A Reconstructed Marriage
e morning, ordering fires to be kept burning brightly all day in his rooms. At eleven there was another telegram, directing Jepson to have the ferns and plants in th
Station at half-past three o'clock, and th
were shining and glowing with light and warmth and beauty. Thus far, all her expectations were realized, but she missed the human welcome which o
ir, before I had time to inform them of
: "You must have a cup of tea, dear, and then rest for a couple of hours. I dar
ven o'clock e
that had been done for her comfort. "Robert," she said, "there is nothing wanting in these rooms. Ever
ative. My mother and sisters always retire to their rooms after lunch, an
ts way. But do you not think, Robert, that a little spon
leep before you dress. I will come for you at two minutes before sev
p, and she could not follow his advice to sleep. She felt chilled and depressed by the atmosphere she was breathing-an atmosphere impregnated with the personali
for I am reasoning from premises unknown to me," she said to herself. "I have heard of these
rom the Westmoreland fells, whom she had hired in Kendal
t the Crawfords of Campbelton had been occupying your rooms for two weeks. 'Plenty of hurrying and scurrying,' they said, 'to get them
ty of time, if the room
ed. Every thing in them is pell-mell, and the dresses not folded straight, and the neckwear and such like, topsy-turvy. And, ma'am, your
rate complaint. It was only necessary to lift the lids to convince herself that the accusation was a just one. For a moment or two she stood looking at the disarranged garments; her face flushed, she locked her finger
were sent here from Kendal," she said. "Open the one we had with us
ar the silk
but it does no harm to remind you, for you are not used to living among a crowd of servants, and might fall into some trap set for yo
s feel comfortable like old clothes; the new ones, like new clot
oyed about the open trunks, but-but,
ces just hatches more; and I will have little to say to
s charmed with the quiet beauty of her costume. "It is just ri
them. They are like moonlight on
a moment to lose. It will
uair Campbell had taken her seat at the foot of the table, an
. I hope you will give he
ora's face, asked: "Had you a pleasant journey? Are
room, and she kept it in her grasp. Then Robert took her to his sisters, and as Isabel sat on one side of the table, and Christina on the other,
rsation. Very soon the desire to conquer these women by the force and magnetism of love came into her heart, and she smiled into their dark, cold faces, and discoursed with such charming grace and social sympathy, th
again to the Mediterranean-for we only got glimpses of places and thing
and said: "I fear not, for a long
rt," said his mother. "Your business has been
mother, and I shall d
will-but I
ristina, "may I
pbell. "Theodora is too long a name for conversa
gard to her right or wish. Her cheeks flushed hotly, and she looked at her husband. Surely he would spare her the distressing position of denying her mother-in-law's decision, or affirming her own. But Robert Campbell was as one th
disposed to answer to Dora, I shall be silent. That is, you know, my privilege." She spoke with a smile and charming manner, and then
zed by her example, stupefied the elder woman. "Do you
really finis
ht to leave the table until I rise. I consi
he intended it to
mpertinent, then it was stupid ignorance, and I shall instruct her in the decencies of respectable life. And I tell you both to re
ve Christina would care to be called Kirsty. And I really think Robert's wife wished to be agreeable, and even friendl
new you, Isabel, to make any exceptions to my opinions-or to
will never come when your daughter Isabel wi
ithout let or hindrance; yet I wish that Christina had kept her foolish question for a little longer. I was hardly ready for active opposition. It is premature. Christina always interferes at the wrong moment." So Chr
ir own apartments, but he did not enter with her. "I am going to leave yo
u, Robert, as I have always
e thing. If you went with me, I might have the whole family, as the library, like the dining-room, is
that free and loving thing, the human soul, was in Theodora's c
ar Robert-yet I
truggle with his family, and he dreaded the experience. Had it been a struggle with business difficulties he would have risen bravely to its demands. A dispute with women irritated him. In his t
f-quarrelsome dinner, the despotic changing of her name might be-as compared with death, accident, or ruin-"trivial" troubles, but she was poignantly wounded in her feelings by them. And their crowning grief was one she hardly dared to remember-her husband's failu
rds in a Scotch household. The fact is general, but the causes for this familiar repression are various, and may be either good or evil. Theodora felt them in her case to be altogether unkind. What could she do about it? There was the perilous luxury of co
versation turned naturally to their apartments. Robert was proud of them, not so much for the money lavished on their adornment, as for the taste he th
voice was so full of displeasure, th
She ought to know better than to
to suppose these things belong to me. Do I ever put my hair in newspap
ep her pins and curl p
would not put such dreadful
ey come he
ho have been occupying
rooms since they were red
They have been fully occupi
at are yo
f your servants, and t
cie appeared. "Ducie," he asked, "who told you
nd women in the kitchen. I was taken
w who the p
Mrs. Laird and her grandd
indicated they had a right there, and that he was neither
lady's trunks were all opened by Mrs. Craw
? Who do
Mrs. Laird, and
ladies their
sent on here directly after her marriage. She had given me the keys of them, and when I saw them open it fairly took my breath away. I am afraid
d be careful how y
roy what is not theirs are just as likely as not to carry off what t
u have been t
ner, I called in one of the kitchen girls. I w
make such ch
my
any truth in thi
and I fear some jewelry gone. The ruby and sapphire ring given me by my college history class as a wedding gift is not in the
in the hurry of pack
ere all leisurely and carefully packed,
our wedd
es
o you avoid
d these four would be quite safe in this house. But look here, Robert," she continued, lifting a set of valuable ermine furs, "these were given
ed carelessly. "Ducie, I do n
lame, either about thi
eft. If the ladies using th
ree wee
clothing found
-perhaps wishing to frighten me, sir. But this way, or that way, sir, things have been ruined that cost no end of money,
go now,
be blamed, sir, and I
once before. If I have to tell you agai
ou would look after clean linen f
atter with the
ks as if it had been use
you s
many things, Robert, but I c
to have everything spotlessly clean and comfortable, bu
get all that was spoiled, or broken, or stolen for his sake, and for sweet love
omfort him, or was really of that childish temper which gets more and more injured, as it is more and more consoled, it was at this stage of her married life impossible for Theodora
not wa
ak to mother. Shal
. Do not stop
s pervaded all her thoughts, and she asked her soul eagerly for some password out of the tangle of small trials, which like brambles made her path difficult an
her worst of all. She had made concessions, where concession was wrong; she
ered to her Inner Woman, and
ak is to
my just rights an
hers to be unjust and unki
nothing by my cowar
ation and suffering
can
g step, in order to take
ooms with her arms full of clean linen, and Theodora said:
r she was willing or unwilling I had to have clean linen, as the beds had been stripped, and Mr. Campbell wanted to go to sleep, and Mrs. Campbell had a headache. Then she flew into a passion, and I do not think I durst have stayed in her presence longer, but Mr. Campbell was heard coming, so she flung the keys to one of the young ladies,
I will buy linen to-morrow, and then we can
ot influenced by a truth she chose to ignore. Ever since dinner she had been talking to her daughters of Theodora, and her smouldering dislike was now a flaming one. The application for clean linen had made her furious, and she was scolding about it when
rooms, mother? I think their occupancy withou
Campbell, for your wife. S
uestion, if
your kindred, it would have been much more sca
with that Crawford and Laird crowd. I will
here when they c
hall turn
all go out
room
harm has been don
y hairpins, stains on the carpets and covers. I burn with
our wife, ind
your opinion
diot! What
pened my wife's trunks, and ruined her
I can say 'or' as big as you. What be
een entered, my wife'
e rooms. Was I to turn the Crawfords and the Lairds on to the si
is my wi
ooms! You ought to be glad of the circumstance. And p
burg
opened by the Campbells before your father brought me home. Every Scotch bride expects it, and if you have married
e tell
was nothing in Dora Newton's trunks worth
em have been w
theatre or somewhere, and had not brought evening gowns with them. I told them t
o right to
re stylish-looking girls in their own gowns. Dora's made
at ring must come back-must, I say. Und
t is
se for the polic
are fairly bewitched. And oh, what a miserable woman I am! Both my lads!" and
her's side, and as she did
ther's heart by your disgraceful marriage. Can you not make Dora behave decently, and
put people in the rooms I had spent
nd all the time and money you spent on those rooms for a stranger. You ought
ords and Lairds are vulgar, common, and uneducated
and blood is thicker than water. The Crawfords
o one comes into them unless they are invited by Theodora or myself. My wife's clothing and ornaments of all kinds belong to my wife, and no
ed whatever they have. They often borrow
onsent of the owner, the law calls it stealing; and the person who h
when his mother sobbed o
he went to her side and asked:
ll right-with you-that you, at least-would understand. I expected you knew-all abo
red: "Well, do not cry, mother, I wi
night (sob
ying in low, passionate tones: "You see, girls! When you can't reason with a man, can't tou
out of it. She believed herself to be right and from her point of view he admitted she was. He told himself that Theodora did not comprehend the wonderful complexity of the Scotch character-he must try and teach her. And as for her destroyed, or lost adornments, they could be replaced. Of course money would be, as it were, lost in s
their own relatives who had occupied the rooms, and then explained the wonderful strength of the family tie
ar, and the use of my clothing, is that
dly loan what they needed. Isabel says they often borrow her brooches and rings and gowns. Moreover,
for an infringement of manifest courtesy and kindness. And I am sure that e
ok at the matter rea
xamining his fingernails, apparently without noticing the look of pained surprise in his wife's eyes, nor
hopes, and some secret tears. And the gain was doubtful. Nature knows how to profit from every shower of rain, every glint of sunshi
petty wrongs which ill-temper and dislike must bring her would only tempt those who hated her to a continuance and enlargement of their sin. Every one, even her husband, would despise her, and she suddenly remembered how God, when He would reason with Job, bid him rise from his dunghil
gs put und
mastered of
eposed, by the
hed ills she wo
th a noble joy, for thus she would be creating her spi
she went to the family table smiling, and almost radiant in a pretty pink gown, and beautiful white muslin neckwear. Her manner was cheerful and conciliatory, but it utterly failed, because the old lady b
ge dinner plates, and she had accepted her share without remark, though unable to eat it. But later, when a dish of boiled salt herring appeared, its peculiar odor made her so
, when she fell nauseated and
he salt fish, Robert.
alt herring every morning. I do not
ust have a cup of coffe
earn to bear
uld be too was
n't s
whole day. And I might waste weeks and months trying to like the od
ad a boiled salt herring to breakfa
learned to
ike
like them
lish them. Mother believed them to be good for me. Now, I do
oy poisons like whiskey and opium, but I t
are too f
d body means somethin
a light so important, you had better t