In Bohemia with Du Maurier eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 66 pages of information about In Bohemia with Du Maurier.

In Bohemia with Du Maurier eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 66 pages of information about In Bohemia with Du Maurier.

I must explain that there was a time when I had to console myself with the reflection that the course of true love never runs smooth.  A lady whom in my mind I had selected as a mother-in-law, by no means reciprocated my feelings of respect and goodwill.  But the young lady, her daughter, fortunately sided with me, and had, in fact, given her very willing consent to the change in her mother’s position which I had suggested.  I was naturally anxious to assure that young lady as frequently and as emphatically as possible how much I appreciated her assistance, and how determined I was never to have any other mother-in-law but the one of my choice; nor could there be anything obscure in such a declaration, as of three sisters in the family that particular one was the only unmarried one.  But neither in obscure nor in explicit language was I allowed to approach her; a blockade was declared and rigorously enforced, and we were soon separated by a distance of some few hundred miles.

[Illustration]

I can look back complacently on the troubles of those days now that twenty years have elapsed since I emerged victorious from the contest; but then the future looked blank and bleak, and I felt nonplussed and down-hearted.  Knowing, however, what a faint heart is said never to win, I was anxious to keep mine up to the mark, and with a view to stimulating its buoyancy I went to make a friendly call on du Maurier.  He would, I felt sure, be sympathetic, and, whatever else might be wanting in that troublesome eye of his, there would be a certain vivifying twinkle in it that could always set me up.

It was as I expected, and I had the full benefit of the eye, and of an ear, too, that he lent willingly as I told him how matters stood.

“Well,” he said, “if you can’t smuggle in a letter, let’s smuggle in your portrait.  It will be rather a joke if she comes across you in Punch.  I’ve just got a subject in which I can use you.”

To be sure, I jumped at the idea, only beseeching him to make me as handsome as he possibly could, without losing sight of the main object, viz., that the young lady should be able to recognise me.  Her mother too, I felt sure, would not fail to be duly impressed, for to figure in Punch would raise me in her estimation as a person of no small importance.

The drawing was made and published, and the scheme worked well; coupled, perhaps, with a few millions of other influences, and with the assistance of the Fates, it achieved the desired result, and before a year had elapsed the original drawing could be presented by du Maurier to the young lady, now become a bride, as a memento of bygone troubles.

One more digression suggested by the name of Arthur Sullivan; it shall be the last.  I am not going back to the time when we were boys together in Leipsic, but will only mention him in connection with Carry; this time Carry in another form.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
In Bohemia with Du Maurier from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.