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The Borrowed Diamonds


by Anne Taylor Clarke


“I say, Jackson, I wonder how Graham manages to dress his wife so well—he is only a book-keeper?”

“Just what I was thinking about. He is our book-keeper, so I know what his salary is, and I can’t imagine how he pays his board and keeps up such an appearance such times as these. His wife must have some means of her own.”

“Not at all. She was a poor girl, earning her own living, when Graham married her.”

“Well, my salary is the same as his, and if I thought I could dress a wife half as well as he dresses his, I would marry tomorrow. I shall ask him how he manages.”

This conversation occurred between the friends Jackson and Anderson while walking on Fifth avenue one Sunday afternoon, after meeting Graham and his pretty young wife. Mrs. Graham’s dress certainly was rich enough to excite the attention of her husband’s fellow clerks. The heavy crimson silk dress, black corded silk sack, and white tulle bonnet trimmed with real blonde, with crimson roses inside and strings of the same color, besides her parasol, gloves, lace handkerchiefs, were indeed too costly to suit the bookkeeper’s salary, had he been obliged to pay for them; but the various articles which made up this handsome costume were birthday presents from relatives of Mr. Graham’s. These relatives took a lively interest in the young couple, and knowing that Mr. Graham’s income was insufficient to dress his wife as other members of the society in which he moved, they made up the deficiency by timely presents. These relatives had not been very well pleased when Mr. Graham married Nellie Smith. She earned her own living and belonged to a family beneath the Grahams in the social scale, but they were too… Read More