FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1551   1552   1553   1554   1555   1556   1557   1558   1559   1560   1561   1562   1563   1564   1565   1566   1567   1568   1569   1570   1571   1572   1573   1574   1575  
1576   1577   1578   1579   1580   1581   1582   1583   1584   1585   1586   1587   1588   1589   1590   1591   1592   1593   1594   1595   1596   1597   1598   1599   1600   >>   >|  
uessed it. I am willing to try to devote what is left of my life to you and to them. And I need your help. I acknowledge it. Let us try to make more possible for them the life we have missed." "The life we have missed!" she said. "Yes. My mistakes, my failures, have brought us to the edge of a precipice. We must prevent, if we can, those mistakes and failures for them. The remedy for unhappy marriages, for all mistaken, selfish and artificial relationships in life is a preventive one. My plan is that we try to educate ourselves together, take advantage of the accruing knowledge that is helping men and women to cope with the problems, to think straight. We can then teach our children to think straight, to avoid the pitfalls into which we have fallen." I paused. Maude did not reply. Her face was turned away from me, towards the red glow of the setting sun above the hills. "You have been doing this all along, you have had the vision, the true vision, while I lacked it, Maude. I offer to help you. But if you think it is impossible for us to live together, if you believe my feeling toward you is not enough, if you don't think I can do what I propose, or if you have ceased to care for me--" She turned to me with a swift movement, her eyes filled with tears. "Oh, Hugh, don't say any more. I can't stand it. How little you know, for all your thinking. I love you, I always have loved you. I grew to be ashamed of it, but I'm not any longer. I haven't any pride any more, and I never want to have it again." "You're willing to take me as I am,--to try?" I said. "Yes," she answered, "I'm willing to try." She smiled at me. "And I have more faith than you, Hugh. I think we'll succeed.".... At nine o'clock that night, when we came out through the gates of the big, noisy station, the children were awaiting us. They had changed, they had grown. Biddy kissed me shyly, and stood staring up at me. "We'll take you out to-morrow and show you how we can ride," said Moreton. Matthew smiled. He stood very close to me, with his hand through my arm. "You're going to stay, father?" he asked. "I'm going to stay, Matthew," I answered, "until we all go back to America.".... PG EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS: Barriers were mere relics of the superstition of the past Benumbing and desiccating effect of that old system of education Conscience was superstition, the fear of the wrath of the gods Conventionality
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1551   1552   1553   1554   1555   1556   1557   1558   1559   1560   1561   1562   1563   1564   1565   1566   1567   1568   1569   1570   1571   1572   1573   1574   1575  
1576   1577   1578   1579   1580   1581   1582   1583   1584   1585   1586   1587   1588   1589   1590   1591   1592   1593   1594   1595   1596   1597   1598   1599   1600   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

answered

 

children

 
vision
 

straight

 

smiled

 

superstition

 

missed

 

turned

 

failures

 

mistakes


Matthew

 
station
 
longer
 

awaiting

 
ashamed
 
succeed
 

BOOKMARKS

 

Barriers

 

relics

 

EDITOR


America

 

Benumbing

 

Conventionality

 

Conscience

 

education

 

desiccating

 

effect

 

system

 

staring

 
morrow

kissed

 

changed

 
father
 

thinking

 

Moreton

 
accruing
 

knowledge

 
helping
 

advantage

 
preventive

educate

 

pitfalls

 

fallen

 
problems
 

relationships

 

brought

 
acknowledge
 

uessed

 

devote

 
precipice