THE HEIRESS.
Trust me, Clara Vere de Vere,
From yon blue heavens above
us bent,
The grand old gardener and his wife
Smile at the claims of long
descent,
Howe’er it be, it seems to me,
’Tis only noble to be
good;
Kind hearts are more than coronets,
And simple faith than Norman
blood.
—Tennyson.
Almost any other youth than Ishmael Worth would have died of such injuries as he had sustained. But owing to that indestructible vitality and irrepressible elasticity of organization which had carried him safely through the deadly perils of his miserable infancy, he survived.
About the fourth day of his illness the irritative fever of his wounds having been subdued, Judge Merlin was admitted to see and converse with him.
Up to this morning the judge had thought of the victim only as the overseer’s nephew, a poor, laboring youth about the estate, who had got hurt in doing his duty and stopping Miss Merlin’s runaway horses; and he supposed that he, Judge Merlin, had done his part in simply taking the suffering youth into his own house and having him properly attended to. And now the judge went to the patient with the intention of praising his courage and offering him some proper reward for his services—as, for instance, a permanent situation to work on the estate for good wages.
And so Judge Merlin entered the sick-chamber, which was no longer darkened, but had all the windows open to admit the light and air.
He took a chair and seated himself by the bedside of the patient, and for the first time took a good look at him.
Ishmael’s handsome face, no longer distorted by suffering, was calm and clear; his eyes were closed in repose but not in sleep, for the moment the judge “hemmed” he raised his eyelids and greeted his host with a gentle smile and nod.
Judge Merlin could not but be struck with the delicacy, refinement, and intellectuality of Ishmael’s countenance.
“How do you feel yourself this morning, my lad?” he inquired, putting the usual commonplace question.
“Much easier, thank you, sir,” replied the youth, in the pure, sweet, modulated tones of a highly-cultivated nature.
The judge was surprised, but did not show that he was so, as he said:
“You have done my daughter a great service; but at the cost of much suffering to yourself, I fear, my lad.”
“I consider myself very fortunate and happy, sir, in having had the privilege of rendering Miss Merlin any service, at whatever cost to myself,” replied Ishmael, with graceful courtesy.
More and more astonished at the words and manner of the young workman, the judge continued:
“Thank you, young man; very properly spoken—very properly: but for all that, I must find some way of rewarding you.”
“Sir,” said Ishmael, with gentle dignity, “I must beg you will not speak to me of reward for a simple act of instinctive gallantry that any man, worthy of the name, would have performed.”