FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1419   1420   1421   1422   1423   1424   1425   1426   1427   1428   1429   1430   1431   1432   1433   1434   1435   1436   1437   1438   1439   1440   1441   1442   1443  
1444   1445   1446   1447   1448   1449   1450   1451   1452   1453   1454   1455   1456   1457   1458   1459   1460   1461   1462   1463   1464   1465   1466   1467   1468   >>   >|  
en were born here, but I've realized we couldn't live here always." "I'm glad you look at it that way," I replied. "Why, we're already getting cramped, Maude, and now you're going to have a governess I don't know where you'd put her." "Not too large, a house," she pleaded. "I know you think I'm silly, but this extravagance we see everywhere does make me uneasy. Perhaps it's because I'm provincial, and always shall be." "Well, we must have a house large enough to be comfortable in," I said. "There's no reason why we shouldn't be comfortable." I thought it as well not to confess my ambitions, and I was greatly relieved that she did not reproach me for buying the lot without consulting her. Indeed, I was grateful for this unanticipated acquiescence, I felt nearer to her, than I had for a long time. I drew up another chair to my desk. "Sit down and we'll make a few sketches, just for fun," I urged. "Hugh," she said presently, as we were blacking out prospective rooms, "do you remember all those drawings and plans we made in England, on our wedding trip, and how we knew just what we wanted, and changed our minds every few days? And now we're ready to build, and haven't any ideas at all!" "Yes," I answered--but I did not look at her. "I have the book still--it's in the attic somewhere, packed away in a box. I suppose those plans would seem ridiculous now." It was quite true,--now that we were ready to build the home that had been deferred so long, now that I had the money to spend without stint on its construction, the irony of life had deprived me of those strong desires and predilections I had known on my wedding trip. What a joy it would have been to build then! But now I found myself: wholly lacking in definite ideas as to style and construction. Secretly, I looked forward to certain luxuries, such as a bedroom and dressing-room and warm tiled bathroom all to myself bachelor privacies for which I had longed. Two mornings later at the breakfast table Maude asked me if I had thought of an architect. "Why, Archie Lammerton, I suppose. Who else is there? Have you anyone else in mind?" "N-no," said Maude. "But I heard of such a clever man in Boston, who doesn't charge Mr. Lammerton's prices; and who designs such beautiful private houses." "But we can afford to pay Lammerton's prices," I replied, smiling. "And why shouldn't we have the best?" "Are you sure--he is the best, Hugh?" "Everybody has him
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1419   1420   1421   1422   1423   1424   1425   1426   1427   1428   1429   1430   1431   1432   1433   1434   1435   1436   1437   1438   1439   1440   1441   1442   1443  
1444   1445   1446   1447   1448   1449   1450   1451   1452   1453   1454   1455   1456   1457   1458   1459   1460   1461   1462   1463   1464   1465   1466   1467   1468   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

Lammerton

 

thought

 
wedding
 

shouldn

 

comfortable

 

replied

 

prices

 

construction

 

suppose

 

wholly


looked

 
forward
 
Secretly
 

ridiculous

 
definite
 
lacking
 

deprived

 

strong

 

predilections

 

desires


deferred

 

mornings

 

charge

 

designs

 

beautiful

 

Boston

 

clever

 

private

 

houses

 
Everybody

afford

 

smiling

 
bachelor
 

privacies

 

longed

 
bathroom
 

bedroom

 
dressing
 

Archie

 
architect

breakfast

 

luxuries

 

confess

 
ambitions
 

greatly

 

reason

 
relieved
 

reproach

 

grateful

 
unanticipated