A silent love
From the very Begining, the girl's family objected strongly
on her dating this guy. Saying that it has got to do with family background
& that the girl will have to suffer for the rest of her life if she were to
be with him.
Due to family's pressure, the couple quarrel very often.
Though the girl love the guy deeply, but she always ask him: "How deep is
your love for me?"
As the guy
is not good with his words, this often cause the girl to be very upset. With
that & the family's pressure, the girl often vent her anger on him. As for
him, he only endure it in silence.
After a
couple of years, the guy finally graduated & decided to further his studies
in overseas. Before leaving, he proposed to the girl: "I'm not very good
with words. But all I know is that I love you. If you allow me, I will take
care of you for the rest of my life. As for your family, I'll try my best to
talk them round. Will you marry me?"
The girl agreed, & with the guy's determination, the
family finally gave in & agreed to let them get married. So before he
leave, they got engaged.
The girl
went out to the working society, whereas the guy was overseas, continuing his
studies. They sent their love through emails & phone calls. Though it's
hard, but both never thought of giving up.
One day, while the girl was on
her way to work, she was knocked down by a car that lost control. When she woke
up, she saw her parents beside her bed. She realised that she was badly
injured. Seeing her mum crying, she wanted to comfort her. But she realized
that all that could come out of her mouth was just a sigh. She has lost her
voice......
The doctors says that the impact on her brain has caused
her to lose her voice. Listening to her parents' comfort, but with nothing
coming out from her, she broke down.
During the
stay in hospital, besides silence cry,.....it's still just silence cry that
companied her. Upon reaching home, everything seems to be the same. Except for
the ringing tone of the phone. Which pierced into her heart everytime it rang.
She does not wish to let the guy know. & not wanting to be a burden to him,
she wrote a letter to him saying that she does not wish to wait any longer.
With that, she sent the ring back to him. In return, the
guy sent millions & millions of reply, and countless of phonecalls,.. all
the girl could do, besides crying, is still crying....
The parents
decided to move away, hoping that she could eventually forget everything &
be happy.
With a new environment, the girl learn sign language &
started a new life. Telling herself everyday that she must forget the guy. One
day, her friend came & told her that he's back. She asked her friend not to
let him know what happened to her. Since then, there wasn't anymore news of
him.
A year has
passed & her friend came with an envelope, containing an invitation card
for the guy's wedding. The girl was shattered. When she open the letter, she
saw her name in it instead.
When she
was about to ask her friend what's going on, she saw the guy standing in front
of her. He used sign language telling her "I've spent a year's time to
learn sign language. Just to let you know that I've not forgotten our promise.
Let me have the chance to be your voice. I Love You. With that, he slipped the
ring back into her finger. The girl finally smiled.
---True Story
Romeo + Juliet
The story is, of course, about a pair of star-crossed
lovers. Two teenagers pursue their love for each other despite the fact that
their families have been at odds with each other for decades. The story
combines swordfighting, disguise, misunderstanding, tragedy, humor, and some of
the most romantic language found in literature all in the name of true love.
In
Later, after discovering
that the young man who caught her eye is a member of the enemy family, Juliet
goes out onto her balcony to tell the stars about her strong but forbidden
love. At the same time, Romeo is lurking in the bushes below. He overhears
Juliet confess her love for him to the heavens. No longer able to control his
powerful feelings, Romeo reveals himself to her and admits that he feels the
same. The very next day, with the help of Romeo's friend Friar Lawrence, Romeo
and Juliet are secretly married.
On the day of the wedding, two of Romeo's friends, Benvolio
and Mercutio, are walking through the streets of
In despair, Juliet
consults with Friar Laurence. He advises her to agree to the marriage, but on
the morning of the wedding, she will drink a potion that he prepares for her.
The potion will make it look like Juliet is dead and she will be put into the
Capulet burial vault. Then, the Friar will send Romeo to rescue her. She does
as the Friar says and is put into the vault by her heartbroken parents.
Bad news travels fast. Before the Friar can tell Romeo of
the hoax, Romeo hears from someone else that his beloved Juliet is dead.
Overcome with grief, Romeo buys a poison and goes to Juliet's tomb to die
beside his wife. At the door of the tomb, Romeo is forced to fight Paris, whom
he swiftly kills. Nothing will stop him from joining his love. Inside the
vault, Romeo drinks the poison and takes his last breath next to his sleeping
wife.
Moments later, Juliet awakens to see her husband's dead
body. She learns what has happened from Friar Laurence who has just arrived and
accessed the scene. With no reason left to live, Juliet kills herself with
Romeo's dagger. The tragedy has a tremendous impact on both the Montagues and
the Capulets. The families are hurt so much by the death of their children that
they agree to never fight again.
ACROSS THE WAY
The news that the late Mr. Cherrington's house on Saville Street had been
let for a school, within a few months after his death, could not have been a
surprise to any one in the neighborhood. Ten years before, when Mr. Cherrington
and those prominent in his generation were in their heyday,
The news could not have been a surprise even to Mr. Homer Ramsay, but
that crusty old bachelor in the seventies brought down his walking-stick with a
vicious thump when he heard it, and remarked that he would live to be ninety
"if only to spite 'em." This threat, however, had reference, not to
Mr. Cherrington's residence, but his own, which was exactly opposite, and which
he had occupied for more than forty years. It was a conviction of Mr. Ramsay's
that there was a conspiracy on foot to purchase his house, and accordingly he
took every opportunity to declare that he would never part with an inch of his
land while he was in the flesh. A wag in the neighborhood had expressed the
opinion that the old gentleman waxed hale and hearty on his own bile. He was
certainly a churlish individual in his general bearing toward his
fellow-beings, and violent in his prejudices. For the last ten years his
favorite prophecy had been that the country was going to the devil.
Besides the house on Saville Street, Mr. Ramsay had some bonds and stock--fifty
or sixty thousand dollars in all--which tidy little property would, in the
natural course of events, descend to his next of kin; in this case, however,
only a first cousin once removed. In the eye of the law a living person has no
heir; but blood is thicker than water, and it was generally taken for granted
that Mr. Horace Barker, whose grandmother had been the sister of Mr. Ramsay's
father, would some day be the owner of the house on
The name of the person to whom Mr. Cherrington's house had been leased
was Miss Elizabeth Whyte. She was twenty-five, and she was starting a school
because it was necessary for her to earn her own living. She considered that
life, from the point of view of happiness, was over for her; and yet, though
she had made up her mind that she could never be really happy again, she was
resolved neither to mope nor to be a burden on any one. Mr. Mills, the executor
of Mr. Cherrington's estate, who believed himself to be a judge of human nature
withal, had observed that she seemed a little overwrought, as though she had
lived on her nerves; but, on the other hand, he had been impressed by her
direct, business-like manner, which argued that she was very much in earnest.
Besides, she was vouched for by the best people, and Mrs. Cyrus Bangs was
moving heaven and earth to procure pupils for her. It was clearly his duty as a
business man to let her have the house.
Until within a few months Elizabeth Whyte had lived in a neighboring
town--the seat of a college, where the minds of young men for successive
generations have been cultivated, but sometimes at the expense of a
long-suffering local community. Her father, who at the time of her birth was a
clergyman with a parish, had subsequently evolved into an agnostic and an
invalid without one, and she had been used to plain living and high thinking
from her girlhood. Even parents who find it difficult to keep the wolf at a
respectful distance by untiring economy will devise some means to make an only
daughter look presentable on her first appearance in society. Fine feathers do
not make fine birds, and yet the consciousness of a becoming gown will
irradiate the cheek of beauty.
Tom was, perhaps, the most popular man of his day; a Philadelphian of
reputedly superfine stock, fresh-faced and athletic, with a jaunty walk. There
was no one at the college assemblies who whispered so entrancingly in her ear
when she was all alone with him in a corner, and no one who placed her new
fleecy wrap about her shoulders with such an air of devotion when it was time
to go home. She liked him from the very first; and all her girl friends
babbled, "Wouldn't it be a lovely match?" But Tom's classmates from
What mother in a distant city would be particularly pleased to have her
only son, on whom rested the hopes of an illustrious stock, lose his heart to a
college belle? But
Then had come the deaths of her father and mother within three months of
each other, and she had awakened one morning to the consciousness that she was
alone in the world, and face to face with the necessity of earning her daily
bread. The gentleman who had charge of the few thousand dollars belonging to
her father's estate, in announcing that her bonds had ceased to pay interest,
had added that she was in the same boat with many of the best people; which
ought to have been a consolation, had she needed any. But this loss of the
means of living had seemed a mere trifle beside her other griefs; indeed, it
acted as a spur rather than a bludgeon. The same pride which had prompted her
to continue to dance bade her bestir herself to make a living. Upon reflection,
the plan of starting a school struck her as the most practicable. But it should
be a school for girls; she had done with the world of men. She had loved with
all her heart, and her heart was broken; it was withered, like the handful of
dried roses in the secret drawer of her work-box.
* * * * *
"I consider Mrs. Cyrus Bangs a very particular woman," she
said, with plaintive impressiveness to her husband. "If she is willing to
send her Gwendolen to Miss Whyte, I am disposed to let Margery, Gladys, and Dorothy
go. Only you must have a very clear understanding with Miss Whyte, at the
outset, as to hours and ventilation and Gladys's hot milk. We cannot move from
the seaside until a fortnight after her term begins, and it will be utterly
impossible for me to get the children to school in the mornings before
half-past nine."
It never occurred to Horace Barker, when one morning about ten o'clock,
some six weeks later, he called at the kindergarten with his precious trio,
that there was any impropriety in breaking in upon Miss Whyte's occupations an
hour after school had begun. What school-mistress could fail to be proud of the
distinction of obtaining his three daughters as pupils at any hour of the
twenty-four when he saw fit to proffer them? He expected to find a cringing,
deferential young person, who would, in the interest of her own bread and
butter, accede without a murmur to any stipulations which so important a
patroness as Mrs. Horace Barker might see fit to impose. He became conscious,
in the first place, that the school-mistress was a much more attractive-looking
young person than he had anticipated, and secondly, that she seemed rather
amused than otherwise at his conditions. No man, and least of all a man so
consummate as Mr. Barker--for he was a dapper little person with a closely
cropped beard and irreproachable kid gloves--likes to be laughed at by a woman,
especially by one who is young and moderately good-looking; and he
instinctively drew himself up by way of protest before Elizabeth spoke.
"Really, Mr. Barker," she replied, after a few moments of
reflection, "I don't see how it is possible for me to carry out Mrs.
Barker's wishes. To let the children come half an hour later and go home half
an hour earlier than the rest would interfere with the proper conduct of the
school. I will do my best to have the ventilation satisfactory, and perhaps I
can manage to provide some hot milk for the second one, as her mother desires;
but in the matter of the hours, I do not see how I can accommodate Mrs. Barker.
To make such an exception would be entirely contrary to my principles."
Horace Barker smiled inwardly at the suggestion that a school-mistress
could have principles which an influential parent might not violate.
"When I say to you that it is Mrs. Barker's particular desire that
her preferences regarding hours should be observed, I am sure that you will
interpose no further objection."
"Mrs. Barker would be very sorry to be compelled to send her
children elsewhere," he said solemnly, with the air of one who utters a
dire threat.
"I should be glad to teach your little girls upon the same terms as
I do my other pupils," said
Horace Barker was a man who prided himself on his deportment. He would no
more have condescended to express himself with irate impetuosity than he would
have permitted his closely cropped beard to exceed the limits which he imposed
upon it. He simply bowed stiffly, and turning to the Misses Barker, who, under
the supervision of a nurse, whom they had been taught to address by her
patronymic Thompson instead of by her Christian name Bridget, had been
open-mouthed listeners to the dialogue, said, "Come, children."
It so happened that as Mr. Horace Barker and the Misses Barker descended
the steps of the late Mr. Cherrington's house, they came plump upon Mr. Homer
Ramsay, who was taking his morning stroll. The old gentleman was standing
leaning on his cane, glaring across the street; and, by way of acknowledging
that he perceived his first cousin once removed, he raised the cane, and,
pointing in the line of his scowling gaze, ejaculated:
"This street is going to perdition. As though it weren't enough to
have a school opposite me, a fellow has had the impudence to put his doctor's
sign right next door to my house--an oculist, he calls himself. In my day, a
man who was fit to call himself a doctor could set a leg, or examine your eyes,
or tell what was the matter with your throat, and not leave you so very much
the wiser even then; but now there's a different kind of quack for every ache
and pain in our bodies."
"We live in a progressive world, Cousin Homer," said Mr.
Barker, placing his eyeglass astride his nose to examine the obnoxious sign
across the way. "Dr. James Clay, Oculist," he read aloud,
indifferently.
"Progressive fiddlesticks, Cousin Horace. A fig for your oculists
and your dermatologists and all the rest of your specialists! I have managed to
live to be seventy-five, and I never had anybody prescribe for me but a good
old-fashioned doctor, thank Heaven! And I'm not dead yet, as the speculators
who have their eyes on my house and are waiting for me to die will find
out." Mr. Ramsay scowled ferociously; then casting a sweeping glance from
under his eyebrows at the little girls, he said, "Cousin Horace, if your
children don't have better health than their mother, they might as well be
dead. Do they go there?" he asked, indicating the school-house with his
cane.
"I am removing them this morning. Anabel had concluded to send them
there, but I find that the young woman who is the teacher has such hoity-toity
notions that I cannot consent to let my daughters remain with her. In my
opinion, so arbitrary a young person should be checked; and my belief is that
before many days she will find herself without pupils." Whereupon Mr.
Barker proceeded on his way, muttering to himself, when at a safe distance,
"Irrational old idiot!"
Mr. Ramsay stood for some moments mulling over his cousin's answer; by
degrees his countenance brightened and he began to chuckle; and every now and
then, in the course of his progress along
"You're the school-mistress?" he asked, with the directness of
an old man who feels that he need not mince his words.
"Yes, sir. I'm Miss Whyte."
"My name's Ramsay; Homer Ramsay. I live opposite, and I've come to
tell you I admire your pluck in not letting my cousin, Horace Barker, put you
down. I'll stand by you, too; you can tell him that. Break up your school? I
should like to see him do it. Had to take his three little girls away, did he?
Ho, ho! A grand good joke that; a grand good joke. What was it he asked you to
do?"
"Mr. Barker wished me to change some of my rules about hours, and I
was not able to accommodate him, that was all," answered Elizabeth, who
found herself eminently puzzled by the interest in her affairs displayed by
this strange visitor.
"I'll warrant he did. And you wouldn't make the change. A grand good
joke that. I know him; he's my first cousin once removed, and the only relation
I've left. And he is going to try and break up your school. I'd like to see him
do it."
"I don't believe that Mr. Barker would do anything so unjust,"
said
"Yes, he would. I had it from his own lips. But he shan't; not while
I'm in the flesh. What did you say your name was?"
"Whyte--Elizabeth Whyte."
"And what made you become a school-teacher, I should like to
know?"
"I had to earn my living."
"Humph! In my day, girls as pretty as you got married; but now the
rich ones are those who get husbands, and those who are poor have to tend shop
instead of baby."
"I know a number of girls who were poor, who have excellent
husbands," said
"Bah! That caps the climax. When pretty girls pretend that they
don't wish to be married, the world is certainly turned upside down. Well, I
like your spirit, though I don't approve of your methods. I just dropped in to
say that if Horace Barker does cause you any trouble, you've a friend across
the way. Good-morning."
And before
That very day after school, while
But
On the following day, when they were about to pass as usual, she was
suddenly confronted in her mind by the alternative whether to recognize him or
not. A glance at him as he approached told her that he himself was evidently
uncertain if she would choose to consider their experience of the previous day
as equivalent to an introduction, and yet she noticed a certain wistfulness of
expression which suggested the desire to be permitted to doff his hat to her.
To acknowledge by a simple inclination of her head the existence of a man whom
she was likely to pass every day seemed the natural thing to do, however
unconventional; so she bowed.
"Good afternoon, Miss Whyte," he said, lifting his hat with a
glad smile.
How completely our lives are often appropriated by incidents which seem
at the time of but slight importance! For the next few months
Pneumonia, that deadly foe of hale and hearty septuagenarians, carried
Mr. Homer Ramsay off within forty-eight hours in the first week of May. And
very shortly after,
Mr. Mills ushered her into his private office. Then opening a parchment
envelope on his desk, he turned to her, and said: "I have the pleasure to
inform you, Miss Whyte, that my client, the late Mr. Homer Ramsay, has left you
the residuary legatee of his entire property--some fifty or sixty thousand
dollars. Perhaps," he added, observing
Mr. Mills, who, as you may remember, was a student of human nature,
believed that Miss Whyte lived on her nerves, and he had therefore planned to
leave her alone for a few moments to allow any hysterical tendency to exhaust
itself. When he returned, he found her looking straight before her with the
document in her lap.
"Is it all plain?" he asked kindly.
"Yes. But I don't understand exactly why he left it to me."
"Because he liked you, my dear. He had become very fond of you. And
if you will excuse my saying so," he added, with a knowing smile, "he
was very anxious to see you well married. He said that he wished to provide you
with a suitable dowry."
"I see," said
"Absolutely. I may as well tell you now as any time, however," Mr.
Mills added smoothly, "that Mr. Ramsay's cousin, Mr. Horace Barker, has
expressed an intention to contest the will. He is the next of kin, though only
a first cousin once removed."
"You need not give yourself the smallest concern in the
matter," the lawyer continued. "If Mr. Barker were in needy
circumstances or were a nearer relative, he might be able to make out a case,
but no jury will hesitate between a first cousin once removed, amply rich in
this world's goods, and a--a--pretty woman. I myself am ready to testify that
Mr. Ramsay was completely in his right mind," he added, with professional
dignity; "and as for the claim of undue influence, it is rubbish--sheer
rubbish."
"At liberty? Bless my stars, Miss Whyte, anybody is at liberty to
refuse a gift of fifty thousand dollars. But when you call to see me again, you
will be laughing at the very notion of such a thing. Go home, my dear young
lady, and leave the matter in my hands. Naturally you are overwrought at the
prospect of going into court."
"It isn't that, Mr. Mills. I cannot take this money; I have no right
to it. I am no relation to Mr. Ramsay, and the only reason he left it to me
was--was because he thought it would help me to be married. Otherwise he would
have left it to Mr. Barker. I have no intention of marrying, and I should not
be willing to take a fortune under such circumstances."
"The will is perfectly legal, my dear. And as to marrying, you are
free to remain single all your days, if you wish to," said Mr. Mills, with
another knowing smile. "Indeed, you are overwrought."
Mr. Mills consoled himself after much additional expostulation with the
reflection that if a woman is bent on making a fool of herself, the wisest man
in the world is helpless to prevent her. He set himself at last to prepare the
necessary papers which would put Mr. Horace Barker in possession of his
cousin's property; and very shortly the act of signal folly, as he termed it,
was completed. Tongues in the neighborhood wagged energetically for a few days;
but presently the birth of twins in the next block distracted the public mind,
and
One evening, about a fortnight before the date when the school was to
close, she noticed that the print of her book seemed blurred; she turned the
page and, perceiving the same effect, realized that her vision was impaired. On
the following morning at school she noticed the same peculiarity whenever she
looked at a book. She concluded that it was but a passing weakness, the result
of having studied too assiduously at night. Still, recognizing that her eyes
were all-important to her, she decided to consult an oculist at once. It would
be a simple matter to do, for was there not one directly opposite in the house
next to Mr. Ramsay's? The sign, Dr. James Clay, Oculist, had daily stared her
in the face. She resolved to consult him that very day after school. To be sure
she knew nothing about him individually, but she was aware that only doctors of
the best class were to be found in
She was obliged to wait in an anteroom, as there were three or four
patients ahead of her. When her turn came to be ushered into the doctor's
office, she found herself suddenly in the presence of the unknown young man
whom she was accustomed to meet daily on her way from school. Her impulse at
recognizing him, though she could not have told why, was to slip away; but
before she could move, he looked up from the table over which he was bent making
a memorandum.
"Miss Whyte!" he exclaimed with pleased astonishment and some
confusion, advancing to meet her. "In what way can I be of service to
you?"
"Dr. Clay? I should like you to look at my eyes; they have been
troubling me lately."
"Of course you will tell me, Dr. Clay, exactly what is the
matter."
"I am bound to do so," he said, slowly. "I wished to make
perfectly sure, before saying that your eyes are quite seriously affected--not
that there is danger of a loss of sight, if proper precautions are
taken--but--but it will be absolutely necessary for you to abstain from using
them in order to check the progress of the disease."
"I see," she said, quietly, after a brief silence. "Do you
mean that I cannot teach school? I am a school-teacher."
"I knew that; and knowing it, I thought it best to tell you the
whole truth. No, Miss Whyte; you must not use your eyes for at least a year, if
you do not wish to lose your sight."
"I see," said
"You have evidently overtaxed them a little; but the disease is
primarily a disease of the nerves. Will you excuse me for asking if at any time
within the last few years you have suffered a severe shock?"
"A shock?"
"That would account for the case, nevertheless."
A few minutes later
It was the sting of shame which this last thought aroused, following in
the train of her bitter reasoning, that caused her to quicken her pace and
clinch her hands. That same pride, which had been her ally hitherto, had come
to her rescue once more. She said to herself that she had done what she knew
was right, and that no force of cruel circumstances should induce her to regret
that she had not acted differently. She would prove still that she was able to
make her own way without assistance, even though she were obliged to scrub
floors. A shock? The shock of a betrayed faith which had arrayed her soul in
bitterness against mankind. Must she own that she was crushed? Not while she
had an arm to toil and a heart to strive.
The next ten days were bitter ones.
One evening while she was alone in her parlor, wrestling with her
schemes, the maid entered and said that a gentleman wished to see her. A
gentleman? She could think of none who would be likely to call upon her, but
she bade the girl show him in; and a moment later she was greeting Dr. Clay.
Presently, while she was wondering why he had come, she found herself listening
to these words: "I am a stranger to you to all intents and purposes, but
you are none to me. For months I have dogged your footsteps unknown to you, and
haunted this house in my walks because I knew that you lived here. The memory
of your face has sweetened my dreams, and those brief moments when we have
passed each other daily have been sweeter than any paradise. I know the story
of your struggle with that coward and of your noble act of renunciation. It cut
into my heart like a knife to speak to you those necessary words the other day,
and I have been miserable ever since. I said to myself at last that I would go
to you and tell you that I could not be happy apart from you; and that your
happiness was mine. This seems presumptuous, intrusive: I wish to be neither. I
have merely come to ask that I may be free to call upon you and to try to make
you love me. I am not rich, but my practice is such that I am able to offer you
a home. Will you allow me to come to see you, at least to be your friend?"
The silence which followed this eager question seemed to demand an
answer. Elizabeth, who had been sitting with bent head, looked up presently and
answered with a sweet smile:
"I have no friends, Dr. Clay. I think it would be very pleasant to
have one."
A few minutes later when he was gone,
A HAPPY ENDING
LYUBOV GRIGORYEVNA, a substantial, buxom lady of forty who undertook
matchmaking and many other matters of which it is usual to speak only in
whispers, had come to see Stytchkin, the head guard, on a day when he was off
duty. Stytchkin, somewhat embarrassed, but, as always, grave, practical, and
severe, was walking up and down the room, smoking a cigar and saying:
"Very pleased to make your acquaintance. Semyon Ivanovitch
recommended you on the ground that you may be able to assist me in a delicate
and very important matter affecting the happiness of my life. I have, Lyubov
Grigoryevna, reached the age of fifty-two; that is a period of life at which
very many have already grown-up children. My position is a secure one. Though
my fortune is not large, yet I am in a position to support a beloved being and
children at my side. I may tell you between ourselves that apart from my salary
I have also money in the bank which my manner of living has enabled me to save.
I am a practical and sober man, I lead a sensible and consistent life, so that
I may hold myself up as an example to many. But one thing I lack--a domestic
hearth of my own and a partner in life, and I live like a wandering Magyar,
moving from place to place without any satisfaction. I have no one with whom to
take counsel, and when I am ill no one to give me water, and so on. Apart from
that, Lyubov Grigoryevna, a married man has always more weight in society than
a bachelor. . . . I am a man of the educated class, with money, but if you look
at me from a point of view, what am I? A man with no kith and kin, no better
than some Polish priest. And therefore I should be very desirous to be united
in the bonds of Hymen--that is, to enter into matrimony with some worthy
person."
"An excellent thing," said the matchmaker, with a sigh.
"I am a solitary man and in this town I know no one. Where can I go,
and to whom can I apply, since all the people here are strangers to me? That is
why Semyon Ivanovitch advised me to address myself to a person who is a
specialist in this line, and makes the arrangement of the happiness of others
her profession. And therefore I most earnestly beg you, Lyubov Grigoryevna, to
assist me in ordering my future. You know all the marriageable young ladies in
the town, and it is easy for you to accommodate me."
"I can. . . ."
"A glass of wine, I beg you. . . ."
With an habitual gesture the matchmaker raised her glass to her mouth and
tossed it off without winking.
"I can," she repeated. "And what sort of bride would you
like, Nikolay Nikolayitch?"
"Should I like? The bride fate sends me."
"Well, of course it depends on your fate, but everyone has his own
taste, you know. One likes dark ladies, the other prefers fair ones."
"You see, Lyubov Grigoryevna," said Stytchkin, sighing
sedately, "I am a practical man and a man of character; for me beauty and
external appearance generally take a secondary place, for, as you know
yourself, beauty is neither bowl nor platter, and a pretty wife involves a
great deal of anxiety. The way I look at it is, what matters most in a woman is
not what is external, but what lies within--that is, that she should have soul
and all the qualities. A glass of wine, I beg. . . . Of course, it would be
very agreeable that one's wife should be rather plump, but for mutual happiness
it is not of great consequence; what matters is the mind. Properly speaking, a
woman does not need mind either, for if she has brains she will have too high
an opinion of herself, and take all sorts of ideas into her head. One cannot do
without education nowadays, of course, but education is of different kinds. It
would be pleasing for one's wife to know French and German, to speak various
languages, very pleasing; but what's the use of that if she can't sew on one's
buttons, perhaps? I am a man of the educated class: I am just as much at home,
I may say, with Prince Kanitelin as I am with you here now. But my habits are
simple, and I want a girl who is not too much a fine lady. Above all, she must
have respect for me and feel that I have made her happiness."
"To be sure."
"Well, now as regards the essential. . . . I do not want a wealthy
bride; I would never condescend to anything so low as to marry for money. I
desire not to be kept by my wife, but to keep her, and that she may be sensible
of it. But I do not want a poor girl either. Though I am a man of means, and am
marrying not from mercenary motives, but from love, yet I cannot take a poor
girl, for, as you know yourself, prices have gone up so, and there will be
children."
"One might find one with a dowry," said the matchmaker.
"A glass of wine, I beg. . . ."
There was a pause of five minutes.
The matchmaker heaved a sigh, took a sidelong glance at the guard, and
asked:
"Well, now, my good sir . . . do you want anything in the bachelor
line? I have some fine bargains. One is a French girl and one is a Greek. Well
worth the money."
The guard thought a moment and said:
"No, I thank you. In view of your favourable disposition, allow me
to enquire now how much you ask for your exertions in regard to a bride?"
"I don't ask much. Give me twenty-five roubles and the stuff for a
dress, as is usual, and I will say thank you . . . but for the dowry, that's a
different account."
Stytchkin folded his arms over his chest and fell to pondering in
silence. After some thought he heaved a sigh and said:
"That's dear. . . ."
"It's not at all dear, Nikolay Nikolayitch! In old days when there
were lots of weddings one did do it cheaper, but nowadays what are our
earnings? If you make fifty roubles in a month that is not a fast, you may be
thankful. It's not on weddings we make our money, my good sir."
Stytchkin looked at the matchmaker in amazement and shrugged his
shoulders.
"H'm! . . . Do you call fifty roubles little?" he asked.
"Of course it is little! In old days we sometimes made more than a
hundred."
"H'm! I should never have thought it was possible to earn such a sum
by these jobs. Fifty roubles! It is not every man that earns as much! Pray
drink your wine. . . ."
The matchmaker drained her glass without winking. Stytchkin looked her
over from head to foot in silence, then said:
"Fifty roubles. . . . Why, that is six hundred roubles a year. . . .
Please take some more. . . With such dividends, you know, Lyubov Grigoryevna,
you would have no difficulty in making a match for yourself. . . ."
"For myself," laughed the matchmaker, "I am an old
woman."
"Not at all. . . . You have such a figure, and your face is plump
and fair, and all the rest of it."
The matchmaker was embarrassed. Stytchkin was also embarrassed and sat
down beside her.
"You are still very attractive," said he; "if you met with
a practical, steady, careful husband, with his salary and your earnings you
might even attract him very much, and you'd get on very well together. . .
."
"Goodness knows what you are saying, Nikolay Nikolayitch."
"Well, I meant no harm. . . ."
A silence followed. Stytchkin began loudly blowing his nose, while the
matchmaker turned crimson, and looking bashfully at him, asked:
"And how much do you get, Nikolay Nikolayitch?"
"I? Seventy-five roubles, besides tips. . . . Apart from that we
make something out of candles and hares."
"You go hunting, then?"
"No. Passengers who travel without tickets are called hares with
us."
Another minute passed in silence. Stytchkin got up and walked about the
room in excitement.
"I don't want a young wife," said he. "I am a middle-aged
man, and I want someone who . . . as it might be like you . . . staid and
settled and a figure something like yours. . . ."
"Goodness knows what you are saying . . ." giggled the
matchmaker, hiding her crimson face in her kerchief.
"There is no need to be long thinking about it. You are after my own
heart, and you suit me in your qualities. I am a practical, sober man, and if
you like me . . . what could be better? Allow me to make you a proposal!"
The matchmaker dropped a tear, laughed, and, in token of her consent,
clinked glasses with Stytchkin.
"Well," said the happy railway guard, "now allow me to
explain to you the behaviour and manner of life I desire from you. . . . I am a
strict, respectable, practical man. I take a gentlemanly view of everything.
And I desire that my wife should be strict also, and should understand that to
her I am a benefactor and the foremost person in the world."
He sat down, and, heaving a deep sigh, began expounding to his
bride-elect his views on domestic life and a wife's duties.
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