Desperate Remedies eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 532 pages of information about Desperate Remedies.

Desperate Remedies eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 532 pages of information about Desperate Remedies.
and the young lady’s travelling on the Continent with her parents the whole of the ensuing summer, on account of delicate health.  Eventually Huntway said that circumstances had rendered Graye’s attachment more hopeless still.  Cytherea’s mother had unexpectedly inherited a large fortune and estates in the west of England by the rapid fall of some intervening lives.  This had caused their removal from the small house in Bloomsbury, and, as it appeared, a renunciation of their old friends in that quarter.

Young Graye concluded that his Cytherea had forgotten him and his love.  But he could not forget her.

2.  From 1843 to 1861

Eight years later, feeling lonely and depressed—­a man without relatives, with many acquaintances but no friends—­Ambrose Graye met a young lady of a different kind, fairly endowed with money and good gifts.  As to caring very deeply for another woman after the loss of Cytherea, it was an absolute impossibility with him.  With all, the beautiful things of the earth become more dear as they elude pursuit; but with some natures utter elusion is the one special event which will make a passing love permanent for ever.

This second young lady and Graye were married.  That he did not, first or last, love his wife as he should have done, was known to all; but few knew that his unmanageable heart could never be weaned from useless repining at the loss of its first idol.

His character to some extent deteriorated, as emotional constitutions will under the long sense of disappointment at having missed their imagined destiny.  And thus, though naturally of a gentle and pleasant disposition, he grew to be not so tenderly regarded by his acquaintances as it is the lot of some of those persons to be.  The winning and sanguine receptivity of his early life developed by degrees a moody nervousness, and when not picturing prospects drawn from baseless hope he was the victim of indescribable depression.  The practical issue of such a condition was improvidence, originally almost an unconscious improvidence, for every debt incurred had been mentally paid off with a religious exactness from the treasures of expectation before mentioned.  But as years revolved, the same course was continued from the lack of spirit sufficient for shifting out of an old groove when it has been found to lead to disaster.

In the year 1861 his wife died, leaving him a widower with two children.  The elder, a son named Owen, now just turned seventeen, was taken from school, and initiated as pupil to the profession of architect in his father’s office.  The remaining child was a daughter, and Owen’s junior by a year.

Her christian name was Cytherea, and it is easy to guess why.

3.  October the twelfth, 1863

We pass over two years in order to reach the next cardinal event of these persons’ lives.  The scene is still the Grayes’ native town of Hocbridge, but as it appeared on a Monday afternoon in the month of October.

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Desperate Remedies from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.