Youth Challenges eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 402 pages of information about Youth Challenges.

Youth Challenges eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 402 pages of information about Youth Challenges.
certain other individual would make a trustworthy, efficient, comfortable husband or wife, and as days and weeks and years passed this respect and trust and regard has blossomed into a beautifully permanent flower of love. ...Doubtless happiness has resulted from marriages which resulted from motives purely mercenary, for human beings are blessed by Heaven with a quality called adaptability.  Of no marriage can one predict happiness surely.  At the altar the best one can do is to hope for the best. ...But what can be said of a marriage brought about by the causes and motives that led Bonbright Foote to Ruth Frazer and Ruth Frazer to Bonbright Foote?

Of the two, Bonbright’s reasons most nearly approached the normal, and therefore the safe; Ruth had been urged by a motive, lofty perhaps, visionary, but supremely abnormal.  Therefore the adjustments to be made, the problems to be mastered, the difficulties in their road to a comfortable, reasonably happy future, were multiplied many times.  Instead of being probable, the success of their little social entity became merely possible, doubtfully possible.

Ruth, being a woman, understood something of this.  Bonbright, being a boy, and a singularly inexperienced boy, understood it not at all, and as he sat alone, a closed door between him and his wife, he wearied his brain upon the puzzle of it.  He came to the conclusion that the present difficult situation was the natural thing.  It was natural for the bride to be timid, frightened, reluctant, for she was entering a dark forest of strange, new experiences.  He understood that his own case might be exaggerated because their marriage had been preceded by no ordinary courtship, with the opportunity which a courtship gives to begin the inevitable readjustments, and to become accustomed to intimacy of thought and act.

The ordinary man has little intuition, but a world of good intentions.  Men blunder woefully in their relations with women, not because of innate boorishness in the sex, not because of willful brashness, but because of lack of understanding.  They mean well, but their performance is deplorable. ...  In that moment Bonbright’s most valuable possession was a certain intuition, a fineness, a decency, a reserve, a natural modesty.  As he sat there alone he reached a conclusion which was, probably, the most profoundly wise conclusion he was to arrive at in his life.  It came not so much from taking thought, as by blessed inspiration.  This conclusion was that he must court Ruth Frazer as a sweetheart, not approach her as a husband. ...

It was a course that would require infinite patience, forbearance, fineness.  In his love for Ruth he felt himself capable of it; felt that it would bring its reward.

So he sat and waited.  He did not approach the door which she had watched with apprehensive eyes until weariness had closed them in sleep. ...

The luncheon hour had passed when he heard Ruth moving about within.

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Youth Challenges from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.