A week after this interview Tyrrel
and Ethel were in New York. They landed early
in the morning, but the Judge and Ruth were on the
pier to meet them; and they breakfasted together at
the fashionable hotel, where an elegant suite had
been reserved for the residence of the Tyrrel-Rawdons
until they had perfected their plans for the future.
Tyrrel was boyishly excited, but Ethel’s interest
could not leave her father and his new wife.
These two had lived in the same home for fifteen years,
and then they had married each other, and both of
them looked fifteen years younger. The Judge
was actually merry, and Ruth, in spite of her supposed
“docility,” had quite reversed the situation.
It was the Judge who was now docile, and even admiringly
obedient to all Ruth’s wifely advices and admonitions.
The breakfast was a talkative, tardy
one, but at length the Judge went to his office and
Tyrrel had to go to the Custom House. Ethel was
eager to see her grandmother, and she was sure the
dear old lady was anxiously waiting her arrival.
And Ruth was just as anxious for Ethel to visit her
renovated home. She had the young wife’s
delight in its beauty, and she wanted Ethel to admire
it with her.
“We will dine with you to-morrow,
Ruth,” said Ethel, “and I will come very
early and see all the improvements. I feel sure
the house is lovely, and I am glad father made you
such a pretty nest. Nothing is too pretty for
you, Ruth.” And there was no insincerity
in this compliment. These two women knew and
loved and trusted each other without a shadow of doubt
or variableness.
So Ruth went to her home, and Ethel
hastened to Gramercy Park. Madam was eagerly
watching for her arrival.
“I have been impatient for a
whole hour, all in a quiver, dearie,” she cried.
“It is nearly noon.”
“I have been impatient also,
Granny, but father and Ruth met us at the pier and
stayed to breakfast with us, and you know how men
talk and talk.”
“Ruth and father down at the
pier! How you dream!”
“They were really there.
And they do seem so happy, grandmother. They
are so much in love with each other.”
“I dare say. There are
no fools like old fools. So you have sold the
Court to Nicholas Rawdon, and a cotton-spinner is
Lord of the Manor. Well, well, how are the mighty
fallen!”
“I made twenty thousand pounds
by the sale. Nicholas Rawdon is a gentleman,
and John Thomas is the most popular man in all the
neighborhood. And, Granny, he has two sons—twins—the
handsomest little chaps you ever saw. No fear
of a Rawdon to heir the Manor now.”
“Fortune is a baggage.
When she is ill to a man she knows no reason.
She sent John Thomas to Parliament, and kept Fred
out at a loss, too. She took the Court from Fred
and gave it to John Thomas, and she gives him two
sons about the same time she gives Fred one, and that
one she kidnaps out of his sight and knowledge.
Poor Fred!”
“Well, grandmother, it is `poor
Fred’s’ own doing, and, I assure you,
Fred would have been most unwelcome at the Court.
And the squires and gentry round did not like a woman
in the place; they were at a loss what to do with
me. I was no good for dinners and politics and
hunting. I embarrassed them.” “Of
course you would. They would have to talk decently
and behave politely, and they would not be able to
tell their choicest stories. Your presence would
be a bore; but could not Tyrrel take your place?”
“Granny, Tyrrel was really unhappy
in that kind of life. And he was a foreigner,
so was I. You know what Yorkshire people think of
foreigners. They were very courteous, but they
were glad to have the Yorkshire Rawdons in our place.
And Tyrrel did not like working with the earth; he
loves machinery and electricity.”
“To be sure. When a man
has got used to delving for gold or silver, cutting
grass and wheat does seem a slow kind of business.”
“And he disliked the shut-up
feeling the park gave him. He said we were in
the midst of solitude three miles thick. It made
him depressed and lonely.”
“That is nonsense. I am
sure on the Western plains he had solitude sixty miles
thick—often.”
“Very likely, but then he had
an horizon, even if it were sixty miles away.
And no matter how far he rode, there was always that
line where earth seemed to rise to heaven. But
the park was surrounded by a brick wall fourteen feet
high. It had no horizon. You felt as if
you were in a large, green box —at least
Tyrrel did. The wall was covered with roses and
ivy, but still it was a boundary you could not pass,
and could not see over. Don’t you understand,
Granny, how Tyrrel would feel this?”
“I can’t say I do.
Why didn’t he come with you?”
“He had to go to the Customs
about our trunks, and there were other things.
He will see you to-morrow. Then we are going
to dine with father, and if you will join us, we
will call at six for you. Do, Granny.”
“Very well, I shall be ready.”
But after a moment’s thought she continued,
“No, I will not go. I am only a mortal
woman, and the company of angels bores me yet.”
“Now, Granny, dear.”
“I mean what I say. Your
father has married such a piece of perfection that
I feel my shortcomings in her presence more than
I can bear. But I’ll tell you what, dearie,
Tyrrel may come for me Saturday night at six, and
I will have my dinner with you. I want to see
the dining-room of a swell hotel in full dress; and
I will wear my violet satin and white Spanish lace,
and look as smart as can be, dear. And Tyrrel
may buy me a bunch of white violets. I am none
too old to wear them. Who knows but I may go
to the theater also?”
“Oh, Granny, you are just the
dearest young lady I know! Tyrrel will be as
proud as a peacock.”
“Well, I am not as young as
I might be, but I am a deal younger than I look.
Listen, dearie, I have never felt old yet!
Isn’t that a thing to be grateful for?
I don’t read much poetry, except it be in the
Church Hymnal, but I cut a verse out of a magazine
a year ago which just suits my idea of life, and,
what is still more wonderful, I took the trouble to
learn it. Oliver Wendell Holmes wrote it, and
I’ll warrant him for a good, cheerful, trust-in-God
man, or he’d never have thought of such sensible
words.”
“I am listening, Granny, for
the verse.”
“Yes, and learn it yourself.
It will come in handy some day, when Tyrrel and you
are getting white-haired and handsome, as everyone
ought to get when they have passed their half-century
and are facing the light of the heavenly world:
“At sixty-two life has begun;
At seventy-three begins once more;
Fly swifter as thou near’st the sun,
And brighter shine at eighty-four.
At ninety-five,
Should thou arrive,
Still wait on God, and work and thrive.”
Such words as those, Ethel, keep a
woman young, and make her right glad that she was
born and thankful that she lives.”
“Thank you for them, dear Granny.
Now I must run away as fast as I can. Tyrrel
will be wondering what has happened to me.”
In this conjecture she was right.
Tyrrel was in evening dress, and walking restlessly
about their private parlor. “Ethel,”
he said, plaintively, “I have been so uneasy
about you.”
“I am all right, dearest.
I was with grandmother. I shall be ready in half
an hour.”
Even if she had been longer, she would
have earned the delay, for she returned to him in
pink silk and old Venice point de rose, with a pretty
ermine tippet across her shoulders. It was a
joy to see her, a delight to hear her speak, and she
walked as if she heard music. The dining-room
was crowded when they entered, but they made a sensation.
Many rose and came to welcome them home. Others
smiled across the busy space and lifted their wineglass
in recognition. The room was electric, sensitive
and excited. It was flooded with a soft light;
it was full of the perfume of flowers. The brilliant
coloring of silks and satins, and the soft miracle
of white lace blended with the artistically painted
walls and roof. The aroma of delicate food, the
tinkle of crystal, the low murmur of happy voices,
the thrill of sudden laughter, and the delicious accompaniment
of soft, sensuous music completed the charm of the
room. To eat in such surroundings was as far
beyond the famous flower-crowned feasts of Rome and
Greece as the east is from the west. It was impossible
to resist its influence. From the point of the
senses, the soul was drinking life out of a cup of
overflowing delight. And it was only natural
that in their hearts both Tyrrel and Ethel should
make a swift, though silent, comparison between this
feast of sensation and flow of human attraction and
the still, sweet order of the Rawdon dining-room,
with its noiseless service, and its latticed win-dows
open to all the wandering scents and songs of the
garden.
Perhaps the latter would have the
sweetest and dearest and most abiding place in their
hearts; but just in the present they were enthralled
and excited by the beauty and good comradeship of
the social New York dinner function. Their eyes
were shining, their hearts thrilling, they went to
their own apartments hand in hand, buoyant, vivacious,
feeling that life was good and love unchangeable.
And the windows being open, they walked to one and
stood looking out upon the avenue. All signs
of commerce had gone from the beautiful street, but
it was busy and noisy with the traffic of pleasure,
and the hum of multitudes, the rattle of carriages,
the rush of autos, the light, hurrying footsteps of
pleasure-seekers insistently demanded their sympathy.
“We cannot go out to-night,”
said Ethel. “We are both more weary than
we know.”
“No, we cannot go to-night;
but, oh, Ethel, we are in New York again! Is
not that joy enough? I am so happy! I am
so happy. We are in New York again! There
is no city like it in all the world. Men live
here, they work here, they enjoy here. How happy,
how busy we are going to be, Ethel!”
During these joyful, hopeful expectations
he was walking up and down the room, his eyes dilating
with rapture, and Ethel closed the window and joined
him. They magnified their joy, they wondered
at it, they were sure no one before them had ever
loved as they loved. “And we are going
to live here, Ethel; going to have our home here!
Upon my honor, I cannot speak the joy I feel, but”
—and he went impetuously to the piano and
opened it—“but I can perhaps sing
it—
“`There is not a spot in this wide-peopled
earth So dear to the heart as the Land of our Birth;
’Tis the home of our childhood, the beautiful
spot Which Memory retains when all else is forgot.
May the blessing of God ever hallow the sod, And
its valleys and hills by our children be trod!
“`May Columbia long lift her white
crest o’er the wave, The birthplace of science
and the home of the brave. In her cities may
peace and prosperity dwell, And her daughters in
virtue and beauty excel. May the blessing of
God ever hallow the sod, And its valleys and hills
by our children be trod.’”
With the patriotic music warbling
in his throat he turned to Ethel, and looked at her
as a lover can, and she answered the look; and thus
leaning toward each other in visible beauty and affection
their new life began. Between smiles and kisses
they sat speaking, not of the past with all its love
and loveliness, but of the high things calling to
them from the future, the work and duties of life
set to great ends both for public and private good.
And as they thus communed Tyrrel took his wife’s
hand and slowly turned on her finger the plain gold
wedding ring behind its barrier of guarding gems.
“Ethel,” he said tenderly,
“what enchantments are in this ring of gold!
What romances I used to weave around it, and, dearest,
it has turned every Romance into Reality.”
“And, Tyrrel, it will also turn
all our Realities into Romances. Nothing in our
life will ever become common. Love will glorify
everything.”
“And we shall always love as
we love now?”
“We shall love far better, far
stronger, far more tenderly.”
“Even to the end of our lives, Ethel?”
“Yes, to the very end.”