Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 299 pages of information about Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science.

Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 299 pages of information about Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science.
own mother, and every time he went out of it in the morning he felt himself a better man than he was when he went into it at night.  His mother and father journeyed a thousand miles to see it, and felt as John did himself—­thanked Heaven for the promise of a child like Lilian—­one so forgetful of herself, so thoughtful for every one else, so candid, so generous, so gentle, so good.  “She is nothing but a child,” said Mrs. Sterling for the thousandth time, “and yet how lofty she is!—­so lofty and so sweet!  What will she be at thirty if she is this at seventeen?  It makes me tremble to think of John’s being blest so, as if it were too much, as if some fate must overtake him.”

“He must become a very superior man under the influence of such a wife as Lilian will be,” said Mr. Sterling.  “Helen shall go on and spend the winter with John:  they teach canaries to sing,” said he, stroking Helen’s black hair, “by hanging up their cages in the same room with a nightingale’s.”

And so Helen was despatched on the journey, and made another member in the little family, for John’s friends merely had rooms, and enjoyed no more sufferance than other guests in the penetralia of the house.  She was a gaunt and big-eyed child, with a certain promise of magnificence that, as Reyburn said, might be fulfilled in a year or two in a sumptuous sort of beauty.  But now she was a morbid and retiring creature, fourteen or fifteen years old, looking out askance and half suspiciously on the world from under the shadow of her immense eyelashes, and singing from room to room with a strange voice that a year or two would ripen into tones fit for a siren.  There was just the difference in age between her and Lilian that, while it allowed them companionship, gave Lilian, together with the fact of her engagement to John, a glorious dignity in Helen’s eyes that she would not have her abate a jot.  Her gowns, her shawls, her simple laces and few jewels seemed the appanage of a superior state of existence; they brought close to her the possibilities of that charmed time when she too would be a woman grown.  She could not tire of gazing at the blush flitting over Lilian’s face as she spoke, at the way her steady eyelid slanted toward her cheek as she read:  the sound of her voice had an intimate music that acted like a charm; and when this wonderful being entertained her in her well hours and cosseted her in her ill ones, listened to her, waited on her and caressed her, Helen rewarded her by worshiping her.  It was Lilian who constantly procured Helen pleasures, who shielded her little faults, who sympathized with her joys and her griefs and her sentimentalities, making merry with her to-day, crying with her to-morrow, and who shone upon her with unvarying sunshine; it was Lilian who did all this in another way for John; it was Lilian who made every one’s happiness that came near her; and Helen’s affection for her became something romantic and ideal.  As for her brother John, Helen had

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Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.