The Damnation of Theron Ware by Harold Frederic
page 324 of 402 (80%)
page 324 of 402 (80%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
|
you know the father, Mr. Madden?"
Theron shook his head. "I think I have seen him," he said. "A small man, with gray whiskers." "A peasant," said Father Forbes, "but with a heart of gold. Poor man! he has had little enough out of his riches. Ah, the West Coast people, what tragedies I have seen among them over here! They have rudimentary lung organizations, like a frog's, to fit the mild, wet soft air they live in. The sharp air here kills them off like flies in a frost. Whole families go. I should think there are a dozen of old Jeremiah's children in the cemetery. If Michael could have passed his twenty-eighth year, there would have been hope for him, at least till his thirty-fifth. These pulmonary things seem to go by sevens, you know." "I didn't know," said Theron. "It is very strange--and very sad." His startled mind was busy, all at once, with conjectures as to Celia's age. "The sister--Miss Madden--seems extremely strong," he remarked tentatively. "Celia may escape the general doom," said the priest. His guest noted that he clenched his shapely white hand on the table as he spoke, and that his gentle, carefully modulated voice had a gritty hardness in its tone. "THAT would be too dreadful to think of," he added. Theron shuddered in silence, and strove to shut his mind against the thought. "She has taken Michael's illness so deeply to heart," the priest |
|


