Told in a French Garden eBook

Mildred Aldrich
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 193 pages of information about Told in a French Garden.

Told in a French Garden eBook

Mildred Aldrich
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 193 pages of information about Told in a French Garden.

“I am afraid,” said the Doctor, “that there is enough of it going on right here—­if we only knew it.  I had an example this afternoon.  I was walking through the village, when an old woman called to me, and asked if I were the doctor from the old Grange.  I said I was, and she begged me to come in and see her daughter-in-law.  She was very ill, and the local doctor is gone.  I found a young, very pretty girl, with a tiny baby, in as bad a state of hysteria as I ever saw.  But that is not the story.  That I heard by degrees.  It seems the father-in-law, a veteran of 1870, now old, and nearly helpless, is of good family, but married, in his middle age, a woman of the country.  They had one son who was sent away to school, and became a civil engineer.  He married, about two years ago, this pretty girl whom I saw.  She is Spanish.  He met her somewhere in Southern Spain, and it was a desperate love match.  The first child was born about six weeks before the war broke out.  Of course the young husband was in the first class mobilized.  The young wife is not French.  She doesn’t care at all who governs France, so that her man were left her in peace.  I imagine that the old father suspected this.  He had never been happy that his one son married a foreigner.  The instant the young wife realized that her man was expected to put love of France before love of her, she began to make every effort to induce him to go out of the country.  To make a long story short, the son went to his mother, whom he adored, made a clean breast of the situation, and proposed that, to satisfy his wife, he should start with her for the Spanish frontier, finding means to have her brother meet them there and take her home to her own people.  He promised to make no effort to cross the frontier himself, and gave his word of honor to be with his regiment in time.  He knew it would not be easy to do, and, in case of accident, he wished his mother to be able to explain to the old veteran.  But the lad had counted without the spirit that is dominant in every French woman to-day.  The mother listened.  She controlled herself.  She did not protest.  But that night, when the young couple were about to leave the house, carrying the sleeping baby, they found the old man, pistol in hand, with his back against the door.  The words were few.  The veteran stated that his son could only pass over his dead body—­that if he insisted, he would shoot him before he would allow him to pass:  that neither wife nor child should leave France.  It was in vain that the wife, on her knees, pleaded that she was not French—­that the war did not concern her—­that her husband was dearer to her than honor—­and so forth.  The old man declared that in marrying his son she became French, though she was a disgrace to the name, that her son was a born Frenchman; that she might go, and welcome, but that she would go without the child, and, of course, that ended the argument.  The next morning the baby was christened, but the

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Told in a French Garden from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.