Uncle Noah's Christmas Inspiration by Leona Dalrymple
page 37 of 46 (80%)
page 37 of 46 (80%)
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or the fall of Rome?"
Dick ignored the sarcasm. "My sympathy for the North made him furious," he went on. "We quarreled terribly and both of us said things that I know we didn't mean. It was the Fairfax temper, sir; I--" "Damn the Fairfax temper!" roared the Major. "Thank Heavens, the Verneys are mild!" Dick laughed, in spite of himself. "I apologized," he continued soberly, "but he wouldn't listen; told me to get out; said if I chose to change my opinions about the North, we'd talk it over, and I, of course, refused." "Of course!" interpolated the Major trimly. "I've written since, suggesting that we forget it all and start anew, but he won't listen, sir." The Major stroked his beard ominously. "Did it ever occur to you, Dick," he demanded, "that enough families were estranged by that War without carrying it over into the Twentieth Century? Let me see--how long after the War were you born? Twenty years, wasn't it? I remember; your father and Ruth's were married about the same time." "Every man has a right to his opinions, Major," Dick asserted with spirit. "Of course I've no personal knowledge of the War, but"--stubbornly--"the North was right." "Fairfax to the core!" thought the Major in secret admiration. "The |
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