The Honorable Peter Stirling and What People Thought of Him eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 604 pages of information about The Honorable Peter Stirling and What People Thought of Him.

The Honorable Peter Stirling and What People Thought of Him eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 604 pages of information about The Honorable Peter Stirling and What People Thought of Him.
of hearsay to her.  Yet she had apparently taken him, as women will, for better, for worse, till death, as trustfully as if he and men generally were as knowable as A B C, instead of as unknown as the algebraic X. Only once had she faltered in her trust of him, and then but for a moment.  How far had her love, and the sight of Peter’s misery, led her blindly to renew that trust?  And would it hold?  She had seen how little people thought of that scurrilous article, and how the decent papers had passed it over without a word.  But she had also seen, the scandal harped upon by partisans and noted that Peter failed to vindicate himself publicly, or vouchsafe an explanation to her.  Had she taken Peter with trust or doubt, knowledge or blindness?

Perhaps a conversation between the two, a week later, will answer these questions.  It occurred on the deck of a vessel.  Yet this parting glimpse of Peter is very different from that which introduced him.  The vessel is not drifting helplessly, but its great screw is whirling it towards the island of Martinique, as if itself anxious to reach that fairy land of fairy lands.  Though the middle of November, the soft warmth of the tropics is in the air.  Nor are the sea and sky now leaden.  The first is turned into liquid gold by the phosphorescence, and the full moon silvers everything else.  Neither is Peter pacing the deck with lines of pain and endurance on his face.  He is up in the bow, where the vessel’s forefoot throws up the white foam in silver drops in the moonlight.  And he does not look miserable.  Anything but that.  He is sitting on an anchor stock, with his back comfortably braced against the rail.  Another person is not far distant.  What that person sits upon and leans against is immaterial to the narrative.

“Why don’t you smoke?” asked that person.

“I’m too happy,” said Peter, in a voice evidencing the truth of his words.

“Will you if I bite off the end?” asked Eve, Jr., placing temptation most temptingly.

“I like the idea exceedingly,” said Peter.  “But my right arm is so very pleasantly placed that it objects to moving.”

“Don’t move it.  I know where they are.  I even know about the matches.”  And Peter sat calmly while his pockets were picked.  He even seemed to enjoy the sensation of that small hand rummaging in his waistcoat pockets.  “You see, dear, that I am learning your ways,” Leonore continued, in a tone of voice which suggested that that was the chief end of woman.  Perhaps it is.  The Westminster catechism only tells us the chief end of man.

“There.  Now are you really happy?”

“I don’t know anybody more so.”

“Then, dear, I want to talk with you.”

“The wish is reciprocal.  But what have we been doing for six days?”

“We’ve been telling each other everything, just as we ought.  But now I want to ask two favors, dear.”

“I don’t think that’s necessary.  Just tell me what they are.”

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The Honorable Peter Stirling and What People Thought of Him from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.