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Title: The Calling Of Dan Matthews 
Author: Harold Bell Wright 
Release Date: November, 2005 [EBook #9314] [This file was first
posted on September 21, 2003] 
Edition: 10 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: US-ASCII 
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, THE 
CALLING OF DAN MATTHEWS *** 
 
E-text prepared by Tiffany Vergon, Mary Meehan, and Project 
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THE CALLING OF DAN MATTHEWS 
BY 
HAROLD BELL WRIGHT 
1909 
AUTHOR OF 
"THE SHEPHERD OF THE HILLS" 
"THAT PRINTER OF UDELL'S" 
With Illustrations by ARTHUR I. KELLER 
 
TO 
WILLIAM WILLIAMS, M.D.
CONTENTS 
I. THE HOME OF THE ALLY 
II. A REVELATION 
III. A GREAT DAY IN CORINTH 
IV. WHO ARE THEY? 
V. HOPE FARWELL'S MINISTRY 
VI. THE CALLING OF DAN MATTHEWS 
VII. FROM DEBORAH'S PORCH 
VIII. THE WORK OF THE ALLY 
IX. THE EDGE OF THE BATTLEFIELD 
X. A MATTER OF OPINION 
XI. REFLECTIONS 
XII. THE NURSE FORGETS 
XIII. DR. HARRY'S CASE 
XIV. THAT GIRL OF CONNER'S 
XV. THE MINISTER'S OPPORTUNITY 
XVI. DAN SEES THE OTHER SIDE 
XVII. THE TRAGEDY 
XVIII. TO SAVE A LIFE 
XIX. ON FISHING
XX. COMMON GROUND 
XXI. THE WARNING 
XXII. AS DR. HARRY SEES IT 
XXIII. A PARABLE 
XXIV. THE WAY OUT 
XXV. A LABORER AND HIS HIRE 
XXVI. THE WINTER PASSES 
XXVII. DEBORAH'S TROUBLE 
XXVIII. A FISHERMAN 
XXIX. A MATTER OF BUSINESS 
XXX. THE DAUGHTER OF THE CHURCH 
XXXI. THE REALITY 
XXXII. THE BARRIER 
XXXIII. HEART'S TRAGEDIES 
XXXIV. SACRIFICED 
XXXV. THE TIE THAT BINDS 
XXXVI. GOOD-BYE 
XXXVII. RESULTS 
XXXVIII. A HANDFUL OF GOLD 
XXXIX. THE VICTORY OF THE ALLY
XL. THE DOCTOR'S GLASSES 
XLI. THE FINAL WORD 
XLII. JUSTICE 
XLIII. THE HOME COMING 
XLIV. THE OLD TRAIL 
 
ILLUSTRATIONS 
Drawn by ARTHUR I. KELLER 
WITH THE DOCTOR THE TWO STRANGERS IN CORINTH 
TOOK DENNY TO HIS HOME 
"--YOU MUST BE IN LIFE A FISHERMAN" 
A GOOD-BYE CARESS 
DAN PLEADED WITH HIM 
 
The Calling of Dan Matthews 
CHAPTER I. 
THE HOME OF THE ALLY 
"And because the town of this story is what it is, there came to dwell in 
it a Spirit--a strange, mysterious power--playful, vicious, deadly; a 
Something to be at once feared and courted; to be denied--yet 
confessed in the denial; a deadly enemy, a welcome friend, an 
all-powerful Ally." 
This story began in the Ozark Mountains. It follows the trail that is
nobody knows how old. But mostly this story happened in Corinth, a 
town of the middle class in a Middle Western state. 
There is nothing peculiar about Corinth. The story might have 
happened just as well in any other place, for the only distinguishing 
feature about this town is its utter lack of any distinguishing feature 
whatever. In all the essential elements of its life, so far as this story 
goes, Corinth is exactly like every other village, town or city in the land. 
This, indeed, is why the story happened in this particular place. 
Years ago, when the railroad first climbed the backbone of the Ozarks, 
it found Corinth already located on the summit. Even before the war, 
this county-seat town was a place of no little importance, and many a 
good tale might be told of those exciting days when the woods were 
full of guerrillas and bushwhackers, and the village was raided first by 
one side, then by the other. Many a good tale is told, indeed; for the 
fathers and mothers of Corinth love to talk of the war times, and to 
point out in Old Town the bullet-marked buildings and the scenes of 
many thrilling events. 
But the sons and daughters of the passing generation, with their sons 
and daughters, like better to talk of the great things that are going to 
be--when the proposed shoe-factory comes, the talked-of mills are 
established, the dreamed-of electric line is built out from the    
    
		
	
	
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