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      The Minister's Charge

      WILLIAM DEAN HOWELLS

      

      

      

      

       The Minister's Charge, W. D. Howells

       Jazzybee Verlag Jürgen Beck

       86450 Altenmünster, Loschberg 9

       Deutschland

      

       ISBN: 9783849657451

      

       www.jazzybee-verlag.de

       [email protected]

      

      

      

      CONTENTS:

       I. 1

       II. 7

       III. 14

       IV. 21

       V. 28

       VI. 38

       VII. 46

       VIII. 50

       IX. 55

       X. 65

       XI. 75

       XII. 90

       XIII. 98

       XIV. 107

       XV. 115

       XVI 122

       XVII. 128

       XVIII. 135

       XIX. 143

       XX. 150

       XXI. 161

       XXII. 171

       XXIII. 181

       XXIV. 192

       XXV. 199

       XXVI. 208

       XXVII 213

       XXVIII. 217

       XXIX. 222

       XXX. 227

       XXXI. 231

       XXXII. 234

       XXXIII 240

       XXXIV. 243

       XXXV. 251

       XXXVI 254

      I.

      On their way back to the farm-house where they were boarding, Sewell's wife reproached him for what she called his recklessness. “You had no right,” she said, “to give the poor boy false hopes. You ought to have discouraged him—that would have been the most merciful way—if you knew the poetry was bad. Now, he will go on building all sorts of castles in the air on your praise, and sooner or later they will come tumbling about his ears—just to gratify your passion for saying pleasant things to people.”

      “I wish you had a passion for saying pleasant things to me, my dear,” suggested her husband evasively.

      “Oh, a nice time I should have!”

      “I don't know about your nice time, but I feel pretty certain of my own. How do you know—Oh, do get up, you implacable cripple!” he broke off to the lame mare he was driving, and pulled at the reins.

      “Don't saw her mouth!” cried Mrs. Sewell.

      “Well, let her get up, then, and I won't. I don't like to saw her mouth; but I have to do something when you come down on me with your interminable consequences. I dare say the boy will never think of my praise again. And besides, as I was saying when this animal interrupted me with her ill-timed attempts at grazing, how do you know that I knew the poetry was bad?”

      “How? By the sound of your voice. I could tell you were dishonest in the dark, David.”

      “Perhaps the boy knew that I was dishonest too,” suggested Sewell.

      “Oh no, he didn't. I could see that he pinned his faith to every syllable.”

      “He used a quantity of pins, then; for I was particularly profuse of syllables. I find that it requires no end of them to make the worse appear the better reason to a poet who reads his own verses to you. But come, now, Lucy, let me off a syllable or two. I—I have a conscience, you know well enough, and if I thought—But pshaw! I've merely cheered a lonely hour for the boy, and he'll go back to hoeing potatoes to-morrow, and that will be the end of it.”

      “I hope that will be the end of it,” said Mrs. Sewell, with the darkling reserve of ladies intimate with the designs of Providence.

      “Well,” argued her husband, who was trying to keep the matter from being serious, “perhaps he may turn out a poet yet. You never can tell where

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