The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 01, No. 3, January, 1858 by Various
page 53 of 293 (18%)
page 53 of 293 (18%)
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"Nor I," cried Laura, sinking still deeper in despair. "Oh, dear!
what shall I do?" "In novels, you know," pursued Cornelia, "where there's a cruel, tyrannical father, like your sister, there's always a hero in love with the heroine----" "I'm sure I wish there was a hero in love with me," said Laura, thinking of her own hero in regimentals. "I'd run away with him," she added, with animation, "if--if both his legs were shot off,"--not considering duly, I dare say, how greatly such a dreadful mutilation, however glorious in itself, would conflict with the rapid locomotion essential to her plan of elopement. But when Tira Blake came to be told of Laura's trouble, and the reasons of it, that sage and prudent friend gave counsel that cheered her like a cordial, telling her it would be sinful to marry a man whom she disliked so heartily, and that in such a matter no one had the right to demand or enforce obedience. "It's bad enough to be married when you're willin'," said she; "but when you a'n't willin', there's no law nor no gospel to make you." "But if Maria should compel me, what should I do?" cried Laura, to whom her sister's will seemed more mighty than both law and gospel. "She can't," replied Statira, sententiously; "she can't. Her 'yes,' in such a case, is only good for herself; it can't make you any man's wife.--What shall you do? Why, nothin',--nothin' in the world. If they should bring bridegroom and parson, and stand you up side of |
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