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    Chapter 1 - Page 2

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    as I have felt and always feel in the presence of Miss Loring."

    "She has a spirit of finer mould than most women," said Mrs. Denison. "I do not know her very intimately; but I have seen enough to give me a clue to her character. Her tastes are pure, her mind evenly balanced, and her intellect well cultivated."

    "But she is only a woman."

    Mr. Hendrickson sighed as he spoke.

    "Only a woman! I scarcely understand you," said Mrs. Denison, gravely. "I am a woman."

    "Yes, and a true woman! Forgive my words. They have only a conventional meaning," replied the young man earnestly.

    "You must explain that meaning, as referring to Jessie Loring."

    "It is this, only. She can be deceived by appearances. Her eyes are not penetrating enough to look through the tinsel and glitter with which wealth conceals the worthlessness of the man."

    "Ah! you are jealous. There is a rival."

    "You, alone, can use those words, and not excite my anger," said Hendrickson.

    "Forgive me if they have fallen upon your ears unpleasantly."

    "A rival, Mrs. Denison!" the young man spoke proudly. "That is something I will never have. The woman's heart that can warm under the smile of another man, is nothing to me."

    "You are somewhat romantic, Paul, in your notions about matrimony. You forget that women are 'only' women."

    "But I do not forget, Mrs. Denison, that as you have so often said to me, there are true marriages in which the parties are drawn towards each other by sexual affinities peculiar to themselves; and that a union in such cases, is the true union by which they become, in the language of inspiration, 'one flesh.' I can enter into none other. When I first met Jessie Loring, a spirit whispered to me--was it a lying spirit?--a spirit whispered to me--'the beautiful complement of your life!' I believed on the instant. In that I may have been romantic."

    "Perhaps not!" said Mrs. Denison.

    Hendrickson looked into her face steadily for some moments, and then said--

    "It was an illusion."

    "Why do you say this, Paul? Why are you so disturbed? Speak your heart more freely."


    "Leon Dexter is rich. I am--poor!"

    "You are richer than Leon Dexter in the eyes of a true woman--richer a thousandfold, though he counted his wealth by millions." There were flashes of light in the eyes of Mrs. Denison.

    Hendrickson bent his glance to the floor and did not reply.

    "If Miss Loring prefers Dexter to you, let her move on in her way without a thought. She is not worthy to disturb, by even the shadow of her passing form, the placid current of your life. But I am by no means certain
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