A Romance of Billy-Goat Hill

Alice Hegan Rice
A Romance of Billy-Goat Hill, by
Alice Hegan Rice

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Title: A Romance of Billy-Goat Hill
Author: Alice Hegan Rice
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[Illustration: "Do you believe in love, Doctor?"]
A ROMANCE OF BILLY-GOAT HILL
BY
ALICE HEGAN RICE
Author of Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch Lovey Mary, Sandy, Etc.
WITH ILLUSTRATIONS
By GEORGE WEIGHT

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
"Do you believe in love, Doctor?"
The Colonel leaned back upon his knees and glared at Morley

There was a sharp report, a smothered groan, then a heavy fall
She held it to the flame, and watched it burn to ashes on the hearth
Maria began to cry, and forgot to jolt the Boarder
Mrs. Sequin paused with her hand on the banister
"It was a great wrong I did you, Don; can you forgive me?"
"Tell me quick! How do you know about the shooting?"
CHAPTER I
It was springtime in Kentucky, gay, irresponsible, Southern springtime,
that comes bursting impetuously through highways and byways,
heedless of possible frosts and impossible fruitions. A glamour of
tender new green enveloped the world, and the air was sweet with the
odor of young and growing things. The brown river, streaked with
green where the fresher currents of the creeks poured in, circled the
base of a long hill that dominated the landscape from every direction.
In spite of the fact that impertinent railroads were beginning to crawl
about its feet, and the flotsam and jetsam of the adjacent city were
gradually being deposited at its base, it nevertheless reared its granite
shoulders proudly and defiantly against the sky.
From the early days when the hill and rich surrounding farm lands had
been granted to the old pioneer William Carsey, one generation of
Carseys after another had lived in the stately old mansion that now
stood like the last remaining fortress against the city's invasion.
Sagging cornices and discolored walls had not dispelled the atmosphere
of contentment that enveloped the place, an effect heightened by the
wide front porch which ran straight across the face of it, like a broad,
complacent smile. Some old houses, like old gallants, bear an
unmistakable air of past prosperity, of past affairs. Romance has trailed
her garments near them and the fragrance lingers.

Thornwood, shabby and neglected, could still afford to drowse in the
sunshine and smile over the past. It remembered the time when its
hospitality was the boast of the countryside, when its stables held the
best string of horses in the State; when its smokehouse, now groaning
under a pile of lumber, sheltered shoulders of pork, and sides of bacon,
and long lines of juicy, sugar-cured hams; when the cellar quartered
battalions of cobwebby bottles that stood at attention on the low
hanging shelves. It was a house ripe with experience and mellow with
memories, a wise, old, sophisticated house, that had had its day, and
enjoyed it, and now, through with ambitions, and through with striving,
had settled down to a peaceful old age.
On this particular Sunday afternoon Colonel Bob Carsey, the third of
his name, sat on the porch in a weather-beaten mahogany rocker,
making himself a mint julep. He was a stout, elderly gentleman, and,
like the rocking chair, was weather-beaten, and of a slightly mahogany
hue. His features, having long ago given up the struggle against
encroaching flesh, were now merely slight indentures, and mild
protuberances, with the exception of the eyes which still blazed away
defiantly, like twinkling lights at the end of a passage.
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