APPLETONS' JO URNAL. some instrument, or, better still, sing some plaintive melody." "That is, you would like me to do the work for you when you were lazy? Thank you. I like my thoughts better than jingling sound." "Then pray let me have your thoughts." "They are not enough my own yet for me to give them away," she replied presently. "Various things were passing through my mind.... Shakespeare's daughter sang, did she not? I think you told me so." " Yes. I never heard her sing anything very plaintive, though. How came you to speak of her?" "Oh, she was one of the various things that passed through my mind.... I think I should like to see her.... No, I should not." "You would rather fancy her, eh?" "It is not that.... When did you see her last?" she suddenly turned to him and asked. "I saw her yesterday." He tried to speak carelessly, and he was vexed that so slight a matter should discompose him. "I went in last evening for a few minutes. It was a good while since I had seen her father, and I did not want him to think me neglectful of him." "After you were here?" "Yes. You know you sent me away while it was still early. You said you had some work you wanted to do by yourself." "What do you do when you go there? Do you discuss Shakespeare and the musical glasses? Tell me what you did last night." Marcia was looking keenly at him. "I found two or three friends of the family there, and the' divine Williams' was playing the fiddle. Have I told you what a virtuoso he is? He plays the fiddle with all his might. It is positively exhilarating to hear him, and you would hardly know him for the rather fierce-looking dramatist who accosted you once with such aggressive politeness." "And they were dancing, I suppose?" "Yes, having a very merry time." "Dancing Irish jigs?" "Dancing Irish jigs. Innocent Irish jigs." "And you put your arms akimbo, I suppose, and danced with them?" "This dreadful fact is unquestionably more dreadful from having been extorted from me an inch at a time." "I am sorry I can not offer you any jigs for your entertainment." "Why so scornful? Do you think I have been taking these pleasant evenings here this winter in anxious expectation that you would at length propose an evening of jigs and breakdowns?" "I don't dancer" "Susanna Shakespeare says I can't. Please tell me what you were doing when I was off on this disreputable rout?" "No, I will not. I did mean to, but I can not now. I will go with you Thursday on one condition." "What is that? Do not make it too easy." "That you will not go to the Shakespeares before we go." She turned away, though she had been looking him before in the face. "Poh! Make a harder condition than that." "Well, that you will not want to go." "That's easily accepted," said he, gayly. It lacked but a day or two before Thursday, and Devons was for some reason out of tune for work. He could not pin himself to his desk, and spent much of the time sauntering about the streets. The condition imposed upon him he had found no difficulty in accepting, yet the recollection of Half-moon Court persistently came to him. He tried to banish it as constructively disloyal, and used the remembrance of his many evenings with Marcia Church as an expulsive power; so it was that he seemed in his mind to be running back and forth between the two houses. It was a relief on Thursday to present himself bodily at Ash Street. Mrs. Church received him cordially. "I'm glad you are going to take Marcia out to-day, Mr. Devons. The poor girl is growing pale with so much confinement, and if she goes on like this I shall have to take her to the shore again. Do you know, I don't believe it's wholly the library work?" She looked very mysterious, and Devons had an uncomfortable feeling that she was implying some understanding with him. "I think-now mind, I don't say it-but I think she's writing a book." "That would certainly account for her pallor," said Devons, "but I myself had not noticed any special paleness. I thought the other night I never had seen her looking better." "She always does look better when you're here. She don't get much other company, and company always brightens her up; that is, some company. But I'm pretty sure it's a book. Oh, there she is!-Marcia, don't you let Mr. Devons tire you out. You know he tells us he's a great walker." "I have two gaits, Mrs. Church, and my fastday gait is my slower.-Miss Marcia, this day is made for us. The east wind has gone off to sea." "To bring your ship in, no doubt," said Mrs. Church, looking with admiration at the two young people as they set out on their excursion. They had chosen, at Marcia's suggestion, a direction which took them through an adjacent town famous for its college; she had not been 134
"A Man May Not Marry His Grandmother" Chapters IV-VI [pp. 126-137]
Appletons' journal: a magazine of general literature. / Volume 6, Issue 32
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- The Romance of a Painter, Chapters VIII-XIII - Ferdinand Fabre - pp. 97-112
- The Shakespearean Myth, Part I - Appleton Morgan - pp. 112-126
- "A Man May Not Marry His Grandmother" Chapters IV-VI - Horace E. Scudder - pp. 126-137
- English Literature (A Chapter from a New History), Part I - Spencer Walpole - pp. 137-150
- The Historical Aspect of the United States - A. P. Stanley - pp. 150-158
- The Judgment of Midas - John Brougham - pp. 158
- On Certain Present Phenomena of the Imagination - Lord Houghton - pp. 159-168
- Intolerance and Persecution - W. H. Mallock - pp. 169-173
- Verify your Compass - W. R. Greg - pp. 173-177
- Some Modern Artists - Harry Quilter - pp. 178-181
- Editor's Table - pp. 182-186
- Books of the Day - pp. 186-192
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- Scudder, Horace E.
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""A Man May Not Marry His Grandmother" Chapters IV-VI [pp. 126-137]." In the digital collection Making of America Journal Articles. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/acw8433.2-06.032. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 24, 2025.