FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   90   91   92   93   94   95   96   97   98   99   100   101   102   103   104   105   106   107   108   109   110   111   112   113   114  
115   116   117   118   119   120   121   122   123   124   125   126   127   128   129   130   131   132   133   134   135   136   137   138   139   >>   >|  
d Mr. Hacket rose and took the green chair from the table, exclaiming: "Michael Henry, God bless you!" Then he kissed his wife and said: "Maggie, you wild rose of Erin! I've been all day in the study. I must take a walk or I shall get an exalted abdomen. One is badly beaten in the race o' life when his abdomen gets ahead of his toes. Children, keep our young friend happy here until I come back, and mind you, don't forget the good fellow in the green chair." Mary helped her mother with the dishes, while I sat with a book by the fireside. Soon Mrs. Hacket and the children came and sat down with me. "Let's play backgammon," Mary proposed. "I don't want to," said John. "Don't forget Michael Henry," she reminded. "Who is Michael Henry?" I asked. "Sure, he's the boy that has never been born," said Mrs. Hacket. "He was to be the biggest and noblest one o' them--kind an' helpful an' cheery hearted an' beloved o' God above all the others. We try to live up to him." He seemed to me a very strange and wonderful creature--this invisible occupant of the green chair. I know now what I knew not then that Michael Henry was the spirit of their home--an ideal of which the empty green chair was a constant reminder. We played backgammon and Old Maid and Everlasting until Mr. Hacket returned. He sat down and read aloud from the _Letters of an Englishwoman in America_. "Do you want to know what sleighing is?" she wrote. "Set your chair out on the porch on a Christmas day. Put your feet in a pail-full of powdered ice. Have somebody jingle a bell in one ear and blow into the other with a bellows and you will have an exact idea of it." When she told of a lady who had been horned by a large insect known as a snapdragon, he laughed loudly and closed the book and said: "They have found a new peril of American life. It is the gory horn of the snapdragon. Added to our genius for boastfulness and impiety, it is a crowning defect. Ye would think that our chief aim was the cuspidor. Showers of expectoration and thunder claps o' profanity and braggart gales o' Yankee dialect!--that's the moral weather report that she sends back to England. We have faults enough, God knows, but we have something else away beneath them an' none o' these writers has discovered it." The sealed envelope which Mr. Wright had left at our home, a long time before that day, was in my pocket. At last the hour had come when. I could open it
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   90   91   92   93   94   95   96   97   98   99   100   101   102   103   104   105   106   107   108   109   110   111   112   113   114  
115   116   117   118   119   120   121   122   123   124   125   126   127   128   129   130   131   132   133   134   135   136   137   138   139   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

Michael

 
Hacket
 

forget

 

snapdragon

 

backgammon

 

abdomen

 
horned
 
insect
 

pocket

 
closed

laughed

 

loudly

 

Christmas

 

jingle

 

powdered

 

bellows

 

thunder

 

profanity

 
braggart
 

cuspidor


Showers

 

expectoration

 

beneath

 

Yankee

 
faults
 

weather

 
report
 

dialect

 

genius

 
Wright

boastfulness

 

impiety

 

England

 

crowning

 

envelope

 

writers

 
discovered
 

defect

 

sealed

 

American


fellow

 

helped

 

friend

 

Children

 
mother
 
proposed
 

children

 

dishes

 
fireside
 

kissed