[CHAPTER I,] [II,] [III,] [IV,] [V,] [VI,] [VII,] [VIII,] [IX,] [X,] [XI,] [XII,] [XIII,] [XIV,] [XV,] [XVI,] [XVII,] [XVIII,] [XIX,] [XX,] [XXI,] [XXII,] [XXIII,] [XXIV,] [XXV,] [XXVI,] [XXVII,] [XXVIII,] [XXIX,] [XXX,] [XXXI,] [XXXII,] [XXXIII,] [XXXIV,] [XXXV,] [XXXVI,] [XXXVII,] [XXXVIII,] [XXXIX,] [XL,] [XLI,] [XLII,] [XLIII,] [XLIV,] [XLV,] [XLVI,] [XLVII,] [XLVIII,] [XLIX,] [L,] [LI,] [LII,] [LIII,] [LIV,] [LV,] [LVI,] [LVII,] [LVIII,] [LIX,] [LX,] [LXI,] [LXII,] [LXIII,] [LXIV,] [LXV,] [LXVI,] [LXVII,] [LXVIII,] [LXIX,] [LXX,] [LXXI,] [LXXII,] [LXXIII,] [LXXIV,] [LXXV,] [LXXVI,] [LXXVII,] [LXXVIII,] [LXXIX,] [LXXX,] [LXXXI,] [LXXXII,] [LXXXIII,] [LXXXIV,] [LXXXV,] [LXXXVI,] [LXXXVII,] [LXXXVIII,] [LXXXIX,] [XC,] [XCI. ]
THE GREEN BAY TREE
The
GREEN BAY
TREE
A Novel
by
LOUIS BROMFIELD
GROSSET & DUNLAP · PUBLISHERS · NEW YORK
By arrangement with FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY
Copyright, 1924, by
Frederick A. Stokes Company
All Rights Reserved
Printed in the United States of America
TO
MY MOTHER,
WHO MUST HAVE KNOWN
AT SOME TIME IN HER LIFE
HATTIE TOLLIVER
“Life is hard for our children. It isn’t as simple as it was for us. Their grandfathers were pioneers and the same blood runs in their veins, only they haven’t a frontier any longer. They stand ... these children of ours ... with their backs toward this rough-hewn middle west and their faces set toward Europe and the East and they belong to neither. They are lost somewhere between.”
“Every one of us is different from the others. There are no two in the least alike and no one ever really knows any one else. There is always a part which remains secret and hidden, concealed in the deepest part of the soul. No husband ever knows his wife and no wife ever really knows her husband. There is always something just beyond that remains aloof and untouched, mysterious and undiscoverable, because we ourselves do not know just what it is. Sometimes it is shameful. Sometimes it is too fine, too precious, ever to reveal. It is quite beyond revelation even if we chose to reveal it.”
“The Green Bay Tree” is part of what is in a sense a single work known as “Escape,” which includes three other parts: “Possession,” “Early Autumn,” and “A Good Woman.”