[Vanished Arizona by Martha Summerhayes]@TWC D-Link bookVanished Arizona CHAPTER XXX 9/14
Our methods were primitive, as there was no gas or electricity there in those days, but the results were good, and the histrionic ability shown by some of our young men and women seemed marvellous to us. I remember especially Bob Emmet's acting, which moved me to tears, in a most pathetic love scene.
I thought, "What has the stage lost, in this gifted man!" But he is of a family whose talents are well known, and his personality, no doubt, added much to his natural ability as an actor. Neither the army nor the stage can now claim this brilliant cavalry officer, as he was induced, by urgent family reasons, shortly after the period of which I am writing, to resign his commission and retire to private life, at the very height of his ambitious career. And now the summer came on apace.
A tennis-court was made, and added greatly to our amusement.
We were in the saddle every day, and the country around proved very attractive at this season, both for riding and driving. But all this gayety did not content me, for the serious question of education for our children now presented itself; the question which, sooner or later, presents itself to the minds of all the parents of army children.
It is settled differently by different people.
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