The Maid of Maiden Lane eBook

Amelia Edith Huddleston Barr
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 302 pages of information about The Maid of Maiden Lane.

The Maid of Maiden Lane eBook

Amelia Edith Huddleston Barr
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 302 pages of information about The Maid of Maiden Lane.

They parted with a handclasp that went to both hearts, and as Hyde passed his mother’s loom, he went in, and told her all that happened to him, She listened with a smile and a heartache.  She knew now that the time had come to say “farewell” to the boy who had made her life for twenty-seven years.  “He must marry like the rest of the world, and go away from her,” and only mothers know what supreme self-sacrifice a pleasant acquiescence in this event implies.  But she bravely put down all the clamouring selfishness of her long sweet care and affection, and said cheerfully—­

“Very much to my liking is Cornelia Moran, She is world-like and heaven-like, and her good heart and sweet nature every one knows.  A loving wife and a noble mother she will make, and if I must lose thee, my Joris, there is no girl in America that I like better to have thee.”

“Never will you lose me, mother.”

“Ah then! that is what all sons say.  The common lot, I look for nothing better.  But see now!  I give thee up cheerfully.  If God please, I shall see thy sons and daughters; and thy father has been anxious about the Hydes.  He would not have a stranger here—­nor would I. Our hope is in thee and thy sweet wife, and very glad am I that thy wife is to be Cornelia Moran.”

And even after Joris had left her she smiled, though the tears dropped down upon her work.  She thought of the presents she would send her daughter, and she told herself that Cornelia was an American, and that she had made for her, with her own hands and brain, a lovely home wherein her memory must always dwell.  Indeed she let her thoughts go far forward to see, and to listen to the happy boys and girls who might run and shout gleefully through the fair large rooms, and the sweet shady gardens her skill and taste had ordered and planted.  Thus her generosity made her a partaker of her children’s happiness, and whoever partakes of a pleasure has his share of it, and comes into contact—­not only with the happiness—­but with the other partakers of that happiness—­a divine kind of interest for generous deeds, which we may all appropriate.

Nothing is more contagious than joy, and Hyde was now a living joy through all the house.  His voice had caught a new tone, his feet a more buoyant step, he carried himself like a man expectant of some glorious heritage.  So eager, so ardent, so ready to be happy, he inspired every one with his buoyant gladness of heart.  He could at least talk to Cornelia with his pen every day, yes, every hour if he desired; and if it had been possible to transfer in a letter his own light-heartedness, the words he wrote would have shone upon the paper.

The next morning Mary Damer called.  She knew that a letter from Cornelia was possible, and she knew also that it would really be as fateful to herself, as to Hyde.  If, as she suspected, it was Rem Van Ariens who had detained the misdirected letter, there was only one conceivable result as regarded herself.  She, an upright, honourable English girl, loving truth with all her heart, and despising whatever was underhand and disloyal, had but one course to take—­she must break off her engagement with a man so far below her standard of simple morality.  She could not trust his honour, and what security has love in a heart without honour?

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Project Gutenberg
The Maid of Maiden Lane from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.