Illustrated by Scott Williams

Boston and New York Houghton Mifflin Company
1917

WALLED in by slums stands Our Square, a valiant green space, far on the flank of the Great City. Ours is an inglorious little world Sociologists have-not yet remarked and classified us. The Washington Square romancers who bold sentimental revel at the foot of Fifth Avenue reck nothing of their sister park, many blocks to the east. But we are patient of our obscurity. Close-knit, keeping our own counsel, jealous of our own concerns, and not without our own pride of place, we live our quiet lives, a community sufficient unto itself. So far as may be for mortals under the sway of death and love and fate, we maintain ourselves with little change amid the kaleidoscopic shiftings of the surrounding metropolis. Few come into Our Square except of necessity. Few go out but under the same stem impulsion. Some of us are held by tradition, some by poverty, some by affection, and some through loyalty to what once was and is no more. Here we live, and here hope to die, “the kind hearts, the true hearts that loved the place of old.” And of all, there is no truer heart or kinder than that of the gentle, shrewd, and neighborly old dominie through whose lips I tell these tales, the real historian of the folk whom I, too, have known and loved in Our Square.


CONTENTS

[ OUR SQUARE ]

[ I ]

[ II ]

[ III ]

[ IV ]

[ THE CHAIR THAT WHISPERED ]

[ MACLACHAN OF OUR SQUARE ]

[ THE GREAT 'PEACEMAKER ]

[ ORPHEUS ]

[ A TALE OF WHITE MAGIC IN OUR SQUARE ]

[ THE MEANEST MAN IN OUR SQUARE ]

[ PAULA OF THE HOUSETOP ]

[ THE LITTLE RED 'DOCTOR OF OUR SQUARE ]


List of Illustrations

[ Whirled Her out of a Pit Of Darkness ]

[ Read from Left to Right ]

[ Her Hands Slipped to his Shoulder ]

[ What Do I Owe Ye But a Curse ]

[ We Have Successfully Terminated the Negotiation ]

[ I Puh-hut It in My Huh-huh-hair ]

[ Jogging Appreciatively Along Behind Schutz's Mouse-hued Mare ]