The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 09, No. 52, February, 1862 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 305 pages of information about The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 09, No. 52, February, 1862.

The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 09, No. 52, February, 1862 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 305 pages of information about The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 09, No. 52, February, 1862.

She was repaid for her active sympathy at once by discovering that this big, awkward thing was not a dead, but only a stunned, body.  It had an ugly bump and a bleeding cut on its manly skull, but otherwise was quite an agreeable object to contemplate, and plainly on its “unembarrassed brow Nature had written ‘Gentleman.’”

As this young lady had never had a fair, steady stare at a stunned hero before, she seized her advantage.  She had hitherto been distant with the other sex.  She had no brother.  Not one of her male cousins had ever ventured near enough to get those cousinly privileges that timid cousins sigh for and plucky cousins take, if they are worth taking.

Wade’s impressive face, though for the moment blind as a statue’s, also seized its advantage and stared at her intently, with a pained and pleading look, new to those resolute features.

Wade was entirely unconscious of the great hit he had made by his tumble; plump into the arms of this heroine!  There were fellows extant who would have suffered any imaginable amputation, any conceivable mauling, any fling from the apex of anything into the lowest deeps of anywhere, for the honor he was now enjoying.

But all he knew was that his skull was a beehive in an uproar, and that one lobe of his brain was struggling to swarm off.  His legs and arms felt as if they belonged to another man, and a very limp one at that.  A ton of cast-iron seemed to be pressing his eyelids down, and a trickle of red-hot metal flowed from his cut forehead.

“I shall have to scream,” thought the lady, after an instant of anxious waiting, “if he does not revive.  I cannot leave him to go for help.”

Not a prude, you see.  A prude would have had cheap scruples about compromising herself by taking a man in her arms.  Not a vulgar person, who would have required the stranger to be properly recommended by somebody who came over in the Mayflower, before she helped him.  Not a feeble-minded damsel, who, if she had not fainted, would have fled away, gasping and in tears.  No timidity or prudery or underbred doubts about this thorough creature.  She knew she was in her right womanly place, and she meant to stay there.

But she began to need help, possibly a lancet, possibly a pocket-pistol, possibly hot blankets, possibly somebody to knead these lifeless lungs and pommel this flaccid body, until circulation was restored.

Just as she was making up her mind to scream, Wade stirred.  He began to tingle as if a familiar of the Inquisition were slapping him all over with fine-toothed curry-combs.  He became half-conscious of a woman supporting him.  In a stammering and intoxicated voice he murmured,—­

“Who ran to catch me when I fell,
And kissed the place to make it well? 
My”------

He opened his eyes.  It was not his mother; for she was long since deceased.  Nor was this non-mother kissing the place.

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The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 09, No. 52, February, 1862 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.