238
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23 revisions | Nicole Push at Aug 04, 2020 11:34 AM | |
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238A BOHEMIAN IN NEBRASKA A Peep at a Home Which Is a Slice Out of Bohemia. A Wife and a Mother Who Finds Time to Turn out Poems, Humor, and Fiction. It's not very often that a woman is a bohemian --a genuine bohemian. And it must be confessed that Nebraska is not the place where one would go to look for a woman of that kind, and certainly he would not journey all day along the Burlington road, over the prairie, so the tiny town of [liubbeli?] - the quietest place, with prohibition politics- to find such a woman. Yet, there is one there. Perhaps some night you will get in that little town, lying down among its hills, about midnight. The place will be black as Erebus. Everyone It is lined with books. It has a typewriter in it, and a writing desk, and a jolly big stove, and some chairs and sofas designed for loafing. And it has pictures [noist?] all of the sort you would expect to find out on the prairie - little sketches of clever [?], old engravings, souvenirs of occasions, mementoes of famous folks. There never was a more informal room - never It's a room where you any good things if it is in you to do it There's something in the atmosphere of the place that brings the humor out of you. And when you get in one of those comfortable chairs with a glass of beer in your hand, and no particular care whether it is time to go to bed or not, and the Chicago, New York, and Omaha papers at your elbow, and new books and magazines yet to be cut lying near, and the memory of a dinner that was very much more than good - that was daring and scientific in its way - then suddenly, bohemia has come to you, and the Nebraska prairie with its hard working, quiet living people seem very far away. The big world of letters is around you, the world of Puck has come to you. You laugh with all those who have every, by laughing, made themselves famous. You feel as if the spirits of all those who were cleverest that ever you have known, had come out with you over the wind racked plains, and were there, drinking beer and laughing, too. It's the mistress of the place that brings all this about. She is a woman not unknown in this state to those who keep track of such small literature as Nebraska can turn out. Her name is Kate McPhelim [Cleary?], and she is an Irish woman, as her name indicates - an Irish gentlewoman, as her name may or not indicate. I think she was born somewhere in Canada. But she has for a mother an elegant, most carefully reared Irishwoman of the old school, whose manners are an education in courtesy, but who has, within, something of the reckless humor in her, which gives her daughter her individuality. Mrs. Cleary's father was a man who held many positions of high trust in New Brunswick, and who was a great dealer in timber, in the days when that meant ship owning, and pioneering courage, and commercial adventure, and all that sort of thing, and he had a reputation for brilliancy and wit. There was plenty of money in those days, and a very formal way of living, and Kate went to the best convent schools, and has studied French and embroidery, and never knew she was going to turn out a bohemian. Later when her father died, her mother took her over to Ireland, to relatives there, and she lived in places where the traditions of her family would hardly let her speak to another child in the neighborhood. It is hinted, however, that about this time Kate began to slip out to the village lane to play with the baker's daughter and that, at times, she even wrote rhymes, and did other things which showed the beginning of that charming disregard for consequences which have made her what she is. Fortunes have a sad way of dwindling when they get in lawyers' hands, and Mrs. [dePhelim?] had to come back from Ireland. She took her two sons out of college, and settled in Philadelphia | 238A BOHEMIAN IN NEBRASKA A Peep at a Home Which Is a Slice Out of Bohemia. A Wife and a Mother Who Finds Time to Turn out Poems, Humor, and Fiction. It's not very often that a woman is a bohemian - a genuine bohemian. And it must be confessed that Nebraska is not the place where one would go to look for a woman of that kind, and certainly he would not journey all day along the Burlington road, over the prairie, so the tiny town of [liubbeli?] - the quietest place, with prohibition politics- to find such a woman. Yet, there is one there. Perhaps some night you will get in that little town, lying down among its hills, about midnight. The place will be black as [?] Everyone It is lined with books. It has a typewriter in it, and a writing desk, and a jolly big stove, and some chairs and sofas designed for loafing. And it has pictures [noist?] all of the sort you would expect to find out on the prairie - little sketches of clever [?], old engravings, souvenirs of occasions, mementoes of famous folks. There never was a more informal room - never It's a room where you any good things if it is in you to do it There's something in the atmosphere of the place that brings the hmor out of you. And when you get in one of those comfortable chairs with a glass of beer in your hand, and no particular care whether it is time to go to bed or not, and the Chicago, New York, and Omaha papers at your elbow, and new books and magazines yet to be cut lying near, and the memory of a dineer that was very much more than good - that was daring and scientific in its way - then suddenly, bohemia has come to you, and the Nebraska prarie with its hard working, quiet living people seem very far away. The big world of letters is around you, the world of Puck has come to you. You laugh with all those who have every, by laughing, made themselves famous. You feel as if the spirits of all those who were cleverest that ever you have known, had come out with you over the windracked plains, and were there, drinking beer and laughing, too. It's the mistress of the place that brings all this about. She is a woman not unknown in this state to those who keep track of such small literature as Nebraska can turn out. Her name is Kate McPhelim [Cleary?], and she is an irish woman, as her name idicates - an Irish gentlewoman, as her name may or not indicate. I think she was born somewhere in Canada. But she has for a mother an elegant, most carefuly reared Irishwoman of the old school, whose manners are an education in courtesy, but who has, within, something of the reckless humor in her, which gives her daughter her individuality. Mrs. Cleary's father was a man who held many positions of high trust in New Brunswick, and who was a great dealer in timber, in the days when that meant ship owning, and pioneering courage, and commercial adventure, and all that sort of thing, and he had a reputation for brilliancy and wit. There was plenty of money in those days, and a very formal way of living, and Kate went to the best convent schools, and has studied French and embroidery, and never knew she was going to turn out a bohemian. Later when her father died, her mother tookher over to Ireland, to relatives there, and she lived in places where the traditions of her family would hardly let her speak to anohter child in the neighborhood. It is hinted, however, that about this time Kate began to slip out to the village lane to play with the baker's daughter and that, at times, she even wrote rhymes, and did other things which showed the beginning of that charming disregard for consequences which have made her what she is. |
