The Desert and the Sown
CONTENTS
It was an evening of sudden mildness following a dry October gale. The colonel had miscalculated the temperature by one log—only one, he declared, but that had proved a pitchy one, and the chimney bellowed with flame. From end to end the room was alight with it, as if the stored-up energies of a whole pine-tree had been sacrificed in the consumption of that four-foot stick.
The young persons of the house had escaped, laughing, into the fresh night air, but the colonel was hemmed in on every side; deserted by his daughter, mocked by the work of his own hands, and torn between the duties of a host and the host's helpless craving for his after-dinner cigar.
Across the hearth, filling with her silks all the visible room in his own favorite settle corner, sat the one woman on earth it most behooved him to be civil to,—the future mother-in-law of his only child. That Moya was a willing, nay, a reckless hostage, did not lessen her father's awe of the situation.
Mrs. Bogardus, according to her wont at this hour, was composedly doing nothing. The colonel could not make his retreat under cover of her real or feigned absorption in any of the small scattering pursuits which distract the female mind. When she read she read—she never “looked at books.” When she sewed she sewed—presumably, but no one ever saw her do it. Her mind was economic and practical, and she saved it whole, like many men of force, for whatever she deemed her best paying sphere of action.
It was a silence that crackled with heat! The colonel, wrathfully perspiring in the glow of that impenitent stick, frowned at it like an inquisitor. Presently Mrs. Bogardus looked up, and her expression softened as she saw the energetic despair upon his face.
“Colonel, don't you always smoke after dinner?”
“That is my bad habit, madam. I belong to the generation that smokes—after dinner and most other times—more than is good for us.” Colonel Middleton belonged also to the generation that can carry a sentence through to the finish in handsome style, and he did it with a suave Virginian accent as easy as his seat in the saddle. Mrs. Bogardus always gave him her respectful attention during his best performances, though she was a woman of short sentences herself.
Mary Hallock Foote
THE DESERT AND THE SOWN
I. — A COUNCIL OF THE ELDERS
II. — INTRODUCING A SON-IN-LAW
III. — THE INITIAL LOVE
IV. — A MAN THAT HAD A WELL IN HIS OWN COURT
V. — DISINHERITED
VI. — AN APPEAL TO NATURE
VII. — MARKING TIME
VIII. — A HUNTER'S DIARY
IX. — THE POWER OF WEAKNESS
X. — THE WHITE PERIL
XI. — A SEARCHING OF HEARTS
XII. — THE BLOOD-WITE
XIII. — CURTAIN
XIV. — KIND INQUIRIES
XV. — A BRIDEGROOM OF SNOW
XVI. — THE NATURE OF AN OATH
XVII. — THE HIDDEN TRAIL
J. STRATTON.
XVIII. — THE STAR IN THE EAST
XIX. — PILGRIMS AND STRANGERS
XX. — A STATION IN THE DESERT
XXI. — INJURIOUS REPORTS CONCERNING AN OLD HOUSE
XXII. — THE CASE STRIKES IN
XXIII. — RESTIVENESS
XXIV. — INDIAN SUMMER
XXV. — THE FELL FROST
XXVI. — PEACE TO THIS HOUSE