Project Gutenberg's The Lady of Big Shanty, by Frank Berkeley Smith
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Title: The Lady of Big Shanty
Author: Frank Berkeley Smith
Release Date: July 22, 2004 [EBook #12989]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LADY OF BIG SHANTY ***
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The Lady of Big Shanty
By
F. BERKELEY SMITH
1909
TO THE READER
This story, written by a man who has passed many years of his life in
the Adirondack woods, strikes a note not often sounded--the power of
the primeval over the human mind.
Once abandoned in the wilderness, wholly dependent upon what can
be wrested from its clutch to prolong existence, all the ordinary
standards and ambitions of life become as naught: for neither love,
hatred, revenge, honour, money, jewels, or social success will bring a
cup of water, a handful of corn or a coal of fire. Under this torture
Nature once more becomes king and man again an atom; his judgment
clarified, his heart stripped naked, his soul turned inside out. The
untamed, mighty, irresistible primitive is now to be reckoned with,
and a lie will no longer serve.
Such is the power of the primeval, and for the unique way in which it
has been treated between these covers, the father takes off his hat to
the son.
F. HOPKINSON SMITH.
_September_, 1909.
THE LADY OF BIG SHANTY
CHAPTER ONE
It was the luncheon hour, and The Players was crowded with its
members; not only actors, but men of every profession, from the tall,
robust architect to the quiet surgeon tucked away among the cushions
of the corner divan. In the hall--giving sound advice, perhaps, to a
newly fledged tragedian--sat some dear, gray-haired old gentleman in
white socks who puffed silently at a long cigar, while from out the
low-ceiled, black-oak dining room, resplendent in pewter and hazy with
tobacco smoke, came intermittent outbursts of laughter. It was the
hour when idlers and workers alike throw off the labours of the day
for a quiet chat with their fellows.
Only one man in the group was restless. This was a yo
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