The Gay Adventure

by Richard Bird

Romance Free eBook Public domain

The Gay Adventure by Richard Bird is a public-domain romance work, free to read online in full. One of Project Gutenberg's most-downloaded titles. A full text excerpt is included below, with EPUB and Kindle editions.

As an Amazon Associate, MyBookPDF earns from qualifying purchases. The Gay Adventure is free to read and download here; the Amazon (physical copy) and Audible (free-trial audiobook) links are optional.

๐Ÿ“ฅ Download free (PDF, EPUB, Kindle) โ€” Project Gutenberg

Free, public domain, no registration.

More: The Gay Adventure summary ยท books like The Gay Adventure ยท more by Richard Bird ยท browse the library.

Read the opening of The Gay Adventure

Produced by David Clarke, Mary Meehan and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

_My book the Critics may abhor--_ _The Public, too. But, all the same,_ _This Page at least is Golden, for_ _It bears the imprint of your name._

Mr. Lionel Mortimer was a young gentleman of few intentions and no private means. Good-humored, by no means ill-looking, and with engaging manners, he was the type of man of whom one would have prophesied great things. His natural gaiety and address were more than enough to carry him over the early stages of acquaintanceship, but subsequent meetings were doomed to end in disillusion. His cheerful outlook on life would be as much to your taste as ever; but the want of a definite aim and an obvious inability to convert his talents into cash made you shake your head doubtfully. A charming fellow, of course, but unpractical ... the kind of man who is popular with all but match-making mothers.

He lived in two rooms in an obscure street off the Strand, and at the time when we make his acquaintance he has just finished a meal that stamps the lower middle classes and the impecunious--to wit, high tea. For the benefit of gastronomers it may be stated that it included herrings, a loaf of bread, some butter of repellent aspect, and strawberry jam. Lionel has lighted his pipe and seated himself at the window to enjoy as much of a June evening as can be enjoyable in a London back street. He has not emitted three puffs of smoke before a tap at the door heralds the entrance of his landlady.

Mrs. Barker, a woman of commanding presence and dressed in rusty black, came into the room. She did not utter a word, not even the conventional remark that it was a fine night or that the evenings would soon begin to draw in now. With a funereal but businesslike demeanor she began to remove the debris of the meal, at intervals giving vent to a rasping cough or a malignant sniff. Of her presence Lionel seemed oblivious, for he continued sitting with his back to the door, gazing with apparent interest into the street. This, perhaps, was curious, for the street was but a lane with little traffic and no features worthy of note. Nor was the building opposite calculated to inspire the most sedulous observer, being merely the blank wall of a warehouse. Not a single window relieved the monotony, usually so painful to the artist or the adventurer. And yet Lionel puffed at his pipe, gazing silently in front of him as if at a masterpiece by Whistler.

When the landlady had transferred the tea-things to a tray, shaken the crumbs from the table-cloth into the empty grate and folded it, she nerved herself for a direct attack. Placing her arms akimbo--an attitude usually denoting truculent defiance or a pleasurable sense of injustice--she pronounced her lodger's name. Lionel started, as if made aware of her presence for the first time. He took his pipe from his mouth and turned with a pleasant smile.

Continue reading The Gay Adventure free โ†’