The Europeans eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 230 pages of information about The Europeans.

The Europeans eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 230 pages of information about The Europeans.

“Where are you going?”

“To Germany—­by the first ship.”

“You have decided not to marry Mr. Acton?”

“I have refused him,” said Eugenia.

Her brother looked at her in silence.  “I am sorry,” he rejoined at last.  “But I was very discreet, as you asked me to be.  I said nothing.”

“Please continue, then, not to allude to the matter,” said Eugenia.

Felix inclined himself gravely.  “You shall be obeyed.  But your position in Germany?” he pursued.

“Please to make no observations upon it.”

“I was only going to say that I supposed it was altered.”

“You are mistaken.”

“But I thought you had signed”—­

“I have not signed!” said the Baroness.

Felix urged her no further, and it was arranged that he should immediately assist her to embark.

Mr. Brand was indeed, it appeared, very impatient to consummate his sacrifice and deliver the nuptial benediction which would set it off so handsomely; but Eugenia’s impatience to withdraw from a country in which she had not found the fortune she had come to seek was even less to be mistaken.  It is true she had not made any very various exertion; but she appeared to feel justified in generalizing—­in deciding that the conditions of action on this provincial continent were not favorable to really superior women.  The elder world was, after all, their natural field.  The unembarrassed directness with which she proceeded to apply these intelligent conclusions appeared to the little circle of spectators who have figured in our narrative but the supreme exhibition of a character to which the experience of life had imparted an inimitable pliancy.  It had a distinct effect upon Robert Acton, who, for the two days preceding her departure, was a very restless and irritated mortal.  She passed her last evening at her uncle’s, where she had never been more charming; and in parting with Clifford Wentworth’s affianced bride she drew from her own finger a curious old ring and presented it to her with the prettiest speech and kiss.  Gertrude, who as an affianced bride was also indebted to her gracious bounty, admired this little incident extremely, and Robert Acton almost wondered whether it did not give him the right, as Lizzie’s brother and guardian, to offer in return a handsome present to the Baroness.  It would have made him extremely happy to be able to offer a handsome present to the Baroness; but he abstained from this expression of his sentiments, and they were in consequence, at the very last, by so much the less comfortable.  It was almost at the very last that he saw her—­late the night before she went to Boston to embark.

“For myself, I wish you might have stayed,” he said.  “But not for your own sake.”

“I don’t make so many differences,” said the Baroness.  “I am simply sorry to be going.”

“That ’s a much deeper difference than mine,” Acton declared; “for you mean you are simply glad!”

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Project Gutenberg
The Europeans from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.