From a Bench in Our Square eBook

Samuel Hopkins Adams
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 226 pages of information about From a Bench in Our Square.

From a Bench in Our Square eBook

Samuel Hopkins Adams
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 226 pages of information about From a Bench in Our Square.

“I didn’t have time,” said he doggedly.

“Time?  Why, there’s nothing but time in that house.”

The Little Red Doctor chose to take my feeble joke at par.  “No time at all.  None of the clocks keep it.”

“How does he manage his life, then?”

“Willy Woolly does that for him.  Barks him up in the morning.  Jogs his elbow at mealtimes.  Tucks him in bed at night, for all I know.”

Thus abortively ended Our Square’s protest against Stepfather Time and his House of Silvery Voices.  The Little Red Doctor’s obscure suggestion stuck in my mind, and a few nights later I made a second call.  Curiosity rather than neighborliness was the inciting cause.  Therefore I ought to have been embarrassed at the quiet warmth of my reception by both of the tenants.  Interrupting himself in the work of adjusting a new acquisition’s mechanism, Stepfather Time settled me into the most comfortable chair and immediately began to talk of clocks.

Good talk, it was; quaint and flavorous and erudite.  But my attention kept wandering to Willy Woolly, who, after politely kissing my hand, had settled down behind his master’s chair.  Willy Woolly was seeing things.  No pretense about it.  His mournful eyes yearned hither and thither, following some entity that moved in the room, dimmer than darkness, more ethereal than shadow.  His ears quivered.  A muffled, measured thumping sounded, dull and indeterminate like spirit rapping; it took me an appreciable time to identify it as the noise of the poodle’s tail, beating the floor.  Once he whined, a quick, quivering, eager note.  And still the amateur of clocks murmured his placid lore.  It was rather more than old nerves could stand.

“The dog,” I broke in upon the stream of erudition.  “Surely, Mr. Merivale—­”

“Willy Woolly?” He looked down, and the faithful one withdrew himself from his vision long enough to lick the master hand.  “Does he disturb you?”

“Oh, no,” I answered, a little confused.  “I only thought—­it seemed that he is uneasy about something.”

“There are finer sensibilities than we poor humans have,” said my host gravely.

“Then you have noticed how he watches and follows?”

“He is always like that.  Always, since.”

His “since” was one of the strangest syllables that ever came to my ears.  It implied nothing to follow.  It was finality’s self.

“It is”—­I sought a word—­“interesting and curious,” I concluded lamely, feeling how insufficient the word was.

“She comes back to him,” said my host simply.

No need to ask of whom he spoke.  The pronoun was as final and definitive as his “since.”  Never have I heard such tenderness as he gave to its utterance.  Nor such desolation as dimmed his voice when he added: 

“She never comes back to me.”

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Project Gutenberg
From a Bench in Our Square from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.