At Last - Page 62/170

"I am no enthusiast," he next averred,--Rosa would have said, very

unnecessarily--"the tricks of sighing lovers are beyond--or

beneath--my imitation. I could not 'write a sonnet to my mistress'

eyebrow,' or move her to tearful pity by sounding declarations of my

adoration of her peerless charms, and my anguish at the bare

imagination of the possibility that these would ever be another's.

But, so far as the earnest affection and sincere esteem of an honest

man can satisfy the requirements of a good woman's heart, yours

shall be filled, Mabel, if you will be my wife. I have admired you

from the first day of our meeting. For six months I have been truly

attached to you, and seriously meditated this declaration. Your

brother is satisfied with the exhibit I have made of my affairs and

my prospects, and sanctions my addresses. I can maintain you more

than comfortably, and it shall be one of the principal aims of my

life to consult your welfare in all my plans for my own advancement.

I have been settled in the large and flourishing city of Albany

about seven years, and--ignoring the trammels of mock humility, let

me say to you--have, within that period, gained to a flattering

extent the confidence of the most respectable portion of the

community; have built up an excellent and growing business

connection, and secured the entree of the best society there. These

are the pecuniary and social aspects of the alliance I propose for

your consideration. Through my sister, and by means of the intimate

association into which her marriage with your brother has drawn you

and myself, you have been enabled, within the twelvemonth that has

elapsed since our introduction, one to the other, to learn whatever

you wished to know with respect to my personal character, my tastes,

temper, and habits. It has given me heartfelt pleasure to discover

that these are, in the main, analogous to your own. I have built

upon this similarity--or harmony would be the better word--sanguine

hopes of our future happiness, should you see your way clear to

accept my proffered hand, consent to link your future with mine."

"I beg to lay the 'ouse in Walcot Square, the business and myself,

before Miss Summerson, for her acceptance," said magnanimous Mr.

Guppy, thus clinching his declaration that "the image he had

supposed was eradicated from his 'art was NOT eradicated."

It was more in keeping with Rosa's character than Mabel's to

recollect the comic scene in the book they had read together lately,

but the latter did remember it at this instant, and despite the

momentous issues involved in her immediate action, was strongly

tempted to laugh in her wooer's solemn face.