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<h1> THE MAID OF MAIDEN LANE </h1>
<h3> A Sequel to “The Bow of Orange Ribbon.” A Love Story </h3>
<h2> By Amelia E. Barr </h2>
<h3> Author of “The Bow of Orange Ribbon,” “Friend Olivia,” etc. </h3>
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1900
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<p><b>CONTENTS</b></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I — THE HOME OF CORNELIA MORAN </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II — THIS IS THE WAY OF LOVE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III — HYDE AND ARENTA </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV — THROWING THINGS INTO CONFUSION</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V — TURNING OVER A NEW LEAF </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI — AUNT ANGELICA </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII — ARENTA’S MARRIAGE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII — TWO PROPOSALS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX — MISDIRECTED LETTERS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X — LIFE TIED IN A KNOT </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI — WE HAVE DONE WITH TEARS AND
TREASONS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII — A HEART THAT WAITS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII — THE NEW DAYS COME </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV — “HUSH! LOVE IS HERE!”</SPAN></p>
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<h2> CHAPTER I — THE HOME OF CORNELIA MORAN </h2>
<p>Never, in all its history, was the proud and opulent city of New York more
glad and gay than in the bright spring days of
Seventeen-Hundred-and-Ninety-One. It had put out of sight every trace of
British rule and occupancy, all its homes had been restored and
re-furnished, and its sacred places re-consecrated and adorned. Like a
young giant ready to run a race, it stood on tiptoe, eager for adventure
and discovery—sending ships to the ends of the world, and round the
world, on messages of commerce and friendship, and encouraging with
applause and rewards that wonderful spirit of scientific invention, which
was the Epic of the youthful nation. The skies of Italy were not bluer
than the skies above it; the sunshine of Arcadia not brighter or more
genial. It was a city of beautiful, and even splendid, homes; and all the
length and breadth of its streets were shaded by trees, in whose green
shadows dwelt and walked some of the greatest men of the century.</p>
<p>These gracious days of Seventeen-Hundred-and-Ninety-One were also the
early days of the French Revolution, and fugitives from the French court—princes
and nobles, statesmen and generals, sufficient for a new Iliad, loitered
about the pleasant places of Broadway and Wall Street, Broad Street, and
Maiden Lane. They were received with courtesy, and even with hospitality,
although America at that date almost universally sympathized with the
French Republicans, whom they believed to be the pioneers of political
freedom on the aged side of the Atlantic. The merchants on Exchange, the
Legislators in their Council Chambers, the working men on the wharves and
streets, the loveliest women in their homes, and walks, and drives, alike
wore the red cockade. The Marseillaise was sung with The Star Spangled
Banner; and the notorious Carmagnole could be heard every hour of the day—on
stated days, officially, at the Belvedere Club. Love for France, hatred
for England, was the spirit of the age; it effected the trend of commerce,
it dominated politics, it was the keynote of conversation wherever men and
women congregated.</p>
<p>Yet the most pronounced public feeling always carries with it a note of
dissent, and it was just at this day that dissenting opinion began to make
itself heard. The horrors of Avignon, and of Paris, the brutality with
which the royal family had been treated, and the abolition of all
religious ties and duties, had many and bitter opponents. The clergy
generally declared that “men had better be without liberty, than
without God,” and a prominent judge had ventured to say publicly
that “Revolution was a dangerous chief justice.”</p>
<p>In these days of wonderful hopes and fears there was, in Maiden Lane, a
very handsome residence—an old house even in the days of Washington,
for Peter Van Clyffe had built it early in the century as a bridal present
to his daughter when she married Philip Moran, a lawyer who grew to
eminence among colonial judges. The great linden trees which shaded the
garden had been planted by Van Clyffe; so also had the high hedges of cut
boxwood, and the wonderful sweet briar, which covered the porch and framed
all the windows filling the open rooms in summer time with the airs of
Paradise. On all these lovely things the old Dutchman had stamped his
memory, so that, even to the third generation, he was remembered with an
affection, that every springtime renewed.</p>
<p>One afternoon in April, 1791, two men were standing talking opposite to
the entrance gates of this pleasant place. They were Captain Joris Van
Heemskirk, a member of the Congress then sitting in Federal Hall, Broad
Street, and Jacobus Van Ariens, a wealthy citizen, and a deacon in the
Dutch Church. Van Heemskirk had helped to free his own country and was now
eager to force the centuries and abolish all monarchies. Consequently, he
believed in France; the tragedies she had been enacting in the holy name
of Liberty, though they had saddened, had, hitherto, not discouraged him.
He only pitied the more men who were trying to work out their social
salvation, without faith in either God or man. But the news received that
morning had almost killed his hopes for the spread of republican ideas in
Europe.</p>
<p>“Van Ariens,” he said warmly, “this treatment of King
Louis and his family is hardly to be believed. It is too much, and too
far. If King George had been our prisoner we should have behaved towards
him with humanity. After this, no one can foresee what may happen in
France.”</p>
<p>“That is the truth, my friend,” answered Van Ariens. “The
good Domine thinks that any one who can do so might also understand the
Revelations. The French have gone mad. They are tigers, sir, and I care
not whether tigers walk on four feet or on two. WE won our freedom without
massacres.”</p>
<p>“WE had Washington and Franklin, and other good and wise leaders who
feared God and loved men.”</p>
<p>“So I said to the Count de Moustier but one hour ago. But I did not
speak to him of the Almighty, because he is an atheist. Yet if we were
prudent and merciful it was because we are religious. When men are
irreligious, the Lord forsakes them; and if bloodshed and bankruptcy
follow it is not to be wondered at.”</p>
<p>“That is true, Van Ariens; and it is also the policy of England to
let France destroy herself.” “Well, then, if France likes the
policy of England, it is her own affair. But I am angry at France; she has
stabbed Liberty in Europe for one thousand years. A French Republic! Bah!
France is yet fit for nothing but a despotism. I wish the Assembly had
more control—”</p>
<p>“The Assembly!” cried Van Heemskirk scornfully. “I wish
that Catherine of Russia were now Queen of France in the place of that
poor Marie Antoinette. Catherine would make Frenchmen write a different
page in history. As to Paris, I think, then, the devil never sowed a
million crimes in more fruitful ground.”</p>
<p>“Look now, Captain, I am but a tanner and currier, as you know, but
I have had experiences; and I do not believe in the future of a people who
are without a God and without a religion.”</p>
<p>“Well, so it is, Van Ariens. I will now be silent, and wait for the
echo; but I fear that God has not yet said ‘Let there be peace.’
I saw you last night at Mr. Hamilton’s with your son and daughter.
You made a noble entrance.”</p>
<p>“Well, then, the truth is the truth. My Arenta is worth looking at;
and as for Rem, he was not made in a day. There are generations of Zealand
sailors behind him; and, to be sure, you may see the ocean in his grey
eyes and fresh open face. God is good, who gives us boys and girls to sit
so near our hearts.”</p>
<p>“And such a fair, free city for a home!” said Van Heemskirk as
he looked up and down the sunshiny street. “New York is not perfect,
but we love her. Right or wrong, we love her; just as we love our mother,
and our little children.”</p>
<p>“That, also, is what the Domine says,” answered Van Ariens;
“and yet, he likes not that New York favours the French so much.
When Liberty has no God, and no Sabbath day, and no heaven, and no hell,
the Domine is not in favour of Liberty. He is uneasy for the country, and
for his church; and if he could take his whole flock to heaven at once,
that would please him most of all.”</p>
<p>“He is a good man. With you, last night, was a little maid—a
great beauty I thought her—but I knew her not. Is she then a
stranger?”</p>
<p>“A stranger! Come, come! The little one is a very child of New York.
She is the daughter of Dr. Moran—Dr. John, as we all call him.”</p>
<p>“Well, look now, I thought in her face there was something that went
to my heart and memory.”</p>
<p>“And, as you know, that is his house across the street from us, and
it was his father’s house, and his grandfather’s house; and
before that, the Morans lived in Winckle Street; and before that, in the
Lady’s Valley; so, then, when Van Clyffe built this house for them,
they only came back to their first home. Yes, it is so. The Morans have
seen the birth of this city. Who, then, can be less of a stranger in it
than the little beauty, Cornelia?”</p>
<p>“As you say, Van Ariens.”</p>
<p>“And yet, in one way, she is a stranger. Such a little one she was,
when the coming of the English sent the family apart and away. To the army
went the Doctor, and there he stayed, till the war was over. Mrs. Moran
took her child, and went to her father’s home in Philadelphia. When
those redcoats went away forever from New York, the Morans came back here,
but the little girl they left in the school at Bethlehem, where those good
Moravian Sisters have made her so sweet as themselves; so pure! so
honest-hearted! so clever! It was only last month she came back to New
York, and few people have seen her; and yet this is the truth—she is
the sweetest maid in Maiden Lane; though up this side, and down that side,
are some beauties—the daughters of Peter Sylvester; and of Jacob
Beckley; and of Claes Vandolsom. Oh, yes! and many others. I speak not of
my Arenta. But look now! It is the little maid herself, that is coming
down the street.”</p>
<p>“And it is my grandson who is at her side. The rascal! He ought now
to be reading his law books in Mr. Hamilton’s office. But what will
you? The race of young men with old heads on their shoulders is not yet
born—a God’s mercy it is not!”</p>
<p>“We also have been young, Van Heemskirk.”</p>
<p>“I forget not, my friend. My Joris sees not me, and I will not see
him.” Then the two old men were silent, but their eyes were fixed on
the youth and maiden, who were slowly advancing towards them; the sun’s
westering rays making a kind of glory for them to walk in.</p>
<p>She might have stepped out of the folded leaves of a rosebud, so lovely
was her face, framed in its dark curls, and shaded by a gypsy bonnet of
straw tied under her chin with primrose-coloured ribbons. Her dress was of
some soft, green material; and she carried in her hand a bunch of
daffodils. She was small, but exquisitely formed, and she walked with
fearlessness and distinction Yet there was around her an angelic gravity,
and that indefinable air of solitude, which she had brought from innocent
studies and long seclusion from the tumult and follies of life.</p>
<p>Of all this charming womanhood the young man at her side was profoundly
conscious. He was the gallant gentleman of his day, hardly touching the
tips of her fingers, but quite ready to fall on his knees before her. A
tall, sunbrowned, military-looking young man, as handsome as a Greek god,
with eyes of heroic form; lustrous, and richly fringed; and a beautiful
mouth, at once sensitive and seductive. He was also very finely dressed,
in the best and highest mode; and he wore his sword as if it were a part
of himself. It was no more in his way than if it were his right arm.
Indeed, all his movements were full of confidence and ease; and yet it was
the vivacity, vitality, and ready response of his face that was most
attractive.</p>
<p>His wonderful eyes were bent upon the maid at his side; he saw no other
earthly thing. With a respectful eagerness, full of admiration, he talked
to her; and she answered his words—whatever they were—with a
smile that might have moved mountains. They passed the two old men without
any consciousness of their presence, and Van Heemskirk smiled, and then
sighed, and then said softly—</p>
<p>“So much youth, and beauty, and happiness! It is a benediction to
have seen it! I shall not reprove Joris at this time. But now I must go
back to Federal Hall; the question of the Capital makes me very anxious.
Every man of standing must feel so.”</p>
<p>“And I must go to my tan pits, for it is the eye of the master that
makes the good servant. You will vote for New York, Van Heemskirk?—that
is a question I need not to ask?”</p>
<p>“Where else should the capital of our nation be? I think that
Philadelphia has great presumptions to propose herself against New York:—this
beautiful city between the two rivers, with the Atlantic Ocean at her
feet!”</p>
<p>“You say what is true, Van Heemskirk. God has made New York the
capital, and the capital she will be; and no man can prevent it. It was
only yesterday that Senator Greyson from Virginia told me that the
Southern States are against Philadelphia. She is very troublesome to the
Southern States, day by day dogging them with her schemes for
emancipation. It is the way to make us unfriends.”</p>
<p>“I think this, Van Ariens: Philadelphia may win the vote at this
time; she has the numbers, and she has ‘persuasions’; but look
you! NEW YORK HAS THE SHIPS AND THE COMMERCE, AND THE SEA WILL CROWN HER!
‘The harvest of the rivers is her revenue; and she is the mart of
nations.’ That is what Domine Kunz said in the House this morning,
and you may find the words in the prophecy of Isaiah, the twenty-third
chapter.”</p>
<p>During this conversation they had forgotten all else, and when their eyes
turned to the Moran house the vision of youth and beauty had dissolved.
Van Heemskirk’s grandson, Lieutenant Hyde, was hastening towards
Broadway; and the lovely Cornelia Moran was sauntering up the garden of
her home, stooping occasionally to examine the pearl-powdered auriculas or
to twine around its support some vine, straggling out of its proper place.</p>
<p>Then Van Ariens hurried down to his tanning pits in the swamp; and Van
Heemskirk went thoughtfully to Broad Street; walking slowly, with his left
arm laid across his back, and his broad, calm countenance beaming with
that triumph which he foresaw for the city he loved. When he reached
Federal Hall, he stood a minute in the doorway; and with inspired eyes
looked at the splendid, moving picture; then he walked proudly toward the
Hall of Representatives, saying to himself, with silent exultation as he
went:</p>
<p>“The Seat of Government! Let who will, have it; New York is the
Crowning City. Her merchants shall be princes, her traffickers the
honourable of the earth; the harvest of her rivers shall be her royal
revenue, and the marts of all nations shall be in her streets.”</p>
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