Tarquin of Cheapside β one of the stories, which entered in a collection of eleven short stories by F. Scott Fitzgerald Β«Tales of the Jazz AgeΒ» (1922).
Written almost six years before being added to this collection, this story was written in Fitzgerald's undergraduate days at Princeton. Considerably revised, it was published in the Β«Smart SetΒ» in 1921. At the time of its conception Fitzgerald had wanted to be a poet, and was interested in the ring of every phrase.
This short story is told in narrative style. As the story opens the invisible narrator and reader are in the home of Wessel Caster. Wessel is reading The Faerie Queen when he is suddenly disturbed by frantic pounding at his front door. When Wessel opens the door he finds a man exhausted and frightened. The man, called «Soft shoes» by the narrator, quickly explains he is running for his life and needs a place to hide. Although Wessel has his concerns he decides to help Soft shoes into hiding and awaits the pursuers⦠All the while wondering what has caused this man to flee. Once the pursuers are gone the man demands the stranger explain, which he does in written form that Wessel begins to read aloud as the story comes to a close.
Famous works of the author F. S. Fitzgerald: Β«This Side of ParadiseΒ», Β«The Beautiful and DamnedΒ», Β«The Great GatsbyΒ», Β«Tender Is the NightΒ», Β«The Last TycoonΒ», Β«The Diamond as Big as the RitzΒ», Β«May DayΒ», Β«The Rich BoyΒ», Β«The Curious Case of Benjamin ButtonΒ», Β«The Offshore PirateΒ», Β«The Ice PalaceΒ», Β«Head and ShouldersΒ», Β«The Cut-Glass BowlΒ», Β«Bernice Bobs Her HairΒ», Β«BenedictionΒ», Β«Tales of the Jazz AgeΒ».
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