Jane Journeys On, by Ruth 
Comfort Mitchell 
 
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Title: Jane Journeys On 
Author: Ruth Comfort Mitchell 
Release Date: December 30, 2006 [EBook #20230] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JANE 
JOURNEYS ON *** 
 
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[Illustration: "SAY, GIRLIE, DIDN'T I TELL YOU I'D PUT THE 
RAISIN IN IT?"]
JANE JOURNEYS ON 
 
BY 
RUTH COMFORT MITCHELL 
AUTHOR OF "PLAY THE GAME," ETC. 
 
D. APPLETON AND COMPANY NEW YORK :: 1922 :: LONDON 
COPYRIGHT, 1922, BY 
D. APPLETON AND COMPANY 
Copyright, 1918, by The International Magazine Co. Copyright, 1919, 
by McCall Co., Inc. Copyright, 1916, 1917, by the Century Co. 
Copyright, 1919, by the Crowell Publishing Co. 
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 
 
TO W. C. MORROW GUIDE AND FRIEND, WHO HAS SET SO 
MANY OF US ON OUR WAY 
 
Transcriber's Note: 
The Table of Contents is not printed in the book but has been generated 
here for the convenience of the reader. 
CONTENTS 
CHAPTER I
CHAPTER II 
 
CHAPTER III 
 
CHAPTER IV 
 
CHAPTER V 
 
CHAPTER VI 
 
CHAPTER VII 
 
CHAPTER VIII 
 
CHAPTER IX 
 
CHAPTER X
CHAPTER XI 
 
CHAPTER XII 
 
CHAPTER XIII 
 
CHAPTER XIV 
 
CHAPTER XV 
 
CHAPTER XVI 
 
CHAPTER XVII 
 
CHAPTER XVIII 
 
CHAPTER XIX 
 
CHAPTER XX
CHAPTER XXI 
 
JANE JOURNEYS ON 
CHAPTER I 
With but one exception, everybody in the upper layer of life in that 
placid Vermont village was sure that Jane Vail was going to marry 
Martin Wetherby. The one exception was Jane herself; she was not 
sure--not entirely. 
There were many sound and sensible reasons why she should, and only 
two or three rather inconsequent ones why she should not. To begin 
with, he was a Wetherby, and the family went steadily back in an 
unbroken line to Colonial days; it was their grave old house with the 
fanlight over its dignified door which had given Wetherby Ridge its 
name. He was doing remarkably well at the bank; it was conceded that 
he would be assistant cashier at the first possible moment; his habits 
were exemplary and he was the most carefully dressed young man in 
the community. His mother freely admitted at the Ladies' Aid and the 
Tuesday Club that he was as perfect a son as any woman ever had, and 
that he would one day make some girl a perfect husband. 
Jane, after long and rebellious thought, could find nothing to set down 
on the other side of the ledger beyond the fact that he was just a little 
too good-looking, that he was already beginning, at twenty-six, to put 
on the flesh which had always been intended for him, that his hands 
were softer than hers, with fingers which widened puffily at the base, 
and that she nearly always knew what he was going to say before he 
said it. 
She was twenty-four years old, and the immemorial custom of that 
village gave her a scant remaining year in which to make up her mind. 
All girls who ran true to pattern were either snugly married or serenely
teaching by the time they were twenty-five, and the choice was not 
always their own. There had been more marriageable maidens than 
eligible youths in the set, and it was rather, Jane told herself grimly, 
like a game of Musical Chairs--a gay, excited scramble, and some one 
always left out. Now, with the exodus of a few and the marrying of 
many, it had narrowed down to three of them--herself, Martin 
Wetherby, and Sarah Farraday, who was her best friend during 
childhood and girlhood; and Sarah, an earnest, blonde girl with 
nearsighted eyes and insistent upper front teeth, had, so to speak, 
stopped playing. She had converted her dead father's old stable into a 
studio by means of art burlap and framed photographs of famous 
composers, and was giving piano lessons daily from ten to four. This 
left the field entirely to Jane, and Jane was carrying about with her an 
increasing conviction that she was not going to do the thing every one 
expected her to do. 
It came curiously to a crisis on a mild and unimportant day in 
November. Jane spent a footless forenoon in her own room in the 
green-shuttered, elm-shaded house where she lived with her adoring 
Aunt Lydia Vail,    
    
		
	
	
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