Instant Download Test Bank For Social Studies For The Elementary and Middle Grades A Constructivist Approach 4 e 4th Edition PDF Scribd
Instant Download Test Bank For Social Studies For The Elementary and Middle Grades A Constructivist Approach 4 e 4th Edition PDF Scribd
Instant Download Test Bank For Social Studies For The Elementary and Middle Grades A Constructivist Approach 4 e 4th Edition PDF Scribd
Language: English
Credits: Al Haines
By
Author of
First Love, The Girl From His Town
The Broken Bell, etc.
ILLUSTRATIONS BY
HOWARD CHANDLER CHRISTY
NEW YORK
GROSSET & DUNLAP
PUBLISHERS
Copyright 1913
The Bobbs-Merrill Company
To
Paris, 1912
CONTENTS
Chapter
I A Serious Event
II Julia Redmond
III A Second Invitation
IV The Dog Pays
V The Golden Autumn
VI Ordered Away
VII A Soldier's Dog
VIII Homesick
IX The Fortunes of War
X Together Again
XI A Sacred Trust
XII The News From Africa
XIII One Dog's Day
XIV An American Girl
XV Julia's Romance
XVI The Duke in Doubt
XVII Out of the Desert
XVIII Two Lovely Women
XIX The Man in Rags
XX Julia Decides
XXI Master and Friend
XXII Into the Desert
XXIII Two Love Stories
XXIV The Meeting
XXV As Handsome Does
XXVI Congratulations
XXVII Valor in Retrospect
XXVIII Happiness
CHAPTER I
A SERIOUS EVENT
"Que diable is the noise in the stable, Brunet? Don't you know that
when I smoke at this hour all Tarascon must be kept utterly silent?"
The ordonnance held his kepi in his hand. He had a round good-natured
face and kind gray eyes that were used to twinkle at his master's humor and
caprices.
"I beg pardon, mon Capitaine, but a very serious event is taking place."
"It will be more serious yet, Brunet, if you don't keep things quiet."
"I am sorry to tell, mon Capitaine, that Michette has just died."
Sabron nodded and took his cigarette out of his mouth as though in
respect for the deceased.
"She has just breathed her last, mon Capitaine, and she is leaving
behind her rather a large family."
Sabron rose, threw his cigarette away and, following across the garden
in the bland May light, went into the stable where Madame Michette, a
small wire-haired Irish terrier had given birth to a fine family and herself
gone the way of those who do their duty to a race. In the straw at his feet
Sabron saw a rat-like, unprepossessing little object, crawling about feebly
in search of warmth and nourishment, uttering pitiful little cries. Its extreme
loneliness and helplessness touched the big soldier, who said curtly to his
man:
"Wrap it up, and if you don't know how to feed it I should not be
surprised if I could induce it to take a little warm milk from a quill. At all
events we shall have a try with it. Fetch it along to my rooms."
He went slowly back to his rooms and busied himself at his table with
his correspondence. Among the letters was an invitation from the Marquise
d'Esclignac, an American married to a Frenchman, and the great lady of the
country thereabouts.
"Will you not," she wrote, "come to dine with us on Sunday? I have my
niece with me. She would be glad to see a French soldier. She has expressed
such a wish. She comes from a country where soldiers are rare. We dine at
eight."
Sabron looked at the letter and its fine clear handwriting. Its wording
was less formal than a French invitation is likely to be, and it gave him a
sense of cordiality. He had seen, during his rides, the beautiful lines of the
Château d'Esclignac. Its turrets surely looked upon the Rhone. There would
be a divine view from the terraces. It would be a pleasure to go there. He
thought more of what the place would be than of the people in it, for he was
something of a hermit, rather a recluse, and very reserved.
He was writing a line of acceptance when Brunet came in, a tiny bundle
in his hand.
"Put Pitchouné over there in the sunlight," ordered the officer, "and we
shall see if we can bring him up by hand."
CHAPTER II
JULIA REDMOND
He remembered all his life the first dinner at the Château d'Esclignac,
where from the terrace he saw the Rhone lying under the early moonlight
and the shadows falling around the castle of good King René.
Their welcome to him was gracious. The American girl spoke French
with an accent that Sabron thought bewilderingly charming, and he put
aside some of his reserve and laughed and talked at his ease. After dinner
(this he remembered with peculiar distinctness) Miss Redmond sang for
him, and although he understood none of the words of the English ballad,
he learned the melody by heart and it followed with him when he left. It
went with him as he crossed the terrace into the moonlight to mount his
horse; it went home with him; he hummed it, and when he got up to his
room he hummed it again as he bent over the little roll of flannel in the
corner and fed the puppy hot milk from a quill.
He shortly made a call at the Château d'Esclignac with the result that he
had a new picture to add to his collection. This time it was the picture of a
lady alone; the Marquise d'Esclignac doing tapestry. While Sabron found
that he had grown reticent again, he listened for another step and another
voice and heard nothing; but before he took leave there was a hint of a
second invitation to dinner.
The marquise was very handsome that afternoon and wore yet another
bewildering dress. Sabron's simple taste was dazzled. Nevertheless, she
made a graceful picture, one of beauty and refinement, and the young
soldier took it away with him. As his horse began to trot, at the end of the
alley, near the poplars at the lower end of the rose terrace he caught a
glimpse of a white dress (undoubtedly a simpler dress than that worn by
Madame d'Esclignac).
CHAPTER III
A SECOND INVITATION
"I don't think, mon Capitaine, that it is any use," Brunet told his master.
"Be still, Brunet," commanded the officer. "You do not come from the
south or you would be more sanguine. Pitchouné has got to live."
The puppy's clumsy adventuresome feet had taken him as far as the
highroad, and on this day, as it were in order that he should understand the
struggle for existence, a bicycle had cut him down in the prime of his youth,
and now, according to Brunet, "there wasn't much use!"
Pitchouné was bandaged around his hind quarters and his adorable little
head and forepaws came out of the handkerchief bandage.
"He won't eat anything from me, mon Capitaine," said Brunet, and
Sabron ceremoniously opened the puppy's mouth and thrust down a dose.
Pitchouné swallowed obediently.
Sabron had just returned from a long hard day with his troops, and tired
out as he was, he forced himself to give his attention to Pitchouné. A
second invitation to dinner lay on his table; he had counted the days until
this night. It seemed too good to be true, he thought, that another picture
was to add itself to his collection! He had mentally enjoyed the others often,
giving preference to the first, when he dined at the château; but there had
been a thrill in the second caused by the fluttering of the white dress down
by the poplar walk.
To-night he would have the pleasure of taking in Miss Redmond to
dinner.
"See, mon Capitaine," said Brunet, "the poor little fellow can't swallow
it."
The water trickled out from either side of Pitchouné's mouth. The sturdy
terrier refused milk in all forms, had done so since Sabron weaned him; but
Sabron now returned to his nursery days, made Brunet fetch him warm milk
and, taking the quill, dropped a few drops of the soothing liquid, into which
he put a dash of brandy, down Pitchouné's throat. Pitchouné swallowed, got
the drink down. gave a feeble yelp, and closed his eyes. When he opened
them the glazed look had gone.
The officer hurried into his evening clothes and ordered Brunet, as he
tied his cravat, to feed the puppy a little of the stimulant every hour until he
should return. Pitchouné's eyes, now open, followed his handsome master
to the door. As Sabron opened it he gave a pathetic yelp which made the
capitaine turn about.
Pitchouné gave a plaintive wail from the bandages and tried to stir.
"As for feeding him, mon Capitaine," the ordonnance threw up his
hands, "he will be stiff by the time..."
But Sabron was half-way down the stairs. The door was open, and on
the porch he heard distinctly a third tenderly pathetic wail.
* * * * * *
*
That evening the Marquise d'Esclignac read aloud to her niece the news
that the Count de Sabron was not coming to dinner. He was "absolutely
desolated" and had no words to express his regret and disappointment. The
pleasure of dining with them both, a pleasure to which he had looked
forward for a fortnight, must be renounced because he was obliged to sit up
with a very sick friend, as there was no one else to take his place. In
expressing his undying devotion and his renewed excuses he put his
homage at their feet and kissed their hands.
"A very poor excuse, my dear Julia, and a very late one."
Miss Redmond played a few bars of the tune Sabron had hummed and
which more than once had soothed Pitchouné, and which, did she know,
Sabron was actually humming at that moment.
The Marquise d'Esclignac had invited the Count de Sabron because she
had been asked to do so by his colonel, who was an old and valued friend.
She had other plans for her niece.
"I feel, my dear," she answered her now, "quite safe in promising that if
it is a question of life and death we shall forgive him. I shall see his colonel
to-morrow and ask him pointblank."
Miss Redmond rose from the piano and came over to her aunt, for
dinner had been announced.
"Well, what do you think," she slipped her hand in her aunt's arm,
"really, what do you think could be the reason?"
CHAPTER IV
He did not think that by getting well, reserving the right for the rest of
his life to a distinguished limp in his right leg, that he had done all that was
expected of him. He developed an ecstatic devotion to the captain,
impossible for any human heart adequately to return. He followed Sabron
like a shadow and when he could not follow him, took his place on a chair
in the window, there to sit, his sharp profile against the light, his pointed
ears forward, watching for the uniform he knew and admired extravagantly.
Pitchouné was a thoroughbred, and every muscle and fiber showed it,
every hair and point asserted it, and he loved as only thoroughbreds can.
You may say what you like about mongrel attachments, the thoroughbred in
all cases reserves his brilliancy for crises.
Sabron, who had only seen Miss Redmond twice and thought about her
countless times, never quite forgave his friend for the illness that kept him
from the château. There was in Sabron's mind, much as he loved Pitchouné,
the feeling that if he had gone that night...
"Voyons, mon cher," his colonel had said to him kindly the next time he
met him, "what stupidity have you been guilty of at the Château
d'Esclignac?"
"I assure you," said the colonel, "that I did you harm there without
knowing it. Madame d'Esclignac, who is a very clever woman, asked me
with interest and sympathy, who your 'very sick friend' could be. As no one
was very sick according to my knowledge, I told her so. She seemed
triumphant and I saw at once that I had put you in the wrong."
It would have been simple to have explained to the colonel, but Sabron,
reticent and reserved, did not choose to do so. He made a very insufficient
excuse, and the colonel, as well as the marquise, thought ill of him. He
learned later, with chagrin, that his friends were gone from the Midi. Rooted
to the spot himself by his duties, he could not follow them. Meanwhile
Pitchouné thrived, grew, cheered his loneliness, jumped over a stick,
learned a trick or two from Brunet and a great many fascinating wiles and
ways, no doubt inherited from his mother. He had a sense of humor truly
Irish, a power of devotion that we designate as "canine," no doubt because
no member of the human race has ever deserved it.
CHAPTER V
Sabron longed for a change with autumn, when the falling leaves made
the roads golden roundabout the Château d'Esclignac. He thought he would
like to go away. He rode his horse one day up to the property of the hard-
hearted unforgiving lady and, finding the gate open, rode through the
grounds up to the terrace. Seeing no one, he sat in his saddle looking over
the golden country to the Rhone and the castle of the good King René,
where the autumn mists were like banners floating from the towers.
There was a solitary beauty around the lovely place that spoke to the
young officer with a sweet melancholy. He fancied that Miss Redmond
must often have looked out from one of the windows, and he wondered
which one. The terrace was deserted and leaves from the vines strewed it
with red and golden specters. Pitchouné raced after them, for the wind
started them flying, and he rolled his tawny little body over and over in the
rustling leaves. Then a rabbit, which before the arrival of Sabron had been
sitting comfortably on the terrace stones, scuttled away like mad, and
Pitchouné, somewhat hindered by his limp, tore after it.
The deserted château, the fact that there was nothing in his military life
beyond the routine to interest him now in Tarascon, made Sabron eagerly
look forward to a change, and he waited for letters from the minister of war
which would send him to a new post.
The following day after his visit to the château he took a walk,
Pitchouné at his heels, and stood aside in the highroad to let a yellow motor
pass him, but the yellow motor at that moment drew up to the side of the
road while the chauffeur got out to adjust some portion of the mechanism.
Some one leaned from the yellow motor window and Sabron came forward
to speak to the Marquise d'Esclignac and another lady by her side.
"Yes," said Sabron, and Miss Redmond, who leaned forward, smiled at
him and extended her pretty hand. Sabron opened the motor door.
Sabron called Pitchouné, who diverted his attention from the chauffeur
to come and be hauled up by the collar and presented. Sabron shook off his
reticence.
"It was a question of 'life and death,' wasn't it?" she said eagerly to
Sabron.
"Really, it was just that," answered the young officer, not knowing how
significant the words were to the two ladies.
Then Madame d'Esclignac knew that she was beaten and that she owed
something and was ready to pay. The chauffeur got up on his seat and she
asked suavely:
He thanked them. He was walking and had not finished his exercise.
"At all events," she pursued, "now that your excuse is no longer a good
one, you will come this week to dinner, will you not?"
He would, of course, and watched the yellow motor drive away in the
autumn sunlight, wishing rather less for the order from the minister of war
to change his quarters than he had before.
CHAPTER VI
ORDERED AWAY
He had received his letter from the minister of war. Like many things
we wish for, set our hopes upon, when they come we find that we do not
want them at any price. The order was unwelcome. Sabron was to go to
Algiers.
Winter is never very ugly around Tarascon. Like a lovely bunch of fruit
in the brightest corner of a happy vineyard, the Midi is sheltered from the
rude experiences that the seasons know farther north. Nevertheless, rains
and winds, sea-born and vigorous, had swept in and upon the little town.
The mistral came whistling and Sabron, from his window, looked down on
his little garden from which summer had entirely flown. Pitchouné, by his
side, looked down as well, but his expression, different from his master's,
was ecstatic, for he saw, sliding along the brick wall, a cat with which he
was on the most excited terms. His body tense, his ears forward, he gave a
sharp series of barks and little soft growls, while his master tapped the
window-pane to the tune of Miss Redmond's song.
Although Sabron had heard it several times, he did not know the words
or that they were of a semi-religious, extremely sentimental character which
would have been difficult to translate into French. He did not know that
they ran something like this:
"God keep you safe, my love,
All through the night;
Rest close in His encircling arms
Until the light."
And there was more of it. He only knew that there was a pathos in the
tune which spoke to his warm heart; which caressed and captivated him and
which made him long deeply for a happiness he thought it most unlikely he
would ever know.
There had been many pictures added to his collection: Miss Redmond at
dinner, Miss Julia Redmond—he knew her first name now—before the
piano; Miss Redmond in a smart coat, walking with him down the alley,
while Pitchouné chased flying leaves and apparitions of rabbits hither and
thither.
The Count de Sabron had always dreaded just what happened to him.
He had fallen in love with a woman beyond his reach, for he had no fortune
whatsoever, nothing but his captain's pay and his hard soldier's life, a
wanderer's life and one which he hesitated to ask a woman to share. In spite
of the fact that Madame d'Esclignac was agreeable to him, she was not
cordial, and he understood that she did not consider him a parti for her
niece. Other guests, as well as he, had shared her hospitality. He had been
jealous of them, though he could not help seeing Miss Redmond's
preference for himself. Not that he wanted to help it. He recalled that she
had really sung to him, decidedly walked by his side when there had been
more than the quartette, and he felt, in short, her sympathy.
Pitchouné, whose eyes had followed the cat out of sight, sprang upon
his master and seemed quite ready for the new departure.
"I shall at least have you," Sabron said. "It will be your first campaign.
We shall have some famous runs and I shall introduce you to a camel and
make you acquainted with several donkeys, not to speak of the historic
Arab steeds. You will see, my friend, that there are other animals besides
yourself in creation."
"A telegram for mon capitaine." Brunet came in with the blue envelope
which Sabron tore open.
It was an order from the minister of war, just such a one as was sent to
some half-dozen other young officers, all of whom, no doubt, felt more or
less discomfited.
Sabron twisted the telegram, put it in the fireplace and lighted his
cigarette with it, watching Pitchouné who, finding himself a comfortable
corner in the armchair, had settled down for a nap.
"So," nodded the young man aloud, "I shall not even have Pitchouné."
"A letter for Monsieur le Capitaine." Brunet returned with a note which
he presented stiffly, and Pitchouné, who chose in his little brain to imagine
Brunet an intruder, sprang from the chair like lightning, rushed at the
servant, seized the leg of his pantaloons and began to worry them, growling,
Brunet regarding him with adoration. Sabron had not thought aloud the last
words of the telegram, which he had used to light his cigarette.
"I am ordered to Algiers and I shall not take horses nor Pitchouné."
The dog, at the mention of his name, set Brunet's leg free and stood
quiet, his head lifted.
"Nor you either, mon brave Brunet." Sabron put his hand on his
servant's shoulder, the first familiarity he had ever shown a man who served
him with devotion, and who would have given his life to save his master's.
"Those," said the officer curtly, "are the orders from headquarters, and the
least said about them the better."
Pitchouné did not follow. He remained immovable like a little dog cut
from bronze; he understood—who shall say—how much of the
conversation? Sabron threw away his cigarette, then read his letter by the
mantelpiece, leaning his arm upon it. He read slowly. He had broken the
seal slowly. It was the first letter he had ever seen in this handwriting. It
was written in French and ran thus:
The letter ended in the usual formal French fashion. Sabron, turning the
letter and rereading it, found that it completed the work that had been going
on in his lonely heart. He stood long, musing.
Pitchouné laid himself down on the rug, his bright little head between
his paws, his affectionate eyes on his master. The firelight shone on them
both, the musing young officer and the almost human-hearted little beast.
So Brunet found them when he came in with the lamp shortly, and as he set
it down on the table and its light shone on him, Sabron, glancing at the
ordonnance, saw that his eyes were red, and liked him none the less for it.
CHAPTER VII
A SOLDIER'S DOG
"It is just as I thought," he told Pitchouné. "I took you into my life, you
little rascal, against my will, and now, although it's not your fault, you are
making me regret it. I shall end, Pitchouné, by being a cynic and
misogynist, and learn to make idols of my career and my troops alone. After
all, they may be tiresome, but they don't hurt as you do, and some other
things as well."
The officer found the house full of people. He thought it hard that he
might not have had one more intimate picture to add to his collection. When
he entered the room a young man was playing a violoncello. There was a
group at the piano, and among the people the only ones he clearly saw were
the hostess, Madame d'Esclignac in a gorgeous velvet frock, then Miss
Redmond, who stood by the window, listening to the music. She saw him
come in and smiled to him, and from that moment his eyes hardly left her.
What the music was that afternoon the Count de Sabron could not have
told very intelligently. Much of it was sweet, all of it was touching, but
when Miss Redmond stood to sing and chose the little song of which he had
made a lullaby, and sang it divinely, Sabron, his hands clasped behind his
back and his head a little bent, still looking at her, thought that his heart
would break. It was horrible to go away and not tell her. It was cowardly to
feel so much and not be able to speak of it. And he felt that he might be
equal to some wild deed, such as crossing the room violently, putting his
hand over her slender one and saying:
"Yes, Madame."
"I expect you will be engaged in some awful native skirmishes. Perhaps
you will even be able to send back a tiger skin."
The young soldier's dark eyes rested almost hostilely on the gorgeous
marquise in her red gown. He felt that she was glad to have him go. He
wanted to say: "I shall come back, however; I shall come back and when I
return" ... but he knew that such a boast, or even such a hope was fruitless.
His colonel had told him only the day before that Miss Redmond was
one of the richest American heiresses, and there was a question of a duke or
a prince and heaven only knew what in the way of titles. As the marquise
moved away her progress was something like the rolling of an elegant
velvet chair, and while his feelings were still disturbed Miss Redmond
crossed the room to him. Before Sabron quite knew how they had been able
to escape the others or leave the room, he was standing with her in the
winter garden where the sunlight came in through trellises and the perfume
of the warmed plants was heavy and sweet. Below them flowed the Rhone,
golden in the winter's light. The blue river swept its waves around old
Tarascon and the battlements of King René's towers.
"What!" she cried. "You are never going to leave that darling dog
behind you?"
"Heavens!" she exclaimed. "What brutes they are! Why, Pitchouné will
die of a broken heart." Then she said: "You are leaving him with your man
servant?"
"Ah!" she breathed. "He is looking for a home? Is he? If so, would you
... might I take care of Pitchouné?"
The Frenchman impulsively put out his hand, and she laid her own in it.
"You are too good," he murmured. "Thank you. Pitchouné will thank
you."
He kissed her hand. That was all.
From within the salon came the noise of voices, and the bow of the
violoncellist was beginning a new concerto. They stood looking at each
other. No condition could have prevented it although the Marquise
d'Esclignac was rolling toward them across the polished floor of the music-
room. As though Sabron realized that he might never see this lovely young
woman again, probably never would see her, and wanted before he left to
have something made clear, he asked quickly:
"Well, it is not very easy to put it in prose," she hesitated. "Things sound
so differently in music and poetry; but it means," she said in French,
bravely, "why, it is a sort of prayer that some one you love very much
should be kept safe night and day. That's about all. There is a little sadness
in it, as though," and her cheeks glowed, "as if there was a sort of
separation. It means..."
And just then Madame d'Esclignac rolled up between them and with an
unmistakable satisfaction presented to her niece the gentleman she had
secured.
"My dear Julia, my godson, the Duc de Tremont." And Sabron bowed to
both the ladies, to the duke, and went away.
This was the picture he might add to his collection: the older woman in
her vivid dress, Julia in her simpler gown, and the titled Frenchman bowing
over her hand.
When he went out to the front terrace Brunet was there with his horse,
and Pitchouné was there as well, stiffly waiting at attention.