There was once a family of three ancient maiden ladies, much respected and loved in the town in which they lived. Their manners of life were well known among their friends, and excited no surprise; but a stranger to the locality once asked of the elder why Miss Matilda, the younger, always went first out of the room? ’Matilda once had an offer of marriage,’ said the dear simple old lady, who had never been so graced, and who felt that such an episode in life was quite sufficient to bestow brevet rank. It was believed by Mrs Stanbury that Dorothy’s honours would be carried further than those of Miss Matilda, but there was much of the same feeling in the bosom of the mother towards the fortunate daughter, who, in the eyes of a man, had seemed goodly enough to be his wife.
With this swelling happiness round her heart, Dorothy read her aunt’s letter, and was infinitely softened. ’I had gotten somehow to love to see your pretty face.’ Dorothy had thought little enough of her own beauty, but she liked being told by her aunt that her face had been found to be pretty. ‘I am very desolate and solitary here,’ her aunt said; and then had come those words about the state of maiden women and then those other words, about women’s duties, and her aunt’s prayer on her behalf. ‘Dear Dorothy, be not such a one.’ She held the letter to her lips and to her bosom, and could hardly continue its perusal because of her tears. Such prayers from the aged addressed to the young are generally held in light esteem, but this adjuration was valued by the girl to whom it was addressed. She put together the invitation or rather the permission accorded to her, to make a visit to Exeter and the intimation in the postscript that Martha knew her mistress’s mind; and then she returned to the sitting-room, in which Martha was still seated with her mother, and took the old servant apart. ‘Martha,’ she said, ‘is my aunt happy now?’