The Honorable Peter Stirling and What People Thought of Him by Paul Leicester Ford
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little difficulty in shifting quickly from one topic to another. "There
is a tangled finish about it that is very pleasant. And in August, when the golden-rod comes, I think it is glorious. It seems to me as if all the hot sunbeams of the summer had been gathered up in--excuse the expression--it's a word of Watts's--into 'gobs' of sunshine, and scattered along the roads and fields." Peter wondered if the request to be excused called for a response, but concluded that it didn't. "Papa told me the other day," continued Miss Pierce, "that there were nineteen distinct varieties of golden-rod. I had never noticed that there were any differences." Peter began to feel easy and comfortable. He made a mental note that Miss Pierce had a very sweet voice. It had never occurred to Peter before to notice if a girl had a pleasant voice. Now he distinctly remembered that several to whom he had talked--or rather who had talked to him--had not possessed that attraction. "Last year," said Miss Pierce, "when Watts was here, we had a golden-rod party. We had the whole house decked with it, and yellow lamps on the lawn." "He told me about it," said Peter. "He really was the soul of it," said Miss Pierce, "He wove himself a belt and chaplet of it and wore it all through the evening. He was so good-looking!" |
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