himself. “Does he think every one that
looks at his scarecrow of a daughter—”
But there he had need to acknowledge to himself his
injustice to Miss Frarnie, a modest maiden who had
more cause to complain of him than he of her, since
he had done his best to please her, and her only fault
lay in being pleased so easily. She was pleased
with him: he understood that now, though his
endeavors to enlist her had been for a very different
manifestation of interest. Perhaps it flattered
him a little: he paused long enough to consider
what sort of a lot it would be if he really had been
plighted to Frarnie instead of Louie. Love and
all that nonsense, he had heard say, changed presently
into a quiet sort of contentment; and if that were
so, it would be all the same at the end of a few years
which one he took. He felt that Frarnie was not
very sympathetic, that her large white face seldom
sparkled with much intelligence, that she would make
but a dull companion; but, for all that, she would
be, he knew, an excellent housewife: she would
bring a house with her too; and when a man is married,
and has half a dozen children tumbling round him, there
is entertainment enough for him, and it is another
bond between him and the wife he did not love too
well at first; and if she were his, his would be the
Sabrina also, and when the Sabrina’s days were
over perhaps a great East Indiaman, and with that
the respect and deference of all his townsmen:
court would be paid to him, his words would be words
of weight, he would have a voice in the selection
of town-officers, he would roll up money in the bank,
and some day he should be master of the great Maurice
mansion and the gardens and grapehouses. It was
a brilliant picture to him, doubtless, but in some
way the recollection of two barelegged little children
digging clams down on the flats when the tide was out,
with the great white lighthouse watching them across
the deserted stretches of the long bent eel-grass,
rose suddenly and wiped the other picture out, and
he saw the wind blowing in Louie’s brown and
silken hair and kissing the color on her cheeks; he
saw the shy sparkle of her downcast eyes, lovely and
brown then as they were now; and as he stood erect
at last, snapping his fingers defiantly, he felt that
he had bidden Mr. Maurice’s ships and stocks
and houses and daughter go hang, and had made his choice
rather to walk with Louie on his arm than as master
of the Sabrina.
It was a good resolution; and if he had but sealed it by speaking next day to Mr. Maurice of his engagement, there would not have been a word to say. But, though he valiantly meant to do it, it was not so easy, after all, as he had thought, and so he put it off for a more convenient season, and the season did not come, and the day of sailing did. And the outfit that went on board the Frarnie was made and packed by the hands of Mrs. Maurice and her daughter—such an outfit as he had never dreamed of; such warm woolens for the storms, such soft linens for the heats, such


