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The Song of the Lark

Уилла Кэсер (Willa Cather)

The Project Gutenberg EBook of Song of the Lark, by Willa Cather

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Title: Song of the Lark

Author: Willa Cather

Release Date: June 25, 2008 [EBook #44]
Last Updated: January 8, 2013

Language: English







Produced by Judith Boss, Marvin Peterson and David Widger







SONG OF THE LARK

By Willa Cather



(1915 edition)





CONTENTS


PART I. FRIENDS OF CHILDHOOD
I    II    III      IV    V    VI    VII    VIII    IX    X    XI    XII
XIII    XIV    XV    XVI    XVII    XVIII    XIX    XX   

PART II. THE SONG OF THE LARK
I    II    III    IV    V    VI    VII    VIII    IX    X    XI   

PART III. STUPID FACES
I    II    III    IV    V    VI   

PART IV. THE ANCIENT PEOPLE
I    II    III    IV    V    VI    VII    VIII   

PART V. DR. ARCHIE'S VENTURE
I    II    III    IV    V   

PART VI. KRONBORG
I    II    III    IV    V    VI    VII    VIII    IX    X    XI   

EPILOGUE





PART I. FRIENDS OF CHILDHOOD





I

Dr. Howard Archie had just come up from a game of pool with the Jewish clothier and two traveling men who happened to be staying overnight in Moonstone. His offices were in the Duke Block, over the drug store. Larry, the doctor's man, had lit the overhead light in the waiting-room and the double student's lamp on the desk in the study. The isinglass sides of the hard-coal burner were aglow, and the air in the study was so hot that as he came in the doctor opened the door into his little operating-room, where there was no stove. The waiting room was carpeted and stiffly furnished, something like a country parlor. The study had worn, unpainted floors, but there was a look of winter comfort about it. The doctor's flat-top desk was large and well made; the papers were in orderly piles, under glass weights. Behind the stove a wide bookcase, with double glass doors, reached from the floor to the ceiling. It was filled with medical books of every thickness and color. On the top shelf stood a long row of thirty or forty volumes, bound all alike in dark mottled board covers, with imitation leather backs.

As the doctor in New England villages is proverbially old, so the doctor in small Colorado towns twenty-five years ago was generally young. Dr. Archie was barely thirty. He was tall, with massive shoulders which he held stiffly, and a large, well-shaped head. He was a distinguished-looking man, for that part of the world, at least.

There was something individual in the way in which his reddish-brown hair, parted cleanly at the side, bushed over his high forehead. His nose was straight and thick, and his eyes were intelligent. He wore a curly, reddish mustache and an imperial, cut trimly, which made him look a little like the pictures of Napoleon III. His hands were large and well kept, but ruggedly formed, and the backs were shaded with crinkly reddish hair. He wore a blue suit of woolly, wide-waled serge; the traveling men had known at a glance that it was made by a Denver tailor. The doctor was always well dressed.