The Missing Bride eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 370 pages of information about The Missing Bride.

The Missing Bride eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 370 pages of information about The Missing Bride.

She was sure, also, that she had seen the man twice, both times in night and storm, when she had wandered forth in search of Marian.

She remembered well the strange figure of that man—­the tall form shrouded in the black cloak—­the hat drawn over the eyes—­the faint spectral gleam of the clear-cut profile—­the peculiar fall of light and shade, the decided individuality of air and gait—­all was distinct as a picture in her memory, and she felt sure that she would be able to identify that man again.

Up to this time, the thought of her secret vow, and her life’s mission, had afforded only a romantic and heroic excitement; but the day was fast approaching when these indexes she retained, should point to a clue that should lead through a train of damning circumstantial evidence destined to test her soul by an unexampled trial.

Paul Douglass had grown up to be a tall and handsome youth, of a very noble, frank, attractive countenance and manners.  To say that he loved Miriam is only to say that he loved himself.  She mingled with every thought, and feeling, and purpose of his heart.

And when, at last, the time came that Paul had to leave home for Baltimore, to remain absent all winter, for the purpose of attending the course of lectures at the medical college, Miriam learned the pain of parting, and understood how impossible happiness would be for her, with Paul away, on naval or military duty, more than half their lives, and for periods of two, three, or five years; and after that she never said another word in favor of his wearing Uncle Sam’s livery, although she had often expressed a wish that he should enter the army.

Miriam’s affection for Paul was so profound and quiet, that she did not know its depth or strength.  As she had not believed that parting from him would be painful until the event had taught her, so even now she did not know how intertwined with every chord and fibre of her heart and how identical with her life, was her love for Paul.  She was occupied by a more enthusiastic devotion to her “brother,” as she called her guardian.

The mysterious sorrow, the incurable melancholy of a man like Thurston Willcoxen, could not but invest him with peculiar interest and even strange fascination for one of Miriam’s enthusiastic, earnest temperament.  She loved him with more than a daughter’s love; she loved him with all the impassioned earnestness of her nature; her heart yearned as it would break with its wild, intense longing to do him some good, to cure his sorrow, to make him happy.  There were moments when but for the sweet shyness that is ever the attendant and conservator of such pure feeling, this wild desire was strong enough to cast her at his feet, to embrace his knees, and with tears beseech him to let her into that dark, sorrowful bosom, to see if she could make any light and joy there.  She feared that he had sinned, that his incurable sorrow was the gnawing tooth of that worm that never dieth,

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The Missing Bride from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.