For Money. room. She was acquiescent, as usual, when he advanced a proposition, but she did not take kindly to the idea of a change. She had lived in the country and loved it all her life, and the serene valley and flowery woods, low hills and gentle river about her native New York village, had given place in her affections to the bold, characteristic mountain scenery about San Manuel. Of San Francisco she had only seen the low, business part of the city, as most of her time had been spent at a hotel or in shopping; and Mrs. Valentine, who was the only person she had visited there, lived in a flat part of the city, where there was no view, declaring that she was too old to climb hills. The impression the dear old city gave Louise on her drive to her new house she never forgot, and it only deepened as the years went by. San Francisco seems like a whimsical individuality, showing strangers her ugliest, seamiest side, but developing new beauties every day after the eyes have grown accustomed to her original appearance. The hills lie round her as round about Jerusalem. And the bay, one of the loveliest in the world, even to those who have seen Naples, holds her in its arms; and wherever you go, you have the city, man, and civilization before you, at your feet; and about and beyond you, the everlasting hills and the everlasting sea. It was a soft, warm, clear day, the rain all gone, when Louise drove with her husband to see her city home; and as she alighted from the carriage, she stood still and looked about her with delight. The house stood on a hill, of course; of a pretty one, that situation is a foregone conclusion in San Francisco. Off to the south, across a valley filled with houses, rose the Twin Peaks and their sister Mission hills, soft with the new green that clothes them after a rain as if by magic; looking to the west she saw the Fort, the Golden Gate, and the ocean beyond, a streak of shining, glittering silver in the afternoon sun; and to the north, a bit of the bay, bounded to her vision by the bold, red mountains on the opposite shore, the intervening house-covered hills of the city, and the mon ster dunes of the beach, more like a placid mountain lake than an arm of the sea, with the vivid blue sky above. "We don't need to go in, Marion," murmured Louise. "I never thought it was beautiful like this." And Mr. Waring felt grateful to her for being pleased. XI. THERE was distress in the Lennard family when she communicated her plans to them. "My dear, I shall never see you again," said Frances, breaking down altogether. "You will have too many new occupations to be running over here all the time, and I can't go across to you very often." Mrs. Lennard sat quiet, divided between grief at the separation-for it was practically that-and delight in the fortunes of her favorite child. It warmed the very middle of her heart that her Louise should leap at one bound to the position of a fashionable woman, and, doubtless, leader as soon as she should feel assured. She had a little formula in speaking of various people: "Yes, they have done very well-as this world goes," the last part of her phrase being a sort of concession to what was expected of her in the way of unworldliness as a clergyman's wife; but in her soul she felt that it was absolutely well. Some one has remarked: "On Earth so much is needed, but in Heaven, Love is all." Mrs. Lennard held privately that it was all very well for love to be enough in heaven, but meanwhile she wanted all that was needed on earth, too, and as she could not have it, the next best thing was that Louise should. Then she thought of her own lessening home circle, and the tears came into her eyes. Of the seven olive branches so lately about her, only four were left, and sometimes but three, for Harry did not always go home at night. Most of Gilbert's work was done after six o'clock, and he, of course, lived in the city. Rose and Louise were married, and their interest in their old home would grow less and less, in the nature of things. She tried to dry her eyes, but the tears rose faster than 1886.] 249
For Money.—Chapters IX-XI [pp. 241-254]
Overland monthly and Out West magazine. / Volume 7, Issue 39
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- The Knights of Labor on the Chinese Situation - W. W. Stone - pp. 225-230
- A Prophecy Partly Verified - P. S. Dorney - pp. 230-234
- The Tacoma Method - George Dudley Lawson - pp. 234-239
- Sequel to the Tacoma Method - H. - pp. 239-240
- For Money.—Chapters IX-XI - Helen Lake - pp. 241-254
- At Daybreak - M. F. Rowntree - pp. 254
- Explorations in the Upper Columbia Country - Samuel Rodman, Jr. - pp. 255-266
- An Heritage of Crime - F. K. Upham - pp. 266-275
- Lost Journals of a Pioneer.—III - G. E. Montgomery - pp. 276-287
- Comrades Only - Emilie Tracy Y. Swett - pp. 287-293
- A Winter Among the Piutes - William Nye - pp. 293-298
- Mysterious Fate of Blockade Runners - J. W. A. Wright - pp. 298-302
- Individuality—Its Bearing Upon the Art of Utterance - John Murray - pp. 302-304
- A New Study of Some Problems Relating to the Giant Trees - C. B. Bradley - pp. 305-316
- March.—By the Atlantic - Helen Chase - pp. 316
- March.—By the Pacific - Ina D. Coolbrith - pp. 316
- Stedman's Poets of America - pp. 317-319
- Recent Fiction - pp. 320-324
- Italian Popular Tales - pp. 325-326
- Etc. - pp. 326-334
- Book Reviews - pp. 334-336
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"For Money.—Chapters IX-XI [pp. 241-254]." In the digital collection Making of America Journal Articles. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/ahj1472.2-07.039. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 22, 2025.