Rensselaer Union, Volume 10, Number 46, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 1 August 1878 — MRS. BARNEY’S SERMON. [ARTICLE]
MRS. BARNEY’S SERMON.
Strangely enough the cellar-stairs preached it—wit least they contributed that very important part—the applica<fon. Sister Searls had furnished the text in the Scorning, then the sermon might have gone on from firstly to forty-seventhly without Mrs. Barney’s notice, had it not been for the cellar stairs. Mrs. Barney was hurried that day—she was always hurried—and it was warm and uncomfortable in the sunshiny stove-heated kitchen, where she was hastening to and fro, and growing fretted and tired without slackening her speed. Nealie, standing at the ironingtable, was tired also. “ There’s so much to do,” she said, wearily. “I don’t see why we need to do baking and ironing both in one day. It makes such a crowd, and we could have left one for the morrow.” “To-morrow will bring work enough of iUk own*” answered Mrs. Barney, quiche. •* Beside, if we should get the work all out of the way the first of the week, a whole day to rest in would be worth something;” .» “ But then we shouldn’t take it for resting iust because it would be a wheie day, and something else could be crowded into it,” murmured Nealie, to whom one hour now looked very inviting and that possible day in the future very uncertain. The mother did not answer and the young girl’s Ind moved more slowly over the damp , muslins as her gaze wandered away to the hills where great trees were throwing cool shadows. How pleasant the shade and greenness were! The desire to bring it nearer suggested another thought to Nealie. “Some vines would be so nice at this window, mother, I could jplant them if you would let Tim dig a little spot out there.” “ Yes, but if we ever get the house fixed up as we want it, wo shall have shutters at that window.” “ But we don’t know when we can do that, and the vines would be so pretty now,” urged Nealie. “Pretty? Well, yes, if we had the whole yard trimmed and laid out as it should be. 1 hope we-shall have it some day; but a stray vine here and there seems hardly worth fussing over when we can’t have the whole done.” Nealie sighed, but was silent, and presently Tim came in with an armful of wood. “ Neqlie,” he said, pausing near her table, **if you’d just sew this sleeve up a little;* The old thing tears awful easy, and I just hit it against a nail.” lie spoke low, but Mrs. Barney’s quick oars caught the words. . “That jacket torn again, Tim! I never saw such a boy to tear things to pieces! No, Nealie can’t stop to mend it now, and I can’t either. I’ve been intending to get you a new one, but there seem much chance to make anything new while you contrive to make so much patching and darning on the old.” Mrs. Barney shut the oven door with a snap. Tim was the hired boy, kindhearted but careless, and he was rather discouraging. Board and clothing sometimes appeared to her a high price for his services. “ Hurry now, and pick some currants for dinner,” she said Tim took the tin-pail pointed put to " him, but did not hurry as he passed with clouded face down the walk. The thought of a new jacket would have been pleasant a few minutes.before, but it had suddenly lost its attractiveness. The boy drew his bushy brows into a scowl, and, as soon as he was out of sight of the house, threw himself upon the grass and began his currant-picking in a very leisurely style. Then it was that Sister Searls drove up in her rattling old buggy, with a horse that was, as Tim said, “ a reg’lar old revolutionary pensioner.” . “If I can’t have fine horses and carriages I can take a deal of comfort with these,” was always Sister Searl’s cheery comment upon her equipage." She had an errand at Mrs. Barney’s and had stopped on her way to the village. ~~ A’ plump, nosy-faoed little woman she was, not young, only that she belonged to the class of people who never grew old; neatly dressed, though it was but that old poplin made over, Mrs. Barney wondering a little that she should have taken the trouble, when she surely needed a new one. “ This room is too warm to ask anyone to Sit in,” she said, apologetically, placing a chair for her caller just outside the door. “ When we are able to’ have the house altered to suit us, 1shall not have a stove hero in summer?’ “In the meanwhile you have this nice cool porch. What a pleasant Elace it is,” said Sister Searls, »giyYes, if ope had time (o enjoy it,”
to get everytldng about the place in just the right order. .that tdoa’t Mve time.” “Take time, Sister Barney, take time!” said Mrs. Searle, smiling, but earnestly. “Make the most of what you have while you ■ are working for something -better. Don’t crowa out any little sweetness you have to make room for some great pleasure that’s farther off. You see,” she added, blushing a little, as if her words needed .excuse, “ it’s something I had to learn myself, years ago—never to trample on daisies in a wild chase after the roses. The roses I haven’t found, but the daisies have been enough to make the path bright.” Mrs. Barney looked upon her in some perplexity, as she took her departure. She had listened with onenaif her mind on the loaves of bread in the oven, and the other half did not fully comprehend what had been said. “ Daisies and roses! I don’t see what any sort °I a flower has to do with wanting a new kitchen! But there! 1 suppose ministers’ wives, even if they are only country ministers’ wives, hear so much talk that it comes natural to them. Bits out of old garment, like as anyway. Dear me! I don’t get much time for poetry in my life! I’m sure of that. How Tim does loiter!” Tim, meanwhile, had sauntered out from among the bushes, and was engaged in untying the old horse that Mrs. Searls had fastened as securely as if it could be induced under any circumstances to run. He was moved to this act of jgallantry, partly because he really likea the cheery little woman, and partly because he heard Mrs. Barney’s call, and was in no haste to go to the house. “That will do, thank you, Tim,” said Sister Searls, nervously anxious to expedite his steps'in the way of obedience. “ I think Mrs. Barney is calling you.” “ Yes’m; she most always is,” answered Tim, philosophically, pausing to arrange the harness with painful deliberation. “ But, my dear boy,” urged Sister Searls, reading something in the knitted brows, “ you really should try to please her and help her all you can, you know. She is kind to you.” “Oh yes, she’s kind! Only when I see one of her kindnesses a coming I dodge; it generally hits a fellow hard enough to be uncomfortable,” responded Tun. Then, having relieved his feelings by this statement, his conscience pricked him slightly, and ha added: “ You see she’s always in such a hurry. She can’t come and bring’em; she has to pitch ’em.” Mrs. Searls meditated as she drove down the country road. “Well, I never thought of that before, but 1 do suppose that’s why the Bible speaks of the Lord’s ‘lovingkindness’ and * tender mercy’ —because there’s so much kindness in the world that isn’t one bit loving, and so much mercy that is only duty and not tenderness. I’ll tell Josiah that.” Fox it happened that while the good minister pored over his books and studied Ideology, his wife, going here and there, studied humanity. And though he epoked Mis own sermons, his life often seasoned them. The baking was done at last, the currants picked,. .and Mrs. Barney's dinner ready. “For the bounty bestowed upon us may we be. duly grateful,” luujynured Hr. BRtileW, with head bowed low over his plate. Ths W remarked that he was tired of a steady diet of ham and eggs, and didn’t see why they couldn’t nave a little variety. “ You would see if you had to cook in the hot kitchen, as I do,” responded Mrs. Barney, more shortly than her wont. “ I’m glad to have whatever I can get most quickly and easily. When we have a summer-kitchen we can begin to live as other people do.” “ If we ain’t all old as Methuseler,” complained Master Tommy, in an undertone which was perfectly audible. “Anyway, the chickens will be if we can’t have any cooked till that time.” He had sniffed the odors of the baking on his homeward way from school, and, settling his juvenile mind upon chickenpie for dinner, had been grievously disappointed. Warm and weary with the morning’s work, the questions and suggestions fretted Mrs. Barney. She felt wounded and aggrieved, too, as she moved about silently after dinner. No onq seemed to see that she cared as much for things nice and comfortable as did the others, she said to herself. She cared far more, indeed, since she was- willing to do without much now, and work ana plan for the sake of having things all that could be desired by-ana-by. How many present comforts and conveniences she had foregone for that! Those very cellar stairs, toward whose dark tortuous steps she was tending, were an example; they could scarcely be more illy-ouilt, or in a more inconvenient place. Mr. Barney had wanted to remove them; but she would not allow him to incur the expense because a second removal might be necessary when the house was thoroughly rearranged. No, she had preferred to submit to the’ discomfort all this time. Too long a time it proved, for even while she meditated an insecure board slipped beneath her feet, plunging her down the narrow stairway against the tough stone wall, and then upon the hard floor of the cellar. One swift moment of terror, the crash of dishes that fell from her hands, a flash of excruciating pain, and then she knew nothing more. She did not hear Nealie’s wild cry from the room above, nor see her husband’s pale face as he lilted her in his arms. When she returned to consciousness a strange voice—the physician's—was saying: “No bones broken, though it’s a-won-der her neck wasn't, falling in the way she did.” Slowly she opened her eyes upon a confused mingling of anxious faces, wet cloths ana bottles of arnica and camphor, and gradually she comprehended what had happened, and her own condition—not dangerously injured, but bruised and lamed, with a sprained ankle that would keep her a prisoner for some days at least. It was a sudden pause in her busy work—an enforced rest. She scarcely knew how to bear it for a moment, as she remembered all she had planned to do, until a second shuddering thought suggested that she might have left it all forever; then she grew patient and thankful. Yet it seemed strange to be quietly lying on the Jounge in the boat room, the room that had been kept so carefully clpsed to preserve its furniture until an addition to the house should transmute it into a back parlor; to waioh through the open door only a spectator, while Nealie flitted to and fro in the kitchen beyond, spreading the table for tea. How good the children were that evening, and how thoughtful her hus-
band was, coming to her side again and again to talk dr food to hrtTWHff not found much time for talking or reading together these late years, she and David; she bad always been so busy when he was in the house. She had dreamed of a leisure time coming, though, when they should have many evenings liko this, except the illness or accident coming to mar her plans, or of death suddenly ending them. But it flashed upon her now how many loving words and offices and daily enjoyments had been crowded out of their home and in that brief retrospective glance she understood the meaning and the earnestness of Sister Searls’ entreaty. “ Why its all kind of real nice and e— if you wasn’t hurt,” declared my, unable to express his enjoyment of the pretty room, and the unusual family gathering any more clearly. Tears gathered in the mother’s eyes, but she had found her clue and meant to follow it. She had ample time for thought in the days that followed, when she was only able to sew a little, now and then, on garments for Tim, or look over seeds for Nealie’s vine-plant-ing; and slowly but surely she learned her lesson, and brought it back to health with.her —to gather life’s pleasantness as God sends his sunshine—day by day. — Kate W. Hamilton, in Interior.
