On a cheery June day Mrs. Penelope
Carroll and her niece Debby Wilder, were whizzing
along on their way to a certain gay watering-place,
both in the best of humors with each other and all
the world beside. Aunt Pen was concocting sundry
mild romances, and laying harmless plots for the pursuance
of her favorite pastime, match-making; for she had
invited her pretty relative to join her summer jaunt,
ostensibly that the girl might see a little of fashionable
life, but the good lady secretly proposed to herself
to take her to the beach and get her a rich husband,
very much as she would have proposed to take her to
Broadway and get her a new bonnet: for both articles
she considered necessary, but somewhat difficult for
a poor girl to obtain.
Debby was slowly getting her poise,
after the excitement of a first visit to New York;
for ten days of bustle had introduced the young philosopher
to a new existence, and the working-day world seemed
to have vanished when she made her last pat of butter
in the dairy at home. For an hour she sat thinking
over the good-fortune which had befallen her, and
the comforts of this life which she had suddenly acquired.
Debby was a true girl, with all a girl’s love
of ease and pleasure; it must not be set down against
her that she surveyed her pretty travelling-suit with
much complacency, rejoicing inwardly that she could
use her hands without exposing fractured gloves, that
her bonnet was of the newest mode, needing no veil
to hide a faded ribbon or a last year’s shape,
that her dress swept the ground with fashionable untidiness,
and her boots were guiltless of a patch, that
she was the possessor of a mine of wealth in two of
the eight trunks belonging to her aunt, that she was
travelling like any lady of the land with man- and
maid-servant at her command, and that she was leaving
work and care behind her for a month or two of novelty
and rest.
When these agreeable facts were fully
realized, and Aunt Pen had fallen asleep behind her
veil, Debby took out a book, and indulged in her favorite
luxury, soon forgetting past, present, and future in
the inimitable history of Martin Chuzzlewit.
The sun blazed, the cars rattled, children cried,
ladies nodded, gentlemen longed for the solace of
prohibited cigars, and newspapers were converted into
sun-shades, nightcaps, and fans; but Debby read on,
unconscious of all about her, even of the pair of
eves that watched her from the Opposite corner of
the car. A Gentleman with a frank, strong-featured
face sat therein, and amused himself by scanning with
thoughtful gaze the countenances of his fellow-travellers.
Stout Aunt Pen, dignified even in her sleep, was
a “model of deportment” to the rising generation;
but the student of human nature found a more attractive
subject in her companion, the girl with an apple-blossom
face and merry brown eyes, who sat smiling into her
book, never heeding that her bonnet was awry, and the
wind taking unwarrantable liberties with her ribbons
and her hair.
Innocent Debby turned her pages, unaware
that her fate sat opposite in the likeness of a serious,
black-bearded gentleman, who watched the smiles rippling
from her lips to her eyes with an interest that deepened
as the minutes passed. If his paper had been
full of anything but “Bronchial Troches”
and “Spalding’s Prepared Glue,” he
would have found more profitable employment; but it
wasn’t, and with the usual readiness of idle
souls he fell into evil ways, and permitted curiosity,
that feminine sin, to enter in and take possession
of his manly mind. A great desire seized him
to discover what book his pretty neighbor; but a cover
hid the name, and he was too distant to catch it on
the fluttering leaves. Presently a stout Emerald-Islander,
with her wardrobe oozing out of sundry paper parcels,
vacated the seat behind the two ladies; and it was
soon quietly occupied by the individual for whom Satan
was finding such indecorous employment. Peeping
round the little gray bonnet, past a brown braid and
a fresh cheek, the young man’s eye fell upon
the words the girl was reading, and forgot to look
away again. Books were the desire of his life;
but an honorable purpose and an indomitable will kept
him steady at his ledgers till he could feel that
he had earned the right to read. Like wine to
many another was an open page to his; he read a line,
and, longing for more, took a hasty sip from his neighbor’s
cup, forgetting that it was a stranger’s also.
Down the page went the two pairs of
eyes, and the merriment from Debby’s seemed
to light up the sombre ones behind her with a sudden
shine that softened the whole face and made it very
winning. No wonder they twinkled, for Elijah
Pogram spoke, and “Mrs. Hominy, the mother of
the modern Gracchi, in the classical blue cap and the
red cotton pocket-handkerchief, came down the room
in a procession of one.” A low laugh startled
Debby, though it was smothered like the babes in the
Tower; and, turning, she beheld the trespasser scarlet
with confusion, and sobered with a tardy sense of
his transgression. Debby was not a starched young
lady of the “prune and prism” school, but
a frank, free-hearted little body, quick to read the
sincerity of others, and to take looks and words at
their real value. Dickens was her idol; and
for his sake she could have forgiven a greater offence
than this.
The strangers contrite countenance and respectful apology won her good-will
at once; and with a finer courtesy than any Aunt Pen would have taught, she
smilingly bowed her pardon, and, taking another book from her basket, opened it,
saying, pleasantly,
“Here is the first volume if
you like it, Sir. I can recommend it as an invaluable
consolation for the discomforts of a summer day’s
journey, and it is heartily at your service.”
As much surprised as gratified, the gentleman accepted the book, and retired
behind it with the sudden discovery that wrongdoing has its compensation in the
pleasurable sensation of being forgiven. Stolen delights are well known to
be specially saccharine: and much as this pardoned sinner loved books, it
seemed to him that the interest of the story flagged, and that the enjoyment of
reading was much enhanced by the proximity of a gray bonnet and a girlish
profile. But Dickens soon proved more powerful than Debby, and she was
forgotten, till, pausing to turn a leaf, the young man met her shy glance, as
she asked, with the pleased expression of a child who has shared an apple with a
playmate,
“Is it good?”
“Oh, very!” and
the man looked as honestly grateful for the book as
the boy would have done for the apple.
Only five words in the conversation,
but Aunt Pen woke, as if the watchful spirit of propriety
had roused her to pluck her charge from the precipice
on which she stood.
Dora, Im astonished at you! Speaking to strangers in that free manner
is a most unladylike thing. How came you to forget what I have told you
over and over again about a proper reserve? The energetic whisper reached the
gentlemans ear, and he expected to be annihilated with a look when his offence
was revealed; but he was spared that ordeal, for the young voice answered,
softly,
“Don’t faint, Aunt Pen:
I only did as I’d be done by; for I had two
books, and the poor man looked so hungry for something
to read that I couldn’t resist sharing my ‘goodies.’
He will see that I’m a countrified little thing
in spite of my fine feathers, and won’t be shocked
at my want of rigidity and frigidity; so don’t
look dismal, and I’ll be prim and proper all
the rest of the way, if I don’t forget
it.”
“I wonder who he is; may belong
to some of our first families, and in that case it
might be worth while to exert ourselves, you know.
Did you learn his name, Dora?” whispered the
elder lady.
Debby shook her head, and murmured,
“Hush!” but Aunt Pen had heard
of matches being made in cars as well as in heaven;
and as an experienced general, it became her to reconnoitre,
when one of the enemy approached her camp. Slightly
altering her position, she darted an all-comprehensive
glance at the invader, who seemed entirely absorbed,
for not an eyelash stirred during the scrutiny.
It lasted but an instant, yet in that instant he was
weighed and found wanting; for that experienced eye
detected that his cravat was two inches wider than
fashion ordained, that his coat was not of the latest
style, that his gloves were mended, and his handkerchief
neither cambric nor silk. That was enough, and
sentence was passed forthwith, “Some
respectable clerk, good-looking, but poor, and not
at all the thing for Dora”; and Aunt Pen turned
to adjust a voluminous green veil over her niece’s
bonnet, “To shield it from the dust, dear,”
which process also shielded the face within from the
eye of man.
A curious smile, half mirthful, half
melancholy, passed over their neighbor’s lips;
but his peace of mind seemed undisturbed, and he remained
buried in his book Till they reached -----, at dusk.
As he returned it, he offered his services in procuring
a carriage or attending to luggage; but Mrs. Carroll,
with much dignity of aspect, informed him that her
servants would attend to those matters, and, bowing
gravely, he vanished into the night.
As they rolled away to the hotel,
Debby was wild to run down to the beach whence came
the solemn music of the sea, making the twilight beautiful.
But Aunt Pen was too tired to do anything but sup
in her own apartment and go early to bed; and Debby
might as soon have proposed to walk up the great Pyramid
as to make her first appearance without that sage
matron to mount guard over her; so she resigned herself
to pie and patience, and fell asleep, wishing it were
to-morrow.
At five, a. m., a nightcapped head appeared at one of the myriad
windows of the Hotel, and remained there as if fascinated by the
miracle of sunrise over the sea. Under her simplicity of character and
girlish merriment Debby possessed a devout spirit and a nature full of
the real poetry of life, two gifts that gave her dawning womanhood its
sweetest charm, and made her what she was. As she looked out that
summer dawn upon the royal marriage of the ocean and the sun, all petty
hopes and longings faded out of sight, and her young face grew luminous
with thoughts too deep for words. Her day was happier for that silent
hour, her life richer for the aspirations that uplifted her like
beautiful strong angels, and left a blessing when they went. The smile
of the June sky touched her lips, the morning red seemed to linger on
her cheek, and in her eye arose a light kindled by the shimmer of that
broad sea of gold; for Nature rewarded her young votary well, and gave
her beauty, when she offered love. How long she leaned there Debby did
not know; steps from below roused her from her reverie, and led her
back into the world again. Smiling at herself, She stole to bed, and
lay wrapped in waking dreams as changeful as the shadows, dancing on
her chamber-wall.
The advent of her aunt’s maid,
Victorine, some two hours later, was the signal to
be “up and doing”; and she meekly resigned
herself into the hands of that functionary, who appeared
to regard her in the light of an animated pin-cushion,
as she performed the toilet-ceremonies with an absorbed
aspect, which impressed her subject with a sense of
the solemnity of the occasion.
“Now, Mademoiselle, regard yourself,
and pronounce that you are ravishing,” Victorine
said at length, folding her hands with a sigh of satisfaction,
as she fell back in an attitude of serene triumph.
Debby obeyed, and inspected herself
with great interest and some astonishment; for there
was a sweeping amplitude of array about the young
lady whom she beheld in the much-befrilled gown and
embroidered skirts, which somewhat alarmed her as
to the navigation of a vessel “with such a spread
of sail,” while a curious sensation of being
somebody else pervaded her from the crown of her head,
with its shining coils of hair, to the soles of the
French slippers, whose energies seemed to have been
devoted to the production of marvellous rosettes.
“Yes, I look very nice, thank
you; and yet I feel like a doll, helpless and fine,
and fancy I was more of a woman in my fresh gingham,
with a knot of clovers in my hair, than I am now.
Aunt Pen was very kind to get me all these pretty
things; but I’m afraid my mother would look
horrified to see me in such a high state of flounce
externally and so little room to breath internally.”
“Your mamma would not flatter
me, Mademoiselle; but come now to Madame; she is waiting
to behold you, and I have yet her toilet to make “;
and, with a pitying shrug, Victorine followed Debby
to her aunt’s room.
“Charming! really elegant!”
cried that lady, emerging from her towel with a rubicund
visage.
“Drop that braid half an inch
lower, and pull the worked end of her handkerchief
out of the right-hand pocket, Vic. There!
Now, Dora, don’t run about and get rumpled,
but sit quietly down and practice repose till I am
ready.”
Debby obeyed, and sat mute, with the
air of a child in its Sunday-best on a week-day, pleased
with the novelty, but somewhat oppressed with the
responsibility of such unaccustomed splendor, and utterly
unable to connect any ideas of repose with tight shoes
and skirts in a rampant state of starch.
“Well, you see, I bet on Lady
Gay against Cockadoodle, and if you’ll believe
me Hullo! there’s Mrs. Carroll, and
deuse take me if she hasn’t got a girl with
her! Look, Seguin!” and Joe
Leavenworth, a “man of the world,” aged
twenty, paused in his account of an exciting race
to make the announcement.
Mr. Seguin, his friend and Mentor, as much his, senior in worldly wickedness
as in years, tore himself from his breakfast long enough to survey the
new-comers, and then returned to it, saying, briefly,
“The old lady is worth cultivating, gives
good suppers, and thanks you for eating them.
The girl is well got up, but has no style, and blushes
like a milkmaid. Better fight shy of her, Joe.”
“Do you think so? Well,
now I rather fancy that kind of thing. She’s
new, you see, and I get on with that sort of girl the
best, for the old ones are so deused knowing that
a fellow has no chance of a By the Lord
Harry, she’s eating bread and milk!”
Young Leavenworth whisked his glass
into his eye, and Mr. Seguin put down his roll to
behold the phenomenon. Poor Debby! her first
step had been a wrong one.
All great minds have their weak points. Aunt Pens was her breakfast,
and the peace of her entire day depended upon the success of that meal.
Therefore, being down rather late, the worthy lady concentrated her energies
upon the achievement of a copious repast, and, trusting to former lessons, left
Debby to her own resources for a few fatal moments. After the flutter
occasioned by being scooped into her seat by a severe-nosed waiter, Debby had
only courage enough left to refuse tea and coffee and accept milk. That
being done, she took the first familiar viand that appeared, and congratulated
herself upon being able to get her usual breakfast. With returning
composure, she looked about her and began to enjoy the buzz of voices, the
clatter of knives and forks, and the long lines of faces all intent upon the
business of the hour; but her peace was of short duration. Pausing for a
fresh relay of toast, Aunt Pen glanced toward her niece with the comfortable
conviction that her appearance was highly creditable; and her dismay can be
imagined, when she beheld that young lady placidly devouring a great cup of
brown-bread and milk before the eyes of the assembled multitude. The poor
lady choked in her coffee, and between her gasps whispered irefully behind her
napkin,
“For Heaven’s sake, Dora,
put away that mess! The Ellenboroughs are directly
opposite, watching everything you do. Eat that
omelet, or anything respectable, unless you want me
to die of mortification.”
Debby dropped her spoon, and, hastily
helping herself from the dish her aunt pushed toward
her, consumed the leathery compound with as much grace
as she could assume, though unable to repress a laugh
at Aunt Pen’s disturbed countenance. There
was a slight lull in the clatter, and the blithe sound
caused several heads to turn toward the quarter whence
it came, for it was as unexpected and pleasant a sound
as a bobolink’s song in a cage of shrill-voiced
canaries.
“She’s a jolly little
thing and powerful pretty, so deuse take me if I don’t
make up to the old lady and find out who the girl is.
I’ve been introduced to Mrs. Carroll at our
house: but I suppose she won’t remember
me till I remind her.”
The “deuse” declining
to accept of his repeated offers (probably because
there was still too much honor and honesty in the boy,)
young Leavenworth sought out Mrs. Carroll on the Piazza,
as she and Debby were strolling there an hour later.
“Joe Leavenworth, my dear, from
one of our first families, very wealthy, fine
match, pray, be civil, smooth
your hair, hold back your shoulders, and put down
your parasol,” murmured Aunt Pen, as the gentleman
approached with as much pleasure in his countenance
as it was consistent with manly dignity to express
upon meeting two of the inferior race.
“My niece, Miss Dora Wilder.
This is her first season at the beach, and we must
endeavor to make it pleasant for her, or she will be
getting homesick and running away to mamma,”
said Aunt Pen, in her society-tone, after she had
returned his greeting, and perpetrated a polite fiction,
by declaring that she remembered him perfectly, for
he was the image of his father.
Mr. Leavenworth brought the heels of his varnished boots together with a
click, and executed the latest bow imported, then stuck his glass in his eye and
stared till it fell out, (the glass, not the eye,) upon which he fell into step
with them, remarking,
“I shall be most happy to show
the lions: they are deused tame ones, so you
needn’t be alarmed. Miss Wilder.”
Debby was good-natured enough to laugh;
and, elated with that success, he proceeded to pour
forth his stores of wit and learning in true collegian
style, quite unconscious that the “jolly little
thing” was looking him through and through with
the smiling eyes that were producing such pleasurable
sensations under the mosaic studs. They strolled
toward the beach, and, meeting an old acquaintance,
Aunt Pen fell behind, and beamed upon the young pair
as if her prophetic eye even at this early stage beheld
them walking altarward in a proper state of blond
white vest and bridal awkwardness.
“Can you skip a stone, Mr. Leavenworth?
asked Debby, possessed with a mischievous desire to
shock the piece of elegance at her side.
“Eh? what’s that?”
he inquired, with his head on one side, like an inquisitive
robin.
Debby repeated her question, and illustrated
it by sending a stone skimming over the water in the
most scientific manner. Mr. Joe was painfully
aware that this was not at all “the thing,”
that his sisters never did so, and that Seguin would
laugh confoundedly, if he caught him at it; but Debby
looked so irresistibly fresh and pretty under her
rose-lined parasol that he was moved to confess that
he had done such a thing, and to sacrifice his gloves
by poking in the sand, that he might indulge in a
like unfashionable pastime.
“You’ll be at the hop
to-night, I hope, Miss Wilder,” he observed,
introducing a topic suited to a young lady’s
mental capacity.
“Yes, indeed; for dancing is
one of the joys of my life, next to husking and making
hay”; and Debby polked a few steps along the
beach, much to the edification of a pair of old gentlemen,
serenely taking their first constitutional.
“Making what?” cried Mr. Joe, poking after
her.
“Hay; ah, that is the pleasantest
fun in the world, and better exercise,
my mother says, for soul and body, than dancing till
dawn in crowded rooms, with everything in a state
of unnatural excitement. If one wants real merriment,
let him go into a new-mown field, where all the air
is full of summer odors, where wild-flowers nod along
the walls, where blackbirds make finer music than
any band, and sun and wind and cheery voices do their
part, while windrows rise, and great loads go rumbling
through the lanes with merry brown faces atop.
Yes, much as I like dancing, it is not to be compared
with that; for in the one case we shut out the lovely
world, and in the other we become a part of it, till
by its magic labor turns to poetry, and we harvest
something better than dried buttercups and grass.”
As she spoke, Debby looked up, expecting to meet a glance of disapproval; but
something in the simple earnestness of her manner had recalled certain boyish
pleasures as innocent as they were hearty, which now contrasted very favorably
with the later pastimes in which fast horses, and that lower class of animals,
fast men, bore so large a part. Mr. Joe thoughtfully punched five holes in
the sand, and for a moment Debby liked the expression of his face; then the old
listlessness returned, and, looking up, he said, with an air of ennui that was
half sad, half ludicrous, in one so young and so generously endowed with youth,
health, and the good gifts of this life,
“I used to fancy that sort of
thing years ago, but I’m afraid I should find
it a little slow now, though you describe it in such
an inviting manner that I would be tempted to try
it, if a hay-cock came in my way; for, upon my life,
it’s deused heavy work loafing about at these
watering-places all summer. Between ourselves,
there’s a deal of humbug about this kind of
life, as you will find, when you’ve tried it
as long as I have.”
“Yes, I begin to think so already;
but perhaps you can give me a few friendly words of
warning from the stones of your experience, that I
may be spared the pain of saying what so many look, ’Grandma,
the world is hollow; my doll is stuffed with sawdust;
and I should ’like to go into a convent, if
you please.’”
Debby’s eyes were dancing with
merriment; but they were demurely down-cast, and her
voice was perfectly serious.
The milk of human kindness had been
slightly curdled for Mr. Joe by sundry college-tribulations;
and having been “suspended,” he very naturally
vibrated between the inborn jollity of his temperament
and the bitterness occasioned by his wrongs.
He had lost at billiards the night
before, had been hurried at breakfast, had mislaid
his cigar-case, and splashed his boots; consequently
the darker mood prevailed that morning, and when his
counsel was asked, he gave it like one who bad known
the heaviest trials of this “Piljin Projiss
of a wale.”
“There’s no justice in
the world, no chance for us young people to enjoy
ourselves, without some penalty to pay, some drawback
to worry us like these confounded ‘all-rounders.’
Even here, where all seems free and easy, there’s
no end of gossips and spies who tattle and watch till
you feel as if you lived in a lantern. ’Every
one for himself, and the Devil take the hindmost’;
that’s the principle they go on, and you have
to keep your wits about you in the most exhausting
manner, or you are done for before you know it.
I’ve seen a good deal of this sort of thing,
and hope you’ll get on better than some do, when
it’s known that you are the rich Mrs. Carroll’s
niece; though you don’t need that fact to enhance
your charms, upon my life, you don’t.”
Debby laughed behind her parasol at
this burst of candor; but her independent nature prompted
her to make a fair beginning, in spite of Aunt Pen’s
polite fictions and well-meant plans.
“Thank you for your warning,
but I don’t apprehend much annoyance of that
kind,” she said, demurely. “Do you
know, I think, if young ladies were truthfully labelled
when they went into society, it would be a charming
fashion, and save a world of trouble? Something
in this style: ’Arabella Marabout,
aged nineteen, fortune $100,000, temper warranted’;
’Laura Eau-de-Cologne, aged twenty-eight,
fortune $30,000, temper slightly damaged’; Deborah
Wilder, aged eighteen, fortune, one pair of hands,
one head, indifferently well filled, one heart, (not
in the market,) temper decided, and no expectations.’
There, you see, that would do away with much of the
humbug you lament, and we poor souls would know at
once whether we were sought for our fortunes or ourselves,
and that would be so comfortable!”
Mr. Leavenworth turned away, with a convicted sort of expression, as she
spoke, and, making a spyglass of his hand, seemed to be watching something out
at sea with absorbing interest. He had been guilty of a strong desire to
discover whether Debby was an heiress, but had not expected to be so entirely
satisfied on that important subject, and was dimly conscious that a keen eye had
seen his anxiety, and a quick wit devised a means of setting it at rest forever.
Somewhat disconcerted, he suddenly changed the conversation, and, like many
another distressed creature, took to the water, saying briskly,
“By-the-by, Miss Wilder, as
I’ve engaged to do the honors, shall I have
the pleasure of bathing with you when the fun begins?
As you are fond of hay-making, I suppose you intend
to pay your respects to the old gentleman with the
three-pronged pitchfork?”
“Yes, Aunt Pen means to put
me through a course of salt water, and any instructions
in the art of navigation will be gratefully received;
for I never saw the ocean before, and labor under
a firm conviction, that, once in, I never shall come
out again till I am brought, like Mr. Mantilini, a
‘damp, moist, unpleasant body.’”
As Debby spoke, Mrs. Carroll hove
in sight, coming down before the wind with all sails
set, and signals of distress visible long before she
dropped anchor and came along-side. The devoted
woman had been strolling slowly for the girl’s
sake, though oppressed with a mournful certainty that
her most prominent feature was fast becoming a fine
copper-color; yet she had sustained herself like a
Spartan matron, till it suddenly occurred to her that
her charge might be suffering a like
“sea-change
Into something rich and strange.”
Her fears, however, were groundless, for Debby met her without a freckle,
looking all the better for her walk; and though her feet were wet with chasing
the waves, and her pretty gown the worse for salt water, Aunt Pen never chid her
for the destruction of her raiment, nor uttered a warning word against an
unladylike exuberance of spirits, but replied to her inquiry most graciously,
“Certainly, my love, we shall
bathe at eleven, and there will be just time to get
Victorine and our dresses; so run on to the house,
and I will join you as soon as I have finished what
I am saying to Mrs. Earl,” then added,
in a stage-aside, as she put a fallen lock off the
girl’s forehead, “You are doing beautifully!
He is evidently struck; make yourself interesting,
and don’t burn your nose, I beg of you.”
Debby’s bright face clouded
over, and she walked on with so much stateliness that
her escort wondered “what the deuse the old lady
had done to her,” and exerted himself to the
utmost to recall her merry mood, but with indifferent
success.
“Now I begin to feel more like
myself, for this is getting back to first principles,
though I fancy I look like the little old woman who
fell asleep on the king’s highway and woke up
with abbreviated drapery; and you look funnier still,
Aunt Pen,” said Debby, as she tied on her pagoda-hat,
and followed Mrs. Carroll, who walked out of her dressing-room
an animated bale of blue cloth surmounted by a gigantic
sun-bonnet.
Mr. Leavenworth was in waiting, and
so like a blond-headed lobster in his scarlet suit
that Debby could hardly keep her countenance as they
joined the groups of bathers gathering along the breezy
shore.
For an hour each day the actors and actresses who played their
different roles at the Hotel with such precision and success put
off their masks and dared to be themselves. The ocean wrought the
change, for it took old and young into its arms, and for a little while
they played like children in their mother’s lap. No falsehood could
withstand its rough sincerity; for the waves washed paint and powder
from worn faces, and left a fresh bloom there. No ailment could
entirely resist its vigorous cure; for every wind brought healing on
its wings, endowing many a meagre life with another year of health. No
gloomy spirit could refuse to listen to its lullaby, and the spray
baptized it with the subtile benediction of a cheerier mood. No rank
held place there; for the democratic sea toppled down the greatest
statesman in the land, and dashed over the bald pate of a millionnaire
with the same white-crested wave that stranded a poor parson on the
beach and filled a fierce reformer’s mouth with brine. No fashion
ruled, but that which is as old as Eden, the beautiful fashion of
simplicity. Belles dropped their affectations with their hoops, and
ran about the shore blithe-hearted girls again. Young men forgot their
vices and their follies, and were not ashamed of the real courage,
strength, and skill they had tried to leave behind them with their
boyish plays. Old men gathered shells with the little Cupids dancing
on the sand, and were better for that innocent companionship; and young
mothers never looked so beautiful as when they rocked their babies on
the bosom of the sea.
Debby vaguely felt this charm, and,
yielding to it, splashed and sang like any beach-bird,
while Aunt Pen bobbed placidly up and down in a retired
corner, and Mr. Leavenworth swam to and fro, expressing
his firm belief in mermaids, sirens, and the rest
of the aquatic sisterhood, whose warbling no manly
ear can resist.
“Miss Wilder, you must learn
to swim. I’ve taught quantities of young
ladies, and shall be delighted to launch the ‘Dora,’
if you’ll accept me as a pilot. Stop a
bit; I’ll get a life-preserver,” and leaving
Debby to flirt with the waves, the scarlet youth departed
like a flame of fire.
A dismal shriek interrupted his pupils play, and looking up, she saw her
aunt beckoning wildly with one hand, while she was groping in the water with the
other. Debby ran to her, alarmed at her tragic expression, and Mrs.
Carroll, drawing the girls face into the privacy of her big bonnet, whispered
one awful word, adding, distractedly,
“Dive for them! oh, dive for
them! I shall be perfectly helpless, if they
are lost!”
“I can’t dive, Aunt Pen;
but there is a man, let us ask him,” said Debby,
as a black head appeared to windward.
But Mrs. Carroll’s “nerves”
had received a shock, and, gathering up her dripping
garments, she fled precipitately along the shore and
vanished into her dressing-room.
Debby’s keen sense of the ludicrous
got the better of her respect, and peal after peal
of laughter broke from her lips, till a splash behind
her put an end to her merriment, and, turning, she
found that this friend in need was her acquaintance
of the day before. The gentleman seemed pausing
for permission to approach, with much the appearance
of a sagacious Newfoundland, wistful and wet.
“Oh, I’m very glad it’s
you, Sir!” was Debby’s cordial greeting,
as she shook a drop off the end of her nose, and nodded,
smiling.
The new-comer immediately beamed upon her like an amiable Triton, saying, as
they turned shoreward,
“Our first interview opened
with a laugh on my side, and our second with one on
yours. I accept the fact as a good omen.
Your friend seemed in trouble; allow me to atone
for my past misdemeanors by offering my services now.
But first let me introduce myself; and as I believe
in the fitness of things, let me present you with an
appropriate card”; and, stooping, the young man
wrote “Frank Evan” on the hard sand at
Debby’s feet.
The girl liked his manner, and, entering into the spirit of the thing, swept
as grand a curtsy as her limited drapery would allow saying, merrily,
“I am Debby Wilder, or Dora,
as aunt prefers to call me; and instead of laughing,
I ought to be four feet under water, looking for something
we have lost; but I can’t dive, and my distress
is dreadful, as you see.”
“What have you lost? I
will look for it, and bring it back in spite of the
kelpies, if it is a human possibility,” replied
Mr. Evan, pushing his wet locks out of his eyes, and
regarding the ocean with a determined aspect.
Debby leaned toward him, whispering with solemn countenance,
“It is a set of teeth, Sir.”
Mr. Evan was more a man of deeds than words, therefore he disappeared at once
with a mighty splash, and after repeated divings and much laughter appeared
bearing the chief ornament of Mrs. Penelope Carrolls comely countenance.
Debby looked very pretty and grateful as she returned her thanks, and Mr. Evan
was guilty of a secret wish that all the worthy ladys features were at the
bottom of the sea, that he might have the satisfaction of restoring them to her
attractive niece; but curbing this unnatural desire, he bowed, saying, gravely,
“Tell your aunt, if you please,
that this little accident will remain a dead secret,
so far as I am concerned, and I am very glad to have
been of service at such a critical moment.”
Whereupon Mr. Evan marched again into the briny deep, and Debby trotted away
to her aunt, whom she found a clammy heap of blue flannel and despair.
Mrs. Carrolls temper was ruffled, and though she joyfully rattled in her teeth,
she said, somewhat testily, when Debbys story was done,
“Now that man will have a sort
of claim on us, and we must be civil, whoever he is.
Dear! dear! I wish it had been Joe Leavenworth
instead. Evan, I don’t remember
any of our first families with connections of that
name, and I dislike to be under obligations to a person
of that sort, for there’s no knowing how far
he may presume; so, pray, be careful, Dora.”
“I think you are very ungrateful,
Aunt Pen; and if Mr. Evan should happen to be poor,
it does not become me to turn up my nose at him, for
I’m nothing but a make-believe myself just now.
I don’t wish to go down upon my knees to him,
but I do intend to be as kind to him as I should to
that conceited Leavenworth boy; yes, kinder even; for
poor people value such things more, as I know very
well.”
Mrs. Carroll instantly recovered her
temper, changed the subject, and privately resolved
to confine her prejudices to her own bosom, as they
seemed to have an aggravating effect upon the youthful
person whom she had set her heart on disposing of
to the best advantage.
Debby took her swimming-lesson with much success, and would have achieved her
dinner with composure, if white-aproned gentlemen had not effectually taken away
her appetite by whisking bills-of-fare into her hands, and awaiting her orders
with a fatherly interest, which induced them to congregate mysterious dishes
before her, and blandly rectify her frequent mistakes. She survived the
ordeal, however, and at four p.m. went to drive with that Leavenworth boy in
the finest turnout ----- could produce. Aunt Pen then came off guard, and
with a sigh of satisfaction subsided into a peaceful doze, still murmuring, even
in her sleep,
“Propinquity, my love, propinquity works wonders.”
“Aunt Pen, are you a modest
woman?” asked the young crusader against established
absurdities, as she came into the presence-chamber
that evening ready for the hop.
“Bless the child, what does
she mean?” cried Mrs. Carroll, with a start
that twitched her back-hair out of Victorine’s
hands.
“Would you like to have a daughter
of yours go to a party looking as I look?” continued
her niece, spreading her airy dress, and standing very
erect before her astonished relative.
“Why, of course I should, and
be proud to own such a charming creature,” regarding
the slender white shape with much approbation, adding, with a smile, as she met
the girls eye,
“Ah, I see the difficulty, now;
you are disturbed because there is not a bit of lace
over these pretty shoulders of yours. Now don’t
be absurd, Dora; the dress is perfectly proper, or
Madame Tiphany never would have sent it home.
It is the fashion, child; and many a girl with such
a figure would go twice as decolletee, and think nothing
of it, I assure you.”
Debby shook her head with an energy that set the pink heather-bells a-tremble
in her hair, and her color deepened beautifully as she said, with reproachful
eyes,
“Aunt Pen, I think there is
a better fashion in every young girl’s heart
than any Madame Tiphany can teach. I am very
grateful for all you have done for me, but I cannot
go into public in such an undress as this; my mother
would never allow it, and father never forgive it.
Please don’t ask me to, for indeed I cannot do
it even for you.”
Debby looked so pathetic that both mistress and maid broke into a laugh which
somewhat reassured the young lady, who allowed her determined features to relax
into a smile, as she said,
“Now, Aunt Pen, you want me
to look pretty and be a credit to you; but how would
you like to see my face the color of those geraniums
all the evening?”
“Why, Dora, you are out of your
mind to ask such a thing, when you know it’s
the desire of my life to keep your color down and make
you look more delicate,” said her aunt, alarmed
at the fearful prospect of a peony-faced protegee.
“Well, I should be anything
but that, if I wore this gown in its present waistless
condition; so here is a remedy which will prevent
such a calamity and ease my mind.”
As she spoke, Debby tied on her little
blonde fichu with a gesture which left nothing more
to be said.
Victorine scolded, and clasped her hands; but Mrs. Carroll, fearing to push
her authority too far, made a virtue of necessity, saying, resignedly,
“Have your own way, Dora, but
in return oblige me by being agreeable to such persons
as I may introduce to you; and some day, when I ask
a favor, remember how much I hope to do for you, and
grant it cheerfully.”
“Indeed I will, Aunt Pen, if
it is anything I can do without disobeying mother’s
‘notions’ as you call them. Ask me
to wear an orange-colored gown, or dance with the
plainest, poorest man in the room, and I’ll do
it; for there never was a kinder aunt than mine in
all the world,” cried Debby, eager to atone
for her seeming wilfulness, and really grateful for
her escape from what seemed to her benighted mind a
very imminent peril.
Like a clover-blossom in a vase of
camellias little Debby looked that night among the
dashing or languid women who surrounded her; for she
possessed the charm they had lost, the freshness
of her youth. Innocent gayety sat smiling in
her eyes, healthful roses bloomed upon her cheek,
and maiden modesty crowned her like a garland.
She was the creature that she seemed, and, yielding
to the influence of the hour, danced to the music
of her own blithe heart. Many felt the spell whose
secret they had lost the power to divine, and watched
the girlish figure as if it were a symbol of their
early aspirations dawning freshly from the dimness
of their past. More than one old man thought
again of some little maid whose love made his boyish
days a pleasant memory to him now. More than
one smiling fop felt the emptiness of his smooth speech,
when the truthful eyes looked up into his own; and
more than one pale woman sighed regretfully with herself,
“I, too, was a happy-hearted creature once!”
“That Mr. Evan does not seem
very anxious to claim our acquaintance, after all,
and I think better of him on that account. Has
he spoken to you to-night, Dora?” asked Mrs.
Carroll, as Debby dropped down beside her after a
“splendid polka.”
“No, ma’am, he only bowed.
You see some people are not so presuming as other
people thought they were; for we are not the most attractive
beings on the planet; therefore a gentleman can be
polite and then forget us without breaking any of
the Ten Commandments. Don’t be offended
with him yet, for he may prove to be some great creature
with a finer pedigree than any of your first families.’
Mr. Leavenworth, as you know everybody, perhaps you
can relieve Aunt Pen’s mind, by telling her
something about the tall, brown man standing behind
the lady with salmon-colored hair.”
Mr. Joe, who was fanning the top of Debbys head with the best intentions in
life, took a survey, and answered readily,
“Why, that’s Frank Evan.
I know him, and a deused good fellow he is, though
he don’t belong to our set, you know.”
“Indeed! pray, tell us something
about him, Mr. Leavenworth. We met in the cars,
and he did us a favor or two. Who and what is
the man?” asked Mrs. Carroll, relenting at once
toward a person who was favorably spoken of by one
who did belong to her “set.”
“Well, let me see,” began
Mr. Joe, whose narrative powers were not great.
“He is a bookkeeper in my Uncle Josh Loring’s
importing concern, and a powerful smart man, they
say. There’s some kind of clever story
about his father’s leaving a load of debts, and
Frank’s working a deused number of years till
they were paid. Good of him, wasn’t it?
Then, just as he was going to take things easier and
enjoy life a bit, his mother died, and that rather
knocked him up, you see. He fell sick, and came
to grief generally, Uncle Josh said; so he was ordered
off to get righted, and here he is, looking like a
tombstone. I’ve a regard for Frank, for
he took care of me through the smallpox a year ago,
and I don’t forget things of that sort; so, if
you wish to be introduced, Mrs. Carroll, I’ll
trot him out with pleasure, and make a proud man of
him.”
Mrs. Carroll glanced at Debby, and
as that young lady was regarding Mr. Joe with a friendly
aspect, owing to the warmth of his words, she graciously
assented, and the youth departed on his errand.
Mr. Evan went through the ceremony with a calmness
wonderful to behold, considering the position of one
lady and the charms of the other, and soon glided
into the conversation with the ease of a most accomplished
courtier.
“Now I must tear myself away,
for I’m engaged to that stout Miss Bandoline
for this dance. She’s a friend of my sister’s,
and I must do the civil, you know; powerful slow work
it is, too, but I pity the poor soul, upon
my life, I do;” and Mr. Joe assumed the air of
a martyr.
Debby looked up with a wicked smile in her eyes, as she said,
“Ah, that sounds very amiable
here; but in five minutes you’ll be murmuring
in Miss Bandoline’s earm ’I’ve
been pining to come to you this half hour, but I was
obliged to take out that Miss Wilder, you see countrified
little thing enough, but not bad-looking, and has a
rich aunt; so I’ve done my duty to her, but deuse
take me if I can stand it any longer.”
Mr. Evan joined in Debby’s merriment;
but Mr. Joe was so appalled at the sudden attack that
he could only stammer a remonstrance and beat a hasty
retreat, wondering how on earth she came to know that
his favorite style of making himself agreeable to
one young lady was by decrying another.
“Dora, my love, that is very
rude, and ‘Deuse’ is not a proper expression
for a woman’s lips. Pray, restrain your
lively tongue, for strangers may not understand that
it is nothing but the sprightliness of your disposition
which sometimes runs away with you.”
“It was only a quotation, and
I thought you would admire anything Mr. Leavenworth
said, Aunt Pen,” replied Debby, demurely.
Mrs. Carroll trod on her foot, and abruptly changed the conversation, by
saying, with an appearance of deep interest,
“Mr. Evan, you are doubtless
connected with the Malcoms of Georgia; for they, I
believe, are descended from the ancient Evans of Scotland.
They are a very wealthy and aristocratic family, and
I remember seeing their coat-of-arms once: three
bannocks and a thistle.”
Mr. Evan had been standing before them with a composure which impressed Mrs.
Carroll with a belief in his gentle blood, for she remembered her own fussy,
plebeian husband, whose fortune had never been able to purchase him the manners
of a gentleman. Mr. Evan only grew a little more erect, as he replied,
with an untroubled mien,
“I cannot claim relationship
with the Malcoms of Georgia or the Evans of Scotland,
I believe, Madam. My father was a farmer, my
grandfather a blacksmith, and beyond that my ancestors
may have been street-sweepers, for anything I know;
but whatever they were, I fancy they were honest men,
for that has always been our boast, though, like President
Jackson’s, our coat-of-arms is nothing but ’a
pair of shirt-sleeves.’”
From Debby’s eyes there shot
a bright glance of admiration for the young man who
could look two comely women in the face and serenely
own that he was poor. Mrs. Carroll tried to
appear at ease, and, gliding out of personalities,
expatiated on the comfort of “living in a land
where fame and fortune were attainable by all who chose
to earn them,” and the contempt she felt for
those “who had no sympathy with the humbler
classes, no interest in the welfare of the race,”
and many more moral reflections as new and original
as the Multiplication-Table or the Westminster Catechism.
To all of which Mr. Evan listened with polite deference,
though there was something in the keen intelligence
of his eye that made Debby blush for shallow Aunt Pen,
and rejoice when the good lady got out of her depth
and seized upon a new subject as a drowning mariner
would a hen-coop.
“Dora, Mr. Ellenborough is coming
this way; you have danced with him but once, and he
is a very desirable partner; so, pray, accept, if he
asks you,” said Mrs. Carroll, watching a far-off
individual who seemed steering his zigzag course toward
them.
“I never intend to dance with
Mr. Ellenborough again, so please don’t urge
me, Aunt Pen;” and Debby knit her brows with
a somewhat irate expression.
“My love, you astonish me!
He is a most agreeable and accomplished young man, spent
three years in Paris, moves in the first circles, and
is considered an ornament to fashionable society.
“What can be your objection,
Dora?” cried Mrs. Carroll, looking as alarmed
as if her niece had suddenly announced her belief in
the Koran.
“One of his accomplishments
consists in drinking champagne till he is not a ‘desirable
partner’ for any young lady with a prejudice
in favor of decency. His moving in ‘circles’
is just what I complain of; and if he is an ornament,
I prefer my society undecorated. Aunt Pen, I
cannot make the nice distinctions you would have me,
and a sot in broadcloth is as odious as one in rags.
Forgive me, but I cannot dance with that silver-labelled
decanter again.”
Debby was a genuine little piece of womanhood; and though she tried to speak
lightly, her color deepened, as she remembered looks that had wounded her like
insults, and her indignant eyes silenced the excuses rising to her aunts lips.
Mrs. Carroll began to rue the hour she ever undertook the guidance of Sister
Deborahs headstrong child, and for an instant heartily wished she had left her
to bloom unseen in the shadow of the parsonage; but she concealed her annoyance,
still hoping to overcome the girls absurd resolve, by saying, mildly,
“As you please, dear; but if
you refuse Mr. Ellenborough, you will be obliged to
sit through the dance, which is your favorite, you
know.”
Debbys countenance fell, for she had forgotten that, and the Lancers was to
her the crowning rapture of the night. She paused a moment, and Aunt Pen
brightened; but Debby made her little sacrifice to principle as heroically as
many a greater one had been made, and, with a wistful look down the long room,
answered steadily, though her foot kept time to the first strains as she spoke,
“Then I will sit, Aunt Pen;
for that is preferable to staggering about the room
with a partner who has no idea of the laws of gravitation.”
“Shall I have the honor of averting
either calamity?” said Mr. Evan, coming to the
rescue with a devotion beautiful to see; for dancing
was nearly a lost art with him, and the Lancers to
a novice is equal to a second Labyrinth of Crete.
“Oh, thank you!” cried
Debby, tumbling fan, bouquet, and handkerchief into
Mrs. Carroll’s lap, with a look of relief that
repaid him fourfold for the trials he was about to
undergo. They went merrily away together, leaving
Aunt Pen to wish that it was according to the laws
of etiquette to rap officious gentlemen over the knuckles,
when they introduce their fingers into private pies
without permission from the chief cook. How
the dance went Debby hardly knew, for the conversation
fell upon books, and in the interest of her favorite
theme she found even the “grand square”
an impertinent interruption, while her own déficiences
became almost as great as her partner’s; yet,
when the music ended with a flourish, and her last
curtsy was successfully achieved, she longed to begin
all over again, and secretly regretted that she was
engaged four deep.
“How do you like our new acquaintance,
Dora?” asked Aunt Pen, following Joe Leavenworth
with her eye, as the “yellow-haired laddie”
whirled by with the ponderous Miss Flora.
“Very much; and I’m glad
we met as we did, for it makes things free and easy,
and that is so agreeable in this ceremonious place,”
replied Debby, looking in quite an opposite direction.
“Well, I’m delighted to
hear you say so, dear, for I was afraid you had taken
a dislike to him, and he is really a very charming
young man, just the sort of person to make a pleasant
companion for a few weeks. These little friendships
are part of the summer’s amusement, and do no
harm; so smile away. Dora, and enjoy yourself
while you may.”
“Yes, Aunt, I certainly will,
and all the more because I have found a sensible soul
to talk to. Do you know, he is very witty and
well informed, though he says he never had much time
for self-cultivation? But I think trouble makes
people wise, and he seems to have had a good deal,
though he leaves it for others to tell of. I
am glad you are willing I should know him, for I shall
enjoy talking about my pet heroes with him as a relief
from the silly chatter I must keep up most of the
time.”
Mrs. Carroll was a woman of one idea; and though a slightly puzzled
expression appeared in her face, she listened approvingly, and answered, with a
gracious smile,
“Of course, I should not object
to your knowing such a person, my love; but I’d
no idea Joe Leavenworth was a literary man, or had
known much trouble, except his father’s death
and his sister Clementina’s runaway-marriage
with her drawing-master.”
Debby opened her brown eyes very wide,
and hastily picked at the down on her fan, but had
no time to correct her aunt’s mistake, for the
real subject of her commendations appeared at that
moment, and Mrs. Caroll was immediately absorbed in
the consumption of a large pink ice.
“That girl is what I call a
surprise-party, now,” remarked Mr. Joe confidentially
to his cigar, as he pulled off his coat and stuck his
feet up in the privacy of his own apartment. “She
looks as mild as strawberries and cream till you come
to the complimentary, then she turns on a fellow with
that deused satirical look of hers, and makes him
feel like a fool. I’ll try the moral dodge
to-morrow and see what effect that will have; for
she is mighty taking, and I must amuse myself somehow,
you know.”
“How many years will it take
to change that fresh-hearted little girl into a fashionable
belle, I wonder?” thought Frank Evan, as he climbed
the four flights that led to his “sky-parlor.”
“What a curious world this is!”
mused Debby, with her nightcap in her hand.
“The right seems odd and rude, the wrong respectable
and easy, and this sort of life a merry-go-round,
with no higher aim than pleasure. Well, I have
made my Declaration of Independence, and Aunt Pen
must be ready for a Revolution if she taxes me too
heavily.”
As she leaned her hot cheek on her
arm, Debby’s eye fell on the quaint little cap
made by the motherly hands that never were tired of
working for her. She touched it tenderly, and
love’s simple magic swept the gathering shadows
from her face, and left it clear again, as her thoughts
flew home like birds into the shelter of their nest.
“Good night, mother! I’ll
face temptation steadily. I’ll try to take
life cheerily, and do nothing that shall make your
dear face a reproach, when it looks into my own again.”
Then Debby said her prayers like any
pious child, and lay down to dream of pulling buttercups
with Baby Bess, and singing in the twilight on her
father’s knee.
The history of Debby’s first
day might serve as a sample of most that followed,
as week after week went by with varying pleasures and
increasing interest to more than one young debutante.
Mrs. Carroll did her best, but Debby
was too simple for a belle, too honest for a flirt,
too independent for a fine lady; she would be nothing
but her sturdy little self, open as daylight, gay as
a lark, and blunt as any Puritan. Poor Aunt
Pen was in despair, till she observed that the girl
often “took” with the very peculiarities
which she was lamenting; this somewhat consoled her,
and she tried to make the best of the pretty bit of
homespun which would not and could not become velvet
or brocade. Seguin, Ellenborough, & Co. looked
with lordly scorn upon her, as a worm blind to their
attractions. Miss MacRimsy and her “set”
quizzed her unmercifully behind her back, after being
worsted in several passages of arms; and more than
one successful mamma condoled with Aunt Pen upon the
terribly defective education of her charge, till that
stout matron could have found it in her heart to tweak
off their caps and walk on them, like the irascible
Betsey Trotwood.
But Debby had a circle of admirers
who loved her with a sincerity few summer queens could
boast; for they were real friends, won by gentle arts,
and retained by the gracious sweetness of her nature.
Moon-faced babies crowed and clapped their chubby
hands when she passed by their wicker-thrones; story-loving
children clustered round her knee, and never were
denied; pale invalids found wild-flowers on their pillows;
and forlorn papas forgot the state of the moneymarket
when she sang for them the homely airs their daughters
had no time to learn. Certain plain young ladies
poured their woes into her friendly ear, and were
comforted; several smart Sophomores fell into a state
of chronic stammer, blush, and adoration, when she
took a motherly interest in their affairs; and a melancholy
old Frenchman blessed her with the enthusiasm of his
nation, because she put a posy in the button-hole of
his rusty coat, and never failed to smile and bow as
he passed by. Yet Debby was no Edgworth heroine
preternaturally prudent, wise, and untemptable; she
had a fine crop of piqués, vanities, and dislikes
growing up under this new style of cultivation.
She loved admiration, enjoyed her purple and fine
linen, hid new-born envy, disappointed hope, and wounded
pride behind a smiling face, and often thought with
a sigh of the humdrum duties that awaited her at home.
But under the airs and graces Aunt Pen cherished
with such sedulous care, under the flounces and furbelows
Victorine daily adjusted with groans, under the polish
which she acquired with feminine ease, the girl’s
heart still beat steadfast and strong, and conscience
kept watch and ward that no traitor should enter in
to surprise the citadel which mother-love had tried
to garrison so well.
In pursuance of his sage resolve, Mr. Joe tried the moral dodge, as he
elegantly expressed it, and, failing in that, followed it up with the tragic,
religious, negligent, and devoted ditto; but acting was not his forte, so Debby
routed him in all; and at last, when he was at his wits end for an idea, she
suggested one, and completed her victory by saying pleasantly,
“You took me behind the curtain
too soon, and now the paste-diamonds and cotton-velvet
don’t impose upon me a bit. Just be your
natural self, and we shall get on nicely, Mr. Leavenworth.”
The novelty of the proposal struck
his fancy, and after a few relapses it was carried
into effect and thenceforth, with Debby, he became
the simple, good-humored lad Nature designed him to
be, and, as a proof of it, soon fell very sincerely
in love.
Frank Evan, seated in the parquet
of society, surveyed the dress-circle with much the
same expression that Debby had seen during Aunt Pen’s
oration; but he soon neglected that amusement to watch
several actors in the drama going on before his eyes,
while a strong desire to perform a part therein slowly
took possession of his mind.
Debby always had a look of welcome
when he came, always treated him with the kindness
of a generous woman who has had an opportunity to
forgive, and always watched the serious, solitary man
with a great compassion for his loss, a growing admiration
for his upright life. More than once the beach-birds
saw two figures pacing the sands at sunrise with the
peace of early day upon their faces and the light of
a kindred mood shining in their eyes. More than
once the friendly ocean made a third in the pleasant
conversation, and its low undertone came and went
between the mellow bass and silvery treble of the human
voices with a melody that lent another charm to interviews
which soon grew wondrous sweet to man and maid.
Aunt Pen seldom saw the twain together, seldom spoke
of Evan; and Debby held her peace, for, when she planned
to make her innocent confessions, she found that what
seemed much to her was nothing to another ear and
scarcely worth the telling; so, unconscious as yet
whither the green path led, she went on her way, leading
two lives, one rich and earnest, hoarded deep within
herself, the other frivolous and gay for all the world
to criticize. But those venerable spinsters,
the Fates, took the matter into their own hands, and
soon got the better of those short-sighted matrons,
Mesdames Grundy and Carroll; for, long before they
knew it, Frank and Debby had begun to read together
a book greater than Dickens ever wrote, and when they
had come to the fairest part of the sweet story Adam
first told Eve, they looked for the name upon the
title-page, and found that it was “Love.”
Fight weeks came and went, eight
wonderfully happy weeks to Debby and her friend; for
“propinquity” had worked more wonders than
poor Mrs. Carroll knew, as the only one she saw or
guessed was the utter captivation of Joe Leavenworth.
He had become “himself” to such an extent
that a change of identity would have been a relief;
for the object of his adoration showed no signs of
relenting, and he began to fear, that, as Debby said,
her heart was “not in the market.”
She was always friendly, but never made those interesting
betrayals of regard which are so encouraging to youthful
gentlemen “who fain would climb, yet fear to
fall.” She never blushed when he pressed
her hand, never fainted or grew pale when he appeared
with a smashed trotting-wagon and black eye, and actually
slept through a serenade that would have won any other
woman’s soul out of her body with its despairing
quavers. Matters were getting desperate; for
horses lost their charms, “flowing bowls”
palled upon his lips, ruffled shirt-bosoms no longer
delighted him, and hops possessed no soothing power
to allay the anguish of his mind. Mr. Seguin,
after unavailing ridicule and pity, took compassion
on him, and from his large experience suggested a remedy,
just as he was departing for a more congenial sphere.
“Now don’t be an idiot,
Joe, but, if you want to keep your hand in and go
through a regular chapter of flirtation, just right
about face, and devote yourself to some one else.
Nothing like jealousy to teach womankind their own
minds, and a touch of it will bring little Wilder
round in a jiffy. Try it, my boy, and good luck
to you!” with which Christian advice
Mr. Seguin slapped his pupil on the shoulder, and
disappeared, like a modern Méphistophélès, in a cloud
of cigar-smoke.
“I’m glad he’s gone,
for in my present state of mind he’s not up to
my mark at all. I’ll try his plan, though,
and flirt with Clara West; she’s engaged, so
it won’t damage her affections; her lover isn’t
here, so it won’t disturb his; and, by Jove!
I must do something, for I can’t stand this
suspense.”
Debby was infinitely relieved by this
new move, and infinitely amused as she guessed the
motive that prompted it; but the more contented she
seemed, the more violently Mr. Joe flirted with her
rival, till at last weak-minded Miss Clara began to
think her absent George the most undesirable of lovers,
and to mourn that she ever said “Yes” to
a merchant’s clerk, when she might have said
it to a merchant’s son. Aunt Pen watched
and approved this stratagem, hoped for the best results,
and believed the day won when Debby grew pale and silent,
and followed with her eyes the young couple who were
playing battledore and shuttle-cock with each other’s
hearts, as if she took some interest in the game.
But Aunt Pen clashed her cymbals too soon; for Debby’s
trouble had a better source than jealousy, and in the
silence of the sleepless nights that stole her bloom
she was taking counsel of her own full heart, and
resolving to serve another woman as she would herself
be served in a like peril, though etiquette was outraged
and the customs of polite society turned upside down.
“Look, Aunt Pen! what lovely
shells and moss I’ve got! Such a splendid
scramble over the rocks as I’ve had with Mrs.
Duncan’s boys! It seemed so like home to
run and sing with a troop of topsy-turvy children that
it did me good; and I wish you had all been there to
see.” cried Debby, running into the drawing-room,
one day, where Mrs. Carroll and a circle of ladies
sat enjoying a dish of highly flavored scandal, as
they exercised their eyesight over fancy-work.
“My dear Dora, spare my nerves;
and if you have any regard for the proprieties of
life, don’t go romping in the sun with a parcel
of noisy boys. If you could see what an object
you are, I think you would try to imitate Miss Clara,
who is always a model of elegant repose.”
Miss West primmed up her lips, and settled a fold in her ninth flounce, as
Mrs. Carroll spoke, while the whole group fixed their eyes with dignified
disapproval on the invader of their refined society. Debby had come like a
fresh wind into a sultry room; but no one welcomed the healthful visitant, no
one saw a pleasant picture in the bright-faced girl with windtossed hair and
rustic hat heaped with moss and many-tinted shells; they only saw that her gown
was wet, her gloves forgotten, and her scarf trailing at her waist in a manner
no well-bred lady could approve. The sunshine faded out of Debbys face,
and there was a touch of bitterness in her tone, as she glanced at the circle of
fashion-plates, saying with an earnestness which caused Miss West to open her
pale eyes to their widest extent,
“Aunt Pen, don’t freeze
me yet, don’t take away my faith in
simple things, but let me be a child a little longer, let
me play and sing and keep my spirit blithe among the
dandelions and the robins while I can; for trouble
comes soon enough, and all my life will be the richer
and the better for a happy youth.”
Mrs. Carroll had nothing at hand to offer in reply to this appeal, and four
ladies dropped their work to stare; but Frank Evan looked in from the piazza,
saying, as he beckoned like a boy,
“I’ll play with you, Miss
Dora; come and make sand pies upon the shore.
Please let her, Mrs. Carroll; we’ll be very good,
and not wet our pinafores or feet.”
Without waiting for permission, Debby
poured her treasures into the lap of a certain lame
Freddy, and went away to a kind of play she had never
known before. Quiet as a chidden child, she walked
beside her companion, who looked down at the little
figure, longing to take it on his knee and call the
sunshine back again. That he dared not do; but
accident, the lover’s friend, performed the work,
and did him a good turn beside. The old Frenchman
was slowly approaching, when a frolicsome wind whisked
off his hat and sent it skimming along the beach.
In spite of her late lecture, away went Debby, and
caught the truant chapeau just as a wave was hurrying
up to claim it. This restored her cheerfulness,
and when she returned, she was herself again.
“A thousand thanks; but does
Mademoiselle remember the forfeit I might demand to
add to the favor she has already done me?” asked
the gallant old gentleman, as Debby took the hat off
her own head, and presented it with a martial salute.
“Ah, I had forgotten that; but
you may claim [text missing in original copy] do something
more to give you pleasure;” and Debby looked
up into the withered face which had grown familiar
to her, with kind eyes, full of pity and respect.
Her manner touched the old man very much; he bent his gray head before her,
saying, gratefully,
“My child, I am not good enough
to salute these blooming checks; but I shall pray
the Virgin to reward you for the compassion you bestow
on the poor exile, and I shall keep your memory very
green through all my life.”
He kissed her hand, as if it were
a queen’s, and went on his way, thinking of
the little daughter whose death left him childless
in a foreign land.
Debby softly began to sing, Oh, come unto the yellow sands! but stopped in
the middle of a line, to say,
“Shall I tell you why I did
what Aunt Pen would call a very unladylike and improper
thing, Mr. Evans?”
“If you will be so kind;”
and her companion looked delighted at the confidence
about to be reposed in him.
“Somewhere across this great
wide sea I hope I have a brother,” Debby said,
with softened voice and a wistful look into the dim
horizon. “Five years ago he left us, and
we have never heard from him since, except to know
that he landed safely in Australia. People tell
us he is dead; but I believe he will yet come home;
and so I love to help and pity any man who needs it,
rich or poor, young or old, hoping that as I do by
them some tender-hearted woman far away will do by
Brother Will.”
As Debby spoke, across Frank Evan’s
face there passed the look that seldom comes but once
to any young man’s countenance; for suddenly
the moment dawned when love asserted its supremacy,
and putting pride, doubt, and fear underneath its
feet, ruled the strong heart royally and bent it to
its will. Debby’s thoughts had floated
across the sea; but they came swiftly back when her
companion spoke again, steadily and slow, but with
a subtile change in tone and manner which arrested
them at once.
“Miss Dora, if you should meet
a man who had known a laborious youth, a solitary
manhood, who had no sweet domestic ties to make home
beautiful and keep his nature warm, who longed most
ardently to be so blessed, and made it the aim of
his life to grow more worthy the good gift, should
it ever come, if you should learn that you
possessed the power to make this fellow-creature’s
happiness, could you find it in your gentle heart
to take compassion on him for the love of ’Brother
Will’?”
Debby was silent, wondering why heart and nerves and brain were stirred by
such a sudden thrill, why she dared not look up, and why, when she desired so
much to speak, she could only answer, in a voice that sounded strange to her own
ears,
“I cannot tell.”
Still, steadily and slow, with strong emotion deepening and softening his
voice, the lover at her side went on,
“Will you ask yourself this
question in some quiet hour? For such a man
has lived in the sunshine of your presence for eight
happy weeks, and now, when his holiday is done, he
finds that the old solitude will be more sorrowful
than ever, unless he can discover whether his summer
dream will change into a beautiful reality. Miss
Dora, I have very little to offer you; a faithful
heart to cherish you, a strong arm to work for you,
an honest name to give into your keeping, these
are all; but if they have any worth in your eyes,
they are most truly yours forever.”
Debby was steadying her voice to reply,
when a troop of bathers came shouting down the bank,
and she took flight into her dressing-room, there
to sit staring at the wall, till the advent of Aunt
Pen forced her to resume the business of the hour
by assuming her aquatic attire and stealing shyly
down into the surf.
Frank Evan, still pacing in the footprints they had lately made, watched the
lithe figure tripping to and fro, and, as he looked, murmured to himself the
last line of a ballad Debby sometimes sang,
“Dance light! for my heart it lies
under your feet, love!”
Presently a great wave swept Debby up, and stranded her very near him, much
to her confusion and his satisfaction. Shaking the spray out of her eyes,
she was hurrying away, when Frank said,
“You will trip, Miss Dora; let
me tie these strings for you;” and, suiting
the action to the word, he knelt down and began to
fasten the cords of her bathing shoe.
Debby stood Looking down at the tall head bent before her, with a curious
sense of wonder that a look from her could make a strong man flush and pale, as
he had done; and she was trying to concoct some friendly speech, when Frank,
still fumbling at the knots, said, very earnestly and low,
“Forgive me, if I am selfish
in pressing for an answer; but I must go to-morrow,
and a single word will change my whole future for the
better or the worse. Won’t you speak it,
Dora?”
If they had been alone, Debby would
have put her arms about his neck, and said it with
all her heart; but she had a presentiment that she
should cry, if her love found vent; and here forty
pairs of eyes were on them, and salt water seemed
superfluous. Besides, Debby had not breathed
the air of coquetry so long without a touch of the
infection; and the love of power, that lies dormant
in the meekest woman’s breast, suddenly awoke
and tempted her.
“If you catch me before I reach
that rock, perhaps I will say ‘Yes,’”
was her unexpected answer; and before her lover caught
her meaning, she was floating leisurely away.
Frank was not in bathing-costume, and Debby never dreamed that he would take
her at her word; but she did not know the man she had to deal with; for, taking
no second thought, he flung hat and coat away, and dashed into the sea.
This gave a serious aspect to Debbys foolish jest. A feeling of dismay
seized her, when she saw a resolute face dividing the waves behind her, and
thought of the rash challenge she had given; but she had a spirit of her own,
and had profited well by Mr. Joes instructions: so she drew a long
breath, and swam as if for life, instead of love. Evan was incumbered by
his clothing, and Debby had much the start of him; but, like a second Leander,
he hoped to win his Hero, and, lending every muscle to the work, gained rapidly
upon the little hat which was his beacon through the foam. Debby heard the
deep breathing drawing nearer and nearer, as her pursuers strong arms cleft the
water and sent it rippling past her lips, something like terror took possession
of her; for the strength seemed going out of her limbs, and the rock appeared to
recede before her; but the unconquerable blood of the Pilgrims was in her veins,
and Nil desperandum her motto; so, setting her teeth, she muttered, defiantly,
“I’ll not be beaten, if I go to the bottom!”
A great splashing arose, and when
Evan recovered the use of his eyes, the pagoda-hat
had taken a sudden turn, and seemed making for the
farthest point of the goal. “I am sure of
her now,” thought Frank; and, like a gallant
seagod, he bore down upon his prize, clutching it with
a shout of triumph. But the hat was empty, and
like a mocking echo came Debby’s laugh, as she
climbed, exhausted, to a cranny in the rock.
“A very neat thing, by Jove!
Deuse take me if you a’n’t ’an honor
to your teacher, and a terror to the foe,’ Miss
Wilder,” cried Mr. Joe, as he came up from a
solitary cruise and dropped anchor at her side.
“Here, bring along the hat, Evan; I’m going
to crown the victor with appropriate what-d’ye-call-’ems,”
he continued, pulling a handful of sea-weed that looked
like well-boiled greens.
Frank came up, smiling; but his lips
were white, and in his eye a look Debby could not
meet; so, being full of remorse, she naturally assumed
an air of gayety, and began to sing the merriest air
she knew, merely because she longed to throw herself
upon the stones and cry violently.
“It was ’most as exciting
as a regatta, and you pulled well, Evan; but you had
too much ballast aboard, and Miss Wilder ran up false
colors just in time to save her ship. What was
the wager?” asked the lively Joseph, complacently
surveying his marine millinery, which would have scandalized
a fashionable mermaid.
“Only a trifle,” answered
Debby, knotting up her braids with a revengeful jerk.
“It’s taken the wind out
of your sails, I fancy, Evan, for you look immensely
Byronic with the starch minus in your collar and your
hair in a poetic toss. Come, I’ll try
a race with you; and Miss Wilder will dance all the
evening with the winner. Bless the man, what’s
he doing down there? Burying sunfish, hey?”
Frank had been sitting below them on a narrow strip of sand, absently piling
up a little mound that bore some likeness to a grave. As his companion
spoke, he looked at it, and a sudden flush of feeling swept across his face, as
he replied,
“No, only a dead hope.”
“Deuse take it, yes, a good
many of that sort of craft founder in these waters,
as I know to my sorrow;” and, sighing tragically.
Mr. Joe turned to help Debby from her perch, but
she had glided silently into the sea, and was gone.
For the next four hours the poor girl
suffered the sharpest pain she had ever known; for
now she clearly saw the strait her folly had betrayed
her into. Frank Evan was a proud man, and would
not ask her love again, believing she had tacitly
refused it; and how could she tell him that she had
trifled with the heart she wholly loved and longed
to make her own? She could not confide in Aunt
Pen, for that worldly lady would have no sympathy
to bestow. She longed for her mother; but there
was no time to write, for Frank was going on the morrow, might
even then be gone; and as this fear came over her,
she covered up her face and wished that she were dead.
Poor Debby! her last mistake was sadder than her
first, and she was reaping a bitter harvest from her
summer’s sowing. She sat and thought till
her cheeks burned and her temples throbbed; but she
dared not ease her pain with tears. The gong
sounded like a Judgment-Day trump of doom, and she
trembled at the idea of confronting many eyes with
such a telltale face; but she could not stay behind,
for Aunt Pen must know the cause. She tried to
play her hard part well; but wherever she looked, some
fresh anxiety appeared, as if every fault and folly
of those months had blossomed suddenly within the
hour. She saw Frank Evan more sombre and more
solitary than when she met him first, and cried regretfully
within herself, “How could I so forget the truth
I owed him?” She saw Clara West watching
with eager eyes for the coming of young Leavenworth,
and sighed, “This is the fruit of
my wicked vanity!” She saw Aunt Pen regarded
her with an anxious face, and longed to say, “Forgive
me, for I have not been sincere!” At last, as
her trouble grew, she resolved to go away and have
a quiet “think,” a remedy which had served her in many a lesser
perplexity; so, stealing out, she went to a grove of cedars usually deserted at
that hour. But in ten minutes Joe Leavenworth appeared at the door of the
summer house, and, looking in, said, with a well-acted start of pleasure and
surprise,
“Beg pardon, I thought there
was no one here, My dear Miss Wilder, you look contemplative;
but I fancy it wouldn’t do to ask the subject
of your meditations, would it?”
He paused with such an evident intention of remaining that Debby resolved to
make use of the moment, and ease her conscience of one care that burdened it;
therefore she answered his question with her usual directness,
“My meditations were partly about you.”
Mr. Joe was guilty of the weakness of blushing violently and looking
immensely gratified; but his rapture was of short duration, for Debby went on
very earnestly,
“I believe I am going to do
what you may consider a very impertinent thing; but
I would rather be unmannerly than unjust to others
or untrue to my own sense of right. Mr. Leavenworth,
if you were an older man, I should not dare to say
this to you; but I have brothers of my own, and, remembering
how many unkind things they do for want of thought,
I venture to remind you that a woman’s heart
is a perilous plaything, and too tender to be used
for a selfish purpose or an hour’s pleasure.
I know this kind of amusement is not considered wrong;
but it is wrong, and I cannot shut my eyes to the
fact, or sit silent while another woman is allowed
to deceive herself and wound the heart that trusts
her. Oh, if you love your own sisters, be generous,
be just, and do not destroy that poor girl’s
happiness, but go away before your sport becomes a
bitter pain to her!”
Joe Leavenworth had stood staring
at Debby with a troubled countenance, feeling as if
all the misdemeanors of his life were about to be paraded
before him; but, as he listened to her plea, the womanly
spirit that prompted it appealed more loudly than
her words, and in his really generous heart he felt
regret for what had never seemed a fault before.
Shallow as he was, nature was stronger than education,
and he admired and accepted what many a wiser, worldlier
man would have resented with anger or contempt.
He loved Debby with all his little might; he meant
to tell her so, and graciously present his fortune
and himself for her acceptance; but now, when the
moment came, the well-turned speech he had prepared
vanished from his memory, and with the better eloquence
of feeling he blundered out his passion like a very
boy.
“Miss Dora, I never meant to
make trouble between Clara and her lover; upon my
soul, I didn’t, and wish Seguin had not put the
notion into my head, since it has given you pain.
I only tried to pique you into showing some regret,
when I neglected you; but you didn’t, and then
I got desperate and didn’t care what became
of any one. Oh, Dora, if you knew how much I
loved you, I am sure you’d forgive it, and let
me prove my repentance by giving up everything that
you dislike. I mean what I say; upon my life
I do; and I’ll keep my word, if you will only
let me hope.”
If Debby had wanted a proof of her
love for Frank Evan, she might have found it in the
fact that she had words enough at her command now,
and no difficulty in being sisterly pitiful toward
her second suitor.
“Please get up,” she said;
for Mr. Joe, feeling very humble and very earnest,
had gone down upon his knees, and sat there entirely
regardless of his personal appearance.
He obeyed; and Debby stood looking up at him with her kindest aspect, as she
said, more tenderly than she had ever spoken to him before,
“Thank you for the affection
you offer me, but I cannot accept it, for I have nothing
to give you in return but the friendliest regard, the
most sincere good-will. I know you will forgive
me, and do for your own sake the good things you would
have done for mine, that I may add to my esteem a
real respect for one who has been very kind to me.”
“I’ll try, indeed,
I will, Miss Dora, though it will be powerful hard
without yourself for a help and a reward.”
Poor Joe choked a little, but called up an unexpected manliness, and added,
stoutly,
“Don’t think I shall be
offended at your speaking so or saying ‘No’
to me, not a bit; it’s all right,
and I’m much obliged to you. I might have
known you couldn’t care for such a fellow as
I am, and don’t blame you, for nobody in the
world is good enough for you. I’ll go away
at once, I’ll try to keep my promise, and I
hope you’ll be very happy all your life.”
He shook Debbys bands heartily, and hurried down the steps, but at the
bottom paused and looked back. Debby stood upon the threshold with
sunshine dancing on her winsome face, and kind words trembling on her lips; for
the moment it seemed impossible to part, and, with an impetuous gesture, he
cried to her,
“Oh, Dora, let me stay and try
to win you! for everything is possible to love, and
I never knew how dear you were to me till now!”
There were sudden tears in the young
man’s eyes, the flush of a genuine emotion on
his cheek, the tremor of an ardent longing in his voice,
and, for the first time, a very true affection strengthened
his whole countenance. Debby’s heart was
full of penitence; she had given so much pain to more
than one that she longed to atone for it longed
to do some very friendly thing, and soothe some trouble
such as she herself had known. She looked into
the eager face uplifted to her own and thought of
Will, then stooped and touched her lover’s forehead
with the lips that softly whispered, “No.”
If she had cared for him, she never would have done it; poor Joe knew that,
and murmuring an incoherent Thank you! he rushed away, feeling very much as he
remembered to have felt when his baby sister died and he wept his grief away
upon his mothers neck. He began his preparations for departure at once,
in a burst of virtuous energy quite refreshing to behold, thinking within
himself, as he flung his cigar-case into the grate, kicked a billiard-ball into
a corner, and suppressed his favorite allusion to the Devil,
“This is a new sort of thing
to me, but I can bear it, and upon my life I think
I feel the better for it already.”
And so he did; for though he was no
Augustine to turn in an hour from worldly hopes and
climb to sainthood through long years of inward strife,
yet in aftertimes no one knew how many false steps
had been saved, how many small sins repented of, through
the power of the memory that far away a generous woman
waited to respect him, and in his secret soul he owned
that one of the best moments of his life was that in
which little Debby Wilder whispered “No,”
and kissed him.
As he passed from sight, the girl leaned her head upon her hand, thinking
sorrowfully to herself,
“What right had I to censure
him, when my own actions are so far from true?
I have done a wicked thing, and as an honest girl
I should undo it, if I can. I have broken through
the rules of a false propriety for Clara’s sake;
can I not do as much for Frank’s? I will.
I’ll find him, if I search the house, and
tell him all, though I never dare to look him in the
face again, and Aunt Pen sends me home to-morrow.”
Full of zeal and courage, Debby caught
up her hat and ran down the steps, but, as she saw
Frank Evan coming up the path, a sudden panic fell
upon her, and she could only stand mutely waiting his
approach.
It is asserted that Love is blind;
and on the strength of that popular delusion novel
heroes and heroines go blundering through three volumes
of despair with the plain truth directly under their
absurd noses: but in real life this theory is
not supported; for to a living man the countenance
of a loving woman is more eloquent than any language,
more trustworthy than a world of proverbs, more beautiful
than the sweetest love-lay ever sung.
Frank looked at Debby, and all her heart stood up in her eyes, as she
stretched her hands to him, though her lips only whispered very low,
“Forgive me, and let me say
the ‘Yes’ I should have said so long ago.”
Had she required any assurance of
her lover’s truth, or any reward for her own,
she would have found it in the change that dawned so
swiftly in his face, smoothing the lines upon his
forehead, lighting the gloom of his eye, stirring
his firm lips with a sudden tremor, and making his
touch as soft as it was strong. For a moment
both stood very still, while Debby’s tears streamed
down like summer rain; then Frank drew her into the
green shadow of the grove, and its peace soothed her
like a mother’s voice, till she looked up smiling
with a shy delight her glance had never known before.
The slant sunbeams dropped a benediction on their
heads, the robins peeped, and the cedars whispered,
but no rumor of what further passed ever went beyond
the precincts of the wood; for such hours are sacred,
and Nature guards the first blossoms of a human love
as tenderly as she nurses May-flowers underneath the
leaves.
Mrs. Carroll had retired to her bed
with a nervous headache, leaving Debby to the watch
and ward of friendly Mrs. Earle, who performed her
office finely by letting her charge entirely alone.
In her dreams Aunt Pen was just imbibing a copious
draught of champagne at the wedding-breakfast of her
niece, “Mrs. Joseph Leavenworth,” when
she was roused by the bride elect, who passed through
the room with a lamp and a shawl in her hand.
“What time is it, and where
are you going, dear?” she asked, dozily wondering
if the carriage for the wedding-tour was at the door
so soon.
“It’s only nine, and I am going for a
sail, Aunt Pen.”
As Debby spoke, the light flashed
full into her face, and a sudden thought into Mrs.
Carroll’s mind. She rose up from her pillow,
looking as stately in her night-cap as Maria Theresa
is said to have done in like unassuming head-gear.
“Something has happened, Dora!
What have you done? What have you said?
I insist upon knowing immediately,” she demanded,
with somewhat startling brevity.
“I have said ‘No’
to Mr. Leavenworth and ‘Yes’ to Mr. Evan;
and I should like to go home to-morrow, if you please,”
was the equally concise reply.
Mrs. Carroll fell flat in her bed,
and lay there stiff and rigid as Morlena Kenwigs.
Debby gently drew the curtains, and stole away leaving
Aunt Pen’s wrath to effervesce before morning.
The moon was hanging luminous and
large on the horizon’s edge, sending shafts
of light before her till the melancholy ocean seemed
to smile, and along that shining pathway happy Debby
and her lover floated into that new world where all
things seem divine.