<h2>CHAPTER XXIV.</h2>
<h3>LONELINESS.</h3>
<P> I SUPPOSE there has never been an earnest
worker, an enthusiast on any subject,
in this changeful world, but has been a victim
at some time to the dismalness of a reaction.
The most forlorn little victim that could be imagined
was Flossy Shipley on that evening after
the meetings, on which her soul had fed so long,
were closed.</P>
<p>Everything in nature and in circumstances
conspired to sink her into her desolate mood.
In the first place it was raining. Now a rain
closing in upon a warm and dusty summer day
is a positive delight; one can listen to the pattering<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_386" id="Page_386"></SPAN></span>
drops with a sense of eager satisfaction
but a rain in midwinter, after a day of sunless
mist and fog, almost amounting to rain, when the
streets are that mixture of snow and water that
can be known only as "slush," when every opening
of a door sends in gusts of damp air that
chill to one's very bones, this weather is a trial;
at least it seemed such to poor little Flossy.</p>
<p>She shivered over the fire in the coal grate.
It glowed brightly, and the room was warm and
bright, yet to Flossy there was a sense of chill in
everything. She was all alone; and the circumstances
connected with that loneliness were not
calculated to brighten the evening for her. The
entire family had gone out to a party, not one of
those quiet little entertainments which people
had been so careful to explain and apologize for
during the meetings, but a grand display of toilet
and supper, and expenditure of all kinds.</p>
<p>Mrs. Westervelt, the hostess, being at all times
noted for the display of her entertainments, had
lavished more than the usual amount of time and
money on the present ones, and waited for the
meetings to close with the most exemplary patience,
in order that she might gain a very few<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_387" id="Page_387"></SPAN></span>
among her guests from those who felt the impropriety
of mixing things too much.</p>
<p>To be sure, the society in general which was
admitted to Mrs. Westervelt's parlors was not
from that class who had any scruples as to what
time they attended parties, but there were two
or three notable exceptions, and those the lady
had been anxious to claim.</p>
<p>Prominent among them had been the Erskines,
it never seeming to occur to Mrs. Westervelt's
brains that there could be other excuse found for
not accepting her invitation save the meetings
that Ruth had taken to attending in such a frantic
manner. Let me say, in passing, that neither
Ruth Erskine nor her father honored the invitation;
they had other matters to attend to.</p>
<p>Meantime, Flossy Shipley, had utterly disgusted
her mother, and almost offended her father,
by giving a peremptory and persistent refusal.
Such a storm of talk as there had been over
this matter almost exhausted the strength of
poor little Flossy, who did not like argument,
and who yet could persist in a most unaccountable
firm manner when occasion required.</p>
<p>"Such an absurd idea!" her sister Kitty said,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_388" id="Page_388"></SPAN></span>
flashing contemptuous eyes on her. "I wonder
what you think is going to become of you,
Flossy? Do you mean to mope at home all the
rest of the winter? I assure you that Mrs. Westervelt
is not the only one who intends to give
a party. We are going to have an unusually
gay season to revive us after so much bell-tolling.
Don't you mean to appear anywhere?
You might as well retire into a convent at once,
if that is the case."</p>
<p>"People will be saying of me, as they do of
Mrs. Treslam, soon, that I do not allow you to
appear in society while Kitty is still a young
lady." This Mrs. Shipley said, and her tone, if
not as sharp as Kitty's, had a note of grievance
in it that was hard to bear.</p>
<p>Then Charlie had taken up the theme:
"What is the use in turning mope, Sis? I'm
sure you can be as good as you like, and go to a
party occasionally."</p>
<p>"I don't mean to mope, Charlie," Flossy said,
trying to speak cheerfully, but there were tears
in her eyes and a tremulous sound in her voice.
"I am truly happier at home than I am at those
places; I don't like to go. It is not entirely because<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_389" id="Page_389"></SPAN></span>
I feel I ought not; it is because I don't
want to."</p>
<p>"She has risen above such follies," Kitty said,
and it is impossible to tell you what a disagreeable
inflection there was to her voice. "Mother,
I am sorry that the poor child has to associate
with such volatile creatures as you and I. She
ought to have some kindred spirit."</p>
<p>"I am sure I don't know where she will find
any," Mrs. Shipley said, with a sigh, "outside of
that trio of girls, who among them have contrived
to make a perfect little slave of you. I
am sure I don't know who has any influence
over you. I used to think you regarded your
mother's wishes a trifle, but I find I am mistaken."</p>
<p>"Oh, mother!" Flossy said, and this time the
tears began to fall, "why <i>will</i> you talk so? I
am sure I try to please you in every way that I
can. I did not know that you cared to have me
go to parties, unless I wanted to go."</p>
<p>Either the tears or something else made her
brother indignant. "What a scene about nothing,"
he said, irritably. "Why can't you let
Flossy go to parties or not, as she pleases? Parties<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_390" id="Page_390"></SPAN></span>
are not such delightful institutions that she
need be expected to be in love with them. I
should be delighted if I never had to appear at
another. Why not let people have their fun in
this world where they choose to find it? If
Flossy has lately discovered that hers can only
be found in prayer-meeting, I am sure it is a
harmless enough diversion while the fit lasts."</p>
<p>Mrs. Shipley laughed. Her son could nearly
always put her into good humor. Besides, she
didn't like to see tears on her baby's face; that
was her pet name for Flossy.</p>
<p>"Oh, I don't know that it makes any serious
difference," she said; "not enough to spoil your
eyes over, Flossy. I don't want you to go out
with us unless you want to; only it is rather
embarrassing to be constantly arranging regrets
for you. Besides, I don't see what it is all coming
to. You will be a moping, forsaken creature;
old before your time, if this continues."</p>
<p>As for Mr. Shipley, he maintained a haughty
silence, neither expressing an opinion on that
subject nor on any other, which would involve
him in a conversation with Flossy. She knew
that he was more seriously displeased with her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_391" id="Page_391"></SPAN></span>
than were any of the others; not so much about
the parties as about other and graver matters.</p>
<p>Col. Baker was the son of Mr. Shipley's old
friend. For this reason, and for several others,
Mr. Shipley was very fond of him. It had long
been in accordance with his plans, that Flossy
should become, at some future time, Mrs. Col.
Baker, and that the estates of the two families
should be thus united.</p>
<p>While he was not at all the sort of man who
would have interfered to push such an arrangement
against the preferences of the parties concerned,
he had looked on with great and increasing
satisfaction, while the plans of the young
people evidently tended strongly in that direction.</p>
<p>That his daughter, after an absence from
home of only two weeks, should have come in
contact with that which seemed to change all
her tastes and views and plans, in regard to other
matters, but which had actually caused her to
turn, with a steady and increasing determination,
away from the friend who had been her acknowledged
protector and attendant ever since she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_392" id="Page_392"></SPAN></span>
was a child, was a matter that he did not understand
nor approve.</p>
<p>"I am not a tyrant," he would say sullenly,
when Mrs. Shipley and himself talked the matter
over; when she, with the characteristics of a
mother, even while her child annoyed and vexed
her, yet struggled to speak a word for her when
a third person came in to blame. "I never ordered
Flossy to be so exceedingly intimate with
Col. Baker that their names have been coupled
together ever since she was a baby. I never insisted
on her accepting his attentions on all occasions.
It was her own free will. I own that
I was pleased with the inclination she displayed,
and did what I could to make the way pleasant
for her, but the thing is not of my planning.
What I am displeased with is this sudden
change. There is no reason for it and no sense
in it. It is just a mere baby performance, a girlish
freak, very unpleasant for him and very disagreeable
for us. The child ought not to be upheld
in it."</p>
<p>So they did their best not to uphold her, and
succeeded among them in making her life very
disagreeable to her.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_393" id="Page_393"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>The matter had culminated on the evening
before the party in question. Col. Baker, despite
the persistent and patient efforts on Flossy's
part to show him the folly of his course, had insisted
on obliging her to speak a decided negative
to his earnestly pressed question. The result
was, an unusually unpleasant domestic
scene, and a general air of gloom and unhappiness.</p>
<p>Mr. Shipley had not ordered his daughter to
marry Col. Baker. He would have been shocked
beyond measure at such a proceeding on the part
of a father. But he made her so unhappy, with
a sense of his disappointment and disapproval,
that more than once she sighed wearily, and
wished in her sad little heart that all this living
was over.</p>
<p>Finally, they all went off to Mrs. Westervelt's
party, and left her alone. She had never felt so
much alone in her life. The blessed meetings,
which had been such a wealth of delight and
helpfulness to her heart, were closed. The
sweet, and holy, and elevating influences that
had surrounded her outer life for so long were
withdrawn. She missed them bitterly.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_394" id="Page_394"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>It almost seemed to her as if everything were
withdrawn from her. Father, and mother, sister,
and even her warm-hearted brother, were
all more or less annoyed at her course. Charlie
had been betrayed into more positive sharpness
than this favorite sister had ever felt from him
before. He felt that his friend Col. Baker had
been ill-treated.</p>
<p>There was a very sore spot about this matter
for Flossy. The truth was, she could not help
seeing that in a sense her father was right; she
had brought it on herself; not lately, not since
her utter change of views and aims, but long before
that. With what satisfaction had she allowed
her name to be coupled familiarly with
that of Col. Baker; how much she had enjoyed
his exclusive attentions; not that she really and
heartily liked him, with a liking that made her
willing to think of him as belonging to her forever;
she had chosen, rather, not to allow herself
to think of any such time; she had contented
herself with saying that she was too young
to think of such things; that she was not obliged
to settle that question till the time came.</p>
<p>But, mind you, all the time she chose to allow,
and enjoy, and encourage by her smiles and her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_395" id="Page_395"></SPAN></span>
evident pleasure in them, very special attentions,
that gave other people liberty to speak of them
almost as one. To call it by a very plain name,
which Flossy hated, and which made her cheek
glow as she forced herself to say it of herself,
she had been flirting with Col. Baker. It isn't a
nice word; I don't wonder that she hated it.
Yet so long as young ladies continue to be guilty
of the sort of conduct that can only be described
by that unpleasant and coarse sounding word, I
am afraid it will be used.</p>
<p>All that was over now, at least it was over as
much as Flossy could make it; but there remained
an uncomfortable sense that she had
wronged a man who honestly loved her; not intentionally—no
decent woman does that—but
thoughtlessly; so many silly girls do that. She
had lost her influence over him now; rather, she
had been obliged to put herself in a position to
lose all influence. She might have been his true,
faithful friend now, and helped him up to a
higher manhood, only by her former folly she had
put it out of her power. These were not pleasant
reflections. Then there was no denying that
she felt very desolate.</p>
<p>"A forlorn friendless creature," her mother<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_396" id="Page_396"></SPAN></span>
had said she would become, or words to that effect.
The thought lingered with her. She
looked over her list of friends; there was always
those three girls, growing dearer by every day of
association; yet their lives necessarily ran much
apart; it would naturally grow more and more
so as the future came to them. Then, too, she
was equally intimate with each of them; they
were all equally dear to her.</p>
<p>Now a woman can not have three friends who
shall all fill that one place in her heart which she
finds. She thought of her home ties; strong they
certainly were; growing stronger every day.
There were few things that she did not feel willing
to do for her father; but the one thing that he
wanted just now was that she should marry Col.
Baker; she could not do that even to please
him.</p>
<p>He would recover from that state of feeling,
of course; but would not other kindred states of
feeling constantly arise, both with him and with
her mother? Could she not <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'forsee'">foresee</ins> a constant
difference of opinion on almost every imaginable
topic? Then there was her sister Kitty. Could
any two lives run more widely apart than hers<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_397" id="Page_397"></SPAN></span>
and Kitty's were likely to? Had they a single
taste in common?</p>
<p>As for Charlie, Flossy turned from that subject;
it was too sore and too tender a spot to be
probed. She trembled for Charlie; he was walking
in slippery places; the descent was growing
easier; she felt that rather than saw it; and, she
felt, too, that his friend Col. Baker was the
leader; and she felt, too, that her intimacy with
Col. Baker had greatly strengthened his.</p>
<p>No wonder that the spot was a sore one.
Grouping all these things together and brooding
over them, with no sound breaking the silence
save the ceaseless drip, drip of the rain, and
the whirls of defiant wind, sitting there in her
loneliness, the large arm-chair in which she
crouched being drawn up before that glowing
fire, is it any wonder that the firelight revealed
the fact that great silent tears were slowly following
each other down Flossy's round smooth
cheek? She felt like a pitiful, lonely, forsaken
baby.</p>
<p>It was not that she was utterly miserable;
she recognized even then the thought that she
had an almighty, everlasting, unchanging Friend.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_398" id="Page_398"></SPAN></span>
She rejoiced even then at the thought, not as
she might have rejoiced, not as it was her privilege
to do, but I mean she knew that all these
trials, and mistakes, and burdens, were but for a
moment. She knew that to-morrow, when the
sun shone again, she would be able to come out
from behind these clouds and grasp some of the
brightness of her life, and endure with patience
the little annoyances that were to be borne; remembering
that she was still very young, and
that there was a chance for a great deal of brightness
for her, even on this side.</p>
<p>But, in the meantime, her intensely human
heart craved human companionship and sympathy;
craved it to such a degree, that if it had
not been for the rain and the darkness, and the
growing lateness of the hour, she would have
gone out then after one of those three girls to
share her mood with her.</p>
<p>Into the midst of this state of dismal journeying
into the valley of gloom there pealed the
sound of the bell. It did not startle her; the
callers in their circle would be sure to be engaged
at the party, and to suppose that she was. Besides,
it was hardly an evening for ordinary callers—something<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_399" id="Page_399"></SPAN></span>
as important as a party was,
would be expected to call out people to-night.
It was some one with a business message for father,
she presumed; and she did not arouse from
her curled-up position among the cushions of
that great chair.</p>
<p>Half listening, half giving attention to her own
thoughts, she was conscious that a servant came
to answer the bell, that the front door opened
and shut, that there was a question asked and
answered in the hall. Then she gave over attending
to the matter. If she were needed the
girl knew she was in the library. Yes, she was
to be summoned for something, to receive the
message probably, for the library door quietly
unclosed.</p>
<p>"What is it, Katie?" she asked, in a sort of
muffled undertone, to hide the traces of disturbance
in her voice, and not turning her head in
that direction; she knew there were tears on her
cheeks.</p>
<p>"Suppose it should not be Katie, may any one
else come in and tell you what it is?" This
was the sentence wherewith she was answered.
What a sudden springing up there was from that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_400" id="Page_400"></SPAN></span>
chair! Even the tears were forgotten; and
what a singular ring there was to Flossy's voice
as she whirled round to full view of the intruder,
and said, "Oh, Mr. Roberts!"</p>
<p>Now, dear friends of this little lonely Flossy,
are you so stupid that you need to be told that
in less than half an hour from that moment she
believed that there could never again come to her
an absolutely lonely hour? That whatever
might come between them, whether of life or of
death, there would be that for each to remember
that would make it impossible ever to be <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'desoolate'">desolate</ins>
again. For there is no desolation of heart
to those who part at night to meet again in the
morning; there may be loneliness and a reaching
out after, and sometimes an unutterable longing
for the morning, but to those who are sure, <i>sure</i>
beyond the possibility of a doubt, that the eternal
morning <i>will</i> dawn, and dawn for them, there
is never again a desolation.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_401" id="Page_401"></SPAN></span></p>
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