Danger eBook

Timothy Shay Arthur
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 299 pages of information about Danger.

Danger eBook

Timothy Shay Arthur
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 299 pages of information about Danger.

The waiter went back into the supper-room, and with a tact that came from experience in cases similar to this managed to get the young man away without arousing his opposition.

Five minutes afterward, as Mrs. Whitford sat in her carriage at the door of Mr. Birtwell’s palace home, her son was pushed in, half resisting, by two waiters, so drunk that his wretched mother had to support him with her arm all the way home.  Is it any wonder that in her aching heart the mother cried out, “Oh, that he had died a baby on my breast”?

CHAPTER XI.

Among the guests at Mr. and Mrs. Birtwell’s was an officer holding a high rank in the army, named Abercrombie.  He had married, many years before, a lady of fine accomplishments and rare culture who was connected with one of the oldest families in New York.  Her grandfather on her mother’s side had distinguished himself as an officer in the Revolutionary war; and on her father’s side she could count statesmen and lawyers whose names were prominent in the early history of our country.

General Abercrombie while a young man had fallen into the vice of the army, and had acquired the habit of drinking.

The effects of alcohol are various.  On some they are seen in the bloated flesh and reddened eyes.  Others grow pale, and their skin takes on a dead and ashen hue.  With some the whole nervous system becomes shattered; while with others organic derangements, gout, rheumatism and kindred evils attend the assimilation of this poison.

Quite as varied are the moral and mental effects of alcoholic disturbance.  Some are mild and weak inebriates, growing passive or stupid in their cups.  Others become excited, talkative and intrusive; others good-natured and merry; not a few coarse, arbitrary, brutal and unfeeling; and some jealous, savage and fiend-like.

Of the last-named class was General Abercrombie.  When sober, a kinder, gentler or more considerate man toward his wife could hardly be found; but when intoxicated, he was half a fiend, and seemed to take a devilish delight in tormenting her.  It had been no uncommon thing for him to point a loaded pistol at her heart, and threaten to shoot her dead if she moved or cried out; to hold a razor at his own throat, or place the keen edge, close to hers; to open a window at midnight and threaten to fling himself to the ground, or to drag her across the floor, swearing that they should take the leap together.

For years the wretched wife had borne all this, and worse if possible, hiding her dreadful secret as best she could, and doing all in her power to hold her husband, for whom she retained a strong attachment, away from temptation.  Friends who only half suspected the truth wondered that Time was so aggressive, taking the flash and merriment out of her beautiful eyes, the color and fullness from her cheeks, the smiles from her lips and the glossy, blackness from her hair.

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Danger from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.