On the day following, the young husband
bore his bride away to grace the prouder home that
awaited her in New York; and affairs in our town settled
themselves down into the old routine.
During the few months that have passed
since the opening of our story, the only matter that
has occurred, of any interest to the reader, at the
Allen House, is the fact that Judge Bigelow has undertaken
the management of Mrs. Montgomery’s affairs,
and the establishment of her claim to the possession,
as only heir, of the whole of Captain Allen’s
property. Some legal difficulties, bearing upon
her identification as his sister, were in the way;
and in the effort to remove these, there had been
considerable correspondence with persons in England.
The first fact to be clearly proved
was the solemnization of a marriage between Mrs. Montgomery’s
mother and the elder Captain Allen. Next, the
identity of Mrs. Montgomery as her child. No
marriage certificate, nor any record of the fact, as
to the exact time and place, were known to be in existence;
and without them, or evidence of a very conclusive
character, the title of Mrs. Montgomery could not
be clearly established.
This, Judge Bigelow stated to her
in the beginning; but, up to this time, no such evidence
had been found.
Mrs. Montgomery’s health was
not good, and as she required occasional medical aid,
my visits to the Allen House were continued.
The more intimately I came to know this lady, the higher
did she rise in my esteem. She united strength
of mind with clearness of perception: and decision
of character with prudence and justice. She had,
likewise, a depth and tenderness of feeling that often
exhibited itself in beautiful incidents. The dignity
of manner, which at first seemed touched with hauteur,
now only gave grace to her fine proportions.
She had, from the beginning, spoken
to me without reserve of her affairs, in which I naturally
took deep interest. One day she said:—
“Doctor, I wish to get your
opinion in regard to an individual whom Judge Bigelow
proposes to send out to England for me on important
business. He is a young man, associated with him,
as I understand it, professionally.
“Mr. Wallingford, you mean?”
“Yes, that is the name, I believe. Do you
know him?”
“Very well.”
“Is he prudent, intelligent, and reliable?”
“I think so.”
“You only think so, Doctor?”
“I can speak in stronger terms.
As far as one can know another, I am ready to say
that he is prudent, intelligent, and reliable.
If I had important business to transact at a distant
point, and needed a trusty agent, I would select him
before any other man in S——.”
I wish no better testimony, Doctor,
and am glad to know that I can procure an agent so
well qualified.”
“Have you seen him?” I inquired.
“No. But Judge Bigelow
is to bring him here today, in order that I may see
and converse with him.”
“You will find him,” said
I, a young man of few words and unobtrusive manners—but
solid as a rock. I have seen him under circumstances
calculated to test the character of any man.”
“What are the circumstances,
if you are free to speak of them?” asked Mrs.
Montgomery. “We get always a truer estimate
of a man, when we see him in some great battle of
life; for then, his real qualities and resources become
apparent.”
I thought for a little while before
answering. It did not seem just right to draw
aside the veil that strangers’ eyes might look
upon a life-passage such as was written in Wallingford’s
Book of Memory. The brief but fierce struggle
was over with him; and he was moving steadily onward,
sadder, no doubt, for the experience, and wiser, no
doubt. But the secret was his own, and I felt
that no one ought to meddle therewith. Still,
a relation of the fact, showing how deeply the man
could feel, and how strong he was in self-mastery,
could not but raise him in the estimation of Mrs.
Montgomery, and increase her confidence.
“It is hardly fair,” said
I, “to bring up the circumstances of a man’s
life over which he has drawn a veil; and which are
sacred to himself alone. In this case, however,
with the end of enabling you more fully to know the
person you think of sending abroad on an important
service, I will relate an occurrence that cannot fail
to awaken in your mind an interest for the young man,
such as we always feel for those who have passed through
deep suffering.”
Blanche was sitting by her mother.
Indeed, the two were almost inseparable companions.
It was a rare thing to find them apart. I saw
her face kindle with an earnest curiosity.
“Judge Bigelow’s nephew
was married, recently,” I said.
“So the Judge informed me.
He spoke very warmly of his nephew, who is a merchant
in New York, I think he said.”
“He is a partner in a mercantile
firm there. The bride was Squire Floyd’s
daughter; a very superior girl—lovely in
character, attractive in person, and, mentally, well
cultivated. I have always regarded her as the
flower of our town.”
“The young man had good taste,
it seems,” Mrs. Montgomery remarked.
“Better than the young lady
showed in taking him for a husband,” said I.
“Ah? Then your opinion of him is not so
favorable.”
“He was not worthy of her, if
I possess any skill in reading character. But
there was one worthy of her, and deeply attached to
her at the same time.”
“This young Wallingford, of whom we were speaking?”
“The same.”
“But she didn’t fancy him?”
“She did fancy him. But—”
“Was not able to resist the
attractions of a New York merchant, when put in opposition
to those of a humble country lawyer?”
“The truth lies about there.
She took the showy effigy of a man, in place of the
real man.”
“A sad mistake. But it
is made every day,” said Mrs. Montgomery, “and
will continue to be made. Alas for the blindness
and folly that lead so many into paths that terminate
in barren deserts, or wildernesses where the soul
is lost! And so our young friend has been crossed
in love.”
“The experience is deeper than
usual,” said I. Then I related, with some particularity,
the facts in the case, already known to the reader.
Both the mother and daughter listened with deep attention.
After I had finished my story, Mrs. Montgomery said,
“He possesses will and strength
of character, that is plain; but I can’t say
that I just like the deliberate process of unloving,
if I may use the word, which you have described.
There is something too cold-blooded about it for me.
Like the oak, bent under the pressure of a fierce
storm, he comes up erect too soon.”
I smiled at her view of the case, and answered,
“You look upon it as a woman,
I as a man. To me, there is a certain moral grandeur
in the way he has disenthralled himself from fetters
that could not remain, without a life-long disability.”
“Oh, no doubt it was the wisest
course,” said Mrs. Montgomery.
“And may we not look among the
wisest men, for the best and most reliable?”
I queried.
“Among those who are truly wise,”
she said, her voice giving emphasis to the word truly.
“What is it to be truly wise?”
“All true wisdom,” she
answered, “as it appertains to the affairs of
this life, has its foundation in a just regard for
others; for, in the degree that we are just to others,
are we just to ourselves.”
“And is not the converse of
your proposition true also? In the degree that
we are just to ourselves, are we not just to others?”
“Undoubtedly. Each individual
bears to common society, the same relation that a
member, organ, or fibre, does to the human body, of
which it makes a part. And as no member, organ,
or fibre of the body, can injure itself without injuring
the whole man; so no individual can do wrong to himself,
without a consequent wrong to others. Each has
duties to perform for the good of common society,
and any self-inflicted or self-permitted disabilities
that hinder the right performance of these duties,
involve a moral wrong.”
“Then the case is very clear
for my friend Wallingford,” said I. “He
is a wise man in your sense of the word—wise,
in resolutely putting away from his mind the image
of one who, if she had been worthy of him, would have
taken her place proudly by his side; but, proving
herself unworthy, could never afterward be to him more
than a friend or stringer. He could not hold
her image in his heart, and fondly regard it, without
sin; for was she not to be the bride of another?
Nor without suffering loss of mental power, and life-purpose,
and thus injuring others trough neglect of duty.
It was acting wisely, then, for him to come up, manfully,
to the work of drawing back his misplaced affections,
and getting them again fully into his own possession.
And he has done the work, if I read the signs aright.
All honor to his manhood!”
“He has, I see, a warm advocate
in you, Doctor,” said Mrs. Montgomery, again
smiling. “Still, in an affair of the heart,
where so much was involved, as seemed to be in his
case, we can hardly fancy such a matter-of-fact, business-like
proceeding as you have described. He might well
have been forgiven, if he had shown more weakness
of character, and acted even a little unreasonably.
I will yield to no one in my regard for manly firmness
and self-control, for bravery and endurance; and I
have seen these qualities put to some of the severest
tests. But in matters of the heart, I must own
that I like to see a man show his weakness. Your
Mr. Wallingford is too cool and calculating for me.
But this is irrelevant to our consideration of his
qualities as a business agent. For this purpose,
I am satisfied that he is fitted in all things essential.”
“And that is quite as far as we need go,”
said I.
“The business in hand,”
said Mrs. Montgomery, resuming the conversation after
a pause, “is of great importance to me, and may
require not only a visit to England, but also to the
West Indies. Unless evidence of my mother’s
marriage can be found, there will be, as you know,
considerable difficulty in establishing my full right
to inherit my brother’s property. And my
identity as the sister of the late Captain Allen must
also be proved. By the will of my father, which
is on record, he left all of his property to my brother.
He, as far as is known, died intestate. As next
of kin, I am the legal heir; but the proof is yet
wanting. My mother’s cousin, a Colonel
Willoughby, of whom we have before spoken, came over
from England, on the strength of some vague rumors
that reached the family from Jamaica, and was successful
in discovering the only survivor of his uncle’s
family. She saw it best to abandon her husband,
as you know. My purpose in sending an agent, versed
in legal matters, and used to weighing evidence, is
to have such papers of Colonel Willoughby’s
as the family possess and will submit for examination,
carefully searched, in the hope that some record may
be found in his hand-writing, sufficiently clear to
establish the fact that my mother was the wife of
the elder Captain Allen. So important an event
as that of searching out my mother, and inducing her
to flee from her husband, could hardly have taken
place, it seems to me, without evidence of the fact
being preserved. And my hope is, that this evidence,
if it can be found, will prove of great value.
So you see, Doctor, that I have good reasons for wishing
to know well the agent who goes abroad with a matter
so vital as this in his hands.”
I admitted the importance of a thoroughly
reliable man to go upon this mission, and repeated
my faith in Wallingford.