“I am sorry, very sorry,”
said Belle Gordon, as a shadow of deep distress flitted
over her pale sad face. She was usually cheerful
and serene in her manner; but now it seemed as if
the very depths of her soul had been stirred by some
mournful and bitter memory. “Your question
was so unexpected and-
“And what!” said Paul
in a tone of sad expectancy, “so unwelcome?”
“It was so sudden, I was not prepared for it.”
“I do not,” said Paul,
“ask an immediate reply. Give yourself ample
time for consideration.”
“Mr. Clifford,” said Belle,
her voice gathering firmness as she proceeded, “while
all the relations of life demand that there should
be entire truthfulness between us and our fellow creatures,
I think we should be especially sincere and candid
in our dealings with each other on this question of
marriage, a question not only as affecting our own
welfare but that of others, a relation which may
throw its sunshine or shadow over the track of unborn
ages. Permit me now to say to you, that there
is no gentleman of my acquaintance whom I esteem more
highly than yourself; but when you ask me for my heart
and hand, I almost feel as if I had no heart to give;
and you know it would be wrong to give my hand where
I could not place my heart.”
“But would it be impossible
for you to return my affection?” “I don’t
know, but I am only living out my [vow] of truthfulness
when I say to you, I feel as if I had been undone
for love. You tell that in offering your hand
that you bring me a heart unhackneyed in the arts of
love, that my heart is the first and only shrine on
which you have ever laid the wealth of your affections.
I cannot say the same in reply. I have had my
bright and beautiful day dream, but it has faded, and
I have learned what is the hardest of all lessons
for a woman to learn. I have learned to live
without love.”
“Oh no,” said Paul, “not
to live without love. In darkened homes how many
grateful hearts rejoice to hear your footsteps on the
threshold. I have seen the eyes of young Arabs
of the street grow brighter as you approached and
say, ’That’s my lady, she comes to see
my mam when she’s sick.’ And I have
seen little girls in the street quicken their face
to catch a loving smile from their dear Sunday school
teacher. Oh Miss Belle instead of living without
love, I think you are surrounded with a cordon of
loving hearts.”
“Yes, and I appreciate them-but
this is not the love to which I refer. I mean
a love which is mine, as anything else on earth is
mine, a love precious, enduring and strong, which
brings hope and joy and sunshine over one’s
path in life. A love which commands my allegiance
and demands my respect. This is the love I have
learned to do without, and perhaps the poor and needy
had learned to love me less, had this love surrounded
me more.”
“Miss Belle, perhaps I was presumptuous,
to have asked a return of the earnest affection I
have for you; but I had hoped that you would give
the question some consideration; and may I not hope
that you will think kindly of my proposal? Oh
Miss Gordon, ever since the death of my sainted mother,
I have had in my mind’s eye the ideal of a woman
nobly planned, beautiful, intellectual, true and affectionate,
and you have filled out that ideal in all its loveliest
proportions, and I hope that my desire will not be
like reaching out to some bright particular star and
wishing to win it. It seems to me,” he said
with increasing earnestness, “whatever obstacle
may be in the way, I would go through fire and water
to remove it.”
“I am sorry,” said Belle
as if speaking to herself, and her face had an absent
look about it, as if instead of being interested in
the living present she was grouping amid the ashes
of the dead past. At length she said, “Mr.
Clifford, permit me to say in the first place, let
there be truth between us. If my heart seems
callous and indifferent to your love, believe me it
is warm to esteem and value you as a friend, I might
almost say as a brother, for in sympathy of feeling
and congeniality of disposition you are nearer to
me than my own brother; but I do not think were I
so inclined that it would be advisable for me to accept
your hand without letting you know something of my
past history. I told you a few moments since
that I had my day dream. Permit me to tell you,
for I think you are entitled to my confidence.
The object of that day dream was Charles Romaine.”
“Charles Romaine!” and
there was a tone of wonder in the voice, and a puzzled
look on the face of Paul Clifford.
“Yes! Charles Romaine,
not as you know him now, with the marks of dissipation
on his once handsome face, but Charles Romaine, as
I knew him when he stood upon the threshold of early
manhood, the very incarnation of beauty, strength
and grace. Not Charles Romaine with the blurred
and bloated countenance, the staggering gait, the confused
and vacant eye; but Charles Romaine as a young, handsome
and talented lawyer, the pride of our village, the
hope of his father and the joy of his mother; before
whom the future was opening full of rich and rare
promises. Need I tell you that when he sought
my hand in preference to all the other girls in our
village, that I gave him what I never can give to
another, the first, deep love of my girlish heart.
For nearly a whole year I wore his betrothal ring
upon my finger, when I saw to my utter anguish and
dismay that he was fast becoming a drunkard. Oh!
Mr. Clifford if I could have saved him I would have
taken blood from every vein and strength from every
nerve. We met frequently at entertainments.
I noticed time after time, the effects of the wine
he had imbibed, upon his manner and conversation.
At first I shrank from remonstrating with him, until
the burden lay so heavy on my heart that I felt I must
speak out, let the consequences be what they might.
And so one evening I told him plainly and seriously
my fears about his future. He laughed lightly
and said my fears were unfounded; that I was nervous
and giving away to idle fancies; that his father always
had wine at the table, and that he had never seen
him under the influence of liquor. Silenced, but
not convinced, I watched his course with painful solicitude.
All remonstrances on my part seemed thrown away; he
always had the precedent of his father to plead in
reply to my earnest entreaties. At last when
remonstrances and entreaties seemed to be all in vain,
I resolved to break the engagement. It may have
been a harsh and hard alternative, but I would not
give my hand where my respect could not follow.
It may be that I thought too much of my own happiness,
but I felt that marriage must be for me positive misery
or positive happiness, and I feared that if I married
a man so lacking in self-control as to become a common
drunkard, that when I ceased to love and respect him,
I should be constantly tempted to hate and despise
him. I think one of the saddest fates that can
befall a woman is to be tied for life to a miserable
bloated wreck of humanity. There may be some women
with broad generous hearts, and great charity, strong
enough to lift such men out of the depths, but I had
no such faith in my strength and so I gave him back
his ring. He accepted it, but we parted as friends.
For awhile after our engagement was broken, we occasionally
met at the houses of our mutual friends in social
gatherings and I noticed with intense satisfaction
that whenever wine was offered he scrupulously abstained
from ever tasting a drop, though I think at times
his self-control was severely tested. Oh! what
hope revived in my heart. Here I said to myself
is compensation for all I have suffered, if by it
he shall be restored to manhood usefulness and society,
and learn to make his life not a thing of careless
ease and sensuous indulgence, but of noble struggle
and high and holy endeavor. But while I was picturing
out for him a magnificent future, imagining the lofty
triumphs of his intellect-an intellect
grand in its achievements and glorious in its possibilities,
my beautiful daydream was rudely broken up, and vanished
away like the rays of sunset mingling with the shadows
of night. My Aunt Mrs. Roland, celebrated her
silver-wedding and my cousin’s birth-day by giving
a large entertainment; and among other things she
had a plentiful supply of wine. Mr. Romaine had
lately made the acquaintance of my cousin Jeanette
Roland. She was both beautiful in person and fascinating
in her manners, and thoughtlessly she held a glass
of wine in her hand and asked Mr. Romaine if he would
not honor the occasion, by drinking her mother’s
health. For a moment he hesitated, his cheek paled
and flushed alternately, he looked irresolute.
While I watched him in silent anguish it seemed as
if the agony of years was compressed in a few moments.
I tried to catch his eye but failed, and with a slight
tremor in his hand he lifted the glass to his lips
and drank. I do not think I would have felt greater
anguish had I seen him suddenly drowned in sight of
land. Oh! Mr. Clifford that night comes
before me so vividly, it seems as if I am living it
all over again. I do not think Mr. Romaine has
ever recovered from the reawakening of his appetite.
He has since married Jeanette. I meet her occasionally.
She has a beautiful home, dresses magnificently, and
has a retinue of servants; and yet I fancy she is not
happy. That somewhere hidden out of sight there
is a worm eating at the core of her life. She
has a way of dropping her eyes and an absent look
about her that I do not fully understand, but it seems
to me that I miss the old elasticity of her spirits,
the merry ring of her voice, the pleasant thrills
of girlish laughter, and though she never confesses
it to me I doubt that Jeanette is happy. And
with this sad experience in the past can you blame
me if I am slow, very slow to let the broken tendrils
of my heart entwine again?”
“Miss Belle,” said Paul
Clifford catching eagerly at the smallest straw of
hope, “if you can not give me the first love
of a fresh young life, I am content with the rich
[aftermath?] of your maturer years, and ask from life
no higher prize; may I not hope for that?”
“I will think on it but for
the present let us change the subject.”
“Do you think Jeanette is happy?
She seems so different from what she used to be,”
said Miss Tabitha Jones to several friends who were
spending the evening with her.
“Happy!” replied Mary
Gladstone, “don’t see what’s to hinder
her from being happy. She has everything that
heart can wish. I was down to her house yesterday,
and she has just moved in her new home. It has
all the modern improvements, and everything is in
excellent taste. Her furniture is of the latest
style, and I think it is really superb.”
“Yes,” said her sister,
“and she dresses magnificently. Last week
she showed me a most beautiful set of jewelry, and
a camel’s hair shawl, and I believe it is real
camel’s hair. I think you could almost run
it through a ring. If I had all she has, I think
I should be as happy as the days are long. I
don’t believe I would let a wave of trouble roll
across my peaceful breast.”
“Oh! Annette,” said
Mrs. Gladstone, “don’t speak so extravagantly,
and I don’t like to hear you quote those lines
for such an occasion.”
“Why not mother? Where’s the harm?”
“That hymn has been associated
in my mind with my earliest religious impressions
and experience, and I don’t like to see you lift
it out of its sacred associations, for such a trifling
occasion.”
“Oh mother you are so strict.
I shall never be able to keep time with you, but I
do think, if I was off as Jeanette, that I would be
as blithe and happy as a lark, and instead of that
she seems to be constantly drooping and fading.”
“Annette,” said Mrs. Gladstone,
“I knew a woman who possesses more than Jeanette
does, and yet she died of starvation.”
“Died of starvation! Why,
when, and where did that happen? and what became of
her husband?”
“He is in society, caressed
and [ ed?] on by the young girls of his set and I
have seen a number of managing mammas to whom I have
imagined he would not be an objectionable son-in-law.”
“Do I know him mother?”
“No! and I hope you never will.”
“Well mother I would like to
know how he starved his wife to death and yet escaped
the law.”
“The law helped him.”
“Oh mother!” said both girls opening their
eyes in genuine astonishment.
“I thought,” said Mary
Gladstone, “it was the province of the law to
protect women, I was just telling Miss Basanquet yesterday,
when she was talking about woman’s suffrage
that I had as many rights as I wanted and that I was
willing to let my father and brothers do all the voting
for me.”
“Forgetting my dear, that there
are millions of women who haven’t such fathers
and brothers as you have. No my dear, when you
examine the matter, a little more closely, you will
find there are some painful inequalities in the law
for women.”
“But mother, I do think it would
be a dreadful thing for women to vote Oh! just think
of women being hustled and crowded at the polls by
rude men, their breaths reeking with whiskey and tobacco,
the very air heavy with their oaths. And then
they have the polls at public houses. Oh mother,
I never want to see the day when women vote.”
“Well I do, because we have
one of the kindest and best fathers and husbands and
good brothers, who would not permit the winds of heaven
to visit us too roughly, there is no reason we should
throw ourselves between the sunshine and our less
fortunate sisters who shiver in the blast.”
“But mother, I don’t see
how voting would help us, I am sure we have influence
I have often heard papa say that you were the first
to awaken him to a sense of the enormity of slavery.
Now mother if we women would use our influence with
our fathers, brothers, husbands, and sons, could we
not have everything we want.”
“No, my dear we could not, with
all our influence we never could have the same sense
of responsibility which flows from the possession of
power. I want women to possess power as well as
influence, I want every Christian woman as she passes
by a grogshop or liquor saloon, to feel that she has
on her heart a burden of responsibility for its existence,
I hold my dear that a nation as well as an individual
should have a conscience, and on this liquor question
there is room for woman’s conscience not merely
as a persuasive influence but as an enlightened and
aggressive power.”
“Well Ma I think you would make
a first class stump speaker. I expect when women
vote we shall be constantly having calls, for the gifted,
and talented Mrs. Gladstone to speak on the duties
and perils of the hour.”
“And I would do it, I would
go among my sister women and try to persuade them
to use their vote as a moral lever, not to make home
less happy, but society more holy. I would have
good and sensible women, grave in manner, and cultured
in intellect, attend the primary meetings and bring
their moral influence and political power to frown
down corruption, chicanery, and low cunning.”
“But mother just think if women
went to the polls how many vicious ones would go?”
“I hope and believe for the
honor of our sex that the vicious women of the community
are never in the majority, that for one woman whose
feet turn aside from the paths of rectitude that there
are thousands of feet that never stray into forbidden
paths, and today I believe there is virtue enough
in society to confront its vice, and intelligence enough
to grapple with its ignorance."