Daisy In The Field - Page 150/231

"Indeed I would, papa."

"Then we should be reduced to a present nothing. The Melbourne

property brings in very little, nothing, in fact, without a

master on the spot to manage it. I dare say some trifling rent

might be obtained for it; and the sale of Magnolia and its

corresponding estates would fetch something if the times

admitted of sale. You know it is impossible now. We should

have scarce anything to live upon, my child, to satisfy your

philanthropy."

"Papa, there was a poor woman once, who was reduced to a

handful of meal and a little oil as her whole household store.

Yet at the command of the prophet of the Lord, she took some

of it to make bread for him, before she fed herself and her

child - both of them starving. And the Lord never let her want

either meal or oil all the time the famine lasted."

"Miracles do not come for people's help, now-a-days, Daisy."

"Papa, yes! God's ways may change, His ways of doing the same

thing; but He does not change. He takes care of His people now

without miracles, all the same."

"All the same!" repeated papa. "That is an English

expression, that you have caught from your friends."

We were both silent for a while.

"Daisy, my child, your views of all these things will alter by

and by. You are young, and have slight experience of the

things of life. By and by, you will find it a much more

serious thing than you imagine to be without wealth. You would

find a great difference between the heiress and the penniless

girl; a difference you would not like."

"Papa," I said slowly, - "I hope you will not be displeased or

hurt, - but I want it to be known, and I wanted you should

know, that I never shall be an heiress. I never will be rich

in that way. I will take what God gives me."

"First throwing away what He has given you," said papa.

"I do not think He has given it, papa."

"What then? have we stolen it?"

"Not we; but those who have been before us, papa; they stole

it. All we are doing, is keeping that which is not ours."

"Enough too, I should think!" said papa. "You will alter your

mind, Daisy, about all this, if you wait a while. What do you

think your mother would say to it?"

"I know, papa," I said softly. "But I cannot help thinking of

what will be said somewhere else. I would like that you and I,

and she too, might have that 'Well done' - which the Lord

Jesus will give to some. And when they enter into the joy of

their Lord, will they care what His service has cost them?"