The Real Adventure. Henry Kitchell Webster
THE LENGTH OF A THOUSAND YARDS
THE EVENING AND THE MORNING WERE THE FIRST DAY
BOOK ONE
The Great Illusion
CHAPTER I
A POINT OF DEPARTURE
"Indeed," continued the professor, glancing demurely down at his notes, "if one were the editor of a column of—er advice to young girls, such as I believe is to be found, along with the household hints and the dress patterns, on the ladies' page of most of our newspapers—if one were the editor of such a column, he might crystallize the remarks I have been making this morning into a warning—never marry a man with a passion for principles."
It drew a laugh, of course. Professorial jokes never miss fire. But the girl didn't laugh. She came to with a start—she had been staring out the window—and wrote, apparently, the fool thing down in her note-book. It was the only note she had made in