The Daughter of an Empress - Page 233/584

"That is it, then," Ribas would often say; "he diffuses happiness

everywhere around him, while he himself has it not! He makes glad and

cheerful faces wherever he appears, and his own is the only serious and

sad brow. Mankind have made him hopeless, and for himself he no longer

believes in happiness!"

Ah, how then did the heart of this innocent child tremble, and how she

longed to find some means for restoring his belief in happiness.

"But why does he not come to those who love him?" asked she. "Why does

he decline the thanks of those whose hearts are truly devoted to him?

Ah, in our humid eyes and joy-beaming faces he would recognize the

truthfulness of our feelings! Why, then, comes he not?"

"I will tell you," said Ribas, with a smile; "he hates women, because

the only one he ever loved was false to him, and now his love is changed

to ardent hatred of all women!"

"I shall therefore never see him!" sighed the girl, hanging her head

with the sadness of disappointment.

This expectation, this constantly increasing impatience, rendered her

inaccessible to any other feeling, any other thought. He of whom she

did not know even the name, was sent by Paulo, and therefore had

she believed and confided in him from the first. Now had she already

forgotten that she had confided in him on Paulo's account; she believed

in him on his own account, and Paulo had retreated into the background.

Occasionally also the bloody image of poor Carlo presented itself to her

mind, and she secretly reproached herself for having mourned him for

so short a time, for having so soon forgotten that faithful,

self-sacrificing friend.

But even these reproaches were soon silenced when with a throbbing bosom

she thought of this new friend, who like a divinity hovered over her

at an infinite and unattainable distance, and whose mysteriously active

nearness replaced both of those friends she had lost, and for whom she

could no longer mourn.