ever, which he hoped not to sully, and
he bent himself quietly to duty, as, crookedly and undesirably, it came
his way. He found no call to do great things of the world, but rather
to straighten out the small things of a wee corner of it, and there to
keep the peace. The maid just came into his life, and he, in his plain
way, thanked Providence and held his tongue, except when secrets would
half slip out and tell-tale acts come about."
Marget made no sign as to whether or not she recognized the portrait,
and thus I was brought up abruptly against the other man of our parable.
"He," I said, "had all the ruder qualities admired by women, those of
manliness, which good women may like, and the others which the other
women secretly like. It was not difficult to see him, both as a hero
and as a villain, and either way the pull of romance lay about him. He
had particular ambitions which brought him between the maid and the
first man, and there was, thanks to certain elements in human ties and
high affairs, a strong influence favourable to those ambitions. But,
as chance or Providence would have it, he was translated to another
land, and there he found such comfort and companionship that he decided
to stay. This left the maid and the man who feared too much, free to
be to each other what they desired; and there ends my parable."
"But," asked Marget with unsteady words which betrayed her agitation,
"where is its moral? A parable must have a moral."
"Has it none?" I boldly asked her, taking her hand in mine, before she
or I knew it, and kissing it and then her rosy, rebellious lips.
By-and-by she looked at me through wet eye-lashes and asked, "Shall I
tell you a parable which had a moral, though maybe it has lost it," and
her tears laughed.
"Do," I said; "I can stand the moral now, whatever it may be."
"It should be a severe moral for you," she whispered, "because you have
been so foolish, so little understanding with me, yet I'll try and make
it light. It also concerns a maiden and two men, but she only cared
for one of the men, never at all for the other. Nor would all the
family interests in the world have made her marry the other. The real
man, well, he seemed not to know that there is a precipice of
influences, of circumstances, for every woman, over which she may be
let slip by his hesitation; and this without possibility of return,
for, even if she could return, her sex pride would not let her."
"
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