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<h2> CHAPTER XXIV </h2>
<h3> Foreshadowings </h3>
<p>Two days after this, Alfred St. Clare and Augustine parted; and Eva, who
had been stimulated, by the society of her young cousin, to exertions
beyond her strength, began to fail rapidly. St. Clare was at last willing
to call in medical advice,—a thing from which he had always shrunk,
because it was the admission of an unwelcome truth.</p>
<p>But, for a day or two, Eva was so unwell as to be confined to the house;
and the doctor was called.</p>
<p>Marie St. Clare had taken no notice of the child's gradually decaying
health and strength, because she was completely absorbed in studying out
two or three new forms of disease to which she believed she herself was a
victim. It was the first principle of Marie's belief that nobody ever was
or could be so great a sufferer as <i>herself</i>; and, therefore, she
always repelled quite indignantly any suggestion that any one around her
could be sick. She was always sure, in such a case, that it was nothing
but laziness, or want of energy; and that, if they had had the suffering
<i>she</i> had, they would soon know the difference.</p>
<p>Miss Ophelia had several times tried to awaken her maternal fears about
Eva; but to no avail.</p>
<p>"I don't see as anything ails the child," she would say; "she runs about,
and plays."</p>
<p>"But she has a cough."</p>
<p>"Cough! you don't need to tell <i>me</i> about a cough. I've always been
subject to a cough, all my days. When I was of Eva's age, they thought I
was in a consumption. Night after night, Mammy used to sit up with me. O!
Eva's cough is not anything."</p>
<p>"But she gets weak, and is short-breathed."</p>
<p>"Law! I've had that, years and years; it's only a nervous affection."</p>
<p>"But she sweats so, nights!"</p>
<p>"Well, I have, these ten years. Very often, night after night, my clothes
will be wringing wet. There won't be a dry thread in my night-clothes and
the sheets will be so that Mammy has to hang them up to dry! Eva doesn't
sweat anything like that!"</p>
<p>Miss Ophelia shut her mouth for a season. But, now that Eva was fairly and
visibly prostrated, and a doctor called, Marie, all on a sudden, took a
new turn.</p>
<p>"She knew it," she said; "she always felt it, that she was destined to be
the most miserable of mothers. Here she was, with her wretched health, and
her only darling child going down to the grave before her eyes;"—and
Marie routed up Mammy nights, and rumpussed and scolded, with more energy
than ever, all day, on the strength of this new misery.</p>
<p>"My dear Marie, don't talk so!" said St. Clare. "You ought not to give up
the case so, at once."</p>
<p>"You have not a mother's feelings, St. Clare! You never could understand
me!—you don't now."</p>
<p>"But don't talk so, as if it were a gone case!"</p>
<p>"I can't take it as indifferently as you can, St. Clare. If <i>you</i>
don't feel when your only child is in this alarming state, I do. It's a
blow too much for me, with all I was bearing before."</p>
<p>"It's true," said St. Clare, "that Eva is very delicate, <i>that</i> I
always knew; and that she has grown so rapidly as to exhaust her strength;
and that her situation is critical. But just now she is only prostrated by
the heat of the weather, and by the excitement of her cousin's visit, and
the exertions she made. The physician says there is room for hope."</p>
<p>"Well, of course, if you can look on the bright side, pray do; it's a
mercy if people haven't sensitive feelings, in this world. I am sure I
wish I didn't feel as I do; it only makes me completely wretched! I wish I
<i>could</i> be as easy as the rest of you!"</p>
<p>And the "rest of them" had good reason to breathe the same prayer, for
Marie paraded her new misery as the reason and apology for all sorts of
inflictions on every one about her. Every word that was spoken by anybody,
everything that was done or was not done everywhere, was only a new proof
that she was surrounded by hard-hearted, insensible beings, who were
unmindful of her peculiar sorrows. Poor Eva heard some of these speeches;
and nearly cried her little eyes out, in pity for her mamma, and in sorrow
that she should make her so much distress.</p>
<p>In a week or two, there was a great improvement of symptoms,—one of
those deceitful lulls, by which her inexorable disease so often beguiles
the anxious heart, even on the verge of the grave. Eva's step was again in
the garden,—in the balconies; she played and laughed again,—and
her father, in a transport, declared that they should soon have her as
hearty as anybody. Miss Ophelia and the physician alone felt no
encouragement from this illusive truce. There was one other heart, too,
that felt the same certainty, and that was the little heart of Eva. What
is it that sometimes speaks in the soul so calmly, so clearly, that its
earthly time is short? Is it the secret instinct of decaying nature, or
the soul's impulsive throb, as immortality draws on? Be it what it may, it
rested in the heart of Eva, a calm, sweet, prophetic certainty that Heaven
was near; calm as the light of sunset, sweet as the bright stillness of
autumn, there her little heart reposed, only troubled by sorrow for those
who loved her so dearly.</p>
<p>For the child, though nursed so tenderly, and though life was unfolding
before her with every brightness that love and wealth could give, had no
regret for herself in dying.</p>
<p>In that book which she and her simple old friend had read so much
together, she had seen and taken to her young heart the image of one who
loved the little child; and, as she gazed and mused, He had ceased to be
an image and a picture of the distant past, and come to be a living,
all-surrounding reality. His love enfolded her childish heart with more
than mortal tenderness; and it was to Him, she said, she was going, and to
his home.</p>
<p>But her heart yearned with sad tenderness for all that she was to leave
behind. Her father most,—for Eva, though she never distinctly
thought so, had an instinctive perception that she was more in his heart
than any other. She loved her mother because she was so loving a creature,
and all the selfishness that she had seen in her only saddened and
perplexed her; for she had a child's implicit trust that her mother could
not do wrong. There was something about her that Eva never could make out;
and she always smoothed it over with thinking that, after all, it was
mamma, and she loved her very dearly indeed.</p>
<p>She felt, too, for those fond, faithful servants, to whom she was as
daylight and sunshine. Children do not usually generalize; but Eva was an
uncommonly mature child, and the things that she had witnessed of the
evils of the system under which they were living had fallen, one by one,
into the depths of her thoughtful, pondering heart. She had vague longings
to do something for them,—to bless and save not only them, but all
in their condition,—longings that contrasted sadly with the
feebleness of her little frame.</p>
<p>"Uncle Tom," she said, one day, when she was reading to her friend, "I can
understand why Jesus <i>wanted</i> to die for us."</p>
<p>"Why, Miss Eva?"</p>
<p>"Because I've felt so, too."</p>
<p>"What is it Miss Eva?—I don't understand."</p>
<p>"I can't tell you; but, when I saw those poor creatures on the boat, you
know, when you came up and I,—some had lost their mothers, and some
their husbands, and some mothers cried for their little children—and
when I heard about poor Prue,—oh, wasn't that dreadful!—and a
great many other times, I've felt that I would be glad to die, if my dying
could stop all this misery. <i>I would</i> die for them, Tom, if I could,"
said the child, earnestly, laying her little thin hand on his.</p>
<p>Tom looked at the child with awe; and when she, hearing her father's
voice, glided away, he wiped his eyes many times, as he looked after her.</p>
<p>"It's jest no use tryin' to keep Miss Eva here," he said to Mammy, whom he
met a moment after. "She's got the Lord's mark in her forehead."</p>
<p>"Ah, yes, yes," said Mammy, raising her hands; "I've allers said so. She
wasn't never like a child that's to live—there was allers something
deep in her eyes. I've told Missis so, many the time; it's a comin' true,—we
all sees it,—dear, little, blessed lamb!"</p>
<p>Eva came tripping up the verandah steps to her father. It was late in the
afternoon, and the rays of the sun formed a kind of glory behind her, as
she came forward in her white dress, with her golden hair and glowing
cheeks, her eyes unnaturally bright with the slow fever that burned in her
veins.</p>
<p>St. Clare had called her to show a statuette that he had been buying for
her; but her appearance, as she came on, impressed him suddenly and
painfully. There is a kind of beauty so intense, yet so fragile, that we
cannot bear to look at it. Her father folded her suddenly in his arms, and
almost forgot what he was going to tell her.</p>
<p>"Eva, dear, you are better now-a-days,—are you not?"</p>
<p>"Papa," said Eva, with sudden firmness "I've had things I wanted to say to
you, a great while. I want to say them now, before I get weaker."</p>
<p>St. Clare trembled as Eva seated herself in his lap. She laid her head on
his bosom, and said,</p>
<p>"It's all no use, papa, to keep it to myself any longer. The time is
coming that I am going to leave you. I am going, and never to come back!"
and Eva sobbed.</p>
<p>"O, now, my dear little Eva!" said St. Clare, trembling as he spoke, but
speaking cheerfully, "you've got nervous and low-spirited; you mustn't
indulge such gloomy thoughts. See here, I've bought a statuette for you!"</p>
<p>"No, papa," said Eva, putting it gently away, "don't deceive yourself!—I
am <i>not</i> any better, I know it perfectly well,—and I am going,
before long. I am not nervous,—I am not low-spirited. If it were not
for you, papa, and my friends, I should be perfectly happy. I want to go,—I
long to go!"</p>
<p>"Why, dear child, what has made your poor little heart so sad? You have
had everything, to make you happy, that could be given you."</p>
<p>"I had rather be in heaven; though, only for my friends' sake, I would be
willing to live. There are a great many things here that make me sad, that
seem dreadful to me; I had rather be there; but I don't want to leave you,—it
almost breaks my heart!"</p>
<p>"What makes you sad, and seems dreadful, Eva?"</p>
<p>"O, things that are done, and done all the time. I feel sad for our poor
people; they love me dearly, and they are all good and kind to me. I wish,
papa, they were all <i>free</i>."</p>
<p>"Why, Eva, child, don't you think they are well enough off now?"</p>
<p>"O, but, papa, if anything should happen to you, what would become of
them? There are very few men like you, papa. Uncle Alfred isn't like you,
and mamma isn't; and then, think of poor old Prue's owners! What horrid
things people do, and can do!" and Eva shuddered.</p>
<p>"My dear child, you are too sensitive. I'm sorry I ever let you hear such
stories."</p>
<p>"O, that's what troubles me, papa. You want me to live so happy, and never
to have any pain,—never suffer anything,—not even hear a sad
story, when other poor creatures have nothing but pain and sorrow, all
their lives;—it seems selfish. I ought to know such things, I ought
to feel about them! Such things always sunk into my heart; they went down
deep; I've thought and thought about them. Papa, isn't there any way to
have all slaves made free?"</p>
<p>"That's a difficult question, dearest. There's no doubt that this way is a
very bad one; a great many people think so; I do myself I heartily wish
that there were not a slave in the land; but, then, I don't know what is
to be done about it!"</p>
<p>"Papa, you are such a good man, and so noble, and kind, and you always
have a way of saying things that is so pleasant, couldn't you go all round
and try to persuade people to do right about this? When I am dead, papa,
then you will think of me, and do it for my sake. I would do it, if I
could."</p>
<p>"When you are dead, Eva," said St. Clare, passionately. "O, child, don't
talk to me so! You are all I have on earth."</p>
<p>"Poor old Prue's child was all that she had,—and yet she had to hear
it crying, and she couldn't help it! Papa, these poor creatures love their
children as much as you do me. O! do something for them! There's poor
Mammy loves her children; I've seen her cry when she talked about them.
And Tom loves his children; and it's dreadful, papa, that such things are
happening, all the time!"</p>
<p>"There, there, darling," said St. Clare, soothingly; "only don't distress
yourself, don't talk of dying, and I will do anything you wish."</p>
<p>"And promise me, dear father, that Tom shall have his freedom as soon as"—she
stopped, and said, in a hesitating tone—"I am gone!"</p>
<p>"Yes, dear, I will do anything in the world,—anything you could ask
me to."</p>
<p>"Dear papa," said the child, laying her burning cheek against his, "how I
wish we could go together!"</p>
<p>"Where, dearest?" said St. Clare.</p>
<p>"To our Saviour's home; it's so sweet and peaceful there—it is all
so loving there!" The child spoke unconsciously, as of a place where she
had often been. "Don't you want to go, papa?" she said.</p>
<p>St. Clare drew her closer to him, but was silent.</p>
<p>"You will come to me," said the child, speaking in a voice of calm
certainty which she often used unconsciously.</p>
<p>"I shall come after you. I shall not forget you."</p>
<p>The shadows of the solemn evening closed round them deeper and deeper, as
St. Clare sat silently holding the little frail form to his bosom. He saw
no more the deep eyes, but the voice came over him as a spirit voice, and,
as in a sort of judgment vision, his whole past life rose in a moment
before his eyes: his mother's prayers and hymns; his own early yearnings
and aspirings for good; and, between them and this hour, years of
worldliness and scepticism, and what man calls respectable living. We can
think <i>much</i>, very much, in a moment. St. Clare saw and felt many
things, but spoke nothing; and, as it grew darker, he took his child to
her bed-room; and, when she was prepared for rest; he sent away the
attendants, and rocked her in his arms, and sung to her till she was
asleep.</p>
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