Bart Ridgeley eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 356 pages of information about Bart Ridgeley.

Bart Ridgeley eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 356 pages of information about Bart Ridgeley.

He then opened a small drawer and took out a portfolio, in which were various bits of bristol-board and paper, covered with crayon and pen sketches, and some things in water-colors—­all giving evidence of a ready hand which showed some untaught practice.  Whether his sense of justice was somewhat appeased, or because he regarded them with more favor, or reserved them for another occasion, was, perhaps, uncertain.  Singularly enough, on each of them, no matter what was the subject, appeared one or more young girl’s heads—­some full-faced, some three-fourths, and more in profile—­all spirited, all looking alike, and each having a strong resemblance to Julia Markham.  Two or three were studied and deliberate attempts.  He contemplated these long and earnestly, and laid them away with a sigh.  They undoubtedly saved the collection.

That night he wrote to Henry: 

Dear brother,—­I am back, of course.  It is an unpleasant way of mine—­this coming back.  It was visionary for me to try a fall with the sciences at Hudson.  You would have been too many for them; I ran away.  I found Colton sick at Cincinnati.  The Texan Rangers had left.  I looked into the waters of the Ohio, running and hurrying away returnlessly to the south-west.  Lord, how they called to me in their liquid offers to carry me away!  They seemed to draw me to linger, and gurgle, and murmur in little staying, coaxing eddies at my feet, to persuade me to go.

“How near one seems to that far-off region of fever and swamp, of sun and sea, of adventure and blood, and old buccaneering, standing by those swift waters, already on their way thither!  Should I go?  Was I not too good to go, and be lost?  Think of the high moral considerations involved?  No matter, I didn’t go—­I came!  Well!

“On reflection—­and I thus assume that I do reflect—­I think men don’t find opportunities, or, if they do, they don’t know them.  One must make an opportunity for himself, and then he will know what to do with it.  The other day I stood on the other side of the Chagrin waiting for an opportunity, and it didn’t come, and I made one.  I waded through, and liked it, and that was not the only lesson I learned at the same time.  But that other was for my personal improvement.  A man can as well find the material for his opportunity in one place as another.  See how I excuse myself!

“Just now, I am a reformed young Blue Beard.  Fatima and her sister may go—­have gone.  I have just overhauled my ‘Blue Chamber,’ taken down all my suspended wives, and burned them.  They ended in smoke.  Lord! there wasn’t flesh and blood enough in them all to decompose, and they gave out no odor even while burning.  I burned them all, cleaned off all the blood-spots, ventilated the room, opened the windows, and will turn it to a workshop.  No more sighing for the unattainable, no more grasping at the intangible, no more clutching at the impalpable.  I am no poet, and we don’t want poetry.  Our civilization isn’t old enough.  Poets, like other maggots, will be produced when fermentation comes.  I am going about the humdrum and the useful.  I am about as low in the public estimation as I can well go; at any rate I am down on hard land, which will be a good starting-point.  Now don’t go off and become sanguine over me, nor trouble yourself much about me.

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Bart Ridgeley from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.