Ishmael, or In The Depths - Page 44/567

Full soon upon that dream of sin

An awful light came bursting in;

The shrine was cold at which she knelt;

The idol of that shrine was gone;

An humbled thing of shame and guilt;

Outcast and spurned and lone,

Wrapt in the shadows of that crime,

With withered heart and burning brain,

And tears that fell like fiery rain,

She passed a fearful time.

--Whittier.

Thus in pleasant wandering through the wood and sweet repose beneath the

trees the happy lovers passed the blooming months of summer and the

glowing months of autumn.

But when the seasons changed again, and with the last days of November

came the bleak northwestern winds that stripped the last leaves from the

bare trees, and covered the ground with snow and bound up the streams

with ice, and drove the birds to the South, the lovers withdrew within

doors, and spent many hours beside the humble cottage fireside.

Here for the first time Herman had ample opportunity of finding out how

very poor the sisters really were, and how very hard one of them at

least worked.

And from the abundance of his own resources he would have supplied their

wants and relieved them from this excess of toil, but that there was a

reserve of honest pride in these poor girls that forbade them to accept

his pressing offers.

"But this is my own family now," said Herman. "Nora is my wife and

Hannah is my sister-in-law, and it is equally my duty and pleasure to

provide for them."

"No, Herman! No, dear Herman! we cannot be considered as your family

until you publicly acknowledge us as such. Dear Herman, do not think me

cold or ungrateful, when I say to you that it would give me pain and

mortification to receive anything from you, until I do so as your

acknowledged wife," said Nora.

"You give everything--you give your hand, your heart, yourself! and you

will take nothing," said the young man sadly.

"Yes, I take as much as I give! I take your hand, your heart, and

yourself in return for mine. That is fair; but I will take no more until

as your wife I take the head of your establishment," said Nora proudly.

"Hannah, is this right? She is my wife; she promised to obey me, and she

defies me--I ask you is this right?"

"Yes, Mr. Brudenell. When she is your acknowledged wife, in your house,

then she will obey and never 'defy' you, as you call it; but now it is

quite different; she has not the shield of your name, and she must take

care of her own self-respect until you relieve her of the charge," said

the elder sister gravely.