"What, Hannah?"
"Well--fair, plain, open, straight-forward, upright dealing, such as should always exist between man and woman."
"Hannah, you are unjust to me! Am I not fair, plain, open, straight-forward, upright, and all the rest of it in my dealing with you?"
"With us, yes; but--"
"With my mother it is necessary to be cautious. It is true that she has no right to oppose my marriage with Nora; but yet she would oppose it, even to death! Therefore, to save trouble and secure peace, I would marry my dear Nora quietly. Mystery, Hannah, is not necessarily guilt; it is often wisdom and mercy. Do not object to a little harmless mystery, that is besides to secure peace! Come, Hannah, what say you?"
"How long must this marriage, should it take place, be kept a secret?"
inquired Hannah uneasily.
"Not one hour longer than you and Nora think it necessary that it should be declared! Still, I should beg your forbearance as long as possible.
Come, Hannah, your answer!"
"I must have time to reflect. I fear I should be doing very wrong to consent to this marriage, and yet--and yet--. But I must take a night to think of it! To-morrow, Mr. Brudenell, I will give you an answer!"
With this reply the young man was obliged to be contented. Soon after he arose and took his leave.
When he was quite out of hearing Nora arose and threw herself into her sister"s arms, crying:
"Oh, Hannah, consent! consent! I cannot live without him!"
The elder sister caressed the younger tenderly; told her of all the dangers of a secret marriage; of all the miseries of an ill-sorted one; and implored her to dismiss her wealthy lover, and struggle with her misplaced love.
Nora replied only with tears and sobs, and vain repet.i.tions of the words:
"I cannot live without him, Hannah! I cannot live without him!"
Alas, for weakness, willfulness, and pa.s.sion! They, and not wise counsels, gained the day. Nora would not give up her lover; would not struggle with her love; but would have her own way.
At length, in yielding a reluctant acquiesence, Hannah said:
"I would never countenance this--never, Nora! but for one reason; it is that I know, whether I consent or not, you two, weak and willful and pa.s.sionate as you are, will rush into this imprudent marriage all the same! And I think for your sake it had better take place with my sanction, and in my presence, than otherwise."
Nora clasped her sister"s neck and covered her face with kisses.
"He means well by us, dear Hannah--indeed he does, bless him! So do not look so grave because we are going to be happy."
Had Herman felt sure of his answer the next day? It really seemed so; for when he made his appearance at the cottage in the morning he brought the marriage license in his pocket and a peripatetic minister in his company.
And before the astonished sisters had time to recover their self-possession Herman Brudenell"s will had carried his purpose, and the marriage ceremony was performed. The minister then wrote out the certificate, which was signed by himself, and witnessed by Hannah, and handed it to the bride.
"Now, dearest Nora," whispered the triumphant bridegroom, "I am happy, and you are safe!"
But--were either of them really safe or happy?
CHAPTER V.
LOVE AND FATE.
Amid the sylvan solitude Of unshorn gra.s.s and waving wood And waters glancing bright and fast, A softened voice was in her ear, Sweet as those lulling sounds and fine The hunter lifts his head to hear, Now far and faint, now full and near-- The murmur of the wood swept pine.
A manly form was ever nigh, A bold, free hunter, with an eye Whose dark, keen glance had power to wake Both fear and love--to awe and charm.
Faded the world that they had known, A poor vain shadow, cold and waste, In the warm present bliss alone Seemed they of actual life to taste.
--_Whittier_.
It was in the month of June they were married; when the sun shone with his brightest splendor; when the sky was of the clearest blue, when the gra.s.s was of the freshest green, the woods in their rudest foliage, the flowers in their richest bloom, and all nature in her most luxuriant life! Yes, June was their honeymoon; the forest shades their bridal halls, and birds and flowers and leaves and rills their train of attendants. For weeks they lived a kind of fairy life, wandering together through the depths of the valley forest, discovering through the illumination of their love new beauties and glories in the earth and sky; new sympathies with every form of life. Were ever suns so bright, skies so clear, and woods so green as theirs in this month of beauty, love, and joy!
"It seems to me that I must have been deaf and blind and stupid in the days before I knew you, Herman! for then the sun seemed only to shine, and now I feel that he smiles as well as shines; then the trees only seemed to bend under a pa.s.sing breeze, now I know they stoop to caress us; then the flowers seemed only to be crowded, now I know they draw together to kiss; then indeed I loved nature, but now I know that she also is alive and loves me!" said Nora, one day, as they sat upon a bank of wild thyme under the spreading branches of an old oak tree that stood alone in a little opening of the forest.
"You darling of nature! you might have known that all along!" exclaimed Herman, enthusiastically pressing her to his heart.
"Oh, how good you are to love me so much! you--so high, so learned, so wealthy; you who have seen so many fine ladies--to come down to me, a poor, ignorant, weaver-girl!" said Nora humbly--for true love in many a woman is ever most humble and most idolatrous, abasing itself and idolizing its object.
"Come down to you, my angel and my queen! to you, whose beauty is so heavenly and so royal that it seems to me everyone should worship and adore you! how could I come down to you! Ah, Nora, it seems to me that it is you who have stooped to me! There are kings on this earth, my beloved, who might be proud to place such regal beauty on their thrones beside them! For, oh! you are as beautiful, my Nora, as any woman of old, for whom heroes lost worlds!"
"Do you think so? do you really think so? I am so glad for your sake! I wish I were ten times as beautiful! and high-born, and learned, and accomplished, and wealthy, and everything else that is good, for your sake! Herman, I would be willing to pa.s.s through a fiery furnace if by doing so I could come out like refined gold, for your sake!"
"Hush, hush, sweet love! that fiery furnace of which you speak is the Scriptural symbol for fearful trial and intense suffering! far be it from you! for I would rather my whole body were consumed to ashes than one shining tress of your raven hair should be singed!"
"But, Herman! one of the books you read to me said: "All that is good must be toiled for; all that is best must be suffered for"; and I am willing to do or bear anything in the world that would make me more worthy of you!"
"My darling, you are worthy of a monarch, and much too good for me!"
"How kind you are to say so! but for all that I know I am only a poor, humble, ignorant girl, quite unfit to be your wife! And, oh! sometimes it makes me very sad to think so!" said Nora, with a deep sigh.
"Then do not think so, my own! why should you? You are beautiful; you are good; you are lovely and beloved, and you ought to be happy!"
exclaimed Herman.
"Oh, I am happy! very happy now! For whatever I do or say, right or wrong, is good in your eyes, and pleases you because you love me so much. G.o.d bless you! G.o.d love you! G.o.d save you, whatever becomes of your poor Nora!" she said, with a still heavier sigh.
At this moment a soft summer cloud floated between them and the blazing meridian sun, veiling its glory.
"Why, what is the matter, love? What has come over you?" inquired Herman, gently caressing her.
"I do not know; nothing more than that perhaps," answered Nora, pointing to the cloud that was now pa.s.sing over the sun.
""Nothing more than that." Well, that has now pa.s.sed, so smile forth again, my sun!" said Herman gayly.
"Ah, dear Herman, if this happy life could only last! this life in which we wander or repose in these beautiful summer woods, among rills and flowers and birds! Oh, it is like the Arcadia of which you read to me in your books, Herman! Ah, if it would only last!"
"Why should it not, love?"
"Because it cannot. Winter will come with its wind and snow and ice. The woods will be bare, the gra.s.s dry, the flowers all withered, the streams frozen, and the birds gone away, and we--" Here her voice sank into silence, but Herman took up the word: