Caleb Wright: A Story of the West
A STORY OF THE WEST BY JOHN HABBERTON Author of HELEN'S BABIES THE JERICHO ROAD ETC. BOSTON LOTHROP PUBLISHING COMPANY
COPYRIGHT, 1901, BY LOTHROP PUBLISHING COMPANY. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ENTERED AT STATIONERS' HALL Norwood Press J. S. Cushing & Co.—Berwick & Smith Norwood, Mass.
CONTENTS
ALL people who have more taste than money are as one in the conviction that people with less money than taste suffer more keenly day by day, week by week, year by year, than any other class of human beings.
Of this kind of sufferer was Philip Somerton, a young man who had strayed from a far-western country town to New York to develop his individuality and make his fortune, but especially to enjoy the facilities which a great city offers (as every one knows, except the impecunious persons who have tried it) to all whose hearts hunger for whatever is beautiful, refining, and also enjoyable.
To some extent Philip had succeeded, for he quickly adapted himself to his new surroundings; and as he was intelligent, industrious, and of good habits, he soon secured a clerkship which enabled him to pay for food, shelter, and clothing, and still have money enough for occasional books and music and theatre tickets, and to purchase a few articles of a class over which the art editor of Philip's favorite morning newspaper raved delightfully by the column. Several years later he was still more fortunate; for he met Grace Brymme, a handsome young woman who had quite as much intelligence and taste as he, and who, like Philip, had been reared in a country town. That in New York she was a saleswoman in a great shop called a department store was not in the least to her discredit; for she was an orphan, and poor, and with too much respect to allow herself to be supported by relatives as poor as she, or to be married off for the sole purpose of securing a home. When Philip declared his love and blamed himself for having formed so strong an attachment before he had become financially able to support a wife in the style to which his sweetheart's refinement and cleverness entitled her, the young woman, who was quite as deep in love as he, replied that in so large a city no one knew the affairs of inconspicuous people, so there was no reason why they should not marry, and she retain her business position and salary under the only name by which her employers and business associates would know her, and together they would earn a modest competence against the glorious by and by.
John Habberton
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I—THEIR FORTUNE
II—TAKING POSSESSION
III—INTRODUCED
IV—HOME-MAKING
V—BUSINESS WAYS
VI—THE UNEXPECTED
VII—AN ACTIVE PARTNER
VIII—THE PORK-HOUSE
IX—A WESTERN SPECTRE
X—SHE WANTED TO KNOW
XI—CALEB'S NEWEST PROJECT
XII—DEFERRED HOPES
XIII—FARMERS' WAYS
XIV—FUN WITH A CAMERA
XV—CAUSE AND EFFECT
XVII—FOREIGN INVASION
XVIII—THE TABBY PARTY
XIX—DAYS IN THE STORE
XX—PROFIT AND LOSS
XXI—CUPID AND CORN-MEAL
XXII—SOME WAYS OF THE WEST
XXIII—AFTER THE STORM
XXIV—HOW IT CAME ABOUT
XXV—LOOKING AHEAD
XXVI—THE RAILWAY
XXVII—CONCLUSION