THE MASTER'S CONFERENCE WITH HIMSELF
It was late in September, and chilly
for the season. A bright fire glowed upon the
hearth in the “lady’s chamber” at
Kennons. Red curtains shaded the windows, and
drooped in folds to the floor. Roses and green
leaves seemed springing up out of the carpet to meet
the light and warmth that radiated from the small
semicircle behind the glittering fender. A bed
hung with white curtains, a dressing bureau, with its
fancy pincushion, and numerous cut-glass bottles of
perfumery, a lounge covered with bright patchwork,
and furnished with log-cabin cushions, easy-chairs
and ottomans, together with the workstand and its
inseparable little basket filled with every indispensable
for needlework all, all bore the trace
of woman’s hand.
For nine years this had been the loved
family-room of Duncan and Ellice Lisle.
Now, Ellice was forever gone.
Her foot had passed the threshold, to come in, to
go out, no more. Her canary hung in the window;
how could he sing on the morrow, missing her
accustomed voice? Her picture hung over the mantle,
looking down with the old-time brightness upon the
the solitary figures beforefire Duncan
and his child.
Hubert, the son, in his eighth year,
sitting clasped in his father’s arms, had pierced
anew that tortured heart by asking questions about
his mother and the mystery of death, which no human
mind can answer. The child was in a vortex of
wonder, grief and speculation. It was the first
great lesson of his life, and he would learn it well,
the more that it was so severe and incomprehensible.
But sleep and fatigue overcame Hubert at length.
The light from the fire no more danced with his shifting
curls, but settled down in a steady golden glow over
the mass that mingled its yellow-brown with the black
beard of the stricken man. For the father would
not lay away his sleeping child. He held him close,
as the something, the all that was left to him of his
lost love. His head drooped low and his lips
rested in a long embrace of the child’s soft
wealth of hair.
Mayhap some watching spirit took pity
upon the man bereaved; for while he gazed into the
fire, the heavy pressure of the present yielded to
a half-conscious memory of the past, and a dream-like
reverie brightened and darkened, flickered and burned
in and out with the red of the flame, and the white
of the ashes.
Duncan Lisle was a boy again.
With two little brothers and a half-dozen black child-retainers,
he hunted in the woods of Kennons, sailed boats on
the red waters of the Roanoke, rode break-neck races
over the old fields, despising fences high, and ditches
deep, and vigorously sought specimens of uncouth,
out-of-the-way beast, bird and insect. He studied
mathematics and classics, played pranks upon one tutor,
and did loving reverence to another. He planted
flowers upon his own mother’s grave, and filled
the vases of his stepmother with her own favorite lilacs
and roses. He made houses, carriages, swings,
sets of furniture, and all sorts of constructions
for his half-sister Della, who was his junior by ten
years at least.
He edified, not to say terrified,
the dusky crowd of juveniles with jack-o’-lanterns,
impromptu giants and brigands, false faces, fire crackers,
ventriloquism and sleight-of-hand performances.
With a decided propensity for fun
and mischief, there was also in his disposition as
evident a proclivity to seriousness and earnestness.
If it gave him delight to play off upon a stranger
the joke of “bagging the game,” he enjoyed
with equal ardor the correct rendering of a difficult
translation, or the solution of an intricate problem.
If sometimes he annoyed with his untimely
jest, he always won by his manly openness and uniform
kindliness of nature. He cherished love for all
that was around him, both animate and lifeless.
Soul and Nature therefore rendered back to him their
meed of harmonious sympathy.
Duncan was scarcely seventeen when
the Plague swept over Kennons. That mysterious
blight, rising in the orient, traveling darkly and
surely unto the remotest West, laid its blackened
hand upon the fair House of Kennons.
Cholera! fearful by name and by nature,
it was not so strange that thy skeleton fingers should
clutch at the myriad-headed city, situate by river
and by sea, but thou wert insatiable! Proud dwellings
and lowly cots in green fields and midst waving woods
thou didst not spare; for thy victim, the human form,
was there.
In the middle of August, the skies
shone over Kennons happy and fair. Some cousins
came down from the city seeking safety bringing,
alas, suffering and death!
In one little month, how fearful a change!
Duncan Lisle, sitting before the fire
on this sad rainy evening, after the lapse of twenty
years, shudders as he recalls the blackened pall that
seemed spread over earth and air.
Strange to say, the disease prevailed
least amongst the frightened servants.
The hundred were perhaps decimated.
In the house only Duncan and his half-sister
Della survived; they in fact escaped the contagion.
The father, a strong, healthy man, struggled bravely
with the fierce attack; he even rallied, until there
was good hope of his recovery. But a sudden relapse
bore him swiftly beyond mortal remedy. Duncan,
in his reverie, closes his eyes, to shut out the fearful
memory. He glides over his college years and his
sister’s course at school. He sees Jerusha
Thornton in her youth and pride and beauty. She
waves off the many suitors in her train, only to smile
winsomely at the young master of Kennons. Her
estate is equal to, and adjoins his own. He has
known her from her childhood he loves no
other and still he loves not her.
He revolves the reason of this in his own mind.
She has beauty, wealth, accomplishments. He gives
no credence to rumors of her cruelty to servants,
though aware of her haughtiness to all, and her disdain
to inferiors. The high favor which she showed
to him would be welcomed with joy by at least a half-dozen
of his acquaintance. But this, her manifest preference,
did not please Duncan Lisle there might
be no accounting for it, but it was a fact.
What was to be done? Kennons
needed sadly a woman at its head. Its master
had come to be nearly twenty-eight, and not married
yet!
The servants were in a state of terrified
suspense, lest he should bring Miss Rusha as
their mistress. They wished their master to marry they
would dance for joy but it must be some
other young lady than the heiress of Thornton Hall.
Delia had been to a Northern school
nearly five years; she would soon be eighteen, and
was about to graduate.
As very young girls, Della and Rusha
had known each other. For many years, however,
having been at different schools they had rarely met.
Duncan held a faint impression that
his half-sister had never been at all partial to this
near neighbor of his. She was coming home so soon,
he had such confidence in her judgment and womanly
intuitions, he would await her coming, and see if
she could divine why it was that while he would
be attracted to Rusha Thornton he could not.
Besides, Della was not returning home
alone. Ellice Linwood had been for five years
her most intimate chosen friend, and room-mate.
Ellice was the only child of a widowed Presbyterian
clergyman. Her father had spent all he had to
bestow upon her, in her education. This being
thorough and complete, in the way such terms are used,
she was henceforth to support herself by teaching.
In order to avoid a deplorable separation,
these two young friends had put their wits together,
and lo, the result! Through Della’s good
brother Duncan, a situation had been secured for Ellice
in the family of Col. Anderson, not over six
miles from Kennons. They would speedily become
excellent equestrians, these friends, and annihilate
the narrow space every day in the year.