Phyllis of Philistia
“After all,” said Mr. Ayrton, “what is marriage?”
“Ah!” sighed Phyllis. She knew that her father had become possessed of a phrase, and that he was anxious to flutter it before her to see how it went. He was a connoisseur in the bric-a-brac of phrases.
“Marriage means all your eggs in one basket,” said he.
“Ah!” sighed Phyllis once more. She wondered if her father really thought that she would be comforted in her great grief by a phrase. She did not want to know how marriage might be defined. She knew that all definitions are indefinite. She knew that in the case of marriage everything depends upon the definer and the occasion.
“So you see there is no immediate cause to grieve, my dear,” resumed her father.
She did not quite see that this was the logical conclusion of the whole matter; but that was possibly because she was born a woman, and felt that marriage is to a woman what a keel is to a ship.
“I think there is a very good cause to grieve when we find a man like George Holland turning deliberately round from truth to falsehood,” said Phyllis sternly.
“And what’s worse, running a very good chance of losing his living,” remarked the father. “Of course it will have to be proved that Moses and Abraham and David and the rest of them were not what he says they were; and it strikes me that all the bench of bishops, and a royal commissioner or two thrown in, would have considerable difficulty in doing that nowadays.”
“What! You take his part, papa?” she cried, starting up. “You take his part? You think I was wrong to tell him—what I did tell him?”
“I don’t take his part, my dear,” said Mr. Ayrton. “I think that he’s a bit of a fool to run his head into a hornet’s nest because he has come to the conclusion that Abraham’s code of morality was a trifle shaky, and that Samson was a shameless libertine. Great Heavens! has the man got no notion of the perspective of history?”
“Perspective? History? It’s the Bible, papa!”
Indignation was in Phyllis’ eyes, but there was a reverential tone in her voice. Her father looked at her—listened to her. In the pause he thought:
Frank Frankfort Moore
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PHYLLIS OF PHILISTIA
CHAPTER I.
AN ASTRONOMER WITHOUT A TELESCOPE.
CHAPTER II.
CHAPTER III.
CHAPTER IV.
SHE HAD NO RIGHT TO ACCUSE HIM OF READING THE BIBLE DAILY.
CHAPTER V.
IN LOVE THERE ARE NO GOOD-BYES.
CHAPTER VI.
CHAPTER VII.
THE DEFENSE OF HOLLAND.
CHAPTER VIII.
I HOPE THAT YOU WILL NOT EVENTUALLY MARRY AN INFIDEL.
CHAPTER IX.
MY FATHER HAS HIS IDEAS ON WHAT’S CALLED REALISM.
CHAPTER X.
IT IS THE PRICE OF BLOOD.
CHAPTER XI.
I’M AFRAID THAT I MUST HAVE PRINCIPLE ON MY SIDE.
CHAPTER XII.
DYNAMITE—SLAVE-DEALING—MASSACRES—ARMENIA!
CHAPTER XIII.
EVEN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS DOESN’T MATTER MUCH.
CHAPTER XIV.
THE HONORABLE MEMBER IS CLEARLY OUT OF ORDER.
CHAPTER XV.
BUT MR. COURTLAND——AH, NEVER MIND!
CHAPTER XVI.
WOULD IT BE WELL WITH MY HUSBAND?
CHAPTER XVII.
WHAT AM I THAT I SHOULD DO THIS THING?
CHAPTER XVIII.
HERBERT COURTLAND IS A MAN WHO HAS LIVED WITH HONOR.
CHAPTER XIX.
THEY HAVE SOULS TO BE SAVED.
CHAPTER XX.
I HAVE HEARD THE PASSIONATE GALLOP OF THOSE FIERY-FOOTED STEEDS.
CHAPTER XXI.
THAT TOILET SHOULD NOT HAVE BEEN WASTED.
CHAPTER XXII.
CHAPTER XXIII.
ITS MOUTHINGS OF THE PAST HAD BECOME ITS MUMBLINGS OF THE PRESENT.
CHAPTER XXIV.
SHE WAS A WIFE, AND SHE HAD A LOVER WHO DISAPPOINTED HER.
CHAPTER XXV.
LIES! LIES! LIES!
CHAPTER XXVI.
DID HE SAY SOMETHING MORE ABOUT RUTH?
CHAPTER XXVII.
THAT’S WHY WOMEN DO NOT MAKE GOOD PHILOSOPHERS.
CHAPTER XXVIII.
THE CHURCH IS NOT NEUROTIC.
CHAPTER XXIX.
CHAPTER XXX.
THERE IS NO ONE I LIKE BETTER THAN PHYLLIS.
CHAPTER XXXI.
YOU MAY TRUST MR. COURTLAND.
CHAPTER XXXII.
LET THEM BOTH GO TOGETHER TO PERDITION.
CHAPTER XXXIII.
I WONDER IF I EVER LOVED YOU UNTIL THIS MOMENT.
CHAPTER XXXIV.
GIVE HIM BACK TO ME—GIVE HIM BACK TO ME!
CHAPTER XXXV.
IF GOD WOULD ONLY GIVE ME ANOTHER CHANCE!
CHAPTER XXXVI.
MARRIAGE IS THE PICTURESQUE GATEWAY LEADING TO A COMMONPLACE ESTATE.