Strange Pages from Family Papers eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 279 pages of information about Strange Pages from Family Papers.

Strange Pages from Family Papers eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 279 pages of information about Strange Pages from Family Papers.

A glance at the agony columns of our daily newspapers, or the notice boards of police stations, it has been remarked, shows how many individuals disappear from home, from their business haunts, and from the circle of their acquaintances, and leave not the slightest trace of their whereabouts.  In only too many instances, no satisfactory explanation has ever been forthcoming to account for a disappearance of this nature, and in the vast majority of cases no evidence has been discovered to prove the death of such persons.  It is well known that “in France, before the Revolution, the vanishing of men almost before the eyes of their friends was so common that it scarcely excited any surprise at all.  The only inquiry was, had he a beautiful wife or daughter, for in that case the explanation was easy; some one who had influence with the Government had designs upon the lady, and made interest to have her natural guardian put out of the way while those designs were being fulfilled.”  But, accountable as the disappearance of an individual was at such an unquiet time in French history, such a solution of the difficulty cannot be made to apply to our own country.  Like other social problems, which no amount of intellectual ingenuity has been able to unravel, the reason why, at intervals, persons are missed and never found must always be regarded as an open question.

Thus a marriage is recorded which took place in Lincolnshire, about the year 1750.  In this instance, the wedding party adjourned after the marriage ceremony to the bridegroom’s residence, and dispersed, some to ramble in the garden and others to rest in the house till the dinner hour.  But the bridegroom was suddenly summoned away by a domestic, who said that a stranger wished to speak to him, and henceforward he was never seen again.  All kinds of inquiries were made but to no purpose, and terrible as the dismay was of the poor bride at this inexplicable disappearance of the bridegroom, no trace could be found of him.  A similar tradition hangs about an old deserted Welsh Hall, standing in a wood near Festiniog.  In a similar manner, the bridegroom was asked to give audience to a stranger on his wedding day, and disappeared from the face of the earth from that moment.  The bride, however, seems to have survived the shock, exceeding her three score years and ten, although, it is said, during all those years, while there was light of sun or moon to lighten the earth, she sat watching—­watching at one particular window which commanded a view of the approach to the house.  In short, her whole faculties, her whole mental powers, became completely absorbed in that weary process of watching, and long before she died she was childish, and only conscious of one wish—­to sit in that long high window, and watch the road, along which he might come.  Family romance records, from time to time, many such stories, and it was not so very long ago that a bridal party were thrown into much consternation by the non-arrival

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Strange Pages from Family Papers from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.