The Gilded Age


google search for The Gilded Age

Return to Master Book Index.

Page
504 505 506 507 508

Quick Jump
1 170 341 511 681

The colonel told the matron as he went away that if she would look to  
Laura's comfort a little it shouldn't be the worse for her; and to the  
turnkey who let them out he patronizingly said,  
"You've got a big establishment here, a credit to the city. I've got a  
friend in there--I shall see you again, sir."  
By the next day something more of Laura's own story began to appear in  
the newspapers, colored and heightened by reporters' rhetoric. Some of  
them cast a lurid light upon the Colonel's career, and represented his  
victim as a beautiful avenger of her murdered innocence; and others  
pictured her as his willing paramour and pitiless slayer. Her  
communications to the reporters were stopped by her lawyers as soon as  
they were retained and visited her, but this fact did not prevent--it may  
have facilitated--the appearance of casual paragraphs here and there  
which were likely to beget popular sympathy for the poor girl.  
The occasion did not pass without "improvement" by the leading journals;  
and Philip preserved the editorial comments of three or four of them  
which pleased him most. These he used to read aloud to his friends  
afterwards and ask them to guess from which journal each of them had  
been cut. One began in this simple manner:--  
History never repeats itself, but the Kaleidoscopic combinations of  
the pictured present often seem to be constructed out of the broken  
fragments of antique legends. Washington is not Corinth, and Lais,  
506  


Page
504 505 506 507 508

Quick Jump
1 170 341 511 681