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Roy Glashan's Library Non sibi sed omnibus Go to Home Page This work is out of copyright in countries with a copyright period of 70 years or less, after the year of the author's death. If it is under copyright in your country of residence, do not download or redistribute this file. Original content added by RGL e. This is a collection of twenty short stories, mostly designed, one might say, to show that revenge is not, as some would maintain, an extinct passion.
It has, on the contrary, a very lively existence, if Mr. Barr's narrative and characters are true to nature. They have certainly a very natural look. The author shows, as he has shown in earlier books, that he wields a very vigorous and graphic pen. A reader naturally gets a little weary of a monotony of horrors.
Occasionally, therefore, we have a pleasant relief in something that is not tragic. Of the same kind is "The Exposure of Lord Stansford.
IN some natures there are no half-tones; nothing but raw primary colours. John Bodman was a man who was always at one extreme or the other. This probably would have mattered little had he not married a wife whose nature was an exact duplicate of his own. Doubtless there exists in this world precisely the right woman for any given man to marry and vice versa ; but when you consider that a human being has the opportunity of being acquainted with only a few hundred people, and out of the few hundred that there are but a dozen or less whom he knows intimately, and out of the dozen, one or two friends at most, it will easily be seen, when we remember the number of millions who inhabit this world, that probably, since the earth was created, the right man has never yet met the right woman.
The mathematical chances are all against such a meeting, and this is the reason that divorce courts exist. Marriage at best is but a compromise, and if two people happen to be united who are of an uncompromising nature there is trouble. In the lives of these two young people there was no middle distance. The result was bound to be either love or hate, and in the case of Mr. Bodman it was hate of the most bitter and arrogant kind.