“My fortune’s made.”
My young friend, Cora Lee, was a gay,
dashing girl, fond of dress, and looking always as
if, to use a common saying, just out of a bandbox.
Cora was a belle, of course, and had many admirers.
Among the number of these, was a young man named Edward
Douglass, who was the very “pink” of neatness
in all matters pertaining to dress, and exceedingly
particular in his observance of the little proprieties
of life.
I saw, from the first, that if Douglass
pressed his suit, Cora’s heart would be an easy
conquest, and so it proved.
“How admirably they are fitted
for each other!” I remarked to my husband, on
the night of their wedding. “Their tastes
are similar, and their habits so much alike, that
no violence will be done to the feelings of either
in the more intimate associations that marriage brings.
Both are neat in person and orderly by instinct, and
both have good principles.”
“From all present appearances,
the match will be a good one,” replied my husband.
There was, I thought, something like reservation in
his tone.
“Do you really think so?”
I said, a little ironically, for Mr. Smith’s
approval of the marriage was hardly warm enough to
suit my fancy.
“Oh, certainly! Why not?” he replied.
I felt a little fretted at my husband’s
mode of speaking, but made no further remark on the
subject. He is never very enthusiastic nor sanguine,
and did not mean, in this instance, to doubt the fitness
of the parties for happiness in the marriage state—as
I half imagined. For myself, I warmly approved
of my friend’s choice, and called her husband
a lucky man to secure, for his companion through life,
a woman so admirably fitted to make one like him happy.
But a visit which I paid to Cora one day about six
weeks after the honeymoon had expired, lessened my
enthusiasm on the subject, and awoke some unpleasant
doubts. It happened that I called soon after
breakfast. Cora met me in the parlour, looking
like a very fright. She wore a soiled and rumpled
morning wrapper; her hair was in papers; and she had
on dirty stockings, and a pair of old slippers down
at the heels.
“Bless me, Cora!” said
I. “What is the matter? Have you been
sick?”
“No. Why do you ask?
Is my dishabille rather on the extreme?”
“Candidly, I think it is, Cora,” was my
frank answer.
“Oh, well! No matter,” she carelessly
replied, “my fortune’s made.”
“I don’t clearly understand you,”
said I.
“I’m married, you know.”
“Yes; I am aware of that fact.”
“No need of being so particular in dress now.”
“Why not?”
“Didn’t I just say?”
replied Cora. “My fortune’s made.
I’ve got a husband.”
Beneath an air of jesting, was apparent
the real earnestness of my friend.
“You dressed with a careful
regard to taste and neatness, in order to win Edward’s
love?” said I.
“Certainly I did.”
“And should you not do the same in order to
retain it?”
“Why, Mrs. Smith! Do you
think my husband’s affection goes no deeper
than my dress? I should be very sorry indeed to
think that. He loves me for myself.”
“No doubt of that in the world,
Cora. But remember that he cannot see what is
in your mind except by what you do or say. If
he admires your taste, for instance, it is not from
any abstract appreciation thereof, but because the
taste manifests itself in what you do. And, depend
upon it, he will find it a very hard matter to approve
and admire your correct taste in dress, for instance,
when you appear before him, day after day, in your
present unattractive attire. If you do not dress
well for your husband’s eyes, for whose eyes,
pray, do you dress? You are as neat when abroad
as you were before your marriage.”
“As to that, Mrs. Smith, common
decency requires me to dress well when I go upon the
street or into company, to say nothing of the pride
one naturally feels in looking well.”
“And does not the same common
decency and natural pride argue as strongly in favour
of your dressing well at home, and for the eye of
your husband, whose approval and whose admiration must
be dearer to you than the approval and admiration
of the whole world?”
“But he doesn’t want to
see me rigged out in silks and satins all the time.
A pretty bill my dressmaker would have against him!
Edward has more sense than that, I flatter myself.”
“Street or ball-room attire
is one thing, Cora, and becoming home apparel another.
We look for both in their places.”
Thus I argued with the thoughtless
young wife, but my words made no impression.
When abroad, she dressed with exquisite taste, and
was lovely to look upon; but at home, she was careless
and slovenly, and made it almost impossible for those
who saw her to realize that she was the brilliant
beauty they had met in company but a short time before.
But even this did not last long. I noticed, after
a few months, that the habits of home were confirming
themselves, and becoming apparent abroad. Her
“fortune was made,” and why should she
now waste time or employ her thoughts about matters
of personal appearance?
The habits of Mr. Douglass, on the
contrary, did not change. He was as orderly as
before, and dressed with the same regard to neatness.
He never appeared at the breakfast-table in the morning
without being shaved; nor did he lounge about in the
evening in his shirt-sleeves. The slovenly habits
into which Cora had fallen annoyed him seriously;
and still more so, when her carelessness about her
appearance began to manifest itself abroad as well
as at home. When he hinted any thing on the subject,
she did not hesitate to reply, in a jesting manner,
that her fortune was made, and she need not trouble
herself any longer about how she looked.
Douglass did not feel very much complimented;
but as he had his share of good sense, he saw that
to assume a cold and offended manner would do no good.
“If your fortune is made, so
is mine,” he replied on one occasion, quite
coolly and indifferently. Next morning he made
his appearance at the breakfast table with a beard
of twenty-four hours’ growth.
“You haven’t shaved this
morning, dear,” said Cora, to whose eyes the
dirty-looking face of her husband was particularly
unpleasant.
“No,” he replied, carelessly.
“It’s a serious trouble to shave every
day.”
“But you look so much better
with a cleanly-shaved face.”
“Looks are nothing—ease
and comfort every thing,” said Douglass.
“But common decency, Edward.”
“I see nothing indecent in a long beard,”
replied the husband.
Still Cora argued, but in vain.
Her husband went off to his business with his unshaven
face.
“I don’t know whether
to shave or not,” said Douglass next morning,
running his hand over his rough face, upon which was
a beard of forty-eight hours’ growth. His
wife had hastily thrown on a wrapper, and, with slip-shod
feet and head like a mop, was lounging in a large
rocking-chair, awaiting the breakfast-bell.
“For mercy’s sake, Edward,
don’t go any longer with that shockingly dirty
face,” spoke up Cora. “If you knew
how dreadfully you look!”
“Looks are nothing,” replied
Edward, stroking his beard.
“Why, what’s come over you all at once?”
“Nothing; only it’s such a trouble to
shave every day.”
“But you didn’t shave yesterday.”
“I know; I am just as well off
to-day as if I had. So much saved, at any rate.”
But Cora urged the matter, and her
husband finally yielded, and mowed down the luxuriant
growth of beard.
“How much better you do look!”
said the young wife. “Now don’t go
another day without shaving.”
“But why should I take so much
trouble about mere looks? I’m just as good
with a long beard as with a short one. It’s
a great deal of trouble to shave every day. You
can love me just as well; and why need I care about
what others say or think?”
On the following morning, Douglass
appeared not only with a long beard, but with a bosom
and collar that were both soiled and rumpled.
“Why, Edward! How you do
look!” said Cora. “You’ve neither
shaved nor put on a clean shirt.”
Edward stroked his face and run his
fingers along the edge of his collar, remarking, indifferently,
as he did so—
“It’s no matter.
I look well enough. This being so very particular
in dress is waste of time, and I’m getting tired
of it.”
And in this trim Douglass went off
to his business, much to the annoyance of his wife,
who could not bear to see her husband looking so slovenly.
Gradually the declension from neatness
went on, until Edward was quite a match for his wife;
and yet, strange to say, Cora had not taken the hint,
broad as it was. In her own person she was as
untidy as ever.
About six months after their marriage,
we invited a few friends to spend a social evening
with us, Cora and her husband among the number.
Cora came alone, quite early, and said that her husband
was very much engaged, and could not come until after
tea. My young friend had not taken much pains
with her attire. Indeed, her appearance mortified
me, as it contrasted so decidedly with that of the
other ladies who were present; and I could not help
suggesting to her that she was wrong in being so indifferent
about her dress. But she laughingly replied to
me—
“You know my fortune’s
made now, Mrs. Smith. I can afford to be negligent
in these matters. It’s a great waste of
time to dress so much.”
I tried to argue against this, but
could make no impression upon her.
About an hour after tea, and while
we were all engaged in pleasant conversation, the
door of the parlour opened, and in walked Mr. Douglass.
At first glance I thought I must be mistaken.
But no, it was Edward himself. But what a figure
he did cut! His uncombed hair was standing up,
in stiff spikes, in a hundred different directions;
his face could not have felt the touch of a razor for
two or three days; and he was guiltless of clean linen
for at least the same length of time. His vest
was soiled; his boots unblacked; and there was an
unmistakable hole in one of his elbows.
“Why, Edward!” exclaimed
his wife, with a look of mortification and distress,
as her husband came across the room, with a face in
which no consciousness of the figure he cut could
be detected.
“Why, my dear fellow! What
is the matter?” said my husband, frankly; for
he perceived that the ladies were beginning to titter,
and that the gentlemen were looking at each other,
and trying to repress their risible tendencies; and
therefore deemed it best to throw off all reserve
on the subject.
“The matter? Nothing’s
the matter, I believe. Why do you ask?”
Douglass looked grave.
“Well may he ask, what’s
the, matter?” broke in Cora, energetically.
“How could you come here in such a plight?”
“In such a plight?” And
Edward looked down at himself, felt his beard, and
ran his fingers through his hair. “What’s
the matter? Is any thing wrong?”
“You look as if you’d
just waked up from a nap of a week with your clothes
on, and come off without washing your face or combing
your hair,” said my husband.
“Oh!” And Edward’s
countenance brightened a little. Then he said
with much gravity of manner—
“I’ve been extremely hurried
of late; and only left my store a few minutes ago.
I hardly thought it worth while to go home to dress
up. I knew we were all friends here. Besides,
as my fortune is made”—and
he glanced with a look not to be mistaken toward his
wife—“I don’t feel called upon
to give as much attention to mere dress as formerly.
Before I was married, it was necessary to be particular
in these matters, but now it’s of no consequence.”
I turned toward Cora. Her face
was like crimson. In a few moments she arose
and went quickly from the room. I followed her,
and Edward came after us pretty soon. He found
his wife in tears, and sobbing almost hysterically.
“I’ve got a carriage at
the door,” said he to me, aside, half laughing,
half serious. “So help her on with her things,
and we’ll retire in disorder.”
“But it’s too bad in you, Mr. Douglass,”
replied I.
“Forgive me for making your
house the scene of this lesson to Cora,” he
whispered. “It had to be given, and I thought
I could venture to trespass upon your forbearance.”
“I’ll think about that,” said I,
in return.
In a few minutes Cora and her husband
retired, and in spite of good breeding and every thing
else, we all had a hearty laugh over the matter, on
my return to the parlour, where I explained the curious
little scene that had just occurred.
How Cora and her husband settled the
affair between themselves, I never inquired.
But one thing is certain, I never saw her in a slovenly
dress afterward, at home or abroad. She was cured.