“No, William; it is a proverb for the wise.”
“Be it for the wise or simple,
as commonly understood, it is no proverb for me.
As a poor plodder along the way of life, it were impossible
for me to know content. So urge me no further,
Robert. I am going out into the world a wealth-seeker,
and not until wealth is gained do I purpose to return.”
“What of Ellen, Robert?”
The young man turned quickly toward
his brother, visibly disturbed, and fixed his eyes
upon him with an earnest expression.
“I love her as my life,”
he said, with a strong emphasis on his words.
“Do you love wealth more than life, William?”
“Robert!”
“If you love Ellen as your life,
and leave her for the sake of getting riches, then
you must love money more than life.”
“Don’t talk to me after
this fashion. I cannot bear it. I love Ellen
tenderly and truly. I am going forth as well for
her sake as my own. In all the good fortune that
comes as the meed of effort, she will be a sharer.”
“You will see her before you leave us?”
“No. I will neither pain
her nor myself by a parting interview. Send her
this letter and this ring.”
A few hours later, and the brothers
stood with tightly grasped hands, gazing into each
other’s faces.
“Farewell, Robert.”
“Farewell, William. Think
of the old homestead as still your home. Though
it is mine, in the division of our patrimony, let your
heart come back to it as yours. Think of it as
home; and, should fortune cheat you with the apples
of Sodom, return to it again. Its doors will
ever be open, and its hearth-fire bright for you as
of old. Farewell.”
And they turned from each other, one
going out into the restless world, an eager seeker
for its wealth and honours; the other to linger among
the pleasant places dear to him by every association
of childhood, there to fill up the measure of his
days-not idly, for he was no drone in the
social hive.
On the evening of that day, two maidens
sat alone, each in the sanctuary of her own chamber.
There was a warm glow on the cheeks of one, and a
glad light in her eyes. Pale was the other’s
face, and wet her drooping lashes. And she that
sorrowed held an open letter in her hand. It
was full of tender words; but the writer loved wealth
more than the maiden, and had gone forth to seek the
mistress of his soul. He would “come back;”
but when? Ah, what a vail of uncertainty was
upon the future! Poor stricken heart! The
other maiden-she of the glowing cheeks
and dancing eyes-held also a letter in
her hand. It was from the brother of the wealth-seeker;
and it was also full of loving words; and it said that,
on the morrow, he would come to bear her as a bride
to his pleasant home. Happy maiden!
SCENE SECOND.
TEN years have passed. And what
of the wealth-seeker? Has he won the glittering
prize? What of the pale-faced maiden he left in
tears? Has he returned to her? Does she
share now his wealth and honour? Not since the
day he went forth from the home of his childhood has
a word of intelligence from the wanderer been received;
and, to those he left behind him, he is now as one
who has passed the final bourne. Yet he still
dwells among the living.
In a far-away, sunny clime, stands
a stately mansion. We will not linger to describe
the elegant exterior, to hold up before the reader’s
imagination a picture of rural beauty, exquisitely
heightened by art, but enter its spacious hall, and
pass up to one of its most luxurious chambers.
How hushed and solemn the pervading atmosphere!
The inmates, few in number, are grouped around one
on whose white forehead Time’s trembling finger
has written the word “Death.” Over
her bends a manly form. There-his face
is toward you. Ah! You recognise the wanderer-the
wealth-seeker. What does he here? What to
him is the dying one? His wife! And has he,
then, forgotten the maiden whose dark lashes lay wet
on her pale cheeks for many hours after she read his
parting words? He has not forgotten, but been
false to her. Eagerly sought he the prize, to
contend for which he went forth. Years came and
departed; yet still hope mocked him with ever-attractive
and ever-fading illusions. To-day he stood with
his hand just ready to seize the object of his wishes-to-morrow,
a shadow mocked him. At last, in an evil hour,
he bowed down his manhood prostrate even to the dust
in mammon-worship, and took to himself a bride, rich
in golden attractions, but poorer, as a woman, than
even the beggar at his father’s gate. What
a thorn in his side she proved!-a thorn
ever sharp and ever piercing. The closer he attempted
to draw her to his bosom, the deeper went the points
into his own, until, in the anguish of his soul, again
and again he flung her passionately from him.
Five years of such a life! Oh,
what is there of earthly good to compensate therefor?
But, in this last desperate throw, did the worldling
gain the wealth, station, and honour he coveted?
He had wedded the only child of a man whose treasure
might be counted by hundreds of thousands; but, in
doing so, he had failed to secure the father’s
approval or confidence. The stern old man regarded
him as a mercenary interloper, and ever treated him
as such. For five years, therefore, he fretted
and chafed in the narrow prison whose gilded bars
his own hands had forged. How often, during that
time, had his heart wandered back to the dear old
home, and the beloved ones with whom he had passed
his early years And ah! how many, many times came
between him and the almost hated countenance of his
wife, the gentle, loving face of that one to whom
he had been false! How often her soft blue eyes
rested on his own! How often he started and looked
up suddenly, as if her sweet voice came floating on
the air!
And so the years moved on, the chain
galling more deeply, and a bitter sense of humiliation
as well as bondage robbing him of all pleasure in
life.
Thus it is with him when, after ten
years, we find him waiting, in the chamber of death,
for the stroke that is to break the fetters that so
long have bound him. It has fallen. He is
free again. In dying, the sufferer made no sign.
Sullenly she plunged into the dark profound, so impenetrable
to mortal eyes, and as the turbid waves closed, sighing,
over her, he who had called her wife turned from the
couch on which her frail body remained, with an inward
“Thank God! I am a man again!”
One more bitter drug yet remained
for his cup. Not a week had gone by, ere the
father of his dead wife spoke to him these cutting
words-
“You were nothing to me while
my daughter lived-you are less than nothing
now. It was my wealth, not my child, that you
loved. She has passed away. What affection
would have given to her, dislike will never bestow
on you. Henceforth we are strangers.”
When next the sun went down on that
stately mansion which the wealth-seeker had coveted,
he was a wanderer again-poor, humiliated,
broken in spirit.
How bitter had been the mockery of
all his early hopes! How terrible the punishment
he had suffered!
SCENE THIRD.
ONE more eager, almost fierce struggle
with alluring fortune, in which the worldling came
near steeping his soul in crime, and then fruitless
ambition died in his bosom.
“My brother said well,”
he murmured, as a ray of light fell suddenly on the
darkness of his spirit: “Contentment is
better than wealth. Dear brother! Dear old
home! Sweet Ellen! Ah, why did I leave you?
Too late! too late! A cup, full of the wine of
life, was at my lips; but I turned my head away, asking
for a more fiery and exciting draught. How vividly
comes before me now that parting scene! I am
looking into my brother’s face. I feel the
tight grasp of his hand. His voice is in my ears.
Dear brother! And his parting words, I hear them
now, even more earnestly than when they were first
spoken:-’Should fortune cheat you
with the apples of Sodom, return to your home again.
Its doors will ever be open, and its hearth-fires
bright for you as of old.’ Ah! do the fires
still burn? How many years have passed since
I went forth! And Ellen? But I dare not
think of her. It is too late-too late!
Even if she be living and unchanged in her affections,
I can never lay this false heart at her feet.
Her look of love would smite me as with a whip of
scorpions.”
The step of time had fallen so lightly
on the flowery path of those to whom contentment was
a higher boon than wealth, that few footmarks were
visible. Yet there had been changes in the old
homestead. As the smiling years went by, each,
as it looked in at the cottage-window, saw the home
circle widening, or new beauty crowning the angel
brows of happy children. No thorn in his side
had Robert’s gentle wife proved. As time
passed on, closer and closer was she drawn to his
bosom; yet never a point had pierced him. Their
home was a type of paradise.
It is near the close of a summer day.
The evening meal is spread, and they are about gathering
around the table, when a stranger enters. His
words are vague and brief, his manner singular, his
air slightly mysterious. Furtive, yet eager glances
go from face to face.
“Are these all your children?”
he asks, surprise and admiration mingling in his tones.
“All ours. And, thank God!
the little flock is yet unbroken.”
The stranger averts his face.
He is disturbed by emotions that it is impossible
to conceal.
“Contentment is better than
wealth,” he murmurs. “Oh that I had
earlier comprehended this truth!”
The words were not meant for others;
but the utterance had been too distinct. They
have reached the ears of Robert, who instantly recognises
in the stranger his long wandering, long mourned brother.
“William!”
The stranger is on his feet.
A moment or two the brothers stand gazing at each
other, then tenderly embrace.
“William!”
How the stranger starts and trembles!
He had not seen, in the quiet maiden, moving among
and ministering to the children so unobtrusively,
the one he had parted from years before-the
one to whom he had been so false. But her voice
has startled his ears with the familiar tones of yesterday.
“Ellen!” Here is an instant
oblivion of all the intervening years. He has
leaped back over the gloomy gulf, and stands now as
he stood ere ambition and lust for gold lured him
away from the side of his first and only love.
It is well both for him and the faithful maiden that
he can so forget the past as to take her in his arms
and clasp her almost wildly to his heart. But
for this, conscious shame would have betrayed his
deeply repented perfidy.
And here we leave them, reader.
“Contentment is better than wealth.”
So the wordling proved, after a bitter experience-which
may you be spared! It is far better to realize
a truth perceptively, and thence make it a rule of
action, than to prove its verity in a life of sharp
agony. But how few are able to rise into such
a realization!