Trial and Triumph eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 139 pages of information about Trial and Triumph.

Trial and Triumph eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 139 pages of information about Trial and Triumph.

“It might be, darling, for you, but how would it be for me who would have to foot the bill?”

“Well, papa, could you not just give me a check like you do mama sometimes?”

“But mama knows how to use it.”

“But papa, don’t I know how also?”

“I have my doubts on that score, but let me refer you to your mother.  She is queen of this realm, and in household matters I as a loyal subject, abide by her decisions.”

“Well, I guess mama is all right on this subject.”

Mrs. Lasette was perfectly willing to gratify her daughter, and it was decided to have an entertainment on Laura’s birthday.

The evening of Mrs. Lasette’s entertainment came bringing with it into her pleasant parlors a bright and merry throng of young people.  It was more than a mere pleasure party.  It was here that rising talent was encouraged, no matter how humble the garb of the possessor, and Mrs. Lasette was a model hostess who would have thought her entertainment a failure had any one gone from it smarting under a sense of social neglect.  Shy and easily embarrassed Annette who was very seldom invited anywhere, found herself almost alone in that gay and chattering throng.  Annette was seated next to several girls who laughed and chatted incessantly with each other without deigning to notice her.  Mrs. Lasette entering the room with Mr. Luzerne whom she presented to the company, and noticing the loneliness and social isolation of Annette, gave him a seat beside her, and was greatly gratified that she had found the means to relieve the tedium of Annette’s position.  Mrs. Lasette had known him as a light hearted boy, full of generous impulses, with laughing eyes and a buoyant step, but he had been absent a number of years, and had developed into a handsome man with a magnificent physique, elegant in his attire, polished in his manners and brilliant in conversation.  Just such a man as is desirable as a companion and valuable as a friend, staunch, honorable and true, and it was rumored that he was quite wealthy.  He was generally cheerful, but it seemed at times as if some sad memories came over him, dashing all the sunshine from his face and leaving in its stead, a sadness which it was touching to behold.  Some mystery seemed to surround his life, but being reticent in reference to his past history, there was a dignity in his manner which repelled all intrusion into the secrecy over which he choose to cast a veil.  Annette was not beautiful, but her face was full of expression and her manner winsome at times.  Lacking social influence and social adaptation, she had been ignored in society, her faults of temper made prominent her most promising traits of character left unnoticed, but this treatment was not without some benefit to Annette.  It threw her more entirely on her own resources.  At first she read when she had leisure, to beguile her lonely hours, and fortunately for her, she was directed in her reading by Mrs. Lasette, who gave and lent her books, which appealed to all that was highest and best in her nature, and kindled within her a lofty enthusiasm to make her life a blessing to the world.  With such an earnest purpose, she was not prepared to be a social favorite in any society whose chief amusement was gossip, and whose keenest weapon was ridicule.

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Project Gutenberg
Trial and Triumph from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.