All's for the Best eBook

Timothy Shay Arthur
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 140 pages of information about All's for the Best.

All's for the Best eBook

Timothy Shay Arthur
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 140 pages of information about All's for the Best.

Two or three times during the evening, Miss Harvey, radiant in her diamonds—­they cost twenty-two hundred dollars—­the price would intrude itself—­and Miss Gardiner, almost guiltless of foreign ornament, were thrown into immediate contact.  But Miss Gardiner was not recognized by the haughty wearer of gems.  It was the old farce of pretence, seeking, by borrowed attractions, to outshine the imperishable radiance of truth.  I looked on, and read the lesson her conduct gave, and wondered that any were deceived into even a transient admiration.  “Rich and rare were the gems she wore,” but they had in them no significance as applied to the wearer.  It was Miss Gardiner who had the real gems, beautiful as charity, and pure as eternal truth; and she wore them with a simple grace, that charmed every beholder who had eyes clear enough from earthy dust and smoke to see them.

I never meet Miss Harvey, that I do not think of the pure and heavenly things of the mind to which diamonds correspond, nor without seeing some new evidence that she wears no priceless jewels in her soul.

IV.

Not as A child.

I DO not know how that may be,” said the mother, lifting her head, and looking through almost blinding tears, into the face of her friend.  “The poet may be right, and, “Not as a child shall I again behold him, but the thought brings no comfort.  I have lost my child, and my heart looks eagerly forward to a reunion with him in heaven; to the blessed hour when I shall again hold him in my arms.”

“As a babe?”

“Oh, yes.  As a darling babe, pure, and beautiful as a cherub.”

“But would you have him linger in babyhood forever?” asked the friend.

The mother did not reply.

“Did you expect him always to remain a child here?  Would perpetual infancy have satisfied your maternal heart?  Had you not already begun to look forward to the period when intellectual manhood would come with its crowning honors?”

“It is true,” sighed the mother.

“As it would have been here, so will it be there.  Here, the growth of his body would have been parallel, if I may so speak, with the growth of his mind.  The natural and the visible would have developed in harmony with the spiritual and the invisible.  Your child would have grown to manhood intellectually, as well as bodily.  And you would not have had it otherwise.  Growth—­development—­the going on to perfection, are the laws of life; and more emphatically so as appertaining to the life of the human soul.  That life, in all its high activities, burns still in the soul of your lost darling, and he will grow, in the world of angelic spirits to which our Father has removed him, up to the full stature of an angel, a glorified form of intelligence and wisdom.  He cannot linger in feeble babyhood; in the innocence of simple ignorance; but must advance with the heavenly cycles of changing and renewing states.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
All's for the Best from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.