The Gilded Age by Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner

in St. Louis, would not take his scalp.

Philip looked rather dubious at this sentence, and wished that he had

written nothing about Indians.

CHAPTER XV.

Eli Bolton and his wife talked over Ruth’s case, as they had often done

before, with no little anxiety. Alone of all their children she was

impatient of the restraints and monotony of the Friends’ Society, and

wholly indisposed to accept the “inner light” as a guide into a life of

acceptance and inaction. When Margaret told her husband of Ruth’s newest

project, he did not exhibit so much surprise as she hoped for. In fact

he said that he did not see why a woman should not enter the medical

profession if she felt a call to it.

“But,” said Margaret, “consider her total inexperience of the world, and

her frail health. Can such a slight little body endure the ordeal of the

preparation for, or the strain of, the practice of the profession?”

“Did thee ever think, Margaret, whether, she can endure being thwarted in

an, object on which she has so set her heart, as she has on this? Thee

has trained her thyself at home, in her enfeebled childhood, and thee

knows how strong her will is, and what she has been able to accomplish in

self-culture by the simple force of her determination. She never will be

satisfied until she has tried her own strength.”

“I wish,” said Margaret, with an inconsequence that is not exclusively

feminine, “that she were in the way to fall in love and marry by and by.

I think that would cure her of some of her notions. I am not sure but if

she went away, to some distant school, into an entirely new life, her

thoughts would be diverted.”

Eli Bolton almost laughed as he regarded his wife, with eyes that never

looked at her except fondly, and replied,

“Perhaps thee remembers that thee had notions also, before we were

married, and before thee became a member of Meeting. I think Ruth comes

honestly by certain tendencies which thee has hidden under the Friend’s

dress.”

Margaret could not say no to this, and while she paused, it was evident

that memory was busy with suggestions to shake her present opinions.

“Why not let Ruth try the study for a time,” suggested Eli; “there is a

fair beginning of a Woman’s Medical College in the city. Quite likely

she will soon find that she needs first a more general culture, and fall,

in with thy wish that she should see more of the world at some large

school.”

There really seemed to be nothing else to be done, and Margaret consented

at length without approving. And it was agreed that Ruth, in order to

spare her fatigue, should take lodgings with friends near the college and

make a trial in the pursuit of that science to which we all owe our

lives, and sometimes as by a miracle of escape.

That day Mr. Bolton brought home a stranger to dinner, Mr. Bigler of the

great firm of Pennybacker, Bigler & Small, railroad contractors. He was

always bringing home somebody, who had a scheme; to build a road, or open

a mine, or plant a swamp with cane to grow paper-stock, or found a

hospital, or invest in a patent shad-bone separator, or start a college

somewhere on the frontier, contiguous to a land speculation.

The Bolton house was a sort of hotel for this kind of people. They were

always coming. Ruth had known them from childhood, and she used to say

that her father attracted them as naturally as a sugar hogshead does

flies. Ruth had an idea that a large portion of the world lived by

getting the rest of the world into schemes. Mr. Bolton never could say

“no” to any of them, not even, said Ruth again, to the society for

stamping oyster shells with scripture texts before they were sold at

retail.

Mr. Bigler’s plan this time, about which he talked loudly, with his mouth

full, all dinner time, was the building of the Tunkhannock, Rattlesnake

and Youngwomans-town railroad, which would not only be a great highway to

the west, but would open to market inexhaustible coal-fields and untold

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