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<h2> II </h2>
<p>She had been placed for her education, fourteen years before, in a
Parisian convent, by a widowed mammma who was fonder of Homburg and Nice
than of letting out tucks in the frocks of a vigorously growing daughter.
Here, besides various elegant accomplishments—the art of wearing a
train, of composing a bouquet, of presenting a cup of tea—she
acquired a certain turn of the imagination which might have passed for a
sign of precocious worldliness. She dreamed of marrying a man of
hierarchical “rank”—not for the pleasure of hearing herself called
Madame la Vicomtesse, for which it seemed to her she should never greatly
care, but because she had a romantic belief that the enjoyment of
inherited and transmitted consideration, consideration attached to the
fact of birth, would be the direct guarantee of an ideal delicacy of
feeling. She supposed it would be found that the state of being noble does
actually enforce the famous obligation. Romances are rarely worked out in
such transcendent good faith, and Euphemia’s excuse was the prime purity
of her moral vision. She was essentially incorruptible, and she took this
pernicious conceit to her bosom very much as if it had been a dogma
revealed by a white-winged angel. Even after experience had given her a
hundred rude hints she found it easier to believe in fables, when they had
a certain nobleness of meaning, than in well-attested but sordid facts.
She believed that a gentleman with a long pedigree must be of necessity a
very fine fellow, and enjoyment of a chance to carry further a family
chronicle begun ever so far back must be, as a consciousness, a source of
the most beautiful impulses. It wasn’t therefore only that noblesse
oblige, she thought, as regards yourself, but that it ensures as nothing
else does in respect to your wife. She had never, at the start, spoken to
a nobleman in her life, and these convictions were but a matter of
extravagant theory. They were the fruit, in part, of the perusal of
various Ultramontane works of fiction—the only ones admitted to the
convent library—in which the hero was always a Legitimist vicomte
who fought duels by the dozen but went twice a month to confession; and in
part of the strong social scent of the gossip of her companions, many of
them filles de haut lieu who, in the convent-garden, after Sundays at
home, depicted their brothers and cousins as Prince Charmings and young
Paladins. Euphemia listened and said nothing; she shrouded her visions of
matrimony under a coronet in the silence that mostly surrounds all
ecstatic faith. She was not of that type of young lady who is easily
induced to declare that her husband must be six feet high and a little
near-sighted, part his hair in the middle and have amber lights in his
beard. To her companions her flights of fancy seemed short, rather, and
poor and untutored; and even the fact that she was a sprig of the
transatlantic democracy never sufficiently explained her apathy on social
questions. She had a mental image of that son of the Crusaders who was to
suffer her to adore him, but like many an artist who has produced a
masterpiece of idealisation she shrank from exposing it to public
criticism. It was the portrait of a gentleman rather ugly than handsome
and rather poor than rich. But his ugliness was to be nobly expressive and
his poverty delicately proud. She had a fortune of her own which, at the
proper time, after fixing on her in eloquent silence those fine eyes that
were to soften the feudal severity of his visage, he was to accept with a
world of stifled protestations. One condition alone she was to make—that
he should have “race” in a state as documented as it was possible to have
it. On this she would stake her happiness; and it was so to happen that
several accidents conspired to give convincing colour to this artless
philosophy.</p>
<p>Inclined to long pauses and slow approaches herself, Euphemia was a great
sitter at the feet of breathless volubility, and there were moments when
she fairly hung upon the lips of Mademoiselle Marie de Mauves. Her
intimacy with this chosen schoolmate was founded on the perception—all
her own—that their differences were just the right ones.
Mademoiselle de Mauves was very positive, very shrewd, very ironical, very
French—everything that Euphemia felt herself unpardonable for not
being. During her Sundays en ville she had examined the world and judged
it, and she imparted her impressions to our attentive heroine with an
agreeable mixture of enthusiasm and scepticism. She was moreover a
handsome and well-grown person, on whom Euphemia’s ribbons and trinkets
had a trick of looking better than on their slender proprietress. She had
finally the supreme merit of being a rigorous example of the virtue of
exalted birth, having, as she did, ancestors honourably mentioned by
Joinville and Commines, and a stately grandmother with a hooked nose who
came up with her after the holidays from a veritable castel in Auvergne.
It seemed to our own young woman that these attributes made her friend
more at home in the world than if she had been the daughter of even the
most prosperous grocer. A certain aristocratic impudence Mademoiselle de
Mauves abundantly possessed, and her raids among her friend’s finery were
quite in the spirit of her baronial ancestors in the twelfth century—a
spirit regarded by Euphemia but as a large way of understanding
friendship, a freedom from conformities without style, and one that would
sooner or later express itself in acts of surprising magnanimity. There
doubtless prevailed in the breast of Mademoiselle de Mauves herself a
dimmer vision of the large securities that Euphemia envied her. She was to
become later in life so accomplished a schemer that her sense of having
further heights to scale might well have waked up early. The especially
fine appearance made by our heroine’s ribbons and trinkets as her friend
wore them ministered to pleasure on both sides, and the spell was not of a
nature to be menaced by the young American’s general gentleness. The
concluding motive of Marie’s writing to her grandmamma to invite Euphemia
for a three weeks’ holiday to the castel in Auvergne involved, however,
the subtlest considerations. Mademoiselle de Mauves indeed, at this time
seventeen years of age and capable of views as wide as her wants, was as
proper a figure as could possibly have been found for the foreground of a
scene artfully designed; and Euphemia, whose years were of like number,
asked herself if a right harmony with such a place mightn’t come by humble
prayer. It is a proof of the sincerity of the latter’s aspirations that
the castel was not a shock to her faith. It was neither a cheerful nor a
luxurious abode, but it was as full of wonders as a box of old heirlooms
or objects “willed.” It had battered towers and an empty moat, a rusty
drawbridge and a court paved with crooked grass-grown slabs over which the
antique coach-wheels of the lady with the hooked nose seemed to awaken the
echoes of the seventeenth century. Euphemia was not frightened out of her
dream; she had the pleasure of seeing all the easier passages translated
into truth, as the learner of a language begins with the common words. She
had a taste for old servants, old anecdotes, old furniture, faded
household colours and sweetly stale odours—musty treasures in which
the Chateau de Mauves abounded. She made a dozen sketches in water-colours
after her conventual pattern; but sentimentally, as one may say, she was
for ever sketching with a freer hand.</p>
<p>Old Madame de Mauves had nothing severe but her nose, and she seemed to
Euphemia—what indeed she had every claim to pass for—the very
image and pattern of an “historical character.” Belonging to a great order
of things, she patronised the young stranger who was ready to sit all day
at her feet and listen to anecdotes of the bon temps and quotations from
the family chronicles. Madame de Mauves was a very honest old woman; she
uttered her thoughts with ancient plainness. One day after pushing back
Euphemia’s shining locks and blinking with some tenderness from behind an
immense face-a-main that acted as for the relegation of the girl herself
to the glass case of a museum, she declared with an energetic shake of the
head that she didn’t know what to make of such a little person. And in
answer to the little person’s evident wonder, “I should like to advise
you,” she said, “but you seem to me so all of a piece that I’m afraid that
if I advise you I shall spoil you. It’s easy to see you’re not one of us.
I don’t know whether you’re better, but you seem to me to have been wound
up by some key that isn’t kept by your governess or your confessor or even
your mother, but that you wear by a fine black ribbon round your own neck.
Little persons in my day—when they were stupid they were very
docile, but when they were clever they were very sly! You’re clever
enough, I imagine, and yet if I guessed all your secrets at this moment is
there one I should have to frown at? I can tell you a wickeder one than
any you’ve discovered for yourself. If you wish to live at ease in the
doux pays de France don’t trouble too much about the key of your
conscience or even about your conscience itself—I mean your own
particular one. You’ll fancy it saying things it won’t help your case to
hear. They’ll make you sad, and when you’re sad you’ll grow plain, and
when you’re plain you’ll grow bitter, and when you’re bitter you’ll be peu
aimable. I was brought up to think that a woman’s first duty is to be
infinitely so, and the happiest women I’ve known have been in fact those
who performed this duty faithfully. As you’re not a Catholic I suppose you
can’t be a devote; and if you don’t take life as a fifty years’ mass the
only way to take it’s as a game of skill. Listen to this. Not to lose at
the game of life you must—I don’t say cheat, but not be too sure
your neighbour won’t, and not be shocked out of your self-possession if he
does. Don’t lose, my dear—I beseech you don’t lose. Be neither
suspicious nor credulous, and if you find your neighbour peeping don’t cry
out; only very politely wait your own chance. I’ve had my revenge more
than once in my day, but I really think the sweetest I could take, en
somme, against the past I’ve known, would be to have your blest innocence
profit by my experience.”</p>
<p>This was rather bewildering advice, but Euphemia understood it too little
to be either edified or frightened. She sat listening to it very much as
she would have listened to the speeches of an old lady in a comedy whose
diction should strikingly correspond to the form of her high-backed
armchair and the fashion of her coif. Her indifference was doubly
dangerous, for Madame de Mauves spoke at the instance of coming events,
and her words were the result of a worry of scruples—scruples in the
light of which Euphemia was on the one hand too tender a victim to be
sacrificed to an ambition and the prosperity of her own house on the other
too precious a heritage to be sacrificed to an hesitation. The prosperity
in question had suffered repeated and grievous breaches and the menaced
institution been overmuch pervaded by that cold comfort in which people
are obliged to balance dinner-table allusions to feudal ancestors against
the absence of side-dishes; a state of things the sorrier as the family
was now mainly represented by a gentleman whose appetite was large and who
justly maintained that its historic glories hadn’t been established by
underfed heroes.</p>
<p>Three days after Euphemia’s arrival Richard de Mauves, coming down from
Paris to pay his respects to his grandmother, treated our heroine to her
first encounter with a gentilhomme in the flesh. On appearing he kissed
his grandmother’s hand with a smile which caused her to draw it away with
dignity, and set Euphemia, who was standing by, to ask herself what could
have happened between them. Her unanswered wonder was but the beginning of
a long chain of puzzlements, but the reader is free to know that the smile
of M. de Mauves was a reply to a postscript affixed by the old lady to a
letter addressed to him by her granddaughter as soon as the girl had been
admitted to justify the latter’s promises. Mademoiselle de Mauves brought
her letter to her grandmother for approval, but obtained no more than was
expressed in a frigid nod. The old lady watched her with this coldness
while she proceeded to seal the letter, then suddenly bade her open it
again and bring her a pen.</p>
<p>“Your sister’s flatteries are all nonsense,” she wrote; “the young lady’s
far too good for you, mauvais sujet beyond redemption. If you’ve a
particle of conscience you’ll not come and disturb the repose of an angel
of innocence.”</p>
<p>The other relative of the subject of this warning, who had read these
lines, made up a little face as she freshly indited the address; but she
laid down her pen with a confident nod which might have denoted that by
her judgement her brother was appealed to on the ground of a principle
that didn’t exist in him. And “if you meant what you said,” the young man
on his side observed to his grandmother on his first private opportunity,
“it would have been simpler not to have sent the letter.”</p>
<p>Put out of humour perhaps by this gross impugnment of her sincerity, the
head of the family kept her room on pretexts during a greater part of
Euphemia’s stay, so that the latter’s angelic innocence was left all to
her grandson’s mercy. It suffered no worse mischance, however, than to be
prompted to intenser communion with itself. Richard de Mauves was the hero
of the young girl’s romance made real, and so completely accordant with
this creature of her imagination that she felt afraid of him almost as she
would have been of a figure in a framed picture who should have stepped
down from the wall. He was now thirty-three—young enough to suggest
possibilities of ardent activity and old enough to have formed opinions
that a simple woman might deem it an intellectual privilege to listen to.
He was perhaps a trifle handsomer than Euphemia’s rather grim Quixotic
ideal, but a very few days reconciled her to his good looks as effectually
they would have reconciled her to a characterised want of them. He was
quiet, grave, eminently distinguished. He spoke little, but his remarks,
without being sententious, had a nobleness of tone that caused them to
re-echo in the young girl’s ears at the end of the day. He paid her very
little direct attention, but his chance words—when he only asked her
if she objected to his cigarette—were accompanied by a smile of
extraordinary kindness.</p>
<p>It happened that shortly after his arrival, riding an unruly horse which
Euphemia had with shy admiration watched him mount in the castle-yard, he
was thrown with a violence which, without disparaging his skill, made him
for a fortnight an interesting invalid lounging in the library with a
bandaged knee. To beguile his confinement the accomplished young stranger
was repeatedly induced to sing for him, which she did with a small natural
tremor that might have passed for the finish of vocal art. He never
overwhelmed her with compliments, but he listened with unfailing
attention, remembered all her melodies and would sit humming them to
himself. While his imprisonment lasted indeed he passed hours in her
company, making her feel not unlike some unfriended artist who has
suddenly gained the opportunity to devote a fortnight to the study of a
great model. Euphemia studied with noiseless diligence what she supposed
to be the “character” of M. de Mauves, and the more she looked the more
fine lights and shades she seemed to behold in this masterpiece of nature.
M. de Mauves’s character indeed, whether from a sense of being so
generously and intensely taken for granted, or for reasons which bid
graceful defiance to analysis, had never been so much on show, even to the
very casual critic lodged, as might be said, in an out-of-the-way corner
of it; it seemed really to reflect the purity of Euphemia’s pious opinion.
There had been nothing especially to admire in the state of mind in which
he left Paris—a settled resolve to marry a young person whose charms
might or might not justify his sister’s account of them, but who was
mistress, at the worst, of a couple of hundred thousand francs a year. He
had not counted out sentiment—if she pleased him so much the better;
but he had left a meagre margin for it and would hardly have admitted that
so excellent a match could be improved by it. He was a robust and serene
sceptic, and it was a singular fate for a man who believed in nothing to
be so tenderly believed in. What his original faith had been he could
hardly have told you, for as he came back to his childhood’s home to mend
his fortunes by pretending to fall in love he was a thoroughly perverse
creature and overlaid with more corruptions than a summer day’s
questioning of his conscience would have put to flight. Ten years’ pursuit
of pleasure, which a bureau full of unpaid bills was all he had to show
for, had pretty well stifled the natural lad whose violent will and
generous temper might have been shaped by a different pressure to some
such showing as would have justified a romantic faith. So should he have
exhaled the natural fragrance of a late-blooming flower of hereditary
honour. His violence indeed had been subdued and he had learned to be
irreproachably polite; but he had lost the fineness of his generosity, and
his politeness, which in the long run society paid for, was hardly more
than a form of luxurious egotism, like his fondness for ciphered
pocket-handkerchiefs, lavender gloves and other fopperies by which
shopkeepers remained out of pocket. In after-years he was terribly polite
to his wife. He had formed himself, as the phrase was, and the form
prescribed to him by the society into which his birth and his tastes had
introduced him was marked by some peculiar features. That which mainly
concerns us is its classification of the fairer half of humanity as
objects not essentially different—say from those very lavender
gloves that are soiled in an evening and thrown away. To do M. de Mauves
justice, he had in the course of time encountered in the feminine
character such plentiful evidence of its pliant softness and fine
adjustability that idealism naturally seemed to him a losing game.</p>
<p>Euphemia, as he lay on his sofa, struck him as by no means contradictory;
she simply reminded him that very young women are generally innocent and
that this is on the whole the most potent source of their attraction. Her
innocence moved him to perfect consideration, and it seemed to him that if
he shortly became her husband it would be exposed to a danger the less.
Old Madame de Mauves, who flattered herself that in this whole matter she
was very laudably rigid, might almost have taken a lesson from the
delicacy he practised. For two or three weeks her grandson was well-nigh a
blushing boy again. He watched from behind the Figaro, he admired and
desired and held his tongue. He found himself not in the least moved to a
flirtation; he had no wish to trouble the waters he proposed to transfuse
into the golden cup of matrimony. Sometimes a word, a look, a gesture of
Euphemia’s gave him the oddest sense of being, or of seeming at least,
almost bashful; for she had a way of not dropping her eyes according to
the mysterious virginal mechanism, of not fluttering out of the room when
she found him there alone, of treating him rather as a glorious than as a
pernicious influence—a radiant frankness of demeanour in fine,
despite an infinite natural reserve, which it seemed at once graceless not
to be complimentary about and indelicate not to take for granted. In this
way had been wrought in the young man’s mind a vague unwonted resonance of
soft impressions, as we may call it, which resembled the happy stir of the
change from dreaming pleasantly to waking happily. His imagination was
touched; he was very fond of music and he now seemed to give easy ear to
some of the sweetest he had ever heard. In spite of the bore of being laid
up with a lame knee he was in better humour than he had known for months;
he lay smoking cigarettes and listening to the nightingales with the
satisfied smile of one of his country neighbours whose big ox should have
taken the prize at a fair. Every now and then, with an impatient suspicion
of the resemblance, he declared himself pitifully bete; but he was under a
charm that braved even the supreme penalty of seeming ridiculous. One
morning he had half an hour’s tete-a-tete with his grandmother’s
confessor, a soft-voiced old Abbe whom, for reasons of her own, Madame de
Mauves had suddenly summoned and had left waiting in the drawing-room
while she rearranged her curls. His reverence, going up to the old lady,
assured her that M. le Comte was in a most edifying state of mind and the
likeliest subject for the operation of grace. This was a theological
interpretation of the count’s unusual equanimity. He had always lazily
wondered what priests were good for, and he now remembered, with a sense
of especial obligation to the Abbe, that they were excellent for marrying
people.</p>
<p>A day or two after this he left off his bandages and tried to walk. He
made his way into the garden and hobbled successfully along one of the
alleys, but in the midst of his progress was pulled up by a spasm of pain
which forced him to stop and call for help. In an instant Euphemia came
tripping along the path and offered him her arm with the frankest
solicitude.</p>
<p>“Not to the house,” he said, taking it; “further on, to the bosquet.” This
choice was prompted by her having immediately confessed that she had seen
him leave the house, had feared an accident and had followed him on
tiptoe.</p>
<p>“Why didn’t you join me?” he had asked, giving her a look in which
admiration was no longer disguised and yet felt itself half at the mercy
of her replying that a jeune fille shouldn’t be seen following a
gentleman. But it drew a breath which filled its lungs for a long time
afterwards when she replied simply that if she had overtaken him he might
have accepted her arm out of politeness, whereas she wished to have the
pleasure of seeing him walk alone.</p>
<p>The bosquet was covered with an odorous tangle of blossoming creepers, and
a nightingale overhead was shaking out love-notes with a profusion that
made the Count feel his own conduct the last word of propriety. “I’ve
always heard that in America, when a man wishes to marry a young girl, he
offers himself simply face to face and without ceremony—without
parents and uncles and aunts and cousins sitting round in a circle.”</p>
<p>“Why I believe so,” said Euphemia, staring and too surprised to be
alarmed.</p>
<p>“Very well then—suppose our arbour here to be your great sensible
country. I offer you my hand a l’Americaine. It will make me intensely
happy to feel you accept it.”</p>
<p>Whether Euphemia’s acceptance was in the American manner is more than I
can say; I incline to think that for fluttering grateful trustful
softly-amazed young hearts there is only one manner all over the world.</p>
<p>That evening, in the massive turret chamber it was her happiness to
inhabit, she wrote a dutiful letter to her mamma, and had just sealed it
when she was sent for by Madame de Mauves. She found this ancient lady
seated in her boudoir in a lavender satin gown and with her candles all
lighted as for the keeping of some fete. “Are you very happy?” the old
woman demanded, making Euphemia sit down before her.</p>
<p>“I’m almost afraid to say so, lest I should wake myself up.”</p>
<p>“May you never wake up, belle enfant,” Madame de Mauves grandly returned.
“This is the first marriage ever made in our family in this way—by a
Comte de Mauves proposing to a young girl in an arbour like Jeannot and
Jeannette. It has not been our way of doing things, and people may say it
wants frankness. My grandson tells me he regards it—for the
conditions—as the perfection of good taste. Very well. I’m a very
old woman, and if your differences should ever be as marked as your
agreements I shouldn’t care to see them. But I should be sorry to die and
think you were going to be unhappy. You can’t be, my dear, beyond a
certain point; because, though in this world the Lord sometimes makes
light of our expectations he never altogether ignores our deserts. But
you’re very young and innocent and easy to dazzle. There never was a man
in the world—among the saints themselves—as good as you
believe my grandson. But he’s a galant homme and a gentleman, and I’ve
been talking to him to-night. To you I want to say this—that you’re
to forget the worldly rubbish I talked the other day about the happiness
of frivolous women. It’s not the kind of happiness that would suit you, ma
toute-belle. Whatever befalls you, promise me this: to be, to remain, your
own sincere little self only, charming in your own serious little way. The
Comtesse de Mauves will be none the worse for it. Your brave little self,
understand, in spite of everything—bad precepts and bad examples,
bad fortune and even bad usage. Be persistently and patiently just what
the good God has made you, and even one of us—and one of those who
is most what we ARE—will do you justice!”</p>
<p>Euphemia remembered this speech in after-years, and more than once,
wearily closing her eyes, she seemed to see the old woman sitting upright
in her faded finery and smiling grimly like one of the Fates who sees the
wheel of fortune turning up her favourite event. But at the moment it had
for her simply the proper gravity of the occasion: this was the way, she
supposed, in which lucky young girls were addressed on their engagement by
wise old women of quality.</p>
<p>At her convent, to which she immediately returned, she found a letter from
her mother which disconcerted her far more than the remarks of Madame de
Mauves. Who were these people, Mrs. Cleve demanded, who had presumed to
talk to her daughter of marriage without asking her leave? Questionable
gentlefolk plainly; the best French people never did such things. Euphemia
would return straightway to her convent, shut herself up and await her own
arrival. It took Mrs. Cleve three weeks to travel from Nice to Paris, and
during this time the young girl had no communication with her lover beyond
accepting a bouquet of violets marked with his initials and left by a
female friend. “I’ve not brought you up with such devoted care,” she
declared to her daughter at their first interview, “to marry a
presumptuous and penniless Frenchman. I shall take you straight home and
you’ll please forget M. de Mauves.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Cleve received that evening at her hotel a visit from this personage
which softened her wrath but failed to modify her decision. He had very
good manners, but she was sure he had horrible morals; and the lady, who
had been a good-natured censor on her own account, felt a deep and real
need to sacrifice her daughter to propriety. She belonged to that large
class of Americans who make light of their native land in familiar
discourse but are startled back into a sense of having blasphemed when
they find Europeans taking them at their word. “I know the type, my dear,”
she said to her daughter with a competent nod. “He won’t beat you.
Sometimes you’ll wish he would.”</p>
<p>Euphemia remained solemnly silent, for the only answer she felt capable of
making was that her mother’s mind was too small a measure of things and
her lover’s type an historic, a social masterpiece that it took some
mystic illumination to appreciate. A person who confounded him with the
common throng of her watering-place acquaintance was not a person to argue
with. It struck the girl she had simply no cause to plead; her cause was
in the Lord’s hands and in those of M. de Mauves.</p>
<p>This agent of Providence had been irritated and mortified by Mrs. Cleve’s
opposition, and hardly knew how to handle an adversary who failed to
perceive that a member of his family gave of necessity more than he
received. But he had obtained information on his return to Paris which
exalted the uses of humility. Euphemia’s fortune, wonderful to say, was
greater than its fame, and in view of such a prize, even a member of his
family could afford to take a snubbing.</p>
<p>The young man’s tact, his deference, his urbane insistence, won a
concession from Mrs. Cleve. The engagement was to be put off and her
daughter was to return home, be brought out and receive the homage she was
entitled to and which might well take a form representing peril to the
suit of this first headlong aspirant. They were to exchange neither
letters nor mementoes nor messages; but if at the end of two years
Euphemia had refused offers enough to attest the permanence of her
attachment he should receive an invitation to address her again. This
decision was promulgated in the presence of the parties interested. The
Count bore himself gallantly, looking at his young friend as if he
expected some tender protestation. But she only looked at him silently in
return, neither weeping nor smiling nor putting out her hand. On this they
separated, and as M. de Mauves walked away he declared to himself that in
spite of the confounded two years he was one of the luckiest of men—to
have a fiancee who to several millions of francs added such strangely
beautiful eyes.</p>
<p>How many offers Euphemia refused but scantily concerns us—and how
the young man wore his two years away. He found he required pastimes, and
as pastimes were expensive he added heavily to the list of debts to be
cancelled by Euphemia’s fortune. Sometimes, in the thick of what he had
once called pleasure with a keener conviction than now, he put to himself
the case of their failing him after all; and then he remembered that last
mute assurance of her pale face and drew a long breath of such confidence
as he felt in nothing else in the world save his own punctuality in an
affair of honour.</p>
<p>At last, one morning, he took the express to Havre with a letter of Mrs.
Cleve’s in his pocket, and ten days later made his bow to mother and
daughter in New York. His stay was brief, and he was apparently unable to
bring himself to view what Euphemia’s uncle, Mr. Butterworth, who gave her
away at the altar, called our great experiment of democratic
self-government, in a serious light. He smiled at everything and seemed to
regard the New World as a colossal plaisanterie. It is true that a
perpetual smile was the most natural expression of countenance for a man
about to marry Euphemia Cleve.</p>
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