Uncle Max 
 
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Title: Uncle Max 
Author: Rosa Nouchette Carey 
 
Release Date: June 17, 2005 [eBook #16080] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK UNCLE 
MAX*** 
E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, Mary Meehan, and the Project 
Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team 
(http://www.pgdp.net) 
 
UNCLE MAX 
by 
ROSA NOUCHETTE CAREY 
Author of 'Nellie's Memories,' 'Wee Wifie,' 'Robert Ord's Atonement,' 
etc. 
1894 
 
CONTENTS 
I. Out of the Mist 
II. Behind the Bars 
III. Cinderella
IV. Uncle Max Breaks The Ice 
V. 'When The Cat Is Away' 
VI. The White Cottage 
VII. Giles Hamilton, Esq 
VIII. New Brooms Sweep Clean 
IX. The Flag of Truce 
X. A Difficult Patient 
XI. One of God's Heroines 
XII. A Missed Vocation 
XIII. Lady Betty 
XIV. Lady Betty Leaves Her Muff 
XV. Up At Gladwyn 
XVI. Gladys 
XVII. 'Why Not Trust Me, Max?' 
XVIII. Miss Hamilton's Little Scholar 
XIX. The Picture In Gladys's Room 
XX. Eric 
XXI. 'I Ran Away, Then!' 
XXII. 'They Have Blackened His Memory Falsely' 
XXIII. The Mystery at Gladwyn 
XXIV. 'Weeping may endure for a Night' 
XXV. 'There is no one like Donald' 
XXVI. I hear about Captain Hamilton 
XXVII. Max opens his Heart 
XXVIII. Crossing the River 
XXIX. Miss Darrell has a Headache 
XXX. With Timbrels and Dances 
XXXI. Wedding-Chimes 
XXXII. A Fiery Ordeal 
XXXIII. Jack Poynter 
XXXIV. I communicate with Joe Muggins 
XXXV. Nightingales and Roses 
XXXVI. Breakers Ahead 
XXXVII. 'I claim that Promise, Ursula' 
XXXVIII. In the Turret-Room 
XXXIX. Whitefoot is saddled 
XL. The Talk in the Gloaming
XLI. 'At five o'clock in the Morning' 
XLII. Down the Pemberley Road 
XLIII. 'Conspiracy Corner' 
XLIV. Leah's Confession 
XLV. 'This Home is yours no longer' 
XLVI. Nap barks in the Stable-yard 
XLVII. At last, Ursula, at last!' 
XLVIII. 'What o' the Way to the End?' 
 
CHAPTER I 
OUT OF THE MIST 
It appears to me, looking back over a past experience, that certain days 
in one's life stand out prominently as landmarks, when we arrive at 
some finger-post pointing out the road that we should follow. 
We come out of some deep, rutty lane, where the hedgerows obscure 
the prospect, and where the footsteps of some unknown passenger have 
left tracks in the moist red clay. The confused tracery of green leaves 
overhead seems to weave fanciful patterns against the dim blue of the 
sky; the very air is low-pitched and oppressive. All at once we find 
ourselves in an open space; the free winds of heaven are blowing over 
us; there are four roads meeting; the finger-post points silently, 'This 
way to such a place'; we can take our choice, counting the mile-stones 
rather wearily as we pass them. The road may be a little tedious, the 
stones may hurt our feet; but if it be the right road it will bring us to our 
destination. 
In looking back it always seems to me as though I came to a fresh 
landmark in my experience that November afternoon when I saw Uncle 
Max standing in the twilight, waiting for me. 
There had been the waste of a great trouble in my young life,--sorrow, 
confusion, then utter chaos. I had struggled on somehow after my twin 
brother's death, trying to fight against despair with all my youthful 
vitality; creating new duties for myself, throwing out fresh feelers
everywhere; now and then crying out in my undisciplined way that the 
task was too hard for me; that I loathed my life; that it was impossible 
to live any longer without love and appreciation and sympathy; that so 
uncongenial an atmosphere could be no home to me; that the world was 
an utter negation and a mockery. 
That was before I went to the hospital, at the time when my trouble was 
fresh and I was breaking my heart with the longing to see Charlie's face 
again. Most people who have lived long in the world, and have parted 
with their beloved, know what that sort of hopeless ache means. 
My work was over at the hospital, and I had come home again,--to rest, 
so they said, but in reality to work out plans for my future life, in a sort 
of sullen silence, that seemed to shut me out from all sympathy. 
It had wrapped me in a sort of mantle of reserve all the afternoon, 
during which I had been driving with Aunt Philippa and Sara. The air 
would do me good. I was moped, hipped, with all that dreary hospital 
work,    
    
		
	
	
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