The Complete Project Gutenberg Writings of Charles Dudley Warner eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 3,672 pages of information about The Complete Project Gutenberg Writings of Charles Dudley Warner.

The Complete Project Gutenberg Writings of Charles Dudley Warner eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 3,672 pages of information about The Complete Project Gutenberg Writings of Charles Dudley Warner.

Memory has the singular characteristic of recalling in a friend absent, as in a journey long past, only that which is agreeable.  Mandeville begins to wish he were in New South Wales.

I did intend to insert here a letter of Herbert’s to the Young Lady, —­obtained, I need not say, honorably, as private letters which get into print always are,—­not to gratify a vulgar curiosity, but to show how the most unsentimental and cynical people are affected by the master passion.  But I cannot bring myself to do it.  Even in the interests of science one has no right to make an autopsy of two loving hearts, especially when they are suffering under a late attack of the one agreeable epidemic.

All the world loves a lover, but it laughs at him none the less in his extravagances.  He loses his accustomed reticence; he has something of the martyr’s willingness for publicity; he would even like to show the sincerity of his devotion by some piece of open heroism.  Why should he conceal a discovery which has transformed the world to him, a secret which explains all the mysteries of nature and human-ity?  He is in that ecstasy of mind which prompts those who were never orators before to rise in an experience-meeting and pour out a flood of feeling in the tritest language and the most conventional terms.  I am not sure that Herbert, while in this glow, would be ashamed of his letter in print, but this is one of the cases where chancery would step in and protect one from himself by his next friend.  This is really a delicate matter, and perhaps it is brutal to allude to it at all.

In truth, the letter would hardly be interesting in print.  Love has a marvelous power of vivifying language and charging the simplest words with the most tender meaning, of restoring to them the power they had when first coined.  They are words of fire to those two who know their secret, but not to others.  It is generally admitted that the best love-letters would not make very good literature.  “Dearest,” begins Herbert, in a burst of originality, felicitously selecting a word whose exclusiveness shuts out all the world but one, and which is a whole letter, poem, confession, and creed in one breath.  What a weight of meaning it has to carry!  There may be beauty and wit and grace and naturalness and even the splendor of fortune elsewhere, but there is one woman in the world whose sweet presence would be compensation for the loss of all else.  It is not to be reasoned about; he wants that one; it is her plume dancing down the sunny street that sets his heart beating; he knows her form among a thousand, and follows her; he longs to run after her carriage, which the cruel coachman whirls out of his sight.  It is marvelous to him that all the world does not want her too, and he is in a panic when he thinks of it.  And what exquisite flattery is in that little word addressed to her, and with what sweet and meek triumph she repeats it to herself, with a feeling that is not altogether pity for those who

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The Complete Project Gutenberg Writings of Charles Dudley Warner from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.