in, Maurine,?And make yourself fit object to be seen."
Helen was bending o'er an almond bush,?And ere she looked up I had read the note,?And calmed my heart, that, bounding, sent a flush?To brow and cheek, at sight of aught HE wrote.?"Ma Belle Maurine:" (so Vivian's billet ran,)?"Is it not time I saw your cherished guest??'Pity the sorrows of a poor young man,'?Banished from all that makes existence blest.?I'm dying to see--your friend; and I will come?And pay respects, hoping you'll be at home?To-night at eight. Expectantly, V. D."
Inside my belt I slipped the billet, saying,?"Helen, go make yourself most fair to see:?Quick! hurry now! no time for more delaying!?In just five hours a caller will be here,?And you must look your prettiest, my dear!?Begin your toilet right away. I know?How long it takes you to arrange each bow -?To twist each curl, and loop your skirts aright.?And you must prove you are au fait to-night,?And make a perfect toilet: for our caller?Is man, and critic, poet, artist, scholar,?And views with eyes of all."
"Oh, oh! Maurine,"?Cried Helen with a well-feigned look of fear,?"You've frightened me so I shall not appear:?I'll hide away, refusing to be seen?By such an ogre. Woe is me! bereft?Of all my friends, my peaceful home I've left,?And strayed away into the dreadful wood?To meet the fate of poor Red Riding Hood.?No, Maurine, no! you've given me such a fright,?I'll not go near your ugly wolf to-night."
Meantime we'd left the garden; and I stood?In Helen's room, where she had thrown herself?Upon a couch, and lay, a winsome elf,?Pouting and smiling, cheek upon her arm,?Not in the least a portrait of alarm.?"Now, sweet!" I coaxed, and knelt by her, "be good!?Go curl your hair; and please your own Maurine,?By putting on that lovely grenadine.?Not wolf, nor ogre, neither Caliban,?Nor Mephistopheles, you'll meet to-night,?But what the ladies call 'a nice young man'!?Yet one worth knowing--strong with health and might?Of perfect manhood; gifted, noble, wise;?Moving among his kind with loving eyes,?And helpful hand; progressive, brave, refined,?After the image of his Maker's mind."
"Now, now, Maurine!" cried Helen, "I believe?It is your lover coming here this eve.?Why have you never written of him, pray??Is the day set?--and when? Say, Maurine, say!"
Had I betrayed by some too fervent word?The secret love that all my being stirred??My lover? Ay! My heart proclaimed him so;?But first HIS lips must win the sweet confession,?Ere even Helen be allowed to know.?I must straightway erase the slight impression?Made by the words just uttered.
"Foolish child!"?I gaily cried, "your fancy's straying wild.?Just let a girl of eighteen hear the name?Of maid and youth uttered about one time,?And off her fancy goes, at break-neck pace,?Defying circumstances, reason, space -?And straightway builds romances so sublime?They put all Shakespeare's dramas to the shame.?This Vivian Dangerfield is neighbour, friend,?And kind companion; bringing books and flowers.?And, by his thoughtful actions without end,?Helping me pass some otherwise long hours;?But he has never breathed a word of love.?If you still doubt me, listen while I prove?My statement by the letter that he wrote.?'Dying to meet--my friend!' (she could not see?The dash between that meant so much to me).?'Will come this eve, at eight, and hopes we may?Be in to greet him.' Now I think you'll say?'Tis not much like a lover's tender note."
We laugh, we jest, not meaning what we say;?We hide our thoughts, by light words lightly spoken,?And pass on heedless, till we find one day?They've bruised our hearts, or left some other broken.
I sought my room, and trilling some blithe air,?Opened my wardrobe, wondering what to wear.?Momentous question! femininely human!?More than all others, vexing mind of woman,?Since that sad day, when in her discontent,?To search for leaves, our fair first mother went.?All undecided what I should put on,?At length I made selection of a lawn -?White, with a tiny pink vine overrun:-?My simplest robe, but Vivian's favourite one.?And placing a single flowret in my hair,?I crossed the hall to Helen's chamber, where?I found her with her fair locks all let down,?Brushing the kinks out, with a pretty frown.?'Twas like a picture, or a pleasing play,?To watch her make her toilet. She would stand,?And turn her head first this, and then that way,?Trying effect of ribbon, bow or band.?Then she would pick up something else, and curve?Her lovely neck, with cunning, bird-like grace,?And watch the mirror while she put it on,?With such a sweetly grave and thoughtful face;?And then to view it all would sway and swerve?Her lithe young body, like a graceful swan.
Helen was over medium height, and slender?Even to frailty. Her great, wistful eyes?Were like the deep blue of autumnal skies;?And through them looked her soul, large, loving, tender.?Her long, light hair was lustreless, except?Upon the ends, where burnished sunbeams slept,?And on the earlocks; and she looped the curls?Back with a shell comb, studded thick
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