A MOTHER'S WAY
Temple Bailey in the short story
entitled, "A Mother's Way" describes a mother's walk this way:
The young mother set her foot on the
path of life, "Is the way long?" "Yes," her guide
said, "and the way is hard. You will be old before you reach the end
of it. But--" he stopped to smile warmly, "the end will be
better than the beginning."
The young mother was so happy, and
thought, that she could not believe anything could be better than these
early years. She played with her children, and gathered flowers for them
along the way, and bathed them in the clear streams. The sun shone on them
and life was good, and the young mother cried, "Nothing will ever be
lovelier than this."
Then night came, and storm, and the
path was dark. The children shook with fear and cold, and the mother drew
them close, covering them with her mantle. Her children said, "oh,
mother, we are not afraid when you are near." The mother said,
"this is better than the brightness of the day, for I have taught my
children courage."
Then the morning came and there was a
hill ahead. The children climbed and grew weary. The mother was weary too,
but she kept encouraging her children, "a little patience and we are
there." So the children continued to climb. When they reached the
top, they said, "we could not have done it without you, mother."
And the mother, when she lay down that night, looked past the stars and
said, "this is a better day than the last. My children have learned
fortitude in the face of difficulty. Yesterday I taught them courage,
today I have taught them strength."
With the next day came strange clouds
that darkened the earth—clouds of war and hate and evil. The children
groped and stumbled. The mother said, "Look up. Lift your eyes past
the blackness to the Light." The children looked up and saw an
Everlasting Glory above the strange clouds. It guided them and brought
them through the darkness and evil. That night the mother said, "this
is the best day of all, for I have helped my children learn to see
God."
The days went on, and the weeks and
the months and the years. The mother grew old, until she was very little
and bent. But her children were tall and strong, and they walked with
courage. When the way was hard, they helped their mother; when the way was
rough, they lifted her, for she was as light as a feather. At last they
came to a hill, and beyond the hill they could see a shining road and
golden gate flung open wide. The mother said, "I have reached the end
of my journey. Now I know that the end really is better than they
beginning. For my children can walk alone and they will teach their
children after them."
The children said, "you will
always walk with us, mother, even when you have gone through the
gate."
They stood and watched her as she went
on alone, and the gates closed after her. They said, "we can't see
her, but she is with us still. A mother like ours is more than a
memory." |