FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   143   144   145   146   147   148   149   150   151   152   153   154   155   >>  
d only five hundred and a trifle. I borrowed the trifle and banked the five hundred." "What'll we do about it?" "Return it to the owner." "It's easy said, but not easy to manage. Let's leave it alone till we get Sellers's advice. And that reminds me. I've got to run and meet Sellers and explain who you are not and who you are, or he'll come thundering in here to stop his daughter from marrying a phantom. But-- suppose your father came over here to break off the match?" "Well, isn't he down stairs getting acquainted with Sally? That's all safe." So Hawkins departed to meet and prepare the Sellerses. Rossmore Towers saw great times and late hours during the succeeding week. The two earls were such opposites in nature that they fraternized at once. Sellers said privately that Rossmore was the most extraordinary character he had ever met--a man just made out of the condensed milk of human kindness, yet with the ability to totally hide the fact from any but the most practised character-reader; a man whose whole being was sweetness, patience and charity, yet with a cunning so profound, an ability so marvelous in the acting of a double part, that many a person of considerable intelligence might live with him for centuries and never suspect the presence in him of these characteristics. Finally there was a quiet wedding at the Towers, instead of a big one at the British embassy, with the militia and the fire brigades and the temperance organizations on hand in torchlight procession, as at first proposed by one of the earls. The art-firm and Barrow were present at the wedding, and the tinner and Puss had been invited, but the tinner was ill and Puss was nursing him--for they were engaged. The Sellerses were to go to England with their new allies for a brief visit, but when it was time to take the train from Washington, the colonel was missing. Hawkins was going as far as New York with the party, and said he would explain the matter on the road. The explanation was in a letter left by the colonel in Hawkins's hands. In it he promised to join Mrs. Sellers later, in England, and then went on to say: The truth is, my dear Hawkins, a mighty idea has been born to me within the hour, and I must not even stop to say goodbye to my dear ones. A man's highest duty takes precedence of all minor ones, and must be attended to with his best promptness and energy, at whatsoever cost to his affections or his co
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   143   144   145   146   147   148   149   150   151   152   153   154   155   >>  



Top keywords:

Sellers

 

Hawkins

 

trifle

 

character

 
hundred
 

Sellerses

 

tinner

 
ability
 

wedding

 
colonel

explain

 
Towers
 

England

 

Rossmore

 
nursing
 

invited

 

engaged

 

organizations

 

British

 

embassy


Finally

 

suspect

 

presence

 
characteristics
 

militia

 

proposed

 
Barrow
 

procession

 

torchlight

 

brigades


temperance

 

present

 

goodbye

 

highest

 
mighty
 

whatsoever

 
energy
 

affections

 

promptness

 
precedence

attended

 

missing

 
Washington
 

promised

 
matter
 

explanation

 
letter
 
allies
 

father

 
marrying