• THE PROMISE James B. Hendryx

    From Joy Beeson@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 3 19:11:18 2023
    I was cleaning up a back-up folder,
    opened /23730-h.htm to find out what it was,
    and it turned out to be the Gutenberg edition of

    THE PROMISE

    A Tale of the Great Northwest
    By
    JAMES B. HENDRYX

    1915

    I was surprised to discover that I'm as fond of northerns as I ever
    was, and I'm several chapters in.

    The plot is composed entirely of improbable co-incidences -- which was
    a plus at the time of writing. Like the detailed descriptions of
    activities related to the first step in reproduction that "spice up"
    today's fiction, the more co-incidences you can shoehorn into a story,
    the better.

    Unlike the co-incidences in _Adele or The Shipwrecked Girl_ by Mrs. S.
    B. C. Samuels 1870 (Example: the missing girl and the brother who is
    searching for her take the same train, but don't happen to see one
    another), these co-incidences arise naturally out of the plot, and
    many of them are foreshadowed.



    11:41 PM 11/27/2023

    In chapter XXXIII, we finally find out what the title means.


    CHAPTER XLVI

    The elderly CEOs can snowshoe out because they need to get back to
    their jobs, but their wives are trapped in camp for the whole winter?

    Well, it's partly because of the plot: to resolve the romance, Evelyn
    must stay the winter, and an unmarried girl can't stay in a lumber
    camp without chaperones.

    And Jeanne, though delicate and beautiful, worked as hard as the men
    when they were hiding the birdseye, and proved to be smarter than Bill
    when it came to keeping it hidden.



    21:52:11 Tuesday, 28 November 2023

    I was disappointed that Evelyn didn't offer to help the overburdened
    camp cook instead of swanning about the camp amusing herself all
    winter. And Charlie could learn quite a lot by being apprenticed to
    as experienced a man as the cook is. Not to mention that having
    something useful to do might take his mind off necessitating dramatic
    rescues.

    At least part of Evelyn's amusement consisted of going out into the
    woods with a rifle and bringing back birds and small game, which would
    supply tasty appetisers for the men.

    The story is a fantasy, in that looking into a man's eyes will tell
    you exactly what sort of man he is, in particular eyes label the
    superhuman *man*.

    And character is inherited; our protagonist is the man who cannot die
    because his uncle was a war hero.

    There aren't a lot of chapters left; the promise laid on the
    mantlepiece in chapter XXXIII must be discharged soon.

    I ran a search for bakneesh; *all* of the hits were quotes from
    Curwood Novels. (I vaguely recall liking Curwood a lot when I was a
    teenager and could read a book a day.) The quotes did inform me that
    it's a red vine with blue flowers.

    People who enjoy SF where the author throws you into his created world
    without any time-travelling guide should read some nineteenth-century
    popular literature.



    21:26:41 Wednesday, 29 November 2023

    Aforementioned dramatic rescue depended on a co-incidence -- but there
    was reason to think the child might be where Bill looked for him.



    6:04 PM 12/3/2023 Sunday, 3 December 2023

    Jeanne should have shouted "Moncrossen shot my brother and is starving
    my mother!"; indeed, she *would* have shouted the summary of her
    troubles. But that would have prevented the dramatic scene in which
    she reveals the truth to Evelyn.

    Co-incidence wise, I think that the hilt would have appeared at the
    precise moment that Bill and Evelyn have been pronounced superman and
    wife in any novel of any century.

    I was disappointed that Jeanne disappeared into the woods, without any resolution of her story. I believe that this was romantic at the
    time.

    I don't think that someone shot square in the middle, who passed out
    only a few seconds after being shot, would be able to sleep it off
    without modern medical care.

    It seems to be a law of the adventure-story world that one recovers
    completely and without any after-effects other than picturesque scars
    from any injury that isn't instantly fatal.

    --
    Joy Beeson
    joy beeson at centurylink dot net
    http://wlweather.net/PAGEJOY/

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)