Father and Son: a study of two temperaments eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 281 pages of information about Father and Son.

Father and Son: a study of two temperaments eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 281 pages of information about Father and Son.

Left to my Mother’s sole care, I became the centre of her solicitude.  But there mingled with those happy animal instincts which sustain the strength and patience of every human mother and were fully present with her—­there mingled with these certain spiritual determinations which can be but rare.  They are, in their outline, I suppose, vaguely common to many religious mothers, but there are few indeed who fill up the sketch with so firm a detail as she did.  Once again I am indebted to her secret notes, in a little locked volume, seen until now, nearly sixty years later, by no eye save her own.  Thus she wrote when I was two months old: 

’We have given him to the Lord; and we trust that He will really manifest him to be His own, if he grow up; and if the Lord take him early, we will not doubt that he is taken to Himself.  Only, if it please the Lord to take him, I do trust we may be spared seeing him suffering in lingering illness and much pain.  But in this as in all things His will is better than what we can choose.  Whether his life be prolonged or not, it has already been a blessing to us, and to the saints, in leading us to much prayer, and bringing us into varied need and some trial.’

The last sentence is somewhat obscure to me.  How, at that tender age, I contrived to be a blessing ‘to the saints’ may surprise others and puzzles myself.  But ‘the saints’ was the habitual term by which were indicated the friends who met on Sunday mornings for Holy Communion, and at many other tunes in the week for prayer and discussion of the Scriptures, in the small hired hall at Hackney, which my parents attended.  I suppose that the solemn dedication of me to the Lord, which was repeated in public in my Mother’s arms, being by no means a usual or familiar ceremony even among the Brethren, created a certain curiosity and fervour in the immediate services, or was imagined so to do by the fond, partial heart of my Mother.  She, however, who had been so much isolated, now made the care of her child an excuse for retiring still further into silence.  With those religious persons who met at the Room, as the modest chapel was called, she had little spiritual, and no intellectual, sympathy.  She noted: 

’I do not think it would increase my happiness to be in the midst of the saints at Hackney.  I have made up my mind to give myself up to Baby for the winter, and to accept no invitations.  To go when I can to the Sunday morning meetings and to see my own Mother.’

The monotony of her existence now became extreme, but she seems to have been happy.  Her days were spent in taking care of me, and in directing one young servant.  My Father was forever in his study, writing, drawing, dissecting; sitting, no doubt, as I grew afterwards accustomed to see him, absolutely motionless, with his eye glued to the microscope, for twenty minutes at a time.  So the greater part of every weekday was spent, and on Sunday he usually preached one, and sometimes two extempore sermons. 

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Father and Son: a study of two temperaments from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.