Classic Audiobook Collection - The Romance of an Old Fool by Roswell Field ~ Full Audiobook [romance]
Episode Date: April 27, 2023The Romance of an Old Fool by Roswell Field audiobook. Genre: romance John Stanhope is a comfortable, successful widower in middle life, content with his books, his country routines, and the dry-witt...ed company of Bunsey, a would-be novelist who is forever observing (and judging) the romantic impulses of others. Yet when a chance trip draws John back to the small town of his boyhood, old streets and familiar names awaken a longing he did not know was still alive. Among renewed friendships and remembered places, he learns that Sylvia, the girl who once shaped his earliest idea of love, died soon after he left. In her absence, John finds himself captivated by Sylvia's daughter, Phyllis, whose youth, charm, and resemblance to the past blur the line between memory and desire. As John drifts from nostalgia into courtship, the town's quiet expectations, the warnings of practical friends, and his own uneasy self-knowledge force him to ask what, exactly, he is pursuing: a real future, or a beautifully preserved illusion. Wry, tender, and sharply observant, this novella explores aging, loneliness, and the strange ways the heart rewrites history. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 1 (00:37:12) Chapter 2 (00:54:52) Chapter 3 (01:11:38) Chapter 4 (01:35:52) Chapter 5 (02:01:42) Chapter 6 (02:20:37) Chapter 7 (02:44:00) Chapter 8 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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the romance of an old fool by roswell field section one if it had not been for bunsey the novelist i might have attained the heights
as a critic bunsey has never commanded my highest admiration and yet i have had my tender moments for him from a really exacting standpoint he was not much of a novelist and to his failure to win the wealth which is supposed to accompany fame
i may have owed much of the debt of his sustained presence and his fondness for my tobacco
bunsey had started out in life with high ideals a resolution to lead the purely literary existence and to supply the market with a variety of choice didactic essays along the line of high thinking
but the demand did not come up to the supply and presently he abandoned his original lofty intention in favor of a sort of dubious romance the financial return
however, while a trifle more regular and encouraging, were not of sufficient importance to justify him in giving up his friendly claims on my house, my library, my time, my favorite lounge, and my best brand of cigars, in return for which he contributed philosophic opinions and much strenuous advice on topics in general and literature in particular.
From my childhood I have been in the habit of keeping a diary,
a running comment on the daily incidents of my pleasant but uneventful life,
and occasionally, when Bunsey's society seemed too assertive and familiar,
I sought to punish him by reading long and numerous excerpts.
To do him justice he took the chastisement meekly,
and even insisted that I was burying a remarkable talent,
sometimes going to the magnanimous extreme of offering to introduce me to his publisher and to speak a good word for me to the editors of certain magazines with whom he maintained a brisk correspondence not infrequently of a querulous nature
all these friendly offices i gently put aside in recalling the degradation of bunsey's ideals though i went on tolerating bunsey who had a good heart and an insistent manner
in this way i possibly deprived myself of a glorious career my ability to befriend bunsey was due to a felicitous chain of circumstances when the late mrs stanhope passed to her
ward, she considerately left behind a document, making me the recipient of her entire and not
inconsiderable fortune.
This proved a most unexpected blow to the church, which had enjoyed the honor and pleasure
of Mrs. Stanhope's association, and which, quite naturally, had hoped to profit by her decease.
The late Mrs. Stanhope, who I neglected to say was, in the eyes of heaven,
the world and the law my wife had not lived with me in that utter abandonment to conjugal affection so much to be desired
we married to please our families and we lived apart as much as possible to please ourselves though not without certain physical charms mrs stanhope was a woman of great moral rigidity and religious austerity who saw life through the diminishing
end of a sectarian telescope, and who cared far more for the distant heathen than for the local
convivial pagans who composed my entourage. She had brought to me a considerable sum of money,
which I had increased by judicious investments, and I dare say that it was in recognition
of my business ability, as well as possibly in a moment of becoming wifely remorse, that she bequeathed to me
her property intact. I gave her final testimonial services wholly in keeping with her standing as a
churchwoman, and I must say for my friends, whom she had severely ignored during her life, that they
behaved very handsomely on that mournful occasion. They turned out in large numbers and testified
in other ways to their regard for her unblemished character. I recall,
not without emotion after all these years, that Bunsey's memorial tribute to the church paper,
for which he never received a dollar, was a model of appreciation, as well as of Christian
forgiveness and self-forgetfulness. The passing of Mrs. Stanhope made it possible for me to
put into operation the long-desired plan of retiring a little way into the country,
not too far from the seductions of the club in the city,
but far enough to conform to the tastes of a country gentleman
who likes to whistle to his dogs,
putter over his roses,
and meditate in a comfortable library
with the poets and philosophers of his fancy.
Here, with my good housekeeper, Prudence,
a name I chose in preference to her mother's selection, Elizabeth,
and my gardener and man of affairs Malachi, I lived for a number of years at peace with the world
and perfectly satisfied with myself. Although I was dangerously over forty, and my hair,
which had been impressively dark, was conspicuously gray in spots, my figure was good,
my dress correct, and my mirror told me that I was still in a position to, and my mirror told me that I was still in a
position to be in the matrimonial running if i tried i mention these trifling physical details merely to save my modesty the humiliation and annoyance of referring to them in future and to prepossess the gentle reader wherever the sex makes it highly important
i do not deny that in certain moments of loneliness which come to us widowers and bachelors alike i had the impulse to tempt again the matter
matrimonial fortune, and counting on my financial standing, together with other attractions,
I ran over the eligible ladies of my acquaintance.
But one was a little too old, and another was a good deal too flighty.
One was too fond of society, and another did not like dogs.
A fifth spoiled her chances by an unwomanly ignorance of horticulture,
and a sixth perished miserably after returning to me one of my most cherished books,
with the leaves dog-eared and the binding cracked.
For I hold with the greatest philosophers that she who maltreats a book will never make a good wife.
And so the years slipped cozily and cheerily by,
while I grew more contented with my environment and less envious of my married friend,
and whenever temporary melancholy overtook me,
I moved into the club for a month,
or slipped across the water,
finding in the change of scene
immediate relief from the monotony of widowerhood.
In thus fortifying myself against the wiles of woman,
I was much abetted by my good prudence,
who never ceased her exhortations
as to the sinister designs of her sex,
and who had ready word of discouragements,
for any possible candidate who might be in the line of succession.
I see that Rogers' woman walking by the house today, Mr. John, she would begin.
And I see her turning her nose up at the new paint on the arbor.
I selected that color myself.
It's queer how that woman does give herself airs,
considering everybody knows that she's been ready for ten years
to take the first man that asks her.
prudence knew that i had escorted the elderly miss rogers to the theatre only the week before and had commented pleasantly on the elegance of her figure but the slight put upon my eye for colour was too much wily prudence
or a day or two after i had rendered an act of neighborly kindness to the bereaved mrs stebbins she would say quite casually
i don't want to utter one word again the poor and afflicted mr john but when the widder stebbins hit cleo with a broom to-day i own i boiled over i shouldn't tell you if it weren't my duty
cleopatra was my favorite cocker spaniel and any fair impression my fair neighbor may have made on my unguarded heart was immediately dispelled
thus subtly and vigilantly my housekeeper kept the outer gates of the citadel and shewed away a possible mistress as effectually as she dispersed the predatory hens from the garden patch
but with the younger generation of women good prudence was less cautious any maiden under the very early twenties she regarded fair material for my friendly offices and frequently she visited me with expressions commendatory of good conduct
i likes to see you with the children mr john bless em sir and they do all seem to be so fond of you there's nothin that keeps the heart so young and fresh as goin with young people
just as nothin ages a man so much as havin a lot of widders and designin old maids about of course she added with the return of her natural suspicion
you are old enough to be father to the whole bunch which keeps people from talking whether it was prudence's approbation or my own inclination i cannot say
but it soon came about that i was on paternally familiar terms with the entire neighborhood of maidens of reasonably tender years and a very important factor in young feminine counsels these artful creatures knew exactly when their favorite
Ravit Roses were in bloom, exactly when the cherries back of the house were ripe, exactly when
it was time to go to town for another theater party, to give a picnic up the river, or a small
and informal dance in the parlors. I was expected to remember and observe all birthdays,
to be a wellspring of benevolence at Christmas, and a free and never-failing florist at Easter.
i was the recipient of all young griefs and troubles and no girl ever committed herself unconditionally to the arms of her lover until she had talked the matter over with uncle john
all this to a good-looking man of well considerably over forty was flattering but no sinecure one morning in the late spring it came over me unhappily that in a moment of fatal forgetfulness
i had promised to be present that evening at a card party a promise exacted by the rogers woman persona non grata to prudence a card-party a card-party
a card party was to me in the category with battle and murder and sudden death from which we all petition to be delivered in the book of common prayer but how to be delivered
i could not be called suddenly to town for i had already run that excuse to its full limit i could not conveniently start for europe on an hour's notice the plea of sickness i dismissed as feminine and unworthy
and while i sat debating to what extreme i could tax my overburdened conscience malachi appeared with the information that he had discovered unmistakable signs of cut-worms in the rose bushes
and that the local custodians of the trees were thundering against an impending epidemic of brown-tailed moth surely my path of duty led to the garden but that card party
no let the cut-worm work his will and let the brown-tailed moth corrupt i must take refuge in flight however inglorious it was then that the good angel who never forsakes a well-meaning man
whispered to me that far back in a quiet corner of new england was the little village where i had passed my boyhood which i had deserted for five-and-twenty years but which which which was the little village where i had passed my boyhood which i had deserted for five-and-twenty years but which which
still remembered me as johnny stanhope thanks to the officious longevity of the editor of the county paper the situation i explained briefly to prudence and malachi and swore them into the conspiracy
i threw a few clothes into a small trunk dispatched a hypocritical note of regret to miss rogers caught the noon train and was soon beyond the danger line
mrs lot casting an apprehensive glance behind her could not have dreaded more fearful consequences than i looking back on the calamity i was evading
but as we went on and on into the cool quiet country and felt the soft air stealing down from the nearing mountains i began to experience a lively sense of relief and pleasure and to wonder why i had so long delayed a visit to my boyhood
home. I am sorry for the man whose childhood knew only the roar and bustle and swiftly shifting scenes of the city.
For him there is no return in, after years, no illusion to be renewed, no joy of youth to be
substantiated. His habitation has passed away, or yielded to the inroads of commerce. His landmarks
have vanished and he is bewildered by the strange sights that time and trade have put upon his memories but time has no terrors for the country-bred boy
the almighty does not change the mountains and the rivers and the great rocks that fortify the scenery and man is slow to push back into the far meadowlands and the hillsides and destroy the simple primitive life of the fathers
all of the joy that such a returning pilgrim might have i felt when i left the train at the junction and scorning the pony engine and combination cars supplied in later years by the railway company as a tribute to progress set out to walk the two miles to the village
every foot of the country i had played over as a boy here was the field where deacon skinner did his hayin just beyond the deacon raised his tobacco crop
that roof over there which i once detected as the top of jim pomeroy's barn reminded me of the day of the raisin when i sprained my ankle and thereby saved myself a thrashing for running away
here was pickerel pond the scene of many miraculous droughts and now i crossed peach brook which babbled along under the road just as saucily and untiringly as if it had slept all those years and was just awakening to fresh life
a hundred rods up the brook was the widow parsons farm and i knew that if i went through the side gate cut across the barnyard and kept down to the left
i should find that same old stump on which bill howland sat the day he caught the biggest dace ever pulled out of the quiet pool the sun was going down behind si thompson's planing mill
as i stopped at the little red-covered bridge that marked the boundary of the village silas had been dead for twenty years but it seemed to me that it was only yesterday that i heard his nasal twang above the roar of the machinery
say you fellows want to get out of that the little bridge had lost much of its color and most of its impressiveness for i remembered when to my boyish fancy it seemed a greater triumph of engineering than the victoria bridge at montreal
and the same old thrill went through me as i started to run just as i did one a boy and felt the planks loosen and creak under my feet
here was a homecoming worth the while.
Hank Pettigrew kept the village tavern.
The memory of man, so far as I knew,
ran not back to the time when Hank did not keep the tavern.
So I was not in the least surprised, as I entered,
to see the old man, with his chair tilted back against the wall,
his knees on a level with his chin,
and his eyes fixed on a chromo of muster-day,
which had descended to him through successive generations.
He did not move as I advanced,
or manifest the slightest emotion of surprise,
merely saying,
Hello, Johnny!
As if he expected me to remark that Mother had sent me over
to see if they had any ice cream left over from dinner.
It probably did not occur to Hank that I,
had been absent twenty-five years. If it had occurred to him, he would have considered such a
trifling flight of time not worth mentioning. With the question of lodging and supper disposed of,
and with the modest bribe of a cigar, which Hank furtively exchanged for a more accustomed brand of
Valley Leaf, it was not difficult to loosen the old landlord's tongue and secure information
of my playmates.
What had become of Teddy Grover,
the pride of our school on exhibition day?
Could we ever forget the afternoon
he stood up before the minister
and the assembled population
and roared,
Marco Bazaaris,
until we were sure
the sultan was quaking in his seraglio?
And how he thundered,
Blaze with your serried columns!
I will not bend the knee.
To our excited imaginations, what dazzling triumphs the future held out for Teddy.
Yep, Ted's still about.
Three days in the week he drives stagecoach over to Spicerville,
and the rest of the time he does odd jobs, sort of tendin' round.
And Sally Cotton, black-eyed, curly-haired, mischievous little sprite,
the agony of the teacher and the love and admiration of the boys,
who climbed trees, rattled to school in the butcher wagon,
never knew a lesson, but was always leading lady in the school colloquies,
and was surely destined to rise to eminence on the American stage,
if she did not break her neck tumbling out of old Skinner's walnut tree.
Oh, Sal!
She married the congregational minister down to Peterfield
and was elected president of the temperance union
and secretary of the Endeavorers.
Read a piece down at Fus Church last week
on breaking away from old standards,
illustrating the alarm and degeneracy of children nowadays.
And George Hawley, our Achilles, our Samson,
our ideal of everything made.
manly and courageous. Strong as an ox and brave as a lion. Our champion in every form of athletic
sports, who looked with contempt on girls and disdained their maidenly advances, who thought only
of deeds of muscular prowess, and who seemed to carry the assurance of a force that would lead
armies and subdue nations. What of George? Well, George was a
about not long ago had your room for his samples traveling for a house down in boston and comes here regular women folks say his last line of shirt-waists were the best they ever see
oh the times that change and change us alas the fleeting years good posthumous that work such havoc with our childhood dreams and
hopes and aspirations. It was a relief after the shattering of these idols to leave the
society of the communicative Mr. Pettigrew and wander into the moonlight.
Save as adding beauty to the scenery, the moon was comparatively of no assistance, for so well
was the little village stamped in my memory, and so little had it changed in the quarter of a
century, that I could have walked blindfolded to any suggested point.
Naturally, I turned my steps toward the home of my youth, and as I drew near the old-fashioned
many-gabled house, with its settled, substantial air, austere yet inviting, its large yard with
the huge elms, and the big lamp burning in the library, or sitting-room, where I first dolefully
studied the geography that told me of a world outside, it seemed to bend toward me rather
frigidly, as if to say reproachfully,
You sold me! You sold me!
True, dear old home, in my less prosperous days I was guilty of the crime of selling the
house that faithfully sheltered my family for a hundred years.
But have I not repented?
and have i not returned to buy you back and to make such further reparation as present conditions and true repentance demand is this less the pleasure than the duty of wealth
with what sensations of delight i walked softly about the grounds taking note of every familiar tree and bush and stump i could have sworn that not a twig not a blade of grass had been despoiled
or had disappeared in the years that marked my absence.
I paused reverently under the old willow tree
and affectionately rubbed my legs,
for from this tree my parents had cut the instruments of torture
for purposes of castigation,
and its name, the weeping willow,
was always associated in my infant mind
with the direct results of contact with my unwilling person.
on a level with the top of the willow was the little attic room where i slept and the more sweetly when the crickets chirped or the summer rain beat upon the roof and where the song of the birds in the morning is the happiest music god has given to the country
back of the woodshed i found the remains of an old grindstone perhaps the same heavy crank i had so often perspiringly and reluctantly turned
indeed my reviving memories were rather too generously connected with the strenuousness and not the pleasures of youth but i thought of the well-filled lot in the old burying-ground on the hillside and of those lying there who had done in the hillside and of those lying there who had
said, My boy, I am doing this for your good. I doubted it at the time, but perhaps they were right.
At all events, the memories were growing pleasanter, for a stretch of 35 years has many
healing qualities, and our childhood griefs are such little things in the afterglow.
In the early morning I renewed my rambles, going first to the low.
little frame schoolhouse, the old church with its tall spire, the sawmill, the deacon's
cider press, the swimming pool, and a dozen other places of boyish adventure and misadventure.
Your true sentimentalist invariably gives the preference to scenes over persons, and is so often
rewarded by the fidelity with which they respond to his eager expectations.
it was not until i had exhausted every incident of the place that i sought out the companions of my school days what strange irony of fate is that which sends some of us out into their restless world to grow away from our old ideals and make others
and restrains some in the monotonous rut of village life to drone peacefully their little span but happy he who knowing nothing misses nothing
if there were any village hamptons or mute inglorious miltons among my playmates they gave no present indications i found the girls considerably older than i expected
the boys less interesting than i hoped but they all welcomed me with that grave unemotional hospitality of the village
and we talked far into the shadows of our school time the day that is never dead while memory endures and so it came about that at the close of day i found myself standing at the garden gate of the eastman cottage
peleg eastman had been our village postmaster a grave shy man who had received the federal office because the thrifty neighbors agreed irrespective of political feeling
that it was much less expensive to give him the office than to support him and his two daughters the prettiest girls in our school for they further agreed that peleg was a shiftless sort of critter
and never could make a living though he was a model postmaster and an excellent citizen and neighbor hence when it came peleg's turn to make the journey to the burying-ground in the village hearse
the whole community of meadowvale was scandalized by the discovery that he had left his girls a comfortable little fortune enough to keep them in modest wealth
meadowvale never recovered from this shock it felt that it had been victimized and that its tenderest sensibility had been violated and when his disconsolate daughters put up the granite shaft to their father's memory
relating that he had been faithful and just the indignant political leader of the village remarked that it was a profanation of scripture thirty years ago i had stood at this little gate with one of the eastman girls
escorting her home from stella perkins's party i had attempted to kiss her good-night and she had boxed my ears thus contributing a disagreeable finale to an other one
pleasant evening.
Time is a great healer, and I cherish no resentment at this late day toward the repudiator of my caresses.
In fact, I smiled in recollection of the incident as I walked up the graveled path and knocked at the door.
I wondered if the same vivacious, rosy-cheeked girl would come to meet me, and if I should feel in duty-bound to make honorable amends.
The door was opened by a tall, spare woman who carried a lamp.
The light reflected directly on her features, showed a face that in any other part of the world would be called hard.
In New England, it is merely resolute.
It was the face of a woman fifty years of age, with massive chin, slightly sunken cheeks, a prominent nose,
heavy eyebrows and a high forehead rather scantily streaked by gray hair there was no trace of the girlish bloom i had known of the beauty that had once been hers but the imperious manner of the woman was unmistakable
mary i began jocularly i have come to apologize she thrust the lamp forward peered into my face and said with not the faintest trace of a smile or the slightest evidence of embarrassment
why that's all right johnny stanhope i accept your apology come right in i went in
we sat in the sitting-room and talked of our school days and our fortunes i told her how i had gone down to the city how i had prospered of my adventures in the world of my marriage dealing very gently with my relations with the late mrs stanhope
of my bereavement and present idyllic existence and she told me of herself how she had lived on and on in the little cottage
caring only for the support and education of her niece phyllis kinglake an orphan for nearly twenty years you remember sylvia she said with the first touch of emotion did i remember sylvia
my little fair-haired playmate with the large eyes and the blue veins showing through the delicate beauty of her face little sylvia who first won my boyish affection and with whom i made a solemn contract of marriage when we were only seven years old
did i not remember how i would pass her house on my way to school and stand at the gate and whistle until she came shyly out with her face as red as her little hood and tippet
and give me her books to carry and protest with the ever-present coquetry of girlhood that she thought i had gone long ago could i ever forget how i saved my coppers one by one until i had accumulated
as some large enough to buy a whole coconut, which I presented to her in the proudest moment
of my life, and how the other girls tossed their heads with the affectation of a sneer
and with pretended indifference to this astonishing stroke of fortune, and that fatal evening,
when I provoked my little beauty's wrath, and in all the receding opportunities of post-office
and Copenhagen, she had turned her face and rosy-leaf.
lips away from me until the world was black with the hopeless despair, and the singing school
where she was our shining ornament, and that blissful night when I stood up with her in the village
church, while we sang our duet descriptive of the special virtues of some particular flower
nominated in the cantata, and how growing older and shyer we still preserved our youthful fancy
even to the day I struck out into the world,
both believing in the endurance of the tie that would draw me back?
What caprice of fate is it that dispels the illusions of youth
and restores them tenfold in the reflection of after years
and over the gulf of the grave?
Did I remember Sylvia?
Then Mary went on to tell me of Sylvia's happy marriage to George King Lake,
how when little phyllis had come and the world was at its brightest the parents had been stricken down in the same week by a virulent disease
and how with her dying breath the mother had asked her sister to look after her little one and protect her from sorrow and harm
very simply this stern-featured woman told the story of her efforts to do her duty to her sister's child and it seemed to me that her face grew softer and her voice gentler as she went over the years they had grown older together
while the beauty of this woman's life was glorified by the willing sacrifices of imposed motherhood i could not see phyllis for she was spending the night with friends in another part of the village
next time she hoped i might be more successful walking slowly to the tavern my mind still went back to my little playmate and the golden days of youth
and if my heart grew a little tenderer and my eyes were moistened by the recall what need to be ashamed of the emotion
and if in the night i dreamed that i was a boy again and that a fair-haired child played with me in the changing glow of dreamland in the best and purest scenes of the human comedy was it a delusion to be dispelled a memory to be put aside
did i remember sylvia end of section one recording by roger maline section two of the romance of an old fool
the livervox recording is in the public domain recording by roger maline the romance of an old fool by roswell field section two
the thought that my train was to leave at ten o'clock did not depress me as i awoke with the sunlight streaming through the window for after all i was obliged to admit that the monotony of meadowvale and the sluggishness of my village friends
were beginning to have an appreciable effect.
Then the memory of little Sylvia came to me again,
and nothing seemed pleasanter, as a benediction of the old days,
than a visit to the burying-ground where she was sleeping.
The previous day I had paid the obligations of remembrance and respect to the graves of my kindred,
and it gave me at first an uncomfortable feeling to realize
that the thought of them was less potent than the recollection of this young girl.
But was it strange or inexcusable?
Had they not lived out their lives of honored usefulness
and grown old and weary of the battle,
and had not she passed away just as the greater joys of living were unfolding,
and the assurance of happiness was the stronger?
Poor Sylvia!
The spectacle of a correctly dressed, middle-aged man passing down the street,
bearing a somewhat cumbersome burden of lilies of the valley and forget-me-nots,
must have had its peculiar significance to the inhabitants of the village,
and many curious glances were my reward.
I passed along, however, without explanations,
in distinct violation of rural etiquette.
The old caretaker of the burying ground met me at the entrance and gave me the directions.
Second path to the right, halfway up the hill, just to the left of the big elm.
The old man had known me as a boy and would have detained me in conversation,
but I pleaded that my time was short and reluctantly he let me go my way.
Slowly up the hill I walked, occasionally pausing to place of a while.
forget-me-not on the grave of one I had known in childhood.
Even old barrows did not escape my passing tribute, a cynical, cross-grained old fellow,
the aversion of the boys who tormented him, and whom he tormented with reciprocal vigor.
No need of a forget-me-not for barrows, for he never forgot anything,
so I gave his somewhat neglected grave the token of a long-steader.
stem of little lilies, in evidence that the past was forgiven and moved on to avoid possible
protestation.
I paused under the wide-branching elm to recover my breath.
The ascent had been arduous for a gentleman inclined to portliness and with wind impaired
by tobacco.
I turned to the left, and at that moment, just before me, a woman's figure slowly rose from
the ground. A creeping sensation possessed me. My heart bounded and my pulses thrilled.
Was this Sylvia risen from the dead? Surely it was Sylvia's graceful girlish form.
This was Sylvia's oval face, with Sylvia's large gray eyes. In such a way,
Sylvia's pretty light hair waved about her temples, and the pink and the pink and
and white of her delicate complexion revealed the blue veins twenty-five years had rolled back in an instant and i was standing in the presence of the past alas the swift passing of the illusion for the conversation of the evening came to me
you are phyllis i said i am phyllis she answered softly her mother's voice and you are mr stanhope my aunt told me
i did not answer for i was staring stupidly at her reluctant to abandon the pleasing fancy that my thinking of her had brought her back from the dead again
she did not speak but glanced inquiringly at the flowers i held in my hand i knew your mother phyllis i managed to say she was a very dear playmate of my childhood
i have brought these flowers to put upon her grave shall we go together the girl's eyes filled and she pointed to the rising mound at her feet
suddenly we bent over and reverently laid the lilies and forget-me-nots under the simple headstone may i talk to you of your mother i asked
we sat down on a rude bench in the path and i told her of my childhood of the days when sylvia and i were sweethearts of our little quarrels and frolics of her mother's beauty and gentleness
the girl laughed at the recital of our misadventures and the tears came into her eyes when i touched on my boyish affection for my playmate
then she told me of her own life so peaceful and happy in the little village and in the neighboring town where she had been educated with all the care and diligence of the new england impulse i looked at my watch
it is quarter past eleven i said ruefully and my train left at ten there's another train at three she replied you will go home and dine with us we dine at twelve in the country you know
if i was somewhat ashamed to face mary eastman she received us with the same stolidity she had manifested when we first met and at once insisted
that I should remain for dinner.
Go into the parlor, she said abruptly.
Phyllis plucked the sleeve of my coat.
Don't go in there, she whispered.
That's Aunt Mary's room exclusively,
and I'm afraid you'll not find it very cheerful.
Come out on the porch.
I know the room, I whispered back as we went out together.
At least I know the tie.
Lots of horsehair belongings.
Square piano against the wall.
Wax flowers under a glass case on the mantle.
Steel engravings of Washington crossing the Delaware.
Family album, huge Bible,
and famous women of two centuries on the center table.
Seashels, blue wedgewood and German china things
mingled in delightful confusion on the whatnot.
If not wax flowers, it's wax fruit.
Phyllis laughed.
How much her laugh was like her mother's, and nodded her head.
Not a bad description, she assented.
You must have the gift of second sight.
Not second sight.
Suppose we call it the gift of second childhood.
we sat on the porch and looked down on the lawn that sloped to the orchard and watched the robins run across the grass and i pointed out to phyllis the very tree under which sylvia and i had stood the day we had our first memorable quarrel
confessing that while at the time there was no doubt in my mind that sylvia was clearly at fault i was now prepared to concede after plenty of reflection that possibly she might have had a reasonable defence
the recital of this pathetic incident led to other reminiscences connected with the old house and its grounds and i was hardly in the second chapter when mary came out and ordered us in to dinner
mary never invited never requested she merely ordered we sat at the table and at a severe look from mary i stopped fumbling with my napkin while phyllis
sweet saint folded her hands and asked a divine blessing pagan philosopher that i was i was singularly moved by the simple faith of these two women
and i think that when i am led back into the fold of my family creed a girl as young and fair and wholly as phyllis will be the angel to guide me the dinner was toothsome the environment fascinating the afternoon fascinating the afternoon
perfect, and so it came about quite naturally that I missed the three o'clock train.
There is nothing so disagreeable in life, I explained apologetically to my friends,
as a hard and fast schedule, which keeps one jumping like an electric clock, doing 60 things
every hour, and never varying the performance.
Fortunately, trains run every day except Sunday, and the general order of the universe is not going to be upset, because I am not checking myself off like a section hand.
Perhaps Mary did not wholly coincide with my argument, but she was called away to her sewing circle, while Phyllis and I lounged lazily on the porch, I, continuing my reminiscences.
Gerulity is not merely the prerogative of age.
The privilege of the monologue is always that of the old boy
who comes back to his childhood's home
and finds in a pretty girl a charming and attentive listener.
He is a poor orator, indeed,
who cannot improve such opportunities.
At a convenient lull in the flow of discourse,
we went off to ride exploring the country roads i knew so well and here began new matter and new reminiscences patiently endured by phyllis who was a most delightful girl
and when we returned late in the afternoon it was directly in the line of circumstances that i should remain for tea and after tea phyllis played and sang for me in the little parlor
for phyllis was a musician of no small merit when in reply to my inquiry she sang a simple scotch ballad her mother had sung so touchingly many years before
a great lump rose in my throat and i sat far over in the shadow that she and mary might not see how blurred were my eyes and how unmanageable my emotion
at what age does it come to a man and a philosopher that he is no longer ashamed of honest sympathetic tears i shall never know whether it was the journey in the train the air and cooking of meadow vale
or the visits to the burying-ground that upset me but for the first time in a dozen years i found myself dissatisfied with my home
i remarked to malachi that the roses seemed to be in a most discouraging condition and that the garden in general was altogether disappointing
i noticed that my dogs barked a great deal that the neighbors had become most tiresome and that bunsey was an unmitigated nuisance even the cuisine which had been my pride and boast grew at times unbearable
and i had not been home a fortnight before i astonished prudence by positively assuring her that the dinner she had set before me was not worth any sane man's serious attention
whereupon that excellent woman announced with superb pride that she guessed it was about time for that rogers woman to give another card party
prudence i said severely for i encourage no flippancy in the part of domestics that remark while probably hasty and ill-considered borders on impertinence
i shall overlook at this time on account of your faithful service in the past but don't let it happen again in any event i amended considerably don't let it drop in my presence
thinking it over i came to the conclusion that prudence was right in the general effect of the suggestion what i needed was a change of scene
long abstention from travel and variety of incident had made me restless and discontented i had not been in europe for two years undoubtedly i was pining for a lazy tour of the continent
the thought decided me i should book my passage on the steamer that sailed the saturday of the following week strangely enough at this interesting moment i received a letter from the chairman of the committee on public improvements in the village of meadowvale
announcing that it had been resolved to procure new rooms for the village library and would mr john stanhope do his native village the honor
of subscribing a small amount toward this desirable end.
As it is always much easier for an indolent man to telegraph than to write letters,
I replied by wire that Mr. Stanhope felt himself much honored by the request.
Not entirely satisfied with this confession,
I sent a second telegram an hour later, doubling my subscription.
Still, my concession.
troubled me.
I have not done my duty, I said to myself.
Here I am, a man of means, I may say of large wealth,
with no special obligations resting upon me,
and yet I have done nothing to benefit or enrich my old home.
It is strange that it has not occurred to me before,
what a privilege, what an honor it is to be a philanthropy.
even in a small way, and with what alacrity those whom heaven has blessed with a fortune should
respond to the calls of deserving need. I blush for my past thoughtlessness, and I shall hasten
to atone for my astonishing neglect. My duty lies before me, and I shall not shrink from it,
whatever the personal inconvenience. Thereupon I telegraphed for the third time to the
chairman that it would give mr. Stanhope the greatest pleasure to put up a suitable library
for the village of Meadowvale and in order to guard against any possible misunderstanding,
he would depart the following day to confer with the committee as to sight and probable
extent of the structure. This concession to my conscience comforted me greatly, and I prepared
for my journey with a lightness that was almost buoyant.
the chairman and two of the committee met me at the junction they were most deprecatory and apologetic and mentioned with evident sorrow the absence of several of the members which might cause a post-pulment of the conference until the following day
i bore up under this intelligence with astonishing cheerfulness end of section two recording by roger maline
Section 3 of The Romance of an Old Fool
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Roger Maline
The Romance of an Old Fool by Roswell Field
Section 3
My good friends, I said, don't let this disturb you for a minute.
I am not so pressed for time that I cannot wait on your reasonable convenience.
your tavern is well kept and the food is wholesome i think i may say that my old friends in meadowvale will interest me until we can come to an amicable understanding
suppose to be sure of a full meeting that we fix the time of conference at day after to-morrow a little late in the afternoon after this suggestion had been received with suitable expressions of gratitude we journeyed together to the village where i was
duly turned over to old pedigrew. And then, as the day was by no means done, I strolled down the
street, and most naturally and quite unthinkingly, found myself a few minutes later,
looking over the Eastman gate at Phyllis on the porch. To say that this charming girl was
surprised by my sudden appearance was no less true than to admit that she did not seem in the
least displeased. I positively had no intention of going in, but before I knew it I was sitting beside her,
relating in the most casual way the reason of my coming. How good it was of you, said the ingenious
creature, and how delighted and grateful Meadowvale will be. It must be glorious to be rich enough
to do things for other people. Now it is not a disagreeable sensation to feel that one is
rich and good and glorious in the large gray eyes of a very pretty woman, and I was conscious of the
mild intoxication from the compliment.
It is, indeed, I answered magnanimously.
I have always maintained that money is given to us in trust for those around us, and that in
making others happy we find our greatest happiness.
I regret that I have not wholly lived up to this undisive.
deniably correct principle.
It will require at least a thousand dollars, she said naively.
Oh, at least.
She was silent a moment.
Then she said,
I was wondering what I would do if I had a thousand dollars to give away.
What do you think you would do?
Speaking for my own preferences,
I think I should like to establish a country club.
the very thing if there is one crying want more than another in meadowvale it is a country club with golf links tennis courts and shower baths now you are laughing at me
not at all fancy old hank and you playing a forsome with aunt mary and me for the cider and apples why it would add years of robustness to our waning lives
"'No,' said the girl decisively.
"'It isn't feasible.'
"'Then,' I went on musingly,
"'we might have an art institute,
"'or the Phyllis King Lake School of Expression,
"'or the Meadowvale Woman's Club,
"'or the Colonial Dames,
"'or, best of all, the Daughters of the American Revolution.
"'That shows how little you are
appreciate the local situation, she responded quickly,
for your best of all is worse and worse.
Imagine an order of daughters in a place where every woman's ancestors
did nothing but fight in the revolution.
As well, call a town meeting at once.
Ah, with a sigh, I see that I shall never spend the thousand dollars in Meadowvale.
Don't be too sure of that, my dear Phyllis, I exclaimed in an outburst, for I was in a particularly
happy and generous mood, and remember that when you do decide how the money is to be philanthropically
invested, we shall see that it is forthcoming.
With such agreeable banter, the minute slipped away, and when Mary appeared with the customary
invitation to tea, it would have been a jolt to the heart.
harmonious order of things to decline. I cannot say that I have ever cordially approved the austerity
of the New England tea table, with its cold bread and biscuits, its applesauce, its frugal allowance of sardines,
its basket of cake, and its not very stimulating pot of tea. But such are the compensations of
pleasant society that even these chili viands may be forgotten.
and i say my amen to phyllis's sweet and modest grace with all the heartiness of a thankful man as no gentleman may with propriety run away immediately after he has accepted hospitality
i lingered in the evening and we had more music which so calmed and rested me that i wondered at my past nervousness and marvelled that i had even contemplated a journey across the water
how it came about that the next morning phyllis and i were strolling over the village down by the river and into the pleasant woods i have forgotten but i dare say that we were discussing further developments of philanthropy
and endeavoring to come to a conclusion as to the proper disposition of that troublesome thousand dollars the girl was so young and joyous so pretty so arch so fascinating with that little coquettishness that is not the usual type of the puritan maiden
i could not find it in my heart to remember mary's words and try to instill in her a closer appreciation of the more serious purposes of life
indeed life is so serious that it is one of the blessed decrees of mother nature that we have that brief allotment of time when it is too serious to think about and youth passes so quickly that it is criminal to rob it of its golden hour
in such a presence i felt my own spirits rising my step becoming springy my whole nature less sluggish
and had i looked in the mirror i should have confidently expected to see a youthful bloom in my cheeks and a return of hair to primary conditions
it is due to this interesting young woman to say that she coyly urged me not to forget my other friends since i was to leave so soon
and it pleased me to fancy that she was not altogether offended when i spoke somewhat hastily and rather flippantly of those of my former companions who had lapsed into tediousness
i reminded her also that as the happiest memory of my childhood was associated with her mother so it was sweet to me to be with her and live again in a pleasant dream the brightness of the past
then for her mother's sake she shyly let me take her hand while i went over again not without emotion the story of my early love
dear little sylvia the meeting of the committee was followed by a general congregation of citizens and i was invited to the platform where i outlined my plans
i hinted that the library was merely the beginning of a number of beneficences which i desired to contribute to medavale's prosperity and as i looked down upon my listeners and caught sight of phyllis glancing up with flushed cheeks and sparkling eyes
i was nearly betrayed into promises of the most preposterous nature at the end of my remarks i recall that i spoke with unusual grace and eloquence
the chairman stood up and gravely thanked me intimating that i was a credit to meadowvale and its perfect public school system
i fancy i should have been applauded if it had been compatible with the nature of the people of meadowvale to make so riotous a demonstration at the close of the meeting it happened by the purest accident that i walked home with mary and phyllis and when mary
harry said in her blunt way that i really had been most generous phyllis did not speak but she slipped her hand under my arm and gave me an appreciative little squeeze which made me regret that i had not pledged another thousand
i was to leave the next morning thanks to the officious members of the committee who had so blunderingly hurried matters to accommodate me that i had no longer an excuse of remaining
and it was for this reason that i went in and sat again in the little parlor while phyllis sang for me the songs that were my favorites and some her mother sang in the long ago
memories were again pleasantly stirred within me as was not infrequent in those days and i experienced all the happiness that comes to him who is persuaded that he has made himself a little above the ordinary attractions of the earth
in this excess of good feeling and stimulated alike by the music and the consciousness of a philanthropic impulse i waited until the moment of parting before declaring definitely my excellent intentions
my dear mary i began turning to that admirable spinster you know how our childhood was linked by a close family feeling and how you and sylvia and i planned in that admirable spinster you know how our childhood was linked by a close family feeling and how you and sylvia and i planned in
our simple ambitions to live together in the great world outside? We may say now that this was
childish romance, and that the caprice of time has made it an idle fancy. For many years we have
been separated, and only by a happy chance have we been brought together. Fortune has been
kind to me. I am called a rich man, and I believe, I may say without boasting,
that i am far beyond the need of anxiety but to a degree i am a lonely man my sister's child is my one near relative in the world and he is a young man with an excellent business
able to take care of himself and naturally engrossed with his own occupations you can understand that at my time of life alone as i am and still young enough to appreciate the joys of living
i have a feeling of desolation for which no riches can compensate had fortune given me a daughter like our phyllis here i think no happiness could have been so great
It has pleased me to look back upon the past, to recall the days of our childhood, and to see in Phyllis the image of her mother.
Why can I not link the present and the future with the past?
Why can I not look on Phyllis as my own daughter, and give to her all the father love I have learned to feel?
I do not rob you either of her love or her presence.
I merely add a new joy to my life, and know that in caring for you both, and in contributing
to her happiness, and securing her against misfortune after we are taken away, I am carrying
out the pledge, however idle at the time, I made to Sylvia.
I fancied I saw what may have been the suspicion of a tear in Mary Eastman's eye.
It vanished as quickly as it came, and when she spoke and thanked me for my generous offer,
her voice was as calm and her manner as collected as if I had made a casual suggestion for attendance at a prayer meeting.
She could not deny that the opportunity was too enticing to be ignored,
and she admitted that my fatherly proposition was distinctly advantageous.
Her New England independence rather revolted at the thought of any immediate financial assistance,
which was not needed, while her New England thrift approved a future settlement
based on family friendliness of many years' standing.
On the whole, she was inclined to be favorable to my point of view.
As for Phyllis, she had listened to me with undisguised amazement.
her big gray eyes had grown larger and the color left her cheeks as i finished then the rosy red rushed back her lip quivered and the tears sprang to her eyes
a moment later she smiled then laughed and was serious again how incomprehensible are these young girls poor child she had never known a father
love. Phyllis followed me to the door. The light, streaming from the parlor, shone squarely on her
exquisite face. A thrill of pleasure went through me, as I realized that at last I had a daughter
whom I could love and cherish. I took her hand in both of mine, and as I released it,
I parted the light, wavy hair, and kissed her forehead. It seemed to be a little bit of her. It seemed
to me that she trembled slightly, but in a moment she was herself, and a gleam of merriment
was in her eyes, as she said, "'Of course, you will write to me, Papa?'
Doubtless the novelty of the situation made me just a little embarrassed. To be called Papa,
the first time by a pretty girl, was more embarrassing than I had expected. And why that half-lap
in her eye, and why that almost quizzical tone.
Was I not kind and good enough to be her father?
And had I not tried to show her every paternal consideration?
Was I not honestly endeavoring to fulfill a sacred pledge?
I was perplexed, but not discouraged.
I will prove to her, I said to myself with firmness,
that I am entirely worthy of her filial affection,
and that she may lean confidently upon me.
And I went straightway to bed and dreamed of her all night,
as every true father should dream of the daughter of his heart and his hope.
End of Section 3, recording by Roger Maline.
Section 4 of The Romance of an Old Fool.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Roger Maline
The Romance of an Old Fool by Roswell Field
Section 4
In the very nature of things, it was necessary that I should return frequently to Meadowvale
to confer with the village committee and to make all proper arrangements for beginning so important a local enterprise.
While this put an end to my projected trip to Europe,
I accepted the situation with calmness and forbearance,
satisfied that in the pursuit of duty
and in giving happiness to my fellow creatures,
I should have the reward of an approving conscience.
To my nephew, Frederick Grenel,
I gave the task of preparing the plans,
and his excellent suggestions were cordially adopted.
Much of my spare time,
and it is amazing how much spare time one has,
has in a village, was spent at the Eastman cottage with my new daughter, and in the evening
I talked to her of the world outside, quite, I fancy, as Othello may have spoken to Desdemona,
but with a more conservative and a better impulse.
I unfolded to her the wonders of great London, the pleasures of Paris, the beauties of Venice,
the sacred mysteries of Rome, the noble trinked.
traditions of Athens. I journeyed with her up the Nile and down the Rhine. One night we were in
gay Vienna, another in Berlin, a third in the grandeur of the Alhambra. From the fjords of Norway
to the tea-houses of Japan was the journey of a few minutes, and the indifference of my
surfeited life gave way before the kindling enthusiasm of this lovely country girl whose
world had been the area of scarcely more than a township. But the paternal relation, however
honest and commendable my intentions, did not seem to thrive as I had fondly hoped. Only in her
teasing moments would this vivacious creature admit the solemnity of our compact, and when she
called me Papa, there was always that gleam of the eye, with that merriment of tone,
which may not have been disrespectful, but was certainly not filial.
This troubled me exceedingly.
I thought it all over, and one night I said to her,
My dear Phyllis, it has become only too evident
that you do not entertain that differential feeling for me,
which a daughter should have for a father.
I shall not describe your emotions as I have analyzed them,
but I am satisfied that we shall not make a complete,
success of my long cherished plan. However, I am not prepared to withdraw unreservedly from my schemes
for your comfort and happiness, and since you cannot look upon me as a father, or treat me like a
father, I have another suggestion to offer. Let me be your elder brother, and watch over and
guard you as a brother's duty should direct. There shall be no diminution of my love, no retribution,
of my promises.
Perhaps, in the feeling that I am your brother,
you will talk with me with greater frankness,
and feel more closely drawn to me,
and we shall be all the better and the happier for the change.
Thus speaking, I took her pretty hand
and carried it respectfully to my lips,
at the same time patting it affectionately,
and assuring her of my brotherly devotion.
And this incomprehensible girl,
threw back her head and laughed then burst into tears laughed again flushed to crimson and ran out of the room i was grieved beyond measure
had i done wrong so quickly and rudely to sever a connection so wholly had the filial feeling been suddenly awakened in her breast was i depriving this poor child of a tender paternal care for which she longed
but which maidenly coyness could not immediately accept?
As a philosopher I have made women the subject of much research,
and my library bears witness to the attention I have paid
to the written opinions of the ablest writers and thinkers of all times,
who have had anything to do with this fascinating theme.
I have seen her in all her phases, analyzed her in all her emotions,
and Bunsey has admitted to me that my,
My theoretical knowledge has been of great value to him in dealing subtly with his heroines.
And yet, despite my complete equipment in mental construction, I am constantly surprised by
a new development, a sudden and unaccountable phenomenon of feminine nature, which undoubtedly
escaped the experience and reasoning of the experts and sages.
It is indeed a matter of pride in woman that while man has studied her for thousands of years,
she continues to exhibit fresh delights in her infinite variety of moods, and to put forth unexpectedly
new and astounding shoots.
I saw Phyllis no more that evening, save in my dreams, and it was wholly creditable to the goodness
of my motives and the sincerity of my affection that she abided with me in my slumbering
fancies with no protracted intermissions.
The next day she was as sweet and gracious as ever,
but I thought her tone a little constrained.
And when, as a father or brother should,
I ventured to speak of the tenderness of our family relation,
a half- imploring look came into her beautiful eyes.
And when I casually remarked on the softness of her hair
or the slenderness of her fingers, her glance was timidly reproachful.
All this gave me great unhappiness, and I discovered to my further distress
that in my attempt to return to the old familiar footing, I was neglecting the committee
and losing interest in the affairs of the library.
A certain peevishness took possession of me.
I was no longer myself, and I lost the gaiety and sprightliness.
which had been always my distinguishing virtues.
Furthermore, I missed the companionship and solace of my books in this emergency,
for I had no reference library to which I could go, in Meadowvale,
for aid in establishing the true condition of this strange girl.
I recalled dimly that somewhere on my shelves was a volume which contained a fairly analogous case,
but while I knew that I possessed such a book,
I could not remember the circumstances or the incident cited,
and this added to my unrest.
Only a student can understand the absolute wretchedness
which overtakes a man when he finds himself miserably dependent
on a distant library.
For several days I gave myself up entirely to my mental depression,
greatly wondering at the perplexing change in my life,
and marvelling that in all my explorations in philosophy i had not provided for just such a crisis whatever it might be one afternoon as i sat in my room at the tavern
looking idly out of the window and across the little river which rippled by something seemed to strike me violently in the forehead it may have been a telepathic suggestion it may have been a return to consciousness
at all events it was an idea i leaped from my chair put on my hat and proceeded rather feverishly to the eastman cottage
phyllis was away for the day mary was knitting in the sitting-room i watched her in silence for a moment and then i said abruptly mary i think i should like to marry phyllis
mary eastman was not the type of a woman to lose herself or betray astonishment she pushed her spectacles sharply above her eyes looked at me sternly and said in a rasping voice
john stanhope don't be an old fool whatever i may be mary i answered much nettled by her tone i do not think anybody can properly regard me as a fool
as for the other qualification i went on complacently i am not so old you and sylvia were the same age and she would have been forty-eight
a man is as old as he feels i ventured finding refuge in a proverb that is evasive and has nothing to do with the question beside what reason of you to believe that phyllis has the slightest desire to marry you
frankly not the slightest reason in the world i replied with the utmost candor that is why i have been so bold as to speak to you on the subject perhaps you thought i might use my influence to help you along quite the contrary my dear mary i assure you i may not know very much about women i was quite humble when separated from my library but i do know that nothing is
so fatal to a lover's prospects as the encouragement of the loved one's relations.
You see that I am perfectly frank.
Then you wish my opposition?
Come, let us be reasonable.
I have told you I wish to marry Phyllis.
I know my good points, and I am not unacquainted with my weak ones.
Unhappily, I can figure out my age to a day.
Alas, I am 48, and Phyllis is not yet 23.
The difference is positively ghastly from a sentimental standpoint.
But if I love her, and she is not hopelessly indifferent to me,
I think that even that difficulty can be bridged.
You know my position, my character, my general reputation.
Neither of us knows what Phyllis really thinks,
or what she will say or do in the matter.
I do not ask either for your opposition or your good offices.
I have come to you as an old friend, and the girl's nearest relative,
to tell you exactly how I feel and what I wish to gain,
and I ask only that I may have the same chance to win her affection
that you might grant to a younger man.
Mary's voice was gentler when she spoke again.
john she said phyllis is all i have in the world it is my one idea to have her happily married to a worthy man whom she honestly loves
providence in inscrutable wisdom may have decreed that you are that man but she continued with a sudden return of yankee caution i have my doubts considering your age
however you have acted honorably in coming to me and while i think phyllis would be a better daughter than wife to you i cannot speak for her
remember that she is very young and very inexperienced her acquaintance with men has been slight you are a man of the world and with enough of the surface polish i don't say it stops with that to dazzle any girl accustomed to
such surroundings as we have here.
Undoubtedly, an offer from you would flatter her.
It might induce her to accept you, thinking that she loved you.
Be careful.
Be sure of your ground before it is too late.
As I walked back to the village, I mused on what Mary had said, but I felt no apprehension.
Most lovers are alike in this, in youth, in middle age, insinility.
perhaps the advantage of middle life is that a man is more the master of himself more in possession of the faculties necessary to carry him through a crisis
without the impetuous desire of youth or the deadened sensibilities of old age he has a certain serene confidence that is a mixture of love and philosophy it disturbed me somewhat to find with what equanimity i had a certain serene confidence that is a mixture of love and philosophy it disturbed me somewhat to find with what equanimity i
faced a situation which promised nothing. It really annoyed me to note that I was picking out
mentally the place to which I should conduct Phyllis, in order to have the harmonious
environment adapted to a sentimental proposition. I remembered that down by the river, just
beyond the willows, there was an old tree where Sylvia and I, ah, so many years ago,
had sat and talked of our lives before us.
To that sacred spot I would lead Sylvia's daughter,
and passing gently from the past to the present,
I would tell her of my love and of my fondest hopes.
How dignified and appropriate such a spot
for a frank, calm, and self-contained a vowel.
Thus philosophically and amiably plotting,
I walked contentedly along.
and looking up i saw phyllis coming toward me swinging her hat in her hand and suggesting in her girlish beauty and graceful outline the poet's shepherdess
she did not see me and yielding to a sudden impulse i stepped quickly aside in the shadow of a neighbor's house as she passed on with her eyes on the ground i followed at a little distance and discovered much to my decision
that she chose the road that led to the burying-ground now a cemetery is not at all the spot that a man whatever his philosophy would select for a tender declaration but i was buoyed by the remembrance of mary's words
the finger of providence may be in it i muttered the lords will be done
slowly up the winding path she walked and i as slowly followed when i reached her she was standing at her mother's grave just as she had stood the morning we first met
i tried to accept this as an omen but failed miserably and omens after all depend on the point of view she raised her eyes and seeing me blushed another omen
omen, which means comparatively little to a man who is aware of the thousand emotions that are
responsible for the blush of a woman. I was again annoyed by the discovery that my pulses were not
beating wildly, and that my heart was not throbbing tumultuously, and when I addressed a commonplace
remark to her, I was thoroughly ashamed and humiliated. It seemed like taking a mean advantage of
innocence and inexperience. We sat together on the little bench, and for the first time
on our acquaintance she appeared embarrassed, as if she knew what was passing in my mind.
I have always believed that women, in addition to their acknowledged intuition, have a special
sense that enables them to anticipate a declaration of passion, and I had no doubt that
phyllis was fully prepared for my confession in spite of her embarrassment this induced me to proceed to the point without unnecessary preliminaries phyllis i said not without a certain agreeable ardor
i have been talking with aunt mary indeed and about you really when i say that i have been talking with aunt mary and about you really when i say that i have been talking with aunt mary and about
you i continued in a grieve tone for i do not like jerky responses i wish you to understand that it was in connection with no ordinary topic
phyllis i spoke with the utmost tenderness can you not guess the nature of our discussion phyllis was equal to the emergency her embarrassment had disappeared i am glad she said that
that your conversation so far as it related to me was out of the ordinary.
I suppose I may ask what the topic was, that is, if you don't mind telling.
This was approaching the serious.
Phyllis, I was telling Aunt Mary that I loved you and wished to make you my wife.
A flash, half merry, half angry, came to her eye.
That was thoughtful of you.
Is it customary for gentlemen in the city when they think they love a girl,
to honor all her relations with their confidence before they speak to the girl herself?
I took her hand.
She made the slightest motion to withdraw it and permitted it to remain in my grasp.
"'Fellas,' I said with all earnestness,
"'do not misunderstand me.
I sought you at the house. You were absent.'
your aunt mary and i have been friends from childhood and it was only natural that out of my heart i spoke the words that were in my mind i told her that i loved you just as at that moment i might have shouted it from the house top
my heart was full of you and i had to speak can't you understand the girl was still obdurate and she spoke with some petulance
if that is the case perhaps it is just as well that it was aunt mary and not one of the neighbors dear little phyllis you're not angry with me because i love you you cannot remain angry with me because i confessed my love before i met you to-day
if you had only seen with what applications of cold water your aunt rewarded my confidence you would pity and not reproach me for a minute the girl was silent then she asked softly
how long have you known that you loved me must i answer that question candidly and unreservedly unreservedly and candidly i seized her other hand and held her firm
firmly.
About fifty minutes.
She laughed rather joyously, I thought.
And having loved me for fully fifty minutes, you wish to make me your wife?
Confiding man!
Little girl, I said tenderly, let us be serious.
If my dull consciousness did not awaken till an hour ago, my heart tells me that I have loved
you ever since I first saw you standing near this spot. I am not going to ask you now whether
you love me or ever can learn to love me. It is happiness enough for me today to know how much
I love you and to know that I have told you of that love. I do not care to have my dream too
rudely and too suddenly dispelled. Very probably you do not care for me as I should like to
have you care for me, but do not make a jest of my affection. I am wholly aware of the
preposterousness of my demands in many respects. This sounded very conventional and
commonplace, but every lover must say it. And believe me, I shudder when I think of what I have
dared confess. Then she said, with the most delightful demurreness,
Mr. Stanhope, is it likely that a girl would sit in a burying ground on a bench with a gentleman,
allowing him to hold both her hands, unless she cared for him a little, just a little?
Up to this moment I had fairly forgotten that I was depriving her of all power of resistance,
but with such encouragement I took an even more sympathetic grasp and sat a trifle closer,
while the minutes ticked away.
A robin flew down from the tree nearby, and saucily hopped toward us,
until at a rebuking call from his mate he flew away,
and I fancied that I could hear them talking over the situation,
and drawing conclusions from their own happiness.
Phyllis was the first to break the charming spell.
"'Mr. Stanhope,' she asked, hardly.
above a whisper. What did Aunt Mary say when you told her that you wish to make me your wife?
She said, Phyllis, that Providence may have decreed that I am the man to bring you happiness.
And still, in that same enchanting whisper, with her face a little rosier as she half hid it below my shoulder,
Mr. Stanhope, do you think that a girl with my Christian training could fly in the face of Providence?
End of Section 4
Recording by Roger Maline
Section 5 of The Romance of an Old Fool
This Libravox recording is in the public domain
Recording by Roger Maline
The Romance of an Old Fool
By Roswell Field
Section 5
The Philosopher was in love
It comes, I have no doubt, to every
well-ordered man to be in love once. Some there are who maintain, with plausibility,
that the passion we call love may be of frequent recurrence, and they point to the passing
fancies of boys and girls, the romances of moonlight, the repeated sightings of the fickle
caridon, and the matrimonial entanglements of the aging Lydia, as evidence for their argument.
that there are varying degrees of the ecstatic emotion cannot be truthfully denied.
Heaven has wisely decreed that the heart, once filled with its ideal,
may be compensated for the bitter hour of sorrow by the soothing balm of a new affection,
and it is even possible that the second love may be more satisfying than the first,
the third or fourth more typical the exultation than its predecessor,
but love whether early or late in the perfect absorption of the faculties comes only once as compared with this remarkable mental state all other conditions are unemotional unfilling
the true lover rises early before the world is astir if it is summer and in the country his thoughts lead him to the cool groves the shady banks of the river
the retired spots where he may uninterruptedly commune with his happiness or his misery,
and reflect on the blessings that are to be, or should be, his.
Was it not then, as a true lover, that in the early morning I walked into the country
and down the banks of the stream, where Sylvia and I had strayed and talked in the sunny days of
youth?
And nature seemed a part of the wedding procession, and the squirrels and the squirrels and the
the fence rails, and the robins, wrens, and wood-thrushes in the trees, chirped and
twittered, "'John Stanhope is in love! John Stanhope is in love!'
And the mocking crow, lazily flapping his wings at a safe distance, croaked enviously,
"'Ha! Ha! Ha! "'Old Stanhope is in love! Ha! ha!'
Yet the whole conspiracy of animated nature could not make Old Stanhope in his present
exaltation, regretful of his age, or ashamed of his passion.
Mary Eastman had accepted the situation without comment.
She neither congratulated nor demurred, but went on with her household duties with the same
method and precision as before.
Men may come and go, hearts may be won and lost, republics may totter and empires may
fall, but the grand scheme of sweeping, dusting, bed-making, and cooking, knows no interruption.
If I did not understand, I at least commended this housewifely prudence, and often, when the domestic
battle was at its height, I would spirit away my little charmer for the discussion of topics within my
comprehension. At the outset I had declared that while it had pleased Providence to begin our romance
in a burying ground, I did not propose to sacrifice all tender sentiment to meditations among the tombs,
and I bore her away to the old tree down by the river, where we sat for hours together, as I
unfolded my plans for our future life. A man who has sat at the feet of the philosophers from Avid to
Schopenhauer, and has gorged his intellect with the abstract principles of love,
naturally adapts himself to the professorial capacity, and I soon saw that Phyllis,
while one of the most lovable, one of the sweetest of girls, was almost wholly ignorant
of the psychology of passion. I could not expect that a young girl of twenty-two would
discourse glibly of the emotion in its intellectual phase, but I could not bear the thought that
she should enter lightly into so serious a compact and without gaining a reasonable comprehension of
its mental analysis. Hence, as opportunity presented, I enriched her mind with the beauties of love
from the standpoint of philosophers and thinkers, and showed her the priceless blessings that must result from a
union dictated by careful provision of reasoning.
To these addresses she listened with sweet patience, and if she did not always grasp their
meaning, she showed much admiration for my erudition and frequently remarked that she had no
idea that love was so abstruse a science.
It seemed to me, in the serenity of my years and the calm assurance of my love, that I was a
most persistent wooer, and I was greatly grieved when she broke out rather petulantly one afternoon,
"'I don't believe you really love me.'
"'You don't believe I love you? And why?'
She hesitated, half abashed by her own outburst, then added a little defiantly,
"'Well, in the first place, you never quarrel with me.'
"'And why?'
Why should I quarrel with you?
Aren't you the most amiable, the most perfect little woman in the world?
Oh, of course, I know all that.
But I have always read, and always believed,
that when two persons are truly, deeply in love,
they have most exciting quarrels.
Is it not true that in all romances,
the man is eternally quarreling with the girl
and bidding her farewell forever?
Yes, and coming back in ten minutes to weep and grovel at her feet and beg her to forgive him.
My dear little Phyllis, why should I bid you farewell forever,
when I am morally certain that in half the time I should be cringing in the turf,
weeping and begging you to say that all is forgiven and forgotten?
That would be lovely, she said pensively.
Perhaps, but it would be very undignified and unnecessary,
and I am not at all sure that you would admire me in that attitude, even if I did imitate the heroes of romance.
A weeping lover is much more agreeable in a novel than an actual life.
However, if you insist that we must quarrel, in order to demonstrate the sincerity of my affection,
I shall suggest that we have our spats when we part for the night,
in order that no precious waking hours may be lost.
you are joking she exclaimed with a little pout not at all still i added reflectively even this plan has its disadvantages for if we quarrel when we part at night it will necessitate my return to your window which would not only annoy your aunt but might scandalize the neighbors
furthermore it might give me a shocking cold unless you immediately repented for the nights are very damn no i sighed with great feeling all this seems impracticable
you must give me a better reason for my coldness phyllis toyed with a clover blossom and made no answer i went on as a slight indication of my unlover-like o'tier
let me confess that i am going to bring you a marvellously glittering bobble when i come back from the city something that will bewilder you by day and dazzle you by night
She shrugged her shoulders.
"'Of course you are. You're always giving me presents.'
"'I laughed at this.
"'Well, suppose I am.
"'I have never heard that it is a sign of waning affection
"'to bestow gifts on the loved one.
"'You refuse me nothing.
"'I dare say you would give me the Boston Statehouse if I wished it.'
"'No, you are wrong, there.'
I replied decisively.
If I bought the State House, I should be compelled to include the emblematic codfish,
and you know my aversion to codfish.
She smiled at the thought, recalling the Sunday breakfast,
and then with a roguish look and a half-embarrassed laugh, she said,
At all events, you cannot deny that you did not kiss me when you left last night.
didn't i i asked in amazement and then quite thrown off my guard i added thoughtlessly i had forgotten
that she replied quietly was because you were so taken up with the philosophy of love and the mental attitude that you overlooked the physical demonstration do you remember the conversation
unfortunately i did i recalled that i had spent an hour or more defining the moral status of love and proving the sufficing reason
it was not a pleasant reflection that so agreeable and instructive a conversation was not thoroughly appreciated we spoke at length on love i ventured feebly that is you did she replied
i'll admit that it was better than an ordinary sermon because the subject was more personal but don't you think we admitted the sufficing reason at the start
and isn't it natural that a girl who has been so conventionally brought up is pretty well satisfied in her own mind of the moral status of course she added with a toss of her pretty head i am not asking you or anybody else to kiss me
i am merely curious to know if this plays any part in the philosophy of love as understood by the greatest thinkers her speech had given me time to pull myself together
no i said with marked emphasis i did not kiss you because i had noted the unworthy suspicions you have expressed to-day and i was hurt and grieved it was hard for me to exhibit my displeasure in this way
and i am regretful now that i have learned that it was simply playfulness on your part don't interrupt i am satisfied that the pure merriment of your nature is responsible for this assault
and i shall take great pleasure in making up this evening for the deficiencies of last night she laughed and we were friends again and with such jocular asperities the days passed quickly and agreeably
until my nephew arrived with the plans and specifications.
Frederick Grinnell was not only my nephew,
but an architect of reputation and promise,
considering his years and experience.
Like Phyllis, he had been left an orphan early in life,
and it had been my pleasure and privilege to give him in education
and see that he was fairly started in life.
While I think I may say that Frederick,
was not quite so attractive as was i at his age he was nevertheless a fine manly young fellow tall well put together of good habits industrious and devoted to his profession
it pleased me to see that he admired phyllis's pretty face and bright animated manner but one evening when i fancied that he was too deeply stirred by her really beautiful voice i told me to see that he was too deeply stirred by her really beautiful voice i told her very
i took the opportunity to converse with him confidentially as we walked back to the tavern i have been intending to tell you frederick i began a little airily of the relations existing between miss kinglake and myself
so far it has been a profound secret i did not then know that the entire village was gossiping about it but i feel that i owe it to you as my nearest relative to admit that miss kingdale and i are engaged
i paused and noting that he did not wint or appear in the least degree discomposed continued of course you will respect my confidence in this matter
of course i added magnanimously it will be perfectly proper for you to signify to miss kinglake that you are aware of our little secret as that will put us all on a better basis and lead to no misunderstanding
it would be awkward to play at cross-purposes and i should be extremely sorry my dear boy to think that i had withheld anything from you for you have always enjoyed my fullest trust
whatever he may have thought his manner betrayed no unusual interest i congratulate you he replied very calmly
now that so perfect an understanding existed in the immediate family circle i gave myself no further uneasiness
i was truly rejoiced to notice that frederick was deferentially polite to phyllis and i encouraged him to show her those polite attentions which my betrothed would reasonably expect from my nephew
and at times i even insisted that he should represent me at certain gatherings of phyllis's friends who were too young and frivolous to claim my serious attention
when he protested and pleaded headache business or other sign of disinclination i rallied him good-humoredly on his lack of gallantry
nonsense my boy i argued a young fellow of your spirit should be only too glad to go out with a pretty girl and enjoy himself
you certainly would not deprive phyllis of an evening's pleasure because your uncle has a stiff knee which interferes with his dancing and confound it you know they never let me smoke at these frolics come now be a good fellow and show the proper family impulse
As they went off together, I looked at them admiringly, and rather fancied that I saw in them
a suggestion of what Sylvia and I had been when we made the rounds of the birthday parties.
For it is fair to confess that the image of Sylvia did not infrequently rise before me,
and I constantly saw in Phyllis the replica of her adorable mother.
in my happiest moments I spoke of this suggestion to Phyllis
and continued to regale her with fragments of my early life associated with her family.
At first I thought that the girl was somewhat piqued,
fearing that Frederick was thrust upon her,
although she admitted that he was good-looking, polite, and danced extremely well,
but I succeeded in convincing her
that true love should not be gauged by the low standards of hot night dancing
and that all philosophers agree that the purest affection springs from quiet contemplation
such as I should enjoy while she was making merry with her friends
to this she once ventured to remark that in that case
perhaps my affection would thrive to greater advantage if I could
contented myself with thinking about her and not seeing her at all,
a suggestion which wounded me in my tenderest sensibilities,
for I was very much in love.
I was also not a little disturbed when,
supplemental to my reminiscences,
Mary went back to the past,
and humorously drew pictures of me as her own early lover.
There is considerable difference between the impaliencels
impalpable airy spirit of the fancy and a wrinkled and austere feminine actuality of fifty in the midst of these innocent and improving pleasures a small cloud appeared in the summer sky
i received a letter addressed in a peculiar but not ornate hand and i opened it with misgivings and read it with consternation mr stanhope sir prudence
and i thinks you'd better come home the plumber was here twice yesterday and the cut-worms is awful hero got glass in her foot and the brown-tailed moths is bad again which is all for the present respectfully malachi
duty is one of the exactions of life which i have never shirked when there seemed no possible way of evading it but in this instance the call of duty was
compromised by matters of equal urgency, for nothing can be more important than the successful
administration of the affairs of love. It was a happy thought that suggested to me a way out of the
difficulty, which was neither more nor less than that we should all go to the city together.
I sprang the proposition at a family conference. Phyllis was delighted.
there is always so much to be seen in the city she cried and i shall meet mr bunsey it has been one of the dreams of my life to know a real literary man this appeared to call for an explanation
heaven knows i am not jealous of bunsey and would not deprive him of a single distinction that is honestly his
but a regard for the truth coupled with much doubt as to bunsey's ability to live up to such lively expectations compelled me to resort to a little gentle correction
my dear phyllis i said you must disabuse your mind of that fallacy bunsey is a popular novelist not a literary man but isn't a novelist a literary man she asked in a amazing
not necessarily i replied pityingly in fact i may say not usually of course we are speaking of popular novelists
the popularity of the novelist is in proportion to his lack of literary style the distinctive popular charm of bunsey is that he is not literary at least if he is his critics have not succeeded in
in discovering it. He successfully conceals his crime. If he is popular, it is because he is not
literary. If he were literary, he could not be popular. That does not seem right, said my little
Puritan. It is not a question of ethics at all, but a matter of taste. However, don't be prejudiced
against Buncey because he is a product of the time and fairly representative of the civilization.
You shall meet him and shall learn from him how a man may succeed in so-called literature
without any hampering literary qualifications. Mary did not receive my proposition in a thankful
and conciliatory spirit. She shook her head doubtfully, and when we were alone together,
she gave voice to her fears.
Phyllis is country-bred, she said,
and knows nothing of the toils and snares
that beset young girls in the city.
Toils and snares, I echoed,
one might gather from your objections
that we contemplate taking Phyllis to the city
merely to expose her to temptation
and corrupt the serenity of her mind.
You seem to forget the end.
elevating influences of my modest home.
No, John, I dare say that your home is not objectionable, taken by itself.
But I am not blind to the seductions of the great city.
You too forget, she added, with a touch of complacency, that I am not inexperienced
or without knowledge of the profligacy of the town.
Granting all this, I said highly diverted by her.
earnestness.
And what are some of these seductions you have in mind?
Theaters, she replied promptly.
Theaters and late hours, midnight suppers, and cocktails.
I laughed uproariously.
My dear Mary, if these deadly sins and perils alarm you, we'll cut them out.
I care little for theaters and less for midnight
suppers and as for cocktails i shall make it my peculiar charge to see that phyllis never hears the abominable word allowing for the removal of these temptations i still think that a trip to the city would do our country flower a world of good
though i have nothing but praise for the manner in which you have brought her up john she answered very gravely i have endeavored to do my duty as i saw my
it. I have tried to bring Phyllis up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord."
The expression carried me back to my childhood, and I bit my lips.
"'Of course you have,' I said.
Wasn't I brought up in this same village, in the same way?
Did not my good mother and my blessed grandmother inflict nurture and admonition upon me
that I might grow up as you see me, a true child of the pilgrim fathers?
The nurture, I remember, was a particularly hard seat in our particularly gloomy old meeting-house,
and the admonition took up the greater part of the Sabbath day,
with a disenchanting prospect of further admonition at home, if I failed to keep awake.
I do not mean to say that I am not thankful for the experience.
in truth i am doubly thankful thankful that i had it and thankful that it is over to this merry vouchsafed no further remonstrance than a distrustful shake of the head excellent woman
is it not to such as you earnest faithful self-sacrificing god fearing that the best in young manhood the purest in young womanhood o the strong womanhood o the strong
strength of the qualities that are the vital force of the nation.
End of Section 5.
Recording by Roger Maline.
Section 6 of The Romance of an Old Fool.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Roger Maline.
The Romance of an Old Fool by Roswell Field.
Section 6.
In the end, the United Opposition was too much
for Mary's arguments, and to town we went.
The pleasure of the journey, on my part,
was somewhat clouded as to the welcome we should receive from prudence,
and truly it acquired my greatest powers of dissimulation
to feign an easy indifference and air of authority before that worthy creature,
as with the most studied politeness and formal hospitality
she received us at the gate.
Prudence and I had sparred so many years that we were like two expert athletes,
and while neither apparently noticed the other,
each was perfectly conscious of the adversary's slightest movement.
Hence, I detected at once her strong aversion to Mary,
whom she immediately selected as a probable mistress,
and I saw her several times vainly try to repress a grimace of disdain and wrath.
it was my first impulse to follow prudence into the kitchen after the ladies had gone to their rooms and make a clean breast of the untoward tidings but i lacked the moral courage and contented myself with an inward show of strength
why should i pander to this woman's caprices was i not master in my own house should i not do as i pleased
i would punish her with the severity of my silence and perhaps in a week or two when she was more tractable i would condescend to tell her exactly how matters stood in this i would be firm
but the next morning before my guests were out of bed i decided that i was not acting wisely was not prudence an old faithful and trustworthy servant
had she not been loyal to my interests and was not her whole life wrapped up in my comfort surely i wronged her to withhold from her the confidence she had so fairly earned
and the flush of shame came to my face as i reflected that i was indulging my first deceit i took a turn in the garden in the heavenly cool of the early morning
to compose my nerves for a very probable ordeal and then i walked boldly into the kitchen where prudent sat with a wooden bowl in her lap paring apples it was one of the unwritten laws of the cuisine that
prudence was never to be disturbed when engaged in this delicate operation.
She maintained that it destroyed the symmetry of the peal, and I dare say she was right.
Consequently, she looked at me reproachfully as I entered, and bent again more assiduously to
her work.
I was much flustered by the ill omen, but I knew that if I hesitated I was lost.
So I advanced valourously, though with accelerated pulse,
and said with all the calmness I could command,
Prudence, I think it only right to tell you that I am going to be married.
One apple rolled from the bowl down along the floor and under the kitchen stove.
I cannot conceive of any shock, however great,
that would cause Prudence to lose more than one apple,
partly to conciliate and partly to conceal my own trepidation,
I made a gallant effort to rescue the wanderer,
and as I poked the hiding place with my stick,
I heard her say,
Lord, I know it had come!
The fact that it has come, Prudence, I answered,
with a sickly attempted gaiety,
does not seem to be a reason why you should call
with such vehemence on your maker.
there does not appear to be any need of providential interposition things are not so bad as all that i always used my most elegant english when conversing with prudence
if she did not understand it it flattered her to think that i paid this tribute to her intelligence mr john she said and there was a suspicious break in her voice
for twenty years i have tried to do my duty by you and now that i must go go i interrupted who said you must go who spoke about anybody's going
you certainly do not expect to turn that bowl of apples over to me and leave me to get breakfast no mr john i shall go on and do my duty as i see it until you have made all your plans and are comfortable
Now, look here, Prudence, I am very comfortable as things are, thank you, and you will pardon me if I say I cannot understand why you should go at all.
I shall continue to eat, I hope, after I am married, and I think it altogether probable that I shall require a housekeeper and a cook.
I believe they do have such things in well-regulated families.
At my age and with my experience, and considering how we have lived, Mr. John, I couldn't get along with a mistress,
especially, she added with a touch of malice, with a woman considerable older than me.
Older than you? What are you talking about? Miss King Lake is young enough to be your daughter.
Another apple rolled on the floor.
miss kinglake she exclaimed in astonishment that lamb good lord i thought you were going to marry the other one prudence i said rather hotly for i did not relish her amazement
you will oblige me by not speaking of these ladies as the lamb and the other one i might gather from your remarks that i am a sort of ravening wolf instead of a well-meaning gentleman
who is merely exercising the privilege of selecting a wife but I said checking
myself for I was ashamed of my explosion I shall be magnanimous enough to believe that
you are delighted with my choice and that I have your congratulations you will be
glad to know that Miss King Lake and I are perfectly satisfied with each other and
that we are both entirely satisfied with you and now that we
understand the situation, I think I may presume that we shall have breakfast at the usual
hour this morning, and tomorrow morning, and for many mornings to come.
And by the way, Prudence, while I have honored you with my confidence, permit me to impress
it upon you that this revelation is not village gossip as yet, and you will put me under
further obligations by not mentioning the circumstance.
Good morning, Prudence.
Kindly call the ladies at eight o'clock.
And thereupon I hastily departed,
leaving the good woman in a state of stupefaction,
since, for the first and only time in our long and controversial association,
had I retired with the last word.
Taking a second turn in the garden,
I encountered Malachi, and my conscience reproached me.
Am I doing right?
i asked to myself in withholding the glad news from this faithful servant who has shown himself so worthy of my confidence is it not my duty to tell him not so much to interest him in his future mistress as to demonstrate the trust i repose in him
malachi received my confidence with less excitement than i had expected in fact i was slightly humiliated by his seeming lack of gratitude
he touched his hat very respectfully and observed irrelevantly that the roses below the arbor were looking uncommonly well this was a poor reward for my attempt at consideration and further convinced me of the uselessness of establishing anything like that the rose-downer was a poor reward for my attempt at consideration and further convinced me of the uselessness of establishing anything
like intimate relations with the proletariat.
By the way, Malachi, I said in parting,
you will keep this matter a profound secret.
Miss King Lake and I are desirous that we shall not be annoyed by village chatter
and premature congratulations.
Having discharged my duty to my good servants,
I felt that my obligations, so far as the relation with Phyllis was concerned,
were at an end, and the morning wore away without further misgivings of disloyalty.
In the afternoon, Bunsey came over for his daily smoke,
and as we sat together in the library, I noticed the entire absence of suspicion in his manner.
My heart smote me.
Truly, I reasoned silently,
I am behaving ill to an old friend who has never withheld from me the very secrets of his soul,
Should I not be as generous, as outspoken with him as he has always proved to me?
Should I not confide to him this one precious secret, at the same time swearing him to preserve it as he would his life?
I blew out a ring of smoke, and then I began with the utmost seriousness.
Bunsey, how do you like the ladies?
He shifted his position,
tipped the ashes from his cigar,
and replied tranquilly.
Oh, I dare say, I shall in time.
The answer vexed me.
Buncey was a bachelor
and should have been, therefore, the more impressionable.
I forgot, for the moment in my annoyance,
that he was a novelist
and had been so diligently creating lovely and impossible women to order that he was not easily moved by the realities of humanity at all events i replied with delicate irony
i am glad that the future is hopeful for the ladies my reason for asking the question was simply to lead the way to a confidence i intend to repose in you
to proceed expeditiously to the end of a long story i intend to marry one of them bunsey's tranquillity was unshaken which one
which one i echoed with heat why miss kinglake of course does she intend to marry you naturally or unnatural
"'Confound your impertinence,' I roared.
"'What do you mean by that?'
"'No impertinence at all, my dear fellow.
In fact, it is most pertinent.
Miss King Lake is a girl, and you—well, you voted for Grant.
"'Which is your gentle way of saying that I am too old?'
"'No, not too old. Just old enough.'
to know better we are never too old to love I said conscious that I was uttering a
melancholy platitude too old to love heaven forbid but we may be too old to marry
at least to marry anybody worthwhile come Stanhope tell me do you really love
this young woman love her here I have been telling you
that I intend to marry a charming girl, and you turn about and ask me if I love her?
Of course I love her. I have been loving her in one way and another for years.
What do you mean by that? I thought you only met her a few weeks ago.
I smiled pityingly. So I did, but for years she has been my affinity.
incidentally i don't mind saying i began by loving her mother bunsey sat up straight oh you loved her mother was her mother pretty
she was as you see phyllis in fact i think she was if anything a trifle prettier we were playmates and schoolmates and in the nature of things if i had not wandered off to the city
i presume we should have married dear little sylvia i went on musingly i can see her at this moment looking down from heaven and smiling on my union with her daughter
for if ever a match was made in heaven this was confound it what are you doing now while i was talking bunsey had reached over taken a sheet of paper and was busily right
He looked up carelessly.
Your story interests me and is such good material that I thought I would make a few notes.
Young boy loves young girl, goes to city, forgets her,
young girl marries, has charming daughter, dies, years pass,
Venerable gentleman returns, sees daughter,
daughter, great emotion on part of VG, thinks he loves her, proposes, accepted,
Mer—no, there I think I must stop for the present.
Oh, don't stop there, I beg, I said sarcastically.
If you are thinking of using these materials for one of your popular novels,
be sure to throw in a few duels, several heart-rending catastrophes, and other incidents of what you will call action, appropriately expressed in bad English.
Bunsey was imperturbable.
Thank you for your appreciative estimate of my literary style, he replied coolly.
But really, my consideration for my old friend deprives me of the pleasure of robbing his diary.
i was still out of temper bunsey i don't mind favoring you with a further confidence you're an ass
with this parting shot i strode out of the library when remembering the sacredness of my revelation i turned back of course you will understand bunsey that however flippantly you may choose to regard what i have said to you you will have the decent
to keep the subject matter to yourself i do not ask your congratulations or your approval but i demand your secrecy the ass braise acknowledgments answered bunsey meekly helping himself to another cigar
you may rely on my loyal and devoted interest the fact that i have heard your secret twice before to-day shall not open my lips or cause me to violate your trust
Notwithstanding my attitude of indifference, I was greatly troubled by Bunsey's unfeeling suggestion.
Could it be possible that I had mistaken my own heart?
Was I, yielding as I had believed, to the first strong passion of my life,
only deluding myself with the remembrance of my vanished youth?
I dismissed the thought impatiently, for, after all,
was not bunsey a hopeless cynic a fellow without a single emotion of the ennobling sentiment of man toward woman a sordid story-teller who created characters for money wrecked homes committed literary murders
played unfeelingly on the tenderest sensibilities and boasted openly that the only angels were those made by a stroke of the pen and retailed at department's
store book counters and while thus reasoning phyllis came to me so winsome in her girlish beauty so radiant in the happiness i had infused into her life
so joyous in the pleasures of the present that i laughed at my own doubts reproached myself for my own unworthy suspicions and straightway forgot both bunsey and his evil promptings
End of Section 6.
Recording by Roger Maline.
Section 7 of The Romance of an Old Fool.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Roger Maline.
The Romance of an Old Fool by Roswell Field.
Section 7.
Love at 8 and 40 is a very pleasant and indolent emotion,
marking the most delightful stage in the progress.
of the great human passion. At 25, we talk it. At 35, we act it. At 45, it is pleasant to sit down
and think about it. The very young man loves without really analyzing. Ten years later, he analyzes
without really loving. In another decade, he has compounded the proportions of love and analysis
and becomes, under favoring conditions, the most dangerous and hence the most acceptable of suitors.
The man in middle life takes his adored one tolerantly and keeps his reservations to himself.
In the ordinary course of events, he has acquired a certain knowledge of feminine character.
He knows the rocks and the shoals of love, and skillful pilot that he is, he avoids them.
he is sure of his course master of his equipment if he errs at all but i anticipate those were very joyous days notwithstanding the applications of cold water so liberally bestowed by my confidential advisers
and eagerly and successfully i exerted myself to convince the doubting ones in general and bunsey in particular how absurd were their suspicions
and how apparent it was that phyllis and i had been purposely created for each other mary threw herself into our pleasures as heartily and joyously as her new england nature would permit
which was never a very riotous demonstration and phyllis with the effervescence and enthusiasm of girlhood eagerly assented to every proposition that had its pleasure-seeking side while i as a thoughtful lover should
busied myself in schemes for summer dissipation,
thankful that it was in my power to prove so devoted a night,
and inwardly rejoicing at my triumph over those who had taxed me with such unworthy thoughts.
Even Frederick, good fellow that he was,
allowed himself unusual days of vacation to partake of our merriment,
and it pleased me greatly to see that when business cares or physical disinclination,
kept me off the program, he no longer allowed his indifference to interfere with his duty as my
nephew and personal representative.
Such, I take it, is the obligation of all young men, similarly placed.
For, before many weeks had passed, I discovered that it was not wise to allow the fleeting
dissipations of the moment, however alluring, to monopolize time which should be given to the
serious affairs of life. I found that a cramped position in a boat in the hot sun brought on nervous
headaches, and that too much time in the garden, when the dew was falling, was conducive to Lombago.
Furthermore, I had been invited by a neighboring university to deliver my celebrated lecture on the
protagonist of Plato, and several new and excellent thoughts had come to me which required
careful and elaborate development. I explained these matters conscientiously and fully to Phyllis,
and while she offered no unreasonable protest, her pretty face clouded, and she did me the honor
to say that half the enjoyment was removed by my absence. Once, she even went so far as to declare
that Plato was a horrid man, and that she believed I thought more of him than of her,
a most ridiculous conclusion, but so essentially feminine that I forgave her at once.
And when she came to me and put her arms around my neck and urged me to go with her to a tennis
match, a foolish game where grown-up people knock little balls over a net with a battle-door,
I pointed out to her that such spectacles, while eminently proper for young folk,
argued a failing mind in those of mature years.
With a charming pout, she said,
Do you think you would have refused to go if my mother had asked you?
Now, tennis is a sport that has come up since Sylvia and I were children together,
but I recalled, with a guilty blush, the time when she and I won the village change,
championship in doubles in an all-day siege of croquet.
So what could I say in my own defense?
Therefore, I went with Phyllis to the tennis court
and sat for two long and inexpressibly dreary hours
watching the senseless and stupid proceedings.
It was pleasant to reflect that I was with Sylvia's daughter,
and I tried to imagine that the keen interest of youth still remained,
but I was sadly out of place.
I am satisfied that this game of tennis
has nothing of the fascinating quality of croquet.
On our arrival home, Phyllis kissed me
and thanked me for what she called my self-denial.
But after that one experience,
Frederick represented me at the tennis court,
as indeed the good-natured boy consented to do
at many similar festivities.
and so the summer wore gradually away one day's enjoyment lazily following in others with nothing to disturb the serenity of my life or to interfere with the calm content into which i had settled
phyllis was everything that a moderate and reasonable lover could wish kind gentle affectionate within the bounds of maidenly discretion attentive to my wishes and considerate of my caprices
the more i saw of her the more i was persuaded that i had chosen wisely and well one afternoon frederick at my suggestion had gallantly given up his work in the office and taken phyllis down the river
i sat with bunsey in the library and took occasion to expound to him the philosophy of perfect love the trouble is i said that people rush blindly in the library and took occasion to expound to him the philosophy of perfect love
the trouble is i said that people rush blindly into matrimony they think they are in love work themselves up to the proper pitch of madness propose and marry while they are in delirium
hence so much of the wretchedness and misery that we see in the homes of our friends for my part i am committed to the doctrine of affinities it is true that i like many others was guilty of the usual folly in my youth
and perhaps that gave me the wisdom to wait for my second venture until precisely the right party came along matrimony bunsey is an exact science
if we regulate our passion control all silly emotion study feminine nature as critically and methodically as we investigate a mathematical problem and commit ourselves only when the affinity presents herself we shall make no mistakes
for after all what is an affinity nothing more than a human being sent by providence as perfectly adapted to the wheels and curves of your nature
a very pretty theory retorted bunsey grimly and by the way when do you think of rushing into matrimony really i said somewhat confused to be entirely honest with you i have not settled on any particular day
you see phyllis should have her fling she is very young true but you are not
as bunsey said this he rose and tossed his cigar out of the window stanhope he went on we are old friends and i don't wish to be continually seeming to interfere with your business
but if i were a man with fifty years leering hideously at me and engaged to a pretty girl of two-and-twenty i'd make quick work of it before providence came along with a younger affinity in a panama hat next to a pretty girl of two and twenty i'd make quick work of it before providence came along with a younger affinity in a panama hat next to you
legge shirt and ducked trousers. I stared at him with a sort of helpless amazement.
Exactly, what do you mean? I asked.
Well, he answered, shrugging his shoulders. At the risk of being kicked out of the house,
let me say that I think such an affinity has already presented himself.
Indeed, and who may that be?
Suppose we say Frederick.
My nephew?
Exactly, your nephew.
He is an uncommonly good-looking fellow,
and, thanks to his uncle's childlike belief in Providence
and the doctrine of affinities,
he has most unusual opportunities to test that doctrine for himself.
I dare say that he is making a formal study of the situation
at this very moment,
and inviting Providence to appear on the scene as his sponsor.
What more was said at this interview,
if indeed it did not terminate with this brutal statement,
I cannot recall,
for Buncey, usually so flippant and cynical,
spoke with an earnestness that stunned me.
My knowledge of the philosophy of love told me that he was wrong.
My observation of the actualities of love,
life made me fear that he might be right.
Theoretically, I could not have been mistaken in my course.
Practically, I began to see weak spots in the chain of evidence.
Swiftly, I ran over the events of the spring and summer,
and as little spots no bigger than a man's hand magnified themselves into black clouds,
Bunsey, sitting opposite, seemed to grow larger and larger and
larger and his smile more malicious and demon-like possibly had i been a younger and more impetuous man i should have flown into a passion taken bunsey at his word and kicked him out of the house
but the philosophy of the thing engrossed me filled me with half fear half curiosity and engaged all my mental faculties had i been mistaken
could i be deceived in the daughter of sylvia however strong my suspicions may have been they were not increased when with the evening phyllis and frederick came home from their excursion
never was phyllis more unreserved more cordial more joyous more attentive to the little wants which i in a mean and shameful test imposed on her
she could not be acting apart this new england girl with her alert conscience her puritan impulse and training her aversion to everything that savored of deceit
and frederick was as much at his ease as if i knew nothing as if i had not heard of his duplicity as if the whole house and grounds were not ringing with accusations of his unworthiness
such are the phenomena of the philosophy of middle life i insisted that he should remain for the evening and after dinner with that contrariness accountable only in a true student of psychology
i made a trifling excuse and walked down to the square leaving them together the curfew was ringing as returning i entered the lower gate at the end of the garden and passed slowly along by the arbor
It may have been Providence, it may have been chance.
It certainly was not philosophy that directed my steps to the far side of the syringa hedge,
which shut me off from the view of those who might come down to the rustic seat at the foot of the cherry tree.
At least I had no intention of playing the spy,
and when I heard Frederick's voice, and knew instinctively that Phyllis was with him,
i quickened my pace that i might not be a sharer of their secrets but an irresistible impulse made me pause when i heard the foolish fellow say
after to-night i shall not come again it is better for us to break now than to wait until it is too late her reply i could not hear presently he said and a little brokenly
i have fought it all out it has been hard so hard but i must meet it as it comes then i heard phyllis's voice it is for the best it is for the best it is for the best
I believe that you care for me. I know how much I care for you and how much this effort is costing me.
We were too late. No other course in honor presents itself.
God knows how eagerly and hopelessly I have sought a way out of this tangle of duty.
Again I heard Phyllis's voice, sunk almost to a whisper.
I have given my word, it is for the best.
the governor has been so good to me frederick exclaimed resentfully that i feel like a criminal even at this moment when i am making for him the sacrifice of a life
he has been my father my protector what i am i owe to him and i must meet him like a grateful and honest man you would not have it otherwise
and for the third time phyllis answered it is for the best had i been of that remarkable stuff of which your true hero is made of which bunsey's heroes are made
and had i come up to the very reasonable expectations of the followers of literary romance i should have burst through the syringa with passion in my face and rage in my heart and precipitated a tragedy
or on the other side i should have taken those ridiculous children by the hand and ended their suffering with my blessing then and there
but as i am only a very common clay with little liking for heroics i did what any selfish and unappreciative man would have done and stole quietly away
i even felt a sort of fierce joy in the knowledge of the security of my position a mean exultation in the thought that phyllis was bound to me and that those from whom i might reasonably fear the most acknowledged the hopelessness of their case
most strangely there came to me no resentment with the knowledge that i had been supplanted by my nephew in the affections of the girl the fact that she loved another-and-and-a-law the knowledge that i had been supplanted by my nephew in the affections of the girl
the fact that she loved another surprised rather than agitated me my argument was upset my doctrine of affinities had been seriously damaged in my individual case
and here was i who should have been yielding to the pangs of disappointment or raging with wounded pride reflecting with considerable calmness on the reverses of a philosopher
i went into the library and lighted a cigar i threw myself into an easy chair and as i looked up i saw a spider web in a corner of the ceiling i must speak to prudence about that in the morning i said to myself with annoyance
then for the first time it came to me that i was out of temper for i am customarily tranquil and not easily upset
my mind wandered rapidly from one thing to another and oddly enough i caught myself humming a little tune which had no sort of relevancy to the events of the day
i tried to dismiss the incident of the garden as the temporary folly of a romantic girl which would wear itself out with a week's absence why should it trouble me
had i been lacking in kindness or affection should i be disturbed because a few boat rides and the influence of moonlight had wrought on a mere child was i not secure in her promise and had i not heard her say she had given her word
as for frederick was he not my debtor had he not confessed it then why give more thought to the matter it was awkward but both were young and both would outlive it
sylvia and i were young and we outlived it but still kept ringing in my ears that despairing half-whisper it is for the best petulantly i threw away my cigar
and went up to my room.
I walked over to the dressing case
and turned up the gas.
The shadow displeased me
and I lighted the opposite jet.
Then I stood squarely before the mirror
and looked critically at the reflection.
Yes, John Stanhope, you are growing old.
That expanding forehead
with the retreating hairs
tells the tale of time.
The gray upon
your cheeks is whitening, and the razor must be used more vigilantly to further deception.
Those creases in your face can no longer be dismissed as character lines.
The shagginess of your eyebrows has the flying ears to account for it.
Plainly, John, you and humbug must part company.
You are not of this generation, and it is not for you.
I turned down the gas, threw open the window, and let the moonlight filter in through the elms
and over the tops of the little pines.
The soft beauty of the night soothed me, and gradually and very gently my irritation and annoyance
slipped away.
Why should not a young girl, radiant in youth and beauty, affect a young man of her generation?
What has an old fellow, with all his money and worldly experience and burnt-out youth,
to give in exchange for that intoxication which every girl may properly regard her lawful gift?
Undoubtedly, I should make a better husband, as husbands go, than my romantic nephew,
and any woman of rare common sense would see the advantages of my position,
but why burden a woman with that rare common sense which robs her of the first and sweetest of her dreams?
No, John Stanhope, go back to your pipe and your books and your gardening,
your life of selfish, indolent do nothing.
Take life as it comes most easily and naturally.
By sparing one heart you may save too.
and that nephew of mine. What a fine, manly fellow he proved himself when put to the test.
The governor had been good to him, and he was going to stand by the governor.
How my heart jumped! And what a warm little feeling there was about the internal cockles,
as I recalled his words.
Bravely said, my boy, and nobly done.
I fear I should not have been so generous,
at your age, and with Sylvia.
And with Sylvia!
How the past crowded back at the thought of her!
Who are you, old dreamer,
who neglected the gift the good gods provided
in the heyday of your youth,
to return to chase the phantom of the past?
Behind that little white cloud, sailing far into the north,
Sylvia may be peeping at you,
and smiling at the delusion of her ancient wooer.
Or, why not think that she is pleading with you,
pleading for her child and the lover,
as she might have pleaded for herself and somebody else,
had somebody else known his own heart before it was too late?
I watched the white cloud as it passed on and on,
growing smaller and fainter as it receded.
I settled back,
still deeper in my chair and sighed.
And then, oh, unworthy night of love, and then I fell asleep.
End of Section 7.
Recording by Roger Maline.
Section 8 of The Romance of an Old Fool.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Roger Maline.
The Romance of an Old Fool by Roswell Field.
Section 8
In the morning, before the family was astir,
I wrote a note,
pleading a sudden and imperative call to town,
and vanished for the day.
I argued with myself that such a step was a delicate consideration
for a young woman, who, having listened to a confession of love a few hours before,
would be hardly at her ease at a breakfast-table conversation.
Incidentally, I was not a good at a breakfast-table conversation.
I was not altogether sure of myself, although I was much refreshed by an excellent night's sleep,
which comes to every philosopher with courage and strength to rise above the unpleasant things in life.
If Phyllis had yielded to an emotion of grief, there was little trace of it when we met at evening.
I fancied that she was somewhat paler, and her manner at times seemed a little listless,
but otherwise there was no great departure from her usual demeanor.
As for myself, the long sunshine of a summer day,
and the conviction that at last the opportunity had come to me
to play the role of a minor hero gave me a piece that amounted almost to buoyancy.
No need had I of the teachings of the musty old philosophers
reposing on my bookshelves.
John Stanhope had learned more of the way of,
life in a few short hours than all his tomes could impart his books had helped him many times in diagnosing the cases of his friends when john fell ill they mocked and deceived him
opportunely enough phyllis followed me into the library and when at my request she sat on a little stool at my feet and i held her hand and stroked her soft light hair a pang went
through my heart, for I felt that she might be near me for the last time.
The philosopher had yet much to learn. For several minutes we were both silent. Of the two,
I was doubtless the more ill at ease, although I concealed it bravely.
"'Philis,' I said at last, "'did you ever get over a childish fondness for fairy stories?'
she smiled at this was i wrong in fancying that her smile was that of sadness and answered i hope not
because i went on bending over and affectionately patting the hand i held a little fairy tale has been running through my head all day and i have decided that you shall be the first to hear it and pass on its merits
and because i added gaily if it has your approval i may wish to publish it shall i begin she nodded her head i could swear now to the weariness the poor child was so staunchly fighting and looked off toward the sunset
once upon a time you see that i am conventional there lived a beautiful young princess on whom a wicked old troll
had cast an evil eye. Now this wicked troll was not so hideous as the trolls we see in our fairy books,
I must say that, but he was so wicked that even this deficiency could not excuse him.
The princess was as young and innocent, I was going to say as simple, as she was beautiful,
and the wicked troll talked so much of his experience in the world, and boasted so hugely of his
wealth and generosity and other shining virtues, that the imagination of the poor little princess
was quite fired, and she was flattered into thinking that here was a treasure not to be lightly
put aside. And so, in a foolish moment, she consented to be his bride, and he took her away to
his castle. I believe trolls do have castles, to make ready for the marriage.
while the preparations were going on and the wicked old troll was laughing with glee to think how he had deluded a princess a handsome young prince appeared on the scene
and what's so natural is that the princess should immediately contrast him with the troll and it came about also quite naturally that before the prince and the princess knew that anything was happening they fell so violently in love with each other
that the birds and the bees and the flowers in the garden and the squirrels in the trees sang and hummed and gossiped and chattered about it
here i paused phyllis did not look up but i felt a shiver run through her body as i stroked her hair and put my arm around her shoulder to caress away her fear
but it happened that although the princess was so much in love that at times she must have forgotten even in the evening the same she must have forgotten even in the
existence of the old troll, she was still possessed of that most inconvenient and annoying
internal arrangement, which we call the New England conscience, and one night, when the
prince had declared his love with more ardor than usual, she remembered the past, how she had
promised to marry the troll, and how she must keep her word, as all good princesses do.
and the prince, who was a very upright young man,
most foolishly listened to her and agreed to give her up.
Whereupon these poor children, having resolved that it was for the best,
Phyllis looked up quickly.
Her face was white, and a look, half of fear, half of reproach, came to her eyes.
She sank down and hid her face in her head.
hands. Both my arms were around her, and I even laughed.
Dear little princess, I whispered,
Don't give way yet. The best is still to come, for you must remember that this is a fairy tale,
and all fairy tales have a good ending. And, to make a long story short,
this wicked old troll was not a troll at all, but a fairy godmother.
who had taken the form for good purposes.
I would have said fairy godfather,
but I have never come across a fairy godfather in all my reading,
and I must be truthful.
Well, the fairy godmother came along right in the nick of time,
and, of course, you know who married and lived happily ever after.
The convulsive movement of the poor child's body told me she was weeping.
and i being a philosopher and more or less hard-hearted as all philosophers are let her weep on presently she said in a voice hardly audible
i gave you my promise and i meant to keep it i am trying so hard to keep it of course you are little girl but why try a bad promise is far better broken than a bad promise is far better broken than
kept, and come to think of it, I am not at all sure that I am anxious to have you keep it.
How do you know that I am not making a desperate effort to secure my own release?
She raised her head quite unexpectedly and caught me with the tears in my eyes.
My eyes always were weak.
Why, you are crying, she said.
Of course I'm crying.
I always cry when I am particularly well pleased.
It is a family peculiarity.
You should see me at the theater.
At a farce comedy, I am a depressing sight,
and that is the reason I always avoid the front seats.
Then, realizing that I might be carrying my gaiety too far,
I went on more soberly.
Can't you see, Phyllis, that the old fool's romance must come to an end?
don't you understand that had i the selfish wish to hold you to a thoughtless promise our adventure would terminate only in misery to us both perhaps you and i have been the last to see it i because i was thinking too much of myself
you because you were carried away by an exalted sense of duty thank heaven it is clear to us both now for it is clear isn't it dear to it dear
The foolish girl did not reply, but she kissed my hand, and it is astonishing how that little act of affection touched and strengthened me.
So we are going to make a new start and begin right.
Tomorrow I shall see Frederick and make a proposition to him, and if that rascal does not give up his heroics and come down to his plain duty as I see it,
well so much the worse for him no don't raise objections she had started to speak for i am always quarrelsome when i cannot have my own way
go to your room and think it over and remember i said more gently for that old tide of the past was coming in that you are sylvia's daughter and that sylvia would have trusted me and counseled you to obey me in all things
slowly and with averted face phyllis rose and walked toward the door i had commanded her and yet i felt a sharp pang of bitterness that she had yielded so quickly to my words
it seemed at the moment that everything was passing out of my life that phyllis that sylvia that all the once sweet continuous memory was lost to me forever
i could not call her back and i could not hope that she would return philosopher that i was i could not explain the sinking and the fear that took possession of me
the philosopher did not know himself all his thought and all his reasoning could not solve the simple riddle the quick intuition of a girl made clear she had reached the door before she paused
then she turned i had risen mechanically and stood looking at her as slowly she came back and waited as if for me to speak
and when the dull philosopher groped helplessly for words and could not meet the appealing eyes she put her hands on his shoulders and laid her warm young face on his heart and said father the night was peacefully beautiful
i had strolled out of the garden and down to the river and there along the bridle-path on the winding bank i walked for miles absorbed in my own thoughts i gave no heed to my little dog hero
trotting at my side and looking anxiously up at me with her large brown eyes as if saying in her dog fashion don't worry old man i'm here
a strange inexplicable happiness had fallen to him who thought he knew all others and did not know even himself i crossed the river to return on the opposite shore and all the way back through the arching trees
the shadows danced in the moonlight and the crickets chirped merrily life seemed so contrary so bewildering for i thought of the wedding music in those early mornings at my boyhood home
and i wondered at the optimism of nature in attuning all emotions to a joyous note again in my garden i saw a half-light in phyllis's room coming nearer i saw the half-light in phyllis's room coming nearer i saw the
that she was standing at the window, with the same cloud in her face that had betrayed the
battle with her conscience. At sight of her, all the joyous emotion of my new tenderness
overwhelmed me, and I cried out cheerily,
"'Good night, Phyllis!' Something in my voice sent a smile to her eyes and gladness to her heart.
As, half-leaning from the window, she kissed her hand to me and called back
softly. Good night, father, dear. The south wind came, bringing the scent of the rose and the
honeysuckle, and stirring the drowsy branches of the elms. The river rippled merrily in the moonlight,
hurrying to bear the tidings of happiness to the greater waters, and off in the distance the blue hills
lifted their heads above the haze. Toward the north, scudded the friendly little white,
cloud and it seemed again a soothing fancy that sylvia oh sweet and pleasant world end of section eight end of the romance of an old fool by roswell field
