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قراءة كتاب The Panchronicon
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THE PANCHRONICON
THE
PANCHRONICON
BY
HAROLD STEELE MACKAYE
NEW YORK
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
1904
Copyright, 1904, by
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
Published, April, 1904

CONTENTS
CHAPTER | PAGE | |
I. | The Theory of Copernicus Droop | 1 |
II. | A Visit to the Panchronicon | 23 |
III. | A Nocturnal Evasion | 38 |
IV. | A Change of Plan | 58 |
V. | Droop's Theory in Practice | 86 |
VI. | Shipwrecked on the Sands of Time | 103 |
VII. | New Ties and Old Relations | 123 |
VIII. | How Francis Bacon Cheated the Bailiffs | 157 |
IX. | Phœbe at the Peacock Inn | 179 |
X. | How the Queen Read Her Newspaper | 208 |
XI. | The Fat Knight at the Boar's Head | 242 |
XII. | How Shakespeare Wrote His Plays | 258 |
XIII. | How the Fat Knight did Homage | 277 |
XIV. | The Fate of Sir Percevall's Suit | 297 |
XV. | How Rebecca Returned to Newington | 317 |
XVI. | How Sir Guy Kept His Tryst | 324 |
XVII. | Rebecca's Trump Card | 340 |
THE PANCHRONICON
CHAPTER I
THE THEORY OF COPERNICUS DROOP
The two sisters were together in their garden.
Rebecca Wise, turned forty and growing slightly gray at the temples, was moving slowly from one of her precious plants to the next, leaning over each to pinch off a dead leaf or count the buds. It was the historic month of May, 1898, and May is the paradise of flower lovers.
Phœbe was eighteen years younger than her sister, and the beauty of the village. Indeed, many declared their belief that the whole State of New Hampshire did not contain her equal.
She was seated on the steps of the veranda that skirted the little white cottage, and the absent gaze of her frank blue eyes was directed through the gate at the foot of the little path bordered by white rose-bushes. In her lap was a bundle of papers yellowed by age and an ivory miniature, evidently taken from the carved wooden box at her side.
Presently Rebecca straightened her back with a slight grimace and looked toward her sister, holding her mold-covered hands and fingers spread away from her.
"Well," she inquired, "hev ye found anythin'?"
Phœbe brought her gaze back from infinity and replied:
"No, I ain't. Only that one letter where Isaac Burton writes her that the players have come to town."
"I don't see what good them letters'll do ye in the Shakespeare class, then."
Rebecca spoke listlessly—more interested in her garden than in her sister's search.
"I don't know," Phœbe rejoined, dreamily. "It's awful funny—but whenever I take out these old letters there comes over me the feelin' that I'm 'way off in a strange country—and I feel like somebody else."
Rebecca looked up anxiously from her work.
"Them sort