The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 05, No. 27, January, 1860 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 311 pages of information about The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 05, No. 27, January, 1860.

The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 05, No. 27, January, 1860 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 311 pages of information about The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 05, No. 27, January, 1860.

“I don’t think you’re right,” said Louise, rather soberly.  “You strip yourself of great advantages.  But about the rubies, I don’t want anything so flaming, so you may keep them; and I don’t care at all about this.  I think, Sir, on the whole, they belong to Yone for her name.”

“So they do,” said papa.  “But not to be bought off!  That’s my little Lu!”

And somehow Lu, who had been holding the rosary, was sitting on papa’s knee, as he half knelt on the floor, and the rosary was in my hand.  And then he produced a little kid box, and there lay inside a star with a thread of gold for the forehead, circlets for wrist and throat, two drops, and a ring.  Oh, such beauties!  You’ve never seen them.

“The other one shall have these.  Aren’t you sorry, Yone?” he said.

“Oh, no, indeed!  I’d much rather have mine, though these are splendid.  What are they?”

“Aqua-marina,” sighed Lu, in an agony of admiration.

“Dear, dear! how did you know?”

Lu blushed, I saw,—­but I was too much absorbed with the jewels to remark it.

“Oh, they are just like that ring on your hand!  You don’t want two rings alike,” I said.  “Where did you get that ring, Lu?”

But Lu had no senses for anything beyond the casket.

If you know aqua-marina, you know something that’s before every other stone in the world.  Why, it is as clear as light, white, limpid, dawn light; sparkles slightly and seldom; looks like pure drops of water, sea-water, scooped up and falling down again; just a thought of its parent beryl green hovers round the edges; and it grows more lucent and sweet to the centre, and there you lose yourself in some dream of vast seas, a glory of unimagined oceans; and you say that it was crystallized to any slow flute-like tune, each speck of it floating into file with a musical grace, and carrying its sound with it.  There! it’s very fanciful, but I’m always feeling the tune in aqua-marina, and trying to find it,—­but I shouldn’t know it was a tune, if I did, I suppose.  How magnificent it would be, if every atom of creation sprang up and said its one word of abracadabra, the secret of its existence, and fell silent again.  Oh, dear! you’d die, you know; but what a pow-wow!  Then, too, in aqua-marina proper, the setting is kept out of sight, and you have the unalloyed stone with its sea-rims and its clearness and steady sweetness.  It wasn’t the stone for Louise to wear; it belongs rather to highly-nervous, excitable persons; and Lu is as calm as I, only so different!  There is something more pure and simple about it than about anything else; others may flash and twinkle, but this just glows with an unvarying power, is planetary and strong.  It wears the moods of the sea, too:  once in a while a warm amethystine mist suffuses it like a blush; sometimes a white morning fog breathes over it:  you long to get into the heart of it.  That’s the charm of gems, after all!  You

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The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 05, No. 27, January, 1860 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.