The Second Generation by David Graham Phillips
page 45 of 403 (11%)
page 45 of 403 (11%)
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that from under his heavy brows his eyes were looking stealthily out,
more minutely observant than ever before, and that what he saw either added to his sadness or took a color of sadness from his mood. She guessed that the actions of Adelaide and Arthur, so utterly different from the actions of the children of her and Hiram's young days--except those regarded by all worth-while people as "trifling and trashy"--had something to do with Hiram's gloom. She decided that Arthur's failure and his lightness of manner in face of it were the chief trouble--this until Hiram's shoulders began to stoop and hollows to appear in his cheeks and under his ears, and a waxlike pallor to overspread his face. Then she knew that he was not well physically; and, being a practical woman, she dismissed the mental causes of the change. "People talk a lot about their mental troubles," she said to herself, "but it's usually three-fourths stomach and liver." As Hiram and illness, real illness, could not be associated in her mind, she gave the matter no importance until she heard him sigh heavily one night, after they had been in bed several hours. "What is it, father?" she asked. There was no answer, but a return to an imitation of the regular breathing of a sleeper. "Hiram," she insisted, "what is it?" "Nothing, Ellen, nothing," he answered; "I must have ate something that don't sit quite right." "You didn't take no supper at all," said she. |
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