Unleavened Bread eBook

Robert Grant (novelist)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 449 pages of information about Unleavened Bread.

Unleavened Bread eBook

Robert Grant (novelist)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 449 pages of information about Unleavened Bread.

“It was because I felt that his thoughts were nobler than most men’s that I wished to marry him,” Selma replied, seraphically.  “But I can see that it is sensible to live where your friends live.  I shall try not to spoil him, Pauline.”  She was already conscious of a mission which appealed to her.  She had been content until now in the ardor of her love to regard Wilbur as flawless—­as in some respects superior to herself; but it was a gratification to her to detect this failing, and to perceive her opportunity for usefulness.  Surely it was important for her husband to be progressive and not merely a dreamer.

Littleton looked from one to the other fondly.  “Not many men are blessed with the love of two such women,” he said.  “I put myself in your hands.  I bow my neck to the yoke.”

In New York in the early seventies the fashionable quarter lay between Eighth and Fortieth Streets, bounded on either side by Fourth and Sixth Avenues.  Central Park was completed, but the region west of it was, from the social stand-point, still a wilderness, and Fifth Avenue in the neighborhood of Twenty-third Street was the centre of elegant social life.  Selma took her first view of this brilliant street on the following day on her way to hunt for houses in the outlying district.  The roar and bustle of the city, which thrilled yet dazed her, seemed here softened by the rows of tall, imposing residences in brown stone.  Along the sunny sidewalks passed with jaunty tread an ever-hurrying procession of stylishly clad men and women; and along the roadbed sped an array of private carriages conducted by coachmen in livery.  It was a brilliant day, and New Yorkers were making the most of it.

Selma had never seen such a sight before.  Benham faded into insignificance in comparison.  She was excited, and she gazed eagerly at the spectacle.  Yet her look, though absorbed, was stern.  This sort of thing was unlike anything American within her personal experience.  This avenue of grand houses and this procession of fine individuals and fine vehicles made her think of that small section of Benham into which she had never been invited, and the thought affected her disagreeably.

“Who are the people who live in these houses?” she asked, presently.

Littleton had already told her that it was the most fashionable street in the city.

“Oh, the rich and prosperous.”

“Those who gamble in stocks, I suppose.”  Selma wished to be assured that this was so.

“Some of them,” said Littleton, with a laugh.  “They belong to people who have made money in various ways or have inherited it—­our well-to-do class, among them the first families in New York, and many of them our best citizens.”

“Are they friends of yours?”

Littleton laughed again.  “A few—­not many.  Society here is divided into sets, and they are not in my set.  I prefer mine, and fortunately, for I can’t afford to belong to theirs.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Unleavened Bread from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.