Words of Cheer for the Tempted, the Toiling, and the Sorrowing eBook

Timothy Shay Arthur
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 304 pages of information about Words of Cheer for the Tempted, the Toiling, and the Sorrowing.

Words of Cheer for the Tempted, the Toiling, and the Sorrowing eBook

Timothy Shay Arthur
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 304 pages of information about Words of Cheer for the Tempted, the Toiling, and the Sorrowing.

And in this view, though our efforts be humble and our toil hard, life can never be a treadmill.

ARTHUR LELAND.

ARTHUR LELAND was a young lawyer of some twenty-seven years of age.  His office stood a stone’s throw from the court-house, in a thriving town in the West.  Arthur had taken a full course in a Northern college, both in the collegiate and law department, and with some honour.  During his course he had managed to read an amazing amount of English literature, and no man was readier or had a keener taste in such things than he.  He had a pleasing personal appearance, a fluent and persuasive manner, an unblemished character.  Every morning he came to his office from one of the most pleasant little cottage homes in the world; and if you had opened the little front gate, and gone up through the shrubbery to the house, you would have seen a Mrs. Leland, somewhere in-doors, and she as intelligent and pleasant a lady as you ever saw.  You would have seen, moreover, tumbling about the grass, or up to the eyes in some mischief, as noble-looking a little fellow of some three years old as you could well have wished for your own son.

This all looks well enough, but there is something wrong.  Not in the house.  No; it is as pleasant a cottage as you could wish—­plenty of garden, peas and honeysuckles climbing up everywhere, green grass, white paint, Venetian blinds, comfortable furniture.

Not in Willie, the little scamp.  No; rosy, healthy, good head, intelligent eyes, a fine specimen he was of an only son.  Full of mischief, of course, he was.  Overflowing with uproar and questions and mischief.  Mustachios of egg or butter-milk or molasses after each meal, as a matter of course.  Cut fingers, bumped forehead, torn clothes, all day long.  Yet a more affectionate, easily-managed child never was.

The mischief was not in Lucy, the Mrs. Leland.  I assure you it was not.  Leland knew, to his heart’s core, that a lovelier, more prudent, sensible, intelligent wife it was impossible to exist.  Thrifty, loving, lady-like, right and true throughout.

Where was this mischief?  Look at Leland.  He is in perpetual motion.  Reading, writing, walking the streets, he is always fast, in dead earnest.  Somewhat too fast.  There is a certain slowness about your strong man.  You never associate the idea of mental depth and power with your quick-stepping man.  You cannot conceive of a Roman emperor or a Daniel Webster as a slight, swift man.  The bearing of a man’s body is the outward emblem of the bearing of his soul.  Leland is rather slight, rather swift.  He meets you in his rapid walk.  He stops, grasps your hand, asks cordially after your health.  There is an open, warm feeling in the man.  No hypocrisy whatever.  Yet he talks too fast.  He don’t give you half a chance to answer one of his rapid questions, before he is asking another totally different.  He is not at

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Words of Cheer for the Tempted, the Toiling, and the Sorrowing from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.