Leonora eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 280 pages of information about Leonora.

Leonora eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 280 pages of information about Leonora.

The door was brusquely opened, and some one entered.

‘Not dressed, Rose?’ said Leonora, a little startled.  ’We ought to be going in ten minutes.’

‘Oh, mother!  I mustn’t go.  I mustn’t really!’

The tall slightly-stooping girl, with her flat figure, her plain shabby serge frock, her tired white face, and the sinister glance of the idealist in her great, fretful eyes, seemed to stand there and accuse the whole of Leonora’s existence.  Utterly absorbed in the imminent examination, her brain a welter of sterile facts, Rose found all the seriousness of life in dates, irregular participles, algebraic symbols, chemical formulas, the altitudes of mountains, and the areas of inland seas.  To the cruelty of the too earnest enthusiast she added the cruelty of youth, and it was with a merciless justice that she judged everyone with whom she came into opposition.

’But, my dear, you’ll be ill if you keep on like this.  And you know what your father said.’

Rose smiled, bitterly superior, at the misguided creature whose horizons were bounded by domesticity on one side and by dress on the other.

‘I shall not be ill, mother,’ she said firmly, sniffing at the scent in the room.  ’I can’t help it.  I must work at my chemistry again to-night.  Father knows perfectly well that chemistry is my weak point.  I must work.  I just came in to tell you.’

She departed slowly, as it were daring her mother to protest further.

Leonora sighed, overpowered by a feeling of impotence.  What could she do, what could any person do, when challenged by an individuality at once so harsh and so impassioned?  She finished her toilette with minute care, but she had lost her pleasure in it.  The sense of the contrariety of things deepened in her.  She looked round the circle of her environment and saw hope and gladness nowhere.  John’s affairs were perhaps running more smoothly, but who could tell?  The shameful fact that the house was mortgaged remained always with her.  And she was intimately conscious of a soilure, a moral stain, as the result of her recent contacts with the man of business in her husband.  Why had she not been able to keep femininely aloof from those puzzling and repellent matters, ignorant of them, innocent of them?  And Ethel, too!  Twelve days of the office had culminated for Ethel in a slight illness, which Doctor Hawley described as lack of tone.  Her father had said airily that she must resume her clerkship in due season, but the entire household well knew that she would not do so, and that the experiment was one of the failures which invariably followed John’s interference in domestic concerns.  As for Milly’s housekeeping, it was an admitted absurdity.  Millicent had lived of late solely for the opera, and John resented any preoccupation which detached the girls’ interest from their home.  When Ethel recovered in the nick of time to attend the final rehearsals, he grew sarcastic, and irrelevantly made cutting remarks about the letter from Paris which Ethel had never translated and which she thought he had forgotten.  Finally he said he probably could not go to the opera at all, and that at best he might look in at it for half an hour.  He was careful to disclaim all interest in the performance.

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Project Gutenberg
Leonora from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.