Burned Bridges by Bertrand W. Sinclair (win 10 ebook reader .TXT) 📖
- Author: Bertrand W. Sinclair
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And So On. But This Flare Of Passionate Tenderness Focussing Upon One
Slender Bit Of A Girl Was Something He Could Not Quite Fathom. He Would
Have Contradicted With Swift Anger Any Suggestion That Perhaps It Was
Merely Wise Old Nature's Ancient Method Efficiently At Work For An
Appointed End. He Had Been So Thoroughly Grounded In The Convention Of
Decrying Physical Impulses, Of Putting Everything Upon A Pure And
Spiritual Plane, That In This First Emotional Crisis Of His Life He
Could No More Help Dodging First Principles Than A Spaniel Pup Can Help
Swimming When He Is First Tossed Into Deep Water.
Still--He Was Not A Fool. He Knew That His Concern Was Not For Sophie
Carr's Immortal Soul, Nor For The Beauty And Sweetness Of Her Spirit,
When He Was Near Her, When He Touched Her Hand, Nor Even In That Supreme
Moment When He Crushed Her Close To His Unquiet Heart And Pressed That
Hot Kiss On Her Lips. It Was The Sheer Flesh And Blood Womanliness Of
Her That Made His Heart Beat Faster, The Sweet Curve Of Her Lips, The
Willowy Grace Of Her Body, The Odd Little Gestures Of Her Hands, The
Melody Of Her Voice And The Gray Pools Of Her Eyes, Eyes Full Of Queer
Gleams And Curious Twinkles--All These Things Were Indescribably
Beautiful To Him. He Loved Her--Just The Girl Herself. He Wanted Her,
Craved Her Presence; Not The Pleasant Memory Of Her, But The Forthright
Physical Nearness Of Her He Desired With An Intensity That Was Like A
Fever.
Chapter 5 (Universal Attributes) Pg 52
Just The Excitement Of Feeling--As According To His Lights He Had A
Right To Feel--That They Stood Pledged, Made It Hard For Him To Get Down
To Fundamentals And Consider Rationally The Question Of Marriage, Of
Their Future, Of How His Appointed Work Could Be Made To Dovetail With
The Union Of Two Such Diverse Personalities As Himself And Sophie Carr.
A Hodge Podge Of This Sort Was Turning Over In His Mind As He Sat There,
Now And Then Absently Feeling The Dusky Puffiness Under One Eye And The
Tender Spot On The Bridge Of His Nose Where Tommy Ashe's Hard Knuckles
Had Peeled Away The Skin. He Still Had A Most Un-Christian Satisfaction
In The Belief That He Had Given As Good As He Had Got. He Was Not
Ashamed Of Having Fought. He Would Fight Again, Any Time, Anywhere, For
Sophie Carr. He Did Not Ask Himself Whether The Combative Instinct Once
Aroused Might Not Function For Lesser Cause.
He Came Out Of This Reverie At The Faint Rustle Of Footsteps Beyond His
Door--Which Was Open Because Of The Hot Fire He Had Built.
He Did Not Suspect That The Source Of Those Footsteps Might Be Sophie
Carr Until She Stood Unmistakably Framed In The Doorway. He Rose To His
Feet With A Glad Cry Of Welcome, Albeit Haltingly Articulated. He Was
Suddenly Reluctant To Face Her With The Marks Of Conflict Upon His Face.
"May I Come In?" She Asked Coolly--And Suited Her Action To The Request
Before He Made Reply.
She Sat Down On A Box Just Within The Door And Looked Soberly At Him,
Scanning His Face. Her Hands Lay Quietly In Her Lap And She Did Not
Seem To See Thompson's Involuntarily Extended Arms. There Was About Her
None Of The Glowing Witchery Of Yesterday. She Lifted To Him A Face
Thoughtful, Even A Little Sad. And Thompson's Hands Fell, His Heart
Keeping Them Company. It Was As If The Somberness Of Those Wind-Swept
Woods Had Crept Into His Cabin. It Stilled The Rush Of Words That
Quivered On His Lips. Sophie, Indeed, Found Utterance First.
"I'm Sorr Mr.
Fairfield, For He, In Common With Others Of His Age, Delighted In
Flinging In A Scrap Of Latin Or French On Every Possible Occasion. They
Were Industrious Investigators Of The Thesaurus In Those Days.
The First Home Of The Union, At No. 1 Bond Street, Was In Reality The
House Of Its Secretary, John H.L. Mccrackan. In 1837 A Building On
Broadway Near Leonard Street Was Secured, And The Club Moved Into It,
There To Remain For Three Years. Then, For Seven Years, It Was In A
House On The Other Side Of Broadway, And In 1847, Obeying The Prevalent
Impulse Up-Townward, It Shifted Its Quarters To The Spot From Which It
Was Later To Remove To The Twenty-First Street Home. That Structure At
Broadway And Fourth Street Was The Property Of The Stuyvesant Family,
And After The Departure Of The Men Of The Union, Was Occupied By The
Confectioner Maillard As A Hotel And Restaurant. In 1852 The Question Of
A Permanent Building Began To Be Discussed, And In 1854 The Land At The
Twenty-First Street Corner Was Secured And The Work Of Erecting The
Structure That In Its Day Was The Most Imposing Of All That Lined Fifth
Avenue Between Waverly Place And The Broadway Junction Begun. The Club
Moved Into The New Quarters In May, 1855, At A Time When Its Membership
Numbered Approximately Five Hundred. In Writing Of The Union As It Was
In 1871 Mr. Fairfield Made The Comment That Literature Was Hardly
Chapter 5 (Universal Attributes) Pg 53Represented At All, And Journalism Only By Manton Marble Of The "World."
As Had Been The Case Of Thackeray And The Athenæum Of London, Mr.
Marble, At The Time Of His First Candidacy, Had Been Blackballed. The
Objection, Also As In The Case Of Thackeray, Was Ascribed Not To The
Personality Of The Man, But To His Profession. But Mr. Marble Was
Eventually Admitted Through The Efforts Of A Member Of The Board Of
Directors, Who Declared Boldly That Not A New Member Should Be Elected
Until The Blackballs Against The Journalist Had Been Withdrawn. Robert
J. Dillon, Landscape Gardener, And J.H. Lazarus, Portrait Painter, Were
Almost The Sole Art Representatives, And In 1871 J. Lester Wallack Was
The Only Actor On The Club List. Wallack's Great Contemporary Of The
Stage, Edwin Booth, Was A Member Of The Century And Of The Lotos. The
Law Of The Day Was Represented By Such Men As Mayor Hall, Until He
Resigned As A Result Of The Criticism Of Fellow-Members Growing Out Of
The Exposures Of The Tammany Frauds In The Summer And Autumn Of 1871,
W.M. Evarts, Judge Garvin, Judge Gunning S. Bedford, Eli P. Norton, And
John E. Burrill. Of Men Prominent In Political And Municipal Life Were
August Belmont, Samuel J. Tilden, Peter B. Sweeny, Former Mayor George
Opdyke, Isaac Bell, And Andrew H. Green, Later To Become The "Father Of
Greater New York." Among The Dominant Financial Figures, In Addition To
August Belmont, Were A.T. Stewart, John J. Cisco, Henry Clews, And John
Jacob Astor. From The Army Were U.S. Grant, Then The Nation's President,
John H. Coster, George W. Cullom, Samuel W. Crawford, Howard Stockton,
Rufus Ingalls, J.L. Rathbone, I.U.D. Reeve, And Stewart Van Vliet. From
The Navy, James B. Breese, James Alden, Edward C. Gratton, Thomas M.
Potter, Henry O. Mayo, James Glynn, W.C. Leroy, L.M. Powell, And John H.
Wright.
By Virtue Of Its Descent From The Sketch And The Column, The Century
Association Might Lay Claim To Seniority Among The Clubs Of Fifth
Avenue. The Sketch Club Was The Result Of The Union Of The Literary And
Artistic Elements Of New York, Which, In 1829, Were Producing An Annual
Called "The Talisman." Among The Writers In The Sketch Were Bryant,
Verplanck, And Sands, And Later Washington Irving And J.K. Paulding
Joined It. There Was No Regular Home, The Club Meeting At The Houses Of
Members In Turn. For Six Months, During 1830, It Did Not Exist, Having
Been Dissolved In May Of That Year, And Reorganized In December.
Thereafter, For A Few Years, It Met In The Council Room Of The National
Academy Of Design, And Then Returned To The Custom Of Meeting At The
Homes O Your Sense Of The Word," She Said. "I Don't Even
Want To Be. It Would Take All The Joy Out Of Living. I Want To Sing And
Dance And Be Vibrantly Alive. I Want To See Far Countries And Big
Cities, To Go About Among People Whose Outlook Isn't Bounded By A Forest
And A Lake Shore, Nor By The Things You Set Store By. And I'll Be A
Discontented Pendulum Until I Do.
"Why," She Burst Out Passionately, "I'd Be The Biggest Little Fool On
Earth To Marry You Just Because--Just Because I Like You, Because You
Kissed Me And For A Minute Made Me Feel That Life Could Be Bounded By
You And Kisses. You're Only The Second Possible Man I've Ever Seen. You
And Tommy Ashe. And Before You Came I Could Easily Have Persuaded Myself
Chapter 5 (Universal Attributes) Pg 54That I Loved Tommy."
"Now You Think Perhaps You Love Me, But That You Might Perhaps Care In
The Same Way For The Next Attractive Man Who Comes Along? Is That It?"
Thompson Asked With A Touch Of Bitterness.
"I Might _Think_ So--How Can One Tell?" She Sighed. "But I'm Very Sure
My Impulses Will Never Plunge Me Into Anything Headlong, As You Would
Have Me Plunge. Don't You See," She Made An Impatient Gesture, "We're
Just Like A Couple Of Fledgling Birds Trying Our Wings. And You Want To
Proceed On The Assumption That We're Equal To Anything, Sure Of
Everything. I _Know_ I'm Not. You--"
She Made Again That Quick, Expressive Gesture With Her Hands. Something
About It Made Thompson Suddenly Feel Hopeless And Forlorn, The Airy
Castles Reared Overnight Out Of The Stuff Of Dreams A Tumbled Heap
About Him. He Sat Down On One Of The Rude Chairs, And Turned His Face To
Look Out The Window, A Lump Slowly Gathering In His Throat.
"All Right," He Said. "Good-By."
If His Tone Was Harsh And Curt He Could Not Help That. It Was All He
Could Say And The Only Possible Fashion Of Saying It. He Wanted To Cry
Aloud His Pain, The Yearning Ache That Filled Him, And He Could Not,
Would Not--No More Than He Would Have Whined Under Pure Physical Hurt.
But When He Heard The Faint Rustle Of Her Cotton Dress And Her Step
Outside He Put His Face On His Hands And Took His Breath With A
Shuddering Sigh.
At That, He Was Mistaken. Sophie Had Not Gone. There Was The Quick,
Light Pad Of Her Feet On The Floor, Her Soft Warm Hands Closed Suddenly
About His Neck, And He Looked Up Into Eyes Bright And Wet. Her Face
Dropped To A
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