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"Why, aunt Caxton?"
"Why do gentlemen generally desire such things to be made known to young ladies?"
"But ma'am"--said Eleanor, the crimson starting again.
"Well, my dear?"
"There is the whole breadth of the earth between us."
"Ships traverse it," said Mrs. Caxton coolly.
"Do you mean that he is coming home?" said Eleanor. Her face was a study, for its changing lights; too quick, too mingled, too subtle in their expression, to be described. So it was at this instant. Half eager, and half shame-faced; an unmistakeable glow of delight, and yet something that was very like shrinking.
"No, my love," Mrs. Caxton made answer--"I do not mean that. He would not leave his place and his work, even for you."
"But then, ma'am--"
"What all this signifies? you would ask. Are you sorry--do you feel any regret--that it should be made known to you?"
"No, ma'am," said Eleanor low, and hanging her head.
"What it signifies, I do not know. That depends upon the answer to a very practical question which I must now put to you. If Mr. Rhys were stationed in England and could tell you all this himself, what would you say to him in answer?"
"I could give him but one, aunt Caxton," said Eleanor in the same manner.
"And that would be a grant of his demand?"
"You know it would, ma'am, without asking me."
"Now we come to the question. He cannot leave his work to come to you.
Is your regard for him enough to make you go to Fiji?"
"Not without asking, aunt Caxton," Eleanor said, turning away.
"Suppose he has asked you."
"But dear aunt Caxton," Eleanor said in a troubled voice, "he never said one word to me of his liking for me, nor to draw out my feeling towards him."
"Suppose he has said it."
"How, ma'am? By word, or in writing?"
"In writing."
Eleanor was silent a little, with her head turned away; then she said in a subdued way, "May I have it, aunt Caxton?"
"My dear, I was not to give them to you except I found that you were favourably disposed towards the object of them. If you ask me for them again, it must be upon that understanding."
"Will you please to give them to me, aunt Caxton," Eleanor said in the same subdued tone.
Mrs. Caxton rose and went to a secretary in the room for one or two papers, which she brought and put in Eleanor's hand. Then folding her arms round her, stooped down and kissed the turned-away face. Eleanor rose up to meet the embrace, and they held each other fast for a little while, neither in any condition to speak.
"The Lord bless you, my child!" said Mrs. Caxton as she released her.
"You must make these letters a matter of prayer. And take care that you do the Lord's will in this business--not your own."
"Aunt Caxton," said Eleanor presently, "why was this not told me long ago--before Mr. Rhys went away?" She spoke the words with difficulty.
"It is too long a story to tell to-night," Mrs. Caxton said after hesitating. "He was entirely ignorant of what your feeling might be towards him--ignorant too how far you might be willing to do and dare for Christ's sake--and doubtful how far the world and Mr. Carlisle might be able to prevail with you if they had a fair chance. He could not risk taking a wife to Fiji who had not fairly counted the cost."
"He was so doubtful of me, and yet liked me?" said Eleanor.
"My love, there is no accounting for these things," Mrs. Caxton said with a smile.
"And he left these with you to give to me?"
"One was left--the other was sent. One comes from Fiji. I will tell you about them to-morrow. It is too long a story for to-night; and you have quite enough to think about already. My dear Eleanor!"
They parted without more words, only with another speaking embrace, more expressive than words; and without looking at the other each went to her own room. Eleanor's was cosy and bright in winter as well as in summer; a fire of the peculiar fuel used in the region of the neighbourhood, made of cakes of coal and sand, glowed in the grate, and the whole colouring of the drapery and the furniture was of that warm rich cast which comforts the eye and not a little disposes the mind to be comfortable in conformity. The only wood fire used in the house was the one in the sitting parlour. Before her grate-full of glowing coals Eleanor sat down; and looked at the two letters she held in her hand.
Looked at the handwriting too, with curious scrutiny, before she ventured to open and read either paper. Wondered too, with an odd side thought, why her fingers should tremble so in handling these, when no letter of Mr. Carlisle's writing had ever reminded her that her fingers had nerves belonging to them. One was a little letter, which Mrs.
Caxton had told her was the first to be read; it was addressed, "In the hand of Mrs. Caxton, for Miss Eleanor Powle." That note Eleanor's little fingers opened with as slight tearing of the paper as might be.
It was in few words indeed.
"Although I know that these lines will never meet the eye of her for whom they are written, unless she be favourably inclined both to them and to me; yet in the extreme doubt which possesses me whether that condition will be ever fulfilled, and consequently whether I am not writing what no one will ever read, I find it very difficult to say anything. Something charges me with foolhardiness, and something with presumption; but there is a something else, which is stronger, that overthrows the charges and bids me go on.
"If you ever see these lines, dear Eleanor, you will know already what they have to tell you; but it is fit you should have it in my own words; that--not the first place in my heart--but the second--is yours; and yours without any rivalry. There is one thing dearer to me than you--it is my King and his service; after that, you have all the rest.
"What is it worth to you? anything? and what will you say to me in reply?
"When you read this I shall be at a distance--before I can read your answer I shall be at the other side of the globe. I am not writing to gratify a vague sentiment, but with a definite purpose--and even, though it mocks me, a definite hope. It is much to ask--I hardly dare put it in words--it is hardly possible--that you should come to me. But if you are ready to do and venture anything in the service of Christ--and if you are willing to share a life that is wholly given to G.o.d to be spent where and how he pleases, and that is to take up its portion for the present, and probably for long, in the depths of South Sea barbarism--let your own heart tell you what welcome you will receive.
"I can say no more. May my Lord bless and keep you. May you know the fulness of joy that Jesus can give his beloved. May you want nothing that is good for you.
"R. Rhys."
The other letter was longer. It was dated "Island Vulanga, in the South Seas, March, 18--,
"My dear Eleanor--
"I do not know what presumption moves me to address you again, and from this far-away place. I say to myself that it is presumption; and yet I yield to the impulse. Perhaps it is partly the wish to enjoy once at least even this fancied communion with you, before some news comes which may shut me off from it for ever. But I yield to the temptation.
I feel very far from you to-day; the tops of the bread-fruit trees that I see from my window, the banana tree with its bunches of fruit and broad bright leaves just before my door--this very hot north wind that is blowing and making it so difficult to do anything and almost to breathe--all remind me that I am in another land, and by the very force of contrast, the fresh Welsh mountains, the green meadows, the cool sweet air of Pla.s.sy--and your face--come before me. Your face, most of all. My mind can think of nothing it would be so refreshing to see. I will write what I please; for you will never read it if the reading would be impertinent; and something tells me you _will_ read it.
"This is one of the hot months, when exertion is at times very difficult. The heat is oppressive and takes away strength and endurance. But it is for my Master. That thought cures all. To be weary for Christ, is not to be weary; it is better than any delights without him. So each day is a boon; and each day that I have been able to fill up well with work for G.o.d, I rejoice and give thanks. There is no limit here to the work to be done; it presses upon us at all points. We cannot teach all that ask for teaching; we can hardly attend to the calls of the sick; hundreds and hundreds stand stretching out their hands to us with the prayer that we would come and tell them about religion, and we cannot go! Our hands are already full; our hearts break for the mult.i.tudes who want the truth, to whom we cannot give it.
We wish that every talent we have were multiplied. We wish that we could work all night as well as all day. Above all _I_ want to be more like my Lord. When I am all Christ's, _then_ I shall be to the praise of his glory, who called me out of darkness into his marvellous light.
I want to be altogether holy; then I shall be quite happy and useful, and there is no other way. Are you satisfied with less, Eleanor? If you are, you are satisfied with less than satisfies Christ. Find out where you stand. Remember, it is as true for you as it was for Paul to say, 'Through Christ I can do all things.'