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Updated: June 15, 2025


At last the work was over, and in unconscious comradery they sat side by side on the broad south doorstep; the sun shining down full upon their uncovered heads smiling an unconscious blessing more potent than formula of clergy.

Back in God's country, he sometimes mused, fellows knew girls like that. Played golf and tennis with them, rode with them, picnicked with them, sat out in the moonlight with them, talking and singing in a spirit of gay comradery that they only half-appreciated, because they had never starved for want of it as he was doing.

The warmth was welcome, and the great flame, with its bright looks of familiar comradery, and its talk like the complex murmur of a throng, made a fourth in our party by no means terrible, as some other incorporeal visitors might have been.

"It's only the moonlight," and a little later he left her at the old Day house with a casual handshake. Thereafter there was a somewhat different tone to the friendship between Janice and the schoolteacher. They were confidential. They both assumed that the other was interested in the matters dear to each. It was a comradery that had no silly side to it.

Bellingham, and whose salutation Corey returned with "Hallo, Charles!" of equal intimacy. Mr. Bellingham caught at the name of Frobisher. "Mrs. Major Dick Frobisher?" "Mrs. Colonel now, but Dick always," said the lady, with immediate comradery. "Do you know my husband?" "I should think so!" said Bellingham; and a talk of common interest and mutual reminiscence sprang up between them.

To him that does not seem reasonable, since one wants it hot in coffee and chocolate; but he yields to my prejudice, and after that he always says, "Ah, leche fria!" and we smile radiantly together in the bond of comradery which cold milk establishes between man and man in Spain.

The dainty ears of the pony, as the day waned, flattened close to his head. Foam gathered beneath the saddle and between the animal's legs; but doggedly relentless as his rider, he forged ahead. Much in common had these two beings; more closely than ever was their comradery cemented that day.

His great interest in life was the Chronicle-Abstract, which paid him poorly and worked him hard. To get in ahead of the other papers was the object for which he toiled with unremitting zeal; but after that he liked to see a good fellow prosper, and he had for Bartley that feeling of comradery which comes out among journalists when their rivalries are off.

Nor was she content with Utopian generalities: she wanted to know the how and why of each case, to hear what conclusions he drew from his results, to what solutions his experiments pointed. In explaining the mill work he forgot his constraint and returned to the free comradery of mind that had always marked their relation.

Generally, however, there is a comradery of the road, a sort of good fellowship among voyagers which lets down ordinary bars, and the men who like to rest as they travel find it highly diverting and interesting to talk with other men from various parts of the country.

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