The Gay Cockade

Temple Bailey
The Gay Cockade

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Title: The Gay Cockade
Author: Temple Bailey
Illustrator: C. E. Chambers
Release Date: August 4, 2005 [EBook #16433]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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COCKADE ***

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[Illustration: AND HERE, DAY AFTER DAY, HE SAT ALONE]

THE GAY COCKADE
BY TEMPLE BAILEY
AUTHOR OF THE TRUMPETER SWAN, THE TIN SOLDIER, Etc.
FRONTISPIECE BY C.E. CHAMBERS
[Illustration]
GROSSET & DUNLAP PUBLISHERS NEW YORK Made in the
United States of America

COPYRIGHT 1921 BY THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY
[Illustration]
Manufacturing Plant Camden, N.J.
Made in U.S.A.
The Gay Cockade

For permission to reprint some of the stories in this volume, the author
is indebted to the courtesy of the editors of Harper's Magazine,
Scribner's Magazine, Collier's Magazine, Ladies' Home Journal,
Saturday Evening Post, Good Housekeeping, and Harper's Bazar.

Contents
THE GAY COCKADE 7
THE HIDDEN LAND 33
WHITE BIRCHES 84

THE EMPEROR'S GHOST 118
THE RED CANDLE 132
RETURNED GOODS 149
BURNED TOAST 165
PETRONELLA 187
THE CANOPY BED 205
SANDWICH JANE 223
LADY CRUSOE 272
A REBELLIOUS GRANDMOTHER 310
WAIT--FOR PRINCE CHARMING 327
BEGGARS ON HORSEBACK 351

THE GAY COCKADE

THE GAY COCKADE
From the moment that Jimmie Harding came into the office, he created
an atmosphere. We were a tired lot. Most of us had been in the
government service for years, and had been ground fine in the mills of
departmental monotony.
But Jimmie was young, and he wore his youth like a gay cockade. He
flaunted it in our faces, and because we were so tired of our dull and
desiccated selves, we borrowed of him, remorselessly, color and
brightness until, gradually, in the light of his reflected glory, we
seemed a little younger, a little less tired, a little less petrified.

In his gay and gallant youth there was, however, a quality which
partook of earlier times. He should, we felt, have worn a feather in his
cap--and a cloak instead of his Norfolk coat. He walked with a little
swagger, and stood with his hand on his hip, as if his palm pressed the
hilt of his sword. If he ever fell in love, we told one another, he would,
without a doubt, sing serenades and apostrophize the moon.
He did fall in love before he had been with us a year. His love-affair
was a romance for the whole office. He came among us every morning
glorified; he left us in the afternoon as a knight enters upon a quest.
He told us about the girl. We pictured her perfectly before we saw her,
as a little thing, with a mop of curled brown hair; an oval face,
pearl-tinted; wide, blue eyes. He dwelt on all her small perfections--the
brows that swept across her forehead in a thin black line, the
transparency of her slender hands, the straight set of her head on her
shoulders, the slight halt in her speech like that of an enchanting child.
Yet she was not in the least a child. "She holds me up to my best, Miss
Standish," Jimmie told me; "she says I can write."
We knew that Jimmie had written a few things, gay little poems that he
showed us now and then in the magazines. But we had not taken them
at all seriously. Indeed, Jimmie had not taken them seriously himself.
But now he took them seriously. "Elise says that I can do great things.
That I must get out of the Department."
To the rest of us, getting out of the government service would have
seemed a mad adventure. None of us would have had the courage to
consider it. But it seemed a natural thing that Jimmie should fare forth
on the broad highway--a modern D'Artagnan, a youthful Quixote, an
Alan Breck--!
We hated to have him leave. But he had consolation. "Of course you'll
come and see us. We're going back to my old house in Albemarle. It's a
rotten shack, but Elise says it will be a corking place for me to write.
And you'll all come down for week-ends."

We felt, I am sure, that it was good of him to ask us, but none of us
expected that we should ever go. We had a premonition that Elise
wouldn't want the deadwood of Jimmie's former Division. I know that
for myself, I was content
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