Daisy In The Field - Page 99/231

I might love, and fear, and hope; but I must not be

"entangled." Not so concerned about myself, either for sorrow

or joy, that I should fail in anything to discern the Lord's

will, or be unready, or be slow, to do it. Not so but that my

heart should be free, looking to God for its chief strength

and joy always and everywhere, - yes, and holding my hopes at

his hand, to be given up if he called them back. With Thorold

parted from me, in the thick of the war struggle, almost

certain to be rejected by both my father and my mother, could

I have and keep such a disentangled heart? The command said

yes, and I knew there were promises that said yes too; but for

a time I was strangely unwilling. I had a sort of

superstitious feeling, that the giving up of my will about

these things, and of my will's hold of them, would be a

preliminary to their being taken away from me in good earnest.

And I trembled and wept and shrank, like the coward I was.

"And if a man also strive for masteries, yet is he not

crowned, except he strive lawfully."

"God's way is the way," I said to myself, - "and there is no

other. I know, in what I said to mamma that afternoon about

dressing and going into the world, it was not all principle.

There was a mixture of selfish disinclination to go into

society, because of Mr. Thorold and my feeling about him. My

thoughts and will are all in a tangle; and they must be

disentangled."

The struggle was long and sore that night. Worse than in

Washington; because here I was alone among those who did not

favour Mr. Thorold, and were opposed in everything to his and

my views and wishes. Temptation said, that it was forsaking

their cause, to give up my will about them. But there is no

temptation that takes us and God has not provided a way of

escape. The struggle was sharp; but when the dawn broke over

the orchards and replaced the glory of the moonlight, my heart

was quiet again. I was bent, before all things, upon doing the

will of God; and had given up myself and all my hopes entirely

to His disposal. They were not less dear hopes for that,

though now the rest of my heart was on something better; on

something which by no change or contingency can disappoint or

fail. I was disentangled. I stood free. And I was happier than

I had been in many a long day. "The peace of God." If people

could only possibly know what that means!