A Young Girls Wooing

E. P. Roe
ᎎA Young Girl's Wooing

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Title: A Young Girl's Wooing
Author: E. P. Roe
Release Date: July 10, 2004 [eBook #12876]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A YOUNG GIRL'S WOOING***
E-text prepared by John Hagerson, Kevin Handy, Cathy Smith, and Project Gutenberg Distributed Proofreaders

The Works of E. P. Roe
Volume Sixteen
A YOUNG GIRL'S WOOING
Illustrated
1884

[Illustration: "ARE YOU SO BENT UPON WINNING HER, GRAYDON?"]

CONTENTS

CHAPTER I
A Crescent of a Girl

CHAPTER II
Graydon Muir

CHAPTER III
The Parting

CHAPTER IV
Effort

CHAPTER V
Achievement

CHAPTER VI
The Secret of Beauty

CHAPTER VII
Not a Miracle

CHAPTER VIII
Rival Girls

CHAPTER IX
The Meeting

CHAPTER X
Old Ties Broken

CHAPTER XI
"I Fear I Shall Fail"

CHAPTER XII
The Promptings of Miss Wildmere's Heart

CHAPTER XIII
"You Will Be Disappointed"

CHAPTER XIV
Miss Wildmere's Strategy

CHAPTER XV
Perplexed and Beguiled

CHAPTER XVI
Declaration of Independence

CHAPTER XVII
Not Strong in Vain

CHAPTER XVIII
Make Your Terms

CHAPTER XIX
An Object for Sympathy

CHAPTER XX
"Veiled Wooing"

CHAPTER XXI
Suggestive Tones

CHAPTER XXII
Disheartening Confidences

CHAPTER XXIII
The Filial Martyr

CHAPTER XXIV
"I'll See How You Behave"

CHAPTER XXV
Gossamer Threads

CHAPTER XXVI
Mrs. Muir's Account

CHAPTER XXVII
Madge's Story

CHAPTER XXVIII
Dispassionate Lovers

CHAPTER XXIX
The Enemies' Plans

CHAPTER XXX
The Strong Man Unmanned

CHAPTER XXXI
Checkmate

CHAPTER XXXII
Madge is Matter-of-Fact

CHAPTER XXXIII
The End of Diplomacy

CHAPTER XXXIV
Broken Lights and Shadows

CHAPTER XXXV
A New Experiment

CHAPTER XXXVI
Madge Alden's Ride

CHAPTER XXXVII
"You are Very Blind"

CHAPTER XXXVIII
"Certainly I Refuse You"

CHAPTER XXXIX
"My True Friend"

CHAPTER XL
The End of the Wooing

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
"_Are you so bent upon winning her, Graydon?_"
_"There, now, be rational" cried the young girl_
_Her lips were parted, her pose, grace itself_
"_Promise me you will take a long rest_"
"_So you imagine I shall soon be making love to another girl?_"

CHAPTER I
A CRESCENT OF A GIRL
When Madge Alden was seventeen years of age an event occurred which promised to be the misfortune of her life. At first she was almost overwhelmed and knew not what to do. She was but a young and inexperienced girl, and for a year or more had been regarded as an invalid.
Madge Alden was an orphan. Four years prior to the opening of our story she had lost her mother, her surviving parent, and since had resided with her elder sister Mary, who was several years her senior, and had married Henry Muir, a merchant of New York City. This gentleman had cordially united with his wife in offering Madge a home, and his manner toward the young girl, as far as his absorbed and busy life permitted, had been almost paternal. He was a quiet, reticent man, who had apparently concentrated every faculty of soul and body on the problem of commercial success. Trained to business from boyhood, he had allowed it to become his life, and he took it very seriously. It was to him an absorbing game--his vocation, and not a means to some ulterior end. He had already accumulated enough to maintain his family in affluence, but he no more thought of retiring from trade than would a veteran whist-player wish to throw up a handful of winning cards. The events of the world, the fluctuations in prices, over which he had no control, brought to his endeavor the elements of chance, and it was his mission to pit against these uncertainties untiring industry and such skill and foresight as he possessed.
His domestic life was favorable to his ruling passion. Mary Alden, at the time of her marriage, was a quiet girl, whose early life had been shadowed by sorrow. She had seen her father pass away in his prime, and her mother become in consequence a sad and failing woman. The young girl rallied from these early years of depression into cheerfulness, and thoroughly enjoyed what some might regard as a monotonous life; but she never developed any taste for the diversions of society. Thus it may be surmised that Mr. Muir encountered no distractions after business hours. He ever found a good dinner awaiting him, and his wife held herself in readiness to do what he wished during the evening, so far as the claims of the children permitted. Therefore there were few more contented men in the city than he, and the name of Henry Muir had become a synonym among his acquaintances for methodical business habits.
In character and antecedents his younger brother, Graydon Muir, who was also an inmate of his family, presented many marked contrasts to the elder man. He had received a liberal education, and had graduated at a city college. He had developed into one of the best products of metropolitan life, and his defects were chiefly due to the circumstances of his lot. During his academic course he had been known as an athletic rather than a bookish man, and had left his Alma Mater with an Apollo-like physique. At the same time he had
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