By Thomas A. Janvier
I.
Mr. John Amesbury, Senior Warden of
St. Jude’s Church, Minneapolis, to the Rev.
Clement Markham:
Vestry of St. Jude’s, April 4th.
Dear Mr. Markham, At a
special meeting of the wardens and vestry of St. Jude’s
Church held this day, it was unanimously decided to
grant your request for leave of absence from your
duties as rector of this parish from June 1st till
September 13th, inclusive, proximo, with permission
to go abroad. I am instructed further to state
that the wardens and vestry of St. Jude’s have
much pleasure in granting your request, as they feel
that your zealous and very successful administration
of the affairs of the parish has abundantly entitled
you to a period of relaxation and rest. Your
salary for the term of your absence will be paid to
you in advance.
In my personal capacity, my dear Markham,
permit me to add that I am delighted that you are
to have this holiday. You richly deserve it.
By-the-way, a good deal of amusement was caused by
the rather characteristic error in the date of your
formal application for leave. Were you to receive
precisely the holiday that you asked for, you would
have to turn back the wheels of time, for your letter
was dated last year!
II.
Mrs. Clement Markham to Mrs. Winthrop Tremont, Boston:
St. Jude’s Rectory, Minneapolis, May 15th.
Dear Aunt Lucy, We are
getting on famously with our preparations for the
summer. Dear Clement is full of his visit to England,
and I am sure that he will have a delightful time.
The bishop has given him a letter of introduction
to the Bishop of London, and another to Dean Rumford,
of Canterbury, so a very desirable introduction to
the best clerical society is assured to him.
He expects to sail from New York on the City of
Paris June 5th, and to sail from London on the
same vessel on September 4th. This will bring
him back to New York in plenty of time to get home
to preach on the next Sunday, the 14th. He expects
to write his sermon on the voyage. It would be
delightful to go with him, but this is impossible
on account of the children. I have engaged board
for the summer at a small but very good hotel in the
White Mountains the Outlook House, Littleton,
New Hampshire and I expect to be very comfortable
there. I made a funny mistake in writing for my
rooms. I directed my first letter to Littleton,
New York. Wasn’t it absurd?
Dear Clement expects to get some vestments
in London, where they make them so well, you know,
and he has promised to bring me from Paris where
he will spend a fortnight two dozen pairs
of gloves and six pairs of black silk stockings.
Fancy my having six pairs of black silk stockings
at once! I shall feel like a queen. The children
are very well.
III.
The Rev. Clement Markham to Mrs. Clement
Markham, Littleton, New Hampshire:
On board “City of Paris,”
June 5th 3:80 p.m.... I stayed with
my brother Ronald last night, and he and Van Cortlandt
came down to see me off. I barely caught the
steamer, for I forgot my watch left it on
the mantel-piece in Ronald’s chambers and
did not remember it until we were half-way down town.
Ronald said, in his chaffing way, that I left my head
somewhere when I was a boy, and that I have been going
around without it ever since. I wish that he
and Van Cortlandt hadn’t such silly notions
about my incapacity in the ordinary affairs of life not
that I really mind their nonsense, for you know how
well I love them both. I am very glad that you
consented to go directly to the mountains instead
of coming to New York to see me off. There was
a great crowd on the dock, and I much prefer to think
of our tender parting.... Be sure to cable me
on the 15th the day that I get to London.
The address, you know, is simply, “Clement,
London,” and I am to arrange with my bankers
to have the despatch sent to me. Good-bye, my Here
is the pilot.
IV.
The Rev. Clement Markham to Mrs. Clement
Markham, Littleton, New Hampshire:
[Cable Despatch.]
London, June 16th. Why have you not cabled?
V.
The Rev. Clement Markham to Mrs. Clement Markham,
Littleton, New
Hampshire:
Charing Cross Hotel, London, June
16th.... After I cabled you this morning I remembered
that I hadn’t arranged with the bankers about
my cable despatches. When I had rectified this
error of omission I received your despatch of yesterday.
It was a very great relief to my mind to have direct
news from you, and to know of the safety and health
of my loved ones, who are dearer to me....
VI.
The Rev. Clement Markham to Mrs. Clement
Markham, Littleton, New Hampshire:
Charing Cross Hotel, London, August 20th.
... I had a delightful fortnight
in Paris.... I bought the gloves and the stockings it
was droll, and not quite proper, about buying the
stockings. I will tell you all about it when I
get home. And I also bought you Something Else
that I am sure will be a pleasant surprise to you
when you see it....
His lordship, Dr., has been kindness itself to me. I dined again
at Lambeth Palace yesterday a farewell dinner. I was a little late, I
am sorry to say, for I got into the wrong boat at Westminster Bridge,
but his lordship very cordially accepted my excuses. At dinner I was
seated next to a very interesting man who has charge of a large parish
in the east end of London. Such poverty as there is in that wretched
region, and such moral depravity, are sickening to contemplate. Thank
Heaven, there is nothing like it in Minneapolis....
I shall sail (D. V.) on the City
of Paris two weeks from to-morrow. I think
that the best arrangement will be for you to come down
to your aunt Lucy’s on the 11th, and on the
12th (D. V.) I will join you at her house in
Boston, whence we will start for home that evening
via the Boston and Albany. I must be in
New York for a few hours to see Ronald and to make
the final arrangements about the new stained-glass
windows. If you prefer to meet me in New York,
arrange matters with Ronald, who will meet you at
the station and take you to a hotel. As I shall
go directly to his office on landing, I will find
out at once what you have decided to do.... On
referring to your letter of the 10th I perceive that
you are afraid that I may have made some mistake about
the sizes of the stockings and gloves. Of course
I got the right sizes; I had it written down:
“N/4, long fingers,” and “N 1/2, narrow ankles.” Don’t fall
into Ronald’s way of fancying that I always get
things wrong. It was about the narrow ankles
that But I had better wait and tell it
to you when I get home. It certainly was very
droll. I have bought a most satisfactory chasuble,
very elegant in material and beautifully made.
I should have hesitated to buy so costly a garment
for myself; but this is for the Service of the Sanctuary.
It will make something of a stir among the congregation,
I think, the first time that I wear it in dear St.
Jude’s.... If, as is probable, I go down
into Wales next week, this will be my last letter.
My heart is full of joyful thankfulness to think that
so very soon I shall see again (D. V.) my own
dear Margaret, who....
VII.
Mrs. Clement Markham to Mrs. Winthrop Tremont, Boston:
Littleton, August 29th.
Dear Aunt Lucy, I have
just received a long and delightful letter from dear
Clement. He had a lovely time in Paris, and he
has bought me the gloves and the silk stockings, and
also Something Else; but he won’t tell me what
this other thing is, for he means it to be a surprise.
Do you think it could possibly be the silk
for a dress? He knows how much I want a new black
silk. But I shall not think about it, for I don’t
want to be disappointed. He has had such delightful
dinners with his lordship the Bishop of London at
Lambeth Palace. His lordship was “kindness
itself,” Clement writes. Clement must have
made a very favorable impression, of course.
And Clement writes that he has bought such a love
of a chasuble. It will stir up the whole congregation
the first time that he wears it, I am sure.
If it is quite convenient to
you, dear Aunt Lucy, I shall come down to you, with
the nurse and the children, on the 11th. That
is the day that Clement will arrive in New York, and
he writes that he will come to Boston the next day after
seeing Ronald, and attending to the final arrangements
about our beautiful new chancel windows and
join me at your house.
But if this arrangement is the least
bit inconvenient to you, please tell me so frankly,
for I can perfectly well meet him in New York, where
Ronald will take care of me till he comes a
plan that he also has arranged in case I do not go
to you. Dear Clement always is so thoughtful
and careful, you know. Please answer soon, so
that I may know what to do. The weather is quite
chilly here now. The children are brown as little
berries and very well. Baby has cut another tooth.
VIII.
Mrs. Winthrop Tremont to Mrs. Clement Markham,
Littleton, New Hampshire:
N Mount Vernon Place, August
30th. My dear Margaret, I write at
once because, I am very sorry to say, it will be impossible
for me to have you here on the date that you name.
I have just completed my arrangements for having the
entire house papered and painted. All the furniture
is locked up in the dining-room (that was done up,
you remember, last summer), and I set out this afternoon
on a round of visits that will fill up the time until
September 12th, when I am promised that the work will
be done. The servants are to have holidays and
the painters and paper-hangers are to be in complete
possession of the premises. Could I be sure that
they would keep their promises and get through by
the 12th, I should urge your coming on that day, which
still would be in time to meet Clement, instead of
on the 11th. But you know how uncertain people
of this sort are. Much as I would love to have
you and Clement with me, I think that you had better
follow out your second plan, and go to Ronald’s
care in New York.
IX.
Mrs. Clement Markham to Mr. Ronald Markham, New York:
Littleton, August 31st.
Dear Ronald, Clement had
arranged, in case we could stay at Aunt Lucy’s,
to meet me in Boston on his return. But I have
just received a letter from Aunt Lucy in which she
says that her house is torn up, and that we cannot
possibly come to her before the 12th. Therefore
I must adopt the other plan that dear Clement, with
his usual thoughtfulness, has suggested, which is
to meet him in New York. He tells me to ask you
to engage rooms for me in some quiet hotel, and also
to ask you to meet me on my arrival with the children
and nurse. I shall leave here on the morning
of the 10th by the White Mountain Express (that gets
in at Jersey City, I think); and if you will care
for me in the way that Clement suggests, I shall be
very grateful.
Clement has had a lovely time during
his holiday. He has been especially favored by
seeing a great deal of the higher clergy. He has
dined repeatedly with the Lord Archbishop of London
at Lambeth Palace, and I am sure that he must have
created a very favorable impression among them, and
given them a highly satisfactory idea of the clergymen
of the American branch of the Anglican Church.
Please answer soon, so that I may know what to do.
I forgot to say that Clement expects to arrive on
the 11th. He is to sail on the 4th.
X.
The Rev. Clement Markham to Mrs. Clement
Markham, Littleton, New Hampshire:
[Cable Despatch.]
Liverpool, September 3d. Sail to-day.
XI.
Mr. Ronald Markham to Mrs. Clement Markham, Littleton,
New Hampshire:
[Telegram.]
San Antonio, Texas, September 5th.
Here for a week on railroad business.
Van Cortlandt will secure you rooms and meet you.
Write him at N Broadway.
XII.
Mrs. Clement Markham to Mr. Hubert Van Cortlandt,
New York:
Littleton, September 5th.
Dear Mr. Van Cortlandt, By
a telegram that I have just received from Ronald,
I find that he is in Texas. I had written to him
to ask him to secure rooms for me at some quiet hotel,
and to meet me at Jersey City on the evening of the
10th, on the arrival of the White Mountain Express.
Of course he cannot do this now, and he telegraphs
me to ask you to do it all in his place. I feel
that I am taking a great liberty in asking so much
of you, but I really cannot help myself. I had
expected to meet Clement in Boston at my aunt’s,
but my aunt is out of town; and now Ronald is away
from New York. It is very provoking. So,
you see, I can only throw myself on your mercy.
But I do this with the less hesitation because I know
how strong your friendship is for my dear Clement,
who will be, as I will be also, very grateful to you.
I am very much puzzled by a cable
despatch from Clement that came two days ago.
It reads, “Sail to-day,” and is dated September
third. Clement’s passage was engaged
on the City of Paris, which I know was advertised
to sail on September fourth, and that is the
date that he all along has named for his return.
Can the date of sailing have been changed? Ought
I to come to New York one day earlier? Everything
seems to be going wrong of late, and I am both worried
and perplexed. If you can think of any comforting
explanation that will account for this change, I shall
be very much obliged to you. Please give my kindest
regards to Mrs. Van Cortlandt.
XIII.
Mr. Hubert Van Cortlandt to Mrs. Clement
Markham, Littleton, New Hampshire:
Law Offices of Van Cortlandt, Howard,
Warrington & Edgecombe, Equitable Building, 120 Broadway.
[Dictated.]
New York, September 7th.
My dear Mrs. Markham, Your
favor of the 5th is received. I am very glad
indeed that I shall have this opportunity to serve
you. You must not consider yourself under any
obligation at all. Remember how close Clement
is to me, though our ways in life have separated widely,
and how true his friendship has been to me through
all these years. I am delighted that Ronald is
out of town, and that I am to be permitted to serve
you in his place.
I regret exceedingly that Mrs. Van
Cortlandt is still in the Catskills, and that our
house still remains in its condition of summer dismantlement.
Were she at home, and the house in order, you would
come directly to us, of course. As this cannot
be, I have engaged an apartment for you with my old
landlady, Mrs. Warden, N Clinton Place.
For a number of years before I was married I occupied
rooms in this house, and I am confident that you will
be far more comfortable there than you possibly could
be at any hotel. Mrs. Warden, who is a motherly
old body, and who remembers Clement well, will take
the best of care of you, and I have arranged that
your meals shall be sent across to you from the Brevoort.
In regard to Clement’s cable
despatch, I am as much puzzled as you are. One
of my young men has just returned from the office of
the Inman Line, and reports that the City of Paris
sailed on her regular date, the 4th, and is due to
arrive here on Wednesday next, the 11th. My young
man was assured that no steamer belonging to any of
the regular lines left Liverpool for this port on
the 3d. The Cunard steamer Samaria did
leave Liverpool on the 3d, however, for Boston.
It is possible, of course since your original
plan seems to have been that you and Clement should
meet in Boston that he has sailed in the
Samaria. But I do not think that this
is probable. The Samaria is a much slower
boat than the City of Paris, and I think that
even Clement would perceive that by sailing in her
he would lose time instead of gaining it. Frankly,
my dear Mrs. Markham, I think that Clement simply
has mixed things up in his despatch by writing “today”
when he meant “to-morrow.” Bless his
dear old heart! he always did have a faculty for getting
things wrong, you know. I decidedly advise you,
therefore, to come down to New York on the 10th, as
you have already arranged.
I observe that you speak of the White
Mountain Express as coming in at Jersey City.
This is a mistake: it arrives at the Forty-second
Street Station. Bear this fact in mind, please;
and I advise you to write on a card which
you had better have easily accessible in your pocket-book Mrs.
Warden’s address, N Clinton Place.
Then, should I miss you in the crowd at the station,
or should any other mischance occur in regard to our
meeting, you will know where to tell your driver to
take you, and where to send your trunks. Do not
fear that any such untoward accident will occur:
it is only professional prudence that leads me to
provide for every contingency that may arise.
As a further precautionary measure (we lawyers are
full of precautionary measures, you know), please
telegraph me from Littleton on the morning that you
leave.
XIV.
Mrs. Clement Markham to Mr. Hubert
Van Cortlandt, New York: Littleton, September
9th.
Dear Mr. Van Cortlandt, Your
very kind letter came last evening. I cannot
tell you how grateful I am to you for all your goodness
and thoughtfulness. With such explicit directions
I cannot possibly go wrong. You must be right,
I think, in regard to the cable despatch. Such
a mistake would be just what dear Clement would be
almost certain to make when in one of his absent-minded
moods. I will do all the prudent things which
you so thoughtfully advise, and I shall keep your letter
to show to dear Clement, so that he may know how much
trouble you have taken to make everything about my
arrival secure. Of course, the train does not
come in at Jersey City: I remember about it now
perfectly. I am in the thick of packing to-day,
and expect to get off in the morning; but I will telegraph
you before I start. I don’t want to bother
you with this letter at your office, so I send it
to your house. I find the address in Clement’s
address-book. Am I not considerate?
XV.
Dr. Atwood Vance to Mr. Hubert Van Cortlandt, New
York:
[Telegram.]
Tannersyille, New York, September
9th. Mrs. Van Cortlandt taken dangerously ill
in night, and continues in critical condition.
Come at once.
XVI.
Mrs. Clement Markham to Mr. Hubert
Van Cortlandt, New York:
[Telegram. Endorsed: “Not delivered.
Party out of town.”]
Littleton, New Hampshire, September 10th. Will
arrive on White Mountain
Express this evening.
XVII.
The Rev. Clement Markham to Mrs. Clement Markham,
N Mount Vernon
Place, Boston:
[Telegram. Endorsed: “Returned
to sender. Unknown at this address.”]
Breyoort House, New York, September
11th. Arrived this morning. Will be with
you (D. V.) to-morrow.
XVIII.
The Rev. Clement Markham to Mrs. Winthrop
Tremont, N Mount Vernon Place, Boston:
[Telegram. Endorsed: “Returned
to sender. Addressee absent from Boston.”]
Breyoort House, New York, September
11th. Is Margaret with you? Please answer
at once.
XIX.
The Rev. Clement Markham to Clerk,
Outlook House, Littleton, New Hampshire:
[Telegram.]
Breyoort House, New York, September 11th. Is
Mrs. Markham still at
Outlook House? Answer prepaid.
XX
Clerk, Outlook House, to the Rev. Clement Markham,
New York:
[Telegram.]
Littleton, New Hampshire, September
11th. Mrs. Markham left on morning train yesterday
for New York.
XXI.
The Rev. Clement Markham to Mr. John
Amesbury, Minneapolis:
[Telegram.]
Breyoort House, New Tore, September 11th. Has
Mrs. Markham returned to
Minneapolis? Please answer immediately.
XXII.
Mr. John Amesbury to the Rev. Clement Markham, New
York:
[Telegram.]
Minneapolis, September 11th.
Mrs. Markham has not returned. Glad you are back
safe.
XXIII.
The Rev. Clement Markham to Mr. Ronald
Markham, Menger House, San Antonio, Texas:
[Telegram.]
Breyoort House, New York, September 11th. [Delivered
September 12th.]
Did Margaret communicate with you
in regard to her intended movements? I cannot
find her and am much perturbed. Answer at once.
XXIV.
Mrs. Clement Markham to Mr. Hubert
Van Cortlandt, No. Broadway, New York:
N Clinton Place, September 11th.
Dear Mr. Van Cortlandt, I was so sorry
that, after all, we did miss each other in the crowd
last night. But I got along very well, thanks
to your forethought in telling me just what to do,
though I must confess that I had five very dreadful
minutes while I was looking for the card on which
I had written Mrs. Warden’s address. And
where do you suppose I found it at last? It was
in my pocket-book, just where you told me to put it!
Wasn’t it absurd? So then we came down
here very comfortably, and found the delightful apartment
that you had secured for me. As for Mrs. Warden,
she is as good as gold. She even had warm milk
ready for Teddy, and a delicious cup of tea for me.
I never shall be able to thank you enough for all that
you have done.
What arrangements have you made about
bringing Clement to me? If the dear boy hasn’t
gone on that slow ship to Boston, and has come, as
you think he has, on the City of Paris, he
ought to arrive today. I should love to go down
to the dock and be the very first to welcome him.
But in such a crowd as there will be I ought not to
venture, ought I? Please let me know by bearer
just what you have done about our meeting, and when
I am to expect my dear boy.
XXV.
Mr. Robert Warrington to Mrs. Clement
Markham, N Clinton Place, New York:
Law Offices of Van Cortlandt, Howard,
Warrington & Edgecombe, Equitable Building, N
Broadway.
New York, September 11th. Miss
(or Mrs.) Margaret Markham:
Dear Madam, Replying, in
the absence of Mr. Van Cortlandt, to yours of even
date, I would say that Mr. Van Cortlandt was called
out of town suddenly yesterday by the dangerous illness
of his wife. I have no knowledge of the matter
concerning which you inquire, and regret, therefore,
my inability to supply the information which you ask.
I may say, however, that the City of Paris,
as I have ascertained by telephone, arrived at her
dock about half an hour ago. Should you desire
to telegraph Mr. Van Cortlandt, his address is the
Bear and Fox Inn, Tannersville, Greene County, New
York.
XXVI.
Mrs. Clement Markham to Mr. Hubert
Van Cortlandt, Bear and Fox Inn, Tannersville, Greene
County, New York:
[Telegram.]
68 Clinton Place, New York, September
11th. [Delivered September 12th.]
What arrangements did you make for
letting Clement know where to find me? If he
came on the City of Paris he is here in New
York now. I am anxious. So sorry about Mrs.
Van Cortlandt.
XXVII.
Mr. Ronald Markham to the Rev. Clement Markham, New
York:
[Telegram.]
San Antonio, Texas, September 12th.
Do not know Margaret’s plans. Think she
arranged matters with Van Cortlandt. See him.
XXVIII.
Mr. Hubert Van Cortlandt to Mrs. Clement
Markham, New York:
[Telegram.]
Tannersyille, September 12th.
Made no arrangements. Expected to meet Clement
at dock. Sorry if I have occasioned you annoyance.
You know cause of neglect. Mrs. Van Cortlandt
now out of danger.
XXIX.
The Rev. Clement Markham to Mr. Ronald
Markham, San Antonio, Texas:
[Telegram.] Breyoort House, New York,
September 12th. Van Cortlandt in Catskills with
sick wife. Saw his partner, Edgecombe, who can
tell me nothing.
I have ascertained that Margaret left
Littleton day before yesterday for this city.
With her departure from Littleton all trace of her
is lost. She has not returned to Minneapolis.
I am wellnigh crazed with grief and anxiety.
Advise me at once what is best to be done. Shall
I advertise? Will it be well to employ the police?
For Heaven’s sake, answer promptly and fully!
XXX.
Mrs. Clement Markham to Mrs. Winthrop Tremont, Boston:
[Telegram.]
68 Clinton Place, New York, September
12th. City of Paris arrived. Mrs. Warden
been to dock and got passenger list. Clement’s
name in it, so he certainly made mistake in his cable
despatch. I state facts fully and clearly, so
that you may understand why Mr. Van Cortlandt was called
suddenly to see sick wife in Catskills, and so, while
Clement must be here in New York, perhaps close by
me, am unable to find him, and he, of course, does
not in the least know where to find me. There
are hundreds of hotels here in New York, and he may
be at all of them. I don’t know what to
do, and am almost frantic with anxiety. Telegraph
me at once, dear Aunt Lucy, and make telegram perfectly
clear, like mine, and long and full and explicit.
This is no time to think about what telegraphing costs.
Perhaps Clement has gone on to you, or the other ship
may have got in sooner. If he is with you, implore
him to return to me at once. Would it be well
for me to employ the police? That was my first
thought, but I was afraid that I might make his disappearance
get into the newspapers and be a scandal, and that
would not do for a clergyman. And he has not
really disappeared; it is only that we neither of us
know where we each are. My head is one horrible
buzz. Shall I advertise? Had I better offer
a reward? Give me your best advice, dear Aunt
Lucy, and please answer immediately.
XXXI.
Mr. Ronald Markham to Mrs. Winthrop Tremont,
Boston:
[Telegram.]
San Antonio, Texas, September 18th. [Delivered 18th.]
Clement is at Brevoort House, New
York. By characteristic blunder has missed Margaret.
If you know her address, please telegraph him.
XXXII.
Mrs. Winthrop Tremont to Mr. Ronald
Markham, New York (forwarded to San Antonio, Texas):
[Telegram.]
Boston, September 12th. [Delivered 13 th.]
Margaret is at N Clinton Place,
in great distress because Clement does not come to
her. What foolishness has overtaken these innocents
now? Please set them right.
XXXIII.
Mrs. Winthrop Tremont to Mrs. Clement
Markham, N Clinton Place, New York:
[Telegram.]
Boston, September 13th. Clement
is at the Brevoort House, quite close by you.
XXXIV.
Mr. Ronald Markham to the Rev. Clement
Markham, Brevoort House, New York:
[Telegram.]
San Antonio, Texas, September 13th. You will
find Margaret at N
Clinton Place, directly across the street from your
hotel.
XXXV.
Mrs. Clement Markham to Mrs. Winthrop Tremont,
Boston:
St. Jude’s Rectory, Minneapolis, September 23d.
Dear Aunt Lucy, We left
New York early last Monday, and by Tuesday night we
were once more safe and together here in our own dear
home. We had no misadventures on our journey,
except that we nearly missed our connection at Syracuse
(where we left the parlor-car for the sleeper) by
getting on the wrong train. Fortunately dear Clement
found out his mistake just in time.
I had not the energy to do more than
telegraph you from New York that all our troubles
were ended. I was too much upset by the agony
that I had been through to write. It was a very
dreadful two days, dear Aunt Lucy; the most dreadful especially
that second day and the last night that
I have ever known. And dear Clement suffered even
more than I did, for I knew at least that he was alive,
and he knew absolutely nothing about me at all.
It all seems now like a horrible dream, and when I
shut my eyes and think about it, I turn giddy and feel
sick and faint. You cannot possibly imagine,
dear Aunt Lucy, how utterly, utterly dreadful it all
was!
If it had not been so very dreadful,
it would have been a little absurd, I think; for,
you know, all the while that we were in such terrible
distress about being unable to find each other, we
actually could have opened our windows and talked
to each other just across the street! As I found
out, when at last dear Clement came to me, his room
in the Brevoort House was directly opposite my apartment
at N Clinton Place. Was it not strange?
And what was still stranger, dear Aunt Lucy, was that
the very morning that our agony ended I happened to
look across the street, and there, hanging beside
an open window of the hotel, I saw a lovely chasuble
that I knew must belong to some clergyman, and it
made me think of the chasuble that Clement had written
he had bought in London and it really was
that very chasuble, you know, for Clement had hung
it there to get the creases out of it and
seeing it set me into a perfect agony of grief, for
I thought that I never was to see my dear husband
again, and that my children were fatherless, and that
I was a widow, and that there was nothing left for
me in the world but the blackest despair. And
it was while I was crying my very heart out that there
was a knock at the door, and then, in a single instant,
all my sorrow was ended as I found myself once more
in dear Clement’s arms.
Yesterday dear Clement preached a
beautiful sermon about man’s liability to error,
and the mysterious ways through which human error
providentially is set right. It was a very impressive
sermon. In the service he wore his new chasuble.
It is exceedingly becoming. Everybody was very
much moved by the sermon; and I was moved, of course,
most of all. I could not help crying. Dear
Clement’s voice trembled once or twice, and
I saw that there were tears in his eyes. The gloves
are perfect, and the stockings really are too good
to be true. They are open-work over the ankles,
and three of the six pairs are ribbed. I wish
that I could tell you what a queer time dear Clement
had when he was buying them. He bought them in
a French shop in Paris, you know; and when he asked
for stockings with narrow ankles, the young woman who
was waiting on him But it will be better
to wait until I can tell it to you. It was very
funny. And the very best of all, dear Aunt Lucy,
is that the surprise that Clement would not write
to me about is the silk for a new black silk
dress! It is a lovely quality. I do wish
that you could have heard Clement’s beautiful
sermon yesterday, and that you could have seen how
handsome he looked in his new chasuble. The weather
to-day is very warm. The children are wonderfully
well.