Clemence eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 268 pages of information about Clemence.

Clemence eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 268 pages of information about Clemence.

The delicate lady, splendid in misty lace and jewels, gave a little nervous shudder at the bare thought of poverty.

“What strange fancies you have, child, and how little you know of the realities of life.”  But gazing into the pure face, with a vague dread for that future, and knowing that One alone knew whether it might contain happiness or misery for her darling, she said, with visible emotion, “You are a good girl, Clemence, and whatever may be in the future, remember that I always sought your welfare as the one great object of my existence.  Always remember that, Clemence.”

“I will, my own dearest mother,” the girl answered brokenly; and neither could see the other through a mist of tears.

Was it a presentiment of their coming fate?

Clemence thought often, amid the gloom that followed, that it was; and many times in her dream-haunted slumbers, murmured, “Always remember that, Clemence; always remember that.”

If the stylish Mrs. Graystone, who could boast of the most aristocratic descent, and whose haughty family had considered it quite a condescension when she married the self-made merchant—­if the little lady had sinned very deeply in wishing to secure for her only child a husband in every way suitable, in her opinion, to a descendant of the Leveridges of Leveridge, she was destined to a full expiation of her wrong, and her towering pride to a fall so great that those who had envied her her life-long prosperity, would say with ill-concealed delight—­“served them right! what will become of their lofty ambition and refined sensibilities now, I wonder?”—­“I knew it would not last forever.”—­“It’s a long lane that never turns;” with many more remarks to the same effect.

“Between you and me and the four walls of this room,” said one Mrs. Crane to her neighbor, “I don’t pity them Graystones as much as I should, if they hadn’t always carried their heads so high above everybody else, who was just as good as themselves, if they couldn’t trace back their descent to the landin’ of the Pilgrims.”

“This is a free and glorious republic, where every man can follow the bent of his own inclinations, provided he don’t intrude upon his neighbor’s rights.  Who gave their blood and sinew to the putting down of them are southern secessionists that threatened the dissolution of our Union?  Who, indeed, but P. Crandall Crane! and I’m proud to say that I’m the wife of that patriotic man.  True, he could not go to war himself, on account of me and the children; but, I dare say, if he could have prevailed upon me to give him up to the cause of liberty, he’d have clomb rapidly to the highest pinnacle of earthly glory, and to-day I’d have been Mrs. General Crane, a leader of the brilliant society at Washington, with my name in the papers as ’the wife of our distinguished General Crane,’ or the ’stately and dignified lady of the brave General;’” &c., &c.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Clemence from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.