Continental Monthly, Vol. II. July, 1862. No. 1. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 316 pages of information about Continental Monthly, Vol. II. July, 1862. No. 1..

Continental Monthly, Vol. II. July, 1862. No. 1. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 316 pages of information about Continental Monthly, Vol. II. July, 1862. No. 1..

After Hiram joined the church he was regular in his attendance on the evening meetings.  He always went to these meetings with some young girl, whom, of course, he accompanied home after the services were over.  As I have said, he was a handsome fellow, and bestowed particular care on his dress and his appearance generally.  He was good-natured and obliging, and withal sensible, so that the young men who envied him and might be inclined to call him a fop or a dandy, could not prefix ‘brainless’ to these epithets and thus ridicule on him.  The fact is, he was shrewder than any of them, and he knew it.  They soon discovered it, and so did the girls, to the utter discomfiture of his rivals.

At all the village gatherings, including the sewing-societies, and the lectures, the prayer-meetings, and meetings of Sunday-school teachers, and so forth, Hiram was not only a favorite, but the favorite with the other sex.  He had a winning, confidential manner, when addressing a young lady even for the first time, which said very plainly, ’We know all about and appreciate each other,’ and which was very taking.  He assumed various little privileges, such as calling the girls by their first name, giving notice that a curl was about to fall, and offering to fix it properly, picking up a bow which had been brushed off, and pinning it securely on again, holding the hand with a kind and amiable smile for a brief space after he had shaken it, and sometimes, when he had occasion to see one of his friends home, keeping her hand in his all the way after it was placed within his arm.

You may ask why such liberties were permitted.  Simply because they were so very equally distributed they had come to be regarded as a matter of course.  In fact, Hiram was a privileged person.  He was so polite, so attentive, so considerate, what if he did have his peculiarities—­how ridiculous to make a fuss about such trifles!  So the ‘trifles’ were acquiesced in.  Besides, I am inclined to think each fair one supposed she was the especial object of Hiram’s regard, and that his attentions to others were mere civilities.  I do not say Hiram so announced it.  I know he did not; for he was not a person, even when a youth, to commit himself foolishly.  Yet if they would mistake general politeness for particular attentions, surely it was not his fault—­oh! no.

There were those who refused to give their adherence to Hiram’s almost unlimited sway.  And as parties generally proceed to extremes, the girls who formed the opposition generally declared him to be a pusillanimous, mean-spirited fellow; they detested the very sight of his smooth, hypocritical face; he had better not come fooling around them—­no, indeed!  Let him attempt it once, they would soon teach him manners.  It is to be observed that these remarks did not emanate from the prettiest or most attractive girls of the village—­all of whom were decidedly and emphatically on Hiram’s side.  They seemed to enjoy the excitement under which their adversaries were laboring, and retorted by exclaiming, ’Sour grapes!’ asserting that those who so shamefully vilified Hiram, would be glad enough to accept his attentions if—­they only had the opportunity.

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Continental Monthly, Vol. II. July, 1862. No. 1. from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.