"But we'll let it rest for the present as if it were. Suppose you were born to be a woman,—we'll put it that way for the sake of illustration,—and suppose, while you were yet a child, you had been married to a man many years your senior—married just to please somebody else—in defiance of your own judgment or desires?"
"Millions of women are married in that way every year, madam. Look at India, at China, at Turkey, and at many modern homes, even in England and America 1 It would seem to be the exception and not the rule where women get the husbands of their choice. I know it is the fashion to pretend they do; for a woman has to become desperately weary of her bargain before she'll own up honestly to a matrimonial mistake."
"But suppose one of those women had been yourself; don't you think if you had been so married in childhood, that you would have rebelled openly as soon as you reached the years of discretion?"
"Nonsense, Daphne!" interrupted Mrs. Benson. "You harp forever on a single string. Suppose you discuss the weather, for a change."
"There are points on which my estimable mother and myself do not agree," said the daughter, with a sad smile. "Don't mind her, please. I have learned that you are a wise and just man, and I am in need of advice. What would you do if, although you had obeyed the letter of the human law, you knew in your own soul thajt your marriage was a sin?"
"Don't talk like that in my presence. Daphne! I cannot bear it!" exclaimed her mother, petulantly.
"When I left the States I hoped to get away from everybody's domestic troubles," said the Captain, earnestly. "Please don't tell me about yours—if you have any—unless it is in my power to assist you."
They had reached a narrow and rocky grade, where careful driving was necessary to avoid disaster.