Grace Livingston Hill's "Tomorrow About This Time" has a wonder message that having faith in God's plan, taking responsibility for our mistakes and not blaming God. I enjoy the Bible lesson within the story. When the author wrote this story, flappers were of those times, I found this interesting, the descriptions and actions. I loved the close knit town and had to laugh at the gossiping people.
Story in short- A father shirks his duty as a father and wonders why his daughter is unmanageable and unlovable.
“I was thinking how much you remind me of a man I have been reading about in the Bible. Jehoram is his name. Ever make his acquaintance?” “Not especially,” answered Greeves coldly, with evident annoyance at the digression. “He was one of those old Israelite-ish kings, wasn’t he?” “Yes, a king, but he blamed God for the results of his own actions.” “Mm! Yes. I see! But how am I to blame for having a daughter like that? Didn’t God make her what she is? Why couldn’t she have been the right kind of a girl? How was I to blame for that?��
“Go read the story of Jehoram and you’ll understand. The city was in a state of siege. The people were starving crazed by hunger, were eating their own children, and appealing to the king to settle their demoniacal quarrels. The king was blaming God for it all, and suddenly the prophet appeared and told him that ‘tomorrow about this time’ there would be plenty to eat and cheap enough for everybody. How do you know but tomorrow about this time God may have relief and joy all planned and on the way?”
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I was happy that Athalie finally became friends with her half sister. I was glad that she did not get hurt, that we know about, her being very young and around much older men. I was happy that Greeves opened his heart to love and God.
Patterson Greeves comes back to Silver Sands after his uncle's death 15 years ago he became the owner of their home after their death but the war and living abroad kept him away. He is a famous bacteriologist which kepts him busy not thinking of his past marriages. "Patterson Greeves, brilliant scholar, noted bacteriologist, honored in France for his feats of bravery and his noted discoveries along the line of his chosen profession, which had made it possible to save many lives during the war;" "In his senior year of college, Patterson Greeves had fallen in love with Alice Jarvis, the lovely daughter of the Presbyterian minister in the little college town where he had spent the years of his collegiate work."He married Alice Jarvis and they were happily married until her death during childbirth. "While he was still at Silver Sands his father-in-law had written to ask if he would let them adopt the little girl as their own in place of the daughter whom they had lost. Of course he would always be welcomed as a son, but the grandfather felt he could not risk letting his wife keep the child and grow to love it tenderly if there was danger of its being torn away from them in three or four years and put under the care of a stepmother." A couple years after his wife's death, he was mad at God and started to welcome non believers to his circle. It was then that he meet his second wife Lilla, who wanted him as a stepping stone, his family name and money. Lilla fooled Patterson, he thought she was all goodness but it soon was known to him that she was different, they had a baby girl, his wife named her Athalie but Patterson could not warm his heart to his daughter and he stayed away from home because of his wife's immorality and unfeeling behavior. "The evenings of reading together suddenly began to openly bore her. Lilla had no notion of settling down to a domestic life. Her husband was only one of many on whom she lavished her smiles, and as soon as she had him safely she began to show her true nature: selfish, untrue, disloyal, mercenary, ambitious." "Well, Pat, the time is up, and as the court decreed I am sending you your daughter. I hope you haven’t forgotten, for it would be rather awkward for the poor thing. I’m going to be married in a few days now and wouldn’t know what to do with her. She’s fourteen and has your stubbornness, but she’s not so bad if you let her have her own way in everything. Don’t worry, she’s the kind that marries young, and she’ll probably take herself off your hands soon. I wish you well of your task." Lilla has written to her ex husband, that their 14 year old daughter will be coming to live with him, Pat became anger and was renouncing God again. He also had letter from his daughter, Alice, of his first marriage, she tells of her grandparents dying and wanting to visit him before she starts working. Her grandmother thought it would be a good idea to visit her father. "He sensed that somewhere deep in his soul was a large engulfing contempt for himself. This was no attitude, of course, for a father to have toward his children. But then they had never really been his children in the strict sense of the word," "Poor credulous Uncle Standish, poor Aunt Lavinia! Strong and fine and good but woefully ignorant and gullible! How little they knew of life! How pleasant to have been like them! And yet, they stagnated in the old town, walking in grooves their forbearers had carved for them, thinking the thoughts that had been taught them. That was not life. Well, why not? He had seen life. And what had it given him? Dust and ashes! A bitter taste! Responsibilities that galled! Hindrances and disappointments! Two daughters whom he did not know! An empty heart and a jaded soul! Ah! Why live?" Pat is thinking about the gullibility of his aunt and uncle with regards to believing in God, he knows the world and knows it does not hold. A bell is ringing there is a fire in Frogtown, Pat is excited to find out so he goes to investigate. He runs into a young boy named Blink and a man who is the Minister. After the fire from the Pickle factory is out, the three walk towards home, Pat invites his new friends in for some refreshments and they all are friendly. Pat's telegram trying to stop Athalie from coming has been useless his daughter will be there the next day. Pat unable to place his daughter in school because of a measles outbreak is surprised when his outspoken unmannered daughter, Athalie shows up early, having phoned one of her mother's lovers to drive her there. She comes giving orders rudely to her father's servants. “No, you shan’t take them out!” screamed Athalie, stamping her heavy young foot indignantly. “I want them here! Put them right down there! She has nothing to say about it!” Joe vacillated from the library to the hall and back again uncertainly and looked pitifully toward his master. “Put the things in the hall, Joe, and then go out and shut the door!” ordered the master with something in his controlled voice that caused his daughter to look at him with surprise. Joe obeyed, Anne Truesdale thankfully disappeared, and Patterson Greeves found himself in the library alone with his child." "He felt like striking her down. He wanted to curse her mother for allowing her to grow up into this, but most of all he felt a loathing for himself that he had made himself responsible for this abnormal specimen of womanhood. Scarcely more than a child and yet wearing the charm of the serpent with ease." Pat is confronted with his daughter so insolent and looking like a flapper. She tries to control him but he is disgusted after she offers him a cigarette, insulting her looks and telling her to wash up her face of all that makeup. "She was a flapper! The most despicable thing known to girlhood, according to his bred and inherited standards. The thing that all the newspapers and magazines held in scorn and dread; the thing that all noted people were writing about and trying to eradicate; the thing they were afraid of and bowed to and let be; and his child was a flapper!" Anne Truesdale was a friend of Pat's aunt and uncle who took over the job of looking over the house after aunt Lavinia died and has come to love Pat, when he was a child as being her own. She is worried after she hears him talk so ungodly, has he lost his faith. The Minister, Bannard has come for a planned hike but sees Pat all upset asking for advice. Pat tells his troubles and his disbelief in God, Bannard tells him he reminds him of the Bibical Jehoram who blamed his actions on God. Pat was blaming his mistakes of his marriage and his unruly daughter not on himself but God. Pat realises Alice is coming today and he wants Athalie to be gone before she arrives, he shutters that Alice's daughter should meet this terrible daughter. Athalie tells about being expelled from school after having a party. Bannard is asked to pick up Pat's other daughter at the train station, he is surprised to see a young lady not a young girl, his heart goes out to her and knows she is the one he has been dreaming all his life. They are introduced and before arriving to her father's home, she sees the church where her relatives are buried. Blink and his dog take a liking to the young lady, Silver, her grandparents named her. Athalie is send upstairs but does not go when she sees the good looking minister come back. She at 14 is very forward and advanced with men. Athalie sees the paintings and when seeing a beautiful angelic picture she then realises it is her father's first wife. She then spits chocolate at the painting, after returning from upstairs she put her mother's half clad picture near the defaced first wife. Silver talks to her father and sees that he is upset about something, she asks him if he wants her there, he crying it is too late, I should have come home much earlier, Silver understands her father's misery and then they have a happy understanding. They walk over to the train station to get her suitcase. Athalie is jealous of this girl and stays in her room eating chocolates, more of her trunks come and there are many and enormous, with indecent clothing. "The man found himself telling his child about his own boyhood, his aunt, his uncle, the old minister, the long sweet services in the quaint old church. There was no bitterness in his voice now as he spoke of the religion of those who had brought him up. Something softening had come over him. He hardly understood himself." Silver and her father see Bannard at the church where he then shows them the old church and just like her mother Silver plays the organ. Pat is worrying about his other daughter at home invites both the minister and Blink for dinner. Athalie spies around the rooms, sees the room that the other girl was given and is quite jealous, she tears Silver's mother's photo and decides to take this room for her own and rudely tells Silver. Silver hears from the girl that this is Athalie is her father's daughter. Silver confused and upset, thinking she is not wanted her until her father tells her his miserable story and begs for her to stay and help him. "The whiff of orange pekoe wafted up as Silver passed her father his cup. Tea on the terrace and she not even told! And there was that stunning-looking man again! Who was he? Did that other girl think she would take possession of him, too, as well as her father, and the house, and the best room, and everything? Well, they would find out! She was going down at once. She would show that stuck-up girl!" Blink sees a boy coming out of the Greeves' window, but realises later it is a fat girl. Blink is an amateur dectective/policeman that helps thwrat crime. He follows her and after eating sweets at the drugstore, he hears hee ring up Bobs telling him, she will sneak out at night and nobody will know, if he does not she will tell her mother that he thinks she is old. She comes back home and sees a tea party looking to crash it, her mother told her to make life uncomfortable for him. "Silver stood at the front window looking out across the field with troubled eyes, trying to think out the horrible situation. She was convinced that she ought not to have come, that she had followed her heart rather than her good judgment, and probably a bit selfishly and determinedly, too, coming unannounced. She had wanted to forestall any attempt on the part of her father to refuse to see her. She had wanted him so, and now, see!" After Athalie told Silver that she will drive her out of her father's home and that she is the sole inheritor of his money. Anne hears this conversation and tells Silver who has been thinking of leaving that she must stay and help her father. Silver sees that Athalie needs a father more than she does. Athalie is still dressed flimsy and her father is angry but will deal with her later. They go to the room with the piano and the picture of Alice is disfigured and Lilla's unseemly one near. A fight of words and spirits between Athalie and her father, after seeing Lilla's picture and destroying it, she takes revenge on one of his relative's painting. All the neighborhood is gossiping on what is going on in the Silver mansion, a city tramp sees Athalie and wonders how his knowledge will profit him. Patterson tried to talk to Athalie, it seems so impossible and he is beginning to see his mistake in not regarding her when she was very young. She tells her father she hates Silver. Silver tells her father she must go, Athalie needs a father because she was never loved and besides she has a job and must leave. Patterson so upset he cannot be without her and that Athalie, he could never love, she will be a viper like her mother, which the young girl overheard. "It was an hour before they arrived at a compromise. Silver was to remain for a time, was to send for her trunk and to be allowed to follow her own course about keeping out of Athalie’s way, on condition that the father was to make an honest effort to win Athalie to a better way of behavior and to try to cultivate a little love between them, though that Patterson Greeves declared was an impossibility." Patterson takes Athalie golfing and sees some of his behaviours in her. Bannard comes to offer the Greeves on a car ride but Athalie refuses since Silver is to go. They drive to the location of the new church building."Greeves stood there watching him with almost jealous eyes, seeing as in a vista a long line of tender services he might have rendered had his heart been right to his own. Where did this rough untaught man learn such angelic gentleness? Here in this bare little house with an environment of the plainest necessities, the father had fenced in a little piece of the kingdom of heaven for his child." The Minister is stopped by a mother whose baby girl is very ill and thought to have pneumonia, Silver offers her services having had nursing training. Patterson is afraid his daughter will become ill, goes into the house to bring her out but he soon after sees how others suffer and he forgets himself. The baby is doing better after some oxygen and care, Patterson is struck by the rough poor father of this baby being a father were he gave up so long ago. The High School girls came over to see he young girl and to welcome her but Athalie who prefers men, finally decides after making them wait a long time with her gaudy and unruly presence, which embarrasses the girls and having had enough Athalie leaves out the front door walking down the street. "From all he had heard the night before, all the gossip that had been going around the town that day, he would not expect his new friend to be deeply grieved at his daughter’s disappearance. And yet—he didn’t like that man’s face! Of course, he might be her uncle or something coming after her. But anyhow, he didn’t like the way the man felt her wrist. It wasn’t nice. Gosh, she was just a kid! Just a foolish little kid. Gosh! He’d like to punch that man’s head even if he was her uncle!" Blink sees Athalie walking to the bridge the meeting place that he heard her talk about on the phone but the man she was meeting was old. Blink feeling disgusted and with the help of his friend Sam who had followed the car ahead but when the other car stopped at the drug store, Blink told his friend to follow him, he is taking the car back to the Sliver place. The man who went into the store comes back waving his hands after the cars are leaving. When Athalie left all those girls in the house and dressed for trouble went out the front door nobody heard from her again, the worrying begins to start but all those girls left to tell around town about their visit. Silver goes in and wins the girls, she accepts an invitation for making fudge with the group which her father comes too and Bannard tries to find the lost girl. Anne is so worried she is actually praying for her. Returning home from the party and no Athalie but a man calling demanding to talk to her.