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The Good Time Coming

Chapter 3 No.3

Word Count: 2108    |    Released on: 29/11/2017

us portico, after her return from the sick woman's cottage; and drawing her arm within

on canvas colours so full of a living beauty. Deep purple and luce

in the ai

loating elysium

, as his eyes sought the western horizon, and for the first time si

rkland, chidingly, "You are not on

o say, my gentle monitor?" returned t

or sordid; and you know I did not." She

y worldly

ot use t

not only in the

the habit of the world to close its eyes to the r

nd that defect

eyes were not able to bring intelligenc

Happily, like Pegasus, it has broad and strong pinions-can rise free from the prisoner's cell and the rich man's dainty pal

usband," said Mrs. Marklan

where would the world be

und for an argument. I I don't know where the world would be under the circumsta

ll atte

ings that are scattered like unseen pearls about t

've been studying for the last hal

the conclusion at whi

law of our being, impressed by the Creator, t

ation for a happy future. Rather, in the wooing of sweet Content to-day, are we making a hom

t something more than it possesses-who does not look to a coming tim

with our mere natural surroundings a law of the Creator, established as a spur to advancement; for this disquietude is but the effect of a deeper cause. It is n

and progression of the spirit as well as of the body; for all physical laws have their origin in the world of mind, and bear thereto exact relations. Yet, for all this, when there is a deep dissatisfaction with what exists around

hough we roam the world over; and it may be, that the narrow path to heaven lies just across our own fields. It is in the actual a

an find no w

ready," was the earnestly spoken answ

from this lovely Eden, and pines for new fields in which to display its powers. Here I fondly hoped to spend the remainder of my life-contented-happy. The idea was a dreamy illusion. Daily is this seen in clear light. I reprove myself; I chide the folly, as I call it; bu

y fallen upon the lovely home where she had hoped to spend all the days of her life-a shadow from a storm-boding cloud. Even from the beginning of their wedded life, she had marked in her husband a defect of character, which, gaining strength, had led to his giving up business, and their retirement to the country. That defect was the common one, appertaining to all, a looking away from the present into the future for the means of enjoyment. In all the years of

some glittering toy-could not remain their permanent home. For this flowed her first tears; and these, as we have said, were for herself. But her mind soon regained its serenity; and from herself, her thoughts turned to her husband. She was unselfish

d children are left. My husband, so generous, so

nded and joined her family in the sitting-room, where the soft astral diffused its pleasant light, and greeted her sober-minded husband with loving smiles and cheerful words. And he was deceived. Not for an instant imagined he, after looking upon her face, that she had passed through a painful, though brief conflict, and was now possessed of a brave heart for any chang

d Mr. Markland, after the children had retir

land; and, as she lifted her eyes,

you, dear?" he

lied, "Why should I be troubled? Have I

, your eyes are

ly an April shadow, Edward, that is quickly lost in Apri

seems wanting. Yet my spirit is like a aged

speak in hyperbole. This lovely place, which everywhere shows the

er to be an idle lingerer among its pleasant groves; for

inutes, her husband said, with a slight hesitation in h

e felt a strong desi

here was a look in her eyes that her husband did no

he added, "and the tour would not

down so low that he could not see, its expression

enjoy the tri

d not think o

dream for a moment of any pleasu

oy tremble over her heart-strings. And yet, for all, she could not keep back t

red singular in her manner that evening, he was puzzled to comprehend its meaning

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The Good Time Coming
The Good Time Coming
“LIFE is a mystery to all men, and the more profound the deeper the striving spirit is immersed in its own selfish instincts. How earnestly do we all fix our eyes upon the slowly-advancing future, impatiently waiting that good time coming which never comes! How fast the years glide by, beginning in hope and ending in disappointment! Strange that we gain so little of true wisdom amid the sharp disappointments that meet us at almost every turn! How keenly the writer has suffered with the rest, need not be told.”