Contrary Mary by Temple Bailey
page 46 of 371 (12%)
page 46 of 371 (12%)
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I--die."
He looked down into the adoring eyes. "I believe you would, Leila," he said, with a boyish catch in his voice; "you're the dearest thing on God's great earth!" The chilled fruit was already on the table when they went in, and it was followed by a chafing dish over which the General presided. Red-faced and rapturous, he seasoned and stirred, and as the result of his wizardry there was placed before them presently such plates of Creole crab as could not be equaled north of New Orleans. "To cook," said the General, settling himself back in his chair and beaming at Mary who was beside him, "one must be a poet--to me there is more in that dish than merely something to eat. There's color--the red of tomatoes, the green of the peppers, the pale ivory of mushrooms, the snow white of the crab--there's atmosphere--aroma." "The difference," Mary told him, smiling, "between your cooking and Susan Jenks' is the difference between an epic--and a nursery rhyme. They're both good, but Susan's is unpremeditated art." "I take off my hat to Susan Jenks," said the General--"when her poetry expresses itself in waffles and fried chicken." Mary was devoting herself to the General. Porter Bigelow who was on the other side of her, was devoting himself to Aunt Isabelle. Aunt Isabelle was serenely content in her new office of chaperone. |
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