“'Here, with my rifle and my steed,
And her who left the world for me'”—
The sound of his own voice in the stillness of the little glen, and a look of surprise in the young girl's quiet eyes, brought a sudden access of color to Arnold's face. “Hm-m-m,” he murmured to himself, “it's queer how rhymes slip away. Well, the last line ends in free. You see, it is a man's idea of happiness,—a young man's. Now, how do you suppose she liked it,—the girl, you know, who left the world, and all that? Did you ever happen to see a poem or a story, written by a woman, celebrating the joys of a solitary existence with the man of her heart?”
“I suppose that many a woman has tried it,” Miss Newell said evasively, “but I'm sure she”—
“Never lived to tell the tale?” cried Arnold.
“She probably had something else to do, while the hunter was riding around with his gun,” Miss Frances continued.
“Well, give her the odds of the rifle and the steed; give the man some commonplace employment to take the swagger out of him; let him come home reasonably tired and cross at night,—do you suppose he would find the 'kind' eyes and the 'smile'? I forgot to tell you that the Hunter of the Prairies is always welcomed by a smile at night.”
“He must have been an uncommonly fortunate man,” she said.
“Of course he was; but the question is: Could any living man be so fortunate? Come, Miss Frances, don't prevaricate!”
“Well, am I speaking for the average woman?”
“Oh, not at all,—you are speaking for the very nicest of women; any other kind would be intolerable on a prairie.”