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Sign up freeThe Canton Advocate
Canton, Lincoln County, South Dakota
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Henry M. Stanley's romantic history: jilted by betrothed Alice Pike after his African expedition, leading to his morose demeanor despite fame; earlier failed courtship of a Greek maiden in Crete due to family demands.
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Romance of Stanley's Life--Betrothed to a Jewess and Jilted While in Africa--Love at First Sight in Athens
From the Cincinnati Enquirer.
The following little romance in real life finds additional interest to Cincinnati readers with the statement that the Lady Alice alluded to is no other than Miss Alice Pike, daughter of the late Samuel N. Pike, and at present the wife of Mr. Barney, who represents the interests of the Pike estate here and manages the opera house property on Fourth street. The story is well told by the N. Y. Graphic as follows:
There are few men in the world to whom life should apparently be so pleasant as to Mr. Henry M. Stanley; there are few, however, to whom it seems to be so bitter. All England is ready to do him honor, fens has been overwhelmed with praise and congratulation; the queen has received him; parliament has thanked him; the two great journals for which he has made his explorations have amply rewarded him. But he is sullen, morose, discontented and savage; he seems to enjoy nothing save occasionally making himself intensely disagreeable at a public dinner or meeting where every one is anxious to do him honor. This is strange; Mr. Stanley is yet a young man and life should yet contain much joy for him. What is the explanation of this mystery?
Mr. Stanley has had a romance; it ended unhappily for him, and this has soured him to the heart. Before he went upon his second expedition to Africa, he met and fell madly in love with a charming young lady, the daughter of a wealthy citizen of Jewish extraction, whose name is perhaps best known in connection with the erection of an extensive but unfortunate opera house Mr. Stanley's passion was deep and violent, but he was told that, at least, he must wait, and that an immediate marriage was out of the question. He was anxious to win even greater fame and fortune and lay them at the feet of his beloved. It was at this moment that the second African expedition was proposed to him: in it he saw the coveted opportunity for distinction and reward, and he eagerly embraced the perilous commission. Throughout the whole of that terrible journey through the jungles of Africa, and all his toils, dangers, sickness, and disappointments, he was sustained by the thought of his love, and by the confident hope of receiving the reward which was dearer to him than the applause of the world or the riches of Golconda. He gave the name of the young lady to the most beautiful lake which he discovered, as he gave it afterward to the handsome boat in which he made a portion of his exploration-the Lady Alice. At length, the source of the Congo was found; the great deed was accomplished, and Stanley returned with a proud and happy heart to the coast. At Zanzibar a packet of letters was awaiting him; and he hastened to open them, hoping to find some message of love and affection from the mistress of his soul. A fatal blow struck him. One of the letters contained the intelligence that Miss Alice - had been married several months.
From that moment Stanley was a changed man. His delight in life was wholly lost. His natural good humor and buoyancy of spirit gave place to long fits of melancholy alternated with violent outbursts of petulance and anger. The plaudits with which he was received upon his arrival in England were distasteful to him; he revenged himself by attacking with unreasonable rage every one who ventured to differ on even the slightest subject with him.
This, however, was Mr. Stanley's second love affair. He had experienced a previous disappointment, but it had not deeply wounded him. Chancing to be spending some time upon the island of Crete, he saw from his window a young Greek maiden in the garden of the opposite house, and he at once felt that his fate was sealed. She was about fifteen years old, and Mr. Stanley has since declared that never, before nor since has he beheld so sweet and beautiful a creature. He at once sought out the American consul and revealed to him the state of his heart. The consul, who had himself married a Greek lady, bade him not despair; took him forthwith to the house of his inamorata and presented him to her mother, who was a widow. Stanley could speak no Greek; the mother no English; the consul was the interpreter. He did his work so well that at the end of half an hour the young lady was sent for. Stanley was forbidden even to touch her hand; but he conversed with her by his eyes; they soon understood each other well. At the end of a week he was an accepted lover; at the end of a fortnight the day for the wedding arrived. All this while he had seen the young lady once a day, always in the presence of her mother. On the day before the wedding he had been permitted for the first time to take her hand and to imprint upon it a chaste salute. The morning of the wedding arrived; Stanley was dressed for the ceremony and was awaiting the happy moment. There entered to him three Greeks, whom he had never seen before, and an interpreter. They are introduced as the brothers of the bride, and they produce a parchment which the interpreter explains. It is a deed of settlement which binds Stanley to pay so much a year to the mother, so much to each brother, and so much to his wife, and to plank down the first installments on the spot. In vain Stanley explains that he is worth nothing and cannot pay; the brothers look daggers, the interpreter frowns, and the scene closes by the arrival of the consul who with difficulty gets Stanley out of the clutches of his tormentors and ships him off to Athens. He never saw his beautiful Grecian maiden again.
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Africa, Zanzibar, England, Crete, Athens
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Henry M. Stanley falls deeply in love with Alice Pike before his second African expedition, sustains himself through hardships with thoughts of her, names discoveries after her, but upon return learns she has married another, changing him into a morose man. Earlier, in Crete, he falls in love at first sight with a 15-year-old Greek maiden, courts her swiftly with consul's help, but her brothers demand financial settlements he cannot meet, forcing him to flee to Athens without marrying her.