Wilson's Tales of the Borders and of Scotland, Volume XXII eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 285 pages of information about Wilson's Tales of the Borders and of Scotland, Volume XXII.

Wilson's Tales of the Borders and of Scotland, Volume XXII eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 285 pages of information about Wilson's Tales of the Borders and of Scotland, Volume XXII.

“Be patient, and learn to hear,” continued the little philosopher.  “Ere yet Cheops built the Pyramids, or Joshua commanded the sun to stand still, yea, before the first sensation tingled in the first nerve made out of the dust, the beginnings were laid of these events of this day and hour, and, in particular, of that one which may well astonish you and grieve you—­viz., that the locket is intended for and inscribed to Agnes Ainslie.”

“Agnes Ainslie!” repeated Rachel, with parched lips and trembling voice, “the daughter of Mr. John Ainslie, my father’s agent, to whom I am even now going, by Mr. Grierson’s command, to request him to call to morrow for the purpose of preparing the settlement!”

“A strange perplexity of events,” said Paul.  “But what is this mingling of threads to the great web of the universe, which is eternally being woven and unwoven, unaffected by the will of man?  And then these small issues, the loss of a fortune by a man, and that of a lover by a woman, how mighty they are to the individual hearts and affections!”

“Mighty indeed,” sobbed Rachel, who had loved Walter so long, and rejoiced to have it in her power to bestow a fortune upon him, and now found all her hopes dissolved into the ashes of grief and disappointment.  “Mighty indeed; and these thoughts of yours are so dreary, how can one believe in them and live!”

“We are compelled to live,” replied he, “even by that same decree which binds us to the infinite chain.  Were it not so, man would imitate the day-flies, and die at sundown, that he might escape the dark night which reveals to him the mystery of his being, whereat he trembles and sobs; and all this is also in the decree.”

“But if all these things are so,” said Rachel, “what do you say of happiness?  Is there no joy in the world?  Are not the birds happy, when in the morning the woods resound with their song, and so, too, every animal after its kind?  Are not children joyful when the house rings with their mirth? and have not men and women their pleasures of a thousand kinds? nay, might not I myself have been one of the happiest of beings, if, with the fortune which is to be left to me, that locket had been engraved with the name of Rachel Grierson in place of Agnes Ainslie?”

“Yes,” replied he, “happiness is in the decree as well; and,” he added with a smile, “it is always cropping out around us, but no one can manufacture the article.  If you wait for it, you may feel it; if you run after it, you will probably not find it, because it is not ready by those eternal laws which, at their beginning, involved its coming up at a certain moment of long after-years.  Then, at the best, pleasure and pain are mere oscillations; but the first movement is downwards, for we cry when we come into the world; and the last is also downwards, for we groan when we go out of it.  It is the old rhyme—­

  ’We scream when we’re born,
    We groan when we’re dying;
  And all that’s between
    Is but laughing and crying.’”

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Wilson's Tales of the Borders and of Scotland, Volume XXII from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.