"To-morrow is the day for your opening of Parliament, and I have a

ticket for the Court tribune, so you may expect to see me floating

somewhere above you in an atmosphere of lace and perfume.

Good-night!--Your poor bewildered sister, ROMA."

IV

Next morning David Rossi put on evening dress, in obedience to the

etiquette of the opening day of Parliament. Before going to the ceremony

he answered Roma's letter of the night before.

"DEAR R.,--If anything could add to the bitterness of my regret at

ending an intercourse which has brought me the happiest moments of

my life, it would be the tone of your sweet and charming letter.

You ask me if the woman I love is beautiful. She is more than

beautiful, she is lovely. You ask me if she knows that I love her.

I have never dared to disclose my secret, and if I could have

believed that she had ever so much as guessed at it, I should have

found some consolation in a feeling which is too deep for the

humiliations of pride. You ask me if she is worthy of my

friendship and love. She is worthy of the love and friendship of a

better man than I am or can ever hope to be.

"Yet even if she were not so, even if there were, as you say, a

fault in her, who am I that I should judge her harshly? I am not

one of those who think that a woman is fallen because

circumstances and evil men have conspired against her. I reject

the monstrous theory that while a man may redeem the past, a woman

never can. I abhor the judgment of the world by which a woman may

be punished because she is trying to be pure, and dragged down

because she is rising from the dirt. And if she had sinned as I

have sinned, and suffered as I have suffered, I would pray for

strength enough to say, 'Because I love her we are one, and we

stand or fall together.' "But she is sweet, and pure, and true, and brave, and noble-hearted,

and there is no fault in her, or she would not be the daughter of

her father, who was the noblest man I ever knew or ever expect to

know. No, the root of the separation is in myself, in myself only,

in my circumstances and the personal situation I find myself in.

"And yet it is difficult for me to state the obstacle which

divides us, or to say more about it than that it is permanent and

insurmountable. I should deceive myself if I tried to believe that

time would remove or lessen it, and I have contended in vain with

feelings which have tempted me to hold on at any price to the only

joy and happiness of my life.




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