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more than a minute the brother and sister were clasped in each
other's arms. There were tears in Mrs. Hamilton's eyes, and her
husband's were most unwontedly dim, for words were not needed to
reveal to them the trial of that moment to those two young hearts.
To Ellen's especially, for her lot was woman's—to endure until time
should prove the reality of Edward's resolution, and mark him indeed
the noble character his disposition so fondly promised. His was
active service, the banishment of thought by deed. Breaking from
her brother, and not daring to address either her aunt or uncle, lest
her control should fail her too soon, Ellen hastened from the room.
"Go to her, aunt Emmeline; oh, tell her I will never, never cause her
to suffer again!" implored Edward, as soon as he could speak, and
clasping his aunt's hand. "She has been struggling with herself the
whole evening for my sake, and she will suffer for it to-morrow,
unless she give it vent, and she will weep less painfully if you speak
of comfort."
"She will be better alone a little while, my dear boy; young as she is,
she knows where to seek and find comfort, and her tears would flow
more freely, conscious only of the presence and healing of her God.
I shall not part from you now. Ellis wanted me for some directions
about your things, and I will come to you in your room afterward."
Mrs. Hamilton knew the human heart well. When she went to Ellen,
the paroxysm of natural sorrow had had vent, and her sympathy, her
earnestly expressed conviction that the trial of beholding error and
remorse in one so beloved would not occur again, could bring
comfort. The tears indeed might still have flowed the faster, perhaps,
at the voice of kindness, but there was healing in them; and when
her aunt left her to go to Edward, she sent him a fond message that
she was better, and in a few days would be happy, quite happy, for
his sake.
It was late before Mrs. Hamilton quitted her nephew. We will not
repeat all that passed between them, all that that fond watchful
relative so earnestly, so appealingly said. Not much in actual words
of counsel had she ever before addressed to him, feeling that that
duty was better performed by Mr. Howard and his uncle. She had
simply tried to influence him by the power of love, of forbearance, of
sympathy with his remorse, and pity for his errors. In the
wretchedness, the fearful anxiety, Ellen's danger and painful illness
had occasioned herself individually, she had never spoken, or even
let fall a sentence which could reproach him as the cause of all; and
therefore, now that she did give her anxious affection words, they
were so spoken, that her nephew never forgot them.
"I feel now," he had said, near the conclusion of their interview, "as
if nothing could tempt me to err again; but oh, aunt Emmeline, so I
thought when I left home before; and its influences all left me as if
they had never been. It may be so again and—and—are there not
such doomed wretches, making all they love best most miserable?"
"Not, indeed, if they will take their home influences with them, my
beloved boy. They deserted you before because, by the insidious
sentiments of a most unhappy man, your religion was shaken, and
you flung aside with scorn and misbelief the only safety for the
young—God's most Holy Word. The influences of your home are
based on that alone, my Edward. They appear perhaps to the casual
observer as only love, indulgence, peace, and the joy springing from
innocent and happy hearts; but these are mere flowers springing
from one immortal root. In God's Word alone is our safety, there
alone our strength and our joy; and that may be yours still, my boy,
though far away from us, and in a little world with interests and
temptations of its own. Take this little Bible; it has been my constant
companion for eighteen years, and to none but to yourself would I
part with it. If you fear your better feelings failing, read it, be guided
by it, if at first only for the sake of those you love; I do not fear, but
that very soon you will do so for its own sake. It bears a name
within it which I think will ever keep it sacred in your care, as it has
been in mine."
Edward opened it eagerly, "Charles Manvers!" he exclaimed; "My
own sailor-uncle, whose memory you have so taught me to love. It
is indeed a spell, dear aunt, and you shall never regret a gift so
precious. But how came it yours?"
"He came to me just before starting for his last trip, entreating me to
exchange Bibles with him, that in our most serious moments we
might think of each other. It was such an unusually serious speech
for him, that it seemed to thrill me with a vague forboding, which
was only too soon realized. I never saw him again; and that little
book indeed increased in value."
Her voice faltered, for even yet the memory of her brother was so
dear to her that she could never speak of him without emotion.
Edward reiterated his eager assurance that it should be equally
valuable to him, adding—
"I have often had strange fancies about uncle Charles, aunt, and
longed for the command of a ship, to scour the coast of Algiers, and
learn something more about the Leander. Somehow or other, I never
can believe he was drowned, and yet to think of him as a slave is
terrible."
"And not likely, my dear boy; think of the lapse of years. But painful
as it is, we must separate, Edward: I must not detain you from rest
and sleep any longer. Only give me one promise—if ever you are led
into temptation and error again, and it may be—for our strongest
resolutions sometimes fail us—write to me without the smallest
hesitation, openly, freely; tell me all, and if you need aid, ask it, and
I will give it; and, if it be possible, avert your uncle's displeasure. I
have no fear that, in telling you this, I am weakening your
resolution, but only to prevent one fault becoming many by
concealment—from dread of anger, and therein the supposed
impossibility of amendment. Remember, my beloved boy, you have a
claim on me which no error nor fault can remove; as, under
providence, the preserver of my husband, I can never change the
anxious love I bear you. You may indeed make me very miserable,
but I know you will not: you will let me look on your noble deed with
all the love, the admiration, it deserves. Promise me that, under any
difficulty or error, small or great, you will write to me as you would
have done to your own beloved mother, and I shall have no fear
remaining."
Edward did promise, but his heart was so full he could not restrain
himself any longer, and as Mrs. Hamilton folded him to her heart, in
a silent but tearful embrace, he wept on her shoulder like a child.
CHAPTER XVI.
THE BIRTHDAY GIFT.

Brightly and placidly, as the course of their own beautiful river, did
the days now pass to the inmates of Oakwood. Letters came from
Edward so frequently, so happily, that hope would rest calmly,
joyously, even on the thought of him. He never let an opportunity
pass, writing always to Mrs. Hamilton (which he had scarcely ever
done before), and inclosing his letters to Ellen open in hers. The
tone, the frequency, were so changed from his last, that his family
now wondered they had been so blind before in not perceiving that
his very seeming liveliness was unnatural and overstrained.
With Ellen, too, Mrs. Hamilton's anxious care was bringing in fair
promise of success—the mistaken influences of her childhood, and
their increased effect from a morbid imagination, produced from
constant suffering, appearing, indeed, about to be wholly eradicated.
Anxious to remove all sad associations connected with the library,
Mrs. Hamilton having determined herself to superintend Ellen's
studies, passed long mornings in that ancient room with her, so
delightfully, that it became associated only with the noble authors
whose works, or extracts from whom, she read and reveled in, and
which filled her mind with such new thoughts, such expansive ideas,
such calming and earnest truths, that she felt becoming to herself a
new being. Lively and thoughtless as Emmeline she could not now
indeed become—alike as their dispositions naturally were; but she
was more quietly, enduringly happy than she had ever remembered
her self.
There was only one alloy, one sad thought, that would intrude
causing a resolution, which none suspected; for, open as she had
become, she could breathe it to none but Ellis, for she alone could
assist her, though it required many persuasions and many
assurances, that she never could be quite happy, unless it was
accomplished, which could prevail on her to grant it. Ellen knew, felt,
more and more each week, that she could not rest till she had
labored for and obtained, and returned into her aunt's hands the full
sum she had so involuntarily appropriated. The only means she
could adopt demanded such a seemingly interminable period of self-
denial, patience, and perseverance, that at first as Ellis represented
and magnified all connected with it, she felt as if, indeed, she could
not nerve herself for the task, much as she desired to perform it; but
prayer enabled her to face the idea, till it lost its most painful aspect,
and three months after Edward's departure she commenced the
undertaking, resolved that neither time nor difficulty should deter
her from its accomplishment. What her plan was, and whether it
succeeded, we may not here inform our readers. Should we be
permitted to resume our History of the Hamilton Family, both will be
revealed.
Greatly to Caroline's delight, the following October was fixed for
them to leave Oakwood, and, after a pleasant tour, to make the long
anticipated visit to London. There would then be three or four
months' quiet for her to have the benefit of masters, before she was
introduced, and Mrs. Hamilton fondly hoped, that the last year's
residence at home, fraught as it had been with so much of domestic
trial, and displaying so many hopeful and admirable traits in
Caroline's disposition, would have lessened the danger of the ordeal
of admiration and gayety which she so dreaded for her child—
whether it had or not, a future page will disclose.
To Emmeline this arrangement was a source of extreme regret,
individually, in which Ellen now quite sympathized. But Emmeline
had never forgotten her mother's gentle hint, that too great
indulgence of regret or sorrow becomes selfishness, and she tried
very hard to create some anticipation of pleasure, even in London.
Ellen would not look to pleasure, but merely tried to think about—
and so, when called upon, cheerfully to resign that which was now
so intensely enjoyable—her studies with her aunt—and so benefit by
them as to give Miss Harcourt no trouble when she was again under
her care; as she knew she and Emmeline must be, more than they
had been yet, when Caroline's introduction, and their residence in
London, would take Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton so much from domestic
pursuits and pleasures, and, even when at home, compel them to be
so frequently engrossed with a large circle of friends, and all the
variety of claims on their attention and time, which a season in
London includes.
It was again the 7th of June, and Ellen's birthday. Accustomed from
the time she became an inmate of Oakwood to regard the
anniversary of her birth in the same serious light as Mrs. Hamilton
had taught her cousins—as a day of quiet reflection, as well as of
thankfulness and joy, as one that, closing and recommencing
another year of their individual lives, taught them that they were
becoming more and more responsible beings—it was not much
wonder that Ellen, the whole of that day, should seem somewhat
less cheerful than usual. She had indeed had many sources of
thankfulness and joy during the past year, but a heart and mind like
hers could not recall its principal event without a return of sorrow.
Mrs. Hamilton would not notice her now unusual sadness until the
evening, when perceiving her standing engrossed in thought beside
one of the widely-opened windows, near which Caroline was
watering some lovely flowers on the terrace, she gently approached
her, and, putting her arm round her, said, fondly—
"You have thought quite seriously and quite long enough for to-day,
my dear Ellen; I must not have any more such very silent
meditations. That there is something to regret in the retrospect of
the last year, I acknowledge, but you must not let it poison all the
sources of thankfulness which it brings likewise."
"It was not of my past conduct, I was thinking at this moment, aunt
Emmeline—it was—"
"What, love? tell me without reserve."
"That I never, never can return in the smallest degree all I owe to
you," replied Ellen, with a sudden burst of emotion, most unusual to
her controlled and gentle character; "I never can do any thing to
evince how gratefully, how intensely I feel all the kindness, the
goodness you have shown me from the first moment you took me to
your home—an unhappy, neglected, ailing child, and this year more,
more than ever. My own poor mother left me in my dangerous
illness, and what have you not done to give me back not merely
physical, but mental health? Day and night you watched beside me,
forgetting all the care, the misery, my conduct had caused you, only
thinking, only seeking, to give me back to health and happiness. Oh,
aunt Emmeline, your very household can evince gratitude and love,
in the performance of their respective duties—I can do nothing,
never can. If I only could."
"Do you remember the fable of the lion and the mouse, my dear
Ellen, and Miss Edgeworth's still prettier story on the same subject?"
replied Mrs. Hamilton, more affected than she chose to betray,
though she drew her niece closer to her, and kissed her fondly. "I
hope I shall never be caught in a net, nor exposed to such horrors
and danger as poor Madame de Fleury in the French Revolution; but
for all that, and unlikely as it seems now, my dear child, you may
have many an opportunity to return all that you so gratefully feel
you owe me. Do not let any such thought worry you; but believe
me, when I assure you that affection and confidence are the only
return I require, united, as they are in you, with such an earnest
desire, and such persevering efforts to become all your best friends
can wish you."
She was interrupted by the entrance of Emmeline, with a small
parcel in her hand.
"Mamma, this has just arrived from Exeter for you; with an
apologizing message from Mr. Bennet, saying, it should have been
here last night, as he promised, but he could not get the articles
from London in time. I am so very curious as to what it possibly can
be, that I would bring it to you myself."
"Any other time I would punish your constant curiosity, Emmeline,
by refusing to gratify it. I can not do so now, however, for I should
punish myself as well. I did want it most particularly this morning;
but I am glad it was not delayed till the day was quite over. Your
uncle and I did not forget your birthday, my dear Ellen, though it
seemed so." And opening the parcel as she spoke, a very pretty
jewel-case appeared, containing the watch, cross, and all the other
trinkets Ellen had placed in Mrs. Langford's hand, and never had had
the courage to inquire for, and the few her aunt had kept for her, but
so prettily arranged and beautifully burnished, that she would
scarcely have known them again.
"Did you never feel any curiosity as to the fate of your trinkets, my
love, that you have never asked about them?"
"I knew they were in better hands than my own," replied Ellen, with
a quivering lip. "I felt I had no further right to them, after
attempting to part with them."
"I know there are some very painful associations connected with
these trinkets, my dear Ellen, and, therefore, I would not return
them to your own care, till I could add to them a birthday-gift," and,
lifting the upper tray, she took out a gold chain, and a pair of
bracelets of chaste and beautiful workmanship—"that the sad
memories of the one may be forgotten in the pleasant thoughts of
the other. I have only one condition to make," she added, in an
earnest lower tone, as Ellen tried to speak her thanks, but could only
cling to her aunt's neck and weep. "If ever again you are tempted to
dispose of them, dearest, promise me to bring them to me, for my
valuation first."
"You shall be put into fetters at once, Ellen," said Emmeline joyously,
as her cousin gave the required promise, so eagerly, that it was
evident, she felt how much security dwelt in it. "Mamma, make her
put them on; I want to see if she looks as interesting as Zenobia did
in her golden chains."
"I think you might find a prettier simile, Emmeline," replied Mrs.
Hamilton, smiling, as she granted her request, by throwing the chain
round Ellen's neck, and fastening the bracelets on her wrists.
"So I can, and so I will," replied the lively girl, altering, without the
smallest hesitation, the lines to suit her fancy—

"For thee, rash girl, no suppliant sues;


For thee may vengeance claim her dues;
Who, nurtured underneath our smile,
Repaid our cares with treacherous wile.

Dishonoring thus thy loyal name,


Fetters and warders thou must claim.
The chain of gold was quick unstrung,
Its links on that fair neck were flung;
Then gently drew the glittering band,
And laid the clasp on Ellen's hand."

THE END

[1] While passing through the press, the scene of the Family Tree has
been strongly objected to by a valued Christian Friend, as being enacted
on the Sunday evening. It was too late then to repair the error. The
author can only express her sincere regret for a fault originating in an
insufficient knowledge of the Christian feeling toward the Sabbath, and
most earnestly trusts the error may be pardoned.
[2] A country dance, the author believes, peculiar to Devonshire, for she
has never seen it danced elsewhere.
[3] For this account of Feroe and the Feroese the author is indebted to a
"History of the Islands, by a Resident."
[4] These storms, as occurring in Devonshire, in both January and
February, are no creation of the imagination; the author has heard them
herself, and more than one officer in the Preventive Service has
mentioned them as occurring during the night-watches, and of awful
violence.
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