More "Short Sixes"

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, New Age, History, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book More "Short Sixes" by Henry Cuyler Bunner, Library of Alexandria
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Henry Cuyler Bunner ISBN: 9781465615084
Publisher: Library of Alexandria Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Henry Cuyler Bunner
ISBN: 9781465615084
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English
Mr. Brimmington, when he came into his money at the age of forty-five, fixed on Pike County, Pennsylvania, as a mountainous country of good report. A postal-guide informed him that Mr. Skinner was the postmaster of Bethel Corners; so, Mr. Brimmington wrote to Mr. Skinner. The correspondence between Mr. Brimmington and Mr. Skinner was long enough and full enough to have settled a treaty between two nations. It ended by a discovery of a house lonely enough and aged enough to fill the bill. Several hundred dollars’ worth of repairs were needed to make it habitable, and Mr. Skinner was employed to make them. Toward the close of a cold November day, Mr. Brimmington saw his purchase for the first time. In spite of his disappointment, he had to admit, as he walked around the place in the early twilight, that it was just what he had bargained for. The situation, the dimensions, the exposure, were all exactly what had been stipulated. About its age there could be no question. Internally, its irregularity—indeed, its utter failure to conform to any known rules of domestic architecture—surpassed Mr. Brimmington’s wildest expectations. It had stairs eighteen inches wide; it had rooms of strange shapes and sizes; it had strange, shallow cupboards in strange places; it had no hallways; its windows were of odd design, and whoso wanted variety in floors could find it there. And along the main wall of Mr. Brimmington’s study there ran a structure some three feet and a half high and nearly as deep, which Mr. Skinner confidently assured him was used in old times as a wall-bench or a dresser, indifferently. “You might think,” said Mr. Skinner, “that all that space inside there was jest wasted; but it ain’t so. Them seats is jest filled up inside with braces so’s that you can set on them good and solid.” And then Mr. Skinner proudly called attention to the two coats of gray paint spread over the entire side of the house, walls, ceilings and woodwork, blending the original portions and the Skinner restorations in one harmonious, homogenous whole.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Mr. Brimmington, when he came into his money at the age of forty-five, fixed on Pike County, Pennsylvania, as a mountainous country of good report. A postal-guide informed him that Mr. Skinner was the postmaster of Bethel Corners; so, Mr. Brimmington wrote to Mr. Skinner. The correspondence between Mr. Brimmington and Mr. Skinner was long enough and full enough to have settled a treaty between two nations. It ended by a discovery of a house lonely enough and aged enough to fill the bill. Several hundred dollars’ worth of repairs were needed to make it habitable, and Mr. Skinner was employed to make them. Toward the close of a cold November day, Mr. Brimmington saw his purchase for the first time. In spite of his disappointment, he had to admit, as he walked around the place in the early twilight, that it was just what he had bargained for. The situation, the dimensions, the exposure, were all exactly what had been stipulated. About its age there could be no question. Internally, its irregularity—indeed, its utter failure to conform to any known rules of domestic architecture—surpassed Mr. Brimmington’s wildest expectations. It had stairs eighteen inches wide; it had rooms of strange shapes and sizes; it had strange, shallow cupboards in strange places; it had no hallways; its windows were of odd design, and whoso wanted variety in floors could find it there. And along the main wall of Mr. Brimmington’s study there ran a structure some three feet and a half high and nearly as deep, which Mr. Skinner confidently assured him was used in old times as a wall-bench or a dresser, indifferently. “You might think,” said Mr. Skinner, “that all that space inside there was jest wasted; but it ain’t so. Them seats is jest filled up inside with braces so’s that you can set on them good and solid.” And then Mr. Skinner proudly called attention to the two coats of gray paint spread over the entire side of the house, walls, ceilings and woodwork, blending the original portions and the Skinner restorations in one harmonious, homogenous whole.

More books from Library of Alexandria

Cover of the book Guide for the Perplexed by Henry Cuyler Bunner
Cover of the book My Day: Reminiscences of a Long Life by Henry Cuyler Bunner
Cover of the book Damaged Goods; The Great Play "Les Avaries" by Henry Cuyler Bunner
Cover of the book Friendship Village Love Stories by Henry Cuyler Bunner
Cover of the book Actas Capitulares Desde El 21 Hasta El 25 De Mayo De 1810 en Buenos Aires by Henry Cuyler Bunner
Cover of the book The Expositor's Bible: The Acts of the Apostles by Henry Cuyler Bunner
Cover of the book The Squire of Sandal-Side: A Pastoral Romance by Henry Cuyler Bunner
Cover of the book Creatures That Once Were Men by Henry Cuyler Bunner
Cover of the book What Women Might do with the Ballot: The Abolition of the White Slave Traffic by Henry Cuyler Bunner
Cover of the book The Poems of Ossian by Henry Cuyler Bunner
Cover of the book A Captain in The Ranks: A Romance of Affairs by Henry Cuyler Bunner
Cover of the book Sea-Hounds by Henry Cuyler Bunner
Cover of the book A Half Century of Conflict: France and England in North America (Complete) by Henry Cuyler Bunner
Cover of the book Charles Lamb by Henry Cuyler Bunner
Cover of the book Scenes and Characters of the Middle Ages by Henry Cuyler Bunner
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy