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The Fruit of the Tree

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The Fruit of the Tree (1907)
by Edith Wharton
4565631The Fruit of the Tree1907Edith Wharton
The Fruit of the Tree
The Fruit of the Tree

The Fruit of the Tree Frontispiece
The Fruit of the Tree Frontispiece

He stood by her in silence, his eyes on the injured man.

THE FRUIT OF THE TREE

BY

EDITH WHARTON

WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY ALONZO KIMBALL

NEW YORK

CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS

MDCCCCVII

COPYRIGHT, 1907, BY CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS

ILLUSTRATIONS

  1. He stood by her in silence, his eyes on the injured manFrontispiece
  2. "No—I shall have to ask you to take my word for it"Facing p. 82
  3. Half-way up the slope they met130

BOOK I

Book I

Book II

Book III

Book IV

[Advertisements]

BOOKS BY EDITH WHARTON
PUBLISHED BY CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS


[12mo. $1.50]

The House of Mirth

Illustrations by A. B. Wenzell

"In my judgment The House of Mirth is a story of such vitality, of such artistic and moral insight, that it will stand by itself in American fiction as a study of a certain kind of society. The title is a stroke of genius in irony, and gives the key to a novel of absorbing interest, as relentless as life itself in its judgment, but deeply and beautifully humanized at the end."—Hamilton W. Mabie.

"Mrs. Wharton has done many good things. She has never done anything better than this."—The Academy.

"She is the first to make a really powerful and brilliant book out of the material offered by American fashion to the novelist. . . . A sterling piece of craftsmanship, a tale which interests the reader at the start and never lets him rest till the end is reached."—New York Tribune.

" So accurate an account of the thoughts and deeds of a single human being has, we are certain, never hitherto been written."—Boston Transcript.

ft It is a great American novel, intensely interesting, marvelous in its literary finish and powerful in its delineation of Lily Bart."—Philadelphia Press.


[12mo. $1.00]

Madame de Treymes

Illustrated in color by A. B. Wenzell

"We know of no book in which the virtues of the short story are united with the virtues of the novel in a higher degree than in this instance."—New York Sun.

BOOKS BY EDITH WHARTON


Sixth Eedition

[12mo, $1.50]

The Greater Inclination

CONTENTS

  • The Muse's Tragedy
  • A Journey
  • The Pelican
  • Souls Belated
  • A Coward
  • The Twilight of the Gods
  • A Cup of Cold Water
  • The Portrait

"Between these stories and those of the ordinary entertaining sort there is a great gulf fixed."—The Dial.


[12mo, $1.50]

Crucial Instances

CONTENTS

  • The Duchess at Prayer
  • The Angel at the Grave
  • The Recovery
  • "Copy" : A Dialogue
  • The Rembrandt
  • The Moving Finger
  • The Confessional

"Tragedy and comedy, pathos and humor, are mingled in these pages of brilliant writing and splendid imagination."
—Philadelphia Press.


[12 mo, $1.50]

The Valley of Decision
25th Thousand

"Coming in the midst of an epoch overcrowded with works of fiction, 'The Valley of Decision' stands out giant-like above its surroundings. It stands, indeed, almost without a rival in the modern literary world, and there can be little doubt that it places Mrs. Wharton at once side by side with the greatest novelists of the day."
—Boston Evening Transcript.

BOOKS BY EDITH WHARTON


[12mo, $1.25]

Illustrations by W. Appleton Clark

" This is a striking little book―striking in its simplicity and penetration, its passion and restraint."―London Times.


[12mo, $1.25]

"Its characters are real, their motives and actions thoroughly human. And the author s art is sufficient to bring out the strength of every situation."―The Argonaut.


[12mo, $1.50]

CONTENTS

  • The Descent of Man
  • The Mission of Jane
  • The Other Two
  • The Quicksand
  • The Dilettante
  • The Reckoning
  • Expiation
  • The Lady s Maid's Bell
  • A Venetian Night s Entertainment

"It is, of course, the extraordinary directness with which Mrs. Wharton's probe goes to the spot under inspection, the deftness with which she is able to bring to the light of day what we had hidden even from ourselves, that account for the admiration with which we regard her short stories." ― London Academy.

BOOKS BY EDITH WHARTON


[8vo, $2.50 net. Postage 17 cents]

Italian Backgrounds

ILLUSTRATED BY PEIXOTTO

CONTENTS

  • An Alpine Posting Inn
  • A Midsummer Week's Dream
  • The Sanctuaries of the Pennine
  • Alps
  • What the Hermits Saw
  • A Tuscan Shrine
  • Sub Umbra Liliorum
  • March in Italy
  • Picturesque Milan
  • Italian Backgrounds

"Belongs in that small class of books of observation which are also books of artistic and spiritual interpretation; which not only describe places and monuments, but convey an impression of peoples, a sense of society, with the elusive atmosphere in which everything of historical or artistic value is seen by those who have the gift of sight." ―The Outlook.


[12mo, $1.25 net]

The Joy of Living

(Es lebe das Leben)

A play in five acts, by Hermann Sudermann. Translated from the German by Edith Wharton.


[Large 8vo, $2.50 net]

With 56 full-page illustrations, by Edith Wharton and Ogden Codman, Jr.


This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published in 1907, before the cutoff of January 1, 1929.


The longest-living author of this work died in 1937, so this work is in the public domain in countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 86 years or less. This work may be in the public domain in countries and areas with longer native copyright terms that apply the rule of the shorter term to foreign works.

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