AUNT ANGELICA
The first changes referred especially
to Hyde’s life, and were not altogether approved
by him. His pretence of reading law had to be
abandoned, for he had promised to remain at home with
his mother, and it would not therefore be possible
for him to dawdle about Pearl Street and Maiden Lane
watching for Cornelia. But he had that happy and
fortunate temper that trusts to events; and also,
he soon began to realize that if circumstances alter
cases, they also alter feelings.
For, looking upon Hyde Manor as the
future home of himself and his wife— and
that wife, happily, Cornelia—he found it
very easy to take an almost eager interest in all
that concerned its welfare and beauty. “How
good! How unselfish he is!” thought his
mother. “Never before has he been so ready
to listen and so willing to please me.”
But, really, the work soon became delightful to him.
The passion for land and for its improvement—the
ruling passion of an Englishman—was not
absent in George; it was only latent, and the idea
of home, of his own personal home, developed it with
amazing rapidity. He was soon able to make excellent
suggestions to his mother; for her ideas, beautiful
enough in the cultivation of flat surfaces, did not
embody the grander possibilities of the higher lands
near the river. But George saw every advantage,
and with great ability directed his little gang of
labourers among the rocks and woody crags of the yet
unplanted wilderness.
In spite of their anxiety about the
General, in spite of George’s longing to see
Cornelia, these early summer days, with their glory
of sunshine and shade and their miracles of growth,
were very happy days; though madame reached her happiness
by putting the future quite out of her thoughts, and
George reached his by anticipating the future as the
fruition of the present. Never since his early
boyhood had madame and her son been so near and so
dear to each other; for her brother-in-law’s
probable death and her husband’s dangerous journeying
released her from social engagements, and permitted
her to spend her time in the employments and the companionship
she loved best of all.
George, while accepting for himself
the same partial seclusion, had more freedom.
He rode into town three or four times every week; got
the news of the clubs and the streets; loitered about
Maiden Lane and the shopping district; and when disappointed
and vexed at events went to his Grandmother Van Heemskirk
for sympathy. For, as yet, he hesitated about
naming Cornelia to his mother. He was sure she
was aware of his passion, and her reticence on the
subject made him fear she was going to advocate the
fulfilment of his father’s promise. And
he had such a singular delicacy about the girl he
loved that he could not endure the thought of bandying
her name about in an angry discussion. Added to
this fine sense was an adoring love for his mother.
She was in anxiety enough, and would be, until she
heard of her husband’s safety; why, then, should
he add his anxiety to hers?
Yet he was not happy about Cornelia.
Since that unfortunate morning at Richmond Hill they
had never met. If she saw him go up or down Maiden
Lane, she made no sign. Several times Arenta’s
face at her parlour window had given him a passing
hope; but Arenta’s own love affairs were just
then at a very interesting point; and, besides, she
regarded the young Lieutenant’s admiration for
her friend as only one of his many transient enthusiasms.
“If there was anything real
in it,” she reflected, “Cornelia would
have talked about him; and that she has never done.”
Then she began to remember, with pride, the very sensible
behaviour of her own lover. “My Athanase,”
she reflected, “did not give me an hour’s
rest until we were engaged. He insisted on talking
to father about our marriage settlements and our future—in
fact, he made of love a thing possible and practical.
A lover like Joris Hyde is not, I think, very fortunate.”
She did not understand that the quality
of love in its finest revelation desires, after its
first sweet inception, a little period of withdrawal—
it wonders at its strange happiness—broods
over it—is fearful of disturbing emotions
so exquisite—prefers the certainty of its
delicious suspense to a more definite understanding,
and finds a keen strange delight in its own poignant
anxieties and hopes. These are the birth pangs
of an immortal love—of a love that knows
within itself, that it is born for Eternity, and need
not to hurry the three-score-and-ten years of time
to a consummation.
Of such noble lineage was the love
of Cornelia for Joris Hyde. His gracious, beautiful
youth, seemed a part of her own youth; his ardent,
tender glances had filled her heart with a sweet trouble
that she did not understand. It was the most
natural thing in the world that she should wish to
be apart; that she should desire to brood over feelings
so strangely happy; and that in this very brooding
they should grow to the perfect stature of a luminous
and unquenchable affection.
Joris was moved by a sentiment of
the same kind, though in a lesser degree. The
masculine desire to obtain, and the delightful consciousness
that he possessed, at least, the tremendous advantage
of asking for the love he craved, roused him from
the sweet torpor to which delicious, dreamy love had
inclined him.
“I have thought of Cornelia
long enough,” he said one delightful summer
morning; “with all my soul I now long to see
her. And it is not an impossible thing I desire.
In short, there is some way to compass it.”
Then a sudden, invincible persuasion of success came
to him; he believed in his own good fortune; he had
a conviction that the very stars connived with a true
lover to work his will. And under this enthusiasm
he galloped into town, took his horse to a stable,
and then walked towards Maiden Lane.
In a few moments he saw Arenta Van
Ariens. She was in a mist of blue and white,
with flowing curls, and fluttering ribbons; and a general
air of happiness. He placed himself directly
in her path, and doffed his beaver to the ground as
she approached.
“Well, then,” she cried,
with an affected air of astonishment, “who would
have thought of seeing you? Your retirement is
the talk of the town.”
“And pray what does the town say?”
“Some part of it says you have
lost your fortune at cards; another part says you
have lost your heart and got no compensation for it.
’Tis strange to see the folly of young people
of this age,” she added, with a little pretended
sigh of superior wisdom.
“As if you, also, had not lost
your heart!” exclaimed Hyde.
“No, sir! I have exchanged
mine for its full value. Where are you going?”
“With you.”
“In a word, no. For I am going to Aunt
Angelica’s.”
“Upon my honour, it is to your
Aunt Angelica’s I desire to go most of all!”
“Now I understand. You
have found out that Cornelia Moran is going there.
Are you still harping on that string? And Cornelia
never said one word to me. I do not approve of
such deceit. In my love affairs I have always
been open as the day.”
“I assure you that I did not
know Miss Moran was going there. I had not a
thought of Madame Jacobus until we met. To tell
the very truth, I came into town to look for you.”
“For me? And why, pray?”
“I want to see Miss Moran.
If I cannot see her, then I want to hear about her.
I thought you, of all people, could tell me the most
and the best. I assured myself that you had infinite
good temper. Now, pray do not disappoint me.”
“Listen! We meet this afternoon
at my aunt’s, to discuss the dresses and ceremonies
proper for a very fine wedding.”
“For your own wedding, in fact—Is
not that so?”
“Well, then?”
“Well, then, who knows more
on that subject than Joris Hyde? Was I not, last
year, at Lady Betty Somer’s splendid nuptials;
and at Fanny Paget’s, and the Countess of Carlisle’s?
Indeed, I maintain that in such a discussion I
am an absolute necessity. And I wish to know Madame
Jacobus. I have long wished to know her.
Upon my honour, I think her to be one of the most
interesting women in New York!”
“I will advise you a little.
Save your compliments until you can say them to my
aunt. I never carry a word to any one.”
“Then take me with you, and
I will repeat them to her face.”
“So? Well, then, here we
are, at her very door. I know not what she will
say—you must make your own excuses, sir.”
As she was speaking, they ascended
the white steps leading to a very handsome brick house
on the west side of Broadway. It had wide iron
piazzas and a fine shady garden at the back, sloping
down to the river bank; and had altogether, on the
outside, the very similitude of a wealthy and fashionable
residence. The door was opened by a very dark
man, who was not a negro, and who was dressed in a
splendid and outlandish manner—a scarlet
turban above his straight black hair, and gold-hooped
earrings, and a long coat or tunic, heavily embroidered
in strange devices.
“He was an Algerine pirate,”
whispered Arenta. “My Uncle Jacob brought
him here—and my aunt trusts him—I
would not, not for a moment.”
As soon as the front door closed,
Joris perceived that he was in an unusual house.
The scents and odours of strange countries floated
about it. The hall contained many tall jars,
full of pungent gums and roots; and upon its walls
the weapons of savage nations were crossed in idle
and harmless fashion. They went slowly up the
highly polished stairway into a large, low parlour,
facing the vivid, everyday business drama of Broadway;
but the room itself was like an Arabian Night’s
dream, for the Eastern atmosphere was supplemented
by divans and sofas covered with rare cashmere shawls,
and rugs of Turkestan, and with cushions of all kinds
of oriental splendour. Strange tables of wonderful
mosaic work held ivory carvings of priceless worth;
and porcelain from unknown lands. Gods and goddesses
from the yellow Gehenna of China and the utterable
idolatry of India, looked out with brute cruelty, or
sempiternal smiles from every odd corner; or gazed
with a fascinating prescience from the high chimney-piece
upon all who entered.
The effect upon Hyde was instantaneous
and uncanny. His Saxon-Dutch nature was in instant
revolt against influences so foreign and unnatural.
Arenta was unconsciously in sympathy with him; for
she said with a shrug of her pretty shoulders, as
she looked around, “I have always bad dreams
after a visit to this room. Do these things have
a life of their own? Look at the creature on
that corner shelf! What a serene disdain is in
his smile! He seems to gaze into the very depths
of your soul. I see that there is a curtain to
his shrine; and I shall take leave to draw it.”
With these words she went to the scornful divinity,
and shut his offending eyes behind the folds of his
gold-embroidered curtain.
Hyde watched her flitting about the
strange room, and thought of a little brown wren among
the poisonous, vivid splendours of tropical swamp
flowers. So out of place the pretty, thoughtless
Dutch girl looked among the spoils of far India, and
Central America, and of Arabian and African worship
and workmanship. But when the door opened, and
Madame Jacobus, with soft, gliding footsteps entered,
Hyde understood how truly the soul, if given the wherewithal,
builds the habitation it likes best. Once possessed
of marvellous beauty, and yet extraordinarily interesting,
she seemed the very genius of the room and its strange,
suggestive belongings. She was unusually tall,
and her figure had kept its undulating, stately grace.
Her hair, dazzlingly white, was piled high above her
ample brow, held in place with jewelled combs and
glittering pins. Her face had lost its fine oval
and youthful freshness, but who of any feeling or
intelligence would not have far preferred the worn
countenance, expressing in a thousand sensitive shades
and emotions the story of her life and love?
And if every other beauty had failed, Angelica’s
eyes would have atoned for the loss. They were
large, softly-black, slow-moving, or again, in a
moment, flashing with the fire that lay hidden in
the dark pit of the iris.
It was said that her slaves adored
her, and that no man who came within her influence
had been able to resist her power—no man,
perhaps, but Captain Jacobus; and he had not resisted,
he had been content to exercise over her a power greater
than her own. He had made her his wife; he had
lavished on her for ten years the spoils of the four
quarters of the world; and his worship of her had only
been equalled by her passionate attachment to him.
Ten years of love, and then parting and silence—unbroken
silence. Yet she still insisted that he was alive,
and would certainly come back to her. With this
faith in her heart, she had refused to put on any
symbol of loss or mourning. She kept his fine
house open, his room ready, and herself constantly
adorned for his home-coming. Society, which
insists on uniformity, did not approve of this unreasonable
hope. It expected her to adopt the garments of
widowhood for a time, and then make a match in accordance
with the great fortune Captain Jacobus had left her.
But Angelica Jacobus was a law unto herself; and society
was compelled to take her with those apologizing shrugs
it gives to whatever is original and individual.
She came in with a smile of welcome.
She was always pleased that her fine home should be
seen by those strange to it; and perhaps was particularly
pleased that General Hyde’s son should be her
visitor. And as Joris was determined to win her
favour, there was an almost instantaneous birth of
good-will.
“Let me kiss your hand, madame,”
said the handsome young fellow, lifting the jewelled
fingers in his own. “I have heard that my
father had once that honour. Do not put me below
him;” and with the words he touched with his
warm lips the long white fingers.
Her laugh rang merrily through the
dim room, and she answered—“You are
Dick Hyde’s own son—nothing else.
I see that”—and she drew the young
man towards the light and looked with a steady pleasure
into his smiling face as she asked—
“What brought you here this morning, sir?”
“Madame, I have heard my father
speak of you; I have seen you; can you wonder that
I desired to know you? This morning I met Miss
Van Ariens, and when she said she was coming here,
I found myself unable to resist the temptation of
coming with her.”
“Let me tell you something,
aunt. I think Lieutenant Hyde can be of great
service to us. He took part in several noble English
weddings last year, and he offers his advice in our
consultation to-day.”
“But where is Cornelia?
I thought she would come with you.”
“She will be here in a few minutes.
I saw her half-an-hour ago.”
“What a beautiful girl she has become!”
said madame.
“She is an angel,” said Hyde.
Angelica laughed. “The
man who calls a woman an angel has never had any sisters,”
she answered; “but, however, she has beauty enough
to set young hearts ablaze. I like the girl,
and I wonder not that others do the same.”
Even as she spoke Cornelia entered.
There was a little flush and hurry on her face; but
oh, how innocent and joyous it was! Quick-glancing,
sweetly smiling, she entered the musky, scented parlour,
and in her white robe and white hat stood like a lily
in its light and gloom. And when she turned to
Hyde an ineffable charm and beauty illumed her countenance.
“How glad I am to see you!” she said, and
the very ring of gladness was in her voice. “And
how strange that we should meet here!”
“That is so,” replied
Madame Jacobus. “One can never see where
the second little bird comes from.”
“Am I late, madame? Surely your clock is
wrong.”
“My clock is never wrong, Cornelia,
A Dutch clock will always go just about so. Come,
now, sit down, and let us talk of such follies as
weddings and wedding gowns.”
In this conversation Hyde triumphantly
redeemed his promise of assistance. He could
describe with a delightful accuracy—or inaccuracy—
the lovely toilets and pretty accessories of the high
English wedding feasts of the previous year.
And in some subtle way he threw into these descriptions
such a glamour of romance, such backgrounds of old
castles and chiming bells, of noble dames glittering
with gems, and village maids scattering roses, of
martial heroes, and rejoicing lovers, all moving in
an atmosphere of song and sunshine, that the little
party sat listening, entranced, with sympathetic eyes
drinking in his wonderful descriptions.
Madame Jacobus was the first to interrupt
these pretty reminiscences. “All this is
very fine,” she said, “but the most of
it is no good for us. The satin and the lace
and even the gems, we can have; the music can be somehow
managed, and we shall not make a bad show as to love
and beauty. But castles and lords and military
pomp, and old cathedrals hung with battle flags—
Such things are not to be had here, and, in plain
truth, they are not necessary for the wedding of a
simple maid like our Arenta.”
“You forget, then, that my Athanase
is of almost royal descent,” said Arenta.
“A very old family are the Tounnerres—older,
indeed, than the royal Capets.”
“No one is to-day so poor as
to envy the royal Capets; and as for an ancient family,
Captain Jacobus used to speak of his forefathers as
’the old fellows whom the flood could not wash
away.’ Jacobus always put his ideas in
such clear, forcible words. What I want to know
is this—where is the ceremony to be performed?”
“The civil ceremony is to be
at the French Embassy,” answered Arenta with
some pride.
“Is that all there is to it?”
“Aunt! How could you imagine
that I should be satisfied with a civil ceremony?
My father also insists upon a religious ceremony; and
my Athanase told him he was willing to marry me in
every church in America. I am not Gertrude Kippon!
No, indeed! I insist on everything being done
in a moral and respectable manner. My father spoke
of Doctor Kunz for the religious part.”
“I like not Doctor Kunz,”
answered madame. “Bishop Provoost and the
Episcopal service is the proper thing. Doctor
Kunz will be sure to say some sharp words—his
tongue is full of them—he stands too stiff—he
does not use his hands gracefully—his walk
and carriage is not dignified—and he looks
at you through spectacles—and I, for one,
do not like to be looked at through spectacles.
We must decide for the Episcopal church.”
“And the little trip after it,”
continued Arenta. “Lieutenant Hyde says
that, in England, it is now the proper thing.”
“But in America it is not the
proper thing. It is a rude unmannerly way to
run off with a bride. We are not red Indians,
nor is the Marquis carrying you by force from some
hostile tribe. The nuptial trip is a barbarism.
I am now weary. Lieutenant, take Miss Moran and
show her my garden. I tell you, it is worth walking
through; and when you have seen the flowers, Arenta
and I will give you a cup of tea.”
Arenta would gladly have gone into
the garden also, but her aunt detained her. “Can
you not see,” she asked, “that those two
are in love with each other? Give love its hour.
They do not want your company.”
“And for that very reason I
wish to go with them. My brother is in love with
Cornelia, and I am for Rem, and not for a stranger—also,
my father and Cornelia’s father are both for
Rem; and, besides, Doctor Moran hates the Hydes.
He will not let Cornelia marry the man.”
“He will not
let! When did Doctor John become omnipotent?
Love laughs at fathers, as well as at locksmiths.
And if Doctor John is against young Hyde, then I shall
the more cheerfully be for him—a pleasant,
handsome youth as ever I saw, is he; and Doctor John—well,
he is neither pleasant nor handsome.”
“Aunt Angelica! I am astonished
at you! Every one will contradict what you say.”
“For that reason, I will maintain
it. It is not my way to shout with the multitude.”
With some hesitation, yet quite carried
away by Hyde’s personal longing and impulse,
Cornelia went into the garden with her lover.
It was a green, shady place, full of great maple-trees
and flowering vines and shrubs, and patches of green
grass. All kinds of sweet old-fashioned flowers
grew there, mingling their scent with the strawberries’
perfume and the woody odours of the ripening cherries.
They were alone in this lovely place; the high privet
hedges hid them from the outside world, and the babble
and rumble of Broadway came to them only as the murmur
of noise in a dream. Speechless with joy, Hyde
clasped Cornelia’s slender fingers, and they
went together down the few broad low steps which led
them into the green shadows of the trees. How
soft was the grassy turf! How exquisite the westering
sunlight, sifting through the maple leaves! They
looked into each other’s eyes and smiled, but
were too happy to speak. For they had suddenly
come into that land, which is east of the sun, and
west of the moon; that land not laid down on any chart,
but which we feel to be our rightful heritage.
Slowly, as they stepped, they came
at length to a little summerhouse. It was covered
with a thick jessamin vine; and the mysterious, languorous
perfume of its starlike flowers filled the narrow resting-place
with the very atmosphere of love. They sat down
there, and in a few moments the seal was broken and
Hyde’s heart found out all the sweetest words
that love could speak. Cornelia trembled; she
blushed, she smiled, she suffered herself to be drawn
close to his side; and, at last, in some sweet, untranslatable
way, she gave him the assurance of her love. Then
they found in delicious silence the eloquence that
words were incompetent to translate; time was forgotten,
and on earth there was once more an interlude of heavenly
harmony in which two souls became one and Paradise
was regained.
Arenta’s voice, petulant and
not pleasant, broke the charm. With a sigh they
rose, dropped each other’s hand, and went out
of their heaven on earth to meet her.
“Tea is waiting,” she
said, “and Rem is waiting, and my aunt is tired,
and you two have forgotten that the clock moves.”
Then they laughed, and laughter is always fatal to
feeling; the magical land of love was suddenly far
away, and there was the sound of china, and the heavy
tones of Rem’s voice—dissatisfied,
if not angry—and Arenta’s lighter
fret; and they stood once more among fetishes and
forms so foreign, fabulous and fantastical, that it
was difficult to pass from the land of love, and all
its pure delights, into their atmosphere.
It would have been harder but for
Madame Jacobus. She understood; and she sympathized;
and there was a kindly element in her nature which
disposed her to side with the lovers. Her smile,—quick
and short as a flash of the eyes—revealed
to Hyde her intention of favour, and without one spoken
word, these two knew themselves to be of the same mind.
And, in parting, she held his hand while she talked,
saying at last the very words he longed to hear—
“We shall expect you again on
Thursday, Lieutenant. Everything is yet undecided,
and the work you have begun, it is right that you should
finish.”
He answered only, “Thank you,
madame!” but he accompanied the words with a
look which asked so much, and confessed so much, that
madame felt herself to be a silent confidante and
a not unwilling accomplice. And when she had
closed the door on her guests, she acknowledged it.
“But then,” she whispered, “I always
did dearly love a lover; and this promises to be a
love affair that will need my help—plenty
of good honest hatred for it to combat—and
wealth and rank and all sorts of conflicting conditions
to get the better of—Well, then, my help
is ready. In plain truth, I don’t like
such perfection as Doctor John; and my nephew Rem
is not interesting. He is sulky, and Hyde is good-tempered,
just like his father, too; and there never was a more
fascinating man than Dick Hyde. He-Ho!
I remember!—I remember!—and yet
I dare say Dick has forgotten my very name—this
is a marriage that will exactly suit me—I
don’t care who is against it!” Then she
said softly to herself—
“Rem went to Cornelia as
they were about to leave, and he reminded her that,
by her permission, he had come to walk home with her.
“Cornelia turned to Hyde,
excused herself, and, cool and silent, took her place
by Rem’s side.
“Hyde accepted the position
with a smile, and a gracious bow, and then joined
Arenta.
“Arenta was far less agreeable
than she ought to have been; for both she and her
brother had a kind of divination. They knew, in
spite of appearances, that Rem had not got the best
of Joris Hyde. I am quick in my observations,
and I know this is so. Well then, it is a very
interesting affair as it stands—and it is
like to grow far more interesting. I am not opposed
to that. I shall enjoy it. Hyde and Cornelia
ought to marry—and they have my good wishes.”
As for Hyde, no thought that could
mar the sweetness and joy of this fortunate hour came
into his mind. Neither Rem’s evident hatred,
nor Arenta’s disapproval, nor yet Cornelia’s
silence, troubled him. He had within his heart
a talisman that made everything propitious. And
he was so joyous that the people whom he passed on
the street caught happiness from him. Men and
women alike turned to look after the youth, for they
felt the virtue of his passing presence, and wondered
what it might mean. Even the necessary parting
from Cornelia was only a phase of this wonderful gladness;
for Love never fails of his token, and, though Arenta’s
sharp eyes could not discover it, Hyde received the
silent message that was meant for him, and for him
only. That one thought made his heart bound and
falter with its exquisite delight—for him
only—for him only, was that swift but certain
assurance; that instantaneous bright flash of love
that held in it all heaven and earth, and left him,
as he told himself again and again, the happiest man
in all the world.
He was hardly responsible for his
actions at this hour; for when a swift gallop brought
him to the Van Heemskirk house, he quite unconsciously
struck the door some rapid, forceful blows, with his
riding whip. His grandfather opened it with an
angry face.
“I thought it was thee,”
he said. “Now, then, in such lordly fashion,
whom didst thou summon? dog or slave, was it?”
“Oh, grandfather, I intended
no harm. Did I strike so hard? Upon my word,
I meant it not.”
At this moment Madame Van Heemskirk
came quickly forward. She turned a face of disapproval
on her husband, and asked sharply, “Why dost
thou complain?”
“I like not my house-door struck
so rudely, Lysbet. No man in all America, but
Joris Hyde, would dare to do it.”
At these words Joris flung himself
from his horse and clasped his grandfather’s
hand. “I did wrong,” he said warmly;
“but I am beside myself with happiness; and
I thought of nothing but telling you. My heart
was in such a hurry that my hands forgot how to behave
themselves.”
“So happy as that, art thou?
Good! Come in, and tell us what has happened
to thee.”
But Lysbet divined the joy in her
grandson’s face; and she said softly as he seated
himself at the open window where his grandfather’s
chair was placed—
“It is Cornelia?”
“Yes, it is Cornelia. She
loves me! The most charming girl the sun ever
shone upon loves me. It is incredible! It
is amazing! I cannot believe in my good fortune.
Will you assure me it is possible? I want to hear
some one say so—and who is there but my
grandfather and you? I do not like to tell my
mother, just yet. What do you say?”
“I say that thou hast chosen
a good girl for a wife. God bless thee,”
answered Lysbet with great emotion.
Van Heemskirk smiled, but was silent;
and Hyde stooped forward, gently moved his long pipe
away from his lips, and said, “Grandfather, speak,
You know Cornelia Moran?”
“I have seen her. With
thee I saw her—walking with thee—dancing
with thee. A great beauty I thought her.
Thy grandmother says she is good. Well, then,
the love of a good, beautiful girl, is something to
be glad over. Not twice in a lifetime comes such
great fortune. But make up thy mind to expect
much opposition. Doctor John and thy father were
ever unfriends. Thy father has other plans for
thee; Cornelia’s father has doubtless other
plans for her. Few men can stand against Doctor
John; he has the word, and the way, to carry all before
him. I know not how the little Cornelia can dare
to disobey him.”
“She has said ‘yes’
to me; and, before heaven and earth, she will stand
by it.”
“Say that much. And of thyself, art thou
sure?”
“Why art thou throwing cold
water on such sweet hopes?” said Lysbet to her
husband.
“Because, when love flames beyond
duty and honour and all expediences, Lysbet, some
one a little cold water ought to throw. And thou
will not do it. No! Rather, would thou add
fuel to the flame.”
“I know not what you mean, sir,”
said Hyde, vaguely troubled by his grandfather’s
words.
“I think thou knowest well what
I mean. Thy father has told thee that thy duty
and thy honour are pledged to Annie Hyde.”
“I never pledged! Never!”
“But, as in thy baptism thy
father made vows for thee, so also for thy marriage
he made promises. Noble birth has responsibility,
as well as privilege. For thyself alone it is
not permitted thee to live, from both the past and
the future there are demands on thee.”
“Grandfather, this living for
the future is the curse of the English land-owners.
They enjoy not the present, for they are busy taking
care of the years they will never see. Their
sons are in their way; it is their grandsons and their
great-grandsons that interest them. Why should
my father plan for my marriage? He may be Earl
Hyde for twenty years— and I hope he will.
For twenty years Cornelia and I can be happy here in
America; and twenty years is a great opportunity.
Everything can happen in twenty years. Of one
thing I am sure—I will marry Cornelia Moran,
even if I run away with her to the ends of the earth.”
“‘Run away with her.’
To be sure! That is in the blood;” and the
old man looked sternly back to the days when Hyde’s
father ran away with his own little daughter.
With some anger Lysbet answered his
thoughts. “What art thou talking about?
What art thou thinking of? Many good men have
run away with their wives. This almighty Doctor
John ran away with his wife. Did not Ava Willing
leave her father’s house and her friends and
her faith for him? And did not the Quakers read
her out of their Meeting for her marriage?—
and I blame them not. Doctor John was no match
for Ava Willing. More, too, if thou must look
back; remember one May night, when thou and I sat
by the Collect in the moonlight, and thou gave me this
ring. What did thou say to me that night?”
“’Tis years ago, Lysbet, and If I have
forgotten—”
“Forgotten! Well, then,
men do forget; but they may be thankful that God has
so made women that they do not forget. The
words thou said that night have been singing in my
heart for fifty years; and yet, if thou must be told,
some of those words were about running away
with thee;— for, at the first,
my father liked thee not.”
“Lysbet! My sweet Lysbet!
I have not forgotten. For thy dear sake I will
stand by Joris, though in doing so I am sure I shall
make some unfriends.”
“Good, my husband. I take
leave to say that thou art doing right.”
“Well, then,” said Hyde,
“if my grandmother stand by me, and you also,
sir; and also Madame Jacobus—”
“Madame Jacobus!” cried Lysbet.
“Yes, indeed!” answered
Hyde. “’Tis to her understanding and kindness
I owe my opportunity; and she gave me, also, one look
which I cannot pretend to misunderstand—a
look of clear sympathy—a look that promised
help.”
“She is a clever woman,”
said Van Heemskirk. “If Joris has her good
will it is not to be thrown away.”
“I like her not,” said
Lysbet. “With my grandson, with my affairs,
why should she meddle? Pray, now, what took thee,
Joris, to her house? It is full of idolatries
and graven images. Doctor Kunz once wrote to her
a letter about them. He said she ought to remember
the Second Commandment. And she wrote to him
a letter, and told him to trouble himself with his
own business. Much anger and shame there might
have been out of this, but Angelica Jacobus is rich,
and she is generous to the church, and to the poor;
and Doctor Kunz said to the elders, ’Let her
alone, for there is a savour of righteousness in her;’
and when she heard of that, she was pleased with the
Doctor, and sent him one hundred dollars for the Indian
Mission. But, Joris, she is no good to thee.
I hear many queer stories of her.”
“Downright lies, all of them,”
replied Hyde. Then he rose, saying, “I
must ride onward. My mother will not sleep until
she sees me.”
“It is nearly dark,” said
Van Heemskirk, “and to-night thou art in the
clouds. The land and the water will be alike to
thee. Rest until the morning.”
“I fear not the dark. I
know the road by night or by day.”
“Yet, even so, mind what I tell
thee—if thou ride in the dark, be not wiser
than thy beast.”
Then they walked with him to the door,
and watched him leap to his saddle and ride into the
twilight trembling over the misty meadows, trickling
with dews. And a great melancholy fell over them,
and they could not resume the conversation. Joris
re-lit his pipe, and Lysbet went softly and thoughtfully
about her household duties. It was one of those
hours in which Life distills for us her vague melancholy
wine; and Joris and Lysbet drank deeply of it.
The moon was in its third day, and
the silent crescent has no calmer and sweeter time;
yet Joris it inclined to a sad presentiment. “In
my heart there is a fear, Lysbet,” he said softly.
“I think our boy has gone a road he will dearly
rue. I foresee disputing, and wounded hearts,
and lives made barren by many disappointed hopes.”
“Nothing of the kind,”
answered Lysbet cheerfully. “Our little
Joris is so happy to-night, why wilt thou think evil
for him? To think evil is to bring evil.
Out of foolishness or perchance such a great love has
not come. No, indeed! That it comes from
heaven I am sure; and to heaven I will leave its good
fortune.”
“Pleasant are thy hopes, Lysbet;
but, too often, vain and foolish.”
“Thy reasoning, is it any wiser?
No. Often I have found it wrong. One thing
the years have said to me, it is this—’Lysbet
put not thy judgment in the place of Providence.
If thou trust Providence, thou hast the easy heart
of a child of God; if thou trust to thine own judgment,
thou hast the troubled heart of an anxious woman.’”