[A Certain Rich Man by William Allen White]@TWC D-Link bookA Certain Rich Man CHAPTER VIII 8/15
But my wife, she's been well trained." In the pause that followed, Watts McHurdie's creaking lever was the only sound that broke the silence.
Then Watts, who had been sewing away at his work with waving arms, spoke, after clearing his throat, "I've heard many say that she was sich." And the old man cackled, and it became a saying-among them and in the town. One who goes back over the fifty years that have passed since Sycamore Ridge became a local habitation and a name finds it difficult to realize that one-third of its life was passed before the panic of '78, which closed the Hendricks' bank.
For those first nineteen years passed as the life of a child passes, so that they seem only sketched in; yet to those who lived at all, to those like Watts McHurdie and Philemon Ward, who now pass their happiest moments mooning over tilted headstones in the cemetery on the Hill, those first nineteen years seem the longest and the best.
And that fateful year of '73 to them seems the most portentous.
For then, perhaps for the first time, they realized the cruel uncertainty of the struggle for existence.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|