Opening a Chestnut Burr

Walter Gregory is a gentleman whose health is broken down by the stress of Wall Street and the consequences of his fast lifestyle. Disillusioned in love and betrayed in friendship, he returns to visit his childhood home in the country. Who is this young woman Annie Walton he finds there? Can she truly be as good as she seems? He determines to test her character to the utmost. Deceitful villains, fire, death, and nautical disasters all try our hero and heroine. She has shown him the saving faith that gives life. Can he rescue her from a false fiancé who would ruin hers?

By : Edward P. Roe (1838 - 1888)

00 - Preface



01 - A Hero, But Not Heroic



02 - Opening A Chestnut Burr



03 - Morbid Brooding



04 - How Miss Walton Managed People



05 - Was It An Accident?



06 - Unexpected Chestnut Burrs



07 - A Conspiracy



08 - Witchcraft



09 - Miss Walton Recommends A Hobby



10 - A Plot Against Miss Walton



11 - A Drinking Song At A Prayer Meeting



12 - Foiled In One Direction



13 - Interpreting Chestnut Burrs



14 - A Well-Meanin' Man



15 - Miss Walton's Dream



16 - An Accident In The Mountains



17 - Promise Or Die



18 - In The Depths



19 - Miss Walton Made Of Different Clay From Others



20 - Miss Walton Made Of Ordinary Clay



21 - Passion And Penitence



22 - Not A Heroine, But A Woman



23 - Gregory's Final Conclusion In Regard To Miss Walton



24 - The Worm-Infested Chestnut - Gregory Tells The Worst



25 - The Old Home In Danger - Gregory Retrieves Himself



26 - Changes In Gregory



27 - Pleading For Life And Love



28 - What A Lover Could Do



29 - Deepening Shadows



30 - Kept From The Evil



31 - Live! Live! - Annie's Appeal



32 - At Sea - A Mysterious Passenger



33 - Collision At Sea - What A Christian Could Do



34 - Unmasked



35 - A Chestnut Burr And A Home

In sending this, my fourth venture, out upon the uncertain waters of public opinion, I shall say but few words of preface. In the past I have received considerable well-deserved criticism from the gentlemen of the caustic pen, but so far from having any hard feeling toward them, I have rather wondered that they found so much to say that was favorable. How they will judge this simple October story (if they think it worth while to judge it at all) I leave to the future, and turn to those for whom the book was really written.

In fancy I see them around the glowing hearth in quiet homes, such as I have tried to describe in the following pages, and hope that this new-comer will be welcomed for the sake of those that preceded it. Possibly it may make friends of its own.

From widely separated parts of the country, and from almost every class, I have received many and cordial assurances that my former books were sources not only of pleasure, but also of help and benefit, and I am deeply grateful for the privilege of unobtrusively entering so many households, and saying words on that subject which is inseparable from happiness in both worlds.

I think the purpose of the book will become apparent to the reader. The incidents and characters are mainly imaginary.

Observation has shown me that there are many in the world, like my hero, whose condition can be illustrated by the following lines:

    Were some great ship all out of stores,

      When half-way o'er the sea,

    Fit emblem of too many lives,

      Such vessel doomed would be.

Must there not be something fatally wrong in that scheme of life which finds an heir of eternity weary, listless, discouraged, while yet in the dawning of existence? It is not in perishing things, merely, to give back the lost zest. But a glad zest and hopefulness might be inspired even in the most jaded and ennui-cursed, were there in our homes such simple, truthful natures as that of my heroine; and in the sphere of quiet homes—not elsewhere—I believe that woman can best rule and save the world.

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