
A restless young poet leaves the quiet fields of his village after a heated argument with his lover, driven by a fierce desire to see his verses spoken across the land. He trades the familiar herd of sheep for a staff and a bundle of clothes, stepping onto the moonlit road that locals swear leads to the great city of Paris. The night air carries both the scent of his home and the promise of an unknown future, and every step feels like a verse waiting to be written.
Soon the road forks, and curiosity pulls him toward a stalled carriage tangled in a brook. With quick instinct he helps free the vehicle, earning a silent invitation from a towering gentleman and a cloaked lady to sit beside them. As the carriage climbs a hill toward a darkened manor, the poet senses mystery and opportunity, his imagination ignited by the enigmatic passengers and the road that may finally carry his words beyond the fields he once tended.
Language
en
Duration
~9 hours (541K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
1999-02-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1862–1910
Best known for warm, witty stories that turn on a last-minute surprise, this American master of short fiction found drama and humor in everyday life. His tales of clerks, swindlers, lovers, and dreamers helped define the classic short-story twist.
View all books
by O. Henry

by O. Henry

by O. Henry

by O. Henry

by O. Henry