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Quest of the Golden Girl: A Romance, The
Book 1   Book 1 - Chapter 16. Clears Up My Mysterious Behaviour Of The Last Chapter
Richard Le Gallienne
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       _ BOOK I CHAPTER XVI. CLEARS UP MY MYSTERIOUS BEHAVIOUR OF THE LAST CHAPTER
       What a sane man should be doing carrying about with him a woman's petticoat and silk stockings, may well be a puzzle to the most intelligent reader.
       Whim, sir, whim! and few human actions admit of more satisfactory solution. Like Shylock, I'll say "It is my humour." But no! I'll be more explanatory. This madcap quest of mine, was it not understood between us from the beginning to be a fantastic whim, a poetical wild-goose chase, conceived entirely as an excuse for being some time in each other's company? To be whimsical, therefore, in pursuit of a whim, fanciful in the chase of a fancy, is surely but to maintain the spirit of the game. Now, for the purpose, therefore, of a romance that makes no pretence to reasonableness, I had very good reasons for buying that petticoat, which (the reasons, not the petticoat) I will now lay before you.
       I have been conscious all the way along through this pilgrimage of its inevitable vagueness of direction, of my need of something definite, some place, some name, anything at all, however slight, which I might associate, if only for a time, with the object of my quest, a definite something to seek, a definite goal for my feet.
       Now, when I saw that mysterious petticoat, and realised that its wearer would probably be pretty and young and generally charming, and that probably her name was somewhere on the waistband, the spirit of whim rejoiced within me. "Why not," it said, "buy the petticoat, find out the name of its owner, and, instead of seeking a vague Golden Girl, make up your mind doggedly to find and marry her, or, failing that, carry the petticoat with you, as a sort of Cinderella's slipper, try it on any girl you happen to fancy, and marry her it exactly fits?"
       Now, I confess, that seemed to me quite a pretty idea, and I hope the reader will think so too. If not, I'm afraid I can offer him no better explanation; and in fact I am all impatience to open my knapsack, and inform myself of the name of her to the discovery of whom my wanderings are henceforth to be devoted. _
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Book 1
   Book 1 - Chapter 1. An Old House And Its Bachelor
   Book 1 - Chapter 2. In Which I Decide To Go On Pilgrimage
   Book 1 - Chapter 3. An Indictment Of Spring
   Book 1 - Chapter 4. In Which I Eat And Dream
   Book 1 - Chapter 5. Concerning The Perfect Woman, And Therefore Concerning All Feminine Readers
   Book 1 - Chapter 6. In Which The Author Anticipates Discontent On The Part Of His Reader
   Book 1 - Chapter 7. Prandial
   Book 1 - Chapter 8. Still Prandial
   Book 1 - Chapter 9. The Legend Of Hebe, Or The Heavenly Housemaid
   Book 1 - Chapter 10. Again On Foot--The Girls That Never Can Be Mine
   Book 1 - Chapter 11. An Old Man Of The Hills, And The Schoolmaster's Story
   Book 1 - Chapter 12. The Truth About The Gipsies
   Book 1 - Chapter 13. A Strange Wedding
   Book 1 - Chapter 14. The Mysterious Petticoat
   Book 1 - Chapter 15. Still Occupied With The Petticoat
   Book 1 - Chapter 16. Clears Up My Mysterious Behaviour Of The Last Chapter
   Book 1 - Chapter 17. The Name Upon The Petticoat
   Book 1 - Chapter 18. In Which The Name Of A Great Poet Is Cried Out In A Solitary Place
   Book 1 - Chapter 19. Why The Stranger Would Not Lose His Shelley For The World
Book 2
   Book 2 - Chapter 1. In Which I Decide To Be Young Again
   Book 2 - Chapter 2. At The Sign Of The Singing Stream
   Book 2 - Chapter 3. In Which I Save A Useful Life
   Book 2 - Chapter 4. 'T Is Of Nicolete And Her Bower In The Wildwood
   Book 2 - Chapter 5. 'T Is Of Aucassin And Nicolete
   Book 2 - Chapter 6. A Fairy Tale And Its Fairy Tailors
   Book 2 - Chapter 7. From The Morning Star To The Moon
   Book 2 - Chapter 8. The Kind Of Thing That Happens In The Moon
   Book 2 - Chapter 9. Written By Moonlight
   Book 2 - Chapter 10. How One Makes Love At Thirty
   Book 2 - Chapter 11. How One Plays The Hero At Thirty
   Book 2 - Chapter 12. In Which I Review My Actions And Renew My Resolutions
Book 3
   Book 3 - Chapter 1. In Which I Return To My Right Age...
   Book 3 - Chapter 2. In Which I Heal A Bicycle And Come To The Wheel Of Pleasure
   Book 3 - Chapter 3. Two Town Mice At A Country Inn
   Book 3 - Chapter 4. Marriage A La Mode
   Book 3 - Chapter 5. Concerning The Haven Of Yellowsands
   Book 3 - Chapter 6. The Moorland Of The Apocalypse
   Book 3 - Chapter 7. "Come Unto These Yellow Sands!"
   Book 3 - Chapter 8. The Twelve Golden-Haired Bar-Maids
   Book 3 - Chapter 9. Sylvia Joy
   Book 3 - Chapter 10. In Which Once More I Become Occupied In My Own Affairs
   Book 3 - Chapter 11. "The Hour For Which The Years Did Sigh"
   Book 3 - Chapter 12. At The Cafe De La Paix
   Book 3 - Chapter 13. The Innocence Of Paris
   Book 3 - Chapter 14. End Of Book Three
Book 4. The Postscript To A Pilgrimage
   Book 4. The Postscript To A Pilgrimage - Chapter 1. Six Years After
   Book 4. The Postscript To A Pilgrimage - Chapter 2. Grace O' God
   Book 4. The Postscript To A Pilgrimage - Chapter 3. The Golden Girl