They do not flatter us or gush over us. They do not always agree with
us. They are not always the most delightful society, by any means.
They are not good talkers, nor--which would do just as well, perhaps
better--do they make enraptured listeners. They have awkward manners,
and very little tact. They do not shine to advantage beside our
society friends. They do not dress well; they look altogether
somewhat dowdy and commonplace. We almost hope they will not see us
when we meet them just outside the club. They are not the sort of
people we want to ostentatiously greet in crowded places. It is not
till the days of our need that we learn to love and know them. It is
not till the winter that the birds see the wisdom of building their
nests in the evergreen trees.
And we, in our spring-time folly of youth, pass them by with a sneer,
the uninteresting, colorless evergreens, and, like silly children with
nothing but eyes in their heads, stretch out our hands and cry for the
pretty flowers. We will make our little garden of life such a
charming, fairy-like spot, the envy of every passer-by! There shall
nothing grow in it but lilies and roses, and the cottage we will cover
all over with Virginia-creeper. And, oh, how sweet it will look,
under the dancing summer sun-light, when the soft west breeze is
blowing!
And, oh, how we shall stand and shiver there when the rain and the
east wind come!
Oh, you foolish, foolish little maidens, with your dainty heads so
full of unwisdom! how often--oh! how often, are you to be warned that
it is not always the sweetest thing in lovers that is the best
material to make a good-wearing husband out of? "The lover sighing
like a furnace" will not go on sighing like a furnace forever.
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