<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXIV"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
<h3>DESIRES AND DREAMS</h3>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_229" id="Page_229"></SPAN></span>Moses passed rather a restless and uneasy night on his
return to the home-roof which had sheltered his childhood.
All his life past, and all his life expected, seemed to boil
and seethe and ferment in his thoughts, and to go round
and round in never-ceasing circles before him.</p>
<p>Moses was <i>par excellence</i> proud, ambitious, and willful.
These words, generally supposed to describe positive vices
of the mind, in fact are only the overaction of certain very
valuable portions of our nature, since one can conceive all
three to raise a man immensely in the scale of moral being,
simply by being applied to right objects. He who is too
proud even to admit a mean thought—who is ambitious
only of ideal excellence—who has an inflexible will only
in the pursuit of truth and righteousness—may be a saint
and a hero.</p>
<p>But Moses was neither a saint nor a hero, but an undeveloped
chaotic young man, whose pride made him sensitive
and restless; whose ambition was fixed on wealth and
worldly success; whose willfulness was for the most part
a blind determination to compass his own points, with the
leave of Providence or without. There was no God in his
estimate of life—and a sort of secret unsuspected determination
at the bottom of his heart that there should be
none. He feared religion, from a suspicion which he entertained
that it might hamper some of his future schemes.
He did not wish to put himself under its rules, lest he
might find them in some future time inconveniently strict.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_230" id="Page_230"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>With such determinations and feelings, the Bible—necessarily
an excessively uninteresting book to him—he
never read, and satisfied himself with determining in a
general way that it was not worth reading, and, as was the
custom with many young men in America at that period,
announced himself as a skeptic, and seemed to value himself
not a little on the distinction. Pride in skepticism is
a peculiar distinction of young men. It takes years and
maturity to make the discovery that the power of faith is
nobler than the power of doubt; and that there is a celestial
wisdom in the ingenuous propensity to trust, which
belongs to honest and noble natures. Elderly skeptics
generally regard their unbelief as a misfortune.</p>
<p>Not that Moses was, after all, without "the angel in
him." He had a good deal of the susceptibility to poetic
feeling, the power of vague and dreamy aspiration, the
longing after the good and beautiful, which is God's witness
in the soul. A noble sentiment in poetry, a fine scene
in nature, had power to bring tears in his great dark eyes,
and he had, under the influence of such things, brief inspired
moments in which he vaguely longed to do, or be,
something grand or noble. But this, however, was something
apart from the real purpose of his life,—a sort of
voice crying in the wilderness,—to which he gave little
heed. Practically, he was determined with all his might,
to have a good time in this life, whatever another might
be,—if there were one; and that he would do it by the
strength of his right arm. Wealth he saw to be the lamp
of Aladdin, which commanded all other things. And the
pursuit of wealth was therefore the first step in his programme.</p>
<p>As for plans of the heart and domestic life, Moses was
one of that very common class who had more desire to be
loved than power of loving. His cravings and dreams
were not for somebody to be devoted to, but for somebody<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_231" id="Page_231"></SPAN></span>
who should be devoted to him. And, like most people
who possess this characteristic, he mistook it for an affectionate
disposition.</p>
<p>Now the chief treasure of his heart had always been his
little sister Mara, chiefly from his conviction that he was
the one absorbing thought and love of her heart. He had
never figured life to himself otherwise than with Mara at
his side, his unquestioning, devoted friend. Of course he
and his plans, his ways and wants, would always be in
the future, as they always had been, her sole thought.
These sleeping partnerships in the interchange of affection,
which support one's heart with a basis of uncounted
wealth, and leave one free to come and go, and buy and
sell, without exaction or interference, are a convenience certainly,
and the loss of them in any way is like the sudden
breaking of a bank in which all one's deposits are laid.</p>
<p>It had never occurred to Moses how or in what capacity
he should always stand banker to the whole wealth of love
that there was in Mara's heart, and what provision he
should make on his part for returning this incalculable debt.
But the interview of this evening had raised a new thought
in his mind. Mara, as he saw that day, was no longer
a little girl in a pink sun-bonnet. She was a woman,—a
little one, it is true, but every inch a woman,—and a
woman invested with a singular poetic charm of appearance,
which, more than beauty, has the power of awakening feeling
in the other sex.</p>
<p>He felt in himself, in the experience of that one day,
that there was something subtle and veiled about her,
which set the imagination at work; that the wistful, plaintive
expression of her dark eyes, and a thousand little shy
and tremulous movements of her face, affected him more
than the most brilliant of Sally Kittridge's sprightly sallies.
Yes, there would be people falling in love with her
fast enough, he thought even here, where she is as secluded<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_232" id="Page_232"></SPAN></span>
as a pearl in an oyster-shell,—it seems means were found
to come after her,—and then all the love of her heart, that
priceless love, would go to another.</p>
<p>Mara would be absorbed in some one else, would love
some one else, as he knew she could, with heart and soul
and mind and strength. When he thought of this, it
affected him much as it would if one were turned out of a
warm, smiling apartment into a bleak December storm.
What should he do, if that treasure which he had taken
most for granted in all his valuations of life should suddenly
be found to belong to another? Who was this fellow
that seemed so free to visit her, and what had passed
between them? Was Mara in love with him, or going to
be? There is no saying how the consideration of this
question enhanced in our hero's opinion both her beauty
and all her other good qualities.</p>
<p>Such a brave little heart! such a good, clear little head!
and such a pretty hand and foot! She was always so
cheerful, so unselfish, so devoted! When had he ever seen
her angry, except when she had taken up some childish
quarrel of his, and fought for him like a little Spartan?
Then she was pious, too. She was born religious, thought
our hero, who, in common with many men professing skepticism
for their own particular part, set a great value on
religion in that unknown future person whom they are fond
of designating in advance as "my wife." Yes, Moses
meant his wife should be pious, and pray for him, while he
did as he pleased.</p>
<p>"Now there's that witch of a Sally Kittridge," he said
to himself; "I wouldn't have such a girl for a wife.
Nothing to her but foam and frisk,—no heart more than
a bobolink! But isn't she amusing? By George! isn't
she, though?"</p>
<p>"But," thought Moses, "it's time I settled this matter
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_233" id="Page_233"></SPAN></span>who is to be my wife. I won't marry till I'm rich,—that's flat. My wife isn't to rub and grub. So at it I
must go to raise the wind. I wonder if old Sewell really
does know anything about my parents. Miss Emily would
have it that there was some mystery that he had the key
of; but I never could get any thing from him. He always
put me off in such a smooth way that I couldn't tell
whether he did or he didn't. But, now, supposing I have
relatives, family connections, then who knows but what
there may be property coming to me? That's an idea
worth looking after, surely."</p>
<p>There's no saying with what vividness ideas and images
go through one's wakeful brain when the midnight moon
is making an exact shadow of your window-sash, with
panes of light, on your chamber-floor. How vividly we
all have loved and hated and planned and hoped and feared
and desired and dreamed, as we tossed and turned to and
fro upon such watchful, still nights. In the stillness, the
tide upon one side of the Island replied to the dash on the
other side in unbroken symphony, and Moses began to
remember all the stories gossips had told him of how he
had floated ashore there, like a fragment of tropical seaweed
borne landward by a great gale. He positively wondered
at himself that he had never thought of it more, and
the more he meditated, the more mysterious and inexplicable
he felt. Then he had heard Miss Roxy once speaking
something about a bracelet, he was sure he had; but afterwards
it was hushed up, and no one seemed to know anything
about it when he inquired. But in those days he
was a boy,—he was nobody,—now he was a young man.
He could go to Mr. Sewell, and demand as his right a fair
answer to any questions he might ask. If he found, as
was quite likely, that there was nothing to be known, his
mind would be thus far settled,—he should trust only to
his own resources.</p>
<p>So far as the state of the young man's finances were<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_234" id="Page_234"></SPAN></span>
concerned, it would be considered in those simple times
and regions an auspicious beginning of life. The sum intrusted
to him by Captain Kittridge had been more than
doubled by the liberality of Zephaniah Pennel, and Moses
had traded upon it in foreign parts with a skill and energy
that brought a very fair return, and gave him, in the eyes
of the shrewd, thrifty neighbors, the prestige of a young
man who was marked for success in the world.</p>
<p>He had already formed an advantageous arrangement
with his grandfather and Captain Kittridge, by which a
ship was to be built, which he should command, and thus
the old Saturday afternoon dream of their childhood be fulfilled.
As he thought of it, there arose in his mind a picture
of Mara, with her golden hair and plaintive eyes and
little white hands, reigning as a fairy queen in the captain's
cabin, with a sort of wish to carry her off and make
sure that no one else ever should get her from him.</p>
<p>But these midnight dreams were all sobered down by the
plain matter-of-fact beams of the morning sun, and nothing
remained of immediate definite purpose except the resolve,
which came strongly upon Moses as he looked across the
blue band of Harpswell Bay, that he would go that morning
and have a talk with Mr. Sewell.</p>
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