Short Fiction O. Henry (comprehension books TXT) ๐
- Author: O. Henry
Book online ยซShort Fiction O. Henry (comprehension books TXT) ๐ยป. Author O. Henry
โโโโโIt was almost dark where we stood alone in the deep grass, and the wind made strange sounds as it swept across the flat.
โโโโโโโI have never breathed to a mortal a word of this story, lad,โ said my uncle, โbut it must out. Listen; when I was a child my grandmother told me the legend of San Jacinto. The next day she died. She told it to me at midnight on this very spot. There was a storm raging, and the furious wind beat us under this old oak for shelter. My grandmotherโs eyes, ordinarily so dim and weak, blazed like stars. She seemed fifty years younger as she raised her trembling hand towards the old battle ground and said:
โโโโโโโโโChild, for the first time in many years a human tongue is about to reveal the secret that this silent spot holds in its eternal bosom. I will now tell you the legend of San Jacinto as told me by my fatherโs half-brother. He was a silent, moody man, fond of reading and solitary walks. One day I found him weeping. When he saw me he brushed the tears away from his eyes and said gently:
โโโโโโโโโโโIs that you, little one? Come and I will tell you something that I have kept locked in my breast for many a year. There is a mournful legend connected with this spot that must be told. Sit by my side, and I will tell it you. I had it from my grandmotherโs sister, who was a well known character in her day. How well I remember her words. She was a gentle and lovely woman, and her sweet and musical tones added interest to the quaint and beautiful legend.
โโโโโโโโโโโโโOnce upon a time,โ she said, โI was riding with my uncleโs stepfather across this valley, when he gazed upon that grove of trees and said:
โโโโโโโโโโโโโโโHave you ever heard the legend of San Jacinto?โ
โโโโโโโโโโโโโโโNay,โ I said.
โโโโโโโโโโโโโโโI will tell it thee,โ he said. โMany years ago when I was a lad, my father and I stopped in the shade there to rest. The sun was just setting, and he pointed to the spot and said:
โโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโMy son, I am growing old and will not be with you long. There is an old legend connected with this ground, and I feel that it should be told you. A long time ago, before you were born my grandfather one dayโ โโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโ
โSee here, you old blatherskite,โ said the Post reporter, โyouโve got this story back about 600 years before the Pontius Pilateโs time now. Donโt you know a news item from an inscription on the pyramids? Our paper doesnโt use plate matter. Why donโt you work this gag of yours off on the syndicates?โ
The aged hermit then frowned and reached under his coat tail, and the reporter ran swiftly, but in a dignified manner, to the Hoodoo Jane and embarked. But there is a legend about the San Jacinto battle ground somewhere in the neighborhood, if one could only get at it.
In MezzotintThe doctor had long ago ceased his hospital practice, but whenever there was a case of special interest among the wards, his spirited team of bays was sure to be seen standing at the hospital gates. Young, handsome, at the head of his profession, possessing an ample income, and married but six months to a beautiful girl who adored him, his lot was certainly one to be envied.
It must have been nine oโclock when he reached home. The stableman took the team, and he ran up the steps lightly. The door opened, and Dorisโs arms were flung tightly about his neck, and her wet cheek pressed to his.
โOh, Ralph,โ she said, her voice quivering and plaintive, โyou are so late. You canโt think how I miss you when you donโt come at the usual hour. Iโve kept supper warm for you. Iโm so jealous of those patients of yoursโ โthey keep you from me so much.โ
โHow fresh and sweet and wholesome you are, after the sights I have to see,โ he said, smiling down at her girlish face with the airy confidence of a man who knows himself well beloved. โNow, pour my coffee, little one, while I go up and change clothes.โ
After supper he sat in the library in his favorite arm chair, and she sat in her especial place upon the arm of the chair and held a match for him to light his cigar. She seemed so glad to have him with her; every touch was a caress, and every word she spoke had that lingering, loving drawl that a woman uses to but one manโ โat a time.
โI lost my case of cerebrospinal meningitis tonight,โ he said gravely.
โI have you, and I donโt have you,โ she said. โYour thoughts are always with your profession, even when I think you are most mine. Ah, well,โ with a sigh, โyou help the suffering, and I would see all that suffer relieved or else like your cerebroโ โwhat is it?โ โpatient, at rest.โ
โA queer case, too,โ said the doctor, patting his wifeโs hand and gazing into the clouds of cigar smoke. โHe should have recovered. I had him cured, and he died on my hands without any warning. Ungrateful, too, for I treated that case beautifully. Confound the fellow. I believe he wanted to die. Some nonsensical romance worried him into a fever.โ
โA romance? Oh, Ralph, tell it to me. Just think! A romance in a hospital.โ
โHe tried to tell it to me this morning in snatches between paroxysms of pain. He was bending backward till his head almost touched his heels, and his ribs were nearly cracking, yet he managed to convey something of his life story.โ
โOh, how horrible,โ said the doctorโs wife, slipping her arm between his neck and the chair.
โIt seems,โ went on the doctor, โas well as I could gather, that some girl had discarded him to marry a more
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