Part 8 (2/2)

Mr. Arlington's smiling glance was again turned on me; and I met it with a hearty laugh.

”Indeed, Aunt Nancy,” said the Colonel, who seemed strangely annoyed at my laughter, ”I think your friend does you little credit, and I can only hope that he had some of these lordly airs drubbed out of him at the West.”

As Col. Donaldson spoke he threw down the engraving which he had held, and pushed his chair from the table.

”I a.s.sure you, sir,” I replied, ”my friend has as few lordly airs as it is possible to conceive in one born to such lordly circ.u.mstances. It was not my intention to impose on you that picture as an actual likeness of him--though had you ever seen him I might easily have done so, as it really resembles him very much in his personal traits.”

”Well, I am glad he did not sit for this picture,” said Col. Donaldson; ”now I can listen to your story with some pleasure.”

”Thank you; you must first take some reflections suggested to me by the incidents I have here narrated. Of the character of these reflections, you will form some conception from the t.i.tle I have given to the tale into which I have interwoven them. I have called it

”LIFE IN AMERICA.”

”Men and Manners in America” was the comprehensive t.i.tle of a book issued some fifteen or twenty years ago, by a gentleman from Scotland, to whom, we fear, Americans have never tendered the grateful acknowledgments he deserved for his disinterested efforts to teach them to eat eggs properly, and to give due time to the mastication of their food. This benevolently instructive work was the precursor of a host of others on the same topics, and others of a kindred character.

America has been the standard subject for the trial essays of European tyros in philosophy, political economy, and book-making in general.

Society in America has been presented, it would seem, in all its aspects--religious, educational, industrial, political, commercial, and fas.h.i.+onable. Our schools and our prisons, our churches and our theatres, have been in turn the subject of investigation, of unqualified censure, and of scarcely less unqualified laudation.

The subject thus dissected, put together, and dissected again, has not been able to restrain some wincing and an occasional outcry, when the scalpel has been held by a more than usually unskilful hand--demonstrations of sensibility which have occasioned apparently as much disapprobation as surprise in the anatomists. We flatter ourselves that there is peculiar fitness in the metaphor just used, for the outer form only of American life has been touched by these various writers.

Its spirit, that which gives to it its peculiar organization, has evaded them as completely as the soul of man evades the keenest investigations of the dissecting room. Even of the seat of the spirit--of the point whence it sends forth its subtle influences, giving activity and direction to every member--of the HOMES of America, they have little real knowledge. The anatomist--the reader will pardon the continuation of a figure so ill.u.s.trative of our meaning--the anatomist knows that not only can he never hope to lay his finger upon the principle of life, but that ere he can pry into those cells in which its mysterious processes are evolved, they must have been dismantled of all that could have guided him to any certain deductions respecting its nature and mode of action. And seldom is the eye of the stranger, never that of the professed bookmaker, suffered to rest upon our homes till they have undergone changes that will as completely baffle his penetration. Nor is this always designedly. It is from a delicate instinct which shrinks from subjecting its most sacred and touching emotions to the rude gaze and ruder comment of the world.

We have been led to these observations by certain events of which we have lately become informed, and which we would here record, as ill.u.s.trative of some peculiarities of social life in America, and especially of the new development of character manifested by women under the influence of these peculiarities.

The ringing of bells, the firing of cannon, the huzzaing of the a.s.sembling mult.i.tude on the announcement in London of the victory of Waterloo, must have seemed a bitter mockery to many a heart, mad with the first sharp agony of bereavement. ”The few must suffer that the many may rejoice,” say the statesman and the warrior while they plan new conquests. It may be so, but we have at present to do with the sufferings of the few.

On the list of the killed in that battle appeared the name of Horace Danforth, Captain in the 41st Regiment of Infantry. It was a name of little note, but there was one to whom it was the synonyme of all that gave beauty or gladness to life; and ere the bells had ceased to sound, or the eager crowd to huzza, her heart was still. With her last quivering sigh had mingled the wail of a new-born infant.

Thus was Horace Maitland Danforth ushered into life. He had been born at the house of his maternal uncle, Sir Thomas Maitland, and as his mother had been wholly dependent on this gentleman, and his father had been a soldier of fortune, leaving to his son no heritage but his name, he continued there, as carefully reared and tenderly regarded as though he had been the heir to Maitland Park and to all its dependencies. Though Sir Thomas had, for many years after the birth of his nephew intended to marry, it was an intention never executed, and when Horace attained his twenty-first birthday, his majority was celebrated as that of his uncle's heir, and as such he was presented by Sir Thomas Maitland to his a.s.sembled tenantry. Soon after this event, the Baronet obtained for his nephew a right to the name and arms of Maitland--a measure to which, knowing little of his father's family, Horace readily consented. Sir Thomas Maitland died suddenly while yet in the prime of life, and was succeeded by Sir Horace, then twenty-four years of age. In the enjoyments of society, of travel, and of those thousand luxuries, mental and physical, which fortune secures, three years pa.s.sed rapidly away with the young, handsome, and accomplished Baronet.

One of the earliest convictions of Horace Maitland's life had been, that the refining presence of woman was necessary to the perfection of Maitland Park, and when Sir Thomas said to him, ”Marry, Horace--do not be an old bachelor like your uncle”--though he answered nothing, he vowed in the inmost recesses of his heart that it should not be his fault if he did not obey the injunction. Yet to the world it seemed wholly his own fault that at twenty-seven he had not given to Maitland Park a mistress, and even he himself could not attribute his continued celibacy to the coldness or cruelty of woman; for, in truth, though he had ”knelt at many a shrine,” he had ”laid his heart on none.” If hardly pressed for his reason, he might have said with Ferdinand,--

”For several virtues Have I liked several women; never any With so full soul, but some defect in her Did quarrel with the n.o.blest grace she own'd, And put it to the foil.”

He who after the death of his uncle continued to urge Sir Horace most on the subject of matrimony, was the one of all the world who might have been supposed least desirous to see him enter into its bonds. This was Edward Maitland, a distant cousin, somewhat younger than himself, to whom he had been attached from his boyhood, and who had been saved by his generosity from many of those painful experiences to which a very narrow income would otherwise have subjected him. It had more than once been suggested to Edward Maitland, that should his cousin die unmarried, he might not unreasonably hope to become his heir, as he was supposed to be uncontrolled by any entail in the disposal of his property, and had few nearer relations than himself, and none with whom he maintained such intimate and affectionate intercourse. Nor could Edward Maitland fail to perceive that his own value in society was in an inverse ratio to the chances of the Baronet's marrying, as a report of an actual proposal on the part of the latter had more than once occasioned a visible declension in the number and warmth of his invitations. These considerations appeared, however, only to stimulate the young man's activity in the search of a wife for his cousin. Had he been employed by a marriage broker with a prospect of a liberal commission, he could hardly have been more indefatigable.

”Well, Horace,” exclaimed the younger Maitland, as the two sat loitering over a late London breakfast one morning, ”how did you like the lady to whom I introduced you last evening?”

A smile lighted the eyes of Sir Horace as he replied, ”Very much, Ned--she is certainly intelligent, and has read and thought more than most ladies of her age.”

”She will make a capital manager, I am sure.”

”And an agreeable companion,” added Sir Horace.

”And a good wife--do you not think so, Horace?”

”She doubtless would be to one who could fancy her, Ned; for me her style is a little too _p.r.o.nonce_.”

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