The Gilded Age


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of it. I might have known they would; and the sharpers, or fools, I  
don't know which, have contrived to involve me for three times as much as  
the first obligation. The security is in my hands, but it is good for  
nothing to me. I have not the money to do anything with the contract."  
Ruth heard this dismal news without great surprise. She had long felt  
that they were living on a volcano, that might go in to active operation  
at any hour. Inheriting from her father an active brain and the courage  
to undertake new things, she had little of his sanguine temperament which  
blinds one to difficulties and possible failures. She had little  
confidence in the many schemes which had been about to lift her father  
out of all his embarrassments and into great wealth, ever since she was  
a child; as she grew older, she rather wondered that they were as  
prosperous as they seemed to be, and that they did not all go to smash  
amid so many brilliant projects. She was nothing but a woman, and did  
not know how much of the business prosperity of the world is only a  
bubble of credit and speculation, one scheme helping to float another  
which is no better than it, and the whole liable to come to naught and  
confusion as soon as the busy brain that conceived them ceases its power  
to devise, or when some accident produces a sudden panic.  
"Perhaps, I shall be the stay of the family, yet," said Ruth, with an  
approach to gaiety; "When we move into a little house in town, will thee  
let me put a little sign on the door: DR. RUTH BOLTON?"  
"Mrs. Dr. Longstreet, thee knows, has a great income."  
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Page
526 527 528 529 530

Quick Jump
1 170 341 511 681