The Home Mission eBook

Timothy Shay Arthur
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 207 pages of information about The Home Mission.

The Home Mission eBook

Timothy Shay Arthur
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 207 pages of information about The Home Mission.

“Anna must have a party.”

“You can do as you like.”

“But you must assent to it.”

“How can I do that, if I don’t approve?”

“But you must approve.”

And Mrs. Wyman persevered until she made him approve—­at least do so apparently.  And so a party was given to Anna, at which she was introduced to several dashing young men, whose attentions almost turned her young head.  In two weeks she had a confidante, a young lady named Clara Spenser, not much older than herself.  The progress already made by Anna in love matters will appear in the following conversation held in secret with Clara.

“Did you say Mr. Carpenter had been to see you since the party?” asked Clara.

“Yes, indeed,” was the animated reply.

“He’s a love of a man!—­the very one of all others that I would set my cap for, if there was any hope.  But you will, no doubt, carry him off.”

Anna coloured to the temples, half with confusion and half with delight.

“He used to pay attention to Jane Sherman, I’m told.”

“Yes; but you’ve cut her out entirely.  Didn’t you notice how unhappy she seemed at the party whenever he was with you?”

“No; was she?”

“Oh, yes; everybody noticed it.  But you can carry off all of her beaux; she’s a mere drab of a girl.  And, besides, she’s getting on the old maids’ list; I’m told she’s more than twenty.”

“She is?”

“It’s true.”

“Oh, dear; there’s no fear of her then.  If I were to go over sixteen before I married, I should be frightened to death.”

“Suppose Carpenter offers himself?”

“I hope he won’t just yet.”

“Why?”

“I want two or three strings to my bow.  It would be dangerous to reject one unless I had another in my eye.”

“Reject?  Nonsense!  Why should you reject an offer?”

“My mother had three offers before she was sixteen, and rejected two of them.”

“Was she married so early?”

“Oh, yes; she was a wife at sixteen, and I’m not going to be a day later, if possible.  I’d like to decline three offers and get married into the bargain before a year passes.  Wouldn’t that be admirable?  It would be something to boast of all my life.”

Pretty well advanced!—­the reader no doubt exclaims; and so our young lady certainly was.  When a very young girl gets into love matters, she “does them up,” as the saying is, quite fast; she doesn’t mince matters at all.  A maiden of twenty is cooler, more thoughtful, and more cautious.  She thinks a good deal, and is very careful how she lets any one—­even her confidante, if she should happen to have one, (which is doubtful)—­know much beyond her mere external thoughts.  Four or five years make a good deal of difference in these things.  But this need hardly have been said.

“You are going to Mrs. Ashton’s on Wednesday evening, of course?” said Clara Spenser to Anna, on visiting her one morning, some weeks after the introduction to Carpenter had taken place.

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Project Gutenberg
The Home Mission from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.