icon 0
icon TOP UP
rightIcon
icon Reading History
rightIcon
icon Sign out
rightIcon
icon Get the APP
rightIcon

Lady Baltimore

Chapter 9 Juno

Word Count: 2013    |    Released on: 19/11/2017

to? It seemed now more as if the boy had been running away from somebody. The waitress had stared at him with extraordinary interest; she had seen his bruise; perhaps she knew how he had got i

company of gossiping strangers. Still, that would scarcely account for it--the dismay with which he had so suddenly left me. Was

en I was moralizing over the misfortune of marrying a jackass! I

t it was exclusively about our Civil War; you would have supposed that nothing else had ever happened in the world. When conversation among the rest of us became general, she preserved a cold and acrid inattention; when the fancy took her to open her own mouth, it was always to begin some reminiscence, and the reminiscence always began: "In September, 1862, when the Northern vandals," etc., etc., or "When the Northern vandals were repulsed by my husband's cousin, General Braxton Bragg," etc., etc. Now it was not that I was personally wounded by the term, because at the time of the vandals I was not even born, and also because I know that vandals cannot be kept out of any army. Deeply as I believed the March to the Sea to have been imperative, of "Sherman's bummers" and their excesses I had a fair historic knowledge and a very poor opinion; and this I should have been glad to tell Juno, h

ry"; a Louisiana poetess, who wore the long, cylindrical ringlets of 1830, and who was attending a convention the Daughters of Dixie; two or three males and females

" inquired the poetess

mous onslaught,

r eyes and crooned, "No

o indeed, mada

y good for your eye,"

id not appear to

on continued. He's my best friend n

d Juno. "He requires no b

on reddened. "Too gr

l. "Daphne! I have said to y

ded 'em twi

't be so forgetful." It was not easy t

son," she declared, "I would sooner witness him st

r him to experience than for you to

s made a sort of snuffing no

who next spoke. "Must have

" repeated Juno. "Wish I'd see

gly. "You'd have felt right lo

yet been offered

ogize besides taking a lic

ies are due. Mr. Mayrant's family" (she paused here for blighting emphasis) "are

ss my doubts as to the family coercion being fou

ation might not soothe your n

wered Juno. "I have just

uld," the poetess murmured. "If he were

rly well enoug

and blew his nose so rema

followed, whic

redit they deserve," she stated. "The whole c

o it. "Is it known what exactl

s a gentleman from whose lips no

tera, mildly. "He sa

ll-merited rebuke

terms?" inqui

f cards. My nephew protested against any gentleman remaining

ersation, because, having no wish to converse with Juno at any time, I especially did not desire it now, just after

ng interior, though I will say for that one that he would never have stooped to humiliate the family name as his son is doing. His regiment was near by when the Northern vandals b

er?" asked a t

ed at the

contribution. "The father di

mured the et cet

woman's life would

a person's niece than for th

hand moved to

such hereditary bloodthirstiness, who can tell?

ther gentleman is laid up, too?" inq

derstand that he

I burst out, "Oh!"

from opposite; the poetess, who had worn an absent expression since being told that the injured champion was not nearly well enough to listen to her

igence than what I bring

en! Well, she should be enlightened, they all should be enl

fear, are still confused by

you know about h

toward her bell; but she wished to hear all about it more than s

o, pray, has later ne

enemy in the hand is worth I d

's bedside, because I have just left him at the front d

silence, and then Juno became truly superb

ve been lost, when the Briton suggested: "

e words which I was too disconcerted to follow, the other et ceteras and the honeymooners hectically effervesced into small talk. I presently found myself eating our last course amid a reestablished calm, when, with a rustle,

Claim Your Bonus at the APP

Open
Lady Baltimore
Lady Baltimore
“S. Weir Mitchell With the Affection and Memories of All My Life To the Reader You know the great text in Burns, I am sure, where he wishes he could see himself as others see him. Well, here lies the hitch in many a work of art: if its maker--poet, painter, or novelist--could but have become its audience too, for a single day, before he launched it irrevocably upon the uncertain ocean of publicity, how much better his boat would often sail! How many little touches to the rigging he would give, how many little drops of oil to the engines here and there, the need of which he had never suspected, but for that trial trip! That's where the ship-builders and dramatists have the advantage over us others: they can dock their productions and tinker at them. Even to the musician comes this useful chance, and Schumann can reform the proclamation which opens his B-flat Symphony. Still, to publish a story in weekly numbers previously to its appearance as a book does sometimes give to the watchful author an opportunity to learn, before it is too late, where he has failed in clearness; and it brings him also, through the mails, some few questions that are pleasant and proper to answer when his story sets forth united upon its journey of adventure among gentle readers. How came my hero by his name? If you will open a book more valuable than any I dare hope to write, and more entertaining too, The Life of Paul Jones, by Mr. Buell, you will find the real ancestor of this imaginary boy, and fall in love with John Mayrant the First, as did his immortal captain of the Bon Homme Richard. He came from South Carolina; and believing his seed and name were perished there to-day, I gave him a descendant. I have learned that the name, until recently, was in existence; I trust it will not seem taken in vain in these pages. Whence came such a person as Augustus? Our happier cities produce many Augustuses, and may they long continue to do so! If Augustus displeases any one, so much the worse for that one, not for Augustus. To be sure, he doesn't admire over heartily the parvenus of steel or oil, whose too sudden money takes them to the divorce court; he calls them the 'yellow rich'; do you object to that? Nor does he think that those Americans who prefer their pockets to their patriotism, are good citizens. He says of such people that 'eternal vigilance cannot watch liberty and the ticker at the same time.' Do you object to that? Why, the young man would be perfect, did he but attend his primaries and vote more regularly,--and who wants a perfect young man? What would John Mayrant have done if Hortense had not challenged him as she did? I have never known, and I fear we might have had a tragedy. Would the old ladies really have spoken to Augustus about the love difficulties of John Mayrant? I must plead guilty. The old ladies of Kings Port, like American gentlefolk everywhere, keep family matters sacredly inside the family circle. But you see, had they not told Augustus, how in the world could I have told--however, I plead guilty. Certain passages have been interpreted most surprisingly to signify a feeling against the colored race, that is by no means mine. My only wish regarding these people, to whom we owe an immeasurable responsibility, is to see the best that is in them prevail. Discord over this seems on the wane, and sane views gaining. The issue sits on all our shoulders, but local variations call for a sliding scale of policy. So admirably dispassionate a novel as The Elder Brother, by Mr. Jervey, forwards the understanding of Northerners unfamiliar with the South, and also that friendliness between the two places, which is retarded chiefly by tactless newspapers. Ah, tact should have been one of the cardinal virtues; and if I didn't possess a spice of it myself, I should here thank by name certain two members of the St. Michael family of Kings Port for their patience with this comedy, before ever it saw the light. Tact bids us away from many pleasures; but it can never efface the memory of kindness.”
1 Chapter 1 A Word About My Aunt2 Chapter 2 I Vary My Lunch3 Chapter 3 Kings Port Talks4 Chapter 4 The Girl Behind The Counter--15 Chapter 5 The Boy Of The Cake6 Chapter 6 In The Churchyard7 Chapter 7 The Girl Behind The Counter--28 Chapter 8 Midsummer-Night's Dream9 Chapter 9 Juno10 Chapter 10 High Walk And The Ladies11 Chapter 11 Daddy Ben And His Seed12 Chapter 12 From The Bedside13 Chapter 13 The Girl Behind The Counter--314 Chapter 14 The Replacers15 Chapter 15 What She Came To See16 Chapter 16 The Steel Wasp17 Chapter 17 Doing The Handsome Thing18 Chapter 18 Again The Replacers19 Chapter 19 Udolpho20 Chapter 20 What She Wanted Him For21 Chapter 21 Hortense's Cigarette Goes Out22 Chapter 22 Behind The Times23 Chapter 23 Poor Aunt Carola!24 Chapter 24 Post Scriptum