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Good Time Coming, The
CHAPTER XXXVII
T.S.Arthur
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       _ WHEN the offer of Mr. Walker's cottage was made known in the family,
       there was a passive acquiescence in the change on the part of all
       but Aunt Grace. Her pride was aroused.
       "It's very kind in Mr. Willet," she said--"very kind, but scarcely
       delicate under the circumstances."
       "Why not delicate?" inquired Mr. Markland.
       "Did they think we were going into that little pigeon-box, just
       under the shadow of Woodbine Lodge. If we have to come down so low,
       it will not be in this neighbourhood. There's too much pride in the
       Markland blood for that!"
       "We have but little to do with pride now," said Mrs. Markland.
       Her husband sighed. The remark of his sister had quickened his
       blood.
       "It is the best we can do!" he remarked, sadly.
       "Not by any means," said Grace. "There are other neighbourhoods than
       this, and other houses to be obtained. Let us go from here; not
       remain the observed of all curious observers--objects of remark and
       pity!"
       Her brother arose while she was speaking, and commenced walking the
       room in a disturbed manner. The words of Grace had aroused his
       slumbering pride.
       "Rather let us do what is best under the circumstances," said Mrs.
       Markland, in her quiet way. "People will have their own thoughts,
       but these should never turn us from a right course."
       "The sight of Woodbine Lodge will rebuke me daily," said Mr.
       Markland.
       "You cannot be happy in this neighbourhood." Grace spoke in her
       emphatic way. "It is impossible!"
       "I fear that it is even so," replied her brother.
       "Then," said Mrs. Markland, in a firm voice, "we will go hence. I
       place nothing against the happiness of my husband. If the sight of
       our old home is to trouble him daily, we will put mountains between,
       if necessary."
       Markland turned toward his wife. She had never looked more beautiful
       in his eye.
       "Is self-negation to be all on her part?" The thought, flashing
       through his mind, changed the current of his feelings, and gave him
       truer perceptions.
       "No, Agnes," he said, "while a faint smile played around his lips,
       "we will not put mountains between us and this neighbourhood. Pride
       is a poor counsellor, and they who take heed to her words, sow the
       seeds of repentance. In reverse of fortune, we stand not alone.
       Thousands have walked this rugged road before us; and shall we
       falter, and look weakly back?"
       "Not so, Edward!" returned his wife, with enthusiasm; "we will
       neither falter nor look back. Our good and evil are often made by
       contrasts. We shall not find the way rugged, unless we compare it
       too closely with other ways our feet have trodden, and sigh vainly
       over the past, instead of accepting the good that is awarded us in
       the present. Let us first make the 'rough paths of peevish nature
       even,' and the way will be smooth to our feet."
       "You will never be happy in this neighbourhood, Edward," said his
       sister, sharply; for she saw that the pride her words had awakened
       was dying out.
       "If he is not happy here, change of place will work no difference."
       Mrs. Markland spoke earnestly.
       "Why not?" was the quick interrogation of Grace.
       "Because happiness is rarely, if ever, produced by a change of
       external relations. We must have within us the elements of
       happiness; and then the heart's sunshine will lie across our
       threshold, whether it be of palace or cottage."
       "Truer words were never spoken," said Mr. Markland, "and I feel
       their better meaning. No, Agnes, we will not go out from this
       pleasant neighbourhood, nor from among those we have proved to be
       friends. If Woodbine Lodge ever looks upon me rebukingly, I will try
       to acknowledge the justice of the rebuke. I will accept Mr. Willet's
       kind offer to-morrow. But what have you to say, Fanny?" Mr. Markland
       now turned to his daughter, who had not ventured a word on the
       subject, though she had listened with apparent interest to the
       conference. "Shall we take Mr. Walker's cottage?"
       "Your judgment must decide that, father," was answered.
       "But have you no choice in the case, Fanny? We can remove into the
       city, or go into some other neighbourhood."
       "I will be as happy here as anywhere. Do as seems best, father."
       A silence, made in a measure oppressive by Fanny's apparent
       indifference to all change, followed. Before other words were spoke,
       Aunt Grace withdrew in a manner that showed a mind disturbed. The
       conference in regard to the cottage was again resumed, and ended in
       the cheerful conclusion that it would afford them the pleasantest
       home, in their changed circumstances, of any that it was possible
       for them to procure. _