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The Cock and Anchor

CHAPTER XVIII
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the two cousins—the neglected jewels and the broken seal.

it was drawing toward evening when emily copland, in high spirits, and richly and becomingly dressed, ran lightly to the door of her cousin's chamber. she knocked, but no answer was returned. she knocked again, but still without any reply. then opening the door, she entered the room, and beheld her cousin mary seated at a small work-table, at which it was her wont to read. there she lay motionless—her small head leaned upon her graceful arms, over which flowed all negligently the dark luxuriant hair. an open letter was on the table before her, and two or three rich ornaments lay unheeded on the floor beside her, as if they had fallen from her hand. there was in her attitude such a passionate abandonment of grief, that she seemed the breathing image of despair. spite of all her levity, the young lady was touched at the sight. she approached her gently, and laying her hand upon her shoulder, she stooped down and kissed her.

"mary, dear mary, what grieves you?" she said. "tell me. it's i, dear—your cousin emily. there's a good girl—what has happened to vex you?"

mary raised her head, and looked in her cousin's face. her eye was wild—she was pale as marble, and in her beautiful face was an expression so utterly woeful and piteous, that emily was almost moved.

"oh! i have lost him—for ever and ever i have lost him," said she, despairingly. "oh! cousin, dear cousin, he is gone from me. god pity me—i am forsaken."

"nay, cousin, do not say so—be cheerful—it cannot be—there, there," and emily copland kissed the poor girl's pale lips.

"forsaken—forsaken," continued mary, for she heard not and heeded not the voice of vain consolation. "he has thrown me off for ever—for ever—quite—quite. god pity me, where shall i look for hope?"

"mary, dear mary," said her cousin, "you are ill—do not give way thus. be assured it is not as you think. you must be in error."

"in error! oh! that i could think so. god knows how gladly i would give my poor life to think so. no, no—it is real—all real. oh! cousin, he has forsaken me."

"i cannot believe it—i can not," said emily copland. "such folly can hardly exist. i will not believe it. what reason have you for thinking him changed?"

"read—oh, read it, cousin," replied the girl, motioning toward the letter, which lay open on the table—"read it once, and you will not bid me hope any more. oh! cousin, dear cousin, there is no more joy for me in this world, turn where i will, do what i may—i am heart-broken."

emily copland glanced through the letter, shook her head, and dropped the note again where it had been lying.

"you know, cousin emily, how i loved him," continued mary, while for the first time the tears flowed fast—"you know that day after day, among all that happened to grieve me, my heart found rest in his love—in the hope and trust that he would never grow cold; and—and—oh! god pity me—now where is it all? you see—you know his love is gone from me—for evermore—gone from me. oh! how i used to count the days and hours till the time would come round when i could see him and speak to him—but this has all gone. hereafter all days are to be the same—morning or evening, summer time or winter—no change of seasons or of hours can bring to me any more hope or gladness, but ever the same—sorrow and desolate loneliness—for oh! cousin, i am very desolate, and hopeless, and heart-broken."

the poor girl threw her arms round her cousin's neck, and sobbed and wept, and wept and sobbed again, as though her heart would break. long and bitterly she wept upon her cousin's neck in silence, unbroken, except by her sobs. after a time, however, emily copland exclaimed,—

"well, mary, to say the truth, i never much liked the matter; and as he is a fool, and an ungrateful fool to boot, i am not sorry that he has shown his character as he has done. believe me, painful as such discoveries are when made thus early, they are incomparably more agonizing when made too late. a little—a very little—time will enable you quite to forget him."

"no, cousin," replied mary—"no, i never will forget him. he is changed indeed—greatly changed from what he was—bitterly has he disappointed and betrayed me; but i cannot forget him. there shall indeed never more pass word or look between us; he shall be to me as one that is dead, whom i shall hear and see no more; but the memory of what he was—the memory of what i vainly thought him—shall remain with me while my poor heart beats."

"well, mary, time will show," said emily.

"yes, time will show—time will show," replied she, mournfully; "be the time long or short, it will show."

"you must forget him—you will forget him; a few weeks, and you will thank your stars you found him out so soon."

"ah, cousin," replied mary, "you do not know how all my thoughts, and hopes, and recollections—everything i liked to remember, and to look forward to; you cannot know how all that was happy in my life—but what boots it, i will keep my troth with him; i will love no other, and wed with no other; and while this sorrowful life remains i will never—never—forget him."

"i can only say, that were the case my own," rejoined emily, "i would show the fellow how lightly i held him and his worthless heart, and marry within a month; but every one has her own way of doing things. remember it is nearly time to start for the theatre; the coach will be at the door in half-an-hour. surely you will come; it would seem so very strange were you to change your mind thus suddenly; and you may be very sure that, by some means or other, the impudent fellow—about whom, i cannot see why, you care so much—would hear of all your grieving, and pining, and love-sickness. pah! i'd rather die than please the hollow, worthless creature by letting him think he had caused me a moment's uneasiness; and then, above all, sir richard would be so outrageously angry—why, you would never hear the end of it. come, come, be a good girl. after all, it is only holding up your head, and looking pretty, which you can't help, for an hour or two. you must come to silence gossip abroad, as well as for the sake of peace at home—you must come."

"i would fain stay here at home," said the poor girl; "heart and head are sick: but if you think my father would be angry with me for staying at home, i will go. it is indeed, as you say, a small matter to me where i pass an hour or two; all times, all places—crowds or solitudes—are henceforward indifferent to me. what care i where they bring me! cousin emily, i will do whatever you think best."

the poor girl spoke with a voice and look of such utter wretchedness, that even her light-hearted, worldly, selfish cousin was touched with pity.

"come, then; i will assist you," said she, kissing the pale cheek of the heart-stricken girl. "come, mary, cheer up, you must call up your good looks it would never do to be seen thus." and so talking on, she assisted her to dress.

gaily and richly arrayed in the gorgeous and by no means unbecoming style of the times, and sparkling with brilliant jewels, poor mary ashwoode—a changed and stricken creature, scarcely conscious of what was going on around her—took her place in her father's carriage, and was borne rapidly toward the theatre.

the party consisted of the two young ladies, who were respectively under the protection of lord aspenly, who sate beside mary ashwoode, happily too much pleased with his own voluble frivolity to require anything more from her than her appearing to hear it, and young ashwoode, who chatted gaily with his pretty cousin.

"what has become of my venerable true-love, major o'leary?" inquired miss copland.

"he will follow on horseback," replied ashwoode. "i beheld him, as i passed downstairs, admiring himself before the looking-glass in his new regimentals. he designs tremendous havoc to-night. his coat is a perfect phenomenon—the investment of a year's pay at least—with more gold about it than i thought the country could afford, and scarlet enough to make a whole wardrobe for the lady of babylon—a coat which, if left to itself, would storm the hearts of nine girls out of ten, and which, even with an officer in it, will enthral half the sex."

"and here comes the coat itself," exclaimed the young lady, as the major rode up to the coach-window—"i'm half in love with it myself already."

"ladies, your devoted slave: gentlemen, your most obedient," said the major, raising his three-cornered hat. "i hope to see you before half-an-hour, under circumstances more favourable to conversation. miss copland, depend upon it, with your permission, i'll pay my homage to you before half-an-hour, the more especially as i have a scandalous story to tell you. meanwhile, i wish you all a safe journey, and a pleasant one." so saying, the major rode on, at a brisk pace, to the "cock and anchor," there intending to put up his horse, and to exchange a few words with young o'connor.

in the meantime the huge old coach, which contained the rest of the party, jolted and rumbled on, until at length, amid the confusion and clatter of crowded vehicles, restive horses, and vociferous coachmen, with all their accompaniments of swearing and whipping, the clank of scrambling hoofs, the bumping and hustling of carriages, and the desperate rushing of chairmen, bolting this way or that, with their living loads of foppery and fashion—the coach-door was thrown open at the box-entrance of the theatre royal, in smock alley.

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