Ursula eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 303 pages of information about Ursula.

Ursula eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 303 pages of information about Ursula.

The abbe and the soldier allowed the young mind to enrich itself with the freedom and comfort which the doctor gave to the body.  Ursula learned as she played.  Religion was given with due reflection.  Left to follow the divine training of a nature that was led into regions of purity by these judicious educators, Ursula inclined more to sentiment than to duty; she took as her rule of conduct the voice of her own conscience rather than the demands of social law.  In her, nobility of feeling and action would ever be spontaneous; her judgment would confirm the impulse of her heart.  She was destined to do right as a pleasure before doing it as an obligation.  This distinction is the peculiar sign of Christian education.  These principles, altogether different from those that are taught to men, were suitable for a woman,—­the spirit and the conscience of the home, the beautifier of domestic life, the queen of her household.  All three of these old preceptors followed the same method with Ursula.  Instead of recoiling before the bold questions of innocence, they explained to her the reasons of things and the best means of action, taking care to give her none but correct ideas.  When, apropos of a flower, a star, a blade of grass, her thoughts went straight to God, the doctor and the professor told her that the priest alone could answer her.  None of them intruded on the territory of the others; the doctor took charge of her material well-being and the things of life; Jordy’s department was instruction; moral and spiritual questions and the ideas appertaining to the higher life belonged to the abbe.  This noble education was not, as it often is, counteracted by injudicious servants.  La Bougival, having been lectured on the subject, and being, moreover, too simple in mind and character to interfere, did nothing to injure the work of these great minds.  Ursula, a privileged being, grew up with good geniuses round her; and her naturally fine disposition made the task of each a sweet and easy one.  Such manly tenderness, such gravity lighted by smiles, such liberty without danger, such perpetual care of soul and body made little Ursula, when nine years of age, a well-trained child and delightful to behold.

Unhappily, this paternal trinity was broken up.  The old captain died the following year, leaving the abbe and the doctor to finish his work, of which, however, he had accomplished the most difficult part.  Flowers will bloom of themselves if grown in a soil thus prepared.  The old gentleman had laid by for ten years past one thousand francs a year, that he might leave ten thousand to his little Ursula, and keep a place in her memory during her whole life.  In his will, the wording of which was very touching, he begged his legatee to spend the four or five hundred francs that came of her little capital exclusively on her dress.  When the justice of the peace applied the seals to the effects of his old friend, they found in a small room, which the captain had allowed no one to enter, a quantity of toys, many of them broken, while all had been used,—­toys of a past generation, reverently preserved, which Monsieur Bongrand was, according to the captain’s last wishes, to burn with his own hands.

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Project Gutenberg
Ursula from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.