Taken Alive
Produced by Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
The Works of E. P. Roe
An Autobiography
Two or three years ago the editor of Lippincott's Magazine asked me, with many others, to take part in the very interesting experience meeting begun in the pages of that enterprising periodical. I gave my consent without much thought of the effort involved, but as time passed, felt slight inclination to comply with the request. There seemed little to say of interest to the general public, and I was distinctly conscious of a certain sense of awkwardness in writing about myself at all. The question, Why should I? always confronted me.
When this request was again repeated early in the current year, I resolved at least to keep my promise. This is done with less reluctance now, for the reason that floating through the press I meet with paragraphs concerning myself that are incorrect, and often absurdly untrue. These literary and personal notes, together with many questioning letters, indicate a certain amount of public interest, and I have concluded that it may be well to give the facts to those who care to know them.
It has been made more clear to me that there are many who honestly do care. One of the most prized rewards of my literary work is the ever-present consciousness that my writings have drawn around me a circle of unknown yet stanch friends, who have stood by me unfalteringly for a number of years. I should indeed be lacking if my heart did not go out to them in responsive friendliness and goodwill. If I looked upon them merely as an aggregation of customers, they would find me out speedily. A popular mood is a very different thing from an abiding popular interest. If one could address this circle of friends only, the embarrassment attendant on a certain amount of egotism would be banished by the assurance of sympathetic regard. Since, from the nature of circumstances, this is impossible, it seems to me in better taste to consider the author called Roe in an objective, rather than in a friendly and subjective sense. In other words, I shall try to look at him from the public point of view, and free myself from some predisposition in his favor shared by his friends. I suppose I shall not succeed in giving a colorless statement of fact, but I may avoid much special pleading in his behalf.
Edward Payson Roe
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"A NATIVE AUTHOR CALLED ROE"
QUEEN OF SPADES
AN UNEXPECTED RESULT
A CHRISTMAS-EVE SUIT
THREE THANKSGIVING KISSES
SUSIE ROLLIFFE'S CHRISTMAS
CAUGHT ON THE EBB-TIDE
CHRISTMAS EVE IN WAR TIMES
A BRAVE LITTLE QUAKERESS
"A NATIVE AUTHOR CALLED ROE"
TAKEN ALIVE AND OTHER STORIES
CHAPTER I
CHAPTER II
CHAPTER III
CHAPTER IV
CHAPTER V
FOUND YET LOST
CHAPTER I
CHAPTER II
CHAPTER III
CHAPTER IV
CHAPTER V
CHAPTER VI
CHAPTER VII
CHAPTER VIII
CHAPTER IX
CHAPTER X
CHAPTER XI
CHAPTER XII
CHAPTER XIII
CHAPTER XIV
QUEEN OF SPADES
AN UNEXPECTED RESULT
A CHRISTMAS-EVE SUIT
THREE THANKSGIVING KISSES
SUSIE ROLLIFFE'S CHRISTMAS
JEFF'S TREASURE
CHAPTER I
CHAPTER II
CAUGHT ON THE EBB-TIDE
CHRISTMAS EVE IN WAR TIMES
A BRAVE LITTLE QUAKERESS