The Prairie Wife

I stooped over the trap-door and lifted it up. Get down there quick! — Page 109, The Prairie Wife.
Copyright 1915 The Curtis Publishing Company
Copyright 1915 The Bobbs-Merrill Company
TO VAN WHO KNOWS AND LOVES THE WEST AS WE LOVE HIM!

Splash!... That's me, Matilda Anne! That's me falling plump into the pool of matrimony before I've had time to fall in love! And oh, Matilda Anne, Matilda Anne, I've got to talk to you! You may be six thousand miles away, but still you've got to be my safety-valve. I'd blow up and explode if I didn't express myself to some one. For it's so lonesome out here I could go and commune with the gophers. This isn't a twenty-part letter, my dear, and it isn't a diary. It's the coral ring I'm cutting my teeth of desolation on. For, every so long, I've simply got to sit down and talk to some one, or I'd go mad, clean, stark, staring mad, and bite the tops off the sweet-grass! It may even happen this will never be sent to you. But I like to think of you reading it, some day, page by page, when I'm fat and forty, or, what's more likely, when Duncan has me chained to a corral-post or finally shut up in a padded cell. For you were the one who was closest to me in the old days, Matilda Anne, and when I was in trouble you were always the staff on which I leaned, the calm-eyed Tillie-on-the-spot who never seemed to fail me! And I think you will understand.
But there's so much to talk about I scarcely know where to begin. The funny part of it all is, I've gone and married the Other Man . And you won't understand that a bit, unless I start at the beginning. But when I look back, there doesn't seem to be any beginning, for it's only in books that things really begin and end in a single lifetime.
Howsomever, as Chinkie used to say, when I left you and Scheming Jack in that funny little stone house of yours in Corfu, and got to Palermo, I found Lady Agatha and Chinkie there at the Hotel des Palmes and the yacht being coaled from a tramp steamer's bunkers in the harbor. So I went on with them to Monte Carlo. We had a terrible trip all the way up to the Riviera, and I was terribly sea-sick, and those lady novelists who love to get their heroines off on a private yacht never dream that in anything but duckpond weather the ordinary yacht at sea is about the meanest habitation between Heaven and earth. But it was at Monte Carlo I got the cable from Uncle Carlton telling me the Chilean revolution had wiped out our nitrate mine concessions and that your poor Tabby's last little nest-egg had been smashed. In other words, I woke up and found myself a beggar, and for a few hours I even thought I'd have to travel home on that Monte Carlo Viaticum fund which so discreetly ships away the stranded adventurer before he musses up the Mediterranean scenery by shooting himself. Then I remembered my letter of credit, and firmly but sorrowfully paid off poor Hortense, who through her tears proclaimed that she'd go with me anywhere, and without any thought of wages (imagine being hooked up by a maid to whom you were under such democratizing obligations!) But I was firm, for I knew the situation, might just as well be faced first as last.

Arthur Stringer
Содержание

The Prairie Wife


THE PRAIRIE WIFE


Thursday the Nineteenth


Saturday the Twenty-first


Monday the Twenty-third


Wednesday the Twenty-fifth


Thursday the Twenty-sixth


Saturday the Twenty-eighth


Wednesday the First


Thursday the Second


Friday the Third


Saturday the Fourth


Monday the Sixth


Wednesday the Eighth


Saturday the Tenth


Sunday the Eleventh


Monday the Twelfth


Sunday the Eighteenth


Monday the Nineteenth


Tuesday the Twentieth


Thursday the Twenty-second


Saturday the Twenty-fourth


Tuesday the Twenty-seventh


Thursday the Twenty-ninth


Friday the Fifth


Sunday the Seventh


Tuesday the Ninth


Saturday the Twenty-first


Sunday the Twenty-ninth


Monday the Seventh


Friday the Eleventh


Sunday the Thirteenth


Wednesday the Sixteenth


Sunday the Twentieth


Sunday the Twenty-seventh


Wednesday the Thirtieth


Thursday the Thirty-first


Sunday the Third


Thursday the Seventh


Saturday the Ninth


Monday the Eleventh


Tuesday the Nineteenth


Sunday the Thirty-first


Tuesday the Ninth


Wednesday the Seventeenth


Thursday the Twenty-fifth


Tuesday the Second


Thursday the Fourth


Wednesday the Seventeenth


Saturday the Twenty-seventh


Tuesday the Sixth


Monday the Twelfth


Tuesday the Twentieth


Monday the Twenty-sixth


Wednesday the Twenty-eighth


Monday the Second


Thursday the Fifth


Tuesday the Tenth


Monday the Sixteenth


Tuesday the Twenty-fourth


Friday the Third


Thursday the Ninth


Wednesday the Fifteenth


Friday the Seventeenth


Saturday the Nineteenth


Friday the Twenty-eighth


Saturday the Twenty-ninth


Sunday the Thirtieth


Tuesday the First


Monday the Seventh


Sunday the Thirteenth


Monday the Twenty-eighth


Saturday the Second


Wednesday the Sixth


Tuesday the Twelfth


Thursday the Fourteenth


Wednesday the Fifth


Sunday the Ninth


Monday the Tenth


Tuesday the Eleventh


Wednesday the Thirteenth


Thursday the Fourteenth


Friday the Fifteenth


Saturday the Sixteenth


Monday the Seventeenth


Wednesday the Nineteenth


Friday the Twenty-first


Monday the Twelfth


Wednesday the Fourteenth


Thursday the Fifteenth


Friday the Sixteenth


Sunday the Eighteenth


Sunday the Twenty-fifth


Tuesday the Twenty-seventh


Wednesday the Twenty-eighth


Friday the Thirtieth


Sunday the First

О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2006-07-19

Темы

Canada -- Fiction; Frontier and pioneer life -- Prairie Provinces -- Fiction

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