The Rivet in Grandfather's Neck eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 278 pages of information about The Rivet in Grandfather's Neck.

The Rivet in Grandfather's Neck eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 278 pages of information about The Rivet in Grandfather's Neck.

As for Miss Stapylton, she appeared to delight in the cloistered, easy-going life of Lichfield.  The quaint and beautiful old town fell short in nothing of her expectations, in spite of the fact that she had previously read John Charteris’s tales of Lichfield,—­“those effusions which” (if the Lichfield Courier-Herald is to be trusted) “have builded, by the strength and witchery of record and rhyme, romance and poem, a myriad-windowed temple in Lichfield’s honor—­exquisite, luminous, and enduring—­for all the world to see.”

Miss Stapylton appeared to delight in the cloistered easy-going life of Lichfield,—­that town which was once, as the outside world has half-forgotten now, the center of America’s wealth, politics and culture, the town to which Europeans compiling “impressions” of America devoted one of their longest chapters in the heyday of Elijah Pogram and Jefferson Brick.  But the War between the States has changed all that, and Lichfield endures to-day only as a pleasant backwater.

Very pleasant, too, it was in the days of Patricia’s advent.  There were strikingly few young men about, to be sure; most of them on reaching maturity had settled in more bustling regions.  But many maidens remained whom memory delights to catalogue,—­tall, brilliant Lizzie Allardyce, the lovely and cattish Marian Winwood, to whom Felix Kennaston wrote those wonderful love-letters which she published when he married Kathleen Saumarez, the rich Baugh heiresses from Georgia, the Pride twins, and Mattie Ferneyhaugh, whom even rival beauties loved, they say, and other damsels by the score,—­all in due time to be wooed and won, and then to pass out of the old town’s life.

Among the men of Rudolph Musgrave’s generation—­those gallant oldsters who were born and bred, and meant to die, in Lichfield,—­Patricia did not lack for admirers.  Tom May was one of them, of course; rarely a pretty face escaped the tribute of at least one proposal from Tom May.  Then there was Roderick Taunton, he with the leonine mane, who spared her none of his forensic eloquence, but found Patricia less tractable than the most stubborn of juries.  Bluff Walter Thurman, too, who was said to know more of Dickens, whist and criminal law than any other man living, came to worship at her shrine, as likewise did huge red-faced Ashby Bland, famed for that cavalry charge which history-books tell you that he led, and at which he actually was not present, for reasons all Lichfield knew and chuckled over.  And Courtney Thorpe and Charles Maupin, doctors of the flesh and the spirit severally, were others among the rivals who gathered about Patricia at decorous festivals when, candles lighted, the butler and his underlings came with trays of delectable things to eat, and the “nests” of tables were set out, and pleasant chatter abounded.

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The Rivet in Grandfather's Neck from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.