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<h2> ON MEMORY. </h2>
<p>"I remember, I remember,<br/>
In the days of chill November,<br/>
How the blackbird on the—"<br/></p>
<p>I forget the rest. It is the beginning of the first piece of poetry I ever
learned; for</p>
<p>"Hey, diddle diddle,<br/>
The cat and the fiddle,"<br/></p>
<p>I take no note of, it being of a frivolous character and lacking in the
qualities of true poetry. I collected fourpence by the recital of "I
remember, I remember." I knew it was fourpence, because they told me that
if I kept it until I got twopence more I should have sixpence, which
argument, albeit undeniable, moved me not, and the money was squandered,
to the best of my recollection, on the very next morning, although upon
what memory is a blank.</p>
<p>That is just the way with Memory; nothing that she brings to us is
complete. She is a willful child; all her toys are broken. I remember
tumbling into a huge dust-hole when a very small boy, but I have not the
faintest recollection of ever getting out again; and if memory were all we
had to trust to, I should be compelled to believe I was there still.</p>
<p>At another time—some years later—I was assisting at an
exceedingly interesting love scene; but the only thing about it I can call
to mind distinctly is that at the most critical moment somebody suddenly
opened the door and said, "Emily, you're wanted," in a sepulchral tone
that gave one the idea the police had come for her. All the tender words
she said to me and all the beautiful things I said to her are utterly
forgotten.</p>
<p>Life altogether is but a crumbling ruin when we turn to look behind: a
shattered column here, where a massive portal stood; the broken shaft of a
window to mark my lady's bower; and a moldering heap of blackened stones
where the glowing flames once leaped, and over all the tinted lichen and
the ivy clinging green.</p>
<p>For everything looms pleasant through the softening haze of time. Even the
sadness that is past seems sweet. Our boyish days look very merry to us
now, all nutting, hoop, and gingerbread. The snubbings and toothaches and
the Latin verbs are all forgotten—the Latin verbs especially. And we
fancy we were very happy when we were hobbledehoys and loved; and we wish
that we could love again. We never think of the heartaches, or the
sleepless nights, or the hot dryness of our throats, when she said she
could never be anything to us but a sister—as if any man wanted more
sisters!</p>
<p>Yes, it is the brightness, not the darkness, that we see when we look
back. The sunshine casts no shadows on the past. The road that we have
traversed stretches very fair behind us. We see not the sharp stones. We
dwell but on the roses by the wayside, and the strong briers that stung us
are, to our distant eyes, but gentle tendrils waving in the wind. God be
thanked that it is so—that the ever-lengthening chain of memory has
only pleasant links, and that the bitterness and sorrow of to-day are
smiled at on the morrow.</p>
<p>It seems as though the brightest side of everything were also its highest
and best, so that as our little lives sink back behind us into the dark
sea of forgetfulness, all that which is the lightest and the most gladsome
is the last to sink, and stands above the waters, long in sight, when the
angry thoughts and smarting pain are buried deep below the waves and
trouble us no more.</p>
<p>It is this glamour of the past, I suppose, that makes old folk talk so
much nonsense about the days when they were young. The world appears to
have been a very superior sort of place then, and things were more like
what they ought to be. Boys were boys then, and girls were very different.
Also winters were something like winters, and summers not at all the
wretched-things we get put off with nowadays. As for the wonderful deeds
people did in those times and the extraordinary events that happened, it
takes three strong men to believe half of them.</p>
<p>I like to hear one of the old boys telling all about it to a party of
youngsters who he knows cannot contradict him. It is odd if, after awhile,
he doesn't swear that the moon shone every night when he was a boy, and
that tossing mad bulls in a blanket was the favorite sport at his school.</p>
<p>It always has been and always will be the same. The old folk of our
grandfathers' young days sang a song bearing exactly the same burden; and
the young folk of to-day will drone out precisely similar nonsense for the
aggravation of the next generation. "Oh, give me back the good old days of
fifty years ago," has been the cry ever since Adam's fifty-first birthday.
Take up the literature of 1835, and you will find the poets and novelists
asking for the same impossible gift as did the German Minnesingers long
before them and the old Norse Saga writers long before that. And for the
same thing sighed the early prophets and the philosophers of ancient
Greece. From all accounts, the world has been getting worse and worse ever
since it was created. All I can say is that it must have been a remarkably
delightful place when it was first opened to the public, for it is very
pleasant even now if you only keep as much as possible in the sunshine and
take the rain good-temperedly.</p>
<p>Yet there is no gainsaying but that it must have been somewhat sweeter in
that dewy morning of creation, when it was young and fresh, when the feet
of the tramping millions had not trodden its grass to dust, nor the din of
the myriad cities chased the silence forever away. Life must have been
noble and solemn to those free-footed, loose-robed fathers of the human
race, walking hand in hand with God under the great sky. They lived in
sunkissed tents amid the lowing herds. They took their simple wants from
the loving hand of Nature. They toiled and talked and thought; and the
great earth rolled around in stillness, not yet laden with trouble and
wrong.</p>
<p>Those days are past now. The quiet childhood of Humanity, spent in the
far-off forest glades and by the murmuring rivers, is gone forever; and
human life is deepening down to manhood amid tumult, doubt, and hope. Its
age of restful peace is past. It has its work to finish and must hasten
on. What that work may be—what this world's share is in the great
design—we know not, though our unconscious hands are helping to
accomplish it. Like the tiny coral insect working deep under the dark
waters, we strive and struggle each for our own little ends, nor dream of
the vast fabric we are building up for God.</p>
<p>Let us have done with vain regrets and longings for the days that never
will be ours again. Our work lies in front, not behind us; and "Forward!"
is our motto. Let us not sit with folded hands, gazing upon the past as if
it were the building; it is but the foundation. Let us not waste heart and
life thinking of what might have been and forgetting the may be that lies
before us. Opportunities flit by while we sit regretting the chances we
have lost, and the happiness that comes to us we heed not, because of the
happiness that is gone.</p>
<p>Years ago, when I used to wander of an evening from the fireside to the
pleasant land of fairy-tales, I met a doughty knight and true. Many
dangers had he overcome, in many lands had been; and all men knew him for
a brave and well-tried knight, and one that knew not fear; except, maybe,
upon such seasons when even a brave man might feel afraid and yet not be
ashamed. Now, as this knight one day was pricking wearily along a toilsome
road, his heart misgave him and was sore within him because of the trouble
of the way. Rocks, dark and of a monstrous size, hung high above his head,
and like enough it seemed unto the knight that they should fall and he lie
low beneath them. Chasms there were on either side, and darksome caves
wherein fierce robbers lived, and dragons, very terrible, whose jaws
dripped blood. And upon the road there hung a darkness as of night. So it
came over that good knight that he would no more press forward, but seek
another road, less grievously beset with difficulty unto his gentle steed.
But when in haste he turned and looked behind, much marveled our brave
knight, for lo! of all the way that he had ridden there was naught for eye
to see; but at his horse's heels there yawned a mighty gulf, whereof no
man might ever spy the bottom, so deep was that same gulf. Then when Sir
Ghelent saw that of going back there was none, he prayed to good Saint
Cuthbert, and setting spurs into his steed rode forward bravely and most
joyously. And naught harmed him.</p>
<p>There is no returning on the road of life. The frail bridge of time on
which we tread sinks back into eternity at every step we take. The past is
gone from us forever. It is gathered in and garnered. It belongs to us no
more. No single word can ever be unspoken; no single step retraced.
Therefore it beseems us as true knights to prick on bravely, not idly weep
because we cannot now recall.</p>
<p>A new life begins for us with every second. Let us go forward joyously to
meet it. We must press on whether we will or no, and we shall walk better
with our eyes before us than with them ever cast behind.</p>
<p>A friend came to me the other day and urged me very eloquently to learn
some wonderful system by which you never forgot anything. I don't know why
he was so eager on the subject, unless it be that I occasionally borrow an
umbrella and have a knack of coming out, in the middle of a game of whist,
with a mild "Lor! I've been thinking all along that clubs were trumps." I
declined the suggestion, however, in spite of the advantages he so
attractively set forth. I have no wish to remember everything. There are
many things in most men's lives that had better be forgotten. There is
that time, many years ago, when we did not act quite as honorably, quite
as uprightly, as we perhaps should have done—that unfortunate
deviation from the path of strict probity we once committed, and in which,
more unfortunate still, we were found out—that act of folly, of
meanness, of wrong. Ah, well! we paid the penalty, suffered the maddening
hours of vain remorse, the hot agony of shame, the scorn, perhaps, of
those we loved. Let us forget. Oh, Father Time, lift with your kindly
hands those bitter memories from off our overburdened hearts, for griefs
are ever coming to us with the coming hours, and our little strength is
only as the day.</p>
<p>Not that the past should be buried. The music of life would be mute if the
chords of memory were snapped asunder. It is but the poisonous weeds, not
the flowers, that we should root out from the garden of Mnemosyne. Do you
remember Dickens' "Haunted Man"—how he prayed for forgetfulness, and
how, when his prayer was answered, he prayed for memory once more? We do
not want all the ghosts laid. It is only the haggard, cruel-eyed specters
that we flee from. Let the gentle, kindly phantoms haunt us as they will;
we are not afraid of them.</p>
<p>Ah me! the world grows very full of ghosts as we grow older. We need not
seek in dismal church-yards nor sleep in moated granges to see the shadowy
faces and hear the rustling of their garments in the night. Every house,
every room, every creaking chair has its own particular ghost. They haunt
the empty chambers of our lives, they throng around us like dead leaves
whirled in the autumn wind. Some are living, some are dead. We know not.
We clasped their hands once, loved them, quarreled with them, laughed with
them, told them our thoughts and hopes and aims, as they told us theirs,
till it seemed our very hearts had joined in a grip that would defy the
puny power of Death. They are gone now; lost to us forever. Their eyes
will never look into ours again and their voices we shall never hear. Only
their ghosts come to us and talk with us. We see them, dim and shadowy,
through our tears. We stretch our yearning hands to them, but they are
air.</p>
<p>Ghosts! They are with us night and day. They walk beside us in the busy
street under the glare of the sun. They sit by us in the twilight at home.
We see their little faces looking from the windows of the old
school-house. We meet them in the woods and lanes where we shouted and
played as boys. Hark! cannot you hear their low laughter from behind the
blackberry-bushes and their distant whoops along the grassy glades? Down
here, through the quiet fields and by the wood, where the evening shadows
are lurking, winds the path where we used to watch for her at sunset.
Look, she is there now, in the dainty white frock we knew so well, with
the big bonnet dangling from her little hands and the sunny brown hair all
tangled. Five thousand miles away! Dead for all we know! What of that? She
is beside us now, and we can look into her laughing eyes and hear her
voice. She will vanish at the stile by the wood and we shall be alone; and
the shadows will creep out across the fields and the night wind will sweep
past moaning. Ghosts! they are always with us and always will be while the
sad old world keeps echoing to the sob of long good-bys, while the cruel
ships sail away across the great seas, and the cold green earth lies heavy
on the hearts of those we loved.</p>
<p>But, oh, ghosts, the world would be sadder still without you. Come to us
and speak to us, oh you ghosts of our old loves! Ghosts of playmates, and
of sweethearts, and old friends, of all you laughing boys and girls, oh,
come to us and be with us, for the world is very lonely, and new friends
and faces are not like the old, and we cannot love them, nay, nor laugh
with them as we have loved and laughed with you. And when we walked
together, oh, ghosts of our youth, the world was very gay and bright; but
now it has grown old and we are growing weary, and only you can bring the
brightness and the freshness back to us.</p>
<p>Memory is a rare ghost-raiser. Like a haunted house, its walls are ever
echoing to unseen feet. Through the broken casements we watch the flitting
shadows of the dead, and the saddest shadows of them all are the shadows
of our own dead selves.</p>
<p>Oh, those young bright faces, so full of truth and honor, of pure, good
thoughts, of noble longings, how reproachfully they look upon us with
their deep, clear eyes!</p>
<p>I fear they have good cause for their sorrow, poor lads. Lies and cunning
and disbelief have crept into our hearts since those preshaving days—and
we meant to be so great and good.</p>
<p>It is well we cannot see into the future. There are few boys of fourteen
who would not feel ashamed of themselves at forty.</p>
<p>I like to sit and have a talk sometimes with that odd little chap that was
myself long ago. I think he likes it too, for he comes so often of an
evening when I am alone with my pipe, listening to the whispering of the
flames. I see his solemn little face looking at me through the scented
smoke as it floats upward, and I smile at him; and he smiles back at me,
but his is such a grave, old-fashioned smile. We chat about old times; and
now and then he takes me by the hand, and then we slip through the black
bars of the grate and down the dusky glowing caves to the land that lies
behind the firelight. There we find the days that used to be, and we
wander along them together. He tells me as we walk all he thinks and
feels. I laugh at him now and then, but the next moment I wish I had not,
for he looks so grave I am ashamed of being frivolous. Besides, it is not
showing proper respect to one so much older than myself—to one who
was myself so very long before I became myself.</p>
<p>We don't talk much at first, but look at one another; I down at his curly
hair and little blue bow, he up sideways at me as he trots. And some-how I
fancy the shy, round eyes do not altogether approve of me, and he heaves a
little sigh, as though he were disappointed. But after awhile his
bashfulness wears off and he begins to chat. He tells me his favorite
fairy-tales, he can do up to six times, and he has a guinea-pig, and pa
says fairy-tales ain't true; and isn't it a pity? 'cos he would so like to
be a knight and fight a dragon and marry a beautiful princess. But he
takes a more practical view of life when he reaches seven, and would
prefer to grow up be a bargee, and earn a lot of money. Maybe this is the
consequence of falling in love, which he does about this time with the
young lady at the milk shop aet. six. (God bless her little ever-dancing
feet, whatever size they may be now!) He must be very fond of her, for he
gives her one day his chiefest treasure, to wit, a huge pocket-knife with
four rusty blades and a corkscrew, which latter has a knack of working
itself out in some mysterious manner and sticking into its owner's leg.
She is an affectionate little thing, and she throws her arms round his
neck and kisses him for it, then and there, outside the shop. But the
stupid world (in the person of the boy at the cigar emporium next door)
jeers at such tokens of love. Whereupon my young friend very properly
prepares to punch the head of the boy at the cigar emporium next door; but
fails in the attempt, the boy at the cigar emporium next door punching his
instead.</p>
<p>And then comes school life, with its bitter little sorrows and its joyous
shoutings, its jolly larks, and its hot tears falling on beastly Latin
grammars and silly old copy-books. It is at school that he injures himself
for life—as I firmly believe—trying to pronounce German; and
it is there, too, that he learns of the importance attached by the French
nation to pens, ink, and paper. "Have you pens, ink, and paper?" is the
first question asked by one Frenchman of another on their meeting. The
other fellow has not any of them, as a rule, but says that the uncle of
his brother has got them all three. The first fellow doesn't appear to
care a hang about the uncle of the other fellow's brother; what he wants
to know now is, has the neighbor of the other fellow's mother got 'em?
"The neighbor of my mother has no pens, no ink, and no paper," replies the
other man, beginning to get wild. "Has the child of thy female gardener
some pens, some ink, or some paper?" He has him there. After worrying
enough about these wretched inks, pens, and paper to make everybody
miserable, it turns out that the child of his own female gardener hasn't
any. Such a discovery would shut up any one but a French exercise man. It
has no effect at all, though, on this shameless creature. He never thinks
of apologizing, but says his aunt has some mustard.</p>
<p>So in the acquisition of more or less useless knowledge, soon happily to
be forgotten, boyhood passes away. The red-brick school-house fades from
view, and we turn down into the world's high-road. My little friend is no
longer little now. The short jacket has sprouted tails. The battered cap,
so useful as a combination of pocket-handkerchief, drinking-cup, and
weapon of attack, has grown high and glossy; and instead of a slate-pencil
in his mouth there is a cigarette, the smoke of which troubles him, for it
will get up his nose. He tries a cigar a little later on as being more
stylish—a big black Havanna. It doesn't seem altogether to agree
with him, for I find him sitting over a bucket in the back kitchen
afterward, solemnly swearing never to smoke again.</p>
<p>And now his mustache begins to be almost visible to the naked eye,
whereupon he immediately takes to brandy-and-sodas and fancies himself a
man. He talks about "two to one against the favorite," refers to actresses
as "Little Emmy" and "Kate" and "Baby," and murmurs about his "losses at
cards the other night" in a style implying that thousands have been
squandered, though, to do him justice, the actual amount is most probably
one-and-twopence. Also, if I see aright—for it is always twilight in
this land of memories—he sticks an eyeglass in his eye and stumbles
over everything.</p>
<p>His female relations, much troubled at these things, pray for him (bless
their gentle hearts!) and see visions of Old Bailey trials and halters as
the only possible outcome of such reckless dissipation; and the prediction
of his first school-master, that he would come to a bad end, assumes the
proportions of inspired prophecy.</p>
<p>He has a lordly contempt at this age for the other sex, a blatantly good
opinion of himself, and a sociably patronizing manner toward all the
elderly male friends of the family. Altogether, it must be confessed, he
is somewhat of a nuisance about this time.</p>
<p>It does not last long, though. He falls in love in a little while, and
that soon takes the bounce out of him. I notice his boots are much too
small for him now, and his hair is fearfully and wonderfully arranged. He
reads poetry more than he used, and he keeps a rhyming dictionary in his
bedroom. Every morning Emily Jane finds scraps of torn-up paper on the
floor and reads thereon of "cruel hearts and love's deep darts," of
"beauteous eyes and lovers' sighs," and much more of the old, old song
that lads so love to sing and lassies love to listen to while giving their
dainty heads a toss and pretending never to hear.</p>
<p>The course of love, however, seems not to have run smoothly, for later on
he takes more walking exercise and less sleep, poor boy, than is good for
him; and his face is suggestive of anything but wedding-bells and
happiness ever after.</p>
<p>And here he seems to vanish. The little, boyish self that has grown up
beside me as we walked is gone.</p>
<p>I am alone and the road is very dark. I stumble on, I know not how nor
care, for the way seems leading nowhere, and there is no light to guide.</p>
<p>But at last the morning comes, and I find that I have grown into myself.</p>
<p>THE END. <br/><br/></p>
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