Preliminaries
-- --
[figure description] Blank Page.[end figure description]
-- --
[figure description] (352-002).[end figure description]
-- --
[figure description] Blank Page.[end figure description]
-- --
[figure description] Blank Page.[end figure description]
-- --
[figure description] Blank Page.[end figure description]
-- --
[figure description] Blank Page.[end figure description]
-- --
[figure description] Blank Page.[end figure description]
-- --
[figure description] Blank Page.[end figure description]
-- --
[figure description] Blank Page.[end figure description]
-- --
[figure description] Blank Page.[end figure description]
-- --
[figure description] (352-011).[end figure description]
-- --
[figure description] Title page.[end figure description]
Title Page
MYRTIS,
WITH OTHER
ETCHINGS AND SKETCHINGS.
BY
MRS. L. H. SIGOURNEY.
NEW YORK:
HARPER & BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS,
82 CLIFF STREET.
-- --
Acknowledgment
[figure description] Page ii.[end figure description]
Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1846, by
Harper & Brothers,
In the Clerk's Office of the Southern District of New York.
-- --
Dedication
[figure description] Page iii.[end figure description]
TO
GEORGE GRIFFIN, ESQ., LL.D.,
A FRIEND TO THE LITERATURE OF HIS COUNTRY,
AS WELL AS AN ELOQUENT SUPPORTER
OF HER LAWS,
This Volume is Dedicated,
WITH THE GRATITUDE AND RESPECT OF
ITS AUTHOR.
-- --
[figure description] Blank Page.[end figure description]
-- --
PREFACE.
[figure description] Page v.[end figure description]
My publishers, whose judgment I hold in high
regard, indicate that there should be a Preface.
It might not be entirely courteous to the reader
to omit it. So, as I have great respect for my
readers also, there shall surely be a Preface.
Yet, as I have little to say, I trust to be excused
if I say little, and if that little should not be remarkable.
Portions of this volume, in other forms, the
public have already seen. Still, I flatter myself,
they may not be wholly unworthy of another
interview; since it is a poor face that will
not bear twice looking at. With other parts, it
is not possible they should be acquainted, as I
have been but recently introduced myself. But
I am doubtful whether the new will be found
better than the old. And as housekeepers are
wont to apologize for presenting the same dish
-- vi --
[figure description] Page vi.[end figure description]
more than once, I wish my apology to comprehend
all that may appear at this time upon my
table, like young Franklin, who advised his father
to “say grace over the whole cask.”
Maternal love is deemed neither idle nor unwise,
if it tell stories when graver thought has
wearied. To passionate or high-wrought fiction,
mine have no pretension. It can be simply said
that their elements are truthful, and their tendency
salutary. Should they be so fortunate as to
deepen any of those sympathies that swell the
great tide of human happiness, and hope, the
writer will never regret that “to point a moral,
she has adorned a tale.”
L. H. S.
Hartford, Conn., July 4th, 1846.
-- --
CONTENTS.
[figure description] Contents page.[end figure description]
Page
Myrtis 1
The Emigrant Bride 37
Lady Arabella Johnson 53
Mary Rice 77
Fall of the Pequod 101
The Yankee 139
A Legend of Pennsylvania 161
The Lady of Mount Vernon 191
A Tale of Poland 207
The Alms-house 237
The Plough and the Sword 255
The Reverse 267
The Lost Children 281
-- --
[figure description] Blank Page.[end figure description]
Sigourney, L. H. (Lydia Howard), 1791-1865 [1846], Myrtis: with other etchings and sketchings (Harper & Brothers, New York) [word count] [eaf352].