CHAPTER I.
When Edward Temple was about
eight or nine years old he was afflicted with a disorder of the
eyes. It was so severe, and his sight was naturally so delicate,
that the surgeon felt some apprehensions lest the boy should become
totally blind. He therefore gave strict directions to keep him in a
darkened chamber, with a bandage over his eyes. Not a ray of the
blessed light of heaven could be suffered to visit the poor
lad.
This was a sad thing for Edward.
It was just the same as if there were to be no more sunshine, nor
moonlight, nor glow of the cheerful fire, nor light of lamps. A
night had begun which was to continue perhaps for months,—a longer
and drearier night than that which voyagers are compelled to endure
when their ship is icebound, throughout the winter, in the Arctic
Ocean. His dear father and mother, his brother George, and the
sweet face of little Emily Robinson must all vanish and leave him
in utter darkness and solitude.
Their voices and footsteps, it is
true, would be heard around him; he would feel his mother’s embrace
and the kind pressure of all their hands; but still it would seem
as if they were a thousand miles away.
And then his studies,—they were
to be entirely given up. This was another grievous trial; for
Edward’s memory hardly went back to the period when he had not
known how to read. Many and many a holiday had he spent at his
hook, poring over its pages until the deepening twilight confused
the print and made all the letters run into long words. Then, would
he press his hands across his eyes and wonder why they pained him
so; and when the candles were lighted, what was the reason that
they burned so dimly, like the moon in a foggy night? Poor little
fellow! So far as his eyes were concerned he was already an old
man, and needed a pair of spectacles almost as much as his own
grandfather did.
And now, alas! the time was come
when even grandfather’s spectacles could not have assisted Edward
to read. After a few bitter tears, which only pained his eyes the
more, the poor boy submitted to the surgeon’s orders. His eyes were
bandaged, and, with his mother on one side and his little friend
Emily on the other, he was led into a darkened chamber.
“Mother, I shall be very
miserable!” said Edward, sobbing.
“O no, my dear child!” replied
his mother, cheerfully. “Your eyesight was a precious gift of
Heaven, it is true; but you would do wrong to be miserable for its
loss, even if there were no hope of regaining it. There are other
enjoyments besides what come to us through our eyes.”
“None that are worth having,”
said Edward.
“Ah, but you will not think so
long,” rejoined Mrs. Temple, with tenderness. “All of us
—your father, and myself, and
George, and our sweet Emily—will try to find occupation and
amusement for you. We will use all our eyes to make you happy. Will
they not be better than a single pair?”
“I will sit, by you all day
long,” said Emily, in her low, sweet voice, putting her hand into
that of Edward.
“And so will I, Ned,” said
George, his elder brother, “school time and all, if my father will
permit me.”
Edward’s brother George was three
or four years older than himself,—a fine, hardy lad, of a bold and
ardent temper. He was the leader of his comrades in all their
enterprises and amusements. As to his proficiency at study there
was not much to be said. He had sense and ability enough to have
made himself a scholar, but found so many pleasanter things to do
that he seldom took hold of a book with his whole heart. So fond
was George of boisterous sports and exercises that it was really a
great token of affection and sympathy when he offered to sit all
day long in a dark chamber with his poor brother Edward.
As for little Emily Robinson, she
was the daughter of one of Mr. Temple’s dearest friends. Ever since
her mother went to heaven (which was soon after Emily’s birth) the
little girl had dwelt in the household where we now find her. Mr.
and Mrs. Temple seemed to love her as well as their own children;
for they had no daughter except Emily; nor would the boys have
known the blessing of a sister had not this gentle stranger come to
teach them what it was. If I could show you Emily’s face, with her
dark hair smoothed
away from her forehead, you would
be pleased with her look of simplicity and loving kindness, but
might think that she was somewhat too grave for a child of seven
years old. But you would not love her the less for that.
So brother George and this loving
little girl were to be Edward’s companions and playmates while he
should be kept prisoner in the dark chamber. When the first
bitterness of his grief was over he began to feel that, there might
be some comforts and enjoyments in life even for a boy whose eyes
were covered with a bandage.
“I thank you, dear mother,” said
he, with only a few sobs; “and you, Emily; and you too, George. You
will all be very kind to me, I know. And my father,—will not he
come and see me every day?”
“Yes, my dear boy,” said Mr.
Temple; for, though invisible to Edward, he was standing close
beside him. “I will spend some hours of every day with you. And as
I have often amused you by relating stories and adventures while
you had the use of your eves, I can do the same now that you are
unable to read. Will this please you, Edward?”
“O, very much,” replied
Edward.
“Well, then,” said his father,
“this evening we will begin the series of Biographical Stories
which I promised you some time ago.”
CHAPTER II.