Homeware: ‘Her uncle Homeware’?
Arden: You read through us all, sir.
Homeware: It may interest you to learn that you are the third of the gentlemen commissioned to consult the lady’s uncle Homeware.
Arden: The third.
Homeware: Yes, she is pursued. It could hardly be otherwise. Her attractions are acknowledged, and the house is not a convent. Yet, Mr. Arden, I must remind you that all of you are upon an enterprise held to be profane by the laws of this region. Can you again forget that Astraea is a widow?
Arden: She was a wife two months; she has been a widow two years.
Homeware: The widow of the great and venerable Professor Towers is not to measure her widowhood by years. His, from the altar to the tomb. As it might be read, a one day’s walk!
Arden: Is she, in the pride of her youth, to be sacrificed to a whimsical feminine delicacy?
Homeware: You have argued it with her?
Arden: I have presumed.
Homeware: And still she refused her hand!
Arden: She commended me to you, sir. She has a sound judgement of persons.
Homeware: I should put it that she passes the Commissioners of Lunacy, on the ground of her being a humorous damsel. Your predecessors had also argued it with her; and they, too, discovered their enemy in a whimsical feminine delicacy. Where is the difference between you? Evidently she cannot perceive it, and I have to seek: You will have had many conversations with Astraea?
Arden: I can say, that I am thrice the man I was before I had them.
Homeware: You have gained in manhood from conversations with a widow in her twenty-second year; and you want more of her.
Arden: As much as I want more wisdom.
Homeware: You would call her your Muse?
Arden: So prosaic a creature as I would not dare to call her that.
Homeware: You have the timely mantle of modesty, Mr. Arden. She has prepared you for some of the tests with her uncle Homeware.
Arden: She warned me to be myself, without a spice of affectation.
Homeware: No harder task could be set a young man in modern days. Oh, the humorous damsel. You sketch me the dimple at her mouth.
Arden: Frankly, sir, I wish you to know me better; and I think I can bear inspection. Astraea sent me to hear the reasons why she refuses me a hearing.
Homeware: Her reason, I repeat, is this; to her idea, a second wedlock is unholy. Further, it passes me to explain. The young lady lands us where we were at the beginning; such must have been her humorous intention.
Arden: What can I do?
Homeware: Love and war have been compared. Both require strategy and tactics, according to my recollection of the campaign.