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The Lost Phcebe – Theodore Dreiser (1871-1945)
Theodore Dreiser came from the Middle West. For some years a journalist, he wrote his first novel, Sister Carrie, out of his deep conviction of the bitterness and sorrow and stupidity of modern life. This was followed by other novels, but it is not until recently that Dreiser has found a large reading public. His short stories are part and parcel of the man’s work.

“What,” asks Sherwood Anderson, “has Dreiser given us? A fine growing and glowing tradition, a new sense of the value of our own lives, a new interest in the life about us, in offices, streets and houses.”

The Lost Phcebe is reprinted by permission of Constable & Co., publishers.
The Lost Phcebe
They lived together in a part of the country which was not so prosperous as it had once been, about three miles from one of those small towns that, instead of increasing in population, is steadily decreasing. The territory was not very thickly settled; perhaps a house every other mile or so, with large areas of corn- and wheat-land and fallow fields that at odd seasons had been sown to timothy and clover.

The Lost Phcebe – Their particular house was part log and part frame, the log portion being the old original home of Henry’s grandfather. The new portion, of now rain-beaten, time-worn slabs, through which the wind squeaked in the chinks at times, and which several overshadowing elms and a butternut-tree made picturesque and reminiscently pathetic, but a little damp, was erected by Henry when he was twenty-one and just married.

That was forty-eight years before. The furniture inside, like the house outside, was old and mildewy and reminiscent of an earlier day. You have seen the what-not of cherry wood, perhaps, with spiral legs and fluted top. It was there. The old-fashioned four poster bed, with its ball-like protuberances and deep curving incisions, was there also, a sadly alienated descendant of an early Jacobean ancestor.

The Lost Phcebe part 14

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Moonlight and shadows combined to give it a strange form and a stranger reality, this fluttering of bog-fire or dancing of wandering fireflies. Was it truly his lost Phoebe? By a circuitous route it...

The Lost Phcebe part 13

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That particular lull that comes in the systole-diastole of this earthly ball at two o`clock in the morning invariably aroused him, and though he might not go any farther he would sit up and...

The Lost Phcebe part 12

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Another thing that puzzled him greatly after a time and after many hundreds of inquiries was, when he no longer had any particular door- yard in view and no special inquiry to make, which...

The Lost Phcebe part 11

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For several years thereafter then he was an odd figure in the sun anti rain, on dusty roads and muddy ones, encountered occasionally in strange and unexpected places, pursuing his endless search. Under nourishment,...

The Lost Phcebe part 10

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She bustled about, meditating on the uncertainties of life, while old Reifsneider thrummed on the rim of his hat with his pale fingers and later ate abstractedly of what she offered. His mind was...

The Lost Phcebe part 9

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“Well, I`ll be switched!” he said aloud to himself. “He`s clean out`n his head. That poor old feller`s been livin` down there till he`s gone outen his mind. I`ll have to notify the authorities.”...

The Lost Phcebe part 8

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“I guess I could find yuh ag`in,” he had always said. But her cackling threat had always been:“Yuh`ll not find me if I ever leave yuh. I guess I kin git some place where...

The Lost Phcebe part 7

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It was one of those little wisps of mist, one of those faint exhalations of the earth that rise in a cool night after a warm day, and flicker like small white cypresses of...

The Lost Phcebe part 6

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By twelve o`clock of this particular night he was asleep, however, and by two had waked again. The moon by this time had shifted to a position on the western side of the house,...

The Lost Phcebe part 5

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I`ll get along now well enough. Yuh just let me be.” And after many pleadings and proffers of advice, with supplies of coffee and bacon and baked bread duly offered and accepted, he was...

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Ibn Battuta part 62

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