Part 1 (1/2)
Daybreak: A Romance of an Old World.
by James Cowan.
CHAPTER I.
AN ASTRONOMER ROYAL.
It was an evening in early autumn in the last year of the nineteenth century. We were nearing the close of a voyage as calm and peaceful as our previous lives.
Margaret had been in Europe a couple of years and I had just been over to bring her home, and we were now expecting to reach New York in a day or two.
Margaret and I were the best of friends. Indeed, we had loved each other from our earliest recollection. No formal words of betrothal had ever pa.s.sed between us, but for years we had spoken of our future marriage as naturally as if we were the most regularly engaged couple in the world.
”Walter,” asked Margaret in her impulsive way, ”at what temperature does mercury melt?”
”Well, to hazard a guess,” I replied, ”I should say about one degree above its freezing point. Why, do you think of making an experiment?”
”Yes, on you. And I am going to begin by being very frank with you. You have made me a number of hurried visits during my stay in Europe, but we have seen more of each other in the course of this voyage than for two long years. I trust you will not be offended when I say I hoped to find you changed. I have never spoken to you about this, even in my letters, and it is only because I am a little older now, and because my love for you has increased with every day of life, that I have the courage to frame these words.”
”Do tell me what it is,” I exclaimed, thoroughly alarmed at her serious manner. ”Let me know how I have disappointed you and I will make what amends I can. Tell me the nature of the change you have been looking for and I will begin the transformation at once, before my character becomes fixed.”
”Alas! and if it should be already fixed,” she replied, without a smile.
”Perhaps it is unreasonable in me to expect it in you as a man, when you had so little of it as a boy; but I used to think it was only shyness then, and always hoped you would outgrow that and gradually become an ideal lover. You have such a mult.i.tude of other perfections, however, that it may be nature has denied you this so that I may be reminded that you are human. If the choice had been left with me I think I should have preferred to leave out some other quality in the make-up of your character, good as they all are.”
”What bitter pill is this,” I asked, ”that you are sugar-coating to such an extent? Don't you see that I am aching to begin the improvement in my manners, as soon as you point out the direction?”
”You must know what I mean from my first abrupt question,” she answered.
”To make an extreme comparison, frozen mercury is warm beside you, Walter. If you are really to be loyal knight of mine I must send you on a quest for your heart.”
”Ah, I supposed it was understood that I had given it to you.”
”I have never seen it,” she continued, ”and you have never before said as much as is contained in those last words. Here we are, talking of many things we shall do after we are married, and yet you have nothing to say of all that wonderful and beautiful world of romance that ought to come before marriage. Is this voyage to come to an end and mean no more to us than to these hundreds of pa.s.sengers around us, who seem only intent to get back to their work at the earliest possible moment? And is our wedding day to approach and pa.s.s and be looked upon merely as part of the necessary and becoming business of our lives? In short, am I never to hear a real love note?”
”Margaret, I have a sister. You know something of the depth of my affection for her. When I meet her in New York to-morrow or next day, if I should throw my arms around her neck and exclaim, in impa.s.sioned tones, 'My sister, I love you,' what would she think of me?”
”She would think you had left your senses on the other side,” replied Margaret, laughing. ”But I decline to accept the parallel. I have not given up my heart to your keeping these many years to be only a sister to you at last.”
”But my mother! Is it possible for me to love you more than my mother loved me? And yet I never heard her speak one word on the subject, and, now that I think of it, I am not sure but words would have cheapened her affection in my mind. You do not doubt me, Margaret?”
”No more than you doubted your mother, although she never told her love. No, it is not so serious as that; but I wish you were more demonstrative, Walter.”
”What, in words? Isn't there something that speaks louder than words?”
”Yes, but let us hear the words, too. There is a beautiful proverb in India which says, 'Words are the daughters of earth and deeds are the sons of heaven.' That is true, but let us not try to pa.s.s through life without enjoying the company of some of the 'daughters of earth.'”
”I will confess this much, Margaret, that your words are one of your princ.i.p.al charms.”
”Oh, do you really think so? I consider that a great compliment from you, for I have often tried to repress myself, fearing that my impulsive and sometimes pa.s.sionate speech would offend your taste, you who are outwardly so cold. Do you know, I have a whole vocabulary of endearing terms ready to be poured into your ears as soon as you begin to give me encouragement?”
”Then teach me how to encourage you, and I will certainly begin at once.