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"So everyone said, sir," replied my father, "but--but he had been ailing for some time before."
"What was his complaint before he caught this disease?" I asked.
"Ah! sir, that's just the point," answered my father. "I sadly fear that it was an epidemic of a more dangerous sort."
"How so?" asked I. "What do you mean?"
"Well, sir, my real opinion is now that the young man was too strongly attached to a maid whom he couldn't marry, and that undermined his health. Then came the epidemic, which he had not sufficient strength to shake off."
"Ah!" said I, "and why could he not marry her? Was the maid unrelenting?"
"Not that, exactly, sir. Indeed, I believe she was as much in love with him, but----"
"But what?"
"Well, the fact of the matter is, sir, the girl's father and I ain't friends, and neither of us was willing to give our consent. The girl was sent off by her father to live at her aunt's, just to get her out of my son's way. I knew all about this, but I wasn't going to tell the young man, lest he should take it into his head to run after her, so, thinking to blunt his pa.s.sion, I invented the story of her death, saying that she had been carried off by the epidemic, hoping that after a time, finding she was no more, that he would cease to think of her. But instead of that, he grew worse and worse, and I attribute his death to the lie I told about his sweetheart's decease."
"You did very wrong," said I, "not to give your consent."
"Well, but, sir, if I _had_ given _mine_, the girl's father would not have given _his_," replied my father.
"If you had been the first to make up the quarrel, I have no doubt that he would have given his consent," said I.
My father seemed stung with this reproach, and took out his handkerchief to wipe his eyes.
"Ah, my poor son! my poor son!" sobbed my father. "What wouldn't I give to have him back again?"
"Would you give your consent to his marriage with the girl he loved if he could come to life again?" I asked.
"Ay, sir, that would I, only too gladly," replied my father, "but what's the use of talking now that he has gone from me for ever?"
"You speak like a man without faith," said I. "Have you no belief in an after life? Have you no hope of meeting him in Heaven?"
"That is the only hope I have left, sir," said my father, "but in the meantime----"
"Ah!" said I, "you cannot make up your mind to be consoled for his loss for the few short years that you have to remain upon earth."
"Well, sir, it's very hard to bear," said my father.
"Have you ever prayed?" I asked.
"Yes, sir," said he, "I say my prayers regularly."
"But do you say them earnestly?" said I. "Do you believe that if you ask a thing that you will receive what you ask for? For instance, if you were to pray for your son to be restored to life, do you believe that he really _would_ be restored to life?"
My father stared in surprise.
"Well, to tell you the truth, sir, no," he said; "for we all know that when a man has been buried three weeks that he rarely returns. Even Lazarus was but four days under the earth. In fact, the thought of praying for his return after his spirit had once been yielded up never occurred to me. When David was bereaved of his child by Uriah's wife, he humbled himself whilst the child was yet alive with sackcloth and ashes, but when he heard that the child was dead, he rose and ate bread. What instance is there on record of one returning to life after being buried three weeks?"
"Pray, nevertheless," said I; "the mercy of G.o.d is boundless. Who knows but that----"
"Oh, sir, sir," said my father, shaking his head, "you but mock me; it cannot be."
"It is impious of you to say it cannot be. Nothing is impossible with G.o.d," said I.
My father smiled faintly. I saw that he regarded me as a kind of well meaning madman, and after lighting my candle, he showed me the way to my room and shut me in for the night.
My room was some few doors off from my father's. I undressed and went to bed. I had not been in bed more than an hour when I heard my father's footsteps on the stairs. He, too, was going to bed. There was no other guest in the inn then, and all was quiet.
I allowed my father a quarter of an hour to get into bed. Then I opened my chamber door, and listened to hear if he was praying, for he always prayed aloud. I was satisfied that he was praying; what the precise words were I could not quite distinguish, but I fancied I heard my name mentioned once or twice. I returned to my chamber and closed the door. I allowed my father another hour to go to sleep. When the time had expired, I stepped on tip-toe across the pa.s.sage and turned the handle of his bedroom door noiselessly. I peeped in. All was silent, or rather he was snoring loudly. Leaving the door ajar, I went back cautiously to my chamber to fetch the candle, and then softly and noiselessly I entered the room where my father lay asleep. I had provided myself with a pinch of salt, which I sprinkled in the flame, so as to give a look of ghostly pallor to my face. Then, tapping my father lightly on the shoulder, he started up in bed.
"Good heavens!" he cried, with every hair erect on his head--
"Jack! is it you?"
He spoke huskily, and his teeth chattered.
"Hus.h.!.+" said I, in a sepulchral voice; "listen to me. Because you have prayed fervently, I have risen from my grave to comfort you. Grieve not for me, father, for I am happy. I have returned to thank you for having given your consent to my marriage. Molly is now mine in spirit, and I shall henceforth rest peacefully in my tomb. Farewell."
I strode towards the door, with long, silent, majestic strides, and closed it carefully after me, leaving my father staring after me into s.p.a.ce and speechless with terror.
I was a very young man then, and a reckless devil-may-care sort of fellow, otherwise I should not have attempted such a dangerous practical joke. The consequences might have been fatal; as it was, my father's nerves were terribly shaken, and I spoilt all his night's rest. When he brought up my breakfast the next morning in the parlour he looked pale and haggard.
"What is the matter, good man?" said I, patronisingly, in my usual feigned voice.
"Oh, sir!" said my father, excitedly, "I saw him last night!"
"Saw him!" I exclaimed. "Saw whom?"
"My son, Jack, sir. Oh, who would have believed it?"
"What! and has he returned to life, or was it his spirit?"
"Yes, sir, his ghost," said my father, with a look of awe, and then he began relating to me the whole particulars of his son's spiritual apparition.
"Then you followed my advice, and have been praying?"
"That I did, sir, with all my heart and soul," said my father.
"You told me last evening," said I, "that if your son should come to life again you would give your consent to his marriage. If you really repent having withheld your consent during his lifetime let me see that your repentance is true by writing me the following words and affixing your signature."
"What words, sir, must I write?" he asked.
"Write," said I, "'If my son is restored to me I will give my consent to his marriage, with the girl of his choice,' that is what you have to write."
"But--but--" began my father.
"Write what I tell you, and affix your signature," said I, gruffly.