The next winter Cynthia was fairly
launched on society. There was no regular coming
out in almost bridal array, with a grand tea and a
houseful of flowers. When a girl left school she
expected to be invited out and to give little companies
at home. Almost the first thing, she was asked
to be one of the six bridesmaids at Laura Manning’s
wedding.
The Mannings had one of the splendid
new houses on Chestnut Street, with spacious grounds
before the houses grew so close together. Avis
Manning was still in school, Cynthia was between the
two in age. Mr. Manning was connected with the
East India trade and an old friend of the Leverett
family. It had begun by Cynthia being invited
to a girls’ tea, and Mrs. Manning had taken
a great fancy to her. Laura was not very tall,
and they did not want any one to dwarf the bride.
Every one was to be in white, the
bride in a soft, thick silk, and she was to have a
court train. The maids were to be in mull or gauze,
as a very pretty thin material was called. The
Empress Josephine had brought in new styles that certainly
were very becoming to young people. The short
waist and square neck, the sleeve puffs that had shrunk
so much they no longer reached the ears, the short
curls around the edge of the forehead arranged so
the white parting showed, the dainty feet in elegant
slippers and choice silk stockings that could not help
showing, for the skirts were short. Pretty feet
and slim ankles seemed to be a mark of good family.
“Will I do?” Cynthia stood
before Cousin Chilian with a half-saucy smile.
Around her throat she wore a beautiful Oriental necklace,
with pendants of different fine stones that sparkled
with every turn of the head. There were match
pendants in her ears, and just back of the rows of
curls was a jewelled comb.
She was a pretty girl without being
a striking beauty. But her eyes would have redeemed
almost any face, and now they were all aglow with a
wonderful light.
He looked his admiration.
“Because if you don’t like me ”
There was a charming half-coquettish
way about her, but she never made a bid for compliments.
“What then?” laughing.
“I’d stay home and spoil
the wedding party. I know they couldn’t
fill my place on a short notice.”
He thought they couldn’t fill it at all, but
he said almost merrily,
“You need not stay at home.”
Cousin Eunice said she looked pretty
enough for the bride. Miss Winn had attended
to her toilette, and now she wrapped a soft silken
cloak about her and Cousin Chilian put her in the
carriage. He was all in his best, ruffled shirt-front,
light brocaded silk waist-coat, and there were lace
ruffles about his hands.
One feels inclined to wonder at the
extravagance of those days, when one sees some of
the heirlooms that have come down to us. But their
handsome gowns went through several seasons, and then
were made over for the daughters. And they did
not have their jewels reset every few months.
Such a roomful of pretty girls!
Youth and health and picturesque dressing make almost
any one pretty. Miss Laura looked fine, but she
paused to say, “Oh, Cynthia, what an elegant
necklace!”
“Father had it made for mother,” she replied
simply.
They patted and pulled a little, powdered, too.
Miss Willard, the great mantua-maker
of that day, who superintended the dressing of brides,
saw that everything was right. The young men came
from their dressing-room, and they began to form the
procession. Both halls were illuminated with
no end of candles, and guests were standing about.
Mr. Lynde Saltonstall took his bride-to-be, and they
let the white train sweep down the broad stairway,
then Avis Manning and Ed Saltonstall followed.
They were not much on knick-names in those days, but
he had been called Ed to distinguish him from some
cousins.
Cynthia and a cousin came next, and
there were several other relatives. It was a
beautiful sight. The bride walked up to the white
satin cushion on which the couple would kneel during
the prayer, the maids and attendants made a semicircle
around her, and then the nearest relatives. The
old white-haired minister had married her mother.
Then there was kissing and congratulation
and Mrs. Saltonstall had her new name, though Avis
said she liked Manning a hundred times better.
“Then you wouldn’t accept
my name?” said Ed, but he looked laughingly at
Cynthia.
“Indeed I wouldn’t!
I don’t want any one’s name at present.
I’m going to be the only daughter of the house
a while,” she returned saucily.
“I wonder if I ought to go on
and ask all the maids?” There was such a funny
anxiety in his face that it added to the merriment.
“You needn’t ask this
one,” said Ward Adams, and Cousin Lois Reade
blushed scarlet, though they all knew she was engaged.
“But I’m going to dance
with every maid. And just at twelve I’m
going to hunt for a glass slipper.”
His look at Cynthia said he needn’t
hunt very far, and she blushed, which made her more
enchanting than before.
They all laughed and talked, the older
men teasing the bride a little and giving her advice
as to how she should break in her new husband.
Young people’s weddings were expected to be gay
and every one added his or her mite. The fine
new house was duly admired. On one side it was
all one long room, beautifully decorated. On
the other a library, for books were beginning to come
in fashion, even if you were not a clergyman or a
student. Then a kind of family sitting-room, with
a large dining-room at the back. Some of the
fine old houses were taken for public purposes later
on.
They went out to refreshments and
the bride cut the cake with a silver knife. Large
suppers were no longer considered the style, but there
was a bountiful supply of delicacies. They drank
health and long life to the bride and groom, and good
wishes of all kinds.
The black waiter, in white gloves
and white apron, stood in the hall to deliver boxes
of wedding cake as the older people took their departure.
And then the fiddlers began to tune up. There
were two minuets to take in all the party. Cynthia
and Mr. Jordan were in the head one, with the bride.
He was a little stiff and excused himself, as he wasn’t
much given to dancing. It didn’t matter
so much in the minuet.
Then they paired off any way.
Mr. Ed Saltonstall caught Cynthia’s hand.
“I’m just dying to dance
with you, and this is the basket quadrille. Jordan
dances like a pump handle, but he’s a good fellow.
Now let us have something worth while. I know
you dance beautifully.”
“How do you know?” piquantly.
“I’d like to be nautical
and impertinent, but I’m afraid you’d report
me to Mr. Leverett. Oh, it’s in you, in
every motion. Aren’t you glad you didn’t
live in those old Puritan days when you would have
been put in the stocks if you had skipped across the
room? Come.”
That was dancing. Not
a halt nor an ungraceful turn, but every curve and
motion was as perfect as if they had danced together
all their lives. She gave two or three happy
sighs. Her cheeks were like the heart of a blush
rose; she never turned very red when she ran or skipped,
and never looked blowsy.
Another person watched and thought
her the prettiest thing in the room, and was very
glad she belonged to him.
“I’m sorry I have to dance
with some one else and it’s Lois Reade.
Adams would like to kick me, I know, and she would
be twice as happy with him. That is the price
you pay for assisting your brother into matrimony.
Next time there shall not be but one bridesmaid, and
I’ll dance with her all the evening.”
“Next time? Will he be
married twice?” she asked demurely.
“Oh, you witch! You are
the most delicious dancer it almost seems
as if you were sipping some very fine wine ”
“And it went to your head,” she laughed.
“Head and heels both. I’m
extravagantly fond of it with a partner like you.
You’ll go to the assemblies this winter?”
“Oh, I don’t know.”
“Is Mr. Leverett very he’s
your guardian, and somehow I stand just a little in
awe of him. He is so polished, and knows so much,
and is he going to be very exclusive?”
“Why ”
She didn’t quite understand, but she looked out
of such lovely eyes that all his pulses throbbed.
“Take your places.”
She was standing there alone when
Mr. Adams asked her. That was only fair play.
Mr. Saltonstall was in the same set and he gave her
hand a squeeze when he took her, crumpled it all up
in his, and she flushed daintily.
He could not dance with her again
until the very last. That was a “circle”
in which you balanced and turned your partner and went
to the next couple, but some way you returned to your
own. There were various pretty figures in it.
Once or twice she was a little confused, but he seemed
always on the watch for her.
The music stopped and the fiddlers
were locking their cases. The dancers went out
to the supper-room again.
“I’d rather dance than
eat. I believe I could dance without music.
Would you like to try?” he asked.
“Oh, no!” with a frightened look that
made him laugh.
Mr. Leverett came, and Mr. Saltonstall
was all polite deference. He wished he could
be invited to call, but how was it to be managed?
Then Cynthia went upstairs to put
on her cloak. The bride kissed her, and said
she was glad to have had her, and when they gave their
house-warming she must be sure to come.
“I’ve had such a lovely time. Thank
you ever so much.”
“I’m the obliged one,” was the reply.
If she had not been in the carriage
she must have danced all the way home. There
was music in her head and a “spirit in her feet.”
She hardly heard what Cousin Chilian was saying, only
after they entered the house and she slipped out of
her wrap, with his good-night, he said, “You
are a very pretty girl, Cynthia.” Of course,
he should have had more sense than to foster a girl’s
vanity.
The next morning she asked him about the assemblies.
“They are very nice dancing
parties. Only the best people go and no sort
of freedom or misbehavior is tolerated. I think
I’ll take out a membership.”
“Oh, do, please do,” she entreated.
The elegant wedding was talked of
for days. Girls called on Miss Leverett it
seemed funny to be called that. She was asked
to join a sewing society that made articles of clothing
for the widows and children of drowned sailors, and
there were many of them on the New England coast.
Her tender heart was moved by the pathetic tales she
heard.
“Dear Cousin Eunice,”
she said one day, “I went with one of the committee
to see a poor sick woman who is in awful destitution.
There are three small children, and when she is well
she goes out washing. They send her driftwood
and old stuff from the ship-yards, and one of the
companies pays her rent. But you should see the
things! Such ragged quilts that hardly hold together,
and one little boy was without stockings. There
are so many things up in the garret that you will never
use ”
“Likely, dear, but they are Chilian’s.”
“He said I might ask you, that
he was willing. Can’t we go up and find
some? What is the use of their being piled up
year after year, and people in need? Ah, if you
could see the poor place!”
Miss Eunice went unwillingly.
The thrift of New England did often shrivel into penuriousness.
She and Elizabeth were in the habit of putting away
so many partly worn articles for the time of need.
“Those old blankets and quilts ”
“Elizabeth thought they would do to cover over.”
“But there are so many better
ones. And some on the closet shelves that have
never been used. Why, there is enough to last
a hundred years.”
“Oh, no;” with an alarmed expression.
“And even I shall not last a hundred years.
No one does.”
“Oh, yes. I knew a woman who lived to be
one hundred and four.”
“Did she come to want?”
“She had a good son to take care of her.”
“And you have Cousin Chilian.
I read somewhere in the Bible I wish I
could remember the chapters and verses, ’While
we have time let us do good unto all men.’
I suppose that means those who haven’t been frugal
and careful, as well as the others.”
“We can’t tell just what every sentence
means.”
“But we can help them.
And here is a poor woman who doesn’t go to taverns;”
smiling tenderly and with persuasive eyes.
They picked out enough for a wagon-load.
Some of Cousin Chilian’s clothes that would
do to cut over, old woollen blankets, and a variety
of articles.
“Let us put them all in this chest.”
“We might need the chest.”
“Oh, no, we won’t.
They will be so much easier to carry that way.
Silas could drive down there. And, oh, you can’t
imagine how much good they will do.”
Cynthia went down to see afterward,
and the poor woman’s gratitude brought tears
to her eyes.
“They will be a perfect God-send
this winter,” she said. “I’ve
been frettin’ as to what we should do.
I’ve never begged yet. Well, the Lord is
good.”
Then there came another source of
interest. Polly Upham was “keeping company.”
A nice, steady young man in the ship-chandlery business,
with a little money saved up, whose folks lived at
Portsmouth. He came regularly on Wednesday night
and Sundays to tea. They went to church in the
evening, and that certified it to the young people.
Betty had left school and was trying her hand at housekeeping.
Louis, the little fellow, was a big boy.
Alice Turner was engaged also, and
certainly very much in love if she considered the
young man a paragon. Cynthia compared them all
with Cousin Chilian, and it wasn’t a bit fair.
She met Mr. Saltonstall at a small
party, where they played games and had forfeits.
It was odd, she thought, how the girls
chose him in everything. She didn’t choose
him once. He spoke of it afterward.
“Why, I thought some of the
others ought to have a chance,” she explained
with winning sweetness. “But if it had been
dancing!” and she laughed, and that reconciled
him.
Then Mrs. Lynde Saltonstall gave her
house-warming. It was a simple dwelling and not
very large, but it was pretty as a picture. And
young people didn’t expect to rival their fathers
and mothers in the start.
They had dancing, and that was enough.
They were all young people, and two of the fiddlers
were there. They had a gay time and a nice supper.
“I think Ed is smitten with
Cynthia Leverett,” Laura remarked to her husband.
“He seemed to feel annoyed that they had sent
Miss Winn in the carriage for her. She’s
a lovely dancer.”
“It wouldn’t be a bad
thing for Ed. She has lots of money that just turns
itself over on interest. And her trustee has been
buying up some choice Boston property for her.
She’s pretty and has charming manners and comes
of a good family.”
Then Mrs. Stevens asked her to come
in to Boston for a few days. She was going to
have a little dancing party.
“My dear, you’ll dance
yourself to death,” said Cousin Eunice.
“Oh, no. It isn’t
as hard as cleaning house or washing, as some of the
poor women do. And it is tiresome to practise
on the spinet, hour after hour counting
time and all that. If I was a girl of twenty years
ago I’m afraid I should be chasing up and down
some old garret, spinning on the big wheel.”
Cousin Eunice laughed, too. Cynthia
always made commonplaces seem amusing, she accented
them so with her bright face.
They were very glad to have her in
Boston. Chilian took her in on Saturday and staid
with her until Monday morning. On Sunday Anthony
Drayton was invited in to dinner. He had improved
very much. The country air had been effaced.
And he was a gentleman by instinct, and acquired cultivation
readily.
“And a fine fellow!” said
Cousin Giles, rubbing his hands. “He’s
decided to go in for law presently, and it will be
a most excellent thing. I don’t know but
I’ll have to adopt him, as you did Cynthia.”
Anthony hovered about the young girl.
She had been cultivating her voice the last year.
It was a sweet parlor voice, adapted to the old-time
songs. Mrs. Stevens had a book of them and she
sang most cheerfully.
“Oh, I wish you were going to
stay over another Sunday,” he exclaimed wistfully.
“But I shall come in on Tuesday evening.
I don’t dance, but Mrs. Stevens is so kind to
me, I’ve met several of the first men in the
city here.”
“Oh, I am glad you are coming.”
It was a very sincere joy and she
could not keep it out of her face, did not try to.
And it was such a sweet face that she raised to his.
He had a sudden unreasonable wish that he was five
years older and settled in business, but then she
was very young.
Mrs. Stevens said to her on Monday,
after she had read a note over and glanced up at her
rather furtively, “There’s a friend of
yours coming Tuesday night a friend from
Salem that I hope you will be glad to see.”
“From Salem ”
“Mr. Saltonstall. He was
in here a fortnight or so ago. His mother and
I used to be great friends. I happened to ask
him if he knew the Leveretts, and he told me about
his brother’s marriage, that you were one of
the bridesmaids.”
“Oh, yes. Laura Manning
was one of the older girls at Madam Torrey’s.
They had just gone in their new house and the wedding
was splendid. And I liked Mr. Edward Saltonstall
so much. He is a most beautiful dancer.
I’m so glad he is coming. You see I don’t
know many of the new dances, and I shouldn’t
so much mind making a break with him.”
She looked up in her sweet, brave
innocence as she uttered it.
“You are not in love with him,
little lady, and he is very much smitten with you,”
Mrs. Stevens ruminated. “But you shall have
the chance.”
“I’ve always liked Ed,”
she continued. “He’s a nice, frank,
honest fellow, pretty gay at times, but not at all
in the dissipated line, just full of fun and frolic.
So I asked him down, and here he says he will come,”
waving her note. “I look out for men who
dance. I do like to see young folks have a good
time. The older people can play cards.”
It seemed rather odd that at eight
o’clock not a soul had come. At home they
would be beginning the fun by this time. Then
a sudden influx of girls, some she had met before two
or three young men and then young Saltonstall,
who had been counting the moments the last half hour.
“I am so glad to see you. It was such a
surprise.”
He could see it in her face, hear
it in her voice. He really was afraid of saying
something foolish something that would be
no harm if they were alone.
“I’ve known Mrs. Stevens
a long while. And Mr. Giles Leverett. It’s
queer well, not quite that either that
I’ve known you such a little while. I always
thought of you as a child, though I’ve seen you
drive your pony carriage.”
“Mrs. Stevens is delightful.”
Then there was another relay, quite
a number of young gentlemen. The black fiddlers
in the hall began to tune up.
There were two very handsome girls
and beautifully gowned. All of them looked pretty
in dancing attire. Then a quadrille was called.
There were just eight couples.
Of course, Mr. Saltonstall took her.
The rug was up and the floor had been polished.
The dancing was elegant, harmonious.
“The next is the Spanish dance.
You will like that. The windings about are like
the song words to the music.”
“But I don’t know it;”
and she shrank back.
“Oh, you’ll get into it.
You are the kind that could pick up any step.
You make me think of a swallow as it darts round.
If it made a mistake no one would know it.”
“Oh, I’d rather not;” entreatingly.
“Don’t spoil the set.”
She rose up and let him lead her out.
She had a way of yielding so quickly, when it was
right and best, very flattering to a man in love and
easily misread.
If dancing had been art instead of
nature, something by rote instead of a segment of
inner harmony, she could not have succeeded so well.
He warded off the few blunders, and at the third change
she had another well-bred partner. But she was
glad to get back to him. The joy shone in her
dangerous eyes.
There were some new dances coming
in. One of the girls from New York and her escort
waltzed up and down the room in a slow-gliding manner
that was the poetry of motion. She was fascinated,
enchanted, and she knew she could do it herself.
“We’ll try it sometime,” Saltonstall
said.
Mr. Leverett came in, bringing Anthony
Drayton with him. He knew he was late, but he
didn’t dance, and he had earned five dollars
copying that evening. But he must see Cynthia.
“Oh, I thought you would not come!”
Then she had been giving a thought to him out of her
happy time!
“I was detained. Are they all well, or
didn’t Cousin Chilian come down?”
“Oh, no.”
They were being marshalled out to supper.
“You’ll have to content
yourself with me,” said Mrs. Stevens to Anthony,
and he accepted smilingly. But she placed Cynthia
next, so he could have a little talk with her.
He was getting on so well, and she was glad for him.
Some one wanted Miss Tracy to waltz
again. Then they had a galop, and the party broke
up. Anthony said good-night, and that he was coming
up on Saturday. Then Saltonstall drew her into
a little nook in the hall that made a connection with
another room when it was open. Mrs. Stevens had
smiled over its uses.
“Cynthia, my darling, I must
tell you this,” and his voice seemed to throb
with emotion. “I want the right to come
and visit you as lovers have, for I love you, love
you! I am coming to see Mr. Leverett and ask
his permission. I do nothing but dream of you
day and night. You are the sweetest, dearest ”
“Oh, don’t! don’t!”
She struggled in the clasp. “Oh, I can’t I ”
and he felt her slight body tremble, so he loosed
it.
“Forgive me. I wanted you
to know so no one can take you from me. I want
to see you often. Oh, love, good-night, good-night!”
He pressed a rapturous kiss upon her
hand and was gone. She slipped through to the
dining-room and took a glass of water.
“You look tired to death, little
country girl,” said Uncle Giles, and he kissed
her on the forehead.