The Impending Sword Author:Edmund Hodgson Yates Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: CHAPTER VI. HARKING-BACK. The evening papers had full details of the accident, which were eagerly discussed and speculated upon; Trenton Warren was a man o... more »f such mark in New York society, that the news of his death created more than an average amount of interest. Not that the news that he was dead was received without question; Warren was considered far too smart a man to allow himself to be gotten rid of in any unexpected manner; and while one set of his friends maintained that some swindler had endeavoured with dishonest intent to personate the great speculator, others averred that it was merely a case of accidental though extraordinary resemblance; while the third party, consisting ofthose who had found themselves mixed up in opposition schemes, believed that Warren was really dead, and that Providence had thus rid them of a dangerous enemy. The next morning, Bryan Duval, attired in the gorgeous dressing-gown, Avas sipping his coffee, when Thornton Carey, with somewhat of a worn look on his usually bright face, entered the room. ' You will think me an unconscionable bore,' he said, 'but I am so haunted by this painful subject that I can think of nothing else, and I have only you to turn to for assistance and advice.' 'My dear sir,' replied Bryan Duval, looking up at him from under his very effective eyebrows, 'you cannot do me a greater favour than to interest me in the great drama of life; a study which has for me the strongest and purest charm; a study the results of which I endeavour to make manifest in those works which the public on both sides of the Atlantic is pleased to approve of.Have you any farther news—you look pale and anxious, my dear sir, as though you had been worried by some farther complication?' ' I have no farther news, and there are no far...« less