The Desert Valley eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 310 pages of information about The Desert Valley.

The Desert Valley eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 310 pages of information about The Desert Valley.

The evening of their first day, alone in her room for an hour before bed, she settled for herself the first difference between these men of the desert fringes and the men she had known at home.  To begin with, she reviewed in mind her old acquaintances:  there were a half-dozen professors, instructors, assistants who called infrequently on her father and whom she had come to know with a degree of familiarity.  The youngest of them had been twenty years older than Helen, and, whereas her father was always an old dear, sometimes a hopeless and helpless old dear, they were simply old fogies.  They constituted, however, an important department in her male friends; the rest were as easily catalogued.  They were the young college men—­men in name only, boys in actuality.  They were of her own age or two or four years older or a year younger.  They danced and made mysterious references to the beer they had wickedly drunk; they motored in their fathers’ cars and played tennis in their fathers’ flannels when they fitted; no doubt they were men in the making, but to judge them as men already was like looking prematurely into the oven to see how the bread was doing; they were still under-baked.  So far they were playing with the game of life; life, herself, had not yet taken them seriously, had not reached out the iron hand that eventually would seize them by the back of the neck, the slack of the trousers, and pitch them out into the open arena.

Helen was considerably pleased with the result of her meditations:  her father’s academic friends had held back behind college walls and thus had never come out into the scrimmage that makes men; her own young friends had not yet reached the time when they would buckle on their armour and mount and talk lance in hand.  Alan Howard and John Carr were men who for a number of years had done man’s work out in the open, no doubt giving and receiving doughty blows.  She considered Carr:  he had taken a monster outfit like Desert Valley and had made it over, in his own image, like a god working.  There were thousands of acres, she had no idea how many.  There were cattle and horses and mules; again she thought of them only vaguely as countless.  There were many men obeying his orders, taking his daily wage.  Carr had mastered a big job and the job had made a masterly man of him.  Then had come Alan Howard with vision and determination and courage.  He had expended almost his last cent for a first payment upon the huge property; he was risking all that he had gathered of the world’s goods, he was out in the open waging his battle like a young king claiming his heritage.  Helen clothed the act in the purple and gold of romance and thrilled at her own picture.

‘After all,’ she discovered, ’there are different kinds of men and I never knew men like these two.’

Then, when she thought of Yellow Barbee, she sniffed.  Barbee was about her own age; she considered him a mere child and transparent.

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Project Gutenberg
The Desert Valley from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.