“I KNOW a young lady who will suit you exactly.”
“Indeed!”
“It’s a fact. She is just the thing.”
“Is she rich?”
“Of course.”
“How rich?”
“Worth some fifty thousand dollars.”
“Are you sure?”
“Certainly. Her father
died about a year ago, and she was his only child.
Her mother has been dead many years. The old man
was well off, and his daughter received all of his
property, and, as she is of age, she has it all under
her own control.”
“Is she handsome?”
“Just so-so. But that don’t matter
a great deal. Gold is beautiful”
“Exactly. And intelligent?”
“I’ve seen smarter girls. But that’s
all the better, you know.”
“Yes. Well now, who is she? That’s
the next question.”
“Her name is Margaretta Riston,
and she is now living with an old aunt in Sycamore
street.”
“Are you acquainted?”
“Intimately.”
“Then be kind enough to introduce
me forthwith. I must make a conquest of some
rich heiress soon, or I shall have to run away, or
petition for the benefit of the Insolvent Law.”
“To-night, if you choose.”
“Very well—let it be to-night.
There is no time to be lost.”
“Suppose she won’t accept you?”
“She must. I’m as
good-looking a fellow as you’ll find in a dozen;
and I flatter myself that I have a smooth tongue in
my head.”
“Well, success to you, I say!
But look here, Smith: if you succeed, I shall
expect a premium.”
“There’ll be no difficulty
about that, Perkins. But let me secure the prize
first; and then say how much you’ll want.
You’ll not find me the man to forget a friend.”
“I’m sure of that,” responded the
other, laughing.
And then the friends shook each other’s
hands heartily, promising, as they parted, to meet
early in the evening, preparatory to visiting the
heiress.
“You would not have me suspicious
of every young man who visits me!” said Margaretta
Riston, in reply to a remark made by her aunt, on
the same evening that the two young men had proposed
calling on her.
“I would rather have you suspicious,
or, rather, exceedingly watchful, than to be altogether
off of your guard. Many dangers beset the path
of a rich young girl like you. There are, and
I am sorry to say it, too many young men in society,
who are mere money-hunters—young men who
would marry an heiress during the first hour of their
acquaintance, and marry her, of course, only for her
money.”
“I can hardly credit it, aunt.
And I am sure that no young men of my acquaintance
are so selfish and mercenary!”
“In that assumption lies a fatal
error, believe me, my dear niece! Too many, alas!
too many young girls have vainly imagined, as you do
now, that, though there might be men of base characters
in society, none such were of their acquaintances.
These have awakened from their fatal error with the
sad consciousness that they had become victims to
their fond infidelity. Rather suspect all until
you have convincing evidence to the contrary, than
remain unguarded until it is too late.”
“But don’t you see, aunt,
how in this case I would do wrong to sincere and honest
minds? And I cannot bear the thought of doing
wrong to any one.”
“You do no wrong to any one,
my niece, in with-holding full confidence until there
is evidence that full confidence may be safely bestowed.
In the present evil state of the world, involving,
as it does, so much of false appearance, hypocrisy,
and selfish motive, it is absolutely necessary, especially
with one in your situation, to withhold all confidence,
until there is unquestionable proof of virtuous principle.”
“There is at least one young
man, who visits here, that I think is above such mean
suspicions,” Margaretta said.
“So I think,” the aunt replied.
“Whom do you mean, aunt?”
“I mean Thomas Fielding.”
“Thomas Fielding! Well, he may be; but—”
“But what, Margaretta?”
“Oh, nothing, aunt. But I do not like Mr.
Fielding so very much.”
“Why not, child?”
“I can hardly tell. But there is no character
about him.”
“No character! Really,
Margaretta, you surprise me. There is more character
and principle about him than about any young man who
comes to this house.”
“I cannot think so, aunt.
He is too tame, prosy, and old-fashioned for me.”
“Whom then did you mean?”
the aunt asked, with an expression of concern in her
tones.
“Why, Mr. Perkins, to be sure.”
The aunt shook her head.
“I am afraid, Margaretta, that
Mr. Perkins is a man of few principles, but thoroughly
selfish ones.”
“How strangely you talk, aunt!
Why, he is any thing but a selfish man. I am
sure he is the most gentlemanly, thoughtful, and polite
man that visits here. He is much more attentive
to others, in company, than Mr. Fielding; and that,
I am sure, indicates a kinder regard for others.”
“Not always, Margaretta.
It may sometimes indicate a cold-hearted, calm assurance,
assumed for selfish ends; while its opposite may be
from a natural reserve or timidity of character.”
“But you don’t mean to
say, surely, that Mr. Perkins is such a one as you
intimate?”
“If I am correct in my observation,
he is all that I have insinuated. In a word,
he is, in my opinion, a mere money-hunter.”
“I am sure, aunt, he is not
so constant in his attentions as he was some time,
ago; and, if he were merely a money-hunter, he would
not, of course, abate those attentions.”
“No—not unless he had discovered
a richer prize.”
“Indeed, aunt, you wrong him.”
“I should be sorry to do so,
Margaretta. But I do not form my opinions hastily.
I try to look close before I come to conclusions.
But I have stronger testimony than my own observations.”
“What is that?”
“Why, I heard this morning that
he is to be married in a few weeks to Harriet Pomeroy.”
“Indeed, you must be mistaken,
aunt,” said Margaretta, suddenly rising to her
feet.
“I presume not,” was the
quiet reply. “My information came almost
direct.”
The entrance of visitors now interrupted
the conversation.
“Permit me to introduce my very
particular friend, Mr. Smith,” said the individual
about whom the aunt and her niece were conversing,
as he entered the handsome parlour of Mrs. Riston.
Mr. Smith and Mr. Perkins were, of
course, received with great affability by Margaretta,
who concealed the impression made upon her mind by
the piece of information just conveyed by her aunt.
As for Mrs. Riston, she was studiedly
polite, but gave the young men no very apparent encouragement.
An hour soon passed away, and then the visitors retired.
“Well, Smith, what do you think
of her?” asked Perkins, as the two gained the
street.
“You’re sure she’s worth fifty thousand
dollars?”
“Oh, yes. There’s no mistake about
that.”
“But how do you know?
This is a matter about which there should be no mistake.”
“I got a friend to examine the
transfer books of the bank where the stock is.
Will that satisfy you?”
“You did? And pray why did you do that?”
“A strange question! but I’ll
tell you, as you seem dull. I had a notion of
her myself.”
“You had?”
“I had.”
“And why did you get out of the notion?”
“Because I saw another whom I liked better.”
“She was richer, I suppose.”
“How can you insinuate such
a thing?” And Perkins laughed in a low, meaning
chuckle.
“Ah, I perceive. Well, how much is she
worth?”
“About a hundred thousand.”
“Are you sure of her?”
“Certainly! The thing’s all settled.”
“You’re a lucky dog, Perkins!
But see here, what did you mean by the premium you
talked of for bringing about a match between me and
Miss Riston?”
“Oh, as to that, I was only
jesting. But you haven’t told me how you
like the young lady yet.”
“Oh, she’ll do, I reckon,”
said Smith, tossing his head half contemptuously.
“Do you think you can secure her?”
“Easily enough. But then
I must get her away as often as possible from that
old Cerberus of an aunt. I didn’t like her
looks at all.”
“She’s suspicious.”
“That’s clear. Well,
she must be wide awake if I commence playing against
her in real earnest. I can win any girl’s
affections that I choose.”
“You have a pretty fair conceit of yourself,
I see.”
“I wouldn’t give a cent
for a man that hadn’t. The fact is, Perkins,
these girls have but one end in view, and that is to
get married. They know that they have to wait
to be asked, and, trembling in fear lest they shall
not get another offer, they are always ready to jump
eagerly at the first.”
“Pretty true, I believe.
But, Smith, don’t you think Margaretta quite
a fair specimen of a girl?”
“Oh, yes. And I have no
doubt that I shall love her well enough, if she don’t
attempt to put on airs, and throw up to me that she
was rich, and I poor. I’ll never stand
that.”
“She’ll not be so foolish, I presume.”
“She’d better not, I can
tell her, if she doesn’t wish to get into hot
water.” And the young man laughed at his
own half-in-earnest jesting.
“He’s a very agreeable
young man, isn’t he, aunt?” said Margaretta,
after the two young men had gone away.
“Who? Mr. Smith, as Mr. Perkins called
him?”
“Yes.”
“He has a smooth enough tongue,
if that is any recommendation; but I do not like him.
Indeed, he is far more disagreeable to me than his
very particular friend, Mr. Perkins.”
“Oh, aunt, how can you talk
so! I’m sure he was very agreeable.
At least, I thought so.”
“That was because he flattered you so cleverly.”
“How can you insinuate
such a thing, aunt? Surely I am not so weak and
vain as to be imposed upon and beguiled by a flatterer!”
“Some men understand how to
flatter very ingeniously; and, to me, Mr. Smith seemed
peculiarly adept in the art. He managed it so
adroitly as to give it all the effect, without its
being apparent to the subject of his experiments.”
“Indeed, aunt, you are mistaken.
I despise a flatterer as much as you do. But
I am sure that I saw nothing like flattery about Mr.
Smith.”
“I am sorry that you did not,
Margaretta. But take my advice, and be on your
guard. That man’s motives in coming to see
you, believe me, are not the purest in the world.”
“You are far too suspicious, aunt; I am sure
you are.”
“Perhaps I have had cause.
At any rate, Margaretta, I have lived longer in, and
seen much more of the world than you have, and I ought
to have a clearer perception of character. For
your own sake, then, try and confide in my judgment.”
“I ought to confide in your
judgment, aunt, I know; but I cannot see as you do
in this particular instance.”
“Then you ought rather to suspect
the correctness of your own observation, when it leads
to conclusions so utterly opposed to mine.”
To this Margaretta did not reply.
It seemed too much like giving up her own rationality
to assent to it, and she did not wish to pain her
aunt by objections.
On the next evening, a quiet, intelligent,
and modest-looking young man called in, and spent
an hour or two with Margaretta and her aunt.
He did not present so imposing and showy an exterior
as did Mr. Smith, but his conversation had in it far
more substance and real common sense. After he
had retired, Margaretta said—
“Well, it is no use; I cannot
take any pleasure in the society of Thomas Fielding.”
“Why not, my dear?” asked the aunt.
“Oh, I don’t know; but he is so dull and
prosy.”
“I am sure he don’t seem
dull to me, Margaretta. He doesn’t talk
a great deal, it is true; but, then, what he does
say is characterized by good sense, and evinces a
discriminating mind.”
“But don’t you think,
aunt, that my money has some influence in bringing
him here?” And Margaretta looked up archly into
her aunt’s face.
“It may have, for aught I can
tell. We cannot see the motives of any one.
But I should be inclined to think that money would
have little influence with Thomas Fielding, were not
every thing else in agreement. He is, I think,
a man of fixed and genuine principles.”
“No doubt, aunt. But, still,
I can’t relish his society. And if I can’t,
I can’t.”
“Very true. If you can’t
enjoy his company, why you can’t. But it
cannot be, certainly, from any want, on his part, of
gentlemanly manners, or kind attentions to you.”
“No; but, then, he is so dull.
I should die if I had no other company.”
“Indeed, my child,” Aunt
Riston said, in a serious tone,” you ought to
make the effort to esteem and relish the society of
those who have evidently some stability of character,
and whose conversation has in it the evidence of mature
observation, combined with sound and virtuous principles,
more than you do the flippant nonsense of mere ladies’
men, or selfish, unprincipled fortune-hunters.”
“Indeed, aunt, you are too severe
on my favourites!” And Margaretta laughed gaily.
But to her aunt there was something
sad in the sound of that laugh. It seemed like
the knell of long and fondly cherished hopes.
“What do you think of Margaretta
Riston, Mary?” asked Thomas Fielding of his
sister, on the next evening after the visit just mentioned.
“Why do you ask so seriously,
brother?” the sister said, looking into his
face, with a smile playing about her lips.
“For a serious reason, sister.
Can you guess what it is?”
“Perhaps so, and therefore I
will not tax your modesty so far as to make you confess
it.”
“Very well, Mary. And now
answer my question. What do you think of Margaretta?”
“I know nothing against her, brother.”
“Nothing against her! Don’t you know
any thing in her favour?”
“Well, perhaps I do. She
is said to be worth some fifty thousand dollars.”
“Nonsense, Mary! What do
I care about her fifty thousand dollars? Don’t
you know any thing else in her favour?”
“Why, yes, brother. As
long as you seem so serious about the matter, I think
Margaretta a fine girl. She is amiable in disposition—is
well educated—tolerably good-looking, and,
I think, ordinarily intelligent.”
“Ordinarily intelligent!”
“Yes. Certainly there is nothing extraordinary
about her.”
“No, of course not.”
“Well, brother, what next?”
“Why, simply, Mary, I like Margaretta
very much. The oftener I see her, the more am
I drawn towards her. To tell the plain, homely
truth, I love her.”
“And don’t care any thing about her fifty
thousand dollars?”
“No Mary, I don’t think
I do. Indeed, if I know my own feelings, I would
rather she were not worth a dollar.”
“And why so, Thomas?”
“Because, I fear the perverting
influence of wealth on her mind. I am afraid
her position will give her false views of life.
I wish to marry for a wife—not for
money. I can make money myself.”
“Still, Thomas, Margaretta is,
I think, an innocent-minded, good girl. I do
not see that she has been much warped by her position.”
“So she seems to me, and I am
glad that my sister’s observation corroborates
my own. And now, Mary, do you think I have any
thing to hope?”
“Certainly, I do.”
“But why do you think so?”
“Because Margaretta must have
good sense enough to see that you are a man of correct
principles, and an affectionate disposition.”
“Still, she may not see in me
that which interests her sufficiently to induce her
to marry me.”
“That is true. But I don’t
believe you have any thing to fear.”
“I cannot help fearing, Mary,
for the simple reason, that I find my affections so
much interested. A disappointment would be attended
with extreme pain.”
“Then I would end suspense at once.”
“I will. To-morrow evening I will declare
my feelings.”
It was about nine o’clock on
the next evening, while Mary Fielding sat reading
by the centre-table, that her brother entered hastily,
and threw himself upon the sofa, a deep sigh escaping
him as he did so.
“What ails you, Thomas?”
inquired his sister, rising and approaching him.
But he made no reply.
“Tell me, what ails you, Thomas?”
Mary urged, taking his hand affectionately.
“I have been to see Margaretta,”
the brother at length replied, in as calm a voice
as he could assume.
“And she has not, surely, declined your offer?”
“She has, and with what appeared
to me an intimation that I loved her money, perhaps,
better than herself.”
“Surely not, brother!”
“To me it seemed so. Certainly
she treated lightly my declaration, and almost jested
with me.”
The sister stood silent for some moments,
and then said—
“The woman who could thus jest
with you, Thomas, is unworthy of you.”
“So I am trying to convince
myself. But the trial is a deeply painful one.”
And painful it proved for many weeks
afterwards. But, finally, he was enabled to rise
above his feelings
In the mean time, Mr. Smith had wooed
the heiress successfully, and, in doing so, his own
heart had become interested, or, at least, he deceived
himself into the belief that such was the case.
He no longer jested, as he had done at first, about
her money, nor declared, even to his friend Perkins,
how strong an influence it had upon his affections.
More serious thoughts of marriage had caused these
selfish motives to retire out of sight and acknowledgment;
but still they existed and still ruled his actions.
The aunt, when Margaretta made known
to her that the young man had offered himself, was
pained beyond measure, particularly as it was evident
that her niece favoured the suitor.
“Indeed, Margaretta,”
said she, earnestly, “he is not worthy of you!”
“You judge him harshly, aunt,”
the niece replied. “I know him to be all
that either of us could wish for.”
“But how do you know, Margaretta?”
“I have observed him closely,
and am sure that, I cannot be deceived in him.”
“Alas! my child, if you know
nothing beyond your own observation, you are far more
ignorant than you suppose. Be guided, then, by
me—trust more to my observation than your
own. He is not the man to make you happy!
Let me urge you, then, to keep him at a distance.”
“I should do injustice to my
own feelings, aunt, and to my own sense of right,
were I to do so. In a word, and to speak out plainly,
he offered himself last evening, and I accepted him!”
“Rash girl!” exclaimed
Mrs. Riston, lifting her hands in astonishment and
pain, “how could you thus deceive your best friend?
How so sadly deceive yourself?”
“Do not distress yourself so,
aunt. You have mistaken the character of Mr.
Smith. He is, in every way, a different man from
what you think him. He is altogether worthy of
my regard and your confidence. I do not wish
to deceive you, aunt; but you set yourself so resolutely
against Mr. Smith from the first that I could not make
up my mind to brave your opposition to a step which
I was fully convinced it was right for me to take.”
“Ah, Margaretta! You know
not what you are doing. Marriage is a far more
serious matter than you seem to think it. Look
around among your young acquaintances, and see how
many have wedded unhappily. And why? Because
marriages were rushed into from a fond impulse, vainly
imagined to be true affection. But no true affection
can exist where there is not a mutual knowledge of
character and qualities of mind. Now what do
you know, really, about Mr. Smith? What does
he know about you? Why, nothing! I want no
stronger evidence of his unworthy motives, than the
fact of his having offered himself after a three weeks’
acquaintance. What could he know of you in that
time? Surely not enough to be able to determine
whether you would make him a suitable wife or not—enough,
perhaps, to be satisfied of the amount of your wealth.”
“You are unjust towards Mr.
Smith,” said Margaretta, half indignantly.
“Not half so unjust as he is
towards you. But surely, my niece, you will reconsider
this whole matter, and take full time to reflect.”
“I cannot reconsider, aunt.
My word is passed, and I would suffer any thing rather
than break my word.”
“You will suffer your heart
to be broken, if you do not.”
“Time will prove that!”
and Margaretta tossed her head with a kind of mock
defiance.
“Have you fixed your wedding
day?” the aunt asked after a few moments’
silence.
“Not yet. But Mr. Smith
wants to be married in three weeks.”
“In three weeks!”
“Yes; but I told him that I could not get ready
within a month.”
“A month! Surely you are not going to act
so precipitately?”
“I cannot see the use of waiting,
aunt, when we are engaged and all ready. And
I can easily get ready in a month.”
To this the aunt did not reply. She felt that
it would be useless.
After this, Mr. Smith was a regular
daily and evening visitor. He perceived, of course,
the unfavourable light in which the aunt viewed him,
and in consequence set himself to work to break down
her prejudices. He was kind and attentive to
her on all occasions, and studied her peculiar views
and feelings, so as to adapt himself to her.
But the old lady had seen too much of the world, and
was too close an observer to be deceived. Still
she found silent acquiescence her only course of action.
At the end of the month from the day of their engagement
Margaretta
Riston was a happy young bride.
One week after their marriage, Mr.
Smith entered the room of his friend Mr. Perkins,
with a pale, agitated countenance.
“What in the world has happened, Smith?”
the friend asked, in alarm.
“Haven’t you heard the news?”
“No. What news?”
“The United States Bank has failed!”
“Oh, no!”
“It is true. And every
dollar of Margaretta’s money is locked up there!”
“Really that is dreadful!
I would sell the stock immediately for what it will
bring, if I were you.”
“So I wish to. But neither
my wife nor her aunt are willing. And so soon
after our marriage I do not like to use positive measures.”
“But the case is urgent.
Delay may sweep from you every dollar.”
“So I fear. What shall
I do then? To have the prize in hand, and find
it thus suddenly escaping, is enough to drive me mad!”
“Sell in spite of them. That’s my
advice.”
“I will!”
And the half crazy young fortune-hunter
hurried away. In a few minutes after, he entered
the room where sat his wife and her aunt in gloomy
and oppressed silence.
“The best thing we can do, Margaretta,
I am satisfied, is to sell,” he said, taking
a chair beside his wife. “The stock is falling
every hour, and it is the opinion of competent judges
that it will not be worth five dollars in a week.”
“And other competent judges
are of a very different opinion,” replied the
aunt. “Mr. Day, who was Margaretta’s
guardian, has just been here, and says that we must
not sell by any means; that after the panic is over
the stock will go up again. The bank, he assures
us, is fully able to meet every dollar, and still have
a large surplus. It would be folly then to sell,
especially when there is no urgent demand for the
money.”
“There is more urgent demand
than you know of,” Mr. Smith said to himself
with bitter emphasis. He added aloud,—
“Mr. Day may know something
about the matter; but I am sure he is mistaken in
the calculation he makes. It is said this morning,
by those who know, that the assets of the bank are
principally in worthless stocks, and that the shareholders
will never get a cent. My advice, then, is to
sell immediately; a bird in the hand is worth two
in the bush.”
But both the wife and aunt objected;
and so soon after marriage he felt that positive opposition
would come with a bad grace.
Steadily day after day, the stock
went down, down, down—and day after day
Mr. Smith persisted in having it sold. The fact
was, duns now met him at every turn, and it was with
the utmost difficulty that he could prevent his wife
and her aunt from guessing at the nature of the many
calls of his “particular friends.”
Money he must have, or he could not keep out of prison
long, and the only chance for his obtaining money
was in the sale of his wife’s stock. But
at the rates for which it was now selling, the whole
proceeds would not cover the claims against him.
At last, when the stock had fallen to twenty dollars,
Mrs. Smith yielded to her husband’s earnest
persuasions, and handed him over the certificates of
her stock, that he might dispose of them to the best
possible advantage.
“Mr. Smith is late in coming
home to his dinner,” the aunt said, looking
at the timepiece.
The young wife lifted her head from
her hand, with a sigh, and merely responded,
“Yes, he is rather late.”
“I wonder what keeps him so!”
the old lady remarked, about five minutes after, breaking
the oppressive silence.
“I’m sure I cannot tell.
I gave him my certificates of stock to sell this morning.”
“You did? I am afraid that was wrong, Margaretta.”
“I’m sure I cannot tell
whether it is or not, aunt. But I’ve had
no peace about them, night nor day, since the bank
failed.”
There was bitterness in the tone of
Margaretta’s voice, that touched the feelings
of her aunt, and tended to confirm her worst fears.
But she could not, now, speak out plainly, as she
had felt constrained to do before marriage, and therefore
did not reply.
For more than an hour did the two
women wait for the return of Mr. Smith, and then they
went through the form of sitting down to the dinner-table.
But few mouthfuls of food passed the lips of either
of them.
Hour after hour moved slowly by, but
still the husband of Margaretta appeared not; and
when the twilight fell, it came with a strange uncertain
fear to the heart of the young wife.
“What can keep him so
late, aunt?” she said, anxiously, as the lights
were brought in.
“Indeed, my child, I cannot
tell. I hope that nothing is wrong.”
“Wrong, aunt? What can
be wrong?” and Margaretta looked her aunt eagerly
and inquiringly in the face.
“I am sure, my child, I do not
know. Something unusual must detain him, and
I only hope that something may be evil neither to him
nor yourself.”
Again there was a deep and painful
silence—painful at least to one heart,
trembling with an undefinable sensation of fear.
“There he is!” ejaculated
Margaretta springing to her feet, as the bell rang,
and hurrying to the door before the servant had time
to open it.
“Here is a letter for Mrs. Smith,”
said a stranger, handing her a sealed note, and then
withdrawing quickly.
It was with difficulty that the young
wife could totter back to the parlour, where she seated
herself by the table, and with trembling hands broke
the seal of the letter that had been given her.
Her eyes soon took in the brief words it contained.
They were as follow:—
“Farewell, Margaretta!
We shall, perhaps, never meet again! Think of
me as one altogether unworthy of you. I have wronged
you—sadly wronged you, I know—but
I have been driven on by a kind of evil necessity
to do what I have done. Forget me! Farewell!”
This note bore neither date nor signature,
but the characters in which it was written were too
well known to be mistaken.
Mrs. Riston saw the fearful change
that passed over the face of her niece as she read
the note, and went quickly up to her. She was
in time to save her from falling to the floor.
All through the night she lay in a state of insensibility,
and it was weeks before she seemed to take even the
slightest interest in any thing that was going on
around her.
It was about three o’clock of
the day that Mr. Smith got possession of the certificates
of deposit, that he entered the room of his friend,
Perkins. He looked agitated and irresolute.
“Well, Smith, how are you?”
his friend said. “Have you sold that stock
yet?”
“Yes.”
“Indeed! So you have triumphed
over your wife’s scruples. Well—what
did you get for it?”
“Only eight thousand dollars.”
“That was a shameful sacrifice!”
“Indeed it was. And it puts me into a terrible
difficulty.”
“What is that?”
“Why, I owe at least that sum;
and I cannot stay here unless it is paid.”
“That is bad.”
“Out of the fifty thousand I
could have squared up, and it would not have been
felt. But I cannot use the whole eight thousand,
and look Margaretta and her aunt in the face again.
And if I don’t pay my debts, you see, to prison
I must go.”
“You are in a narrow place, truly. Well,
what are you going to do?”
“A question more easily asked
than answered. Among my debts are about, four
thousand dollars that must be paid whether or no.”
“Why?”
“They are debts of honour!”
“Ah, indeed! that is bad. You will have
to settle them.”
“Of course!” Then, in a loud and emphatic
whisper, he said—
“And I have settled them!”
“Indeed! Well, what next?
How will you account to your wife for the deficiency?”
“Account to my wife!”
and as he said this, he ground his teeth together,
while his lip curled. “Don’t talk
to me in that way, Perkins, and cause me to hate the
woman I have deceived and injured!”
“But what are you going to do, Smith?”
“I am going to clear out with
the balance of the money in my pocket. I can’t
stay here, that’s settled; and I’m not
going away penniless, that’s certain. Margaretta’s
old aunt has money enough, and can take care of her—so
she’s provided for. And I’ve no doubt
but that she’ll be happier without me than with
me.”
“Where are you going?”
“Somewhere down South.”
“When?”
“At four o’clock this afternoon.”
“Well, success to you.
There are some rich widows in the Southern country,
you know.”
“I understand; but I’m
rather sick of these operations. They are a little
uncertain. But good-bye, and may you have better
luck than your friend Smith.”
“Good-bye.” And the two young men
shook hands cordially and parted.
At four o’clock Mr. Smith left
for Baltimore—not the happiest man in the
cars by a great deal.
Since that day the confiding young
creature who had thrown all into the scale for him
has neither seen him nor heard from him. To her
the light of life seems fled for ever. Her face
is very pale, and wears an expression of heart-touching
misery. She is rarely seen abroad. Poor
creature! In her one sad error, what a lifetime
of sorrow has been involved!
Of all conditions in life, that of
the young heiress, with her money in her own right,
is peculiarly dangerous. The truly worthy shrink
often from a tender of their affection, for fear their
motives may be thought interested; while the mercenary
push forward, and by well-directed flattery, that
does not seem like flattery, win the prize they cannot
appreciate.
There are such base wretches in society.
Let those who most need to fear them be on their guard.
It is now but a few weeks since Thomas
Fielding, who was despised and rejected by Margaretta,
married a sweet girl in every way worthy of him.
She is not rich in worldly goods, but she is rich in
virtuous principles. The former Fielding does
not need; but the latter he can cherish “as
a holy prize.”