The Good Time Coming eBook

Timothy Shay Arthur
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 300 pages of information about The Good Time Coming.

The Good Time Coming eBook

Timothy Shay Arthur
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 300 pages of information about The Good Time Coming.

Nearly a year had glided away since the wreck of Markland’s fortune, and little or no change in his worldly prospects was visible.  He was sitting late, one evening, reading aloud to his wife from a book which the latter had received from Mrs. Willet.  The rest of the family had retired.  Mrs. Markland was plying her needle busily.  Altered circumstances had made hourly industry on her part a necessity; yet had they in no way dimmed the cheerful brightness of her spirits.

“Come, Agnes,” said her husband, closing the book, “it is growing late; and you have worked long enough.  I’m afraid your health will suffer.”

“Just a few minutes longer,” replied Mrs. Markland, smiling.  “I must finish this apron for Frank.  He will want it in the morning.”  And her hand moved quicker.

“How true is every word you have been reading!” she added, after a few moments.  “Manifold indeed are the ways in which a wise Providence dispenses good to the children of men.  Mercy is seen in the cloud as well as in the sunshine.  Tears to the spirit are like rain to the earth.”

“The descent looked frightful,” said Markland, after a pause—­“but we reached the lower ground uninjured.  Invisible hands seemed to bear us up.”

“We have found the land far pleasanter than was imagined; and the sky above of a purer crystal.”

“Yes—­yes.  It is even so.  And if the flowers that spring up at our feet are not so brilliant, they have a sweeter perfume and a diviner beauty.”

“In this land,” said Mrs. Markland, “we see in the visible things that surround us what was rarely seen before—­types of the invisible things they represent.”

“Ah, yes, yes!  Scales have fallen from my eyes.  I have learned a new philosophy.  In former times, Mr. Allison’s words seemed full of beautiful truths, yet so veiled, that I could not see their genuine brightness.  Now they are like sudden gleams of sunlight on a darkened landscape.”

“Seekers after happiness, like the rest of the world,” said Mrs. Markland, resting her hands upon the table by which she sat, and, gazing earnestly into her husband’s face, “we had lost our way, and were moving with swift feet in the wrong direction.  Suddenly, our kind Father threw up before us an impassable mountain.  Then we seemed shut out from the land of promise forever, and were in despair.  But he took his weeping, murmuring children by the hand, and led them gently into another path!”

“Into a narrower way”—­Mr. Markland took up the words of his wife—­“and sought by few; yet, it has already brought us into a pleasant region.”

“To speak in less ideal language,” said Mrs. Markland, “we have been taught an all-important lesson.  It is this:  That there is over each one of us an intimate providential care which ever has regard to our eternal good.  And the reason of our many and sad disappointments lies in the fact, that we seek only the gratification of natural life, in which are the very elements of dissatisfaction.  All mere natural life is selfish life; and natural ends gained only confirm this selfish life, and produce misery instead of happiness.”

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Project Gutenberg
The Good Time Coming from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.