Burned Bridges - Bertrand W. Sinclair (best ereader for academics txt) 📗
- Author: Bertrand W. Sinclair
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She Crossed The Room To A Shelf Above The Serried Volumes Of Sam Carr's
Library, Lifted The Cover Of A Tin Tobacco Box And Took Out A Letter.
This She Gave To Thompson. Then She Sat Down Cross-Legged On The
Wolfskin Beside Her Youngster, Looking Up At Her Visitor Impassively,
Her Moon Face Void Of Expression, Except Perhaps The Mildest Trace Of
Curiosity.
Thompson Fingered The Envelope For A Second, Scarcely Crediting His
Ears. The Letter In His Hands Conveyed Nothing. He Did Not Recognize The
Writing. He Was Acutely Conscious Of A Dreadful Heartsinking. There Was
A Finality About The Indian Woman's Statement That Chilled Him.
"They Have Gone Away?" He Said. "Where? When Did They Go?"
"Long Time. Two Moon," She Replied Matter-Of-Factly. "Dunno Where Go.
Sam Say He Go--Don't Know When Come Back. Leave Me House, Plenty
Blanket, Plenty Grub. Next Spring He Say He Send More Grub. That All.
Sophie Go Too."
Thompson Stared At Her. Perhaps He Was Not Alone In Facing Something
That Numbed Him.
"Your Man Go Away. Not Come Back. You Sorry? You Feel Bad?" He Asked.
Her Lips Parted In A Wide Smile.
"Sam He Good Man," She Said Evenly. "Leave Good Place For Me. I Plenty
Warm, Plenty To Eat. I No Care He Go. Sam, Pretty Soon He Get Old. I
Want Ketchum Man, I Ketchum. No Feel Bad. No."
She Shook Her Head, As If The Idea Amused Her. And Mr. Thompson,
Perceiving That A Potential Desertion Which Moved Him To Sympathy Did
Not Trouble Her At All, Turned His Attention To The Letter In His Hand.
He Opened The Envelope. There Were Half A Dozen Closely Written Sheets
Within.
Dear Freckle-Faced Man: There Is Such A Lot I Want To Say That I
Don't Know Where To Begin. Perhaps You'll Think It Queer I Should
Write Instead Of Telling You, But I Have Found It Hard To Talk To
You, Hard To Say What I Mean In Any Clear Sort Of Way. Speech Is
A Tricky Thing When Half Of One's Mind Is Dwelling On The Person
One Is Trying To Talk To And Only The Other Half Alive To What
One Is Trying To Express. The Last Time We Were Together It Was
Hard For Me To Talk. I Knew What I Was Going To Do, And I Didn't
Like To Tell You. I Wanted To Talk And When I Tried I Blundered.
Too Much Feeling--A Sort Of Inward Choking. Andast Generation Used To
Read And Reread "Mr. Barnes Of New York," And "Mr. Potter Of Texas," And
"Miss Nobody Of Nowhere," And "That Frenchman," Which Should Have Been
Called "M. De Vernay Of Paris." Those Were The Earliest And The "Big
Four." The List Of Successors Is A Long One, But That Certain Something,
That Indefinable Quality, Which Had Made The First Books Great Trash Was
Irrevocably Gone. Of All The Flamboyant Characters Of The Tales Mr.
Barnes Was Deservedly The Most Popular, And At Such Times As He Was Not
Winning International Rifle Matches At Monte Carlo, Or Racing About
Europe In Respectable Pursuit Of Desirable Young Ladies, He Inhabited A
Dwelling On Lower Fifth Avenue. Practically All Fifth Avenue Were The
Scenes Of "Miss Nobody Of Nowhere," With Its Charming Heroine And Her
Adopted Parents, Its Wicked English Nobleman, And Its Comical Little
Chapter 7 (A Fortune And A Flitting) Pg 67Anglo-Maniac Dude. Under Some Name Or Other A "Gussie Van Beekman" Was A
Necessary Ingredient Of Every Gunter Novel.
It Is A Far Cry From Gunter To Henry James, Though Each Wrought
According To His Lights, And Served His Purpose In His Time. It Was When
The Avenue Was In Its Infancy That Dr. Sloper, Of James's "Washington
Square," Went To Live In The Brick House With White Stone Trimmings,
That, Practically Unchanged, May Be Seen Today, Diagonally Across The
Street From The Arch. The Novelist Wrote Of The Locality As Having "A
Kind Of Established Repose Which Is Not Of Frequent Occurrence In Other
Quarters Of The Long, Shrill City"; And Ascribed To It, "A Richer, Riper
Look Than Any Of The Upper Ramifications Of The Great Longitudinal
Thoroughfare--The Look Of Having Had Something Of A Social History."
That "Richer, Riper Look," That Suggestion Of A Past, Is There To-Day,
And Is Likely To Be There Tomorrow. The Particular Sloper House Is Quite
Easy Of Identification. It Is The Third From The Corner As One Goes
Westward From The Avenue. In 1835, When Dr. Sloper First Took
Possession, Moving Uptown From The Neighbourhood Of The City Hall, Which
Had Seen Its Best Days Socially, The Square, Then The Ideal Of Quiet And
Genteel Retirement, Was Enclosed By A Wooden Paling. The Edifice In
Which The Slopers Lived And Its Neighbours Were Then Thought To Embody
The Last Results Of Architectural Science. It Actually Dates To 1831.
Among The Merchants Who Built In That Year Were Thomas Suffern, Saul
Allen, John Johnston, George Griswold, James Boorman, And William C.
Rhinelander. It Was Their Type Of House That Was Accepted For The
Neighbourhood As The First Streets Began To Open To The Right And Left
Of Fifth Avenue. That Northern Stretch Of The Square, First Invaded In
Fiction By Henry James, Has Ever Been A Favourite Background Of The
Story-Spinners, Who Never Tire Of Contrasting Its Tone Of Well-Bred
Aristocracy With The Squalor, Half-Bohemian And Half-Proletarian, That
Faces It From Across The Park. In Fiction One Does Not Necessarily Have
To Be Of An Old New York Family In Order To Inhabit One Of Those
North-Side Dwellings. Robert Walmsley, Of O. Henry's "The Defeat Of The
City," Lived There, And The Boyhood To Which He Looked Back Was One
Spent On An Up-State Farm; While Another Erstwhile Tenant In The
Exclusive Row Was The Devious Artemas Quibble, Of Mr. Arthur Train's
Narrative, Who Began Life Humbly Somewhere In Grey New England, And
Ended It, So Far As The Reader Was Informed, In Sing Sing Prison. Then
There Was The Home Of Mrs. Martin, The "Duchess Of Washington Square" Of
Brander Matthews's "The Last Meeting," And That Of Miss Grandish, Of
Julian Ralph's "People We Pass," And The House Of Mrs. Delaney, Of Edgar
Fawcett's "Rutherford," And The Structure Which Inspired One-Half Of
Edward W. Townsend's "Just Across The Square," And The Five-Room
Apartment "At The Top Of A House With Dormer Windows On The North Side"
Where Sanford Lived According To F. Hopkinson Smith's "Caleb West," And
Where His Guests, Looking Out, Could See The "Night Life Of The Park,
Miniature Figures Strolling About Under The Treing In Brilliant
Light Or Swallowed Up In Dense Shadow As They Passed In The Glare Of
Many Lamps Scattered Among The Budding Foliage." Also Over The Square,
Regarded In The Light Of Fiction, Is The Friendly Shadow Of Bunner, Who
Liked It At Any Time, But Liked It Best Of All At Night, With The Great
Dim Branches Swaying And Breaking In The Breeze, The Gas Lamps
Flickering And Blinking, When The Tumults And The Shoutings Of The Day
Were Gone And "Only A Tramp Or Something Worse In Woman's Shape Was
Chapter 7 (A Fortune And A Flitting) Pg 68Hurrying Across The Bleak Space, Along The Winding Asphalt, Walking Over
The Potter's Field Of The Past On The Way To The Potter's Field To Be."
[Illustration: "At The Northwest Corner Of Fifty-Fourth Street Is The
University Club, To The Mind Of Arnold Bennett ('Your United States'),
The Finest Of All The Fine Structures That Line The Avenue"]
But To Turn Into The Avenue Proper, And To Follow The Trail Of The
Novelists Northward. At The Very Point Of Departure We Are On The Site
Of The Imaginary Structure That Gave The Title To Leroy Scott's "No. 13
Washington Square," For The Reason That There Is No Such Number At All,
And That The House In Question Must Have Occupied The Space Between Nos.
12 And 14, Respectively, On The East And West Corners Facing Waverly
Place. Before The Next Street Is Reached We Have Passed The Home Of The
Huntingdons Of Edgar Fawcett's "A Hopeless Case," And At The Southwest
Corner Of The Avenue And Eighth Street, Facing The Brevoort, Is No. 68
Clinton Place, Which Was Not Only The Setting, But Also The _Raison
D'être_ Of Thomas A. Janvier's "A Temporary Deadlock." Almost Diagonally
Across The Street Is An Old Brick House, With Ionic Pillars Of Marble
And A Fanlight At The Arched Entrance--One Of Those Houses That, To Use
The Novelist's Words, "Preserve Unobtrusively, In The Midst Of A City
That Is Being Constantly Rebuilt, The Pure Beauty Of Colonial
Dwellings." It Was The Home Of The Ferrols Of Stephen French Whitman's
"Predestined," One Of The Books Of Real Power That Appear From Time To
Time, To Be Strangely Neglected, And Through That Neglect To Tempt The
Discriminating Reader To Contempt For The Literary Judgment Of His Age.
At The Northwest Corner Of Ninth Street There Is A Brownish-Green
Building Erected In The Long, Long Ago To Serve As A Domicile Of The
Brevoort Family, Which Had Once Exercised Pastoral Sway Over So Many
Acres Of This Region. Later It Became The Home Of The De Rhams. But To
Richard Harding Davis, Then A Reporter On The "Evening Sun," It Had
Nothing Of The Flavour Of The Patroons. It Was Simply The House Where
Young Cortlandt Van Bibber, Returning From Jersey City Where He Had
Witnessed The "Go" Between "Dutchy" Mack And A Coloured Person
Professionally Known As The Black Diamond, Found His Burglar. There Is
No Mistaking The House, Which "Faced The Avenue," Nor The Stone Wall
That Ran Back To The Brown Stable Which Opened On The Side Street, Nor
The Door In The Wall, That, Opening Cautiously, Showed Van Bibber The
Head Of His Quarry. "The House Was Tightly Closed, As If Some One Was
Lying Inside Dead," Was A Line Of Mr. Davis's Description. Many Years
After The Writing Of "Van Bibber's Burglar," Another Maker Of Fiction
Associated With New York Was Standing Before The Ninth Street House, Of
The History Of Which He Knew Nothing. "Grim Tragedy Lives There, Or
Should Live There," Said Owen Johnson, "I Never Pass Here Without The
Feeling That There Is Some One Lying Dead Inside."
Van Bibber's Presence In The Neighbourhood Was In No Wise Surprising,
For It Was One Of His Favourite Haunts When He Was
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