Deephaven and Selected Stories & Sketches eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 306 pages of information about Deephaven and Selected Stories & Sketches.

Deephaven and Selected Stories & Sketches eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 306 pages of information about Deephaven and Selected Stories & Sketches.

My hero and heroine were reasonably well established to begin with:  they each had some money, though Mr. Wilson had most.  His father had at one time been a rich man, but with the decline, a few years before, of manufacturing interests, he had become, mostly through the fault of others, somewhat involved; and at the time of his death his affairs were in such a condition that it was still a question whether a very large sum or a moderately large one would represent his estate.  Mrs. Wilson, Tom’s step-mother, was somewhat of an invalid; she suffered severely at times with asthma, but she was almost entirely relieved by living in another part of the country.  While her husband lived, she had accepted her illness as inevitable, and rarely left home; but during the last few years she had lived in Philadelphia with her own people, making short and wheezing visits only from time to time, and had not undergone a voluntary period of suffering since the occasion of Tom’s marriage, which she had entirely approved.  She had a sufficient property of her own, and she and Tom were independent of each other in that way.  Her only other stepchild was a daughter, who had married a navy officer, and had at this time gone out to spend three years (or less) with her husband, who had been ordered to Japan.

It is not unfrequently noticed that in many marriages one of the persons who choose each other as partners for life is said to have thrown himself or herself away, and the relatives and friends look on with dismal forebodings and ill-concealed submission.  In this case it was the wife who might have done so much better, according to public opinion.  She did not think so herself, luckily, either before marriage or afterward, and I do not think it occurred to her to picture to herself the sort of career which would have been her alternative.  She had been an only child, and had usually taken her own way.  Some one once said that it was a great pity that she had not been obliged to work for her living, for she had inherited a most uncommon business talent, and, without being disreputably keen at a bargain, her insight into the practical working of affairs was very clear and far-reaching.  Her father, who had also been a manufacturer, like Tom’s, had often said it had been a mistake that she was a girl instead of a boy.  Such executive ability as hers is often wasted in the more contracted sphere of women, and is apt to be more a disadvantage than a help.  She was too independent and self-reliant for a wife; it would seem at first thought that she needed a wife herself more than she did a husband.  Most men like best the women whose natures cling and appeal to theirs for protection.  But Tom Wilson, while he did not wish to be protected himself, liked these very qualities in his wife which would have displeased some other men; to tell the truth, he was very much in love with his wife just as she was.  He was a successful collector of almost everything but money, and during a great part of his life he had

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Deephaven and Selected Stories & Sketches from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.