Short Stories: A Magazine of Fact and Fiction. Vol. V, No. 2, Mar. 1891
Vol V. No. 2
This magazine is planned to cover the story-telling field of the world. Its selections will be of the best procurable in all the languages.
MAR. 1891
(Italian of Haydée: Translated for Short Stories by E. Cavazza.)
When, before the altar, the priest asked her, “are you content?” it was with all her soul Gemma had responded, “Yes!”
Oh, yes; she was content indeed. Through the cloud of costly lace which enwrapped her in its snowy transparence, she saw the vast church all dotted with lights, resplendent in the dark gleam of mosaics upon golden backgrounds, animated by the slight movement of the very elegant crowd that filled it; lighted by oblique rays descending from the nave, all a glitter of gold, silks and brilliants; and it was her own future that she seemed to see thus—the years of luxury and wealth which her rich marriage was preparing for her. And had it not been the dream for which she sighed? She, the ideal blonde, of eighteen years, with the tall and proud figure; the pure, disdainful profile under heavy curls like those of an archangel; with haughty eyes sparkling like blue gems under the golden fringes of her long eyelashes.
She had been for a long time a poor girl, the daughter of citizens who had seen better days, that marvelous human lily. She had experienced all the petty troubles, all the cruel daily sufferings of misery that conceals itself. The poor and inelegant gowns, painfully remodeled every year; the insolence of creditors; humiliations; continual and tormenting thoughts of money—she had experienced them all, and in her little heart, eager for pleasure and enjoyment, swollen with unsatisfied longings, a dream was arisen little by little, occupying all the room, rendering her insensible to all the rest: the dream of at last becoming rich.
She wanted it, absolutely; she was born for it; she was rich, now. That “yes,” which she had just pronounced, had, by its three magic letters, changed her destiny; and she was so content, so happy, that it appeared to her it was all a dream, that her Mechlin veil was a cloud that transported her into the realms of the impossible, across a sidereal heaven, of which the diamond pins thrust among her laces formed the flaming stars; and, in order to return to reality, she must cast her eyes toward her husband, Luigo Marchis, kneeling beside her, in the mystic, velvety shade of the altar, lit by the tremulous brightness of the candles.
Various
---
DECEPTIONS: A MATRIMONIAL STUDY
ETCHINGS: FROZEN
A DEPUTY GOVERNOR’S WOOING
ETCHINGS: THE SAD HOUR
ABRUM, CA’LINE AND ASPHALT
ETCHINGS: AFTERWARD
THE MAN WHO NEVER WAS FOUND
ETCHINGS: THE OLD VIOLINIST
THE DEVILS IN HEAVEN
THE RACES ON THE NEVA
ETCHINGS: THE FERRYMAN
THE PLAYERS AT THE CHESS
ETCHINGS: GO LEAD THE HORSE IN!
TWO AFTERNOONS
FOLLOWING THE SEA
ETCHINGS: JEANNETTE
IN THE HOUSE OF SUDDHOO
ETCHINGS: THE HUSKING BEE
MY BABOON BEDFELLOW
PROFESSOR JOVANNY’S FUNERAL
ETCHINGS: THAT DOOR
AMONG THE AOULÂD NAÎEL
ETCHINGS: COMFORT
TIMMY MULLIGAN’S RALLY
THE GOBLIN BARBER
Transcriber’s Notes