<p>This young Evelina, by the fine dignity which had been born with
her and not acquired by precept and example, by the sweetly formal
diction which seemed her native tongue, had filled him with awe. Now,
when he thought she was angered with him, he felt beneath her lady
feet, his nostrils choked with a spiritual dust of humiliation.</p>
<p>He went forward blindly. The dusk had deepened; from either side
of the road, from the mysterious gloom of the bushes, came the twangs
of the katydids, like some coarse rustic quarrellers, each striving
for the last word in a dispute not even dignified by excess of
passion.</p>
<p>Suddenly somebody jostled him to his own side of the path.
“That you, Thomas? Where you been?” said a voice in his
ear.</p>
<p>“That you, father? Down to the post-office.”</p>
<p>“Who was that you was talkin' with back there?”</p>
<p>“Miss Evelina Leonard.”</p>
<p>“That girl that's stayin' there—to the old
Squire's?”</p>
<p>“Yes.” The son tried to move on, but his father stood
before him dumbly for a minute. “I must be going, father. I've
got to work on my sermon,” Thomas said, impatiently.</p>
<p>“Wait a minute,” said his father. “I've got
something to say to ye, Thomas, an' this is as good a time to say it
as any. There ain't anybody 'round. I don't know as ye'll thank me
for it—but mother said the other day that she thought you'd
kind of an idea—she said you asked her if she thought it would
be anything out of the way for you to go up to the Squire's to make a
call. Mother she thinks you can step in anywheres, but I don't know.
I know your book-learnin' and your bein' a minister has set you up a
good deal higher than your mother and me and any of our folks, and I
feel as if you were good enough for anybody, as far as that goes; but
that ain't all. Some folks have different startin'-points in this
world, and they see things different; and when they do, it ain't much
use tryin' to make them walk alongside and see things alike. Their
eyes have got different cants, and they ain't able to help it. Now
this girl she's related to the old Squire, and she's been brought up
different, and she started ahead, even if her father did lose all his
property. She 'ain't never eat in the kitchen, nor been scart to set
down in the parlor, and satin and velvet, and silver spoons, and
cream-pots 'ain't never looked anything out of the common to her, and
they always will to you. No matter how many such things you may live
to have, they'll always get a little the better of ye. She'll be 'way
above 'em; and you won't, no matter how hard you try. Some ideas
can't never mix; and when ideas can't mix, folks can't.”</p>
<p>“I never said they could,” returned Thomas, shortly.
“I can't stop to talk any longer, father. I must go
home.”</p>
<p>“No, you wait a minute, Thomas. I'm goin' to say out what I
started to, and then I sha'n't ever bring it up again. What I was
comin' at was this: I wanted to warn ye a little. You mustn't set too
much store by little things that you think mean consider'ble when
they don't. Looks don't count for much, and I want you to remember
it, and not be upset by 'em.”</p>
<p>Thomas gave a great start and colored high. “I'd like to
know what you mean, father,” he cried, sharply.</p>
<p>“Nothin'. I don't mean nothin', only I'm older'n you, and
it's come in my way to know some things, and it's fittin' you should
profit by it. A young woman's looks at you don't count for much. I
don't s'pose she knows why she gives 'em herself half the time; they
ain't like us. It's best you should make up your mind to it; if you
don't, you may find it out by the hardest. That's all. I ain't never
goin' to bring this up again.”</p>
<p>“I'd like to know what you mean, father.” Thomas's
voice shook with embarrassment and anger.</p>
<p>“I ain't goin' to say anything more about it,” replied
the old man. “Mary Ann Pease and Arabella Mann are both in the
settin'-room with your mother. I thought I'd tell ye, in case ye
didn't want to see 'em, and wanted to go to work on your
sermon.”</p>
<p>Thomas made an impatient ejaculation as he strode off. When he
reached the large white house where he lived he skirted it carefully.
The chirping treble of girlish voices came from the open sitting-room
window, and he caught a glimpse of a smooth brown head and a high
shell comb in front of the candle-light. The young minister tiptoed
in the back door and across the kitchen to the back stairs. The
sitting-room door was open, and the candle-light streamed out, and
the treble voices rose high. Thomas, advancing through the dusky
kitchen with cautious steps, encountered suddenly a chair in the dark
corner by the stairs, and just saved himself from falling. There was
a startled outcry from the sitting-room, and his mother came running
into the kitchen with a candle.</p>
<p>“Who is it?” she demanded, valiantly. Then she started
and gasped as her son confronted her. He shook a furious warning fist
at the sitting-room door and his mother, and edged towards the
stairs. She followed him close. “Hadn't you better jest step in
a minute?” she whispered. “Them girls have been here an
hour, and I know they're waitin' to see you.” Thomas shook his
head fiercely, and swung himself around the corner into the dark
crook of the back stairs. His mother thrust the candle into his hand.
“Take this, or you'll break your neck on them stairs,”
she whispered.</p>
<p>Thomas, stealing up the stairs like a cat, heard one of the girls
call to his mother—“Is it robbers, Mis' Merriam? Want us
to come an' help tackle 'em?”—and he fairly shuddered;
for Evelina's gentle-lady speech was still in his ears, and this rude
girlish call seemed to jar upon his sensibilities.</p>
<p>“The idea of any girl screeching out like that,” he
muttered. And if he had carried speech as far as his thought, he
would have added, “when Evelina is a girl!”</p>
<p>He was so angry that he did not laugh when he heard his mother
answer back, in those conclusive tones of hers that were wont to
silence all argument: “It ain't anything. Don't be scared. I'm
coming right back.” Mrs. Merriam scorned subterfuges. She took
always a silent stand in a difficulty, and let people infer what they
would. When Mary Ann Pease inquired if it was the cat that had made
the noise, she asked if her mother had finished her blue and white
counterpane.</p>
<p>The two girls waited a half-hour longer, then they went home.
“What do you s'pose made that noise out in the kitchen?”
asked Arabella Mann of Mary Ann Pease, the minute they were
out-of-doors.</p>
<p>“I don't know,” replied Mary Ann Pease. She was a
broad-backed young girl, and looked like a matron as she hurried
along in the dusk.</p>
<p>“Well, I know what I think it was,” said Arabella
Mann, moving ahead with sharp jerks of her little dark body.</p>
<p>“What?”</p>
<p>“It was him.”</p>
<p>“You don't mean—”</p>
<p>“I think it was Thomas Merriam, and he was tryin' to get up
the back stairs unbeknownst to anybody, and he run into
something.”</p>
<p>“What for?”</p>
<p>“Because he didn't want to see <em>us</em>.”</p>
<p>“Now, Arabella Mann, I don't believe it! He's always real
pleasant to me.”</p>
<p>“Well, I do believe it, and I guess he'll know it when I set
foot in that house again. I guess he'll find out I didn't go there to
see him! He needn't feel so fine, if he is the minister; his folks
ain't any better than mine, an' we've got 'nough sight handsomer
furniture in our parlor.”</p>
<p>“Did you see how the tallow had all run down over the
candles?”</p>
<p>“Yes, I did. She gave that candle she carried out in the
kitchen to him, too. Mother says she wasn't never any kind of a
housekeeper.”</p>
<p>“Hush! Arabella: here he is coming now.”</p>
<p>But it was not Thomas; it was his father, advancing through the
evening with his son's gait and carriage. When the two girls
discovered that, one tittered out quite audibly, and they scuttled
past. They were not rivals; they simply walked faithfully side by
side in pursuit of the young minister, giving him as it were an
impartial choice. There were even no heart-burnings between them; one
always confided in the other when she supposed herself to have found
some slight favor in Thomas's sight; and, indeed, the young minister
could scarcely bow to one upon the street unless she flew to the
other with the news.</p>
<p>Thomas Merriam himself was aware of all this devotion on the part
of the young women of his flock, and it filled him with a sort of
angry shame. He could not have told why, but he despised himself for
being the object of their attention more than he despised them. His
heart sank at the idea of Evelina's discovering it. What would she
think of him if she knew all those young women haunted his house and
lagged after meeting on the chance of getting a word from him?
Suppose she should see their eyes upon his face in meeting time, and
decipher their half-unconscious boldness, as he had done against his
will. Once Evelina had looked at him, even as the older Evelina had
looked at his father, and all other looks of maidens seemed to him
like profanations of that, even although he doubted afterwards that
he had rightly interpreted it. Full it had seemed to him of that
tender maiden surprise and wonder, of that love that knows not
itself, and sees its own splendor for the first time in another's
face, and flees at the sight. It had happened once when he was coming
down the aisle after the sermon and Evelina had met him at the door
of her pew. But she had turned her head quickly, and her soft curls
flowed over her red cheek, and he doubted ever after if he had read
the look aright. When he had gotten the courage to speak to her, and
she had met him with the gentle coldness which she had learned of her
lady aunt and her teacher in Boston, his doubt was strong upon him.
The next Sunday he looked not her way at all. He even tried
faithfully from day to day to drive her image from his mind with
prayer and religious thoughts, but in spite of himself he would lapse
into dreams about her, as if borne by a current of nature too strong
to be resisted. And sometimes, upon being awakened from them, as he
sat over his sermon with the ink drying on his quill, by the sudden
outburst of treble voices in his mother's sitting-room below, the
fancy would seize him that possibly these other young damsels took
fond liberties with him in their dreams, as he with Evelina, and he
resented it with a fierce maidenliness of spirit, although he was a
man. The thought that possibly they, over their spinning or their
quilting, had in their hearts the image of himself with fond words
upon his lips and fond looks in his eyes, filled him with shame and
rage, although he took the same liberty with the delicately haughty
maiden Evelina.</p>
<p>But Thomas Merriam was not given to undue appreciation of his own
fascination, as was proved by his ready discouragement in the case of
Evelina. He had the knowledge of his conquests forced upon his
understanding until he could no longer evade it. Every day were
offerings laid upon his shrine, of pound-cakes and flaky pies, and
loaves of white bread, and cups of jelly, whereby the culinary skill
of his devotees might be proved. Silken purses and beautiful socks
knitted with fancy stitches, and holy book-marks for his Bible, and
even a wonderful bedquilt, and a fine linen shirt with hem-stitched
bands, poured in upon him. He burned with angry blushes when his
mother, smiling meaningly, passed them over to him. “Put them
away, mother; I don't want them,” he would growl out, in a
distress that was half comic and half pathetic. He would never taste
of the tempting viands which were brought to him. “How you act,
Thomas!” his mother would say. She was secretly elated by these
feminine libations upon the altar of her son. They did not grate upon
her sensibilities, which were not delicate. She even tried to assist
two or three of the young women in their designs; she would often
praise them and their handiwork to her son—and in this she was
aided by an old woman aunt of hers who lived with the family.
“Nancy Winslow is as handsome a girl as ever I set eyes on, an'
I never see any nicer sewin',” Mrs. Merriam said, after the
advent of the linen shirt, and she held it up to the light
admiringly. “Jest look at that hem-stitchin'!” she
said.</p>
<p>“I guess whoever made that shirt calkilated 't would do for
a weddin' one,” said old Aunt Betty Green, and Thomas made an
exclamation and went out of the room, tingling all over with shame
and disgust.</p>
<p>“Thomas don't act nateral,” said the old woman,
glancing after him through her iron-bound spectacles.</p>
<p>“I dun'no' what's got into him,” returned his
mother.</p>
<p>“Mebbe they foller him up a leetle too close,” said
Aunt Betty. “I dun'no' as I should have ventured on a shirt
when I was a gal. I made a satin vest once for Joshua, but that don't
seem quite as p'inted as a shirt. It didn't scare Joshua, nohow. He
asked me to have him the next week.”</p>
<p>“Well, I dun'no',” said Mrs. Merriam again. “I
kind of wish Thomas would settle on somebody, for I'm pestered most
to death with 'em, an' I feel as if 't was kind of mean takin' all
these things into the house.”</p>
<p>“They've 'bout kept ye in sweet cake, 'ain't they,
lately?”</p>
<p>“Yes; but I don't feel as if it was jest right for us to eat
it up, when 't was brought for Thomas. But he won't touch it. I can't
see as he has the least idee of any one of them. I don't believe
Thomas has ever seen anybody he wanted for a wife.”</p>
<p>“Well, he's got the pick of 'em, a-settin' their caps right
in his face,” said Aunt Betty.</p>
<p>Neither of them dreamed how the young man, sleeping and eating and
living under the same roof, beloved of them since he entered the
world, holding himself coldly aloof from this crowd of
half-innocently, half-boldly ardent young women, had set up for
himself his own divinity of love, before whom he consumed himself in
vain worship. His father suspected, and that was all, and he never
mentioned the matter again to his son.</p>
<p>After Thomas had spoken to Evelina the weeks went on, and they
never exchanged another word, and their eyes never met. But they
dwelt constantly within each other's thoughts, and were ever present
to each other's spiritual vision. Always as the young minister bent
over his sermon-paper, laboriously tracing out with sputtering quill
his application of the articles of the orthodox faith, Evelina's blue
eyes seemed to look out at him between the stern doctrines like the
eyes of an angel. And he could not turn the pages of the Holy Writ
unless he found some passage therein which to his mind treated
directly of her, setting forth her graces like a prophecy. “The
fairest among women,” read Thomas Merriam, and nodded his head,
while his heart leaped with the satisfied delight of all its fancies,
at the image of his love's fair and gentle face. “Her price is
far above rubies,” read Thomas Merriam, and he nodded his head
again, and saw Evelina shining as with gold and pearls, more precious
than all the jewels of the earth. In spite of all his efforts, when
Thomas Merriam studied the Scriptures in those days he was more
nearly touched by those old human hearts which throbbed down to his
through the ages, welding the memories of their old loves to his
living one until they seemed to prove its eternity, than by the
Messianic prophecies. Often he spent hours upon his knees, but arose
with Evelina's face before his very soul in spite of all.</p>
<p>And as for Evelina, she tended the flowers in the elder Evelina's
garden with her poor cousin, whose own love-dreams had been
illustrated as it were by the pinks and lilies blooming around them
when they had all gone out of her heart, and Thomas Merriam's
half-bold, half-imploring eyes looked up at her out of every flower
and stung her heart like bees. Poor young Evelina feared much lest
she had offended Thomas, and yet her own maiden decorum had been
offended by him, and she had offended it herself, and she was faint
with shame and distress when she thought of it. How had she been so
bold and shameless as to give him that look at the meeting-house? and
how had he been so cruel as to accost her afterwards? She told
herself she had done right for the maintenance of her own maiden
dignity, and yet she feared lest she had angered him and hurt him.
“Suppose he had been fretted by her coolness?” she
thought, and then a great wave of tender pity went over her heart,
and she would almost have spoken to him of her own accord. But then
she would reflect how he continued to write such beautiful sermons,
and prove so clearly and logically the tenets of the faith; and how
could he do that with a mind in distress? Scarcely could she herself
tend the flower-beds as she should, nor set her embroidery stitches
finely and evenly, she was so ill at ease. It must be that Thomas had
not given the matter an hour's worry, since he continued to do his
work so faithfully and well. And then her own heart would be sorer
than ever with the belief that his was happy and at rest, although
she would chide herself for it.</p>
<p>And yet this young Evelina was a philosopher and an analyst of
human nature in a small way, and she got some slight comfort out of a
shrewd suspicion that the heart of a man might love and suffer on a
somewhat different principle from the heart of a woman. “It may
be,” thought Evelina, sitting idle over her embroidery with
far-away blue eyes, “that a man's heart can always turn a while
from love to other things as weighty and serious, although he be just
as fond, while a woman's heart is always fixed one way by loving, and
cannot be turned unless it breaks. And it may be wise,” thought
young Evelina, “else how could the state be maintained and
governed, battles for independence be fought, and even souls be
saved, and the gospel carried to the heathen, if men could not turn
from the concerns of their own hearts more easily than women? Women
should be patient,” thought Evelina, “and consider that
if they suffer 't is due to the lot which a wise Providence has given
them.” And yet tears welled up in her earnest blue eyes and
fell over her fair cheeks and wet the embroidery—when the elder
Evelina was not looking, as she seldom was. The elder Evelina was
kind to her young cousin, but there were days when she seemed to
dwell alone in her own thoughts, apart from the whole world, and she
seldom spoke either to Evelina or her old servant-man.</p>
<p>Young Evelina, trying to atone for her former indiscretion and
establish herself again on her height of maiden reserve in Thomas
Merriam's eyes, sat resolutely in the meeting-house of a Sabbath day,
with her eyes cast down, and after service she glided swiftly down
the aisle and was out of the door before the young minister could
much more than descend the pulpit stairs, unless he ran an indecorous
race.</p>
<p>And young Evelina never at twilight strolled up the road in the
direction of Thomas Merriam's home, where she might quite reasonably
hope to meet him, since he was wont to go to the store when the
evening stage-coach came in with the mail from Boston.</p>
<p>Instead she paced the garden paths, or, when there was not too
heavy a dew, rambled across the fields; and there was also a lane
where she loved to walk. Whether or not Thomas Merriam suspected
this, or had ever seen, as he passed the mouth of the lane, the
flutter of maidenly draperies in the distance, it so happened that
one evening he also went a-walking there, and met Evelina. He had
entered the lane from the highway, and she from the fields at the
head. So he saw her first afar off, and could not tell fairly whether
her light muslin skirt might not be only a white-flowering bush. For,
since his outlook upon life had been so full of Evelina, he had found
that often the most common and familiar things would wear for a
second a look of her to startle him. And many a time his heart had
leaped at the sight of a white bush ahead stirring softly in the
evening wind, and he had thought it might be she. Now he said to
himself impatiently that this was only another fancy; but soon he saw
that it was indeed Evelina, in a light muslin gown, with a little
lace kerchief on her head. His handsome young face was white; his
lips twitched nervously; but he reached out and pulled a spray of
white flowers from a bush, and swung it airily to hide his agitation
as he advanced.</p>
<p>As for Evelina, when she first espied Thomas she started and half
turned, as if to go back; then she held up her white-kerchiefed head
with gentle pride and kept on. When she came up to Thomas she walked
so far to one side that her muslin skirt was in danger of catching
and tearing on the bushes, and she never raised her eyes, and not a
flicker of recognition stirred her sweet pale face as she passed
him.</p>
<p>But Thomas started as if she had struck him, and dropped his spray
of white flowers, and could not help a smothered cry that was half a
sob, as he went on, knocking blindly against the bushes. He went a
little way, then he stopped and looked back with his piteous hurt
eyes. And Evelina had stopped also, and she had the spray of white
flowers which he had dropped, in her hand, and her eyes met his. Then
she let the flowers fall again, and clapped both her little hands to
her face to cover it, and turned to run; but Thomas was at her side,
and he put out his hand and held her softly by her white arm.</p>
<p>“Oh,” he panted, “I—did not mean to
be—too presuming, and offend you. I—crave your
pardon—”</p>
<p>Evelina had recovered herself. She stood with her little hands
clasped, and her eyes cast down before him, but not a quiver stirred
her pale face, which seemed turned to marble by this last effort of
her maiden pride. “I have nothing to pardon,” said she.
“It was I, whose bold behavior, unbecoming a modest and
well-trained young woman, gave rise to what seemed like presumption
on your part.” The sense of justice was strong within her, but
she made her speech haughtily and primly, as if she had learned it by
rote from some maiden school-mistress, and pulled her arm away and
turned to go; but Thomas's words stopped her.</p>
<p>“Not—unbecoming if it came—from the
heart,” said he, brokenly, scarcely daring to speak, and yet
not daring to be silent.</p>
<p>Then Evelina turned on him, with a sudden strange pride that lay
beneath all other pride, and was of a nobler and truer sort.
“Do you think I would have given you the look that I did if it
had not come from my heart?” she demanded. “What did you
take me to be—false and a jilt? I may be a forward young woman,
who has overstepped the bounds of maidenly decorum, and I shall never
get over the shame of it, but I am truthful, and I am no jilt.”
The brilliant color flamed out on Evelina's cheeks. Her blue eyes
met Thomas's with that courage of innocence and nature which dares
all shame. But it was only for a second; the tears sprang into them.
“I beg you to let me go home,” she said, pitifully; but
Thomas caught her in his arms, and pressed her troubled maiden face
against his breast.</p>
<p>“Oh, I love you so!” he whispered—“I love
you so, Evelina, and I was afraid you were angry with me for
it.”</p>
<p>“And I was afraid,” she faltered, half weeping and
half shrinking from him, “lest you were angry with me for
betraying the state of my feelings, when you could not return
them.” And even then she used that gentle formality of
expression with which she had been taught by her maiden preceptors to
veil decorously her most ardent emotions. And, in truth, her training
stood her in good stead in other ways; for she presently commanded,
with that mild dignity of hers which allowed of no remonstrance, that
Thomas should take away his arm from her waist, and give her no more
kisses for that time.</p>
<p>“It is not becoming for any one,” said she, “and
much less for a minister of the gospel. And as for myself, I know not
what Mistress Perkins would say to me. She has a mind much above me,
I fear.”</p>
<p>“Mistress Perkins is enjoying her mind in Boston,”
said Thomas Merriam, with the laugh of a triumphant young lover.</p>
<p>But Evelina did not laugh. “It might be well for both you
and me if she were here,” said she, seriously. However, she
tempered a little her decorous following of Mistress Perkins's
precepts, and she and Thomas went hand in hand up the lane and across
the fields.</p>
<p>There was no dew that night, and the moon was full. It was after
nine o'clock when Thomas left her at the gate in the fence which
separated Evelina Adams's garden from the field, and watched her
disappear between the flowers. The moon shone full on the garden.
Evelina walked as it were over a silver dapple, which her light gown
seemed to brush away and dispel for a moment. The bushes stood in
sweet mysterious clumps of shadow.</p>
<p>Evelina had almost reached the house, and was close to the great
althea bush, which cast a wide circle of shadow, when it seemed
suddenly to separate and move into life.</p>
<p>The elder Evelina stepped out from the shadow of the bush.
“Is that you, Evelina?” she said, in her soft, melancholy
voice, which had in it a nervous vibration.</p>
<p>“Yes, Cousin Evelina.”</p>
<p>The elder Evelina's pale face, drooped about with gray curls, had
an unfamiliar, almost uncanny, look in the moonlight, and might have
been the sorrowful visage of some marble nymph, lovelorn, with
unceasing grace. “Who—was with you?” she asked.</p>
<p>“The minister,” replied young Evelina.</p>
<p>“Did he meet you?”</p>
<p>“He met me in the lane, Cousin Evelina.”</p>
<p>“And he walked home with you across the field?”</p>
<p>“Yes, Cousin Evelina.”</p>
<p>Then the two entered the house, and nothing more was said about
the matter. Young Evelina and Thomas Merriam agreed that their
affection was to be kept a secret for a while. “For,”
said young Evelina, “I cannot leave Cousin Evelina yet a while,
and I cannot have her pestered with thinking about it, at least
before another spring, when she has the garden fairly growing
again.”</p>
<p>“That is nearly a whole year; it is August now,” said
Thomas, half reproachfully, and he tightened his clasp of Evelina's
slender fingers.</p>
<p>“I cannot help that,” replied Evelina. “It is
for you to show Christian patience more than I, Thomas. If you could
have seen poor Cousin Evelina, as I have seen her, through the long
winter days, when her garden is dead, and she has only the few plants
in her window left! When she is not watering and tending them she
sits all day in the window and looks out over the garden and the
naked bushes and the withered flower-stalks. She used not to be so,
but would read her Bible and good books, and busy herself somewhat
over fine needle-work, and at one time she was compiling a little
floral book, giving a list of the flowers, and poetical selections
and sentiments appropriate to each. That was her pastime for three
winters, and it is now nearly done; but she has given that up, and
all the rest, and sits there in the window and grows older and
feebler until spring. It is only I who can divert her mind, by
reading aloud to her and singing; and sometimes I paint the flowers
she loves the best on card-board with water-colors. I have a poor
skill in it, but Cousin Evelina can tell which flower I have tried to
represent, and it pleases her greatly. I have even seen her smile.
No, I cannot leave her, nor even pester her with telling her before
another spring, and you must wait, Thomas,” said young
Evelina.</p>
<p>And Thomas agreed, as he was likely to do to all which she
proposed which touched not his own sense of right and honor. Young
Evelina gave Thomas one more kiss for his earnest pleading, and that
night wrote out the tale in her journal. “It may be that I
overstepped the bounds of maidenly decorum,” wrote Evelina,
“but my heart did so entreat me,” and no blame whatever
did she lay upon Thomas.</p>
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