Five minutes later, Tom Thurston entered, and Julia Monson came
down to receive HIM, her pique not interfering, and it being rather
stylish to be disengaged on the morning of the day when the household
was in all the confusion of a premeditated rout.
{premeditated rout = planned party}
"This is SO good of you, Miss Monson," said Tom, as he made his
bow--I heard it all, being still on the sofa--"This is SO good of you,
when your time must have so many demands on it."
"Not in the least, Mr. Thurston--mamma and the housekeeper have
settled every thing, and I am really pleased to see you, as you can give
me the history of the new play--"
"Ah! Miss Monson, my heart--my faculties--my ideas--" Tom was
getting bothered, and he made a desperate effort to extricate himself--
"In short, my JUDGMENT is so confused and monopolized, that I have
no powers left to think or speak of plays. In a word, I was not there."
"That explains it, then--and what has thus confused your mind, Mr.
Thurston?"
"The approach of this awful night. You will be surrounded by a host of
admirers, pouring into your ears their admiration and love, and then
what shall I have to support me, but that 'yes,' with which you once
raised me from the depths of despair to an elevation of happiness that
was high as the highest pinnacle of the caverns of Kentucky; raising me
from the depths of Chimborazo."
{caverns of Kentucky = Mammoth Cave; Chimborazo = a 20,500 foot
volcano in Ecuador}
Tom meant to reverse this image, but love is proverbially desperate in
its figures of speech, and any thing was better than appearing to
hesitate. Nevertheless, Miss Monson was too well instructed, and had
too much real taste, not to feel surprise at all this extravagance of diction
and poetry.
"I am not certain, Mr. Thurston, that I rightly understand you," she said.
"Chimborazo is not particularly low, nor are the caverns of Kentucky so
strikingly elevated."
"Ascribe it all to that fatal, heart-thrilling, hope-inspiring 'yes,' loveliest of
human females," continued Tom, kneeling with some caution, lest the
straps of his pantaloons should give way--"Impute all to your own lucid
ambiguity, and to the torments of hope that I experience. Repeat that
'yes,' lovely, consolatory, imaginative being, and raise me from the thrill
of depression, to the liveliest pulsations of all human acmes."
"Hang it," thought Tom, "if she stand THAT, I shall presently be ashore.
Genius, itself, can invent nothing finer."
But Julia did stand it. She admired Tom for his exterior, but the
admiration of no moderately sensible woman could overlook
rodomontade so exceedingly desperate. It was trespassing too boldly
on the proprieties to utter such nonsense to a gentlewoman, and Tom,
who had got his practice in a very low school, was doomed to discover
that he had overreached himself.
"I am not certain I quite understand you, Mr. Thurston, answered the
half-irritated, half-amused young lady; "your language is so very
extraordinary--your images so unusual--"
"Say, rather, that it is your own image, loveliest incorporation of
perceptible incarnations," interrupted Tom, determined to go for the
whole, and recalling some rare specimens of magazine eloquence--
"Talk not of images, obdurate maid, when you are nothing but an image
yourself."
"I! Mr. Thurston--and of what is it your pleasure to accuse me of being
the image?"
"O! unutterable wo--yes, inexorable girl, your vacillating 'yes' has
rendered me the impersonation of that oppressive sentiment, of which
your beauty and excellence have become the mocking reality. Alas,
alas! that bearded men,"--Tom's face was covered with hair--"Alas,
alas! that bearded men should be brought to weep over the contrarieties
of womanly caprice."
Here Tom bowed his head, and after a grunting sob or two, he raised
his handkerchief in a very pathetic manner to his face, and THOUGHT
to himself--"Well, if she stand THAT, the Lord only knows what I shall
say next."
As for Julia, she was amused, though at first she had been a little
frightened. The girl had a good deal of spirit, and she had tant soit peu
of mother Eve's love of mischief in her. She determined to "make
capital" out of the affair, as the Americans say, in shop-keeping slang.
{tant soit peu = an ever so tiny amount}
"What is the 'yes,' of which you speak," she inquired, "and, on which
you seem to lay so much stress?"
"That 'yes' has been my bane and antidote," answered Tom, rallying for
a new and still more desperate charge. "When first pronounced by your
rubicund lips, it thrilled on my amazed senses like a beacon of light--"
"Mr. Thurston--Mr. Thurston--what DO you mean?"
"Ah, d---n it," thought Tom, "I should have said HUMID light'--how the
deuce did I come to forget that word--it would have rounded the
sentence beautifully."
"What do I mean, angel of 'humid light,'" answered Tom, aloud; "I mean
all I say, and lots of feeling besides. When the heart is anguished with
unutterable emotion, it speaks in accents that deaden all the nerves, and
thrill the ears." Tom was getting to be animated, and when that was the
case, his ideas flowed like a torrent after a thunder-shower, or in
volumes, and a little muddily. "What do I mean, indeed; I mean to have
YOU," he THOUGHT, "and at least, eighty thousand dollars, or
dictionaries, Webster's inclusive, were made in vain."
"This is very extraordinary, Mr. Thurston," rejoined Julia, whose sense
of womanly propriety began to take the alarm; "and I must insist on an
explanation. Your language would seem to infer--really, I do not know,
what it does NOT seem to infer. Will you have the goodness to explain
what you mean by that 'yes?'"
"Simply, loveliest and most benign of your sex, that once already, in
answer to a demand of your hand, you deigned to reply with that
energetic and encouraging monosyllable, yes--dear and categorical
affirmative--" exclaimed Tom, going off again at half-cock, highly
impressed with the notion that rhapsody, instead of music, was the food
of love--"Yes, dear and categorical affirmative, with what ecstasy did
not my drowsy ears drink in the melodious sounds--what extravagance
of delight my throbbing heart echo its notes, on the wings of the unseen
winds--in short, what considerable satisfaction your consent gave my
pulsating mind!"
"Consent!--Consent is a strong WORD, Mr. Thurston!"
"It is, indeed, adorable Julia, and it is also a strong THING. I've known
terrible consequences arise from the denial of a consent, not half as
explicit as your own."
"Consequences!--may I ask, sir, to what consequences you allude?"
"The consequences, Miss Monson--that is, the consequences of a
violated troth, I mean--they may be divided into three parts--" here,
Tom got up, brushed his knees, each in succession, with his pocket-
handkerchief, and began to count on his fingers, like a lawyer who is
summing up an argument--"Yes, Miss Julia, into three parts. First come
the pangs of unrequited love; on these I propose to enlarge presently.
Next come the legal effects, always supposing that the wronged party
can summon heart enough to carry on a suit, with bruised affections--"
"hang it," thought Tom, "why did I not think of that word 'bruised' while
on my knees; it would tell like a stiletto--" "Yes, Miss Julia, if 'bruised
affections' would permit the soul to descend to such preliminaries. The
last consequence is, the despair of hope deferred."
"All this is so extraordinary, Mr. Thurston, that I insist on knowing why
you have presumed to address such language to me--yes, sir, INSIST
on knowing your reason."
Tom was dumbfounded. Now, that he was up, and looking about him,
he had an opportunity of perceiving that his mistress was offended, and
that he had somewhat overdone the sublime, poetical and affecting.
With a sudden revulsion of feeling and tactics, he determined to throw
himself, at once, into the penitent and candid.
"Ah, Miss Monson," he cried, somewhat more naturally--"I see I have
offended and alarmed you. But, impute it all to love. The strength of my
passion is such, that I became desperate, and was resolved to try any
expedient that I thought might lead to success."
"That might be pardoned, sir, were it not for the extraordinary character
of the expedient. Surely, you have never seen in me any taste for the
very extraordinary images and figures of speech you have used, on this
occasion."
"This handkerchief,"--said Tom, taking me from the sofa--"this
handkerchief must bear all the blame. But for this, I should not have
dreamt of running so much on the high-pressure principle; but love, you
know, Miss Julia, is a calculation, like any other great event of life, and
must be carried on consistently."
"And, pray, sir, how can that handkerchief have brought about any such
result?"
"Ah! Miss Monson, you ask me to use a most killing frankness! Had we
not better remain under the influence of the poetical star?"
"If you wish to ensure my respect, or esteem, Mr. Thurston, it is
necessary to deal with me in perfect sincerity. Nothing but truth will ever
be pleasing to me."
"Hang it," THOUGHT Tom, again, "who knows? She is whimsical, and
may really like to have the truth. It's quite clear her heart is as insensible
to eloquence and poetry, as a Potter's Field wall, and it might answer to
try her with a little truth. Your $80,000 girls get SUCH notions in their
heads, that there's no analogy, as one might say, between them and the
rest of the species. Miss Julia," continuing aloud, "my nature is all plain-
dealing, and I am delighted to find a congenial spirit. You must have
observed something very peculiar in my language, at the commencement
of this exceedingly interesting dialogue?"
"I will not deny it, Mr. Thurston; your language was, to say the least,
VERY peculiar."
"Lucid, but ambiguous; pathetic, but amusing; poetical, but
comprehensive; prosaical, but full of emphasis. That's my nature. Plain-
dealing, too, is my nature, and I adore the same quality in others; most
especially in those I could wish to marry."
"Does this wish, then, extend to the plural number?" asked Julia, smiling
a little maliciously.
"Certainly; when the heart is devoted to virtuous intentions, it wishes for
a union with virtue, where-ever it is to be found. Competence and virtue
are my mottoes, Miss Julia."
"This shows that you are, in truth, a lover of plain-dealing, Mr.
Thurston--and now, as to the handkerchief?"
"Why, Miss Julia, perceiving that you are sincere, I shall be equally
frank. You own this handkerchief?"
"Certainly, sir. I should hardly use an article of dress that is the property
of another."
"Independent, and the fruit of independence. Well, Miss Monson, it
struck me that the mistress of such a handkerchief MUST like poetry--
that is, flights of the imagination--that is, eloquence and pathos, as it
might be engrafted on passion and sentiment."
"I believe I understand you, sir; you wish to say that common sense
seemed misapplied to the owner of such a handkerchief."
"Far from that, adorable young lady; but, that poetry, and eloquence,
and flights of imagination, seem well applied. A very simple calculation
will demonstrate what I mean. But, possibly, you do not wish to hear
the calculation--ladies, generally, dislike figures?"
"I am an exception, Mr. Thurston; I beg you will lay the whole matter
before me, therefore, without reserve."
"It is simply this, ma'am. This handkerchief cost every cent of $100--"
"One hundred and twenty-five," said Julia quickly.
"Bless me," THOUGHT Tom, "what a rich old d---l her father must be.
I will not give her up; and as poetry and sentiment do not seem to be
favorites, here goes for frankness--some women are furious for plain
matter-of-fact fellows, and this must be one of the number. One
hundred and twenty-five dollars is a great deal of money," he added,
aloud, "and the interest, at 7 per cent, will come to $1.75. Including first
cost and washing, the annual expense of this handkerchief may be set
down at $2. But, the thing will not last now five years, if one includes
fashion, wear and tear, &c., and this will bring the whole expense up to
$27 per annum. We will suppose your fortune to be $50,000, Miss
Julia--"
Here Tom paused, and cast a curious glance at the young lady, in the
hope of hearing something explicit. Julia could hardly keep her
countenance, but she was resolved to go to the bottom of all this plain-
dealing.
"Well, sir," she answered, "we will suppose it, as you say, $50,000."
"The interest, then, would be $3,500. Now 27 multiplied by 130--"
here Tom took out his pencil and began to cypher--"make just 3510, or
rather more than the whole amount of the interest. Well, when you
come to deduct taxes, charges, losses and other things, the best
invested estate of $3,500 per annum, will not yield more than $3,000,
nett. Suppose a marriage, and the husband has ONLY $1,000 for his
pocket, this would bring down the ways and means to $2,000 per
annum; or less than a hundredth part of the expense of keeping ONE
pocket-handkerchief; and when you come to include rent, fuel,
marketing, and other necessaries, you see, my dear Miss Monson, there
is a great deal of poetry in paying so much for a pocket-handkerchief."
"I believe I understand you, sir, and shall endeavor to profit by the
lesson. As I am wanted, you will now excuse me, Mr. Thurston--my
father's step is in the hall--" so Julia, in common with all other
Manhattanese, called a passage, or entry, five feet wide--" and to him I
must refer you."
This was said merely as an excuse for quitting the room. But Tom
received it literally and figuratively, at the same time.