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Taylor, Bayard, 1825-1878 [1863], Hannah Thurston: a story of American life (G. P. Putnam, New York) [word count] [eaf713T].
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p713-014 CHAPTER I. IN WHICH WE ATTEND THE GREAT SEWING-UNION AT PTOLEMY.

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Never before had the little society of Ptolemy known so
animated a season. For an inland town, the place could not at
any time be called dull, and, indeed, impressed the stranger
with a character of exuberant life, on being compared with
other towns in the neighborhood. Mulligansville on the east,
Anacreon on the north, and Atauga City on the west, all fierce
rivals of nearly equal size, groaned over the ungodly cheerfulness
of its population, and held up their hands whenever its
name was mentioned. But, at the particular time whereof we
write—November, 1852—the ordinarily mild flow of life in
Ptolemy was unusually quickened by the formation of the great
Sewing-Union. This was a new social phenomenon, which
many persons looked upon as a long stride in the direction of
the Millennium. If, however, you should desire an opposite
view, you have but to mention the subject to any Mulligansvillain,
any Anacreontic, or any Atauga citizen. The simple
fact is, that the various sewing-circles of Ptolemy—three in
number, and working for very different ends—had agreed to
hold their meetings at the same time and place, and labor in
company. It was a social arrangement which substituted one

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large gathering, all the more lively and interesting from its
mixed constitution, in place of three small and somewhat
monotonous circles. The plan was a very sensible one, and it
must be said, to the credit of Ptolemy, that there are very few
communities of equal size in the country where it could have
been carried into effect.

First, the number of members being taken as the test of relative
importance, there was the Ladies' Sewing-Circle, for raising
a fund to assist in supporting a Mission at Jutnapore. It was
drawn mainly from the congregation of the Rev. Lemuel Styles.
Four spinsters connected with this circle had a direct interest
in four children of the converted Telugu parents. There was
a little brown Eliza Clancy, an Ann Parrott, and a Sophia
Stevenson, in that distant Indian sheepfold; while the remaining
spinster, Miss Ruhaney Goodwin, boasted of a (spiritual)
son, to whom she had given the name of her deceased brother,
Elisha. These ladies were pleasantly occupied in making
three mousseline-de-laine frocks, an embroidered jacket, and
four half-dozens of pocket handkerchiefs for their little Telugu
children, and their withered bosoms were penetrated with a
secret thrill of the lost maternal instinct, which they only
dared to indulge in connection with such pious and charitable
labors.

The second Circle was composed of ladies belonging to the
Cimmerian church, who proposed getting up a village fair,
the profits of which should go towards the repair of the Parsonage,
now sadly dilapidated. Mrs. Waldo, the clergyman's
wife, was at the head of this enterprise. Her ambition was
limited to a new roof and some repairs in the plastering, and
there was a good prospect that the Circle would succeed in
raising the necessary sum. This, however, was chiefly owing
to Mrs. Waldo's personal popularity. Ptolemy was too small
a place, and the Cimmerians too insignificant a sect, for the
Church, out of its own resources, to accomplish much for its
shepherd.

Lastly, there was the Sewing-Circle for the Anti-Slavery

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Fair, which was limited to five or six families. For the previous
ten years, this little community, strong in the faith, had
prepared and forwarded their annual contribution, not discouraged
by the fact that the circulation of their beloved
special organ did not increase at the Ptolemy Post-Office, nor
that their petitions to Congress were always referred, and
never acted upon. They had outlived the early persecution, and
could no longer consider themselves martyrs. The epithets
“Infidel!” “Fanatic!” and “Amalgamationist!” had been hurled
at them until their enemies had ceased, out of sheer weariness,
and they were a little surprised at finding that their importance
diminished in proportion as their neighbors became
tolerant. The most earnest and enthusiastic of the little band
were Gulielma Thurston, a Quaker widow, and her daughter
Hannah; Mrs. Merryfield, the wife of a neighboring farmer,
and Seth Wattles, a tailor in the village. Notwithstanding
the smallness of this circle, its members, with one exception,
were bright, clear-minded, cheerful women, and as the suspicions
of their infidelity had gradually been allayed (mainly by
their aptness in Biblical quotation), no serious objection was
made to their admittance into the Union.

The proposition to unite the Circles came originally, we
believe, from Mrs. Waldo, whose sectarian bias always gave
way before the social instincts of her nature. The difficulty
of carrying it into execution was much lessened by the fact
that all the families were already acquainted, and that, fortunately,
there was no important enmity existing between any
two of them. Besides, there is a natural instinct in women
which leads them to sew in flocks and enliven their labor by
the discussion of patterns, stuffs, and prices. The Union, with
from twenty-five to forty members in attendance, was found
to be greatly more animated and attractive than either of the
Circles, separately, had been. Whether more work was
accomplished, is a doubtful question; but, if not, it made
little difference in the end. The naked Telugus would not
suffer from a scantier supply of clothing; the Cimmerians

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would charge outrageous prices for useless articles, in any
case: nor would The Slavery Annihilator perish for want of
support, if fewer pen-wipers, and book-marks, inscribed with
appropriate texts, came from Ptolemy.

The Sewing-Union was therefore pronounced a great social
success, and found especial favor in the eyes of the gentlemen,
who were allowed to attend “after tea,” with the understanding
that they would contribute something to either of the
three groups, according to their inclinations. Mrs. Waldo, by
general acquiescence, exercised a matronly supervision over
the company, putting down any rising controversy with a
gentle pat of her full, soft hand, and preventing, with cheerful
tyranny, the continual tendency of the gentlemen to interrupt
the work of the unmarried ladies. She was the oleaginous
solvent, in which the hard yelk of the Mission Fund, the vinegar
of the Cimmerians, and the mustard of the Abolitionists
lost their repellant qualities and blended into a smooth social
compound. She had a very sweet, mellow, rounded voice,
and a laugh as comforting to hear as the crackling of a wood-fire
on the open hearth. Her greatest charm, however, was
her complete unconsciousness of her true value. The people
of Ptolemy, equally unconscious of this subduing and harmonizing
quality which she possessed, and seeing their lionesses
and lambs sewing peaceably together, congratulated themselves
on their own millennial promise. Of course everybody
was satisfied—even the clergymen in Mulligansville and
Anacreon, who attacked the Union from their pulpits, secretly
thankful for such a near example of falling from the stiff,
narrow, and carefully-enclosed ways of grace.

It was the third meeting of the Union, and nearly all the
members were present. Their session was held at the house
of Mr. Hamilton Bue, Agent of the “Saratoga Mutual” for
the town of Ptolemy, and one of the Directors of the Bank at
Tiberius, the county-seat. Mrs. Hamilton Bue was interested
in the contribution for the mission at Jutnapore, and the Rev.
Lemuel Styles, pastor of the principal church in the village,

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had been specially invited to come “before tea,” for the purpose
of asking a blessing on the bountiful table of the hostess.
The parlor, large as it was (for Ptolemy), had been somewhat
overcrowded during the afternoon; therefore, anticipating a
large arrival of gentlemen in the evening, Mrs. Bue had the
tables transferred from the sitting-room to the kitchen, locked
the hall door, and thus produced a suite of three apartments,
counting the hall itself as one. The guests were admitted at
the side-entrance, commonly used by the family. Two or
three additional lamps had been borrowed, and the general
aspect of things was so bright and cheerful that Mr. Styles
whispered to Mrs. Hamilton Bue: “Really, I am afraid this
looks a little like levity.”

“But it's trying to the eyes to sew with a dim light,” said
she; “and we want to do a good deal for The Fund this evening.”

“Ah! that, indeed!” he ejaculated, smiling blandly as he
contemplated Miss Eliza Clancy and Miss Ann Parrott, who
were comparing the dresses for their little brown namesakes.

“I think it looks better to be gored,” said the former.

“Well—I don't know but what it does, with that figure,”
remarked Miss Parrott, “but my Ann's a slim, growing girl,
and when you've tucks—and I'm making two of 'em—it
seems better to pleat.

“How will this do, Miss Eliza?” asked Mrs. Waldo, coming
up at the moment with a heavy knitted snood of crimson
wool, which she carefully adjusted over her own abundant
black hair. The effect was good, it cannot be denied. The
contrast of colors was so pleasing that the pattern of the
snood became quite a subordinate affair.

“Upon my word, very pretty!” said the lady appealed to.

“Pity you haven't knit it for yourself, it suits you so well,”
Miss Parrott observed.

“I'd rather take it to stop the leak in my best bed-room,”
Mrs. Waldo gayly rejoined, stealing a furtive glance at her

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head in the mirror over the mantel-piece. “Oh, Miss Thurston,
will you let us see your album-cover?”

Hannah Thurston had caught sight of a quiet nook in the
hall, behind the staircase, and was on her way to secure possession
of it. She had found the warmth of the sitting-room
intolerable, and the noise of many tongues began to be distracting
to her sensitive Quaker ear. She paused at once, and
in answer to Mrs. Waldo's request unfolded an oblong piece
of warm brown cloth, upon which a group of fern-leaves,
embroidered with green silk, was growing into shape. The
thready stems and frail, diminishing fronds were worked
with an exquisite truth to nature.

“It is not much more than the outline, as yet,” she remarked,
as she displayed the embroidery before the eager
eyes of Mrs. Waldo and the two spinsters.

The former, who possessed a natural though uncultivated
sense of beauty, was greatly delighted. “Why it's perfectly
lovely!” she exclaimed: “if I was younger, I'd get you to
teach me how you do it. You must be sure and let me see
the book when it's finished.”

“I don't see why my Eliza couldn't make me one of the
flowers around Jutnapore,” said Miss Clancy. “I'll mention
it in my next letter to Miss Boerum—the missionary's wife,
you know. It would be such a nice thing for me to remember
her by.”

Meanwhile the gentlemen began to drop in. Mr. Merryfield
arrived, in company with the Hon. Zeno Harder, member of
the Legislature for Atauga county. Then followed the Rev.
Mr. Waldo, a small, brisk man, with gray eyes, a short nose,
set out from his face at a sharper angle than is usual with
noses, and a mouth in which the Lord had placed a set of
teeth belonging to a man of twice his size—for which reason his
lips could not entirely close over them. His face thus received
an expression of perpetual hunger. The air of isolation, common
to clergymen of those small and insignificant sects which
seem to exist by sheer force of obstinacy, was not very

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perceptible in him. It had been neutralized, if not suppressed,
by the force of a strong animal temperament. On that side
of his nature, there was no isolation.

A number of young fellows—bashful hobbledehoys, or
over-assured men of two or three and twenty, with rigorously
fashionable shirt-collars—now made their appearance and
distributed themselves through Mrs. Hamilton Bue's rooms.
In the rising noise of conversation the more timid ventured to
use their tongues, and the company soon became so animated
that all of Mrs. Waldo's authority was necessary, to prevent
the younger ladies from neglecting their tasks. The Cimmerians,
as a point of etiquette, were installed in the parlor,
which also accommodated a number of the workers for the
Mission Fund, the remainder being gathered in the sitting-room,
where Mr. Styles and Mr. Waldo carried on an exceedingly
guarded and decorous conversation. Hannah Thurston
had secured her coveted nook behind the staircase in the
hall, where she was joined by Mrs. Merryfield and Miss Sophia
Stevenson. Mrs. Waldo, also, kept a chair at the same table,
for the purpose of watching the expanding fern-leaves in the
intervals of her commandership. Seth Wattles tilted his chair
in a corner, eager for an opportunity to usurp the conversation.

Seth was an awkward, ungainly person, whose clothes were
a continual satire on his professional skill. The first impression
which the man made, was the want of compact form.
His clay seemed to have been modelled by a bungling apprentice,
and imperfectly baked afterwards. The face was
long and lumpy in outline, without a proper coherence between
the features—the forehead being sloping and contracted
at the temples, the skull running backwards in a high, narrow
ridge. Thick hair, of a faded brown color, parted a little on
one side, was brushed behind his ears, where it hung in stiff
half-curls upon a broad, falling shirt-collar, which revealed his
neck down to the crest of the breast-bone. His eyes were
opaque gray, prominent, and devoid of expression. His nose

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was long and coarsely constructed, with blunt end and thick
nostrils, and his lips, though short, of that peculiar, shapeless formation,
which prevents a clear line of division between them.
Heavy, and of a pale purplish-red color, they seemed to run
together at the inner edges. His hands were large and hanging,
and all his joints apparently knobby and loose. His skin
had that appearance of oily clamminess which belongs to such
an organization. Men of this character seem to be made of
sticks and putty. There is no nerve, no elasticity, no keen,
alert, impressible life in any part of their bodies.

Leaving the ladies of the Fund to hear Mrs. Boerum's last
letter describing the condition of her school at Jutnapore, and
the Cimmerians to consult about the arrangements for their
Fair, we will join this group in the hall. Mrs. Waldo had
just taken her seat for the seventh time, saying: “Well, I
never shall get any thing done, at this rate!”—when her attention
was arrested by hearing Hannah Thurston say, in answer
to some remark of Mrs. Merryfield:

“It is too cheerful a place, not to be the home of cheerful
and agreeable people.”

“Oh, you are speaking of Lakeside, are you not?” she
asked.

“Yes, they say it's sold,” said Mrs. Merryfield; “have you
heard of it?”

“I believe Mr. Waldo mentioned it at dinner. It's a Mr.
Woodbury, or some such name. And rich. He was related,
in some way, to the Dennisons. He's expected immediately.
I'm glad of it, for I want to put him under contribution. Oh,
how beautiful! Did you first copy the pattern from the
leaves, Hannah, or do you keep it in your head?”

“Woodbury? Related to the Dennisons?” mused Mrs.
Merryfield. “Bless me! It can't be little Maxwell—Max.
we always called him, that used to be there summers—well,
nigh twenty years ago, at least. But you were not here
then, Mrs. Waldo—nor you, neither, Hannah. I heard afterwards
that he went to Calcutty. I remember him very

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well—a smart, curly-headed youngster, but knowed nothing
about farming. Him and my poor Absalom”—here she
smothered a rising sigh—“used to be a good deal with
other.”

An unusual stir in the sitting-room interrupted the conversation.

There were exclamations—noises of moving chairs—indistinct
phrases—and presently the strong voice of the Hon.
Zeno Harder was heard: “Very happy to make your acquaintance,
Sir—very happy!” Mrs. Waldo slipped to the
door and peeped in, telegraphing her observations in whispers
to the little party behind the stairs. “There's Mr.
Hammond—the lawyer, you know, from Tiberius, and another
gentleman—a stranger. Tall and sunburnt, with a moustache—
but I like his looks. Ah!” Here she darted back to her
seat. “Would you believe it?—the very man we were talking
about—Mr. Woodbury!”

In accordance with the usages of Ptolemy society, the new-comers
were taken in charge by the host, and formally introduced
to every person present. In a few minutes the round
of the sitting-room was completed and the party entered the
hall. Miss Thurston, looking up with a natural curiosity, encountered
a pair of earnest brown eyes, which happened, at
the moment, to rest mechanically upon her. Mr. Hamilton
Bue advanced and performed his office. The stranger bowed
with easy self-possession and a genial air, which asserted his
determination to enjoy the society. Mrs. Waldo, who was no
respecter of persons—in fact, she often declared that she
would not be afraid of Daniel Webster—cordially gave him
her hand, exclaiming: “We were this minute talking of you,
Mr. Woodbury! And I wished you were here, that I might
levy a contribution for our Sewing-Circle. But you're going
to be a neighbor, and so I'll ask it in earnest, next
time.”

“Why not now?” said the gentleman, taking out his
purse. “First thoughts are often best, and you know the

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proverb about short settlements. Pray accept this, as a token
that you do not consider me a stranger.”

“Oh, thank you!” she cried, as she took the bank-note;
“but” (hesitatingly) “is this a donation to our Society, or
must I divide it with the others?” The peculiar tone in
which the question was put rendered but one answer possible.
No man could have uttered it with such artful emphasis.

The constitution of the Sewing-Union was explained, and
Mr. Woodbury purchased a universal popularity by equal
contributions to the three Circles. Had he been less impulsive—
less kindly inclined to create, at once, a warm atmosphere
around his future home—he would not have given so
much. The consequences of his generosity were not long in
exhibiting themselves. Two days afterwards, the Seventh-Day
Baptists, at Atauga City, waited on him for a subscription
towards the building of their new church; and even the
ladies of Mulligansville so far conquered their antipathy to
the Ptolemy district, as to apply for aid to the Mission at
Pulo-Bizam, in the Ladrone Islands, which was a subject of
their especial care.

The introduction of a new element into a society so purely
local as that of Ptolemy, is generally felt as a constraint.
Where the stranger is a man of evident cultivation, whose superiority,
in various respects, is instinctively felt, but would be
indignantly disclaimed if any one dared to assert it, there is,
especially, a covert fear of his judgment. His eye and ear are
supposed to be intensely alert and critical: conversation becomes
subdued and formal at his approach: the romping youths
and maidens subside into decorous and tedious common-places,
until the first chill of his presence is overcome. Mr. Woodbury
had tact enough to perceive and dissipate this impression.
His habitual manners were slightly touched with reserve, but
no man could unbend more easily and gracefully. To the few
who remembered him as “Little Max.”—among them Mrs.
Merryfield—he manifested the cordial warmth of an old
friend, and laughed with a delight which came from the

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heart, at their mention of certain boyish mishaps which marked
his summers at Lakeside. The laborers for the Mission
Fund were rejoiced to learn that, though he had never been at
Jutnapore, yet he had once seen Mr. Boerum, on that gentleman's
arrival at Calcutta. (“What a pity he did'nt go to
Jutnapore! He might have told me about my Eliza,” remarked
Miss Clancy, aside.) In short, the ice between Mr.
Woodbury and the rest of the company was broken so quickly
that even the formation of the first thin crust was scarcely
perceived. His introduction to Ptolemy society was—in the
social technology of Boston—“a success.”

Again the clacking of tongues rose high and shrill, lessening
only for a few minutes after the distribution of wedges of
molasses-cake, offered by Mrs. Hamilton Bue's black-mitted
hands. Mr. Hamilton Bue followed in her wake with a jingling
tray, covered with glasses of lemonade, which the ladies
sipped delicately. The four spinsters, observing that Mrs.
Lemuel Styles drank but the half of her glass, replaced theirs
also half-filled, though it went to their hearts to do so. The
needles now stood at ease, no longer marching, with even
stitch, over their parade-grounds of silk, or cotton, or mousseline-de-laine.
One straggler after another fell out of the
ranks, until it was finally declared that “we have done enough
for this evening.” Then came singing, commencing with
“From Greenland's Icy Mountains,” in which half the company
joined. Miss Sophia Stevenson, who had a good voice,
with—it must be admitted—an occasional tendency to sharps,
led the hymn; but the parts were unequally distributed,
which Mr. Woodbury perceiving, he struck in with a rich
baritone voice. This acquisition was immediately noticed,
and, at the conclusion of the hymn, Mrs. Waldo requested
that he would favor them with a solo.

“I prefer to listen,” he answered. “I know none but the
old, old songs, which you all have heard. But you are welcome
to one of them, if you will first let me hear something
newer and fresher.” Unconsciously, he had hit the custom

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of Ptolemy, never to sing until somebody else has first sung,
to encourage you. The difficulty is, to find the encourager.

Mrs. Waldo seized upon Seth Wattles, who, nothing loth,
commenced in a gritty bass voice:



“Why-ee dooz the why-eet man follah mee pawth,
Like the ha-ound on the ty-eeger's tra-hack?
Dooz the flu-hush on my da-hark cheek waken his wrawth—
Dooz he co-hovet the bow a-hat mee ba-hack?”

“What in the world is the song about?” whispered Mr.
Woodbury.

“It's the Lament of the Indian Hunter,” said Mrs. Waldo:
“he always sings it. Now comes the chorus: it's queer:
listen!”

Thereupon, from the cavernous throat of the singer, issued
a series of howls in the minor key, something in this wise:

Yo-ho—yo-ho! Yo-HO-O—yo-HO-ho-ho-ho!”

“After this,” thought Woodbury, “they can bear to hear
an old song, though a thousand times repeated.” And being
again pressed, he gave simply, without any attempt at brilliancy
of execution: “The Harp of Tara.”

There was profound silence, as his voice, strung with true
masculine fibre, rang through the rooms. Generally, the least
intellectual persons sing with the truest and most touching expression,
because voice and intellect are rarely combined: but
Maxwell Woodbury's fine organ had not been given to him at
the expense of his brain. It was a lucky chance of nature. His
hearers did not really know how admirably he interpreted that
sigh of the Irish heart, but they were pleased, and not niggardly
in their expressions of delight.

More songs were called for, and refused. There was the
usual coaxing, and a shocking prevalence of hoarseness, combined
with sudden loss of memory. One young lady commenced
with “Isle” (which she pronounced eye-heel) “of
Beauty,” but broke down at the end of the first verse, and all
the cries of: “Do go on!” “It's so pretty!” could not

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encourage her to resume. Finally some one, spying Hannah Thurston,
who had folded up her embroidery and was sitting in a shaded
corner, cried out:

“Oh, Miss Thurston! Give us that song you sang the last
time—that one about the mountains, you know.”

Miss Thurston started, as if aroused out of a profound
revery, while a flitting blush, delicate and transient as the
shadow of a rose tossed upon marble, visited her face. She
had felt and followed, word by word and tone by tone, the
glorious Irish lay. The tragic pathos of the concluding lines—


“For freedom now so seldom wakes,
The only throb she gives
Is when some heart indignant breaks,
To show that still she lives!”
—thrilled and shook her with its despairing solemnity. What
a depth of betrayed trust, of baffled aspiration, it revealed!
Some dormant sentiment in her own heart leapt up and answered
it, with that quick inner pang, which would be a cry
were it expressed in sound. Yet was the despair which the
melody suggested of a diviner texture than joy. It was that
sadness of the imaginative nature which is half triumph, because
the same illumination which reveals the hopelessness of
its desires reveals also their beauty and their divinity.

The request addressed to her was a shock which recalled
her to herself. It was so warmly seconded that refusal would
have been ungracious, and a true social instinct told her that
her revery, though involuntary, was out of place. She profited
by the little delay which ensued in order to secure silence—
for in our country communities silence always precedes the
song—to recover her full self-possession. There was no tremor
in her voice, which soared, with the words, into a still,
clear ether, in which the pictures of the song stood out
pure, distinct, and sublime. It was one of those lyrics of
Mrs. Hemans, which suggest the trumpet at woman's lips—
shorn of its rough battle-snarl, its fierce notes tenderly

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muffled, but a trumpet still. She sang, with the bride of the
Alpine hunter:



“Thy heart is in the upper world,
And where the chamois bound;
Thy heart is where the mountain-fir
Shakes with the torrent's sound:
And where the snow-peaks gleam like stars
In the stillness of the air,
And where the lawine's voice is heard,—
Hunter, thy heart is there!”

It was rather musical declamation, than singing. Her voice,
pure, sweet, and strong, distinctly indicated the melody, instead
of giving it positively, beyond the possibility of a mistaken
semitone. It was a ringing chant of that “upper world”
of the glaciers, where every cry or call is followed by a musical
echo,—where every sound betrays the thin air and the
boundless space. Hannah Thurston sang it with a vision of
Alpine scenery in her brain. She saw, gleaming in the paler
sunshine, beneath the black-blue heaven, the sharp horns of
frosted silver, the hanging ledges of short summer grass, the
tumbled masses of gray rock, and the dust of snow from falling
avalanches. Hence, he who had once seen these things in
their reality, saw them again while listening to her. She knew
not, however, her own dramatic power: it was enough that
she gave pleasure.

Maxwell Woodbury's eyes brightened, as the bleak and
lofty landscapes of the Bernese Oberland rose before him.
Over the dark fir-woods and the blue ice-caverns of the
Rosenlaui glacier, he saw the jagged pyramid of the Wetterhorn,
toppling in the morning sky; and involuntarily asked
himself what was the magic which had started that half-forgotten
picture from the chambers of his memory. How
should this pale, quiet girl who, in a musical sense, was no
singer, and who had assuredly never seen the Alps, have
caught the voice which haunts their desolate glory? But
these were questions which came afterwards. The concluding

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verse, expressing only the patience and humility of love in the
valley, blurred the sharp crystal of the first impression and
brought him back to the Sewing-Union without a rude shock
of transition. He cordially thanked the singer—an act rather
unusual in Ptolemy at that time, and hence a grateful surprise
to Hannah Thurston, to whom his words conveyed a more
earnest meaning than was demanded by mere formal courtesy.

By this time the assembled company had become very
genial and unconstrained. The Rev. Lemuel Styles had entirely
forgotten the levity of Mrs. Bue's illumination, and even indulged
in good-humored badinage (of a perfectly mild and
proper character) with Mrs. Waldo. The others were gathered
into little groups, cheerfully chatting—the young gentlemen
and ladies apart from the married people. Scandal was
sugar-coated, in order to hide its true character: love put on
a bitter and prickly outside, to avoid the observation of others:
all the innocent disguises of Society were in as full operation
as in the ripened atmosphere of great cities.

The nearest approach to a discord was in a somewhat heated
discussion on the subject of Slavery, which grew up between
Seth Wattles and the Hon. Zeno Harder. The latter was
vehement in his denunciation of the Abolitionists, to which
the former replied by quoting the Declaration of Independence.
The two voices—either of them alike unpleasant to a
sensitive ear—finally became loud enough to attract the attention
of Mrs. Waldo, who had a keen scent for opportunities
for the exercise of her authority.

“Come, come!” she cried, placing one hand on Seth's shoulder,
while she threatened the Honorable Zeno with the other:
“this is forbidden ground. The Sewing-Union would never
hold together, if we allowed such things. Besides, what's the
use? You two would talk together all night, I'll warrant, and
be no nearer agreeing in the morning.”

“No,” cried Seth, “because your party politicians ignore
the questions of humanity!”

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“And your fanatical abstractionists never look at any thing
in a practical way!” rejoined the Honorable Zeno.

“And both are deficient in a sense of propriety—I shall
have to say, if you don't stop,” was Mrs. Waldo's ready comment.

This little episode had attracted a few spectators, who
were so evidently on Mrs. Waldo's side, that “the Judge,”
as the Hon. Zeno was familiarly called, at once saw the politic
course, and rising magnificently, exclaimed: “Although we
don't advocate Women's Rights, we yield to woman's authority.”
Then, bowing with corpulent condescension, he passed
away. Seth Wattles, having no longer an opponent, was condemned
to silence.

In the mean time, it had been whispered among the company
that the next meeting of the Union would be held at the
Merryfield farm-house, a mile and a half from Ptolemy. This
had been arranged by the prominent ladies, after a good deal
of consultation. Mr. Merryfield still belonged to the congregation
of the Rev. Lemuel Styles, although not in very good
repute. His farm-house was large and spacious, and he was
an excellent “provider,” especially for his guests. Moreover,
he was the only one of the small clan of Abolitionists, who
could conveniently entertain the Union,—so that in him were
discharged all the social obligations which the remaining members
could fairly exact. The four spinsters, indeed, had exchanged
patient glances, as much as to say: “This is a cross
which we must needs bear.” Mr. Merryfield, be it known,
had refused to contribute to Foreign Missions, on the ground
that we had already too many black heathen at home. The
younger persons, nevertheless, were very well satisfied, and
thus the millennial advance of Ptolemy was not interrupted.

The more staid guests had now taken leave, and there was
presently a general movement of departure. The ladies put
on their bonnets and shawls in the best bedroom up-stairs, and
the gentlemen picked out their respective hats and coats from
the miscellaneous heap on the kitchen settee. The hall-door

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was unlocked to facilitate egress, and lively groups lingered
on the stairs, in the doorway, and on the piazza. The gentlemen
dodged about to secure their coveted privilege of
escort: now and then a happy young pair slipped away in the
belief that they were unnoticed: there were calls of “Do
come and see us, now!”—last eager whispers of gossip, a great
deal of superfluous female kissing, and the final remarks to
Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton Bue: “Good-bye! we've had a nice
time!”—as the company filtered away.

When the last guest had disappeared, Mr. Hamilton Bue
carefully closed and locked the doors, and then remarked to
his wife, who was engaged in putting out the extra lamps:
“Well, Martha, I think we've done very well, though I say it
that shouldn't. Mr. Styles liked your tea, and the cake must
have been pretty good, judging from the way they stowed it
out of sight.”

“Yes,” said Mrs. Bue; “I was afraid at one time, there
wouldn't be enough to go round. It's well I made up my
mind, at the last minute, to bake five instead of four. Molasses
is so high.”

“Oh, what's the odds of two shillings more or less,” her
husband consolingly remarked, “when you've got to make a
regular spread? Besides, I guess I'll clear expenses, by persuading
Woodbury to insure his house in our concern. Dennisons
always took the Etna.”

-- 026 --

p713-031 CHAPTER II. MR. WOODBURY'S INTRODUCTION TO LAKESIDE.

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On the very day when the Sewing-Union met in Ptolemy,
there was an unusual commotion at Lakeside. Only four or
five days had elapsed since the secluded little household had
been startled by the news that the old place was finally sold,
and now a short note had arrived from Mr. Hammond, of Tiberius,
who was the agent for the estate, stating that the new
owner would probably make his appearance in the course of
the day.

The first thing that suggested itself to the distracted mind
of Mrs. Fortitude Babb, the housekeeper, was immediately to
summon old Melinda, a negro woman, whose specialty was
house-cleaning. Had there been sufficient time, Mrs. Babb
would have scoured the entire dwelling, from garret to cellar.
A stranger, indeed, would have remarked no appearance of
disorder, or want of proper cleanliness, anywhere: but the
tall housekeeper, propping her hands upon her hips, exclaimed,
in despair: “Whatever shall I do? There 's hardly time to
have the rooms swep', let alone washin' the wood-work.
Then, ag'in, I dunno which o' the two bed-rooms he'd like
best. Why couldn't Mr. Hammond hold him back, till things
was decent? And the libery 's been shet up, this ever so
long; and there's bakin' to do—squinch tarts, and sich likes—
and you must kill two chickens, Arbutus, right away!”

“Don't be worried, Mother Forty,” replied Arbutus Wilson,
the stout young man whom Mrs. Babb addressed, “things
a 'n't lookin' so bad, after all. Max.—well, Mr. Woodbury, I
must say now, though it'll go rather queer, at first—was always
easy satisfied, when he was here afore.”

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[figure description] Page 027.[end figure description]

“I reckon you think people doesn't change in twenty year.
There's no tellin' what sort of a man he's got to be. But
here comes Melindy. I guess I'll open the libery and let it
air, while she fixes the bedrooms.”

Mrs. Babb's nervousness had a deeper cause than the condition
of the Lakeside mansion. So many years had elapsed
since she first came to the place as housekeeper, that it seemed
to have become her own property as surely as that of the
Dennison family. The death of Mrs. Dennison, eight months
before, recalled her to the consciousness of her uncertain tenure.
Now, since the estate was finally sold and the new
owner about to arrive, a few days, in all probability, would
determine whether her right was to be confirmed or herself
turned adrift upon the world. Although her recollections of
Maxwell Woodbury, whose last visit to Lakeside occurred
during the first year of her reign, were as kindly as was consistent
with her rigid nature, she awaited his arrival with a
mixture of jealousy and dread. True, he was somewhat
nearer to her than those relatives of Mrs. Dennison who had
inherited the property at her death, for the latter Mrs. Babb
had never seen, while him she had both gently scolded and
severely petted: but she felt that the removal of Arbutus
Wilson and herself from the place would be a shameful piece
of injustice, and the fact that such removal was possible indicated
something wrong in the world.

Arbutus, who was a hardy, healthy, strapping fellow, of
eight-and-twenty, was her step-step-son, if there can be such a
relation. His father, who died shortly after his birth, was one
of those uneducated, ignorant men, whose ears are yet quick to
catch and retain any word of grandiloquent sound. Nothing
delighted him so much as to hear the Biblical genealogies
read. He had somewhere picked up the word arbutus, the
sound of which so pleased him that he at once conferred it
upon his baby, utterly unconscious of its meaning. A year or
two after his death, the widow Wilson married Jason Babb,
an honest, meek-natured carpenter, who proved a good father

-- 028 --

[figure description] Page 028.[end figure description]

to the little Arbutus. She, however, was carried away by a
malignant fever, in the first year of her second marriage. The
widower, who both mourned and missed her, cherished her
child with a conscientious fidelity, and it was quite as much
from a sense of duty towards the boy, as from an inclination
of the heart, that he married Miss Fortitude Winterbottom, a
tall, staid, self-reliant creature, verging on spinsterhood.

The Fates, however, seemed determined to interfere with
Jason Babb's connubial plans; but the next time it was upon
himself, and not upon his wife, that the lot fell. Having no
children of his own, by either wife, he besought Fortitude,
with his latest breath, to be both father and mother to the
doubly-orphaned little Bute Wilson. It must be admitted
that Mrs. Babb faithfully performed her promise. The true
feeling of parental tenderness had never been granted to her,
and the sense of responsibility—of ownership—which came in
its stead—was a very mild substitute; but it impressed the
boy, at least, with a consciousness of care and protection,
which satisfied his simple nature. Mrs. Dennison, with her
kind voice, and gentle, resigned old face, seemed much more
the mother, while Mrs. Babb, with her peremptory ways and
strict idea of discipline, unconsciously assumed for him the
attitude of a father. The latter had come to Lakeside at a
time when Mr. Dennison's confirmed feebleness required his
wife to devote herself wholly to his care. Mrs. Babb, therefore,
took charge of the house, and Arbutus, at first a younger
companion of Henry Dennison, afterwards an active farm-boy,
finally developed into an excellent farmer, and had almost the
exclusive management of the estate for some years before Mrs.
Dennison's death.

Thus these two persons, with an Irish field-hand, had been
the only occupants of Lakeside, during the summer and autumn.
Arbutus, or Bute, as he was universally called in the
neighborhood, was well-pleased with the news of Mr. Woodbury's
purchase. He remembered him, indistinctly, as the
“town-boy” who gave him his first top and taught him how

-- 029 --

[figure description] Page 029.[end figure description]

to spin it, though the big fellow couldn't tell a thrush's egg
from a robin's, and always said “tortoise” instead of “tortle.”
Bute thought they'd get along together somehow—or, if they
didn't, he could do as well somewheres else, he reckoned.
Nevertheless, he felt anxious that the owner should receive a
satisfactory impression on his arrival, and busied himself, with
Patrick's assistance, in “setting every thing to rights” about
the barn and out-houses.

After all, there was scarcely need of such hurried preparation.
Mr. Hammond and Woodbury, detained by some
necessary formalities of the law, did not leave Tiberius until
the afternoon of that day. The town being situated at the
outlet of Atauga Lake, they took the little steamer to Atauga
City, near its head, in preference to the long road over the
hills. The boat, with a heavy load of freight, made slow progress,
and it was dusk before they passed the point on the
eastern shore, beyond which Lakeside is visible from the
water. On reaching Ptolemy by the evening stage from
Atauga City, Maxwell Woodbury found the new “Ptolemy
House” so bright and cheerful, that he immediately proposed
their remaining for the night, although within four miles of
their destination.

“I have a fancy for approaching the old place by daylight,”
said he to his companion. “Here begins my familiar ground,
and I should be sorry to lose the smallest test of memory.
Besides, I am not sure what kind of quarters I should be able
to offer you, on such short notice.”

“Let us stay, then, by all means,” said the lawyer. “I can
appreciate feelings, although I am occupied entirely with
deeds.” Here he quietly chuckled, and was answered by a
roar from the landlord, who came up in time to hear the
remark.

“Ha! ha! Good, Mr. Hammond!” exclaimed the latter.
“Very happy to entertain you, gentlemen. Mr. Woodbury
can have the Bridal Chamber, if he likes. But you should go
to the Great Sewing-Union, gentlemen. You will find all

-- 030 --

[figure description] Page 030.[end figure description]

Ptolemy there to-night. It's at Hamilton Bue's: you know
him, Mr. Hammond—Director of the Bank.”

The results of this advice have already been described.
After breakfast, on the following morning, the two gentlemen
set out for Lakeside in a light open carriage. It was one of
the last days of the Indian summer, soft and hazy, with a foreboding
of winter in the air. The hills, enclosing the head of
the lake, and stretching away southwards, on opposite sides
of the two valleys, which unite just behind Ptolemy, loomed
through their blue veil with almost the majesty of mountain
ranges. The green of the pine-forests on their crests, and of
those ragged lines of the original woods which marked the
courses of the descending ravines, was dimmed and robbed of its
gloom. The meadows extending towards the lake were still
fresh, and the great elms by the creek-side had not yet shed
all of their tawny leaves. A moist, fragrant odor of decay pervaded
the atmosphere, and the soft southwestern wind, occasionally
stealing down the further valley, seemed to blow the sombre
colors of the landscape into dying flickers of brightness.

As they crossed the stream to the eastward of the village,
and drove along the base of the hills beyond, Woodbury exclaimed:

“You cannot possibly understand, Mr. Hammond, how
refreshing to me are these signs of the coming winter, after
nearly fifteen years of unbroken summer. I shall enjoy the
change doubly here, among the scenes of the only country-life
which I ever knew in America,—where I was really happiest,
as a boy. I suppose,” he added, laughing, “now that the
business is over, I may confess to you how much I congratulate
myself on having made the purchase.”

“As if I did not notice how anxious you were to buy!” rejoined
the lawyer. “You must be strongly attached to the
old place, to take it on the strength of former associations. I
wish it were nearer Tiberius, that we might have more of your
society. Did you pass much of your youth here?”

“Only my summers, from the age of twelve to fifteen. My

-- 031 --

[figure description] Page 031.[end figure description]

constitution was rather delicate when I was young, and Mrs.
Dennison, who was a distant relative of my father, and sometimes
visited us in New York, persuaded him to let me try
the air of Lakeside. Henry was about my own age, and we
soon became great friends. The place was a second home to
me, thenceforth, until my father's death. Even after I went
to Calcutta, I continued to correspond with Henry, but my
last letter from Lakeside was written by his mother, after his
body was brought home from Mexico.”

“Yes,” said Mr. Hammond, “the old lady fairly broke
down after that. Henry was a fine fellow and a promising
officer, and I believe she would have borne his loss better, had
he fallen in battle. But he lingered a long time in the hospital,
and she was just beginning to hope for his recovery, when
the news of his death came instead. But see! there is Roaring
Brook. Do you hear the noise of the fall? How loud it
is this morning!”

The hill, curving rapidly to the eastward, rose abruptly from
the meadows in a succession of shelving terraces, the lowest of
which was faced with a wall of dark rock, in horizontal strata,
but almost concealed from view by the tall forest trees which
grew at its base. The stream, issuing from a glen which descended
from the lofty upland region to the eastward of the
lake, poured itself headlong from the brink of the rocky steep,—
a glittering silver thread in summer, a tawny banner of
angry sound in the autumn rains. Seen through the hazy air,
its narrow white column seemed to stand motionless between
the pines, and its mellowed thunder to roll from some region
beyond the hills.

Woodbury, who had been looking steadily across the meadows
to the north, cried out: “It is the same—it has not yet
run itself dry! Now we shall see Lakeside; but no—yet I
certainly used to see the house from this point. Ah! twenty
years! I had forgotten that trees cannot stand still; that
ash, or whatever it is, has quite filled up the gap. I am afraid
I shall find greater changes than this.”

-- 032 --

[figure description] Page 032.[end figure description]

His eyes mechanically fell, as the wheels rumbled suddenly
on the plank bridge over Roaring Brook. Mr. Hammond looked
up, gave the horse a skilful dash of the whip and shot past
the trees which lined the stream. “Look and see!” he presently
said.

The old place, so familiar to Woodbury, and now his own
property, lay before him. There was the heavy white house,
with its broad verandah, looking southward from the last low
shelf of the hills, which rose behind it on their westward
sweep back to the lake. The high-road to Anacreon and
thence to Tiberius, up the eastern shore, turned to the right
and ascended to the upland, through a long winding glen.
A small grove of evergreens still further protected the house
on its northwestern side, so that its position was unusually
sunny and sheltered. The head of the lake, the meadows
around Ptolemy and the branching valleys beyond, were all
visible from the southern windows; and though the hills to
the east somewhat obscured the sunrise, the evenings wore a
double splendor—in the lake and in the sky.

“Poor Henry!” whispered Woodbury to himself, as Mr.
Hammond alighted to open the gate into the private lane.
The house had again disappeared from view, behind the rise
of the broad knoll upon which it stood, and their approach
was not visible until they had reached the upper level, with
its stately avenue of sugar-maples, extending to the garden
wall.

The place was really unchanged, to all appearance. Perhaps
the clumps of lilac and snowball, along the northern
wall were somewhat higher, and the apple-trees in the orchard
behind the house more gnarled and mossy; but the house itself,
the turfed space before it, the flagged walk leading to the
door, the pyramids of yew and juniper, were the same as
ever, and the old oaks at each corner seemed, twig for twig,
to have stood still for twenty years. A few bunches of chrysanthemum,
somewhat nipped by the frost, gave their sober
autumnal coloring and wholesome bitter-sweet odor to the

-- 033 --

[figure description] Page 033.[end figure description]

garden-alleys. The late purple asters were shrivelled and
drooping, and the hollyhocks stood like desolate floral towers,
tottering over the summer's ruin.

For the first time in twenty years, Woodbury felt the almost
forgotten sensation of home steal through his heart.
Quickly and silently he recognized each familiar object, and
the far-off days of the past swept into the nearness of yesterday.
His ear took no note of Mr. Hammond's rattling remarks:
the latter was not precisely the man whose atmosphere
lures forth the hidden fragrance of one's nature.

As they drove along the garden-wall, a strong figure appeared,
approaching with eager strides. He glanced first at
the horse and carriage. “Fairlamb's livery—the bay,” was
his mental remark. The next moment he stood at the gate,
waiting for them to alight.

“How do you do, Mr. Hammond?” he cried. “You're
late a-comin': we expected ye las' night. And is this really
Mr. Maxwell, I mean Mr. Woodbury—well, I'd never ha
knowed him. I s'pose you don't know me, nuther, Mr.
Max.?”

“God bless me! it must be little Bute!” exclaimed Woodbury,
taking the honest fellow's hand. “Yes, I see it now—
man instead of boy, but the same fellow still.”

“Yes, indeed, that I be!” asserted the delighted Arbutus.
He meant much more than the words indicated.
Fully expressed, his thoughts would have run something in
this wise: “I guess we can git on together, as well as
when we was boys. If you ha'n't changed, I ha'n't. I'll
do my dooty towards ye, and you won't be disapp'inted in
me.”

In the mean time, Mrs. Fortitude Babb had made her appearance,
clad in the black bombazine which she had purchased
for Jason's funeral, and was waiting, tall and rigid, but
with considerable internal “flusteration” (as she would have
expressed it), on the verandah. One mental eye was directed
towards the new owner, and the other to the fowls in the

-- 034 --

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kitchen, which she had cut up the evening before, for a fricassee,
and which were thus rendered unfit for roasting. “Why,
he's a perfick stranger!” “If there's only time to make a pie
of 'em!” were the two thoughts which crossed each other in
her brain.

“Mrs. Babb! there's no mistaking who you are!” exclaimed
Woodbury, as he hastened with outstretched hand up the
flagged walk.

The old housekeeper gave him her long, bony hand in
return, and made an attempt at a courtesy, a thing which
she had not done for so long that one of her knee-joints
cracked with the effort. “Welcome, Sir!” said she, with becoming
gravity. Woodbury thought she did not recognize
him.

“Why, don't you remember Max.?” he asked.

“Yes, I recollex you as you was. And now I come to
look, your eyes is jist the same. Dear, dear!” and in spite
of herself two large tears slowly took their way down her
lank cheeks. “If Miss Dennison and Henry could be here!”
Then she wiped her eyes with her hand, rather than spoil the
corner of her black silk apron. Stiffening her features the
next moment, she turned away, exclaiming in a voice unnecessarily
sharp: “Arbutus, why don't you put away the
horse?”

The gentlemen entered the house. The hall-door had evidently
not been recently used, for the lock grated with a
sound of rust. The sitting-room on the left and the library
beyond, were full of hazy sunshine and cheerful with the
crackling of fires on the open hearth. Dust was nowhere to
be seen, but the chairs stood as fixedly in their formal places as
if screwed to the floor, and the old books seemed to be glued
together in regular piles. None of the slight tokens of habitual
occupation caught the eye—no pleasant irregularity of domestic
life,—a newspaper tossed here, a glove there, a chair
placed obliquely to a favorite window, or a work-stand or
foot-stool drawn from its place. Mrs. Babb, it is true, with a

-- 035 --

[figure description] Page 035.[end figure description]

desperate attempt at ornament, had gathered the most presentable
of the chrysanthemums, with some springs of arbor-vit
æ, and stuck them into an old glass flower-jar. Their
pungent odor helped to conceal the faint musty smell which
still lingered in the unused rooms.

“I think we will sit here, Mrs. Babb,” said Woodbury,
leading the way into the library. “It was always my favorite
room,” he added, turning to the lawyer, “and it has the finest
view of the lake.”

“I'm afeard that's all you'll have,” the housekeeper grimly
remarked. “Things is terrible upside-down: you come so
onexpected. An empty house makes more bother than a full
one. But you're here now, an' you'll have to take it sich as
it is.”

Therewith she retired to the kitchen, where Bute soon
joined her.

“Well, Mother Forty,” he asked, “how do you like his
looks? He's no more changed than I am, only on th' outside.
I don't s'pose he knows more than ever about farmin',
but he's only got to let me alone and things 'll go right.”

“Looks is nothin',” the housekeeper answered. “Handsome
is that handsome does, I say. Don't whistle till you're
out o' the woods, Bute. Not but what I'd ruther have him
here than some o' them people down to Po'keepsy, that never
took no notice o' her while she lived.”

“There's no mistake, then, about his havin' bought the
farm?”

“I guess not, but I'll soon see.”

She presently appeared in the library, with a pitcher of
cider and two glasses on a tray, and a plate of her best “jumbles.”
“There's a few bottles o' Madary in the cellar,” she
said; “but you know I can't take nothin' without your leave,
Mr. Hammond—leastways, onless it's all fixed.”

Woodbury, however, quietly answered: “Thank you, we
will leave the wine until dinner. You can give us a meal, I
presume, Mrs. Babb?”

-- 036 --

[figure description] Page 036.[end figure description]

“'T wo'nt be what I'd like. I'd reckoned on a supper las'
night, instid of a dinner to-day. Expect it 'll be pretty much
pot-luck. However, I'll do what I can.”

Mrs. Babb then returned to the kitchen, satisfied, at least,
that Mr. Maxwell Woodbury was now really the master of
Lakeside.

-- 037 --

p713-042 CHAPTER III. AN EVENING OF GOSSIP, IN WHICH WE LEARN SOMETHING ABOUT THE PERSONS ALREADY MENTIONED.

[figure description] Page 037.[end figure description]

After a long absence in India, Woodbury had come home
to find all his former associations broken, even the familiar
landmarks of his boyish life destroyed. His only near relative
was an older sister, married some years before his departure,
and now a stately matron, who was just beginning to enjoy a
new importance in society from the beauty of her daughters.
There was a small corner in her heart, it is true, for the exiled
brother. The floor was swept, there; the room aired, and
sufficient fire kept burning on the hearth, to take off the chill:
but it was the chamber of an occasional guest rather than of
an habitual inmate. She was glad to see him back again, especially
as his manners were thoroughly refined and his wealth
was supposed to be large (indeed, common report greatly
magnified it): she would have lamented his death, and have
worn becoming mourning for him—would even have persuaded
her husband to assist him, had he returned penniless.
In short, Woodbury could not complain of his reception,
and the absence of a more intimate relation—of a sweet,
sympathetic bond, springing from kinship of heart as well as
of blood, was all the more lightly felt because such bond had
never previously existed.

In the dreams of home which haunted him in lonely hours,
on the banks of the Hoogly or the breezy heights of Darjeeling,
Lakeside always first arose, and repeated itself most frequently
and distinctly. “Aunt Dennison,” as he was accustomed
to call her, took the place, in his affectionate memory,

-- 038 --

[figure description] Page 038.[end figure description]

of the lost mother whose features he could trace but dimly,
far back in the faint consciousness of childhood. There
seemed to be no other spot in the world to which he had a
natural right to return. The friends whom he had left, in
New York, as a young man of twenty-one, had become restless,
impetuous men of business, from whose natures every
element of calm had been shaken, while he had slowly and
comfortably matured his manhood in the immemorial repose
of Asia. The atmosphere of the city at first excited, then
wearied him. The wish to visit Lakeside was increasing in
his mind, when he was one day startled by seeing the property
advertised for sale, and instantly determined to become
the purchaser. A correspondence with Mr. Hammond ensued,
and, as there was another competitor in the field, Woodbury's
anxiety to secure the old place led him to close the
negotiations before he had found time to see it again. Now,
however, he had made arrangements to spend the greater part
of the winter there, as much on account of the certain repose
and seclusion which he craved, as from the physical necessity
of that tonic which the dry cold of the inland offered to his
languid tropical blood.

No disposal had yet been made of the stock and implements
belonging to the farm, which had not been included in the
purchase of the estate. Woodbury's object in buying the
land had no reference to any definite plan of his future life.
He had come back from India with a fortune which, though
moderate, absolved him from the necessity of labor. He simply
wished to have a home of his own—an ark of refuge to
which he could at any time return—a sheltered spot where
some portion of his life might strike root. His knowledge of
farming was next to nothing. Yet the fields could not be allowed
to relapse into wilderness, the house must have a housekeeper,
and the necessity of continuing the present occupants
in their respective functions was too apparent to be discussed.
For the present, at least, Mrs. Babb and Arbutus were indispensable
adherents of the property.

-- 039 --

[figure description] Page 039.[end figure description]

After dinner, Mr. Hammond paid them what was due from
the estate. Bute turned the money over uneasily in his hand,
grew red in the face, and avoided meeting the eye of the new
owner. Mrs. Babb straightened her long spine, took out a
buckskin purse, and, having put the money therein, began
rubbing the steel clasp with the corner of her apron. Woodbury,
then, with a few friendly words, expressed his pleasure
at having found them in charge of Lakeside, and his desire
that each should continue to serve him in the same capacity as
before.

Mrs. Babb did not betray, by the twitch of a muscle, the
relief she felt. On the contrary, she took credit to herself for
accepting her good fortune. “There's them that would like
to have me,” said she. “Mrs. Dennison never havin' said
nothin' ag'in my housekeepin', but the reverse; and I a'n't
bound to stay, for want of a good home; but somebody must
keep house for ye, and I'd hate to see things goin' to wrack,
after keerin' for 'em, a matter o' twenty year. Well—I'll
stay, I guess, and do my best, as I've always done it.”

Et tu, Bute?” said Mr. Hammond, whose small puns
had gained him a reputation for wit, in Tiberius.

Bute understood the meaning, not the words. “I'm glad
Mr. Max. wants me,” he answered, eagerly. “I'd hate to leave
the old place, though I'm able to get my livin' most anywheres.
But it'd be like leavin' home—and jist now, with that twoyear
old colt to break, and a couple o' steers that I'm goin' to
yoke in the spring—it wouldn't seem natural, like. Mr. Max.
and me was boys together here, and I guess we can hitch
teams without kickin' over the traces.”

After arranging for an inventory and appraisal of the live
stock, farming implements, and the greater part of the furniture,
which Woodbury decided to retain, Mr. Hammond took
his departure. Mrs. Babb prepared her tea at the usual early
hour. After some little hesitation, she took her seat at the
table, but evaded participation in the meal. Mr. Woodbury
sat much longer than she was accustomed to see, in the people

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of Ptolemy: he sipped his tea slowly, and actually accepted a
fourth cup. Mrs. Babb's gratification reached its height when
he began to praise her preserved quinces, but on his unthinkingly
declaring them to be “better than ginger,” her grimness
returned.

“Better than ginger! I should think so!” was her mental
exclamation.

Throwing himself into the old leather arm-chair before the
library fire, Woodbury enjoyed the perfect stillness of the November
evening. The wind had fallen, and the light of a half-moon
lay upon the landscape. The vague illumination, the
shadowy outlines of the distant hills, and that sense of isolation
from the world which now returned upon him, gratefully
brought back the half-obliterated moods of his Indian life. He
almost expected to hear the soft whish of the punka above his
head, and to find, suddenly, the “hookah-burdar” at his
elbow. A cheerful hickory-fed flame replaced the one, and a
ripe Havana cigar the other; but his repose was not destined
to be left undisturbed. “The world” is not so easy to
escape. Even there, in Ptolemy, it existed, and two of its
special agents (self-created) already knocked at the door of
Lakeside.

The housekeeper ushered Mr. Hamilton Bue and the Hon.
Zeno Harder into the library. The latter, as Member of the
Legislature, considered that this call was due, as, in some sort,
an official welcome to his district. Besides, his next aim was
the State Senate, and the favor of a new resident, whose
wealth would give him influence, could not be secured too
soon. Mr. Bue, as the host of the previous evening, enjoyed
an advantage over the agent of the “Etna,” which he was not
slow to use. His politeness was composed of equal parts of
curiosity and the “Saratoga Mutual.”

“We thought, Sir,” said the Hon. Zeno, entering, “that
your first evening here might be a little lonesome, and you'd
be glad to have company for an hour or so.”

The Member was a coarse, obese man, with heavy chaps,

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thick, flat lips, small eyes, bald crown, and a voice which had
been made harsh and aggressive in its tone by much vigorous
oratory in the open air. The lines of his figure were rounded,
it is true, but it was the lumpy roundness of a potato rather
than the swelling, opulent curves of well-padded muscle.
Mr. Hamilton Bue, in contrast to him, seemed to be made of
angles. His face and hands had that lean dryness which suggests
a body similarly constructed, and makes us thankful for
the invention of clothing. He was a prim, precise business
man, as the long thin nose and narrow lips indicated, with a
trace of weakness in the retreating chin. Neither of these
gentlemen possessed a particle of that grapy bloom of ripe
manhood, which tells of generous blood in either cell of the
double heart. In one the juice was dried up; in the other it
had become thick and slightly rancid.

They were not the visitors whom Woodbury would have
chosen, but the ostensible purpose of their call demanded
acknowledgment. He therefore gave them a cordial welcome,
and drew additional chairs in front of the fire. The Hon.
Zeno, taking a cigar, elevated his feet upon the lower moulding
of the wooden mantel-piece, spat in the fire, and remarked:

“You find Ptolemy changed, I dare say. Let me see—
when were you here last? In '32? I must have been studying
law in Tiberius at that time. Oh, it's scarcely the same
place. So many went West after the smash in '37, and new
people have come in—new people and new idees, I may
say.”

“We have certainly shared in the general progression of
the country, even during my residence here,” said Mr. Hamilton
Bue, carefully assuming his official style. “Ten years
ago, there were but thirty-seven names on the books of the
Saratoga Mutual. Now we count a hundred and thirteen.
But there is a reason for it: the Company pays its loss punctually—
most punctually.”

Unconscious of this dexterous advertising, Woodbury

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answered the Hon. Zeno: “Since I am to be, for a while, a
member of your community, I am interested in learning something
more about it. What are the new ideas you mentioned,
Mr. Harder?”

“Well, Sir,—I can't exactly say that Hunkerism is a new
thing in politics. I'm a Barnburner, you must know, and
since the split it seems like new parties, though we hold on to
the old principles. Then there's the Temperance Reform—
swep' every thing before it, at first, but slacking off just now.
The Abolitionists, it's hardly worth while to count—there's so
few of them—but they make a mighty noise. Go for Non-Resistance,
Women's Rights, and all other Isms. So, you see,
compared to the old times, when 'twas only Whig and Democrat,
the deestrict is pretty well stirred up.”

Mr. Bue, uncertain as to the views of his host upon some of
the subjects mentioned, and keeping a sharp eye to his own
interests, here remarked in a mild, placable tone: “I don't
know that it does any harm. People must have their own
opinions, and there's no law to hinder it. In fact, frequent
discussion is a means of intellectual improvement.”

“But what's the use of discussing what's contrary to Scriptur'
and Reason?” cried the Hon. Zeno, in his out-door voice.
Our party is for Free Soil, and you can't go further under
the Constitution,—so, what's the use in talking? Non-Resistance
might be Christian enough, if all men was saints;
but we've got to take things as we find 'em. When you're
hit, hit back, if you want to do any good in these times. As
for Women's Rights, it's the biggest humbug of all. A
pretty mess we should be in, if it could be carried out! Think
of my wife taking the stump against Mrs. Blackford, and me
and him doing the washing and cooking!”

“Who was the Abolitionist—for such I took him to be—
with whom you were talking, last evening, at Mr. Bue's?”
Woodbury asked.

“Wattles—a tailor in Ptolemy—one of the worst fanatics
among 'em!” the irate Zeno replied. “Believes in all the

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Isms, and thinks himself a great Reformer. It's disgusting to
hear a man talk about Women's Rights, as he does. I don't
mind it so much in Hannah Thurston; but the fact is, she's
more of a man than the most of 'em.”

“Hannah Thurston! Is not that the lady who sang—a
pale, earnest-looking girl, in a gray dress?”

“I did'nt notice her dress,” the Member answered. “She
sings, though—not much voice, but what she has tells amazingly.
Between ourselves, I'll admit that she's a first-rate
speaker—that is, for a woman. I was tempted to have a
round with her, at the last meeting they held; but then, you
know, a woman always has you at a disadvantage. You
daren't give it back to them as sharp as you get it.”

“Do you really mean that she makes public harangues?”
exclaimed Woodbury, who, in his long absence from home,
had lost sight of many new developments in American
society.

“Yes, and not bad ones, either, when you consider the subject.
Her mother used to preach in Quaker Meetings, so it
doesn't seem quite so strange as it might. Besides, she isn't
married, and one can make some allowance. But when Sarah
Merryfield gets up and talks of the tyranny of man, it's a
little too much for me. I'd like to know, now, exactly what
her meek lout of a husband thinks about it.”

“Is Mrs. Waldo, also, an advocate of the new doctrine?”

“She? No indeed. She has her rights already: that is,
all that a woman properly knows how to use. Though I don't
like the Cimmerian doctrine—Mr. Waldo is pastor of the
Cimmerians—yet I think she's a much better Christian than
the Merryfields, who still hang on to our Church.”

“What are the Cimmerians?” inquired Woodbury. “Are
they so called from the darkness of their doctrines?”

The Hon. Zeno did not understand the classical allusion.
“They're followers of the Rev. Beza Cimmer,” he said. “He
was first a Seceder, I believe, but differed with them on the
doctrine of Grace. Besides, they think that Baptism, to be

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saving, must be in exact imitation of that of the Saviour.
The preacher wears a hair garment, like John the Baptist,
when he performs the ceremony, and the converts long, white
robes. They pick out some creek for their Jordan, and do
not allow outsiders to be present. They don't grow in numbers,
and have but a very small congregation in Ptolemy. In
fact, Mr. Waldo is considered rather shaky by some of the
older members, who were converted by Cimmer himself. He
don't hold very close communion.”

A part of this explanation was incomprehensible to Woodbury,
who was not yet familiar with the catch-words which
fall so glibly from the mouths of country theologians. He
detected the Member's disposition to harangue instead of
converse—a tendency which could only be prevented by a
frequent and dexterous change of subject. “Your church,”
he said:—“I take it for granted you refer to that of Mr.
Styles,—seems to be in a flourishing condition.”

“Yes,” replied Mr. Hamilton Bue, “we have prospered
under his ministry. Some have backslidden, it is true, but we
have had encouraging seasons of revival. Our ladies are now
very earnest in the work of assisting the Jutnapore Mission.
Mrs. Boerum is from Syracuse, and a particular friend of Miss
Eliza Clancy. I think Miss Eliza herself would have gone
if she had been called in time. You know it requires a
double call.”

“A double call! Excuse me if I do not quite understand
you,” said the host.

“Why, of course, they must first be called to the work;
and then, as they can't go alone among the heathen, they
must afterwards depend on a personal call from some unmarried
missionary. Now Miss Clancy is rather too old
for that.”

Woodbury could not repress a smile at this naïve statement,
although it was made with entire gravity. “I have seen something
of your missions in India,” he at last remarked, “and
believe that they are capable of accomplishing much good.

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Still, you must not expect immediate returns. It is only the
lowest caste that is now reached, and the Christianizing of
India must come, eventually, from the highest.”

Rather than discuss a subject of which he was ignorant, the
Hon. Zeno started a new topic. “By the way, the next meeting
of the Sewing Union will be at Merryfield's. Shall you
attend, Mr. Woodbury?”

“Yes. They are among the few persons who have kept me
in good remembrance, though they, too, from what you have
said, must be greatly changed since I used to play with their
son Absalom. I am very sorry to hear of his death.”

“It is a pity,” replied the Member, biting off the end of a
fresh cigar. “Absalom was really a fine, promising fellow,
but they spoiled him with their Isms. They were Grahamites
for a year or two—lived on bran bread and turnips, boiled
wheat and dried apples. Absalom took up that and the
water-cure, and wanted to become a patent first-class reformer.
Now, Temperance is a good thing—though I can't quite go
the Maine Law—but water inside of you and outside of you,
summer and winter alike, isn't temperance, according to my
idee. He had a spell of pleurisy, one winter, and doctored
himself for it. His lungs were broken up, after that, and he
went off the very next fall. They set a great deal of store
by him.”

“Is it possible that such delusions are held by intelligent
persons?” exclaimed Woodbury, shocked as well as surprised.
“I hope these theories are not included in the general
progress of which Mr. Bue spoke. But I have almost forgotten
my duty as a host. The nights are getting cold, gentlemen,
and perhaps you will take a glass of wine.”

The Hon. Zeno's small eyes twinkled, and his lips twitched
liquorously. “Well—I don't care if I do,” said he.

Mr. Hamilton Bue was silent, and slightly embarrassed. He
had found it necessary to join the Temperance Society, because
the reform was a popular one. He always went with
the current as soon as it became too strong to stem

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conveniently. But the temptation to indulge still lurked in his
thin blood. It was evident that the Member, for his own
sake, would not mention the circumstance, and Mr. Woodbury,
in all probability, would never think of it again.

Some of Mrs. Babb's “Madary” presently twinkled like
smoky topaz in the light of the wood-fire. Mr. Bue at first
sipped hesitatingly, like a bather dipping his toes, with a
shudder, into the waters of a cold river; but having once
reached the bottom of the glass—so quickly, indeed, that it
excited his own surprise—he made the next plunge with the
boldness of a man accustomed to it.

“You will attend church, I presume, Mr. Woodbury?”
said he. “Of course you have convictions.”

“Certainly,” Woodbury answered, without a clear idea of
what was meant by the word—“very strong ones.”

“Of course—it could not be otherwise. I shall be very
glad if you will now and then accept a seat in my pew. Mr.
Styles is a great authority on Galatians, and I am sure you
will derive spiritual refreshment from his sermons.”

Here the Hon. Zeno rose and commenced buttoning his
coat, as a signal of departure. Growing confidential from his
inner warmth, he placed one hand affectionately on Woodbury's
shoulder, somewhat to the latter's disgust, and said:
“Now you are one of us, Woodbury, you must take an active
part in our political concerns. Great principles are at stake,
Sir, and the country has need of men like you. Let me warn
you against the Hunkers—their game is nearly played out.
I'll be most happy, Sir, to explain to you the condition of
parties. You'll find me well posted up.”

Mr. Bue took occasion to make a parting hint in the interest
of the Saratoga Mutual. “If you wish to have your house insured,
Mr. Woodbury,” said he, “I shall be glad to send you
our pamphlets. The Company is so well known, fortunately,
that its name is a sufficient recommendation.”

The owner of Lakeside stood on the verandah, watching
his guests drive down the maple avenue. As the sound of

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their wheels sank below the brow of the hill, the muffled
voice of Roaring Brook came softly to him, across the dark
meadows. A part of Atauga Lake threw back the light of
the descending moon. “Here,” thought he, “is the commencement
of a new existence. It is not the old, boyish life
of which I dreamed, but something very different. I foresee
that I shall have to accustom myself to many features of this
society, which are not attractive—some of them even repugnant—
and perhaps the only counterbalancing delight left to
me will be the enjoyment of this lovely scenery, the peace of
this secluded life. Will that be sufficient? Or will these
oaks and pines at last pall upon my eye, like the palms and
banyans of the East? No: one cannot be satisfied with external
resources. I must study, with a liberal human interest,
the characteristics of this little community, however strange
or repellant they may seem; and certainly, after making
friends among the fossilized Brahmins, there must be a few
among my fellow-Christians and fellow-countrymen, whom I
can heartily respect and love. Those long Indian years must
be placed in a closed Past, and I must adapt myself to habits
and associations, which have become more foreign than
familiar to me.”

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p713-053 CHAPTER IV. AN INTERVIEW ON THE ROAD, AND A NEW HOUSEHOLD.

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The Indian Summer still held its ground, keeping back the
winter's vanguard of frost and keen nor'westers. Day by
day the smoky air became more densely blue and still, and
the leaves, long since dead, hung upon the trees for want of a
loosening wind. The hickory-nuts fell by their own weight,
patterning here and there in the woods, in single smart raps,
and giving out a vigorous balsamic odor, as their cleft rinds
burst open. Only at night a gathering chill and a low moaning
in the air gave the presage of an approaching change in
the season.

On one of those warm forenoons which almost reproduce
the languor and physical yearning of the opening Spring,
Bute Wilson, mounted on Dick, the old farm-horse, jogged
slowly along the road to Ptolemy, whistling “The Rose that
All are Praising,” a melody which he had learned at the
singing-school. Bute was bound for the village, on a variety
of errands, and carried a basket on his arm. Dick's deliberate
gait seemed to be in harmony with the current of his
thoughts. The horse understood his rider, and knew very
well when to take his ease, and when to summon up the little
life left in his stiff old legs. Horses are better interpreters of
one's moods than the most of one's human friends.

Bute was a very good specimen of the American countryman.
A little over the average height, and compacted of
coarse, hardy fibre, he possessed, in spite of the common
stock from which he had sprung, the air of independent self-respect
which a laboring man can only acquire in a

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community where caste is practically ignored. His independence,
however, had not degenerated into impudence: he knew his
deficiencies of nature and education, and did not attempt to
off-set them by a vulgar assertion of equality. He could sit
at Mr. Woodbury's table (using the knife a little too freely)
without embarrassment, and could take his dinner in the
kitchen without being conscious of degradation. His horses,
cattle, and crops occupied the first place in his mind—himself—
no, another person had the second place—and his own
personality gave him the least trouble. He was a general
favorite in the neighborhood, and his position was, perhaps,
more fortunate than he knew, though the knowledge of it
would not have made him happier than he was. He was honestly
respected by those below, and not looked down upon by
those above him. This consideration was won by his thorough
frankness, simplicity, and kindness of heart. His face was too
broad and his nose too thick, to be called handsome; but
there were fewer eyes into which men looked with more satisfaction
than the pair of large blue-gray ones, divided by the
nose aforesaid. His forehead was rather low, but open and
smooth, and his yellow hair, curling a little at the ends, grew
back from the temples with a sturdy set, as if determined that
they should not be hidden. Add to these traits a voice mellow
in spite of its volume—the cattle understood its every inflection—
and it is easy to perceive that Bute was in especial
favor with the opposite sex. From head to foot, Nature had
written upon him: This man is a male.

Bute had climbed the rise beyond Roaring Brook, when his
reveries, whatever they might have been, were interrupted by
the sight of a woman, walking towards Ptolemy, a short distance
in advance of him. Although no other person was near,
to play the spy, he felt the blood creeping up to his ears, as
he looked keenly and questioningly at the little figure, in its
dark-blue merino dress, tripping forward with short, quick
steps. Dick noticed the change in his master, and broke into
a trot down the gentle slope. At the sound of hoofs, the figure

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turned, disclosing a bunch of brown ringlets and a saucy little
nose, then drew to one side of the road and stopped.

“Good-morning, Miss Carrie!” cried Bute, as he drew rein,
on approaching: “I thought it was you. Goin' to Ptolemy?
So am I. Git up on the bank, and I'll take ye on behind me.
Dick'll carry double—he's as quiet as a lamb. Here, I'll jerk
off my coat for you to set on.” And he had his right arm out
of the sleeve before he had finished speaking.

“Ah!” cried the lady, affecting a mild scream; “No, indeed,
Mr. Wilson! I am so afraid of horses. Besides, I don't
think it would look right.”

It suddenly occurred to Bute's mind, that, in order to ride
as he had proposed, she would be obliged to clasp him with
both arms. Heaving a sigh of regret, he drew on his coat and
jumped off the horse.

“Well, if you won't ride with me, I'll walk with you, any
how. How's your health, Miss Carrie?” offering his hand.

“Very well, I thank you, Mr. Wilson. How's Mrs. Babb?
And I hear that Mr. Woodbury has come to live with you.”

Miss Caroline Dilworth was too well satisfied at meeting with
Bute, to decline his proffered company. She was on her way
from the house of a neighboring farmer, where she had been
spending a fortnight as seamstress, to the cottage of the widow
Thurston, who lived on the edge of the village. The old
lady's health was declining, and Miss Dilworth occasionally
rendered a friendly assistance to the daughter. They were
both always glad to see the lively, chattering creature, in spite
of her manifold weaknesses and affectations. She was tewenty-five
years of age, at least, but assumed all the timidity and inexperience
of a girl of sixteen, always wearing her hair in a
mesh of natural ringlets which hung about her neck, and talking
with a soft childish drawl, unless—which rarely happened—
she was so very much in earnest as to forget herself. Her
nose was piquantly retroussé, her mouth small and cherry-red,
and her complexion fair (for she took great care of it); but
her eyes inclined to pale-green rather than blue, and she had

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an affected habit of dropping the lids. Perhaps this was to
conceal the unpleasant redness of their edges, for they were
oftentimes so inflamed as to oblige her to suspend her occupation.
Her ambition was, to become a teacher—a post for
which she was not at all qualified. Hannah Thurston, however,
had kindly offered to assist her in preparing herself for
the coveted career.

What it was that attracted Bute Wilson to Miss Dilworth,
he was unable to tell. Had the case been reversed, we should
not wonder at it. Only this much was certain; her society
was a torment to him, her absence a pain. He would have cut
off his little finger for the privilege of just once lifting her in
his strong arms, and planting a kiss square upon the provoking
mouth, which, as if conscious of its surplus of sweetness,
could say so many bitter things to him. Bute had never
spoken to her of the feeling which she inspired in him. Why
should he? She knew just how he felt, and he knew that she
knew it. She played with him as he had many a time played
with a big trout at the end of his line. Over and over again
he had been on the point of giving her up, out of sheer worriment
and exhaustion of soul, when a sudden look from those
downcast eyes, a soft word, half whispered in a voice whose
deliberate sweetness tingled through him, from heart to fingerends,
bound him faster than ever. Miss Dilworth little suspected
how many rocks she had sledged to pieces, how many
extra swaths she had mowed in June, and shocks of corn she
had husked in October, through Bute Wilson's arm. If Mr.
Woodbury were a cunning employer, he would take measures
to prolong this condition of suspense.

On the present occasion, the affected little minx was unusually
gracious towards her victim. She had a keen curiosity
to gratify. “Now, Bute,” said she, as they started together
towards Ptolemy, Bute leading Dick by the bridle; “I want
you to tell me all about this Mr. Woodbury. What kind of a
man is he?”

“He's only been with us three or four days. To be sure, I

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knowed him as a boy, but that's long ago, and I may have to
learn him over ag'in. It won't be a hard thing to do, though:
he's a gentleman, if there ever was one. He's a man that'll
always do what's right, if he knows how.”

“I mean, Bute, how he looks. Tall or short? Is he handsome?
Isn't he burnt very black, or is it worn off?”

“Not so many questions at once, Miss Carrie. He a'n't
blacker 'n I'd be now, if I was complected like him. Tall, you
might call him—nigh two inches more'n I am, and a reg'lar
pictur' of a man, though a bit thinner than he'd ought to be.
But I dunno whether you'd call him handsome: women has
sich queer notions. Now, there's that Seth Wattles, that you
think sich a beauty—”

“Bute Wilson! You know I don't think any such thing!
It's Seth's mind that I admire. There's such a thing as moral
and intellectual beauty, but that you don't understand.”

“No, hang it!—nor don't want to, if he's got it! I believe
in a man's doin' what he purtends to do—keepin' his mind on
his work, whatever it is. If Seth Wattles lays out to be a
tailor, let him be one: if he wants to be a moral and intellectual
beauty, he may try that, for all I keer—but he can't do
both to once't. I wish he'd make better trowsus, or give up
his business.”

Miss Dilworth knew her own weakness, and carefully avoided
entering into a discussion. She was vexed that one of the
phrases she had caught from Hannah Thurston, and which she
had frequently used with much effect, had rattled harmlessly
against the hard mail of Bute's common sense. At another
time she would have taken—or have seemed to take—offence,
at his rough speech; but she had not yet heard enough of Mr.
Woodbury.

“Well, never mind Seth,” she said, “you've not finished telling
me about your new master.

If she had intended to prick Bute with this word, she utterly
failed. He quietly resumed the description: “Every man
that I like is handsome to me; but I think any woman would

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[figure description] Page 053.[end figure description]

admire to see Mr. Max. He's got big brown eyes, like them
o' the doe Master Harry used to have, and a straight nose, like
one o' the plaster heads in the libery. He wears a beard on
his upper lip, but no whiskers, and his hair is brown, and sort
o' curlin'. He's a man that knows what he's about, and can
make up his mind in five minutes, and looks you straight in
the face when he talks; and if he'd a hard thing to say (though
he's said nothin' o' the kind to me), he'd say it without flinchin',
a little worse to your face than what he'd say behind y'r back.
But what I like best in him, is, that he knows how to mind his
own business, without botherin' himself about other folks's.
You wouldn't ketch him a pitchin' into me because I chaw
tobacco, like Seth Wattles did, with all his moral and intellectual
beauty.”

“Oh, but, Bute, you know it's so unhealthy. I do wish
you'd give it up.”

“Unhealthy! Stuff and nonsense—look at me!” And, indeed
Bute, stopping, straightening himself, throwing out his
breast, and striking it with a hard fist until it rang like a muffled
drum, presented a picture of lusty, virile strength, which
few men in the neighborhood of Ptolemy could have matched.
“Unhealthy!” he continued; “I s'pose you'd call Seth
healthy, with his tallow face, and breast-bone caved in. Why,
the woman that marries him can use his ribs for a wash-board,
when she's lost her'n. Then there was Absalom Merryfield,
you know, killed himself out and out, he was so keerful o' his
health. I'd ruther have no health at all, a darned sight, than
worry my life out, thinkin' on it. Not that I couldn't give
up chawin' tobacco, or any thing else, if there was a good
reason for it. What is it to you, Carrie, whether I chaw or
not?”

Miss Dilworth very well understood Bute's meaning, but
let it go without notice, as he knew she would. The truth is,
she was not insensible to his many good qualities, but she was
ambitious of higher game. She had not attended all the meetings
held in Ptolemy, in favor of Temperance, Anti-Slavery

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[figure description] Page 054.[end figure description]

and Women's Rights, without imbibing as much conceit as
the basis of her small mind could support. The expressions
which, from frequent repetition, she had caught and retained,
were put to such constant use, that she at last fancied them
half original, and sighed for a more important sphere than
that of a sempstress, or even a teacher. She knew she could
never become a speaker—she was sure of that—but might she
not be selected by some orator of Reform, as a kindred soul,
to support him with her sympathy and appreciation? Thus
far, however, her drooping lids had been lifted and her curls
elaborately tangled, in vain. The eloquent disciples, not
understanding these mute appeals, passed by on the other side.

She drew the conversation back to Mr. Woodbury, and
kept it to that theme until she had ascertained all that Bute
knew, or was willing to tell; for the latter had such a strong
sense of propriety about matters of this kind, as might have
inspired doubts of his being a native-born American. By this
time they had reached the bridge over East Atauga Creek,
whence it was but a short distance to the village.

“There is Friend Thurston's cottage, at last,” said Miss
Dilworth. “Have you seen Miss Hannah lately? But, of
course, she can't visit Lakeside now.”

“I'm sorry for it,” Bute remarked. “She's a fine woman,
in spite of her notions. But why can't she?”

“It would not be proper.”

“Wouldn't it be proper for a man to visit us?”

“To be sure. How queer you talk, Bute!”

“Well—she says a woman should be allowed to do whatever
a man does. If Women's Rights is worth talkin' about,
it's worth carryin' out. But I guess Miss Hannah's more of a
woman than she knows on. I like to hear her talk, mighty
well, and she says a good many things that I can't answer,
but they're ag'in nature, for all that. If she was married and
had a family growin' up 'round her, she wouldn't want to be a
lawyer or a preacher. Here we are, at the gate. Good-by,
Miss Carrie!”

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“Good-by, Bute!” said Miss Dilworth, mechanically,
pausing at the gate to see him spring into the saddle and trot
rapidly down the street. She was confounded, and a little
angry, at the nonchalance with which he treated her oracle.
“I wish it had been Hannah Thurston, instead of me,” she
said to herself, with a spiteful toss of her head—“she has
an answer ready for everybody.”

The plot of ground in front of the cottage already wore
its winter livery. The roses were converted into little obelisks
of straw, the flower-beds were warmly covered, and only
the clumps of arbor-vitæ and the solitary balsam-fir were allowed
to display their hardy green. Miss Dilworth passed
around the house to the kitchen entrance, for she knew the
fondness of the inmates for warmth and sunshine, and the
sitting-room which they habitually occupied looked southward,
over the vegetable garden, to the meadows of the eastern
valley. Every thing was scrupulously neat and ordered.
The tops of vegetables left for seed and the dead stalks of
summer flowers had been carefully removed from the garden.
The walks had been swept by a broom, and the wood-shed,
elsewhere more or less chaotic in its appearance, was here
visited by the same implement. Its scattered chips seemed
to have arranged themselves into harmonious forms, like the
atoms of sand under the influence of musical tones.

In the kitchen a girl of thirteen—the only servant the
house afforded—was watching the kettles and pans on the
cooking-stove. This operation might have been carried on in
the parlor just as well, so little appearance was there of the
usual “slops” and litter of a kitchen. This was Friend
Thurston's specialty as a housekeeper—her maxim was, that
there should be no part of a house where a visitor might not
be received. Her neighbors always spoke of her kitchen with
an admiration wherein there was a slight mixture of despair.

The sitting-room, beyond, was made cheerful by windows
opening to the south and east; but more so by the homely
simplicity and comfort of its arrangement. Every object

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spoke of limited means, but nothing of pinched self-denial.
The motley-colored rag carpet was clean, thick, and warm;
the chintz sofa was relieved by inviting cushions; the old-fashioned
rocking-chair was so stuffed and padded as to remedy
its stiffness; the windows were curtained, and a few brands were
smouldering among white ashes in the grate. A shelf inside
the southern window held some tea-roses in pots, mignionette,
heliotrope, and scarlet verbenas. There were but three pictures—
a head of Milton, an old wood-engraving of the cottage where
George Fox was born, and a tolerable copy of the Madonna
della Seggiola. On a stand in the corner were the favorite
volumes of the old lady, very plainly bound, as was meet, in
calf of a drab color—Job Scott's Works, Woolman's Journal,
and William Penn's “No Cross, No Crown.” A swinging
book-shelf, suspended on the wall, contained a different collection,
which evidently belonged to the daughter. Several
volumes of Carlyle, Margaret Fuller, Shelley, Bettina von
Arnim, De Staël's “Corinne,” the “Record of Woman,”
Milton, George Sands' “Consuelo,” Mrs. Child's “Letters
from New York,” Hugh Miller, and bound numbers of the
“Liberty Bell,” were among them. Had a certain drawer
been opened, one would have found files of The Slavery Annihilator,
Mrs. Swisshelm's Saturday Visitor, and the weekly
edition of the New-York Tribune. A rude vase of birch
bark, on a bracket, was filled with a mass of flowering grasses,
exquisitely arranged with regard to their forms and colors,
from pale green and golden-gray to the loveliest browns and
purples. This object was a work of art, in its way, and shed
a gleam of beauty over the plainness of the apartment.

Friend Gulielma Thurston, leaning back in the rocking-chair,
had suffered her hands, with the knitting they held, to sink
into her lap, and looked out upon the hazy valley. Her thin
face, framed in the close Quaker cap, which barely allowed her
gray hair to appear at the temples, wore a sweet, placid expression,
though the sunken eyes and set lips told of physical
suffering. The spotless book-muslin handkerchief, many-folded,

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covered her neck and breast, and a worsted apron was tied
over her drab gown, rather from habit than use. As she basked
in the balmy warmth of the day, her wasted fingers unconsciously
clasped themselves in a manner that expressed patience
and trust. These were the prominent qualities of her nature—
the secret of her cheerfulness and the source of her courage.

Late married, she had lost her first child, and shortly after
the birth of her daughter Hannah, her husband also. The latter
was a stern, silent man, rigid in creed and in discipline, but
with a concealed capacity for passion which she had not understood
while she possessed him. Her mind first matured in
the sorrow of his loss, and she became, from that natural
need which is content with no narrower comfort, a speaker in
the meetings of her sect. The property she inherited at her
husband's death was very small, and she was obliged to labor
beyond her strength, until the bequest of an unmarried brother
relieved her from pressing want. Hannah, to whom she had
managed to give a tolerably thorough education, obtained a
situation as teacher, for which she proved so competent that
a liberal offer from the Trustees of the Young Ladies' Seminary
at Ptolemy induced both mother and daughter to remove
thither. Her earnings, added to the carefully husbanded property,
finally became sufficient to insure them a modest support,
so that, when her mother's failing health obliged Hannah
to give up her place, there was no serious anxiety for the
future to interfere with her filial duty.

The daughter was seated at the eastern window, beside a
small table, which was covered with gorgeously tinted autumn
leaves. She was occupied in arranging them in wreaths and
groups, on sheets of card-board, which were designed to form
an album, and to wear, as binding, the embroidery of fern-leaves,
upon which we first found her engaged. Such an
album, contributed by her to the Anti-Slavery Fair, the previous
year, had enriched the treasury of the Society by the sum
of ten dollars, and the managers had begged a second donation
of the same kind.

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Catching a glimpse of Miss Dilworth through the window,
she rose to receive her. In stature, she was somewhat above
the average height of women, though not noticeably tall, and
a little too slender for beauty. Her hands were thin, but
finely formed, and she carried them as if they were a conscious
portion of herself, not an awkward attachment. Her face
would have been a perfect oval, except that the forehead, instead
of being low and softly rounded, was rather squarely
developed in the reflective region, and the cheeks, though not
thin, lacked the proper fulness of outline. Her hair was of a rich,
dark-brown, black in shadow, and the delicate arches of the
eye-brows were drawn with a clear, even pencil, above the
earnest gray eyes, dark and deep under the shadow of their
long lashes. The nose was faultless, and the lips, although no
longer wearing their maidenly ripeness and bloom, were so
pure in outline, so sweetly firm in their closing junction, so
lovely in their varying play of expression, that the life of her
face seemed to dwell in them alone. Her smile had a rare
benignity and beauty. The paleness of her face, being, to
some extent, a feature of her physical temperament, did not
convey the impression of impaired health: a ruddy tint would
not have harmonized with the spiritual and sensitive character
of her countenance. No one would have dreamed of calling
Hannah Thurston a beauty. In society nine men would have
passed her without a thought; but the tenth would have stood
still, and said: “Here is a woman `to sit at a king's right
hand, in thunder-storms,'” and would have carried her face in
his memory forever.

The severest test of a woman is to play an exceptional part
in the world. Her respect, her dignity, her virtue itself, become
doubtful, if not mythical, in the eyes of men. In the
small circle of Ptolemy, Hannah Thurston had subjected herself
to this test, and it was no slight triumph for her, had she
known it, that, while her views were received with either horror
or contempt, while the names of her fellow priestesses or
prophetesses were bandied about in utter disrespect, she was

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never personally ridiculed. No tongue dared to whisper an
insinuation against either her sincerity or her purity. This,
however, was partly owing to the circumstances of her life in
the place. She had first achieved popularity as a teacher, and
honor as a daughter. Among other things, it was generally reported
and believed that she had declined an offer of marriage,
advantageous in a worldly point of view, and the act was set
down to her credit as wholly one of duty towards her mother.

In her plain brown dress, with linen collar and cuffs, the
only ornament being a knot of blue ribbon at the throat, she
also, appeared to be a Quakeress; yet, she had long since perceived
that the external forms of the sect had become obsolete,
and no longer considered herself bound by them. Some concession
in dress, however, was still due for her mother's sake,
beyond whose rapidly shortening span of life she could see no
aim in her own, unless it were devoted to righting the wrongs
of her sex. She had had her girlish dreams; but the next
birthday was her thirtieth, and she had already crossed, in resolve,
that deep gulf in a woman's life.

Miss Caroline Dilworth, in her blue dress, came as if dipped
in the Indian Summer, with a beryl gleam in her eyes, as she
darted into the sitting-room. She caught Hannah Thurston
around the waist, and kissed her twice: she was never known
to greet her female friends with less. Then, leaning gently
over the rocking-chair, she took the old woman's hand.

“Take off thy bonnet, child,” said the latter, “and push
thy hair back, so that I can see thy face. I'm glad thee's
come.”

“Oh, Friend Thurston, I was so afraid I couldn't get away
from Parkman's. It's a lonely place, you know, over the hill,
and she's hard of hearing. Ah! I'm out of breath, yet”—and
therewith heaving a sigh of relief, the little creature threw off
her shawl and untied the strings of her bonnet.

Their life had so much in it that was grave and earnest—
their conversation naturally turning to the past rather than
the future—that the Thurstons always felt themselves cheered

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by Miss Dilworth's visits. She dropped her affectations in
their presence, and became, for the time, a light-hearted, amiable,
silly woman. She never arrived without a fresh budget
of gossip, generally of slight importance, but made piquant by
her rattling way of telling it.

“How thee does run on!” Friend Thurston would sometimes
say, whereupon the sempstress would only toss her curls
and run on all the more inveterately.

“Oh, I must tell you all about Lakeside and the new owner!”
she exclaimed, as she settled herself into a chair.

Hannah Thurston could probably have told her more about
Mr. Woodbury than she already knew; but it would have
been unkind to cut short the eager narrative, and so Bute's report,
with many additions and variations, was served out to
them in chapters, during the afternoon.

-- 061 --

p713-066 CHAPTER V. IN WHICH MR. WOODBURY HEARS A WOMAN SPEAK.

[figure description] Page 061.[end figure description]

In his intercourse with the society of his new home, Woodbury
found fewer distasteful circumstances to be overlooked,
than he had at first feared. The novelty of the experience
had its charm, and, as his mind recovered something of that
active interest in men which he had almost unlearned, he was
surprised to find how vital and absorbing his relations with
them became. From the very earnestness of his views, however,
he was reticent in the expression of them, and could with
difficulty accustom himself to the discussion, in mixed society, of
subjects which are usually only broached in the confidential intimacy
of friends. Not merely “Fate, free-will, foreknowledge
absolute,” but the privacy of individual faiths, doubts, and aspirations,
became themes of discussion; even the shrinking
sanctity of love was invaded, and the ability to converse
fluently was taken by the community of Ptolemy as a sign of
capacity to feel deeply on these subjects.

At the dinners and evening parties of the English, an intellectual
as well as a social propriety is strictly observed, and the
man who makes a habit of producing for general inspection,
his religious convictions or his moral experiences, is speedily
voted a bore. Maxwell Woodbury, whose long residence in
Calcutta had fixed his habits, in this respect, was at first more
amused than shocked, at the abandon with which spiritual
intimacies were exchanged, in the society of Ptolemy. He soon
learned, however, that much of this talk was merely a superficial
sentimentalism, and that the true sanctities of the speakers'

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[figure description] Page 062.[end figure description]

hearts were violated more in appearance than in fact. Nevertheless,
he felt no inclination to take part in conversation of
this character, and fell into the habit of assuming a mystical,
paradoxical tone, whenever he was forcibly drawn into the
discussion. Sometimes, indeed, he was tempted to take the
opposite side of the views advocated, simply in order to extort
more reckless and vehement utterances from their defenders.
It is not surprising, therefore, that his lack of earnestness,—as
it seemed to the others—was attributed by many to a stolid
indifference to humanity. Seth Wattles even went so far as
to say: “I should not wonder if he had made his money in
the accursed opium traffic.”

The two topics which, for him, possessed an intrinsically repellant
character, happened to be those which were at that
time most actively discussed: Spiritualism and Women's
Rights. He had seen the slight-of-hand of the Indian jugglers,
far more wonderful than any feats supernaturally performed
in the presence of mediums, and the professed communications
from the world of spirits struck him as being more inane
twaddle than that which fell from the lips of the living believers.
He had not lived thirty-six years without as much
knowledge of woman as a single man may profitably acquire;
and the better he knew the sex, the more tender and profound
became his regard. To him, in his strength, however, the relation
of protector was indispensable; the rudest blows of life
must first fall upon his shield. The idea of an independent
strength, existing side by side with his, yet without requiring
its support, was unnatural and repulsive. Aunt Dennison, in
her noble self-abnegation as wife and mother, was more queenly
in his eyes, than Mary Wollstonecraft or Madame de Staël.
It was difficult for him to believe how any truly refined and
feminine woman could claim for her sex a share in the special
occupations of man.

There is always a perverse fate which attracts one into the
very situations he wishes to avoid. On the evening when the
Sewing-Union met at Merryfield's, Woodbury happened to be

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drawn into a group which contained Mrs. Waldo, Hannah
Thurston, and the host. The latter was speaking of a plan
for a Female Medical College.

“It is the first step,” said he, “and its success will overthrow
the dynasty of ideas, under which woman has been
crushed, as it were.” The phrase: “dynasty of ideas,” he
had borrowed from a recent lecturer.

“Well”, said Mrs. Waldo, musingly, “if it went no further
I should not have much to say against it, for we know that
women are the best nurses, and they may make tolerable doctors.
But I should prefer that somebody else than myself
made the beginning.”

“You are right,” remarked Woodbury; “it is not pleasant
to think of a woman standing at a dissecting-table, with a
scalpel in her hand, and a quarter of a subject before her.”

Hannah Thurston shuddered inwardly, but at once took up
the gauntlet. “Why not?” she asked. “Are not women
capable of this, and more than this, for the sake of knowledge
that will enable them to do good? Or is it because their
minds are too weak to grapple with the mysteries of science?”

Woodbury, to avoid a discussion to which he was so
strongly averse, assumed a gay, bantering tone. “In the
presence of ladies,” he said, smiling, and partly directing his
words to Mrs. Waldo, “there is only one way of answering
the latter question.”

Hannah Thurston was of too earnest a nature to endure
trifling—for such seemed his reply. Her gray eyes kindled
with an emotion a very little milder than contempt. “So!”
she exclaimed, “we must still endure the degradation of
hollow compliment. We are still children, and our noise can
be quieted with sugar-plums!”

“I beg your pardon, Miss Thurston!” Woodbury gravely
answered. “My apparent disrespect was but a shift to avoid
discussing a subject which I have never seriously considered,
and which, I will only say, seems to me a matter of instinct
rather than of argument. Besides,” he added, “I believe

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Mrs. Waldo, as our dictatress, prohibits debate on these
occasions.”

The lady referred to immediately came to his assistance.
“I do prohibit it;” said she, with a magisterial wave of the
hand; “and you cannot object to my authority, Hannah,
since you have a chance to defend our sex, and cover with
confusion all such incorrigible bachelors as Mr. Woodbury, on
Thursday next. I'm sure he's a misanthrope, or—mis—whatever
you call it.”

“A misogynist?” Woodbury gayly suggested. “No, no,
Mrs. Waldo. Do not you, as a clergyman's wife, know that
there may be a devotional feeling so profound as to find the
pale of any one sect too narrow?”

Hannah Thurston looked earnestly at the speaker. What
did he mean?—was that also jest? she asked herself. She
was unaccustomed to such mental self-possession. Most of
the men she knew would have answered her with spirit, considering
that to decline a challenge thrown down by a woman
was equivalent to acknowledging the intellectual equality of
the sexes—this being the assertion which they most strenuously
resisted. Mr. Woodbury, however, had withdrawn as
a matter of taste and courtesy. She had given him the
opportunity of doing so, a little to her own discomfiture, and
was conscious that her self-esteem was wounded by the result.
She could not quite forgive him for this, though his manner,
she felt, compelled respect. At the risk of having her silence
misinterpreted, she made no reply.

Woodbury, who had not understood Mrs. Waldo's allusion,
took an opportunity, later in the evening, to ask for an explanation.

“I thought you had heard,” said she. “There is to be a
meeting in favor of Women's Rights, on Thursday afternoon,
at the Hall, in Ptolemy. Mr. Bemis, the great advocate of
the reform, is to be there, and I believe they expect Bessie
Stryker.”

“Who is Bessie Stryker?”

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“Mr. Woodbury! It's well you did not ask Hannah Thurston
that question. You've been out of the country—I had
forgotten that; but I should think you must have heard of
her in Calcutta. She has travelled all over the country,
lecturing on the subject, and has made such a name as a
speaker that everybody goes to hear her. She is quite pretty,
and wears the new Bloomer dress.”

“Really, you excite my curiosity. I must attend this
meeting, if only to show Miss Thurston that I am above the
vulgar prejudice which I presume she imputes to me.”

“Oh, no, Mr. Woodbury. Hannah Thurston is not unjust,
whatever faults she may have. But you should know that she
has a dislike—morbid, it seems to me—of the compliments
which you men generally pay to us women. For my part, I
see no harm in them.”

“Both of you, at least, are candid,” replied Woodbury,
laughing, “and that trait, with me, covers a multitude of
weaknesses.”

Woodbury went to the meeting on the following Thursday,
much as he would have attended a Brahminical festival in
honor of the Goddess Unna-Purna. He felt no particular
interest in the subject to be treated, except a curiosity to know
how it could be rendered plausible to a semi-intelligent
auditory. Of Ptolemy, privately and socially, he had seen
something, but he had not yet mingled with Ptolemy in
public.

“The Hall,” as it was called (being the only one in the
place), was a brick building, situated on the principal street.
Its true name was Tumblety Hall, from the builder and owner,
Mr. Jabez Tumblety, who had generously bestowed his name
upon it in consideration of receiving ten per cent. on his investment,
from the lease of it to phrenologists, the dancing
school, Ethiopian Minstrels, exhibitors of laughing gas, lecturers
on anatomy (the last lecture exclusively for gentlemen),
jugglers, temperance meetings, caucuses of the Hunkers and
Barnburners, and, on Sundays, to the Bethesdeans in the

-- 066 --

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morning and the Spiritualists in the evening. Its internal
aspect was rather shabby. The roughly-plastered walls offered
too great a temptation for the pencils and charcoal of unfledged
artists, when bored by a windy orator. Various
grotesque heads, accompanied by names and dates, made up
for the absence of frescoes, but the talent thus displayed did
not seem to be appreciated, for under some of them was
written, in a later hand: “he is a fool.” The benches were
of unpainted pine, with long back-rails, which, where they
had not been split off by the weight of the leaning crowd,
were jagged with whittled notches. Along the further end
of the hall ran a platform, raised three feet above the floor,
and containing a table, three arm-chairs, and two settees. The
floor might have been swept, but had not recently been
washed, to judge from the stains of tobacco-juice by which it
was mottled.

When Woodbury entered, the seats were nearly all occupied,
an audience of five hundred persons being in attendance.
Most of them were evidently from the country; some, indeed,
who were favorably inclined to the cause, had come from Mulligansville
and Atauga City. All the loafers of Ptolemy were
there, of course, and occupied good seats. The few members
of the respectable, conservative, moneyed class, whose curiosity
drew them in, lingered near the door, on the edges of the
crowd, in order that they might leave whenever so disposed,
without attracting attention to their presence.

Mr. Merryfield occupied the middle chair on the platform,
with a heavy-faced, bald-templed, belligerent looking gentleman
on his right, and a middle-aged lady in black silk, on his left.
The settees were also occupied by persons of both sexes who
were interested in the cause. Among them was Hannah
Thurston.

A whispered consultation was carried on for some time
among the party on the platform, the belligerent gentleman
evidently having the most to say. Finally Mr. Merryfield
arose, thumped upon the table, and after waiting a minute

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for the “she!” to subside, announced: “The meeting will now
come to order!”

The meeting being already in order, no effect was produced
by this announcement.

“As we have assembled together, as it were,” he continued,
“principally to listen to the noble advocates of the glorious
cause who are to appear before us, my friends suggest that—
that there should be no—that we should dispense, as it were,
with a regular organization, and proceed to listen to their
voices. The only—I would suggest, if the meeting is willing,
that we should appoint—that is, that a committee should be
named, as it were, to draw up resolutions expressing their—
our sense on the subject of Women's Rights. Perhaps,” he
added, turning around, “some one will make the motion.”

“I move that a committee of six be appointed!” “I second
the motion!” were heard, almost simultaneously.

“Those in favor of that motion will signify their assent by
saying `Aye!'” said Mr. Merryfield.

“Aye!” rang through the house with startling unanimity,
all the boys expressing their enthusiastic assent.

“Contrary—`No!'”

Dead silence.

“The Ayes have it. Who shall the Committee be composed
of.”

“Both sexes must be represented. Three men and three
women,” said the belligerent gentleman, suddenly, half rising
from his seat.

In a short time the members of the Committee were appointed,
and, there being no further business on hand, Mr. Merryfield
said: “I have now the pleasure, as it were, of introducing
to the audience the noble advocate of Women's Rights, Isaiah
Bemis, who—whose name is—is well known to you all as the
champion of his—I mean, her—persecuted sex.” Mr. Merryfield
was so disconcerted by the half-suppressed laughter which
followed this blunder, that the termination of his eulogium became
still more confused. “The name of Isaiah Bemis,” he

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said, “does not need my condem — commendation. When
Woman shall fill her true spere, it will shine—will be written
among the martyrs of Reform, as it were, for Truth, crushed
to Earth, rises up in spite of—of—though the heavens fall!”

Mr. Bemis, who was no other than the gentleman of belligerent
aspect, already mentioned, at once arose, bowing
gravely in answer to a slight, hesitating, uncertain sound of
applause. The Ptolemy public had not listened for years to
speakers of all kinds, and on all subjects, without acquiring
some degree of critical perception. They both enjoyed and
prided themselves on their acumen, and a new man, whatever
his doctrines might be, was sure that he would find a full
house to receive him. If he possessed either eloquence or
humor, in any appreciable degree, he had no reason to complain
of his reception. The class of hearers to which we refer
did not consider themselves committed to the speaker's views
by their manifestations of applause. Off the platform, there
were not twenty advocates of Women's Rights in the whole
audience, yet all were ready to hear Mr. Bemis, and to approve
a good thing, if he should happen to say it.

A few minutes, however, satisfied them that he was not the
kind of speaker they coveted. He took for his text that maxim
of the Declaration of Independence, that “all governments derive
their just powers from the consent of the governed,” first
proved the absolute justice of the theory, and then exhibited
the flagrant violation of it in the case of woman. She is
equally obliged, with man, to submit to the laws, he said, but
has no voice in making them; even those laws which control
her property, her earnings, her children, her person itself, are
enacted without consultation with her. She not only loses her
name, but her individual privileges are curtailed, as if she belonged
to an inferior order of beings. The character of his
harangue was aggressive throughout. He referred as little
as possible, to any inherent difference in the destinies of sex;
men and women were simply human beings, and in Society, and
Law, and Government, there should be no distinction made

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[figure description] Page 069.[end figure description]

between them. There was a certain specious display of logic
in his address; the faulty links were glozed over, so that his
chain of argument appeared sound and strong, from end to
end. Granting his premises, indeed, which he assumed with
an air, as if they were beyond dispute—all the rest readily followed.
Those who believed with him, not perceiving the defect
in his basis, were charmed with the force and clearness of
his views.

A crowd feels, not reasons, and the auditors, after an hour
of this talk, began to manifest signs of weariness. Even
Woodbury, to whom the whole scene was a study—or, rather,
a show—only kept his place from a desire to hear the famous
Bessie Stryker.

Mr. Bemis at last sat down, and some further whispering
ensued. There was a slight hitch in the proceedings, it was
evident. In a few minutes, Mr. Merryfield again arose. “My
friends,” said he; “I regret to be able to state that we are
disappointed, as it were, in listening—in the arrival of Bessie
Stryker. We expected her in the afternoon stage coming from
Cephalonia, and was to have lectured there last night, but has
arrived without her. But I hope, nevertheless, that you will—
that it will be agreeable to you, as it were, to hear a few
words from our friend, Hannah Thurston, who requires—whom
you know already.”

Hearty signs of approbation greeted this announcement.
Thus appealed to, Hannah Thurston, who at first made a movement
of hesitation, rose, quietly removed her bonnet, and
walked forward to the table. Her face seemed a little paler
than usual, but her step was firm, and the hand which she
placed upon the table did not tremble. After a pause, as if
to collect and isolate her mind from external impressions, she
commenced speaking, in a voice so low that only its silver
purity of tone enabled her to be heard. Yet the slight tremulousness
it betrayed indicated no faltering of courage; it was
simply a vibration of nerves rather tensely strung.

“I will not repeat,” she began, “the arguments by which

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the eloquent speaker has illustrated the wrongs endured by
woman, under all governments and all systems of law, whether
despotic or republican. These are considerations which lie
further from us; we are most concerned for those injuries
which require an immediate remedy. When we have removed
the social prejudices which keep our sex in a false position—
when we have destroyed the faith of the people in the tyrannical
traditions by which we are ruled—the chains of the law
will break of themselves. As a beginning to that end, woman
must claim an equal right to education, to employment, and reward.
These are the first steps in our reform, to reach the
sources of those evils which cause our greatest suffering. We
can endure a little longer, to be deprived of the permission to
vote and to rule, because the denial is chiefly an assault upon
our intelligence; but we need now—at once—and, my friends,
I am pleading for millions who cannot speak for themselves—
we need an equal privilege with man, to work and to be justly
paid. The distinction which is made, to our prejudice, renders
us weak and helpless, compared with our brethren, to whom
all fields are open, and who may claim the compensation which
is justified by their labor, without incurring ridicule or contempt.
They are even allowed to usurp branches which, if
the popular ideas of woman's weakness, and man's chivalry
towards her be true, should be left for us. Even admitting
that our sphere is limited—that there are only a few things
which we may properly do—is it generous, is it even just, that
man, who has the whole range of life to choose from, should
crowd us out from these few chances of earning our bread?
Or to force us to perform the same labor for a smaller remuneration,
because we are women? Could we not measure a
yard of calico as rapidly, or choose a shade of zephyr as correctly
as the elegant young men who stand behind the counter?
With our more sensitive physical organization, might
not all tasks requiring quickness, nicety of touch, and careful
arrangement, be safely confided to our hands?”

At this point the audience, which had quite lost its air of

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weariness, broke into subdued but cordial applause. Hannah
Thurston's voice, as she acquired possession of her subject, increased
in strength, but at no time appeared to rise above a
conversational tone. Her manner also, was simply conversational.
The left hand slightly touched the table, as if she only
wished to feel a support at hand, not use it; while she now
and then, involuntarily, made a simple movement with the
right. The impression she produced was that of a woman
compelled by some powerful necessity or duty to appear
before a public assembly, not of one who coveted and enjoyed
the position. Woodbury was profoundly interested in the
speaker, and in her words. Both were equally new to him.

“What we now ask, therefore, my friends,” she continued,
“is that the simple justice be meted out to us, which we feel
that man—without adopting any of our views concerning the
true position of woman—is bound to give. We ask that his
boasted chivalry be put into practice, not merely in escorting
us to concerts, or giving us his seat in a railroad-car, or serving
us first at the table—or in all other ways by which the
reputation of chivalry and gallantry towards our sex is earned
at little cost; but in leaving open to us those places which he
confesses we are fitted to fill—in paying us, as teachers, clerks,
tailors, or operatives, the same wages for the same work which
men do!”

This was so simply and fairly stated, that the audience again
heartily approved. There was nothing, in fact, of the peculiar
doctrines of Women's Rights in what she said—nothing to
which they could not have individually assented, without compromising
their position in regard to the main point. Mr.
Bemis, however, drew down his heavy brows, and whispered
to the chairman: “Very good, so far as it goes, but timidly
stated. We must strike the evil at its root.”

After dwelling for some time on this aspect of the question,
and illustrating it by a number of examples, Hannah Thurston
went a step further.

“But we deny,” she said, “that Man has any natural right

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to prescribe the bounds within which Woman may labor and
live. God alone has that right, and His laws govern both
sexes with the same authority. Man has indeed assumed it,
because he disbelieves in the intellectual equality of women.
He has treated her as an older child, to whom a certain amount
of freedom might be allowed, but whom it was not safe to
release entirely from his guardianship. He has educated her
in this belief, through all the ages that have gone by since the
creation of the world. Now and then, women have arisen, it
is true, to vindicate the equal authority of their sex, and have
nobly won their places in history; but the growth of the truth
has been slow—so slow, that to-day, in this enlightened maturity
of the world, we must plead and prove all that which
you should grant without our asking. It is humiliating that
a woman is obliged to collect evidence to convince men of her
equal intelligence. She, who is also included in the one word,
Man! Placed side by side with him in Paradise—Mother of
the Saviour who came to redeem his fallen race—first and
holiests among the martyrs and saints! Young men! Think
of your own mothers, and spare us this humiliation!”

These words, uttered with startling earnestness, produced a
marked sensation in the audience. Perhaps it was a peculiarity
springing from her Quaker descent, that the speaker's voice
gradually assumed the character of a musical recitative, becoming
a clear, tremulous chant, almost in monotone. This
gave it a sad, appealing expression, which touched the emotional
nature of the hearer, and clouded his judgment for the
time being. After a pause, she continued in her ordinary
tone:

“The pages of history do not prove the superiority of man.
When we consider the position which he has forced woman to
occupy, we should rather wonder that she has so often resisted
his authority, and won possession of the empire which he
had appropriated to himself. In the earliest ages he admitted
her capacity to govern, a power so high and important in its
nature, that we should be justified in claiming that it embraces

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all other capacities, and in resting our defence on that alone.
Such women as Semiramis and Zenobia, Margaret of Denmark,
and Elizabeth of England, Maria Theresa, and Catharine of
Russia, are not the least—not second, even—among great
rulers. Jael and Judith, and the Maid of Orleans stand no
less high among the deliverers of nations, than Leonidas and
William Tell. The first poet who sang may have been Homer,
but the second was Sappho.* Even in the schools of Philosophy,
the ancients had their Hypatia, and the scholars of the
Middle Ages honored the learning of Olympia Morata. Men
claim the field of scientific research as being exclusively their
own; but the names of Caroline Herschel in England, and
Maria Mitchell in America, prove that even here women cannot
justly be excluded. Ah, my friends! when God calls a
human being to be the discoverer of His eternal laws, or the
illustrator of His eternal beauty, He does not stop to consider
the question of sex! If you grant human intellect at all to
Woman, you must grant the possibility of inspiration, of genius,
of a life divinely selected as the instrument of some great
and glorious work. Admitting this, you may safely throw
open to us all avenues to knowledge. Hampered as Woman
still is—circumscribed in her spheres of action and thought
(for her false education permanently distorts her habits of
mind)—she is yet, at present, far above the Saxon bondmen
from whom the most of you are descended. You know that
she has risen thus far, not only without injury to herself, but
to your advantage: why check her progress, here? Nay, why
check it any where? If Man's dominion be thereby limited,
would his head be less uneasy, if the crown he claims were
shared with another? Is not a friend better than a servant?
If Marriage were a partnership for Woman, instead of a clerkship,
the Head of the House would feel his burthen so much
the lighter. If the physician's wife were competent to prepare
his medicines, or the merchant's to keep his books, or the

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lawyer's to draw up a bond, the gain would be mutual. For Woman,
to be a true helpmeet to Man, must know all that Man
knows; and, even as she is co-heir with him of Heaven—receiving,
not the legal `Third part,' but all of its infinite blessedness,—
so she should be co-proprietor of the Earth, equally
armed to subdue its iniquities, and prepare it for a better
future!”

With these words, Hannah Thurston closed her address.
As she quietly walked back to her seat and resumed her bonnet,
there was a stir of satisfaction among the audience, terminating
in a round of applause, which, however, she did not
acknowledge in any way. Although, in no part of the discourse,
had she touched the profounder aspects of the subject,
especially the moral distinctions of sex, she had given utterance
to many absolute truths, which were too intimately connected,
in her mind, with the doctrine she had adopted, for
her to perceive their real independence of it. Thus, most of
her hearers, while compelled to agree with her in many respects,
still felt themselves unconvinced in the main particular.
She was not aware of her own inability to discuss the question
freely, and ascribed to indifference or prejudice that reluctance
among men, which really sprang from their generous
consideration for her sex.

As for Woodbury, he had listened with an awakened interest
in her views, which, for the time, drew his attention
from the speaker's personality. Her first appearance had
excited a singular feeling of compassion—partly for the trial
which, he fancied, she must undergo, and partly for the
mental delusion which was its cause. It was some time before
he was reassured by her calmness and self-possession.
At the close, he was surprised to discover in himself a lurking
sensation of regret that she had not spoken at greater length.
“I was wrong the other night,” he thought. “This woman
is in severe earnest, and would have been less offended if I
had plumply declined her challenge, instead of evading it. I
have yet something to learn from these people.”

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The Committee of Six now made their report. Seth Wattles,
who was one of the number, and had assumed to himself
the office of Chairman, read a string of Resolutions, setting
forth, That: Whereas, this is an Age of Progress, and no reform
should be overlooked in the Great Battle for the Right:
Therefore, Resolved—That we recognize in this movement
for the Equal Rights of Woman a cause without the support
of which no other cause can be permanently successful: and,
Resolved, That we will in every way help forward the good
work, by the Dissemination of Light and Information, tending
to set forth the claims of Woman before the Community: also,
Resolved, That we will circulate petitions to the State Legislature,
for the investment of Woman with all civil and political
rights: and, lastly, Resolved, That, we will use our best endeavors
to increase the circulation of The Monthly Hollyhock,
a journal devoted to the cause of Women's Rights.

Mr. Merryfield arose and inquired: “Shall the Report of
the Committee be adopted?” He fortunately checked himself
in time not to add: “as it were.”

“I move its adoption!” “I second the motion!” were immediately
heard from the platform.

“All who are in favor of adopting the Resolutions we have
just heard read, will signify their assent by saying `Aye!'”

A scattering, irregular fire of “Ayes” arose in reply. The
boys felt that their sanction would be out of place on this occasion,
with the exception of two or three, who hazarded their
voices, in the belief that they would not be remarked, in the
general vote. To their dismay, they launched themselves into
an interval of silence, and their shrill pipes drew all eyes to
their quarter of the house.

“Contrary,—`No!'”

The opponents of the movement, considering that this was
not their meeting, refrained from voting.

“Before the meeting adjourns,” said Mr. Merryfield, again
rising, “I must—I take the liberty to hope, as it were, that
the truths we have heard this day may spread—may sink

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deeply into our hearts. We expect to be able to announce,
before long, a visit from Bessie Stryker, whose failure—whom
we have missed from among our eleg—eloquent champions.
But we trust she is elsewhere, and our loss is their gain. I
thank the audience for your attendance—attention, I should
say, and approbation of our glorious reform. As there is no
further business before the meeting, and our friends from Mulligansville
and Atauga City have some distance to return home,
we will now adjourn in time to reach their destination.”

At this hint the audience rose, and began to crowd out the
narrow door-way and down the steep staircase. Woodbury,
pushed and hustled along with the rest, was amused at the
remarks of the crowd: “He?—oh, he's a gassy old fellow!”
“Well, there's a good deal of truth in it!” “Bessie Stryker?
I'd rather hear Hannah Thurston any day!” “He didn't half
like it!” “She has a better right to say such things than he
has!”—and various other exclamations, the aggregate of which
led him to infer that the audience felt no particular interest in
the subject of Women's Rights, but had a kindly personal feeling
towards Hannah Thurston.

eaf713n1

* Miss Thurston makes these statements on her own responsibility.

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p713-082 CHAPTER VI. IN WHICH LAKESIDE BECOMES LIVELY.

[figure description] Page 077.[end figure description]

Winter at last set in—the steady winter of Central New
York, where the snow which falls at the beginning of December
usually covers the ground until March. Ptolemy, at least,
which lies upon the northern side of the watershed between
the Susquehanna and the rivers which flow into Lake Ontario,
has a much less variable winter temperature than the great
valley, lying some thirty miles to the southward. Atauga
Lake, in common with Cayuga and Seneca, never freezes,
except across the shallows at its southern end; but its waters,
so piercingly cold that they seem to cut the skin like the blade
of a knife, have no power to soften the northern winds. The
bottoms between Ptolemy and the lake, and also, in fact, the
Eastern and Western Valleys, for some miles behind the village,
are open to the North; and those sunny winter days
which, in more sheltered localities, breathe away the snow,
here barely succeed in softening it a little. On the hills it is
even too deep for pleasure. As soon as a highway has been
broken through the drifts, the heavy wood-sleds commence
running, and very soon wear it into a succession of abrupt
hollows, over which the light cutters go pitching like their
nautical namesakes in a chopping sea.

Woodbury, in obedience to a promise exacted by his sister,
went to New York for the holidays, and, as might have been
anticipated, became entangled in a succession of social engagements,
which detained him until the middle of January. He
soon grew tired of acting as escort to his two pretty, but (it

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must be confessed, in strict confidence), shallow nieces, whose
sole æsthetic taste was opera—and in opera, especially Verdi.
After a dozen nights of “darling Bosio,” and “delightful Beneventano,”
and “all the rest of them,” he would have been
glad to hear, as a change, even the “Taza be-taza” of the Hindoo
nautch-girls. A season of eastern rains and muddy streets
made the city insupportable, and—greatly to the wonder of
his sister's family—he declined an invitation to the grand
Fifth Avenue ball of Mrs. Luther Leathers, in order to return
to the wilderness of Ptolemy.

Taking the New York and Erie express-train to the town
of Miranda, he there chartered a two-horse cutter, with an
Irish attachment, and set out early the next morning. He
had never before approached Ptolemy from this side, and the
journey had all the charm of a new region. It was a crisp,
clear day, the blood of the horses was quickened by the frosty
air, and the cutter slid rapidly and noiselessly over the wellbeaten
track. With a wolf-skin robe on his knees, Woodbury
sat in luxurious warmth, and experienced a rare delight in
breathing the keen, electric crystal of the atmosphere. It was
many years since he had felt such an exquisite vigor of life
within him—such a nimble play of the aroused blood—such
lightness of heart, and hope, and courage! The snow-crystals
sparkled in the sunshine, and the pure shoulders of the hills
before him shone like silver against the naked blue of the sky.
He sang aloud, one after another, the long-forgotten songs,
until his moustache turned to ice and hung upon his mouth
like the hasp of a padlock.

Rising out of the Southern valleys, he sped along, over the
cold, rolling uplands of the watershed, and reached Mulligansville
towards noon. Here the road turned westward, and a
further drive of three miles brought him to the brink of the
long descent to East Atauga Creek. At this point, a superb
winter landscape was unfolded before him. Ptolemy, with its
spires, its one compactly-built, ambitious street, its scattered
houses and gardens, lay in the centre of the picture. On the

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white floor of the valley were drawn, with almost painful
sharpness and distinctness, the outlines of farm-houses, and
barns, fences, isolated trees, and the winding lines of elm and
alder which marked the courses of the streams. Beyond the
mouth of the further valley rose the long, cultivated sweep of
the western hill, flecked with dull-purple patches of pine forest.
Northward, across the white meadows and the fringe of trees
along Roaring Brook, rose the sunny knoll of Lakeside, sheltered
by the dark woods behind, while further, stretching far
away between the steep shores, gleamed the hard, steel-blue
sheet of the lake. The air was so intensely clear that the distance
was indicated only by a difference in the hue of objects,
not by their diminished distinctness.

“By Jove! this is glorious!” exclaimed Woodbury, scarcely
conscious that he spoke.

“Shure, an' it's a fine place, Surr!” said the Irish driver, appropriating
the exclamation.

Shortly after commencing the descent, a wreck was descried
ahead. A remnant of aristocracy—or, at least, a fondness for
aristocratic privilege—still lingers among our republican people,
and is manifested in its most offensive form, by the drivers
of heavy teams. No one ever knew a lime-wagon or a wood-sled
to give an inch of the road to a lighter vehicle. In this
ease, a sled, on its way down, had forced an ascending cutter
to turn out into a deep drift, and in attempting to regain the
track both shafts of the latter had been snapped off. The sled
pursued its way, regardless of the ruin, and the occupants of
the cutter, a gentleman and lady, were holding a consultation
over their misfortune, when Woodbury came in sight of them.
As the gentleman leading his horse back into the drift to give
room, turned his face towards the approaching cutter, Woodbury
recognized, projecting between ear-lappets of fur, the curiously-planted
nose, the insufficient lips, and the prominent
teeth, which belonged to the Rev. Mr. Waldo. The recognition
was mutual.

“My dear, it is Mr. Woodbury!” the latter joyfully cried,

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turning to the muffled lady. She instantly stood up in the
cutter, threw back her veil, and hailed the approaching deliverer:
“Help me, good Samaritan! The Levite has wrecked me, and
the Priest has enough to do, to take care of himself!”

Woodbury stopped his team, sprang out, and took a survey
of the case. “It is not to be mended,” said he; “you must
crowd yourselves in with me, and we will drive on slowly, leading
the horse.”

“But I have to attend a funeral at Mulligansville—the child
of one of our members,” said Mr. Waldo, “and there is no
time to lose. My dear, you must go back with Mr. Woodbury.
Perhaps he can take the harness and robes. I will
ride on to Van Horn's, where I can borrow a saddle.”

This arrangement was soon carried into effect. Mr. Waldo
mounted the bare-backed steed, and went off up the hill, thumping
his heels against the animal's sides. The broken shafts
were placed in the cutter, which was left “to be called for,”
and Mrs. Waldo took her seat beside Woodbury. She had
set out to attend the funeral, as a duty enjoined by her husband's
office, and was not displeased to escape without damage
to her conscience.

“I'm glad you've got back, Mr. Woodbury,” she said, as
they descended the hill. “We like to have our friends about
us, in the winter, and I assure you, you've been missed.”

“It is pleasant to feel that I have already a place among
you,” he answered. “What is the last piece of gossip? Is
the Great Sewing-Union still in existence?”

“Not quite on the old foundation. Our fair has been held—
by the bye, there I missed you. I fully depended on selling
you a quantity of articles. The Anti-Slavery Fair is over, too;
but they are still working for the Jutnapore Mission, as there
is a chance of sending the articles direct to Madras, before
long; and so the most of us still attend, and either assist them
or take our own private sewing with us.”

“Where do you next meet?”

“Ah, that's our principal trouble. We have exhausted all

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the available houses, besides going twice to Bue's and Wilkinson's.
Our parsonage is so small—a mere pigeon-house—that
it's out of the question. I wish I had some of your empty
rooms at Lakeside. Now, there's an idea! Capital! Confess
that my weak feminine brain is good at resorts!”

“What is it?” Woodbury asked.

“Can't you guess? You shall entertain the Sewing-Union
one evening. We will meet at Lakeside: it is just the thing!”

“Are you serious, Mrs. Waldo? I could not, of course, be
so ungracious as to refuse, provided there is no impropriety
in compliance. What would Ptolemy say to the plan?”

“I'll take charge of that!” she cried. “Impropriety! Are
you not a steady, respectable Member of Society, I should like
to know? If there's any thing set down against you, we must
go to Calcutta to find it. And we are sure there are no trapdoors
at Lakeside, or walled-up skeletons, or Blue Beard chambers.
Besides, this isn't Mulligansville or Anacreon, and it is
not necessary to be so very straight-laced. Oh yes, it is the
very thing. As for the domestic preparations, count on my
help, if it is needed.”

“I am afraid,” he replied, “that Mrs. Babb would resent
any interference with her authority. In fact,” he added,
laughing, “I am not certain that it is safe to decide, without
first consulting her.”

“There, now!” rejoined Mrs. Waldo. “Do you remember
what I once told you? Yes, you bachelors, who boast of
your independence of woman, are the only real slaves to the
sex. No wife is such a tyrant as a housekeeper. Not but
what Mrs. Babb is a very honest, conscientious, proper sort of
a person,—but she don't make a home, Mr. Woodbury. You
should get married.”

“That is easily said, Mrs. Waldo,” he replied, with a laugh
which covered, like a luxuriant summer vine, the entrance to
a sighing cavern,—“easily said, and might be easily done, if
one were allowed to choose a wife for her domestic qualities
valued at so much per month.”

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[figure description] Page 082.[end figure description]

“Pshaw!” said she, with assumed contempt. “You are
not a natural cynic, and have no right to be single, at your
age, without a good reason.”

“Perhaps there is a good reason, Mrs. Waldo. Few persons,
I imagine, remain single from choice. I have lost the
susceptibility of my younger days, but not the ideal of a true
wedded life. I should not dare to take the only perfect
woman in the world, unless I could be lover as well as husband.
I sincerely wish my chances were better: but would
you have me choose one of the shallow, showy creatures I
have just been visiting, or one of your strong-minded orators,
here in Ptolemy?”

Mrs. Waldo understood both the earnest tone of the speaker,
and the veiled bitterness of his concluding words. She read
his heart at a glance, thorough woman as she was, and honored
him then, and forever thenceforth.

“You must not take my nonsense for more than it is worth,
Mr. Woodbury,” she answered softly. “Women at my age,
when God denies them children, take to match-making, in the
hope of fulfilling their mission by proxy. It is unselfish in us,
at least. But, bless me! here we are, at the village. Remember,
the Sewing-Union meets at Lakeside.”

“As soon as the Autocrat Babb has spoken,” said he, as he
handed her out at the Cimmerian Parsonage, “I will send
word, and then the matter will rest entirely in your hands.”

“Mine? Oh, I am a female General Jackson—I take the
responsibility!” she cried, gayly, as the cutter drove away.

Woodbury, welcomed at the gate of Lakeside by the cheery
face of Bute Wilson, determined to broach the subject at once
to the housekeeper. Mrs. Fortitude Babb was glad to see
him again, but no expression thereof manifested itself in her
countenance and words. Wiping her bony right-hand on her
apron—she had been dusting the rooms, after sweeping—she
took the one he offered, saying: “How's your health, Sir?”
and then added: “I s'pose you've had a mighty fine time,
while you was away?”

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[figure description] Page 083.[end figure description]

“Not so fine but that I'm glad to get home again,” he
answered. The word “home” satisfied Mrs. Babb's sense of
justice. His sister, she was sure, was not the housekeeper
she herself was, and it was only right that he should see and
acknowledge the fact.

“I want your advice, Mrs. Babb,” Woodbury continued.
“The Sewing-Union propose to meet here, one evening.
They have gone the round of all the large houses in Ptolemy,
and there seems to be no other place left. Since I have
settled in Lakeside, I must be neighborly, you know. Could
we manage to entertain them?”

“Well—comin' so suddent, like, I don't hardly know what
to think. Things has been quiet here for a long time:” the
housekeeper grimly remarked, with a wheezy sigh.

“That is true,” said Woodbury; “and of course you must
have help.”

“No!” she exclaimed, with energy, “I don't want no help—
leastways only Melindy. The rooms must be put to rights—
not but what they're as good as Mrs. Bue's any day; and
there'll be supper for a matter o' twenty; and cakes and
things. When is it to be?”

“Next Friday, I presume; but can you get along without
more assistance?”

“'Taint every one that would do it,” replied Mrs. Babb,
“There's sich a settin' to rights, afterwards. But I can't have
strange help mixin' in, and things goin' wrong, and me to have
the credit of it. Melindy's used to my ways, and there's not
many others that knows what housekeepin' is. Sich a mess as
some people makes of it!”

Secretly, Mrs. Babb was well pleased at the opportunity of
publicly displaying her abilities, but it was not in her nature
to do any thing out of the regular course of her housekeeping,
without having it understood that she was making a great
sacrifice. She was not so unreasonable as to set herself up for
an independent power, but she stoutly demanded and maintained
the rights of a belligerent. This point having once

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[figure description] Page 084.[end figure description]

been conceded, however, she exhibited a wonderful energy in
making the necessary preparations.

Thanks to Mrs. Waldo, all Ptolemy soon knew of the arrangement,
and, as the invitation was general, nearly everybody
decided to accept it. Few persons had visited Lakeside
since Mrs. Dennison's funeral, and there was some curiosity
to know what changes had been made by the new owner.
Besides, the sleighing was superb, and the moon nearly full.
The ladies connected with the Sewing-Union were delighted
with the prospect, and even Hannah Thurston, finding that
her absence would be the only exception and might thus seem
intentional, was constrained to accompany them. She had
seen Woodbury but once since their rencontre at Merryfield's,
and his presence was both unpleasant and embarrassing to her.
But the Merryfields, who took a special pride in her abilities,
cherished the hope that she would yet convert him to the true
faith, and went to the trouble of driving to Ptolemy in order
to furnish her with a conveyance.

Early in the afternoon the guests began to arrive. Bute,
aided by his man Patrick, met them at the gate, and, after a
hearty greeting (for he knew everybody), took the horses and
cutters in charge. Woodbury, assuming the character of host
according to Ptolemaic ideas, appeared at the door, with Mrs.
Babb, rigid in black bombazine, three paces in his rear. The
latter received the ladies with frigid courtesy, conducted them
up-stairs to the best bedroom, and issued the command to
each of them, in turn: “lay off your Things!” Their
curiosity failed to detect any thing incomplete or unusual in
the appointments of the chamber. The furniture was of the
Dennison period, and Mrs. Fortitude had taken care that no
fault should be found with the toilet arrangements. Miss
Eliza Clancy had indeed whispered to Miss Ruhaney Goodwin:
“Well, I think they might have some lavender, or baywater,
for us,”—but the latter immediately responded with
a warning “sh!” and drew from her work-bag a small
oiled-silk package, which she unfolded, producing therefrom a

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diminutive bit of sponge, saturated with a mild extract of
lemon verbena. “Here,” she said, offering it to the other
spinster, “I always take care to be pervided.”

The spacious parlor at Lakeside gradually filled with
workers for the Mission Fund. Mrs. Waldo was among the
earliest arrivals, and took command, by right of her undisputed
social talent. She became absolute mistress for the
time, having, by skilful management, propitiated Mrs. Babb,
and fastened her in her true place, at the outset, by adamantine
chains of courtesy and assumed respect. She felt herself,
therefore, in her true element, and distributed her subjects
with such tact, picking up and giving into the right hands the
threads of conversation, perceiving and suppressing petty
jealousies in advance, and laughing away the awkwardness or
timidity of others, that Woodbury could not help saying to
himself: “What a queen of the salons this woman would
have made!” It was a matter of conscience with her, as he
perhaps did not know, that the occasion should be agreeable,
not only to the company, but also to the host. She was responsible
for its occurrence, and she felt that its success would
open Lakeside to the use of Ptolemy society.

There was also little in the principal parlor to attract the
attention of the guests. The floor was still covered by the old
Brussels carpet, with its colossal bunches of flowers of impossible
color and form,—the wonder of Ptolemy, when it was
new. There were the same old-fashioned chairs, and deep
sofas with chintz covers: and the portraits of Mrs. Dennison,
and her son Henry, as a boy of twelve, with his hand upon the
head of a Newfoundland dog, looked down from the walls.
Woodbury had only added engravings of the Madonna di San
Sisto and the Transfiguration, neither of which was greatly admired
by the visitors. Mrs. Hamilton Bue, pausing a moment
to inspect the former, said of the Holy Child: “Why, it looks
just like my little Addy, when she's got her clothes off!”

In the sitting-room were Landseer's “Challenge” and Ary
Scheffer's “Francesca da Rimini.” Miss Ruhaney Goodwin

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turned suddenly away from the latter, with difficulty suppressing
an exclamation. “Did you ever?” said she to Miss Eliza
Clancy; “it isn't right to have such pictures hung up.”

“Hush!” answered Miss Eliza, “it may be from Scripture.”

Miss Ruhaney now contemplated the picture without hesitation.
It was a proof before lettering. “What can it be, then?”
she asked.

“Well—I shouldn't wonder if 'twas Jephthah and his
daughter. They both look so sorrowful.”

The Rev. Lemuel Styles and his wife presently arrived.
They were both amiable, honest persons, who enjoyed their
importance in the community, without seeming to assume it.
The former was, perhaps, a little over-cautious lest he should
forget the strict line of conduct which had been prescribed for
him as a theological student. He felt that his duty properly
required him to investigate Mr. Woodbury's religious views,
before thus appearing to endorse them by his presence at
Lakeside; but he had not courage to break the dignified reserve
which the latter maintained, and was obliged to satisfy
his conscience with the fact that Woodbury had twice attended
his church. Between Mr. Waldo and himself there
was now a very cordial relation. They had even cautiously
discussed the differences between them, and had in this way
learned, at least, to respect each other's sincerity.

The last of all the arrivals before tea was Mr. and Mrs. Merryfield,
with Hannah Thurston. The latter came, as already
mentioned, with great reluctance. She would rather have
faced an unfriendly audience than the courteous and self-possessed
host who came to the door to receive her. He oppressed
her, not only with a sense of power, but of power
controlled and directed by some cool faculty in the brain,
which she felt she did not possess. In herself, whatever of
intellectual force she recognized, was developed through the
excitement of her feelings and sympathics. His personality,
it seemed to her, was antagonistic to her own, and the knowledge
gave her a singular sense of pain. She was woman

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enough not to tolerate a difference of this kind without a
struggle.

“Thank you for coming, Miss Thurston,” said Woodbury,
as he frankly offered his hand. “I should not like any member
of the Union to slight my first attempt to entertain it. I
am glad to welcome you to Lakeside.”

Hannah Thurston lifted her eyes to his with an effort that
brought a fleeting flush to her face. But she met his gaze,
steadily. “We owe thanks to you, Mr. Woodbury,” said she,
“that Lakeside still belongs to our Ptolemy community. I
confess I should not like to see so pleasant a spot isolated, or—
what the people of Ptolemy would consider much worse,”
she added, smiling—“attached to Anacreon.”

“Oh, no!” he answered, as he transferred her to the charge
of Mrs. Babb. “I have become a thorough Ptolemaic, or a
Ptolemystic, or whatever the proper term may be. I hurl defiance
across the hill to Anacreon, and I turn my back on the
south-east wind, when it blows from Mulligansville.”

“Come, come! We won't be satirized;” said Mrs. Waldo,
who was passing through the hall. “Hannah, you are just in
time. There are five of the Mission Fund sitting together, and
I want their ranks broken. Mr. Woodbury, there will be no
more arrivals before tea; give me your assistance.”

“Who is the tyrant now?” he asked.

“Woman, always, in one shape or other,” she answered,
leading the way into the parlor.

After the very substantial tea which Mrs. Babb had prepared,
and to which, it must be whispered, the guests did
ample justice, there was a pause in the labors of the Union.
The articles intended for the Jutnapore Mission were nearly
completed, in fact, and Mrs. Waldo's exertions had promoted
a genial flow of conversation, which did not require the aid of
the suggestive needle. The guests gathered in groups, chatting
at the windows, looking out on the gray, twilight landscape,
or watching the approach of cutters from Ptolemy, as
they emerged from the trees along Roaring Brook. Mr.

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Hamilton Bue and the Hon. Zeno Harder were the first to
make their appearance, not much in advance, however, of the
crowd of ambitious young gentlemen. Many of the latter were
personally unknown to Woodbury, but this was not the least
embarrassment to them. They gave him a rapid salutation,
since it was not to be avoided, and hurried in to secure advantageous
positions among the ladies. Seth Wattles not only
came, to enjoy a hospitality based, as he had hinted, on the
“accursed opium traffic,” but brought with him a stranger
from Ptolemy, a Mr. Grindle, somewhat known as a lecturer
on Temperance.

The rooms were soon filled and Woodbury was also obliged
to throw open his library, into which the elderly gentlemen
withdrew, with the exception of the Rev. Mr. Styles. Mr.
Waldo relished a good story, even if the point was somewhat
coarse, and the Hon. Zeno had an inexhaustible fund of such.
Mr. Bue, notwithstanding he felt bound to utter an occasional
mild protest, always managed to be on hand, and often, in his
great innocence, suggested the very thing which he so evidently
wished to avoid. If the conversation had been for some
time rather serious and heavy, he would say: “Well, Mr.
Harder, I am glad we shall have none of your wicked stories
to-night”—a provocation to which the Hon. Zeno always responded
by giving one.

Bute Wilson, after seeing that the horses were properly
attended to, washed his hands, brushed his hair carefully, and
put on his Sunday frock-coat. Miss Caroline Dilworth was
one of the company, but he had been contented with an occasional
glimpse of her through the window, until the arrival of
Seth Wattles. The care of the fires in the grates, the lamps,
and other arrangements of the evening, gave him sufficient
opportunity to mix with the company, and watch both his
sweetheart and his presumed rival, without appearing to do so.
“Darn that blue-gilled baboon!” he muttered to himself; “I
believe his liver's whiter than the milt of a herrin', an' if you'd
cut his yaller skin, he'd bleed whey 'stid o' blood.”

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Seth Wattles, nevertheless, was really guiltless of any designs
on the heart of the little seamstress. Like herself, he was ambitious
of high game, and, in the dreams of his colossal conceit,
looked forward with much confidence to the hour when
Hannah Thurston should take his name, or he hers: he was
prepared for either contingency. To this end he assumed a
tender, languishing air, and talked of Love, and A Mission,
and The Duality of The Soul, in a manner which, in a more
cultivated society, would have rendered him intolerable. He
had a habit of placing his hand on the arm or shoulder of the
person with whom he was conversing, and there were in
Ptolemy women silly enough to be pleased by these tokens of
familiarity. Hannah Thurston, though entirely harmonizing
with him as a reformer, and therefore friendly and forbearing
in her intercourse, felt a natural repugnance towards him
which she could not understand. Indeed, the fact gave her
some uneasiness. “He is ugly,” she thought; “and I am so
weak as to dislike ugliness—it must be that:” which conclusion,
acting on her sensitive principle of justice, led her to
treat him sometimes with more than necessary kindness. Many
persons, the Merryfields included, actually fancied that there
was a growing attachment between them.

“Miss Carrie,” whispered Bute, as he passed her in the hall,
“Do you like your lemonade sweet? We're goin' to bring it
in directly, and I'll git Mother Forty to make a nice glass of
it, o' purpose for you.”

“Thank you, Mr. Wilson: yes, if you please,” answered the
soft, childish drawl and the beryl-tinted eyes, that sent a thousand
cork-screw tingles boring through and through him.

Bute privately put six lumps of sugar into one glass, which
he marked for recognition; and then squeezed the last bitter
drops of a dozen lemons into another.

The latter was for Seth Wattles.

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p713-095 CHAPTER VII. WHAT HAPPENED DURING THE EVENING.

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Woodbury had prudently left the preparations for the refreshment
of his numerous guests in the hands of Mrs. Babb,
who, aided by the sable Melinda, had produced an immense
supply of her most admired pastry. By borrowing freezers
from the confectioner in Ptolemy, and employing Patrick to do
the heavy churning, she had also succeeded in furnishing very
tolerable ices. The entertainment was considered to be—and,
for country means, really was—sumptuous. Nevertheless, the
housekeeper was profuse in her apologies, receiving the abundant
praises of her guests with outward grimness and secret
satisfaction.

“Try these crullers,” she would say: “p'r'aps you'll find
'em better 'n the jumbles, though I'm afeard they a'n't hardly
done enough. But you'll have to put up with sich as there
is.”

“Oh, Mrs. Babb!” exclaimed Mrs. Hamilton Bue, “don't
say that! Nobody bakes as nice as you do. I wish you'd
give me the receipt for the jumbles.”

“You're welcome to it, if you like 'em, I'm sure. But it
depends on the seasonin', and I don't never know if they're
goin' to come out right.”

“Mrs. Babb,” said Woodbury, coming up at this moment,
“will you please get a bottle of Sherry. The gentlemen, I see,
have nothing but lemonade.”

“I told Bute to git some for them as likes it.”

“A-hm!” Mrs. Bue ejaculated, as the housekeeper departed
to look after the wine; “I think, Mr. Woodbury, they
don't take any thing more.”

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“Let me give them a chance, Mrs. Bue. Ah, here comes
Bute, with the glasses. Shall I have the pleasure?” offering
her one of the two which he had taken.

“Oh, dear me, no—not for any thing!” she exclaimed, looking
a little frightened.

“Mr. Bue,” said Woodbury, turning around to that gentleman,
“as Mrs. Bue refuses to take a glass of wine with me,
you must be her substitute.”

“Thank you, I'd—I'd rather not, this evening,” said Mr.
Bue, growing red in the face.

There was an embarrassing pause. Woodbury, looking
around, perceived that Bute had already offered his tray to the
other gentlemen, and that none of the glasses upon it had been
taken. He was about to replace his own without drinking,
when the Hon. Zeno Harder said: “Allow me the pleasure,
Sir!” and helped himself. At the same moment the Rev. Mr.
Waldo, in obedience to a glance from his wife, followed his
example.

“I have not tasted wine for some years,” said the latter,
“but I have no objection to its rational use. I have always
considered it sanctioned,” he added, turning to Mr. Styles,
“by the Miracle of Cana.”

Mr. Styles slightly nodded, but said nothing.

“Your good health, Sir!” said the Hon. Zeno, as he emptied
his glass.

Health?” somebody echoed, in a loud, contemptuous
whisper.

Woodbury bowed and drank. As he was replacing his
glass, Mr. Grindle, who had been waiting for the consummation
of the iniquity, suddenly stepped forward. Mr. Grindle
was a thin, brown individual, with a long, twisted nose, and a
voice which acquired additional shrillness from the fact of its
appearing to proceed entirely from the said nose. He had occasionally
lectured in Ptolemy, and was known,—by sight, at
least,—to all the company. Woodbury, however, was quite
ignorant of the man and every thing concerning him.

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“I am surprised,” exclaimed Mr. Grindle, with his eyes
fixed on vacancy, “that a man who has any regard for his
reputation will set such a pernicious example.”

“To what do you refer?” asked Woodbury, uncertain
whether it was he who was addressed.

“To that!” replied the warning prophet, pointing to the
empty wine-glass—“the source of nine-tenths of all the sin
and suffering in the world!”

“I think you would have some difficulty in finding Sherry
enough to produce such a result,” Woodbury answered,
beginning to understand the man.

“Sherry, or Champagne, or Heidsick!” retorted Mr. Grindle,
raising his voice: “it's all the same—all different forms
of Rum, and different degrees of intemperance!”

Woodbury's brown eyes flashed a little, but he answered
coolly and sternly: “As you say, Sir, there are various forms
of intemperance, and I have too much respect for my guests
to allow that any of them should be exhibited here. Mrs.
Waldo,” he continued, turning his back on the lecturer, and
suddenly changing his tone, “did you not propose that we
should have some music?”

“I have both persuaded and commanded,” she replied, “but
singers, I have found, are like a flock of sheep. They huddle
together and hesitate, until some one takes the lead, and then
they all follow, even if it's over your head. You must be
bell-wether, after all.”

“Any thing for harmony,” he answered, gayly. “Ah! I
have it—a good old song, with which none of our friends can
find fault.”

And he sang, in his mellow voice, with an amused air, which
Mrs. Waldo understood and heartily enjoyed: “Drink to me
only with thine eyes.

Mr. Grindle, however, turned to Seth Wattles and said,
sneeringly: “It's easy enough to shirk an argument you can't
answer.” A fortnight afterwards he exploited the incident in
a lecture which he gave before the Sons of Temperance, at

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Ptolemy. Commencing with the cheap groggeries, he gradually
rose in his attacks until he reached the men of wealth and
education. “There are some of these in our neighborhood,”
he said: “it is not necessary for me to mention names—men
whom perhaps we might excuse for learning the habit of rumdrinking
on foreign shores, where our blessed reform has not
yet penetrated, if they did not bring it here with them, to corrupt
and destroy our own citizens. Woe unto those men, say I!
Better that an ocean of fire had rolled between those distant
shores of delusion and debauchery and this redeemed land, so
that they could not have returned! Better that they had perished
under the maddening influence of the bowl that stingeth
like an adder, before coming here to add fresh hecatombs to the
Jaws of the Monster!” Of course, everybody in Ptolemy
knew who was meant, and sympathizing friends soon carried
the report to Lakeside.

The unpleasant episode was soon forgotten, or, from a natural
sense of propriety, no longer commented upon. Even the
strongest advocates of Temperance present felt mortified by
Mr. Grindle's vulgarity. Hannah Thurston, among others,
was greatly pained, yet, for the first time, admired Woodbury's
coolness and self-possession, in the relief which it gave
her. She wished for an opportunity to show him, by her manner,
a respect which might in some degree counterbalance the
recent rudeness, and such an opportunity soon occurred.

She was standing before the picture of Francesca da Rimini,
lost in the contemplation of the wonderful grace and pathos
of the floating figures, when Woodbury, approaching her, said:

“I am glad that you admire it, Miss Thurston. The picture
is a great favorite with me.”

“The subject is from Dante, is it not?” she asked; “that
figure is he, I think.”

Woodbury was agreeably surprised at her perception, especially
as she did not say “Dant,” which he might possibly have
expected. He explained the engraving, and found that she
recollected the story, having read Cary's translation.

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“Since you are so fond of pictures, Miss Thurston,” said
he, “let me show you another favorite of mine. Here, in the
library.”

Taking a large portfolio from its rack, he opened it on the
table, under a swinging lamp. There were views of Indian
scenery—strange temples, rising amid plumy tufts of palm;
elephants and tigers grappling in jungles of gigantic grass;
pillared banians, with gray-bearded fakirs sitting in the
shade, and long ghauts descending to the Ganges. The glimpses
she caught, as he turned the leaves, took away her breath
with sudden delight.

At last he found the plate he was seeking, and laid it before
her. It was a tropical brake, a tangle of mimosa-trees,
with their feathery fronds and balls of golden down, among
which grew passion-flowers and other strange, luxuriant vines.
In the midst of the cool, odorous darkness, stood a young Indian
girl of wonderful beauty, with languishing, almond-shaped
eyes, and some gorgeous unknown blossom drooping from
her night-black hair. Her only garment, of plaited grass or
rushes, was bound across the hips, leaving the lovely form bare
in its unconscious purity. One hand, listlessly hanging among
the mimosa leaves, which gradually folded up and bent away
where she touched them, seemed to seek the head of a doe,
thrust out from the foliage to meet it. At the bottom of the
picture a fawn forced its way through the tangled greenery.
The girl, in her dusky beauty, seemed a dryad of the sumptuous
forest—the child of summer, and perfume, and rank,
magnificent bloom.

“Oh, how beautiful!” exclaimed Hannah Thurston, at once
impressed by the sentiment of the picture: “It is like the scent
of the tube rose.”

“Ah, you comprehend it!” exclaimed Woodbury, surprised
and pleased: “do you know the subject?”

“Not at all, but it scarcely needs an explanation.”

“Have you ever heard of Kalidasa, the Hindoo poet?”

“I have not, I am sorry to say,” she answered; “I have

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sometimes found references to the old Sanscrit literature in
modern authors, but that is all I know about it.”

“My own knowledge has been derived entirely from translations,”
said he, “and I confess that this picture was the cause
of my acquaintance with Kalidasa. I never had patience to
read their interminable epics. Shall I tell you the story of
Sakontala, this lovely creature?”

“Certainly, if you will be so kind: it must be beautiful.”

Woodbury then gave her a brief outline of the drama, to
which she listened with the greatest eagerness and delight.
At the close, he said:

“I am sorry I have not a copy of the translation to offer
you. But, if you would like to read another work by the
same poet, I think I have the `Megha-Duta,' or `Cloud-Messenger,
' somewhere in my library. It is quite as beautiful a
poem, though not in the dramatic form. There are many characteristic
allusions to Indian life, but none, I think, that you
could not understand.”

“Thank you, Mr. Woodbury. It is not often that I am
able to make the acquaintance of a new author, and the pleasure
is all the greater. I know very little of literature outside
of the English language, and this seems like the discovery of
a new world in the Past. India is so far-off and unreal.”

“Not to me,” he answered, with a smile. “We are creatures
of habit to a greater extent than the most of us guess.
If you could now be transplanted to India, in less than five
years you would begin to imagine that you were born under
the lotus-leaf, and that this life in Ptolemy had occurred only
in the dreams of a tropical noonday.”

“Oh, no, no!” said she, with earnestness. “We cannot so
forget the duties imposed upon us—we cannot lose sight of
our share in the great work intrusted to our hands. Right,
and Justice, and Conscience, are everywhere the same!”

“Certainly, as absolute principles. But our individual duties
vary with every change in our lives, and our individual action
is affected, in spite of ourselves, by the influences of the

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external world. Are you not—to take the simplest evidence of this
fact—cheerful and hopeful on some days, desponding and
irresolute on others, without conscious reason? And can you
not imagine moods of Nature which would permanently color
your own?”

Hannah Thurston felt that there was a germ of harsh, material
truth in his words, beside which her aspirations lost
somewhat of their glow. Again she was conscious of a painful,
unwelcome sense of repulsion. “Is there no faith?” she
asked herself; “are there no lofty human impulses, under this
ripe intelligence?” The soft, liquid lustre faded out of her
eyes, and the eager, animated expression of her face passed
away like the sunshine from a cloud, leaving it cold and gray.

Woodbury, seeing Miss Eliza Clancy, in company with
other ladies, entering the library, tied up the portfolio and
replaced it in its rack. Mrs. Waldo, pressing forward at the
same time, noticed upon the table a Chinese joss-stick, in its
lackered boat. She was not a woman to disguise or restrain
an ordinary curiosity.

“What in the world is this?” she asked, taking the boat in
her hands. The other ladies clustered around, inspecting it
from all sides, but unable to guess its use.

“Now,” said Woodbury, laughing, “I have half a mind to
torment you a little. You have all read the Arabian Nights?
Well, this is an instrument of enchantment.”

“Enchantment! Do the Indian jugglers use it?” asked
Mrs. Waldo.

I use it,” said he. “This rod, as it appears to be, is made
of a mysterious compound. It has been burned at one end,
you see. When lighted, it is employed to communicate fire
to another magical substance, through which the Past is
recalled and the Future made clear.”

Miss Clancy and the other spinsters opened their eyes wide,
in wonderment. “Provoking! Tell us now!” cried Mrs.
Waldo.

“It is just as I say,” he answered. “See, when I light the

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end—thus—it burns with a very slow fire. This single piece
would burn for nearly a whole day.”

“But what is the other magical substance?” she asked.

“Here is a specimen,” said he, taking the lid from a circular
box of carved bamboo, and disclosing to their view some cigars.

The spinsters uttered a simultaneous exclamation. “Dreadful!”
cried Mrs. Waldo, in affected horror. “Hannah, can
you imagine such depravity?”

“I confess, it seems to me an unnatural taste,” Hannah
Thurston gravely answered; “but I presume Mr. Woodbury
has some defence ready.”

“Only this,” said he, with an air between jest and earnest,
“that the habit is very agreeable, and, since it produces a
placid, equable tone of mind, highly favorable to reflection,
might almost be included in the list of moral agencies.”

“Would it not be more satisfactory,” she asked, “if you
could summon up the same condition of mind, from an earnest
desire to attain the Truth, without the help of narcotic drugs?”

“Perhaps so,” he replied; “but we are all weak vessels, as
you know, Mrs. Waldo. I have never yet encountered such a
thing as perfect harmony in the relations between body and
mind. I doubt, even, if such harmony is possible, except at
transient intervals. For my part, my temper is so violent and
uncontrollable that the natural sedative qualities of my mind
are insufficient.”

Mrs. Waldo laughed heartily at this assertion, and the
serious tone in which it was uttered. Hannah Thurston, to
whom every fancied violation of the laws of nature was more
or less an enormity, scarcely knew whether to be shocked or
amused. She had determined to carefully guard herself against
committing such an indiscretion as Mr. Grindle, but it was
hard to be silent, when Duty demanded that she should bear
a stern testimony against evil habits.

“You should be charitable, ladies,” Woodbury continued,
“towards some of our masculine habits, seeing that we do not
interfere with yours.”

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[figure description] Page 098.[end figure description]

“Bless me! what habits have we, I should like to know!”
exclaimed Mrs. Waldo.

“A multitude: I don't know the half of them. Crochetwork,
and embroidery, and patterns, for instance. Tea is
milder than tobacco, I grant, but your systems are more sensitive.
Then, there are powders and perfumes; eau de Cologne,
lavender, verbena, heliotrope, and what not—against all of
which I have nothing to say, because their odors are nearly
equal to that of a fine Havana cigar.”

Miss Eliza Clancy and Miss Ruhaney Goodwin exchanged
glances of horror. They were both too much embarrassed to
reply.

“You understand our weaknesses,” said Hannah Thurston,
with a smile in which there was some bitterness.

“I do not call them weaknesses,” he answered. “I should
be glad if this feminine love of color and odor were more common
among men. But there are curious differences of taste,
in this respect. I have rarely experienced a more exquisite
delight than in riding through the rose-fields of Ghazeepore, at
the season for making attar: yet some persons cannot endure
the smell of a rose. Musk, which is a favorite perfume with
many, is to me disagreeable. There is, however, a physical
explanation for this habit of mine, which, perhaps, you do not
know.”

“No,” said she, still gravely, “I know nothing but that it
seems to me unnecessary, and—if you will pardon me the
word—pernicious.”

“Certainly. It is so, in many cases. But some constitutions
possess an overplus of active nervous life, which suggests the
use of a slight artificial sedative. The peculiar fascination of
smoking is not in the taste of the weed, but the sight of the
smoke. It is the ear of corn which we hold out to entice into
harness the skittish thoughts that are running loose. In the
Orient, men accomplish the same result by a rosary, the beads
of which they run through their fingers.”

“Yes!” interrupted Mrs. Waldo: “My brother George,

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[figure description] Page 099.[end figure description]

who was always at the head of his class, had a habit of twisting
a lock of his hair while he was getting his lessons. It
stuck out from the side of his head, like a horn. When
mother had his hair cut, he went down to the foot, and he
never got fairly up to head till the horn grew out again.”

“A case in point,” said Woodbury. “Now, you, ladies,
have an exactly similar habit. Sewing, I have heard, is oftentimes
this soothing agent, but knitting is the great feminine
narcotic. In fact, women are more dependent on these slight
helps to thought—these accompaniments to conversation—
than men. There are few who can sit still and talk a whole
evening, without having their hands employed. Can you not
see some connecting link between our habits?”

The spinsters were silent. The speaker had, in fact, rather
gone beyond their depth, with the exception of Mrs. Waldo,
whose sympathy with him was so hearty and genial that she
would have unhesitatingly accepted whatever sentiments he
might have chosen to declare. Hannah Thurston was not a
little perplexed. She scarcely knew whether he was entirely
sincere, yet his views were so novel and unexpected that she
did not feel prepared to answer them. Before this man's appearance
in Ptolemy, her course had been chosen. She had
taken up, weighed, and decided for herself the questions of
life: a period of unpleasant doubt and hesitation had been
solved by the acceptance of (to her) great and important theories
of reform. Was a new and more difficult field of doubt to
be opened now?—more difficult, because the distinctions of the
sexes, which had been almost bridged over in her intercourse
with reformers of kindred views, were suddenly separated by
a new gulf, wider than the old.

Woodbury, noticing something of this perplexity in her countenance,
continued in a lighter tone: “At least, Miss Thurston,
I think you will agree with me that a physical habit,
if you prefer to call it so, is not very important in comparison
with those vices of character which are equally common and
not so easy to eradicate. Is not the use of a `narcotic drug'

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less objectionable than the systematic habit of avarice, or envy,
or hypocrisy?”

“Yes, indeed!” said Mrs. Waldo, recollecting his generous
donation to the Cimmerians, “and I, for one, will not prohibit
the use of your magical ingredients.”

“I cannot judge for you, Mr. Woodbury,” said Hannah
Thurston, feeling that some response was expected; “but have
you no duty towards those who may be encouraged in the
same habit, to their certain injury, by your example?”

“There, Miss Thurston, you touch a question rather too
vague to enter practically into one's life. After accepting, in
its fullest sense, the Christian obligation of duty towards our
fellow-men, there must be a certain latitude allowed for individual
tastes and likings. Else we should all be slaves to each
other's idiosyncrasies, and one perverted or abnormal trait
might suppress the healthy intellectual needs of an entire community.
Must we cease to talk, for example, because there is
scarcely a wholesome truth which, offered in a certain way,
might not operate as poison to some peculiarly constituted
mind? Would you cease to assert an earnest conviction from
the knowledge that there were persons unfitted to receive
it?”

“I do not think the analogy is quite correct,” she answered,
after a moment's pause, “because you cannot escape the recognition
of a truth, when it has once found access to your
mind. A habit, which you can take up or leave off at will, is
a very different thing.”

“Perhaps, then,” said Woodbury, who perceived by the
rising shade on Mrs. Waldo's smooth brow that it was time to
end the discussion, “I had best plead guilty, at once, to being
something of an Epicurean in my philosophy. I am still too
much of an Oriental to be indifferent to slight material comforts.”

“In consideration of your hospitality,” interposed Mrs.
Waldo, brightening up, “the Sewing Union will not judge
you very severely. Is it not so, Miss Clancy?”

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“Well—really—oh no, we are under obligations to Mr.
Woodbury;” said the spinster, thus unexpectedly appealed to,
and scarcely knowing how to reply.

“Our community have reason to congratulate themselves,
Sir,” here broke in the Hon. Zeno Harder, who had entered
the library in time to hear the last words.

Woodbury bowed dryly and turned away.

Soon afterwards, the sound of sleigh-bells in front of the
house announced the first departures. The company became
thinner by slow degrees, however, for the young gentlemen
and ladies had found the large parlor of Lakeside full of convenient
nooks, which facilitated their habit of breaking into
little groups, and were having such agreeable conversation that
they would probably have remained until the small hours, but
for the admonitions of the older folks. Among the earliest to
leave were the Merryfields, taking with them Hannah Thurston
and Miss Dilworth, greatly to Bute's regret. The latter,
unable to detect any signs of peculiar intimacy between Seth
Wattles and the little seamstress, became so undisguised in his
fondness for her society as to attract, at last, Mrs. Babb's attention.
The grim housekeeper had a vulture's beak for
scenting prey of this kind. While she assisted Mrs. Styles to
find her “Things,” in the bedroom up-stairs, she steadfastly
kept one eye on the snowy front yard, down which the Merryfield
party were moving. Bute, as she anticipated, was hovering
around the last and smallest of the hooded and cloaked
females. He put out his arm two or three times, as if to
steady her steps. They had nearly reached the cutter, where
Patrick was holding the impatient horses, when she saw
another male figure hurry down the walk. There was a sudden
tangle among the dim forms, and one of them, she noticed,
plunged full length into a bank of snow.

Mrs. Babb was so agitated by this tableau, that she suddenly
threw up her hands, exclaiming: “Well, if that don't
beat all!”

Mrs. Styles, carefully muffled for the journey home, had just

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turned to say good-night to the housekeeper, and stood petrified,
unable to guess whether the exclamation was one of admiration
or reproach. She slightly started back before the
energy with which it was uttered.

“Well, to be sure, how I do forgit things!” said Mrs. Babb,
coming to her senses. “But you know, Ma'am, when you're
not used to havin' company for a while, y'r head gits bothered.
'Pears to me I haven't been so flustered for years. You're
sure, Ma'am, you're right warm. I hope you won't take no
cold, goin' home.”

The scene that transpired in front of the house was sufficiently
amusing. Bute Wilson, as deputy-host, escorted Miss
Dilworth to the cutter, and was delighted that the slippery
path gave him at least one opportunity to catch her around the
waist. Hearing rapid footsteps behind him, he recognized
Seth Wattles hard upon his track, and, as the ungainly tailor
approached, jostled him so dexterously that he was tumbled
headlong into a pile of newly-shovelled snow.

“Ah! Who is it? Is he hurt?” exclaimed Miss Dilworth.

A smothered sound, very much resembling “Damn!” came
from the fallen individual.

“Let me help you up,” said Bute; “you pitched ag'in me
like an ox. Why, Seth, is it you? You ha'n't tore your
trowsus, nor nothin', have you?”

Seth, overwhelmed before the very eyes of Hannah Thurston,
whom he was hastening to assist into the cutter, grumbled:
“No, I'm not hurt.” Meantime, Bute had said good-night
to the party, and the cutter dashed away.

“Well, it's one comfort that you can always mend your own
rips,” the latter remarked, consolingly.

Finally, the last team departed, and the sound of the bells
diminished into a faint, fairy sweetness, as if struck by the
frosty arrows of the starlight from the crystals of the snow.
Lakeside returned to more than its wonted silence and seclusion.
Woodbury closed the door, walked into his library,
lighted a cigar at the still burning piece of joss-stick, and

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threw himself into a chair before the fire. Now and then
puffing a delicate, expanding ring of smoke from his lips, he
watched it gradually break and dissolve, while reviewing, in
his thoughts, the occurrences of the evening. They were not
wholly agreeable, yet the least so—Mr. Grindle's rude attack,—
was not to be dismissed from the mind like an ordinary piece
of vulgarity. It was a type, he thought, of the manners which
self-constituted teachers of morality must necessarily assume
in a community where intellect is characterized by activity
rather than development. Society, in its broader sense, is unknown
to these people,—was his reflection. In the absence of
cultivation, they are ruled by popular ideas: Reforms are
marshalled in, as reserve corps, behind the ranks of Religion,
and not even the white flag of a neutral is recognized in the
grand crusade. “Join us and establish your respectability,
or resist us and be cut down!” is the cry.

“Yet”—he mused further—“is it not something that, in a
remote place like this, Ideas have vitality and power? Admitting
that the channels in which they move are contracted,
and often lead in false directions, must they not rest on a basis
of honest, unselfish aspiration? The vices which spring from
intolerance and vulgar egotism are not to be lightly pardoned,
but, on the other hand, they do not corrupt and demoralize like
those of the body. One must respect the source, while resisting
the manifestation. How much in earnest that Quaker girl
seemed! It was quite a serious lecture she gave me, about
such a trifle as this” (puffing an immense blue ring into the
air). “But it was worth taking it, to see how she enjoyed
the Sakontala. She certainly possesses taste, and no doubt
thinks better than she talks. By the by, I quite forgot to
give her the translation of the Megha-Duta.

Springing up, Woodbury found the volume, after some
search, and soon became absorbed, for the second time, in its
pages.

“Bute,” said Mrs. Babb, as she wiped the dishes, and carefully
put away the odds and ends of the refreshments; “'Pears

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to me you was gallivantin' round that Carrline Dilwuth, more
than's proper.”

Bute, standing with legs spread out and back to the fire,
answered, as he turned around to face it, whereby, if he
blushed, the evidence was covered by the glow of the flame:
“Well, she's a gay little creetur, and 'taint no harm.”

“I dunno about that,” sharply rejoined the housekeeper.
“She's a cunnin', conceited chit, and 'll lead you by the nose.
You're just fool enough to be captivated by a piece o' waxwork
and curls. It makes me sick to look at 'em. Gals used
to comb their hair when I was young. I don't want no sich
a thing as she is, to dance at my buryin'.”

“Oh, Mother Forty, don't you go off about it!” said Bute,
deprecatingly. “I ain't married to her, nor likely to be.”

“Married! I guess not! Time enough for that when I'm
dead and gone. Me that brought you up, and to have somebody
put over my head, and spendin' all your earnins on fine
clothes, and then hankerin' after my money. But it's locked
up, safe and tight, I can tell you that.”

“I'm man-grown, I reckon,” said Bute, stung into resistance
by this attack, “and if I choose to git married, some day or
other, I don't see who can hinder me. It's what everybody
else does, and what you've done, yourself.”

Bute strode off to bed, and the housekeeper, sitting down
before the fire, indulged in the rare luxury of shedding several
tears.

-- 105 --

p713-110 CHAPTER VIII. IN WHICH MR. WOODBURY PAYS AN UNEXPECTED VISIT.

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On the following Monday, Woodbury having occasion to
visit Ptolemy, took with him the volume of Kalidasa, intending
to leave it at the cottage of the widow Thurston. The
day was mild and sunny, and the appearance of the plank
sidewalk so inviting to the feet, that he sent Bute forward to
the Ptolemy House with the cutter, on alighting at the cottage
gate.

The door of the dwelling, opening to the north, was protected
by a small outer vestibule, into which he stepped,
designing simply to leave the book, with his compliments, and
perhaps a visiting-card—though the latter was not de rigueur
in Ptolemy. There was no bell-pull; he knocked, gently at
first, and then loudly, but no one answered. Turning the knob
of the door he found it open, and entered a narrow little hall,
in which there was a staircase leading to the upper story, and
two doors on the left. Knocking again at the first of these,
an answer presently came from the further room, and the
summons, “Come in!” was repeated, in a clear though weak
voice.

He no longer hesitated, but advanced into the sitting-room.
Friend Thurston, sunning herself in her comfortable chair,
looked around. A fleeting expression of surprise passed over
her face, but the next moment she stretched out her hand,
saying: “How does thee do?”

“My name is Woodbury,” said he, as he took it respectfully,
“I—”

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[figure description] Page 106.[end figure description]

“I thought it must be thee,” she interrupted. “Hannah
described thy looks to me. Won't thee sit down?”

“I have only called to leave a book for your daughter, and
will not disturb you.”

“Thee won't disturb me. I feel all the better for a little
talk now and then, and would be glad if thee could sit and chat
awhile. Thee's just about the age my little Richard would
have been if he had lived.”

Thus kindly invited, Woodbury took a seat. His eye appreciated,
at a glance, the plainness, the taste, and the cozy
comfort of the apartment, betraying in every detail, the touches
of a woman's hand. Friend Thurston's face attracted and
interested him. In spite of her years, it still bore the traces
of former beauty, and its settled calm of resignation recalled
to his mind the expression he remembered on that of Mrs.
Dennison. Her voice was unusually clear and sweet, and the
deliberate evenness of her enunciation,—so different from the
sharp, irregular tones of the Ptolemy ladies,—was most agreeable
to his ear.

“Hannah's gone out,” she resumed; “but I expect her back
presently. It's kind of thee to bring the book for her. Thee
bears no malice, I see, that she lectured thee a little. Thee
must get used to that, if thee sees much of our people. We
are called upon to bear testimony, in season and out of season,
and especially towards men of influence, like thee, whose responsibilities
are the greater.”

“I am afraid you over-estimate my influence,” Woodbury
replied; “but I am glad you do not suppose that I could
bear malice on account of a frank expression of opinion.
Every man has his responsibilities, I am aware, but our ideas
of duty sometimes differ.”

“Thee's right there,” said the old lady; “and perhaps we
ought not to ask more than that the truth be sought for, in a
sincere spirit. I don't think, from thy face, that there is much
of stubborn worldly pride in thy nature, though thee belongs
to the world, as we Friends say.”

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[figure description] Page 107.[end figure description]

“I have found that a knowledge of the world cures one of
unreasonable pride. The more I mingle with men, the more I
find reflections of myself, which better enable me to estimate
my own character.”

“If thee but keeps the heart pure, the Holy Spirit may
come to thee in the crowded places, even as The Saviour was
caught up from the midst of His Disciples!” she exclaimed
with fervor. Gazing on her steady, earnest eyes, Woodbury
could not help thinking to himself: “The daughter comes
legitimately by her traits.”

“Can thee accustom thyself to such a quiet life as thee leads
now?” she asked; and then gazing at him, continued, as if
speaking to herself: “It is not a restless face. Ah, but that is
not always a sign of a quiet heart. There are mysteries in
man, past finding out, or only discovered when it is too late!”

“This life is not at all quiet,” he answered, “compared with
that which I have led for the past ten or twelve years. In a
foreign country, and especially within the tropics, the novelty
of the surroundings soon wears off, and one day is so exactly
the repetition of another, that we almost lose our count of
time. It seems to me, now, as if I were just awaking out of a
long sleep. I have certainly thought more, and felt more, in
these three months than in as many years abroad; for I had
come to believe that the world was standing still, while now I
see that it really moves, and I must move with it.”

“I like to hear thee say that!” exclaimed the widow, turning
suddenly towards him, with a bright, friendly interest in
her face. “Men are so apt to be satisfied with their own opinions—
at least, when they've reached thy age. Thee's over
thirty, I should think?”

“Thirty-six,” Woodbury respectfully answered, “but I hope
I shall never be so old as to suppose, like the counsellors of
Job, that wisdom will die with me.”

The widow understood his allusion, in the literal sense
which he intended: not so another auditor. Hannah Thurston,
who heard the last words as she entered the room, at once

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suspected a hidden sarcasm, aimed principally at herself. The
indirect attacks to which she had been subjected,—especially
from persons of her own sex,—had made her sensitive and suspicious.
Her surprise at Woodbury's presence vanished in the
spirit of angry antagonism which suddenly arose within her.
She took the hand he frankly offered, with a mechanical coldness
strangely at variance with her flushed cheeks and earnest
eyes.

“I'm glad thee's come, Hannah,” said the old lady. “Friend
Woodbury has been kind enough to bring thee a book, and
I've been using an old woman's privilege, to make his acquaintance.
He'll not take it amiss, I'm sure!”

Woodbury replied with a frank smile, which he knew she
would understand. His manner towards the daughter, however,
had a shade of formal deference. Something told him
that his visit was not altogether welcome to her. “I found
the translation of the Megha-Duta, Miss Thurston,” he said,
“and have called to leave it, on my way to the village. If it
interests you, I shall make search for whatever other fragments
of Indian literature I may have.”

“I am very much obliged to you,” she forced herself to say,
inwardly resolving, that, whether interesting or not, this was
the first and last book she would receive from the library of
Lakeside.

“It is really kind of thee,” interposed the widow; “Hannah
finds few books here in Ptolemy that she cares to read, and we
cannot afford to buy many. What was the work, Hannah,
thee spoke of the other night?”

Thus appealed to, the daughter, after a moment's reluctance,
answered: “I was reading to mother Carlyle's Essay on
Goethe, and his reference to `Wilhelm Meister' excited my
curiosity. I believe Carlyle himself translated it, and therefore
the translation must be nearly equal to the original.”

“I read it some years ago, in Calcutta,” said Woodbury,
“but I only retain the general impression which it left upon
my mind. It seemed to me, then, a singular medley of

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wisdom and weakness, of the tenderest imagination and the
coarsest reality. But I have no copy, at present, by which to
test the correctness of that impression. I am not a very critical
reader, as you will soon discover, Miss Thurston. Do you
like Carlyle?”

“I like his knowledge, his earnestness, and his clear insight
into characters and events, though I cannot always adopt his
conclusions. His thought, however, is strong and vital, and it
refreshes and stimulates at the same time. I am afraid he
spoils me for other authors.”

“Is not that, in itself, an evidence of something false in his
manner? That which is absolutely greatest or truest should
not weaken our delight in the lower forms of excellence. Peculiarities
of style, when not growing naturally out of the subject,
seem to me like condiments, which disguise the natural
flavor of the dish and unfit the palate to enjoy it. Have you
ever put the thought, which Carlyle dresses in one of his
solemn, involved, oracular sentences, into the Quaker garb of
plain English?”

“No,” said Hannah Thurston, somewhat startled. “I confess,”
she added, after a pause, “the idea of such an experiment
is not agreeable to me. I cannot coldly dissect an author
whom I so heartily admire.”

Woodbury smiled very, very slightly, but her quick eye
caught and retained his meaning. “Then I will not dissect
him for you,” he said; “though I think you would find a
pleasure in the exercise of the critical faculty, to counterbalance
the loss of an indiscriminate admiration. I speak for
myself, however. I cannot be content until I ascertain the
real value of a man and his works, though a hundred pleasant
illusions are wrecked in the process. I am slow to acknowledge
or worship greatness, since I have seen the stuff of which
many idols are composed. The nearer an author seems to reflect
my own views, the more suspicious I am, at first, of his
influence upon me. A man who knows how to see, to think,
and to judge, though he may possess but an average intellect,

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[figure description] Page 110.[end figure description]

is able to get at all important truths himself, without taking
them at second-hand.”

There was no assumption of superiority—not the slightest
trace of intellectual arrogance in Woodbury's manner. He
spoke with the simple frankness of a man who was utterly unconscious
that he was dealing crushing blows on the mental
habits of his listener—not seeming to recognize, even, that
they were different from his own. This calmness, so unlike
the heat and zeal with which other men were accustomed to
discuss questions with her, disconcerted and silenced Hannah
Thurston. He never singled out any single assertion of hers
as a subject of dispute, but left it to be quietly overwhelmed
in the general drift of his words. It was a species of mental
antagonism for which she was not prepared. To her mother,
who judged men more or less by that compound of snow and
fire who had been her husband, Woodbury's manner was exceedingly
grateful. She perceived, as her daughter did not,
the different mental complexion of the sexes; and moreover,
she now recognized, in him, a man with courage enough to
know the world without bitterness of heart.

“I thank thee,” said she, as he rose to leave with an apology
for the length of his stay; “I have enjoyed thy visit. Come
again, some time, if thee finds it pleasant to do so. I see thee
can take a friendly word in a friendly way, and thee may be
sure that I won't judge thy intentions wrongly, where I am
led to think differently.”

“Thank you, Friend Thurston: it is only in differing, that
we learn. I hope to see you again.” He took the widow's
offered hand, bowed to Hannah, and left the room.

“Mother!” exclaimed the latter, as she heard the outer
door close behind him, “why did thee ask him to come
again?”

“Why, Hannah! Thee surprises me. It is right to bear
testimony, but we are not required to carry it so far as that.
Has thee heard any thing against his character?”

“No, mother: he is said to be upright and honorable, but I

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do not like to be obliged to him for kindnesses, when he,
no doubt, thinks my condemnation of his habits impertinent,—
when, I know, he despises and sneers at my views!”

“Hannah,” said the mother, gravely, “I think thee does him
injustice. He is not the man to despise thee, or any one who
thinks earnestly and labors faithfully, even in a cause he cannot
appreciate. We two women, living alone here, or only seeing
the men who are with us in sympathy, must not be too hasty
to judge. Is thee not, in this way, committing the very fault
of which thee accuses him?”

“Perhaps so,” said Hannah: “I doubt whether I know what
is true.” She sank wearily into a chair. The volume Woodbury
left behind, caught her eye. Taking it up, she turned
over the leaves listlessly, but soon succumbed to the temptation
and read—read until the fairy pictures of the Indian
moonlight grew around her, as the Cloud sailed on, over jungle
and pagoda, and the dance of maidens on the marble terraces.

Meanwhile, Woodbury having transacted his business and
Bute Wilson his, the two were making preparations to return
to Lakeside, when a plump figure, crossing the beaten snowtrack
in front of the Ptolemy House, approached them. Even
before the thick green veil was thrown back, Woodbury recognized
the fat hand which withdrew itself from a worn chinchilla
muff, as the hand of Mrs. Waldo. Presently her round dark
eyes shone full upon him, and he heard—what everybody in
Ptolemy liked to hear—the subdued trumpet of her voice.

“Just in time to catch you!” she laughed. “How do you
do, Bute? Will you call at the parsonage, Mr. Woodbury?
No? Then I must give you my message in the open street.
Is anybody near? You must know it's a secret.” After having
said this in a loud tone, she lowered her voice: “Well, I
don't mind Bute knowing it: Bute is not a leaky pitcher, I'm
sure.”

“I reckon Mr. Max knows that,” said Arbutus, with a broad
laugh dancing in his blue eyes.

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“What is it? Another fair for the Cimmerians? Or is
Miss Eliza Clancy engaged to a missionary?” asked Woodbury.

“Be silent, that you may hear. If it were not for my feet
getting cold, I would be a quarter of an hour telling you. But
I must hurry—there's Mrs. Bue coming out of her yard, and
she scents a secret a mile off. Well—it's to be at Merryfield's
on Saturday evening. You must be sure to come.”

“What—the Sewing Union?”

“Bless me! I forgot. No—Dyce is to be there.”

“Dyce?”

“Yes. They don't want it to be generally known, as so many
would go out of mere curiosity. I must say, between us, that
is my only reason. Neither you nor I have any faith in it; but
Mrs. Merryfield says she will be glad if you can come.”

“First tell me who Dyce is, and what is to be done,” said
Woodbury, not a little surprised. The expression thereof
was instantly transferred to Mrs. Waldo's face.

“Well—to be sure, you're as ignorant as a foreigner. Bute
knows, I'll be bound. Tell him, Bute, on the way home.
Good-by! How do you do, Mrs. Bue? I was just telling
Mr. Woodbury that the vessel for Madras”—and the remainder
of the sentence was lost in the noise of the departing bells.

“Dyce is what they call a Mejum,” explained Bute, as they
dashed out on the Anacreon road: “Merryfields believe in it.
I was there once't when they made the dinner-table jump like
a wild colt Then there's sperut-raps, as they call 'em, but
it's not o' much account what they say. One of 'em spoke to
me, lettin' on to be my father. `Arbutus,' says he (they spelt
it out), `I'm in the third spere, along with Jane.' Ha! ha!
and my mother's name was Margaretta! But you'd better
see it for yourself, Mr. Max. Seein' 's believin', they say,
but you won't believe more'n you've a mind to, after all.”

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p713-118 CHAPTER IX. SPIRITUAL AND OTHER RAPPINGS.

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Had the invitation to a spiritual séance been given by any
one but Mrs. Waldo, Woodbury would probably have felt little
inclination to attend. The Merryfields alone, with their
ambitious sentiment and negative intellect, were beginning to
be tiresome acquaintances, now that the revival of old memories
was exhausted; but the warm heart and sound brain of
that one woman made any society tolerable. His thoughts reverted
to Hannah Thurston: would she be there? Of course:
was his mental reply—yet she certainly could not share in the
abominable delusion. Why not, after all? Her quick, eager
intelligence, too proud and self-reliant to be restrained by traditional
theories,—too unbalanced, from the want of contact
with equal minds,—too easily moved by the mere utterance
of attractive sentiment,—was it not, rather, the soil in which
these delusions grew strong and dangerous? He would go
and see.

Nevertheless, he was conscious of a feeling of reluctance, almost
of shame at his own curiosity, as he left Lakeside. The
night was overcast, with a raw, moaning wind in the tree-tops,
and Bute was forced to drive slowly, feeling rather than seeing
the beaten tracks. This employment, with the necessary remarks
to the old horse Dick, fully occupied his attention.
Finally, however, he broke silence with:

“I s'pose they'll have Absalom up to-night?”

“What! Do they go so far as that? Can they really believe
it?” Woodbury asked.

“They jest do. They want to b'lieve it, and it comes easy.

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If brains was to be ground, between you and me, neither of
'em would bring much grist to the mill. I don't wonder at
her so much, for she set a good deal of store by Absalom, and
't seems natural, you know, for women to have notions o' that
kind.”

“Are there many persons in Ptolemy who believe in such
things?”

“Well—I don't hardly think there be. Leastways, they
don't let on. There's Seth Wattles, o' course: he's fool enough
for any thing; and I guess Lawyer Tanner. Ever sence Mr.
Styles preached ag'in 'em, it a'n't considered jist respectable.
Infidel-like, you know.”

Woodbury laughed. “Well, Bute,” said he, “we shall
hardly find Mr. Waldo there to-night, if that is the case.”

“He'll be there, Mr. Max, if she is. She'll bring him clear,
no matter what folks says. Miss Waldo's a wife worth havin'—
not but what he's got considerable grit, too. He's not
strong at revivals, but he's a good hand at holdin' together all
he gits.”

As they drove up the lane to Merryfield's farm-house, all was
dark and silent. The shutters were closed, and there was no
appearance of other visitors having arrived. At the noise of
the bells, however, the door opened, and the owner, after summoning
his hired man from the kitchen, to assist Bute in taking
charge of the horse, waited until Woodbury approached,
in order to help him off with his overcoat. “They are all
here that are likely to come,” he announced in a whisper.

James Merryfield was a man of fifty, or a little more, in
whom the desire to be a reformer had been excited long after
he had reached his maturity as a simple, unpretending farmer.
The fictitious character but imperfectly overlaid the natural
one, giving him an uncertain, hesitating air. Indeed, with all
his assertion and self-gratulation, he never could overcome a
secret doubt of his ability to play the new part. But he was
honest and sincerely conscientious, and a more prominent position
than he would have assumed, of his own choice, was

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forced upon him by his friends. He possessed a comfortable
property, and they were well aware of the advantage of being
represented by men with bases.

His frame had been soundly developed, not over-worn, by
labor in his own fields, yet he was awkward, almost shambling,
in his movements. His head was usually held on the left side,
and a straight line dropped from the centre of his brow would
not nearly have coincided with the axis of his nose. The large,
irregular mouth expressed both the honesty and the weakness
of the man. His voice, always nasal, rose into a shrill, declamatory
monotone when he became excited—a key which he
continually let drop, and again resumed, in disagreeable fluctuations.
Thus Woodbury, while heartily respecting his character,
found much of his society tiresome.

His wife, Sarah, who was six or seven years younger, was
one of those women, who, without the power of thinking for
themselves, have, nevertheless, a singular faculty for accepting
the thoughts and conclusions of others. She was entirely dependent
on two or three chosen leaders in the various “Reforms,”
without the slightest suspicion of her mental serfdom.
Every new phase of their opinions she appropriated, and
reproduced as triumphantly as if it had been an original discovery.
She had, in fact, no intellectual quality except a tolerable
fluency of speech. This, alone, gave her some consideration
in her special circle, and kept her hesitating husband in
the background. Both had been touched by the Hand of Progress,
rather too late for their equilibrium. They had reached
the transition state, it is true, but were doomed never to pass
through it, and attain that repose which is as possible to shallow
as to deep waters.

In person she was thin, but not tall, with a face expressive
of passive amiability, slightly relieved by dyspepsia. The pale,
unhealthy color of her skin, the dulness of her eyes, and the
lustreless hue of her thin, reddish-brown hair, hinted at a system
hopelessly disordered by dietetic experiments. Her children
had all died young, with the exception of Absalom, who

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had barely reached manhood, when the care of his health, as
Bute said, proved too great a burden to him.

Woodbury was ushered, not into the parlor, but into the
room ordinarily occupied by the family. A single candle was
burning on the table, dimly lighting the apartment. Mrs.
Merryfield came forward to receive her guest, followed by Mrs.
Waldo, who said, with unusual gravity: “You are in time—
we were just about to commence.”

Seated around the table were Hannah Thurston, Mr. Waldo,
Seth Wattles, Tanner, the lawyer, and a cadaverous stranger,
who could be no other than Mr. Dyce. A motion of his hand
dissuaded the company from rising, and they gravely bowed
to Woodbury without speaking. Mr. Dyce, after a rapid
glance at the new-comer, fixed his eyes upon the table. He
was a middle-aged man, broad-shouldered but spare, with long,
dark hair, sunken cheeks, and eyes in which smouldered some
powerful, uncanny magnetic force.

After Woodbury had taken his seat at the table, and Mr.
Merryfield had closed the door, the medium spoke, in a low
but strong voice:

“Take away the candle.”

It was placed upon a small stand, in a corner of the room.
“Shall I put it out?” asked the host.

Mr. Dyce shook his head.

Presently a succession of sharp, crackling raps was heard, as
if made on the under surface of the table. They wandered
about, now fainter, now stronger, for a few moments, and then
approached Mrs. Merryfield.

“It's Absalom!” she cried, the yearning of a mother's heart
overleaping the course of experiment. “What has he to say
to-night?”

“Will the spirit communicate through the alphabet?” asked
the medium.

Three raps—“Yes.”

Lettered cards were laid upon the table, and the medium,
commencing at A, touched them in succession until a rap

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announced the correct letter. This was written, and the process
repeated until the entire communication was obtained.

I have been teaching my sisters. They are waiting for
me on the steps of the temple. Good-night, mother!
”—was
Absalom's message.

“How beautiful!” exclaimed Seth Wattles. “The temple
must mean the future life, and the steps are the successive
spheres. Will any spirit communicate with me?”

The raps ceased. Mr. Dyce raised his head, looked around
with his glow-worm eyes, and asked: “Does any one desire
to speak with a relative or friend? Does any one feel impressed
with the presence of a spirit?” His glance rested on
Hannah Thurston.

“I would like to ask,” said she, as the others remained silent,
“whether the person whose name is in my mind, has any
message for me.”

After a pause, the medium shuddered, stretched out his
hands upon the table, with the fingers rigidly crooked, lifted
his head, and fixed his eyes on vacancy. His lips scarcely
seemed to move, but a faint, feminine voice came from his
throat.

I am in a distant sphere,” it said, “engaged in the labors
I began while on earth. I bear a new name, for the promise
of that which I once had is fulfilled.

Hannah Thurston said nothing. She seemed to be pondering
the meaning of what she had heard. Mrs. Waldo turned
to Woodbury, with a face which so distinctly said to him,
without words: “It's awful!” that he answered her, in a
similar way: “Don't be afraid!”

“Will you ask a question, Mr. Woodbury?” said the
host.

“I have no objection,” he said, in a serious tone, “to select
a name, as Miss Thurston has done, and let the answer test
from what spirit it comes.”

After a rapid glance at the speaker, the medium pushed
pencil and paper across the table, saying: “Write the name,

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fold the paper so that no one can see it, and hold it in your
hand.” He then placed one elbow on the table, and covered
his face with his hand, the fingers slightly separated.

Woodbury wrote—a long name, it seemed to be—and
folded the paper as directed. Some wandering, uncertain
raps followed. Communication by means of the alphabet
was proposed to the spirit, without a response. After a
sufficient pause to denote refusal, the raps commenced
again.

Mr. Dyce shuddered several times, but no sound proceeded
from his mouth. Suddenly turning towards Woodbury with
set eyes, and pointing his finger, he exclaimed: “He is standing
behind you!”

The others, startled, looked towards the point indicated, and
even Woodbury involuntarily turned his head.

“I see him,” continued the medium—“a dark man, not of
our race. He wears a splendid head-dress, and ornaments of
gold. His eyes are sad and his lips are closed: he is permitted
to show his presence, but not to speak to you. Now he
raises both hands to his forehead, and disappears.”

“Who was it?” asked Mrs. Waldo, eagerly.

Woodbury silently unfolded the paper, and handed it to her.
Even Mr. Dyce could not entirely conceal his curiosity to hear
the name.

“What is this!” said she. “I can scarcely read it: Bab—
Baboo Rugbutty Churn Chuckerbutty! It is certainly nobody's
name!”

“It is the actual name of an acquaintance of mine, in Calcutta,”
Woodbury answered.

“A Hindoo!” exclaimed Mr. Dyce, with a triumphant air:
“that accounts for his inability to use the alphabet.”

“I do not see why it should,” rejoined Woodbury, “unless
he has forgotten his English since I left India.”

“He did speak English, then?” several asked.

“Did, and still does, I presume. At least, he was not dead,
three months ago,” he answered, so quietly and gravely that

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none of the company (except, perhaps, the medium) supposed
that a trick had been intended.

“Not dead!” some one exclaimed, in great amazement.
“Why did you summon him?”

“Because I did not wish to evoke any friend or relative
whom I have lost, and I had a curiosity to ascertain whether
the spirits of the living could be summoned, as well as those
of the dead.”

There was a blank silence for a few moments. Only Bute,
who had stolen into the room and taken a quiet seat in one
corner, with his eyes wide open, gave an audible chuckle.

Mr. Dyce, who had concealed a malignant expression under
his hand, now lifted a serene face, and said, in a solemn voice:
“The living, as we call them, cannot usurp the powers and
privileges of those who have entered on the spiritual life. The
spirit, whose name was written, has either left the earth, or
that of another, unconsciously present in the gentleman's mind,
has presented itself.”

The believers brightened up. How simple was the explanation!
The mere act of writing the name of one Hindoo had
recalled others to Mr. Woodbury's memory, and his thoughts
must have dwelt, en passant,—probably without his being in
the least aware of it, so rapid is mental action,—on some other
Hindoo friend, long since engaged in climbing the successive
spheres. In vain did he protest against having received even
a flying visit from the recollection of any such person. Seth
Wattles triumphantly asked: “Are you always aware of
every thing that passes through your mind?”

Mrs. Merryfield repeated a question she had heard the week
before: “Can you always pick up the links by which you pass
from one thought to another?”

Her husband modestly thrust in a suggestion: “Perhaps
your friend Chuckerchurn is now among the spirits, as it
were.”

Mr. Dyce, who had been leaning forward, with his arms under
the table, during these remarks, suddenly lifted his head,

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exclaiming: “He has come back!”—which produced a momentary
silence. “Yes—I cannot refuse you!” he added, as if
addressing the spirit, and then started violently from his seat,
twisting his left arm as if it had received a severe blow. He
drew up his coat-sleeve, which was broad and loose, then the
sleeve of his shirt, and displayed a sallow arm, upon the skin
of which were some red marks, somewhat resembling the letters
“R. R.” In a few moments, however, the marks faded
away.

“His initials! Who can it be?” said Seth.

“Rammohun Roy!” said Hannah Thurston, betrayed, as it
almost seemed, into a temporary belief in the reality of the
visitation.

“I assure you,” Woodbury answered, “that nothing was
further from my thoughts than the name of Rammohun Roy,
a person whom I never saw. If I wished to be convinced
that these phenomena proceed from spirits, I should select some
one who could give me satisfactory evidence of his identity.”

“The skeptical will not believe, though one came from
heaven to convince them,” remarked the medium, in a hollow
tone.

There was an awkward silence.

“My friends, do not disturb the atmosphere!” cried Mr.
Merryfield; “I hope we shall have further manifestations.”

A loud rap on the table near him seemed to be intended as a
reply.

Mr. Dyce's hand, after a few nervous jerks, seized the pencil,
and wrote rapidly on a sheet of paper. After completing
the message and appending the signature to the bottom, he
heaved a deep sigh and fell back in his chair.

Mr. Merryfield eagerly grasped the paper. “Ah!” said he,
“it is my friend!” and read the following:

Be ye not weak of vision to perceive the coming triumph
of Truth. Even though she creep like a tortoise in the race,
while Error leaps like a hare, yet shall she first reach the goal.

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The light from the spirit-world is only beginning to dawn upon
the night of Earth. When the sun shall rise, only the owls
and bats among men will be blind to its rays. Then the perfect
day of Liberty shall fill the sky, and even the spheres of
spirits be gladdened by reflections from the realm of mortals!

Benjamin Lundy.

In spite of certain inaccuracies in the spelling of this message,
the reader's face brightened with satisfaction. “There!”
he exclaimed—“there is a genuine test! No one but the
spirit of Lundy, as it were, could have written those words.”

“Why not?” asked Woodbury.

“Why—why—the foot of Hercules sticks out!” said Mr.
Merryfield, falling, in his confusion, from the lofty strain.
“You never knowed the sainted Lundy, the purest and most
beautiful spirit of this age. Those are his very—yes, he would
make the same expressions, as it were, if his voice could,—if
he were still in the flesh.”

Woodbury's eyes, mechanically, wandered to Mrs. Waldo
and Hannah Thurston. The former preserved a grave face,
but a smile, perceptible to him alone, lurked at the bottom of
her eyes. The latter, too earnest in all things to disguise the
expression of her most fleeting emotions, looked annoyed and
uneasy. Woodbury determined to take no further part in the
proceedings—a mental conclusion which Mr. Dyce was sufficiently
clairvoyant to feel, and which relieved while it disconcerted
him.

Various other spirits announced their presence, but their
communications became somewhat incoherent, and the semibelievers
present were not strengthened by the evening's experiments.
Mr. Waldo, in answer to a mental question, received
the following message:

I will not say that my mind dwelt too strongly on the
symbols by which Faith is expressed, for through symbols the
Truth was made clear to me. There are many paths, but they
all have the same ending.

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“There can be no doubt of that. Are you not satisfied?”
asked Seth Wattles.

“Not quite. I had expected a different message from the
spirit I selected,” said Mr. Waldo.

“Was it not Beza Cimmer?”

“No!” was the astonished reply: “I was thinking of a
school-mate and friend, who took passage for the West Indies
in a vessel that was never heard of afterwards.”

“We must not forget,” said Mr. Dyce, “that our friends in
the spirit-world still retain their independence. You may send
for a neighbor to come and see you, and while you are waiting
for him, another may unexpectedly step in. It is just so in our
intercourse with spirits: we cannot control them. We cannot
say to one: `come!' and to another: `go!' We must abide
their pleasure, in faith and humility.”

Mr. Waldo said nothing, and made no further attempt at
conversation with his lost school-mate. Seth Wattles summoned,
in succession, the spirits of Socrates, Touissant L'Ouverture,
and Mrs. Hemans, but neither of them was inclined to
communicate with him.

After a while, some one remarked: “Will they not more
palpably manifest themselves?”

“We can try,” said Mr. Dyce.

Mr. Merryfield thereupon took the solitary candle into an adjoining
room. As the shutters were closed, the apartment was
thus left in complete darkness. The guests kept their seats
around the table, and it was specially enjoined upon them not
to move. At the end of a few minutes rustling noises were
heard, loud raps resounded on the table, which was several
times violently lifted and let down, and blows were dealt at
random by invisible hands. Those who were so fortunate as
to be struck, communicated the news in a whisper to their
neighbors. Presently, also, the little old-fashioned piano,
standing on one side of the room, began to stir its rusty
keys. After a few discordant attempts at chords, a single
hand appeared to be endeavoring to play “Days of

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Absence,” the untuned keys making the melody still more
dismal.

It was enough to set one's teeth on edge, but Mrs. Merryfield
burst into tears. “Oh!” she cried, “it's Angelina herself!
She was taking lessons, and had just got that far when
she died.”

The sounds ceased, and light was restored to the room. Mr.
Dyce was leaning on the table, with his face in his hands. As
he lifted his head, a large dark stain appeared under his right
eye.

“Why, what has happened to you?” cried Merryfield.
“Your eye is quite black!”

The medium, whose glance happened to fall upon his right
hand, closed it so suddenly that the gesture would have attracted
notice, if he had not skilfully merged it into one of his
convulsive shudders. A rapid flush came to his face, and passed
away, leaving it yellower than before.

“The unfriendly spirits are unusually active to-night,” he
finally answered: “They are perhaps encouraged by the presence
of doubters or scoffers. I name no names. I received
several severe blows while the light was removed, and feel exhausted
by the struggles I have undergone. But it is nothing.
The spirit of Paracelsus will visit me to-night, and remove
the traces of this attack. Had the atmosphere been
pure, it could not have occurred. But some who are here
present are yet incapable of receiving the Truth, and their
presence clouds the divine light through which the highest
manifestations are made.”

Woodbury was too much disgusted to answer. His eye fell
upon Bute, who sat in the corner, with his large hand covering
his mouth, and his face scarlet.

“I confess,” said Mr. Waldo, turning to the medium, “that I
am not convinced of the spiritual character of these phenomena.
I do not profess to explain them, but neither can I explain
much that I see in Nature, daily; and I do not perceive the
necessity of referring them at once to supernatural causes.

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By such an assumption, the spiritual world is degraded in our
eyes, without, in my opinion, any increase of positive truth,
even if the assumption were correct. A man who is really so
blind as to disbelieve in the future life, would not be converted
by any thing we have seen here to-night; while for us, who believe,
the phenomena are unnecessary.”

“What!” exclaimed Mr. Dyce. “You do not appreciate
the divine utterances from the world of spirits! You do not
recognize the new and glorious Truths, the germs of a more
perfect Creed!”

“I would prefer,” the parson mildly answered, “not to hear
the word `divine' so applied. No: to be entirely frank, I see
nothing new, or even true, in comparison with the old, Eternal
Truth.”

“But,” interrupted Merryfield, desperately, seeing the bright
assent on Hannah Thurston's face; “do you not believe in
Progress? Have we, as it were, exhausted—are we at the
end of truth?”

“Most certainly I believe in the forward march of our race.
We are still children in wisdom, and have much to learn. But
let me ask, my friend, do you not believe that the future life is
an immeasurable advance upon this?”

“Yes,” said Merryfield.

“Then,” Mr. Waldo continued, “why is it that the professed
communications from great minds, such as Socrates, Luther,
or the Apostles themselves, are below the expressions of even
average human intellect?”

The believers stared at each other in dumb amazement.
The coolness with which the parson took hold of and trampled
upon their gems of superhuman wisdom, was like that of St.
Boniface, when he laid the axe to the sacred Hessian oak.
His hearers, like the Druids on that occasion, were passive,
from the sheer impossibility of comprehending the sacrilege.
Mr. Dyce shook his head and heaved a sigh of commiseration.
Seth Wattles clasped his hands, lifted his eyes, and muttered
in a hoarse voice: “The time will come.” Mrs. Merryfield

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was unable to recall any phrase that applied to the case, but
wiped her eyes for the third time since the mysterious performance
on the piano.

Mrs. Waldo, however, looked at her husband with a smile
which said to him: “I knew you could silence them whenever
you choose to show your strength.” Then, rising, she added,
aloud: “Now the atmosphere is certainly disturbed. Let us
come back to our present existence, which, after all, is very
good, when one has health, friends, and a contented spirit.”

Mr. Merryfield whispered to his wife, who disappeared in
the kitchen. “Don't go yet,” he said to his guests, who
had risen from the table; “we must warm you, before you
start.”

“Is it possible? whiskey-punch?” asked Woodbury, aside,
of Mrs. Waldo.

“Hush! The very suggestion of such a thing would ruin
you, if it were known,” she replied.

At the end of a few minutes, Mrs. Merryfield reappeared,
followed by a negro girl, who bore several steaming plates on
a japanned tray. They proved to contain slices of mince-pie,
réchauffée, and rather palatable, although heavy, in the absence
of brandy. Mrs. Merryfield, during the day, had seriously
thought of entertaining her guests with coffee; but as she was
thoroughly convinced of the deleterious nature of the beverage,
she decided that it would be no less criminal to furnish it
to others than if she drank it herself. Consequently they received,
instead, glasses of hot lemonade, which, by an association
of ideas, almost convinced Woodbury, in spite of himself,
that he was suffering under an attack of influenza.

Mr. Dyce, who adroitly managed to keep the left side of
his face towards the candle, ate his portion with great relish.
His spiritual office being ended for the day, he returned with
avidity to the things of this world, and entered into a defence
of animal food, addressed to Seth Wattles, who was inclined
to be a Vegetarian. Indeed, the medium dropped hints unfavorable
to the Temperance reform, which would have shocked

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some of his hearers, if he had not based them, like the most of
his opinions, on spiritual communications.

As the guests were putting on their coats and cloaks in the
hall, Woodbury overheard Mrs. Waldo, furtively saying to her
spouse: “I am so glad you spoke your mind.”

“I must thank you, also, Mr. Waldo,” said Hannah Thurston.
“One should not too willingly accept any thing so new
and strange. For the sake of the truth we already possess,
it is right to be cautious”

“And now it is my turn to thank you, Miss Thurston,” rejoined
Woodbury, gayly, as they went out into the cool nightair.

She understood him. For one instant her habitual antagonism
asserted itself, but she conquered it by a strong effort.
The night hid her face, and her voice was even-toned and
sweet as ever, as she answered: “I am glad there is one point
on which we can agree.”

“Oh, there are a great many, I assure you,” he exclaimed,
with a lightness which, she knew not why, struck her unpleasantly:
“If we could take away from your surplus of earnestness,
to complete my lack of it, we should get on very well
together.”

“Can one be too much in earnest?” she asked.

“Decidedly. There are relative values in ethics, as in every
thing else. You would not pull a pink with the same serious
application of strength which you would use, to wind a bucket
out of a well. But Mrs. Waldo waits: good-night!”

He lifted her into the cutter, the horses started, and she was
off before she had fairly time to consider what he meant. But
the words were too singular to be forgotten.

Bute now made his appearance, and Woodbury took his seat
in the cutter beside him. Dick was another horse when his
head was pointed towards home, and the bells danced to a
lively measure as they passed up the valley in the face of the
wind. The rising moon struggled through clouds, and but two
or three stars were visible overhead. The night was weird

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and sad, and in its presence the trials and the indulgencies of
daylight became indistinct dreams. Woodbury recalled, with
a feeling of intense repugnance, the occurrences of the evening.
“Better,” he said to himself, “a home for the soul within
the volcanic rings of yonder barren moon, with no more than
the privacy it may command in this life, than to be placed on
the fairest star of the universe, and be held at the beck and
call of every mean mind that dares to juggle with sanctities.”

Plunged in these meditations, he did not at first notice the
short, half-suppressed spirts of laughter into which Bute occasionally
broke. The latter, at last, unable to enjoy his fun
alone, said:

“When you looked at me, Mr. Max., I thought I'd ha'
bust. I never was so nigh givin' way in my life.”

“What was it?” asked Woodbury.

“Well, you musn't say nothin'. I done it.”

“You!”

“Yes, ha! ha! But he's no idee who it was.”

“Did you strike him in the face, Bute?”

“Lord, no! He done all the strikin' there was done to-night.
I fixed it better 'n that. You see I suspicioned they'd git Angeliny's
spirut to playin' on the pyanna, like th' other time I was
there. Thinks I, I've a notion how it's done, and if I'm right,
it's easy to show it. So, afore comin' into the settin'-room, I
jist went through the kitchen, and stood awhile on the hearth,
to warm my feet, like. I run one arm up the chimbley, when
nobody was lookin', and rubbed my hand full o' soft sut.
Then I set in the corner, and held my arm behind me over the
back o' the cheer, till the candle was took out. Now's the
time, thinks I, and quick as wink I slips up to the pyanna—I
knowed if they'd heerd me they'd think it was a spirut—and
rubbed my sutty hand very quietly over the black keys. I
didn't dare to bear on, but, thinks I, some 'll come off, and he 'll
be sure to git it on his hands. Do you see it, Mr. Max.?
When the light come back, there he was, solemn enough, with

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a black eye, ha! ha! I couldn't git a sight of his hand,
though; he shet his fist and kep' it under the table.”

Woodbury at first laughed heartily, but his amusement soon
gave place to indignation at the swindle. “Why did you not
expose the fellow?” he asked Bute.

“Oh, what's the use! Them that believes wouldn't believe
any the less, if they'd seen him play the pyanna with their own
eyes. I've no notion o' runnin' my head into a hornet's nest,
and gittin' well stung, and no honey to show for my pains.”

With which sage observation Bute drove up to the door of
Lakeside.

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p713-134 CHAPTER X. IN WHICH WE HEAR A DIVERTING STORY.

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The winter wore away, slowly to the inhabitants of Ptolemy,
rapidly and agreeably to the owner of Lakeside, who
drank life, activity, and cheerfulness from the steady cold.
Every day, while the snow lasted, his cutter was to be seen on
the roads. Dick proved entirely inadequate to his needs and
was turned over to Bute's use, while the fastest horse out of
Fairlamb's livery-stable in Ptolemy took his place. Woodbury's
drives extended not only to Anacreon and the neighboring
village of Nero Corners—a queer little place, struck out of
sight in a hollow of the upland,—but frequently as far as Tiberius,
which, being situated on a branch of the New York Central,
considered itself quite metropolitan. The inhabitants took
especial delight in its two principal streets, wherein the houses
were jammed together as compactly as possible, and huge
brick blocks, with cornices and window-caps of cast-iron, started
up pompously between one-story buildings of wood, saying
to the country people, on market days: “Behold, a city!”

The farmers around Ptolemy, who believe that every man
born in a large town, and ignorant of either farming or some
mechanical employment, must necessarily be soft, weak, and
effeminate in his nature—“spoiled,” so far as true masculine
grit is concerned—were not a little astonished at Woodbury's
activity and powers of endurance. More than once some of
them had met him, sheeted with snow and driving in the teeth
of a furious north-eastern storm, yet singing merrily to himself
as if he liked it all! It was noticed, too, that a vigorous red
was driving away the tan of Indian summers from his cheeks,

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that a listless, indifferent expression, which at first made them
say “he has sleepy eyes,” had vanished from those organs, as
if a veil had been withdrawn, leaving them clear and keen,
with a cheerful, wide-awake nature looking out. Thus,
although his habitual repose of manner remained, it no longer
impressed the people as something foreign and uncomfortable;
and the general feeling towards him, in spite of the attacks of
Mr. Grindle and the insinuations of Seth Wattles, was respectful
and friendly. Bute, who was a confirmed favorite among
the people, would suffer no word to be said against his master,
and went so far as to take a respectable man by the throat, in
the oyster-cellar under the Ptolemy House, for speaking of
him as a “stuck-up aristocrat.”

That part of a man's life which springs from his physical
temperament seemed, in Woodbury's case, to have stood still
during his sojourn abroad. After the tropical torpidity of his
system had been shaken off, he went back ten years in the
sudden refreshment of his sensations. The delicate cuticle of
youth, penetrated with the finer nerves which acknowledge
every touch of maturing existence as a pleasure, was partially
restored. The sadness engendered by hard experience, the
scorn which the encounter with human meanness and selfishness
left behind, the half-contemptuous pity which the pride
of shallow brains provoked—these were features of his nature,
which, impressed while it was yet plastic, were now too firmly
set to be erased; but they were overlaid for the time by the
joyous rush of physical sensation. His manner lost that first
gravity which suggested itself even in his most relaxed and
playful moods; he became gay, brilliant, and bantering, and
was the life of the circles in which he moved. As the owner
of Lakeside, all circles, of course, were open to him; but he
soon discovered the most congenial society and selected it,
without regard to the distinctions which prevailed in Ptolemy.
As no standard of merely social value was recognized, the
little community was divided according to the wealth, or the
religious views of its members; whence arose those jealousies

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and rivalries which the Great Sewing-Union had for a time
suppressed. Woodbury soon perceived this fact, and determined,
at the start, to preserve his social independence.
Neither of the circles could complain of being neglected, yet
neither could claim exclusive possession of him. He took tea
twice in one week with the Rev. Lemuel Styles, and the heart
of Miss Legrand, the clergyman's sister-in-law, began to be
agitated by a vague hope; but, in a few days afterwards, he
accompanied the Misses Smith (Seventh-day Baptists) on a
sleighing party to Atauga City, and was seen, on the following
Sunday, to enter the Cimmerian church.

Between the Waldos and himself, a sincere friendship had
grown up. The parson and his wife possessed, in common
with Woodbury, a basis of healthy common sense, which, in
spite of the stubborn isolation of their sect, made them tolerant.
They had no idea of turning life into a debating-school,
and could hear adverse opinions incidentally dropped, in the
course of conversation, without considering that each word
was thrown down as a gage of combat. Hence, Woodbury
found no pleasanter house than theirs, in all his rounds, and the
frank way in which he occasionally claimed their scanty hospitality
was so much like that of a brother, that the parson declared
to his wife, it expressed his idea of Christian society. I
am afraid I shall injure Mr. Waldo's reputation, but I am
bound to state that Woodbury was the last man whom he
would have attempted to secure, as a proselyte.

One evening in March, after the winter had begun to melt
away on the long hill sweeping from the eastern valley around
to Lakeside, a little party accidentally assembled in Mrs.
Waldo's parlor. Since the proceeds of the Fair had enabled
her to cover its walls with a cheap green paper, and to substitute
a coarse carpet of the same color for the tattered thing which
she had transferred to her bed-room, the apartment was vastly
improved. The horse-hair sofa and chairs, it is true, had performed
a great deal of service, but they were able to do it;
the sheet-iron stove gave out a comfortable warmth; and the

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one treasure of the parsonage, a melodeon, which did the
duty of an organ on Sundays, was in tolerable tune. Hannah
Thurston contributed a vase of grasses, exquisitely arranged,
which obliged Mrs. Waldo to buy a plaster bracket from an
itinerant Italian. She could ill afford to spare the half-dollar
which it cost—and, indeed, most of the women in her
husband's congregation shook their heads and murmured:
“Vanity, vanity!” when they saw it—but a little self-denial in
her housekeeping, which no one else than herself ever knew,
reconciled the deed to her conscience. Woodbury brought to
her from New York an engraving of Ary Scheffer's “Christus
Consolator,” which not only gave her great delight, but was
of service in a way she did not suspect. It hung opposite to
the grasses, and thus thoroughly counterbalanced their presumed
“vanity,” in the eyes of Cimmerian visitors. Indeed,
they were not sure but a moral effect was intended, and this
uncertainty stopped the remarks which might otherwise have
spread far and wide.

The party in Mrs. Waldo's parlor was assembled by accident,
we have said; but not entirely so. Hannah Thurston
had been invited to tea by the hostess, and Woodbury by Mr.
Waldo, who had met him in the streets of Ptolemy. This
coincidence was unintentional, although not unwelcome to the
hosts, who, liking both their guests heartily, could not account
for the evident prejudice of the one and the indifference of
the other. Mrs. Waldo had long since given up, as insane,
her first hope of seeing the two drawn together by mutual
magnetism; all she now desired was to establish an entente
cordiale,
since the entente d'amour could never be. On this
occasion, the parties behaved towards each other with such
thorough courtesy and propriety, that, had Hannah Thurston
been any other woman, Mrs. Waldo would have suspected the
existence of an undying enmity.

After tea Mr. and Mrs. Merryfield made their appearance.
They had come to Ptolemy to attend a lecture on Temperance
by Abiram Stokes, a noted orator of the cause, who, however,

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failed to arrive. Seth Wattles presently followed, apparently
by accident, but really by design. He had ascertained where
Hannah intended to pass the evening, from the widow Thurston's
little servant-maid, whom he waylaid as she was coming
out of the grocery-store, and did not scruple to thrust himself
upon the company. His self-complacency was a little disturbed
by the sight of Woodbury, whose discomfiture, during
the evening, he mentally resolved to accomplish.

His victim, however, was in an unusually cheerful mood, and
every arrow which the indignant Seth shot, though feathered
to the barb with insinuation, flew wide of the mark. Woodbury
joined in denunciation of the opium traffic; he trampled
on the vices of pride, hypocrisy, and selfishness; he abhorred
intemperance, hated oppression, and glorified liberty. But he
continually brought the conversation back to its key-note of
playful humor, cordially seconded by Mrs. Waldo, whose only
fault, in the eyes of her reforming friends, was that she had
no taste for serious discussion. Seth, finally, having exhausted
his quiver, began to declaim against the corrupting influence
of cities.

“It is time that hackneyed superstition were given up,” said
Woodbury. “Everybody repeats, after poor old Cowper,
`God made the country and man made the town;' therefore,
one is divine, and the other—the opposite. As if God had no
part in that human brain and those human affections, out of
which spring Art, and Discovery, and the varied fabric of
Society! As if man had no part in making Nature attractive
and enjoyable to us!”

“Cities are created by the selfishness of man,” cried Seth, a
little pompously.

“And farms, I suppose, are created entirely by benevolence!”
retorted Woodbury, laughing. “You Reformers
have the least cause to complain of cities. You got your
Temperance from Baltimore, and your Abolition from Boston.”

“That proves nothing: there was one just man even in

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Sodom!” exclaimed Seth, determined not to be put down
“But, of course, people who think fashion more important
than principle, will always admire a city life.”

“Yes, it is Fashion,” added Mrs. Merryfield, who was unusually
dyspeptic that evening—“it is Fashion that has impeded
the cause of woman. Fashion is the fetters which
chains her down as the slave of man. How can she know her
rights, when she is educated, as a child, to believe that Dress
is her Doom?”

“If you were familiar with cities, Mrs. Merryfield,” said
Woodbury, “you would find that they admit of the nearest
approach to social independence. Fashion is just as rigid in
Ptolemy as it is in New York; among the Hottentots or Digger
Indians, far more so. Not only that, but Fashion is
actually necessary to keep us from falling into chaos. Suppose
there were no such thing, and you and Mr. Merryfield lived in
tents, dressed in oriental costume, while Mr. Waldo preached
in feathers and war-paint, to Miss Thurston, in a complete suit
of steel armor, Mr. Wattles with Chinese pig-tail and fan, and
myself in bag-wig, powder, and ruffles!”

The hearty laughter which followed this suggestion did not
silence Seth. “It is not a subject for frivolity,” he exclaimed;
“you cannot deny that Fashion corrupts the heart and destroys
all the better impulses of human nature.”

“I do deny it,” replied Woodbury, whose unusual patience
was nearly exhausted. “All sweeping, undiscriminating assertions
contain much that is both false and absurd, and yours is
no exception. The foundation of character lies deeper than
external customs. The honor of man, the virtue of woman,
the pure humanity of both, is not affected by the cut or colors
of their dress. If the race is so easily corrupted as one might
infer from your assertions, how can you ever expect to succeed
with your plans of reform?”

“I should not expect it,” interposed Mrs. Merryfield, “if I
had to depend on the women that worships the Moloch of
fashion. Why, if I was the noblest and wisest of my sex,

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they'd turn up their noses at me, unless I lived in Fifth
Avenue.”

A sweet, serious smile, betraying that breath of dried roses
which greets us as we open some forgotten volume of the
past, stole over Woodbury's face. His voice, also, when
he spoke, betrayed the change. Some memory, suddenly
awakened, had banished the present controversy from his
mind.

“It is strange,” said he, slowly, addressing Mrs. Waldo,
rather than the speaker, “how a new life, like mine in India,
can make one forget what has gone before it. In this moment,
a curious episode of my youth suddenly comes back to
me, distinct as life, and I wonder how it could ever have been
forgotten. Shall I give you a story in place of an argument,
Mrs. Merryfield? Perhaps it may answer for both. But if
you can't accept it in that light, you may have the last word.”

“Pray tell us, by all means!” exclaimed Mrs. Waldo.

Woodbury looked around. Hannah Thurston, meeting his
questioning glance, silently nodded. Seth was sullen and gave
no sign. Mrs. Merryfield answered, “I'd like to hear it, well
enough, I'm sure,” whereto her husband added: “So would
I, as—as it were.” Thus encouraged, Woodbury began:

“It happened after my father's death, and before I left New
York for Calcutta. I was not quite twenty when he died, and
his bankruptcy left me penniless, just at the time of life when
such a condition is most painfully felt. In my case it was
worse than usual, because so utterly unexpected, and my
education had in no way prepared me to meet it. Every thing
went: house, furniture, library, and even those domestic trifles
which are hardest to part with. A few souvenirs of my
mother were saved, and a friend of the family purchased and
gave to me my father's watch. My brother-in-law was unable
to help me, because he was greatly involved in the ruin. He
sent my sister and their children to live in a cheap New Jersey
village, while he undertook a journey to New Orleans, in
the hope of retrieving his position by a lucky stroke of

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business. Thus, within a month after the funeral of my
father, I found myself alone, poor, and homeless. It was in
1837, and the great financial crash was just beginning to
thunder in men's ears. My father's friends were too much
concerned about their own interests to care especially for
mine. It was no single case of misfortune: there were examples
equally hard, on all sides, very soon.

“Nevertheless, I was not suffered to become a vagabond.
A subordinate clerkship was procured for me, at a salary of
two hundred and fifty dollars a year I was ignorant of
business, for my father had intended that I should study Law,
after completing my collegiate course, and the character of
my mind was not well adapted for commercial life. The
salary, small as it was, fully equalled the value of my services,
and I should have made it suffice to meet my wants, if I had
received it punctually. But my employer so narrowly escaped
ruin during the crisis that he was often unable to pay me, or
my fellow-clerks, our monthly wages, and I, who had no little
hoard to draw upon, like the others, sometimes suffered the
most painful embarrassment. I have frequently, this winter,
heard the praises of a vegetable diet. I have some right to
give my opinion on the subject, as I tried the experiment for
two months at a time, and must say that it totally failed.

“I was too proud to borrow money, at such times, and was,
moreover, exceedingly sensitive lest my situation should become
known. The boarding-house, where I first made my home, became
uncomfortable, because I was not always ready with my
money on Saturday morning. Besides, it was a cheap place, kept
by an old woman with two sentimental daughters, who wore
their hair in curls and always smelt of sassafras soap. There were
various reasons which you will understand, without my telling
you, why my residence there grew at last to be insufferable. I
accidentally discovered that the owner of a corner grocery in
the Bowery had a vacant room over his store, with a separate
entrance from the cross-street, and that he could supply me, at
a cheap rent, with the most necessary furniture. The bargain

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was soon made. The room and furniture cost me a dollar a week,
and my food could be regulated according to my means. The
common eating-houses supplied me, now and then, with a meal,
but I oftenest bought my bread at the baker's, and filled my
pitcher from the hydrant in the back-yard. I was also so far
independent that I could choose my associates, and regulate
my personal habits. I assure you that I never washed my
face with sassafras soap.”

Mrs. Waldo laughed heartily at this declaration, and Mrs.
Merryfield innocently exclaimed: “Why, I'm sure it's very
good for the skin.”

“Meanwhile,” Woodbury continued, “I still kept up intercourse
with the circle in which my father moved, and which,
at that time, would have been called `fashionable.' Some
families, it is true, felt a restraint towards me which I was too
sensitive not to discover. The daughters had evidently been
warned against too great a display of sympathy. On the other
hand, I made new and delightful acquaintances, of equal social
standing, by whom I was treated with a delicacy and a generous
consideration which I shall never forget. In fact, whatever
Christian respect I may exhibit, in my intercourse with
others, I learned from those families. You may know what
they were, Mr. Waldo, by imagining how you would treat me,
now, if I should suddenly lose my property.

“I had been living in this manner for a year, or thereabouts,
when the main incident of my story occurred. In the circle
where I was most intimate, there were two or three wealthy
bachelors, who had handsome residences in the neighborhood
of Bleecker street (there was no Fifth Avenue then). These
gentlemen had, in turn, given entertainments during the winter,
and had taken such pains to make them agreeable to the
young ladies, that they constituted a feature of the season.
The company was small and select, on these occasions, two or
three married pairs being present for the sake of propriety,
but no society was ever more genial, joyous, and unconstrained
in tone. At the last entertainment, our host finished by giving

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us a choice supper, to which we sat down in order to enjoy it
thoroughly. I have had a prejudice against all ambulatory
suppers since. There were songs and toasts, and fun of the
purest and most sparkling quality. At last, one of the young
ladies said, with a mock despair: `So, this is the end of our
bachelor evenings. What a pity! I am ready to wish that
you other gentlemen had remained single, for our sakes. You
know you cannot give us such delightful parties as this.'

“`Are there really no more bachelors?' exclaimed Miss
Remington, a tall, beautiful girl, who sat opposite to me.
`Must we sing: Lochaber no more? But that will never do:
some married man must retract his vow, for our sakes.'

“One of the latter, looking around the table, answered:
`Let us be certain, first, that we are at the end of the list.
Belknap, Moulton, Parks—yes—but stop! there's Woodbury!
too modest to speak for himself.'

“`Woodbury! Woodbury!' they all shouted, the young
ladies insisting that I should and must entertain them in my
turn. My heart came into my throat. I attempted to laugh
off the idea as a jest, but they were too joyously excited to
heed me. It was a cruel embarrassment, for none of the company
even knew where I lived. My letters were always sent
to the office of my employer. Moreover, I had but five dollars,
and had made a resolution never to live in advance of my
wages. What was I to do? The other guests, ignorant of
my confusion, or not heeding it, were already talking of the
entertainment as settled, and began to suggest the evening
when it should take place. I was meditating, in a sort of desperation,
whether I should not spring up and rush out of the
house, when I caught Miss Remington's eye. I saw that she
understood my embarrassment, and wanted to help me. Her
look said `Accept!'—a singular fancy darted through my
mind, and I instantly regained my self possession. I informed
the company that I should be very happy to receive them, and
that my entertainment should bear the same proportion to my
means as that of our host. The invitations were given and

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accepted on the spot, and an evening selected from the following
week.

“`But where is it to be?' asked one of the young ladies.

“`Oh, he will let you know in time,' said Miss Remington,
who took occasion to whisper to me, before the company separated:
`Come to me first, and talk the matter over.'

“I called upon her the next evening, and frankly confided
to her my situation and means. She was three or four years
older than myself, and possessed so much natural judgment
and good sense, in addition to her social experience, that I had
the utmost confidence in her advice. A woman of less tact
would have offered to assist me, and that would have been an
end of the matter. She saw at once what was best to be done,
and we very soon agreed upon the preparations. Every thing
was to be kept secret from the rest of the company, whom she
determined to mystify to her heart's content. She informed
them that the entertainment would be unlike any thing they
had ever seen; that the place was not to be divulged, but the
guests were to assemble at her father's house on the appointed
evening; and that they must so dress as to do the highest
honor to my hospitality. The curiosity of all was greatly excited;
the affair was whispered about, and others endeavored
to join the party, but it was strictly confined to the original
company.

“On my part I was not idle. Adjoining my chamber was
a large room, in which the grocer kept some of his stores.
This room I thoroughly cleaned, removing some of the articles,
but retaining all the kegs and boxes. The grocer, an honest,
amiable man, supposed that I was preparing a little festival
for some of my relatives, and gave me the free use of his material.
I arranged the kegs and boxes around the walls,
and covered them with coarse wrapping-paper, to serve as
seats. The largest box was stationed in a corner, with a keg
on the top, as a post for the single musician I had engaged—
an old Irish fiddler, whom I picked up in the street I went
out towards Yorkville and brought home a bundle of cedar

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boughs, with which I decorated the walls, constructing a large
green word—Welcome—above the fireplace. I borrowed
twelve empty bottles in which I placed as many tallow candles,
and disposed them about the room, on extemporized brackets.
For my own chamber, which was designed to answer as a dressing-room
for the ladies, I made candlesticks out of the largest
turnips I could find in the market. In fact, I purposely removed
some little conveniences I possessed, and invented substitutes
of the most grotesque kind. I became so much interested
in my preparations, and in speculating upon the effect
they would produce, that I finally grew as impatient as my
guests for the evening to arrive.

“Nine o'clock was the hour appointed, and, punctually to the
minute, five carriages turned out of the Bowery and drew up,
one after another, at the side-door. I was at the entrance, in
complete evening dress, with white gloves (washed), to receive
my guests. I held a tray, upon which there were as many
candles fixed in large turnips, as there were gentlemen in the
party, and begged each one to take a light and follow me.
The ladies, magnificently dressed in silks and laces, rustled
up the narrow staircase, too much amazed to speak. As I
threw open the door of my saloon, the fiddler, perched near
the ceiling, struck up `Hail to the Chief.' The effect, I assure
you, was imposing. Miss Remington shook hands with
me, heartily, exclaiming: `Admirable! You could not have
done better.' To be sure, there were some exclamations of
surprise, and perhaps one or two blank faces—but only for a
moment. The fun was seen immediately, and the evening
commenced with that delightful social abandon in which other
evenings generally end. The fiddler played a Scotch reel, and
the couples took their places on the floor. Two of the older
gentlemen were familiar with both the Scotch and Irish dances,
and the younger ladies set about learning them with a spirit
which charmed the old musician's heart. The superb silks
floated about the room to the jolliest tunes, or rested, in the
intervals, on the grocer's kegs, and once a string of pearls

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broke and rolled into the fireplace. After a while, the grocer's
boy, in his shirt-sleeves, made his appearance with a large
market-basket on his arm, containing a mixture of cakes,
raisins, and almonds. He was in great demand, especially
as I furnished no plates. It was then agreed to put the
basket on a keg, as a permanent refreshment-table, and the boy
brought in lemonade, in all kinds of drinking-vessels. I had
taken some pains to have them all of different patterns. There
were tin-cups, stoneware mugs, tea-cups, bowls, and even a
cologne bottle. By this time all had fully entered into the
spirit of the affair: I was not only at ease but jubilant. The
old fiddler played incessantly. Miss Remington sang `The
Exile of Erin' to his accompaniment, and the old man cried:
we had speeches, toasts, recitations: we revived old games:
we told fortunes with cards (borrowed from the porter-house
across the way): in short, there was no bound to the extent of
our merriment, and no break in its flow.

“It occurred to some one, at last, to look at his watch.—
`God bless me! it's three o'clock!' he cried. Three!—and six
hours had already passed away! The ladies tore up my green
word `Welcome,' to get sprigs of cedar as souvenirs of the
evening: some even carried off the turnip-candlesticks. Miss
Remington laughed in her sleeve at the latter. `I know better
than to do that,' she said to me; `turnips have a habit of
rotting.' It was unanimously voted that I had given them
the best entertainment of the season; and I am sure, for my
own part, that none had been so heartily enjoyed.

“The story, as you may suppose, soon became known; and
it was only by sheer resolution that I escaped a social popularity
which might have turned my head at that age. I was
even asked to repeat the entertainment, so that others might
have a chance to participate in it; but I knew that its whole
success lay in the spontaneous inspiration which prompted,
and the surprise which accompanied it. The incident, however,
proved to be one of the influences to which I must attribute
my subsequent good fortune.”

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“Pray, how was that?” asked Mr. Waldo.

“My employer heard, in some way or other, that I had
given a splendid entertainment. Knowing my means, and
fearing that I had fallen into reckless habits, he called me into
his private office and very seriously asked for an explanation
of my conduct. I related the circumstances, precisely as
they had occurred. He easily ascertained that my story was
true, and from that day forward took an increased interest in
me, to which I must attribute, in part, my rapid advancement.
Now, if there is any moral in all this, I think you can easily
find it. If there is not, perhaps you have been diverted
enough to pardon me for talking so much about myself.”

“Why, it's delightful! I never heard any thing better!”
cried Mrs. Waldo.

“It shows, though,” interposed Mrs. Merryfield, “how inconsistent
those fashionable women are. They can be courageous
and independent for the sake of pleasure, but they'd be
horrified at venturing so far for the sake of principle.”

“You are hardly just,” said Hannah Thurston, addressing
the last speaker; “Mr. Woodbury's story has a moral, and I
am very glad he has given it to us.”

Seth Wattles had been interested and amused, in spite of
himself, but he was not the man to acknowledge it. He was
endeavoring to find some point at which he might carp, with
a show of reason, when Miss Carrie Dilworth entered the room,
and presently Bute Wilson, who had driven from Lakeside to
take Woodbury home.

“Mr. Max.!” cried the latter, whose face had a flushed,
strange expression, “Diamond won't stand alone, and I must
go out and hold him till you're ready.”

“I'll come at once, then,” said Woodbury, and took leave
of the company.

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As Bute, on entering the village, passed the Widow Thurston's
cottage, he noticed a dim little figure emerging from the
gate. Although the night was dark, and the figure was so
muffled as to present no distinct outline, Bute's eyes were
particularly sharp. Like the sculptor, he saw the statue in
the shapeless block. Whether it was owing to a short jerking
swing in the gait, or an occasional sideward toss of what
seemed to be the head, he probably did not reflect; but he
immediately drew the rein on Diamond, and called out “Miss
Carrie!”

“Ah!” proceeded from the figure, as it stopped, with a
start; “who is it?”

Bute cautiously drove near the plank sidewalk, before
answering. Then he said: “It's me.”

“Oh, Bute,” exclaimed Miss Dilworth, “how you frightened
me! Where did you come from?”

“From home. I'm a-goin' to fetch Mr. Max., but there's no
hurry. I say, Miss Carrie, wouldn't you like to take a little
sleigh-ride? Where are you goin' to?”

“To Waldo's.”

“Why, so am I! Jump in, and I'll take you along.”

Miss Dilworth, nothing loath, stepped from the edge of the
sidewalk into the cutter, and took her seat. Bute experienced
a singular feeling of comfort, at having the soft little body
wedged so closely beside him, with the same wolf-skin spread
over their mutual knees. His heart being on the side next

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her, it presently sent a tingling warmth over his whole frame;
the sense of her presence impressed him with a vague physical
delight, and he regretted that the cutter was not so narrow as
to oblige him to take her upon his knees. It was less than
half a mile to the parsonage—about two minutes, as Diamond
trotted—and then the doors of heaven would close upon him.

“No! by Jimminy!” he suddenly exclaimed, turning
around in the track, at the imminent risk of upsetting the
cutter.

“What's the matter?” cried Miss Dilworth, a little alarmed
at this unexpected manœuvre.

“It isn't half a drive for you, Carrie,” Bute replied. “The
sleddin's prime, and I'll jist take a circuit up the creek, and
across into the South Road. We'll go it in half an hour, and
there's plenty of time.”

Miss Dilworth knew, better even than if he had tried to tell
her, that Bute was proud and happy at having her beside
him. Her vanity was agreeably ministered to; she enjoyed
sleighing; and, moreover, where was the harm? She would
not have objected, on a pinch, to be driven through Ptolemy
by Arbutus Wilson, in broad daylight; and now it was too
dark for either of them to be recognized. So she quietly
submitted to what was, after all, not a hard fate.

As they sped along merrily over the bottoms of East
Atauga Creek, past the lonely, whispering elms, and the
lines of ghostly alders fringing the stream, where the air
struck their faces with a damp cold, the young lady shuddered.
She pressed a little more closely against Bute, as if
to make sure of his presence, and said, in a low tone: “I
should not like to be alone, here, at this hour.”

Poor Bute felt that the suspense of his heart was no longer
to be borne. She had played with him, and he had allowed
himself to be played with, long enough. He would ask a
serious question and demand a serious answer. His resolution
was fixed, yet, now that the moment had arrived, his tongue
seemed to become paralyzed. The words were in his mind,

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every one of them—he had said them over to himself, a hundred
times—but there was a muzzle on his mouth which prevented
their being put into sound. He looked at the panels
of fence as they sped past, and thought, “so much more of
the road has gone, and I have said nothing.”

Miss Dilworth's voice was like a palpable hand stretched
out to draw him from that quagmire of silence. “Oh,
Carrie!” he exclaimed, “you needn't be alone, anywheres—
leastways where there's any thing to skeer or hurt you.”

She understood him, and resumed her usual tactics, half-accepting,
half-defensive. “We can't help being alone sometimes,
Bute,” she answered, “and some are born to be alone
always. Alone in spirit, you know; where there is no congenial
nature.”

“You're not one o' them, Carrie,” said Bute, desperately.
“You know you're not a genus. If you was, I shouldn't keer
whether I had your good-will or not. But I want that, and
more'n that, because I like you better than any thing in this
world. I've hinted the same many a time, and you know it,
and I don't want you to turn it off no longer.”

The earnestness of his voice caused Miss Dilworth to tremble.
There was a power in the man which she feared she
could not withstand. Still he had made no definite proposal,
and she was not bound to answer more than his words literally
indicated.

“Why, of course I like you, Bute,” said she; “everybody
does. And you've always been so kind and obliging towards
me.”

“Like! I'd ruther you'd say hate than like. There's two
kinds o' likin', and one of 'em's the kind that doesn't fit anybody
that comes along. Every man, Carrie, that's wuth his
salt, must find a woman to work for, and when he's nigh onto
thirty, as I am, he wants to see a youngster growin' up, to
take his place when he gits old. Otherways, no matter how
lucky he is, there's not much comfort to him in livin'. Now,
I'm awful serious about this. I don't care whether we're

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congenial spirits, or not, but I want you, Carrie, for my wife.
You may hunt far and wide, but you'll find nobody that'll
keer for you as I will. Perhaps I don't talk quite as fine as
some, but talkin's like the froth on the creek; maybe it's
shallow, and maybe it's deep, you can't tell. The heart's the
main thing, and, thank God, I'm right there. Carrie, this
once, jist this once, don't trifle with me.”

Bute's voice became soft and pleading, as he closed. Miss
Dilworth was moved at last; he had struck through her affected
sentimentalism, and touched the small bit of true womanly
nature beneath it. But the impression was too sudden. She
had not relinquished her ambitious yearnings; she knew and
valued Bute's fidelity, and, precisely for that reason, she felt
secure in seeming to decline it. She would have it in reserve,
in any case, and meanwhile, he was too cheerful and light-hearted
to suffer much pain from the delay. Had he taken
her in his arms, had he stormed her with endearing words,
had he uttered even one sentence of the hackneyed sentiment
in which she delighted, it would have been impossible to resist.
But he sat silently waiting for her answer, while the
horse slowly climbed the hill over which they must pass to
reach the South Road; and in that silence her vanity regained
its strength.

“Carrie?” he said, at last.

“Bute?”

“You don't answer me.”

“Oh, Bute!” said she, with a curious mixture of tenderness
and coquetry, “I don't know how. I never thought you
were more than half in earnest. And I'm not sure, after all,
that we were meant for each other. I like you as well as I
like anybody, but—”

Here she paused.

“But you won't have me, I s'pose?” said Bute, in a tone
that was both bitter and sad.

“I don't quite mean that,” she answered. “But a woman
has so much at stake, you know. She must love more than a

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man, I've been told, before she can give up her name and her
life to him. I don't know, Bute, whether I should do right to
promise myself to you. I've never thought of it seriously.
Besides, you come upon me so sudden—you frightened me a
little, and I really don't exactly know what my own mind is.”

“Yes, I see,” said Bute, in a stern voice.

They had reached the top of the hill, and the long descent
to Ptolemy lay before them. Bute drew the reins and held
the horse to his best speed. Some inner prop of his strong
breast seemed to give way all at once. He took the thick
end of his woollen scarf between his teeth and stifled the convulsive
movements of his throat. Then a sensation of heat
rushed through his brain, and the tears began to roll rapidly
down his cheeks. He was grateful for the darkness which hid
his face, for the bells which drowned his labored breathing,
and for the descent which shortened the rest of the drive. He
said nothing more, and Miss Dilworth, in spite of herself, was
awed by his silence. By the time they had reached the parsonage
he was tolerably calm, and the traces of his passion
had disappeared from his face.

Miss Dilworth lingered while he was fastening the horse.
She felt, it must be confessed, very uneasy, and not guiltless of
what had happened. She knew not how to interpret Bute's
sudden silence. It was probably anger, she thought, and
she would therefore lay the first stone of a temple of reconciliation.
She liked him too well to lose him wholly.

“Good-night, Bute!” she said, holding out her hand: “you
are not angry with me, are you?”

“No,” was his only answer, as he took her hand. There
was no eager, tender pressure, as before, and the tone of his
voice, to her ear, betrayed indifference, which was worse than
anger.

After Woodbury had taken leave, there was a general movement
of departure. The sempstress had come to spend a few
days with Mrs. Waldo, and did not intend returning; it was
rather late, and the Merryfields took the nearest road home, so

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that Hannah Thurston must have walked back, alone, to her
mother's cottage, had not Seth Wattles been there to escort her.
Seth foresaw this duty, and inwardly rejoiced thereat. The
absence of Woodbury restored his equanimity of temper, and
he was as amiably disposed as was possible to his incoherent
nature. He was not keen enough to perceive the strong relief
into which his shapeless mind was thrown by the symmetry
and balance of the man whom he hated—that he lost ground,
even in his own circle, not merely from the discomfiture of the
moment, but far more from that unconscious comparison of the
two which arose from permanent impressions. He was not
aware of the powerful magnetism which social culture exercises,
especially upon minds fitted, by their honest yearning
after something better, to receive it themselves.

Seth was therefore, without reason, satisfied with himself as
he left the house. He had dared, at least, to face this self-constituted
lion, and had found the animal more disposed to
gambol than to bite. He flattered himself that his earnestness
contrasted favorably with the levity whereby Woodbury had
parried questions so important to the human race. Drawing
a long breath, as of great relief, he exclaimed:

“Life is real, life is earnest! We feel it, under this sky:
here the frivolous chatter of Society is hushed.”

Hannah Thurston took his proffered arm, conscious, as she
did so, of a shudder of something very like repugnance. For
the first time it struck her that she would rather hear the
sparkling nothings of gay conversation than Seth's serious
platitudes. She did not particularly desire his society, just
now, and attempted to hasten her pace, under the pretext that
the night was cold.

Seth, however, hung back. “We do not enjoy the night as
we ought,” said he. “It elevates and expands the soul. It is
the time for kindred souls to hold communion.”

“Scarcely out of doors, in winter, unless they are disembodied,”
remarked Miss Thurston.

Seth was somewhat taken aback. He had not expected so

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light a tone from so grave and earnest a nature. It was unusual
with her, and reminded him, unpleasantly, of Woodbury's
frivolity. But he summoned new courage, and continued:

“We can say things at night for which we have no courage
in daylight. We are more sincere, somehow—less selfish, you
know, and more affectionate.”

“There ought to be no such difference,” said she, mechanically,
and again hastening her steps.

“I know there oughtn't. And I didn't mean that I wasn't
as true as ever; but—but there are chosen times when our
souls are uplifted and approach each other. This is such a
time, Hannah. We seem to be nearer, and—and—”

He could get no farther. The other word in his mind was
too bold to be used at the outset. Besides, having taken one
step, he must allow her to take the next: it would make the
crisis easier for both. But she only drew her cloak more
closely around her, and said nothing.

“The influences of night and—other things,” he resumed,
“render us insensible to time and—temperature. There is
one thing, at least, which defies the elements. Is there not?”

“What is it?” she asked.

“Can't you guess?”

“Benevolence, no doubt, or a duty so stern and sacred that
life itself is subordinate to its performance.”

“Yes, that's true—but I mean something else!” Seth exclaimed.
“Something I feel, now, deep in my buzzum. Shall
I unveil it to your gaze?”

“I have no right to ask or accept your confidence,” she
replied.

“Yes, you have. One kindred soul has the right to demand
every thing of the other. I might have told you, long ago,
but I waited so that you might find it out for yourself, without
the necessity of words. Surely you must have seen it in my
eyes, and heard it in my voice, because every thing powerful
in us expresses itself somehow in spite of us. The deepest

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emotions, you know, are silent; but you understand my silence
now, don't you?”

Hannah Thurston was more annoyed than surprised by this
declaration. She saw that a clear understanding could not be
avoided, and nerved herself to meet it. Her feeling of repugnance
to the speaker increased with every word he uttered;
yet, if his passion were genuine (and she had no right to doubt
that it was so), he was entitled at least to her respect and her
pity. Still, he had spoken only in vague terms, and she could
not answer the real question. Why? Did she not fully understand
him? Was the shrinking sense of delicacy in her
heart, which she was unable to overcome, a characteristic of
sex, separating her nature, by an impassable gulf, from that of
man?

“Please explain yourself clearly, Seth,” she said, at last.

“Oh, don't your own heart explain it for you? Love don't
want to be explained: it comes to us of itself. See here—
we've been laboring together ever so long in the Path of Progress,
and our souls are united in aspirations for the good of our
fellow-men. All I want is, that we should now unite our lives
in the great work. You know I believe in the equal rights of
Woman, and would never think of subjecting you to the
tyranny your sisters groan under. I have no objection to
taking your name, if you want to make that sort of a protest
against legal slavery. We'll both keep our independence, and
show to the world the example of a true marriage. Somebody
must begin, you know, as Charles Macky, the glorious poet of
our cause, says in his Good Time Coming.”

“Seth,” said Hannah Thurston, with a sad, deliberate sweetness
in her voice, “there is one thing, without which there
should be no union between man and woman.”

“What is that?” he asked.

“Love.”

“How? I don't understand you. That is the very reason
why—”

“You forget,” she interrupted, “that love must be

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reciprocal. You have taken it for granted that I returned, in equal
measure, the feelings you have expressed towards me. Where
the fortune of a life is concerned, it is best to be frank, though
frankness give pain. Seth, I do not, I never can, give you
love. A coincidence of opinions, of hopes and aspirations, is
not love. I believe that you have made this mistake in your
own mind, and that you will, sooner or later, thank me for
having revealed it to you. I have never suspected, in you,
the existence of love in its holiest and profoundest meaning,
nor have I given you reason to suppose that my sentiments
towards you were other than those of friendly sympathy and
good-will. I deeply regret it, if you have imagined otherwise.
I cannot atone to you for the ruin of whatever hopes you may
have cherished, but I can at least save you from disappointment
in the future. I tell you now, therefore, once and forever,
that, whatever may happen, however our fates may
change, you and I can never, never be husband and wife.”

Sweet and low as was her voice, an inexorable fate spoke in
it. Seth felt, word by word, its fatal significance, as the condemned
culprit feels the terrible phrases of his final sentence.
He knew, instinctively, that it was vain to plead or expostulate.
He must, perforce, accept his doom; but, in doing so, his injured
self-esteem made a violent protest. It was the fretful
anger of disappointment, rather than the unselfish sorrow of
love. He could only account for the fact of his refusal by the
supposition that her affections were elsewhere bestowed.

“I see how it is,” said he, petulantly; “somebody else is in
the way.”

“Do not misunderstand me,” she answered. “I, only, am
responsible for your disappointment. You have no right to
question me, and I might well allow your insinuation to pass
without notice; but my silence may possibly mislead you, as
it seems my ordinary friendly regard has done. I will, therefore,
for my own sake no less than yours—for I desire, in so
solemn a matter, to leave no ground for self-reproach—voluntarily
say to you, that I know no man to whom I could

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surrender my life in the unquestioning sacrifice of love. I have long
since renounced the idea of marriage. My habits of thought—
the duties I have assumed—my lack of youth and beauty,
perhaps” (and here the measured sweetness of her voice was
interrupted for a moment), “will never attract to me the man,
unselfish enough to be just to my sex, equally pure in his aspirations,
equally tender in his affections, and wiser in the
richness of his experience, whom my heart would demand, if
it dared still longer to cherish a hopeless dream. I have not
even enough of an ideal love remaining, to justify your jealousy.
In my association with you for the advancement of
mutual aims, as well as in our social intercourse, I have treated
you with the kindly respect which was your due as a fellowbeing,
but I can never recognize in you that holy kinship of
the heart, without which Love is a mockery and Marriage is
worse than death!”

Seth felt it impossible to reply, although his self-esteem was
cruelly wounded. She thought herself too good for him, then:
that was it! Why, the very man she had described, as the
ideal husband she would never meet—it was exactly himself!
It was of no use, however, for him to say so. She had rejected
him with a solemn decision, from which there was no appeal.
He must, also, needs believe her other declaration, that
she loved no one else. Her inordinate mental pride was the
true explanation.

They had stopped, during the foregoing conversation. Hannah
Thurston had dropped her hold on his arm, and stood,
facing him, on the narrow sidewalk. The night was so dark
that neither could distinctly see the other's face. A melancholy
wind hummed in the leafless twigs of the elms above
them, and went off to sough among a neighboring group of
pines. Finding that Seth made no answer, Miss Thurston
slowly resumed her homeward walk. He mechanically accompanied
her. As they approached the widow's cottage, he
heaved a long, hoarse sigh, and muttered:

“Well, there's another aspiration deceived. It seems

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there's no quality of human nature which we can depend
upon.”

“Do not let this disappointment make you unjust, Seth,”
she said, pausing, with her hand upon the gate. “You have
deceived yourself, and it is far better to become reconciled to
the truth at once. If I have ignorantly, in any way, assisted
in the deception, I beg you to pardon me.”

She turned to enter the cottage, but Seth still hesitated.
“Hannah,” he said at last, awkwardly: “You—you won't say
any thing about this?”

She moved away from him with an instant revulsion of feeling.
“What do you take me for?” she exclaimed. “Repeat
that question to yourself, and perhaps it may explain to you
why your nature and mine can never approach!” Without
saying good-night, she entered the house, leaving Seth to wander
back to his lodgings in a very uncomfortable frame of
mind.

Hannah Thurston found the lighted lamp waiting for her in
the warm sitting-room; her mother was already in bed. She
took off her bonnet and cloak, and seated herself in the widow's
rocking-chair. Tears of humiliation stood in her eyes. “He
does not deserve,” she said to herself, “that I should have
opened my heart before him. I wanted to be just, for I thought
that love, however imperfect or mistaken, was always at least
delicate and reverent. I thought the advocacy of moral truth
presupposed some nobility of soul—that a nature which accepted
such truth could not be entirely low and mean. I have
allowed a profane eye to look upon sanctities, and the very
effort I made to be true and just impresses me with a sense of
self-degradation. What must I do, to reconcile my instincts
with the convictions of my mind? Had I not suppressed the
exhibition of my natural repugnance to that man, I should have
been spared the pain of this evening—spared the shrinking
shudder which I must feel whenever the memory of it returns.”

Gradually her self-examination went deeper, and she

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confessed to herself that Seth's declaration of love was in itself her
greatest humiliation. She had not told him the whole truth,
though it had seemed to be so, when she spoke. She had not
renounced the dream of her younger years. True, she had
forcibly stifled it, trodden upon it with the feet of a stern
resolution, hidden its ruins from sight in the remotest
chamber of her heart—but now it arose again, strong in its
immortal life. Oh, to think who should have wooed her under
the stars, in far other words and with far other answers—the
man whom every pulse of her being claimed and called upon,
the man who never came! In his stead this creature, whose
love seemed to leave a stain behind it—whose approach to
her soul was that of an unclean footstep. Had it come to this?
Was he the only man whom the withheld treasures of her
heart attracted towards her? Did he, alone, suspect the
splendor of passion which shone beneath the calmness and
reserve of the presence she showed to the world?

It was a most bitter, most humiliating thought. With her
head drooping wearily towards her breast, and her hands
clasped in her lap, with unheeded tears streaming from her
eyes, she sought refuge from this pain in that other pain of the
imagined love that once seemed so near and lovely—lovelier
now, as she saw it through the mist of a gathering despair.
Thus she sat, once more the helpless captive of her dreams,
while the lamp burned low and the room grew cold.

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p713-160 CHAPTER XII. MOTHER AND DAUGHTER.

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The morning came, late and dark, with a dreary March
rain, the commencement of that revolutionary anarchy in the
weather, through which the despotism of Winter is overthrown,
and the sweet republic of Spring established on the
Earth. Even Woodbury, as he looked out on the writhing
trees, the dripping roofs, and the fields of soggy, soaked snow,
could not suppress a sigh of loneliness and yearning. Bute,
whose disappointment, bitter though it was, failed to counteract
the lulling warmth of the blankets after his ride home
against the wind, and who had therefore slept soundly all
night, awoke to a sense of hollowness and wretchedness which
he had never experienced before. His duties about the barn
attended to, and breakfast over, he returned to his bedroom
to make his usual Sunday toilet. Mr. Woodbury had decided
not to go to church, and Bute, therefore, had nothing but his
own thoughts, or the newspapers, to entertain him through the
day. Having washed his neck and breast, put on the clean
shirt which Mrs. Babb took care to have ready for him, and
combed his yellow locks, he took a good look at himself in the
little mirror.

“I a'n't handsome, that's a fact,” he thought to himself,
“but nuther is she, for that matter. I've got good healthy
blood in me, though, and if my face is sunburnt, it don't look
like taller. I don't see why all the slab-sided, lantern-jawed,
holler-breasted fellows should have no trouble o' gittin' wives,
and me, of a darned sight better breed, though I do say it, to

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have sich bad luck! I can't stand it. I've got every thing
here that a man could want, but 'ta'n't enough. O Lord! to
think her children should have somebody else than me for a
father!”

Bute groaned and threw himself on the bed, where he
thrust both hands through his carefully combed hair. His
strong masculine nature felt itself wronged, and the struggle
was none the less severe, because it included no finer spiritual
disappointment. He possessed only a true, honest, tender
heart, as the guide to his instincts, and these, when baffled,
suggested no revenge, such as might occur to a more reckless
or more imaginative nature. His life had been blameless,
heretofore, from the simple force of habit, and the pure atmosphere
in which he lived. To confess the truth, he was not
particularly shocked by the grosser experiences of some of his
friends, but to adopt them himself involved a change so violent
that he knew not where it might carry him. If the
thought crossed his mind at all, it was dismissed without a
moment's hospitality. He did not see, because he did not
seek, any escape from the sore, weary, thirsty sensation which
his disappointment left behind. The fibres of his nature, which
were accustomed to give out a sharp, ringing, lusty twang to
every touch of Life, were now muffled and deadened in tone:
that was all.

It might have been some consolation to Bute, if he could
have known that his presumed rival was equally unfortunate.
In the case of the latter, however, there was less of the pang
of blighted hopes than of the spiteful bitterness of wounded
vanity. Seth Wattles was accustomed to look upon himself,
and not without grounds of self-justification, as an unusual
man. The son of a poor laborer, orphaned at an early age,
and taken in charge by a tailor of Ptolemy, who brought him
up to his own business, he owed his education mostly to a
quick ear and a ready tongue. His brain, though shallow,
was active, its propelling power being his personal conceit; but
he was destitute of imagination, and hence his attempted

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flights of eloquence were often hopelessly confused and illogical.
The pioneer orators of Abolition and Temperance, who
visited Ptolemy, found in him a willing convert, and he was
quick enough to see and to secure the social consideration
which he had gained in the small community of “Reformers”—
an advantage which the conservative society of the village denied
to him. Indeed, the abuse to which he was occasionally
subjected, was in itself flattering; for only men of importance,
he thought, are thus persecuted. Among his associates, it was
customary to judge men by no other standard than their views
on the chosen reforms, and he, of course, stood among the
highest. His cant, his presumption, his want of delicacy,
were all overlooked, out of regard to an advocacy of “high
moral truths,” which was considered to be, and doubtless was,
sincere.

Let us not, therefore, judge the disappointed tailor too
harshly. His weaknesses, indeed, were a part of his mental
constitution, and could, under no circumstances, have been
wholly cured; but it was his own fault that they had so
thoroughly usurped his nature.

Whatever spiritual disturbance he might have experienced,
on awaking next morning to the realities of the world, the
woman who rejected him was much more deeply and painfully
troubled. Years had passed since her heart had known so
profound an agitation. She felt that the repose which she had
only won after many struggles, had deceived herself. It was
a false calm. The smooth mirror, wherein the sunshine and
the stars saw themselves by turns, was only smooth so long
as the south-wind failed to blow. One warm breath, coming
over the hills from some far-off, unknown region, broke into
fragments the steady images of her life. With a strange conflict
of feeling, in which there was some joy and much humiliation,
she said to herself: “I am not yet the mistress of my fate.”

She rose late, unrefreshed by her short, broken sleep, and
uncheered by the dark, cold, and wet picture of the valley. It
was one of those days when only a heart filled to the brim

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with unmingled happiness can take delight in life—when the
simplest daily duties present themselves as weary tasks—when
every string we touch is out of tune, and every work attempted
is one discord the more. Descending to the sitting-room,
she found her mother in the rocking-chair, before a
brisk fire, while the little servant-girl was busy, preparing
the table for breakfast—a work which Hannah herself usually
performed.

“Thee's rather late, Hannah,” said the widow. “I thought
thee might be tired, and might as well sleep, while Jane set
the table. She must learn it some time, thee knows.”

“I'm obliged to thee, mother,” the daughter replied. “I
have not slept well, and have a little headache this morning.
It is the weather, I think.”

“Now thee mentions it, I see that thee's quite pale. Jane,
put two spoonfuls of tea in the pot; or, stay, thee'd better
bring it here and let me make it.”

Hannah had yielded to the dietetic ideas of her friends, so
far as to give up the use of tea and coffee—a step in which
the widow was not able to follow her. A few months before,
the former would have declined the proposal to break her
habit of living, even on the plea of indisposition; she would
have resisted the natural craving for a stimulant or a sedative
as something morbid; but now she was too listless,
too careless of such minor questions, to refuse. The unaccustomed
beverage warmed and cheered her, and she rose
from the table strengthened to resume her usual manner.

“I thought it would do thee good,” said the widow, noting
the effect, slight as it was, with the quick eye of a mother.
“I'm afraid, Hannah, thee carries thy notions about diet a
little too far.”

“Perhaps thee's right, mother,” was the answer. She had
no inclination to commence a new discussion of one of the few
subjects on which the two could not agree.

After the house had been put in order for the day, preparations
made for the frugal dinner, and the servant-girl

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despatched to the Cimmerian Church, Hannah took her usual
seat by the window, saying: “Shall I read to thee, mother?”

“If thee pleases.”

There was no Quaker Meeting nearer than Tiberius, and
hence it had been the widow's custom, on “First-Days,”
to read, or hear her daughter read, from the classics of the
sect. To Hannah, also, in spite of her partial emancipation,
there was a great charm in the sweet simplicity and sincerity
of the early Friends, and she read the writings of Fox, Barclay,
Elwood, and William Penn, with a sense of refreshment
and peace. To these were added some other works of a similar
character, which the more cultivated Quakers have indorsed
as being inspired by the true spirit—Thomas à Kempis,
Jeremy Taylor, Madame Guyon, and Pascal. She now took
the oft-read “No Cross, No Crown,” of William Penn, the
tone of which was always consoling to her; but this time its
sweet, serious utterances seemed to have lost their effect.
She gave the words in her pure, distinct voice, and strove to
take them into her mind and make them her own: in vain!
something interposed itself between her and the familiar
meaning, and made the task mechanical. The widow felt, by
a sympathetic presentiment, rather than from any external
evidence which she could detect, that her daughter's mind
was in some way disturbed; yet that respectful reserve which
was habitual in this, as in most Quaker families, prevented
her from prying into the nature of the trouble. If it was a
serious concern, she thought to herself, Hannah would mention
it voluntarily. There are spiritual anxieties and struggles,
she knew, which must be solved in solitude. No one,
not even a mother, should knock at the door of that chamber
where the heart keeps its privacies, but patiently and silently
wait until bidden to approach and enter.

Nevertheless, after dinner, when the household order was
again restored, and Hannah, looking from the window upon
the drenched landscape, unconsciously breathed a long, weary
sigh, Friend Thurston felt moved to speak.

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“Hannah,” she said, gravely and softly, “thee seems to
have something on thy mind to-day.”

For a minute the daughter made no reply. Turning away
from the window, she looked upon her mother's worn, pale
face, almost spectral in the cloudy light, and then took her
accustomed seat.

“Yes, mother,” she answered, in a low voice, “and I ought
to tell thee.”

“If thee feels so, tell me then. It may lighten thy own
burden, without making mine heavier.”

“It is scarcely a burden, mother,” said Hannah. “I know
that I have done what is right, but I fear that I may have unconsciously
brought it upon myself, when it might have been
avoided.” She then repeated the conversation which had
taken place between Seth Wattles and herself, omitting only
that secret, impassioned dream of her heart, a glimpse of
which she had permitted to escape her. She did not dare to
betray it a second time, and thus her own sense of humiliation
was but half explained.

Friend Thurston waited quietly until the story was finished.
“Thee did right, Hannah,” she said, after a pause, “and I do
not think thee can justly reproach thyself for having given
him encouragement. He is a very vain and ignorant man,
though well-meaning. It is not right to hold prejudice
against any one, but I don't mind telling thee that my feeling
towards him comes very near being that. Thee never could
be happy, Hannah, with a husband whom thee did not respect:
nay, I mean something more—whom thee did not feel
was wiser and stronger than thyself.”

A transient flush passed over the daughter's face, but she
made no reply.

“Thee has a gift, I know,” the widow continued, “and thee
has learned much. There is a knowledge, though, that comes
with experience of life, and though I feel my ignorance in
many ways, compared to thy learning, there are some things
which I am able to see more clearly than thee. It requires no

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book-learning to read the heart, and there is less difference in
the hearts of women than thee may suppose. We cannot be
wholly independent of the men: we need their help and companionship:
we acknowledge their power even while we
resist it. There are defects in us which we find supplied in
them, as we supply theirs where marriage is perfect and holy.
But we cannot know this, except through our own experience.
I have agreed with thee in most of thy views about the rights
of our sex, but thee never can be entirely wise on this subject
so long as thee remains single. No, Hannah, thee won't
think hard of me for saying it, but thee does not yet truly
know either woman or man. I have often quietly wished that
thee had not set thy heart against marriage. The Lord
seems to have intended a mate for every one, so that none of
His children should be left alone, and thee should not shut
thy eyes against the signs He gives.

“Mother!”

Even while uttering this exclamation, into which she was
startled by the unexpected words of her mother, Hannah
Thurston felt that she was betraying herself.

“Child! child! thy father's eyes—thee has his very look!
I am concerned on thy account, Hannah. Perhaps I have been
mistaken in thee, as I was mistaken in him. Oh, if I could have
known him in time! I shall not be much longer with thee,
my daughter, and if I tell thee how I failed in my duty it may
help thee to perform thine, if—if my prayers for thy sake
should be fulfilled.”

The widow paused, agitated by the recollections which her
own words evoked. The tears trickled down her pale cheeks,
but she quietly wiped them away. Her countenance thus
changed from its usual placid repose, Hannah was shocked to
see how weak and wasted it had grown during the winter.
The parting, which she did not dare to contemplate, might be
nearer than she had anticipated.

“Do not say any thing that might give thee pain,” she
said.

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“Give thyself no concern, child. It will bring me relief.
I have often felt moved to tell thee, but there seemed to be
no fitting time before now.”

“Is it about my father?” Hannah asked.

“Yes, Hannah. I wish he could have lived long enough to
leave his face in thy memory, but it was not to be. Thee often
reminds me of him, especially when I feel that there is something
in thy nature beyond my reach. I was past thy age
when we were married, and he was no longer a young
man. We had known each other for some years, but
nothing passed between us that younger persons would
have called love. I was sincerely drawn towards him, and
it seemed right that my life should become a part of his.
It came to me as a natural change. Richard was not a man
of many words; he was considered grave and stern; and
when he first looked upon me with only a gentle smile on his
face, I knew that his heart had made choice of me. From
that time, although it was long before he spoke his mind, I accustomed
myself to think of him as my husband. This may
seem strange to thee, and, indeed, I never confessed it to him.
When we came to live together, and I found, from every circumstance
of our daily life, how good and just he was, how
strong and upright and rigid in the ways that seemed right to
him, I leaned upon him as a helper and looked up to him as a
guide. There was in my heart quite as much reverence as
love. An unkind word never passed between us. When I
happened to be wrong in any thing, he knew how to turn
my mind so gently and kindly that I was set right without
knowing how. He was never wrong. Our married life was
a season of perfect peace—yes, to me, because my own contentment
made me careless, blind.

“I sometimes noticed that his eyes rested on me with a singular
expression, and I wondered what was in his mind. There
was something unsatisfied in his face, a look that asked for I
knew not what, but more than the world contains. Once,
when I said: `Is any thing the matter, Richard?' he turned

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quickly away and answered sharply. After that, I said nothing,
and I finally got accustomed to the look. I recollect
when thy brother was born, he seemed like another man,
though there was no outward change. When he spoke to me
his voice was trembly, and sounded strange to my ears; but
my own weakness, I thought, might account for that. He
would take the babe to the window, before its eyes could bear
the light; would pick it up when asleep, and hold it so tightly
as to make the poor thing cry; then he would put it down
quickly and walk out of the room without saying a word. I
noticed all this, as I lay, but it gave me no concern: I knew
not but that all men found their first children so strange and
curious. To a woman, her first babe seems more like something
familiar that is brought back to her, than something entirely
new that is added to her life.

“I scarcely know how to make clear to thy mind another
change that came over thy father while our little Richard still
lived. I never could be entirely certain, indeed, when it commenced,
because I fancied these things were passing moods
connected with his serious thoughts—he was a man much
given to reflection—and did not dream that they concerned
myself. Therein, our quiet, ordered life was a misfortune.
One day was like another, and we both, I think, took things
as they were, without inquiring whether our knowledge of
each other's hearts might not be imperfect. Oh, a storm would
have been better, Hannah—a storm which would have shown
us the wall that had grown up between us, by shaking it down!
But thee will see that from the end—thee will see it, without
my telling thee. Richard seemed graver and sterner, I thought,
but he was much occupied with business matters at that time.
After our child was taken from us, I began to see that he was
growing thinner and paler, and often felt very uneasy about
him. His manner towards me made me shy and a little afraid,
though I could pick out no word or act that was not kind and
tender. When I ventured to ask him what was the matter, he
only answered: `Nothing that can be helped.' I knew, after

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that, that all was not right, but my eyes were not opened to
the truth.”

Here Friend Thurston paused, as if to summon strength to
continue her narrative. Her withered hands were trembling,
and she clasped them together in her lap with a nervous energy
which did not escape her daughter's eye. The latter had
listened with breathless attention, waiting with mingled eagerness
and dread for the dénouement, which she felt must be
more or less tragic. Although her mother's agitation touched
her own heart with sympathetic pain, she knew that the story
had now gone too far to be left unfinished. She rose, brought
a glass of water, and silently placed it on the little table beside
her mother's chair. When she had resumed her seat, the latter
continued:

“Within a year after our boy's death, thee was born. It
was a great consolation to me then, although it has been a much
greater one since. I hoped, too, that it would have made
Richard a little more cheerful, but he was, if any thing, quieter
than ever. I sometimes thought him indifferent both to
me and the babe. I longed, in my weakness and my comfort,
to lay my head upon his breast and rest a while there. It
seemed a womanly fancy of mine, but oh, Hannah, if I had had
the courage to say that much! Once he picked thee up,
stood at the window for a long while, with thee in his arms,
then gave thee back to me and went out of the room without
saying a word. The bosom of thy little frock was damp, and
I know now that he must have cried over thee.

“I had not recovered my full strength when I saw that he
was really ailing. I began to be anxious and uneasy, though
I scarcely knew why, for he still went about his business as
usual. But one morning—it was the nineteenth of the Fifth
month, I remember, and on Seventh-day—he started to go to
the village, and came back to the house in half an hour, looking
fearfully changed. His voice, though, was as steady as
ever. `I believe I am not well, Gulielma,' he said to me;
`perhaps I'd better lie down a while. Don't trouble thyself—

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it will soon be over.' I made him undress and go to bed, for
my anxiety gave me strength. Then I sent for the doctor,
without telling Richard what I had done. It was evening
when the doctor came; thee was rather fretful that day, and
I had taken thee into another room, for fear Richard might be
disturbed. I only noticed that the doctor stayed a long time,
but they were old friends, I thought, and might like to talk.
By the time I had put thee to sleep, he had left and Richard was
alone. I went directly to him. `What is thee to take?' I asked.
`Nothing,' he said, so quietly that I ought to have been relieved,
but—I do not know how it was—I turned to him trembling
like a leaf, and cried out: `Richard, thee has not told me all!'

“`Yes, all, Gulielma,' said he, `nothing will help: I must
leave thee.' I stared at him a while, trying to stand still,
while every thing in the room went spinning around me, until
I saw nothing more. I was lying beside him on the bed
when I came to myself. My hair was wet: he had picked me
up, poured water on his handkerchief and bathed my face.
When I opened my eyes, he was leaning over me, looking
into my eyes with a look I cannot describe. He breathed
hard and painfully, and his voice was husky. `I have frightened
thee, Gulielma,' said he; `but—but can thee not resign
thyself to lose me?' His look seemed to draw my very soul
from me; I cried, with a loud and bitter cry, `Richard,
Richard, take me with thee!' and threw my arms around his
neck. Oh, my child, how can I tell thee the rest? He put
away my arms, he held me back, and gasped, as he looked at
me with burning eyes: `Take care what thee says, Gulielma;
I am dying, and thee dare not deceive me; does thee love me
as I love thee—more than life, more, the Lord pardon me,
more than heaven?' For the first time, I knew that I did. If it
was a sin, it has been expiated. I cannot remember what was
said, after that. It was all clear between us, and he would
allow no blame to rest on me; but he could not speak, except
at intervals. He held my hand all night, pressing it faintly in
his sleep. The next day he died.

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“He had loved me thus all the time, Hannah, and it was the
pride and the strength of his love which deceived me. He
would not ask for a caress or a tender word, because he
thought that a woman who loved would freely give it—nor
would he offer one, so long as he suspected that the sacred expression
of his heart might be only passively received. Ah, it
was a sad doubt of me on his part, a sad blindness towards
him on mine. When he began to suffer from disease of the
heart, and knew that his life was measured, his self-torture increased.
He purposely tried to subdue the mild, tempered
affection which he supposed I felt for him, in order that his
death might be a lighter grief to me. And I lived with him,
day after day, never guessing that his stern, set manner was
not his real self! I do not dare to think on the cross he must
have borne: my own seems heavy, and my spirit sometimes
grows weary under it, and is moved to complain. Then I remember
that by bearing it cheerfully I am brought nearer to
him, and the burden becomes light.”

Hannah Thurston listened to the last words with her face
buried in her hands, and her heart full of pity and self-reproach.
What was the pang of her own fruitless dream, her baffled
ideal, beside the sharp, inconsolable sorrow which consumed
her mother's years? What availed her studies, her intellectual
triumphs, her fancied comprehension of life, in comparison
with that knowledge of the heart of man thus fearfully won?
Humble, as when, a child, she listened to her mother's words
as the accents of infallible wisdom, she now bowed down
before the sanctity of that mother's experience.

The widow leaned back in her chair, with closed eyes, but
with a happy serenity on her weary face. Hannah took her
hand, and whispered, with a broken voice: “Thank thee,
mother!” The weak old arms drew her gently down, and
the pale lips kissed her own.

“Bless thee, my daughter. Now take thy book and let me
rest a while.”

Hannah took the book, but not to read.

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p713-172 CHAPTER XIII. IN WHICH SPRING OPENS.

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The rainy Sunday was the precursor of a thaw, which lasted
for a fortnight, and stripped the landscapes of Ptolemy of
every particle of snow, except such as found a lodgment in
fence-corners, behind walls, or in shaded ravines. The wands
of the willow clumps along the streams brightened to a vivid
yellow, and the myriad twigs of low-lying thickets blushed
purple with returning sap. Frozen nights and muddy days
enough were yet in store; but with every week the sun gained
confidence in his own alchemy, and the edge of the north-wind
was blunted. Very slowly, indeed, a green shimmer crept
up through the brown, dead grass; the fir-woods breathed a
resinous breath of awaking; pale green eyes peeped from the
buds of the garden-lilacs, and, finally, like a tender child, ignorant
of danger, the crocus came forth full blown and shamed
the cowardly hesitation of the great oaks and elms.

During this season, Woodbury's intercourse with the society
of the village was mostly suspended. After the termination
of the Great Sewing-Union, families fell back into their
narrower circles, and rested for a time both from their social
and their charitable labors. Even the itinerant prophets and
philanthropists ceased their visits, leaving Ptolemy in its normal
darkness. Only Mr. Dyce, it was whispered, had again
made his appearance at the Merryfields', where his spiritual
sessions were attended by a select circle of the initiated.
Neither Woodbury nor Mr. Waldo had been again invited to
attend.

All minor gossip, however, was lost sight of, in the interest

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occasioned by an event which occurred about this time. Miss
Eliza Clancy, to the surprise of everybody, had at last received
“a call.” During a visit to Syracuse, she had made the
acquaintance of the Rev. Jehiel Preeks, a widower who, having
been driven away from Tristan d'Acunha after losing his
wife there, had been commissioned by the A. B. C. F. M. to a
new field of labor in the Telugu country. His station was to
be Cuddapah, only a day's journey from Jutnapore. Miss
Eliza displayed such an intimate knowledge of the latter mission,
derived from Mrs. Boerum's letters, and such a vital concern
in the spiritual welfare of the Telugus, that the Rev.
Jehiel, at their third interview, asked her to share his labors.
There were persons in Ptolemy so malicious as to declare that
the proposal really came from Miss Eliza herself; but this is
not for a moment to be believed. The missionary made a better
choice than such persons were willing to admit. Although
verging on forty, and ominously thin, Miss Clancy was sincere,
active, and patient, and thought more of the heathen souls
whom she might enlighten than of the honors of her new position.
When she returned to Ptolemy as Mrs. Preeks, with
her passage engaged to Madras in the very vessel which was
to carry out the contributions of the Mission Fund, she was
too thoroughly happy to be disturbed by the village gossip.
The other ladies of the Fund — foremost among them her
sister spinsters, Miss Ann Parrott and Miss Sophia Stevenson—
immediately resumed work, in order to provide her with a
generous outfit for the voyage. Early in April the parting
took place, with mutual tears, and thenceforth the pious patronage
of Ptolemy was transferred from Jutnapore and Mrs.
Boerum to Cuddapah and Mrs. Preeks.

The Hon. Zeno Harder occupied his seat in the Legislature,
through the winter. Several times during the session Woodbury
received the compliment of documents, one of them entitled:
“Remarks of the Hon. Zeno Harder, of Atauga County,
on the Mohawk and Adirondac Railroad Bill.” Occasionally,
also, the Albany Cerberus was sent to him with one of the

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leading editorials marked, by way of directing his attention
to it. The Hon. Zeno looked upon Woodbury, who had been
so long absent from the country as to have lost “the run” of
politics, as fair prey. By securing him before the hostile party
had a chance, he would gain two votes (one of them Bute's),
and possibly more, besides a President of character and substance,
for mass-meetings. Woodbury, however, was too
shrewd, and the Member too clumsy in his diplomacy, for the
success of this plan. The former, although foreseeing that he
would be inevitably drawn to take sides, sooner or later,
determined to preserve his independence as long as possible.

The churches in the village undertook their periodical “revivals,”
which absorbed the interest of the community while
they lasted. It was not the usual season in Ptolemy for such
agitations of the religious atmosphere, but the Methodist clergyman,
a very zealous and impassioned speaker, having initiated
the movement with great success, the other sects became
alarmed lest he should sweep all the repentant sinners of the
place into his own fold. As soon as they could obtain help
from Tiberius, the Baptists followed, and the Rev. Lemuel
Styles was constrained to do likewise. For a few days, the
latter regained the ground he had lost, and seemed about to
distance his competitors. Luckily for him, the Rev. Jehiel
Preeks accompanied his wife on her farewell visit, and was
immediately impressed into the service. His account of his
sufferings at Tristan d'Acunha, embracing a description of the
sickness and triumphant death of his first wife, melted the auditors
to tears, and the exhortation which followed was like seed
planted in well-ploughed ground. The material for conversion,
drawn upon from so many different quarters, was soon exhausted,
but the rival churches stoutly held out, until convinced that
neither had any further advantage to gain over the other.

Mr. Waldo, of course, was not exempt from the general
necessity, although conscious of the disadvantage under which
he labored in representing so unimportant a sect. Its founder
had been a man of marked character, whose strong, peculiar

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intellect, combined with his earnestness of heart, wrought
powerfully upon those with whom he came in personal contact,
but his views were not broad enough to meet the wants of a
large class. After his death, many of his disciples, released
from the influence of his personality, saw how slight a difference
separated them from their brethren, and yearned to be included
in a more extensive fold. Among these was Mr. Waldo,
whose native good sense taught him that minor differences in
interpretation and observances do not justify Christians in dividing
their strength by a multitude of separate organizations.
His congregation, however, was very slowly brought to view
the matter in the same light, and he was too sincerely attached
to its members to give up his charge of them while any
prospect of success remained.

On this occasion, nevertheless—thanks to the zeal of some
of his flock, rather than his own power of wielding the thunderbolts
of Terror—Mr. Waldo gained three or four solitary
fish out of the threescore who were hauled up from the deeps
by the various nets. The Cimmerian rite of baptism had this
advantage, that it was not performed in public, and its solemnity
was not therefore disturbed by the presence of a crowd
of curious spectators, such as are especially wont to be on
hand when the water is cold. Mr. Waldo even disregarded
the peculiar form of initiation which characterized his sect,
affirming that it added no sanctity to the rite.

During the period of the revivals, there was a temporary
suspension of the social life of Ptolemy. Even kindred families
rarely assembled at tea except to discuss the absorbing
topic and compare the results obtained by the various churches.
There was a great demand for Baxter's “Saint's Rest,”
Alleine's “Alarm,” Young's “Night Thoughts,” and Pollok's
“Course of Time,” at the little bookstore. Two feathers disappeared
from the Sunday bonnet of Mrs. Hamilton Bue, and
the Misses Smith exchanged their red ribbons for slate-colored.
Still, it was not the habit of the little place to be sombre, its
gayety was never excessive, and hence its serious moods

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never assumed a penitential character, and soon wore off. In
this respect it presented a strong contrast to Mulligansville
and Anacreon, both of which communities retained a severe
and mournful expression for a long time after their revivals
had closed.

By this time the meadows were covered with young grass,
the willows hung in folds of misty color, and a double row of
daffodils bloomed in every garden. The spring ploughing and
all the other various forms of farm labor commenced in the
valleys, and on the warm, frostless hillsides. The roads were
again dry and hard; the little steamer resumed its trips on the
lake; and a new life not only stirred within the twin valleys,
but poured into them from without.

As the uniformity of winter life at Lakeside gave way to
the changes exacted by the season, Woodbury became dimly
sensible that Mrs. Fortitude Babb, with all her virtues as a
housekeeper, stood too prominently in the foreground of his
home. Her raw, angular nature came so near him, day by day,
as to be felt as a disturbing element. She looked upon her
dominion as reassured to her, and serenely continued the exercise
of her old privileges. While entertaining the profoundest
respect, not unmixed with a moderate degree of affection, for
her master, she resisted any attempt to interfere with the
regular course of household procedure which she had long
since established. He was still too ignorant, indeed, to dispute
her authority with any success, in-doors; but when the
gardening weather arrived, and she transferred her rule to the
open air, his patience was sometimes severely tried.

He knew, from his boyish days, every square foot in the
sunny plot of ground—the broad alley down the centre, with
flower-beds on either side, producing pinks, sweet-williams,
larkspurs, marigolds, and prince's-feathers, in their succession;
the clumps of roses at regular intervals; the low trellis, to be
overrun with nasturtiums and sweet-peas; the broad vegetable
beds, divided by rows of currant and gooseberry bushes,
and the crooked old quince-trees against the northern wall.

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There were they all, apparently unchanged; but, reverently
as he looked upon them for the sake of the Past, he felt that
if Lakeside was to be truly his home, its features must, to
some extent, be moulded by his own taste. The old arrangements
could not be retained, simply for the sake of the old
associations; the place must breathe an atmosphere of life,
not of death. In spite of the admirable situation of the house,
its surroundings had been much neglected, and the trained
eye of its master daily detected new capacities for beauty.

Nothing of all this, however, suggested itself to the ossified
brain of the housekeeper. In her eyes, Woodbury was but a
tenant of Mrs. Dennison, and that lady would cry down from
Paradise to forbid the position of her favorite plants and her
trees from being changed. Hence, Mrs. Babb was almost
petrified with astonishment, one warm morning, on Woodbury
saying to her, as they stood in the garden:

“I shall extend the garden, so as to take in another half-acre.
The ground must be first prepared, so it can scarcely
be done this spring; but, at least, this first row of currants
can be taken up and set beyond the second. The vegetables
will then be partly hidden from sight, and these beds can be
planted with flowers.”

“O, the land!” exclaimed the housekeeper. “Did a body
ever hear o' sich a thing! Where'll you get your currans for
pies, I'd like to know? They won't bear a mite if you take
'em up now. Besides, where am I to plant peas and early
beans, if you put flowers here?”

“There,” said Woodbury, pointing to the other end of the
garden.

“Why, I had 'em there last summer. Here, where these
cabbages was, is the right place. To my thinkin', there's
flowers enough, as it is. Not that I'd take any of 'em up:
she was always fond of 'em, and she was satisfied with my
fixin' of the garden. But there's them that thinks they knows
better. 'T'an't any too big as it was, and if you take off all
this here ground, we'll run out o' vegetables afore the

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summer's over. Then, I'll git the blame, all over the neighborhood.
People knows I 'tend to it.”

“Mrs. Babb,” said Woodbury, a little sternly, “I shall take
care that your reputation does not suffer. It is my intention
to engage an experienced gardener, who will take all this
work off your hands, for the future. But the improvements I
intend to make cannot be carried out immediately, and I must
ask you to superintend the planting, this spring. You shall
have sufficient ground for all the vegetables we need, and it
can make little difference to you where they grow.”

The housekeeper did not venture upon any further remonstrance,
but her heart was filled with gall and bitterness. She
could not deny to herself Woodbury's right to do what he
pleased with his own, but such innovations struck her as being
almost criminal. They opened the door to endless confusions,
which it distressed her to contemplate, and the end
whereof she could not foresee.

That evening, as Bute was shelling his seed-corn in the
kitchen, he noticed that her thin lips were a little more tightly
compressed than usual, while she plied her knitting-needles
with an energy that betrayed a serious disturbance of mind.
Bute gave himself no concern, however, well knowing that,
whatever it was, he should hear it in good time.

Mrs. Babb sighed in her usual wheezy manner, drawing up
and letting down her shoulders at the same time, and knit a
few minutes longer, with her eyes fixed on the kitchen clock.
At last she said: “Ah, yes, it's well she's gone.”

Bute looked up, but as she was still inspecting the clock, he
said nothing.

“I was afeard things couldn't stay as they was,” she again
remarked.

Bute picked up a fresh ear, and began grinding the buttend
with a cob, to loosen the grains.

“It's hard to see sich things a-comin' on, in a body's old
days,” groaned the housekeeper. This time her gaze was removed
from the clock, and fell grimly upon her adopted son.

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“What's the matter, Mother Forty?” he asked.

“Matter, Bute? I should think you'd ha' seen it, if you
was in the habit o' seein' furder than your nose. Things is
goin' to wrack, fast enough. He will have his way, no matter
how onreasonable it is.”

“Well, why shouldn't he? But as for bein' unreasonable,
I don't see it. He's gettin' the hang of farmin' matters amazin'ly,
and is goin' to let me do what I've been wantin' to,
these five year. Wait till we get the gewano, and phosphate,
and drainin' and deep ploughin', and you won't see such
another farm in the hull county.”

“Yes, and the garden all tore to pieces,” rejoined the housekeeper;
“if she could come out of her grave next year, she
won't know it ag'in. And me, that's tended to it this ever so
long, to have a strange man, that nobody knows, stuck over
my head!”

Bute bent his face over the ear of corn, to conceal a
malicious smile. He knew that all the housekeeper wanted,
was to “speak out her mind”—after which she would resign
herself to the inevitable. He accordingly made no further
reply, and commenced whistling, very softly, “Barbara
Allen,” a tune which of late seemed to harmonize with his
mood.

Woodbury, on his part, was conscious of a restless stirring
of the blood, for which his contact with the housekeeper was
in the least degree responsible. Her figure, nevertheless,
formed a hard, sharp, rocky background, against which was
projected, in double sweetness from the contrast, the soft outlines
of a younger form, glimmering indistinctly through a
mist which concealed the face.

He did not deceive himself. He saw that his apparent independence
was a belligerent condition, in which he could
never find adequate peace; but not for this reason—not from
any cool calculations of prudence—did he long to see the
household of Lakeside governed by its legitimate mistress.
If the long years of summer had made his heart apathetic or

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indifferent, it had not deadened his nature to the subtle magic
of spring. A more delicate languor than that of the tropics
crept over him in the balmy mornings; all sounds and odors
of the season fostered it, and new images began to obtrude
upon his sleeping as well as his waking dreams. He knew
the symptoms, and rejoiced over the reappearance of the old
disease. It was not now the fever of youth, ignorantly given
up to its own illusions. He could count the accelerated pulsations,
hold the visions steadily fast as they arose in his brain,
and analyze while he enjoyed them. Love and Experience
must now go hand in hand, and if an object presented itself,
the latter must approve while the former embraced.

Reviewing, in his mind, the women whom he knew, there
was not one, he confessed to himself, whom he would ever,
probably, be able to love. His acquaintances in New York
were bright, lively girls—the associates of his nieces—in some
of whom, no doubt, there was a firm basis of noble feminine
character. It could not be otherwise; yet the woman who
must share his seclusion, finding in him, principally, her
society, in his home her recreation, in his happiness her own,
could scarcely be found in that circle. Coming back to Ptolemy,
his survey was equally discouraging. He could never
overlook a lack of intellectual culture in his wife. Who possessed
that, unless, indeed, Hannah Thurston? She, he admitted,
had both exquisite taste and a degree of culture remarkable
for the opportunities she enjoyed; but a union with
her would be a perpetual torment. She, with her morbid
notions of right, seeing an unpardonable sin in every innocent
personal habit! What little she had observed of his external
life had evidently inspired her with a strong dislike of him;
how could she bear to know him as he was—to look over the
pages of his past life? His wife, he felt, must be allowed no
illusions. If she could not find enough of truth and manliness
in his heart to counterbalance past errors and present defects,
she should find no admittance there.

In spite of these unavailing reviews, one important result

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was attained. He would no longer, as heretofore, shrink from
the approach of love. From whatever quarter the guest
might come, the door should be found open, and the word
“Welcome,” woven of the evergreen leaves of immortal
longing, should greet the arrival.

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p713-182 CHAPTER XIV. CONTAINING CONVERSATIONS MORE IMPORTANT THAN THEY SEEM TO BE.

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One balmy afternoon, when the dandelions were beginning to
show their golden disks among the grass, Woodbury started on
foot for Ptolemy, intending to take tea with the Waldos, whom
he had not seen for a fortnight. Sauntering along the road,
at the foot of the eastern hill, with the dark, pine-fringed rocks
and the sparkling cascade on one hand, and the fresh, breathing
meadows on the other, he found himself, at last, at the
end of the lane leading to the Merryfield farm-house, and
paused, attracted by the roseate blush of a Judas-tree in the
garden. The comfortable building, with its barn and out-houses,
seemed to bask in happy warmth and peace, half-hidden
in a nest of fruit-trees just bursting into bloom. The
fences around them had been newly whitewashed, and gleamed
like snow against the leafing shrubbery. An invigorating
smell of earth came from the freshly-ploughed field to the south.
Every feature of the scene spoke of order, competence, and
pastoral contentment and repose.

In such a mood, he forgot the occasional tedium of the
farmer's talk, and the weak pretensions of his wife, and only
remembered that he had not seen them for some time. Turning
into the lane, he walked up to the house, where he was cordially
received by Mr. Merryfield. “Come in,” said the latter:
“Sarah's looking over seeds, or something of the kind, with
Miss Thurston, but she'll be down presently. You recollect
Mr. Dyce?” The last words were spoken as they entered the

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room, where the medium, with his sallow, unwholesome face,
sat at an open window, absorbed in the perusal of a thick
pamphlet. He rose and saluted Woodbury, though by no
means with cordiality.

“How delightful a home you have here, Mr. Merryfield,”
Woodbury said. “You need not wish to change places with
any one. An independent American farmer, with his affairs
in such complete order that the work almost goes on of itself,
from year to year, seems to me the most fortunate of
men.”

“Well—yes—I ought to be satisfied,” answered the host:
“I sometimes wish for a wider spere, but I suppose it's best
as it is.”

“Oh, be sure of that!” exclaimed Woodbury: “neither is
your sphere a narrow one, if it is rightly filled.”

“Nothing is best as it is,” growled Mr. Dyce, from the window,
at the same time; “private property, family, isolated
labor, are all wrong.”

Woodbury turned to the speaker, with a sudden doubt of
his sanity, but Mr. Merryfield was not in the least surprised.

“You know, Mr. Dyce,” said he, “that I can't go that far.
The human race may come to that in the course of time, as it
were, but I'm too old to begin.”

“Nobody is too old for the Truth,” rejoined the medium, so
insolently that Woodbury felt an itching desire to slap him in
the face,—“especially, when it's already demonstrated. Here's
the whole thing,” he continued, giving the pamphlet a whack
on the window-sill: “read it, and you'll find how much better
off we are without those selfish institutions, marriage and the
right to property.”

“What is it?” asked Woodbury.

“It's the annual report of the Perfectionists. They have a
community near Aqueanda, where their principles are put in
practice. Every thing is in common: labor is so divided that
no one feels the burden, yet all live comfortably. The children
are brought up all together, and so the drudgery of a family is

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avoided. Besides, love is not slavery, but freedom, and the
affections are true because they do not wear legal chains.”

“Good God! Is this true?” exclaimed Woodbury, turning
to Mr. Merryfield.

“I believe it is,” he answered. “I've read part of the report,
and there are queer things in it. Even if the doctrine is
right, I don't think mankind is fit for it yet. I shouldn't like,
even, to let everybody read that book: though, to be sure,
we might be much more outspoken than we are.”

“Read it,” said Mr. Dyce, thrusting the pamphlet into
Woodbury's hand. “It's unanswerable. If you are not
blinded by the lies and hypocrisies of Society, you will see
what the true life of Man should be. Society is the Fall, sir,
and we can restore the original paradise of Adam whenever
we choose to free ourselves from its tyranny.”

“No doubt, provided we are naturally sinless, like Adam,”
Woodbury could not help saying, as he took the pamphlet.
He had no scruples in receiving and reading it, for he was not
one of those delicate, effeminate minds, who are afraid to look
on error lest they may be infected. His principles were so
well-based that every shock only settled them the more firmly.
He had never preferred ignorance to unpleasant knowledge,
and all of the latter which he had gained had not touched the
sound manliness of his nature.

“We are!” cried Mr. Dyce, in answer to his remark.
“The doctrine of original sin is the basis of all the wrongs of
society. It is false. Human nature is pure in all its instincts,
and we distort it by our selfish laws. Our life is artificial and
unnatural. If we had no rights of property we should have
no theft: if we had no law of marriage we should have no licentiousness:
if we had no Governments, we should have no
war.”

Mr. Merryfield did not seem able to answer these declarations,
absurd as they were, and Woodbury kept silent, from
self-respect. The former, however, was stronger in his instincts
than in his powers of argument, and shrank, with a sense of

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painful repugnance, from a theory which he was unable to combat.
Mr. Dyce's prolonged visit was beginning to be disagreeable
to him. His ambition to be considered a prominent
reformer was his weak side, and his freely-offered hospitality
to the various apostles had given him a consideration which
misled him. His kindness had thus frequently been imposed
upon, but the secret fear of losing his place had prevented him,
hitherto, from defending himself.

Mr. Dyce, on the other hand, was one of those men who are
not easily shaken off. He led a desultory life, here and there,
through New York and the New England States, presiding at
spiritual sessions in the houses of the believers, among whom
he had acquired a certain amount of reputation as a medium.
Sometimes his performances were held in public (admittance
ten cents), in the smaller towns, and he earned enough in this
way to pay his necessary expenses. When he discovered a believing
family, in good circumstances, especially where the
table was well supplied, he would pitch his tent, for days, or
weeks, as circumstances favored. Such an oasis in the desert
of existence he had found at Mr. Merryfield's, and the discomfort
of the meek host at his prolonged stay, which would have
been sufficiently palpable to a man of the least delicacy of feeling,
was either unnoticed by him, or contemptuously ignored.

Woodbury read the man at a glance, and received, also, a
faint suspicion of Mr. Merryfield's impatience at his stay; but
he, himself, had little patience with the latter's absurdities, and
was quite content that he should endure the punishment he
had invoked.

Putting the pamphlet in his pocket, and turning to Mr. Dyce,
he said: “I shall read this, if only to find out the point at
which Progress becomes Reaction—where Moral Reform
shakes hands with Depravity.”

The medium's sallow face grew livid, at the firm coolness
with which these words were spoken. He half-started from his
seat, but sank back again, and turning his head to the window,
gave a contemptuous snort from his thin nostrils.

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“There is mischief in that man,” thought Woodbury.

Mr. Merryfield, in spite of his trepidation—for he was a
thorough physical coward, and the moral courage on which he
plumed himself was a sham article, principally composed of
vanity—nevertheless felt a sense of relief from Woodbury's
composed, indifferent air. Here, at least, was one man who
could meet the vampire unconcernedly, and drive, if need be,
a stake through his gorged carcass. For once, he regretted
that he did not possess a similar quality. It was almost resistance,
he was aware, and the man capable of it might probably
be guilty of the crime (as he considered it) of using physical
force; but he dimly recognized it in a refreshing element of
strength. He did not feel quite so helpless as usual in Woodbury's
presence, after that.

Still, he dreaded a continuance of the conversation. “Will
you come, as it were”—said he; “that is, would you like”—

Woodbury, who had turned his back upon Mr. Dyce, after
speaking, suddenly interrupted him with: “How do you do,
Mrs. Merryfield?”

The mistress of the house, passing through the hall, had
paused at the open door. Behind her came Hannah Thurston,
in her bonnet, with a satchel on her arm.

After the greetings were over, Mrs. Merryfield said: “We
were going into the garden.”

“Pray, allow me to accompany you,” said Woodbury.

“Oh, yes, if you care about flowers and things.”

The garden was laid out on the usual plan: a central alley,
bordered with flower-beds, vegetables beyond, and currants
planted along the fence. It lay open to the sun, sheltered by
a spur of the eastern ridge, and by the orchard to the left of the
house. In one corner stood a Judas-tree, every spray thickly
hung with the vivid rose-colored blossoms. The flowers were
farther advanced than at Lakeside, for the situation was much
lower and warmer, and there had been no late frosts. The
hyacinths reared their blue and pink pagodas, filling the walk
with their opulent breath; the thick green buds of the tulips

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began to show points of crimson, and the cushiony masses of
mountain-pink fell over the boarded edges of the beds.

Mrs. Merryfield had but small knowledge of floriculture. Her
beds were well kept, however, but from habit, rather than taste.
“My pineys won't do well, this year, I don't think,” said she:
“this joon-dispray rose is too near them. Here's plenty of
larkspurs and coreopsisses coming up, Hannah; don't you want
some?”

“Thank you, my garden is wild with them,” Miss Thurston
answered, “but I will take a few plants of the flame-colored
marigold, if you have them to spare.”

“Oh, that's trash; take them all, if you like.”

“Miss Thurston,” said Woodbury, suddenly, “would you
like to have some bulbs of gladeolus and tiger-lily? I have just
received a quantity from Rochester.”

“Very much indeed: you are very kind,” she said. “How
magnificent they are, in color!” The next moment, she was
vexed at herself for having accepted the offer, and said no
more.

Mrs. Merryfield, having found the marigolds, took up a
number and placed them in a basket, adding various other
plants of which she had a superfluity. As they left the garden,
Woodbury quietly took the basket, saying: “I am walking
to Ptolemy also, Miss Thurston.”

It was impossible to decline his company, though the
undefinable sense of unrest with which his presence always
affected her, made the prospect of the walk far from agreeable.
Side by side they passed down the lane, and had nearly gained
the highway, when Woodbury broke the silence by saying:

“What do you think of Mr. Dyce?”

Hannah Thurston was a little startled by the unexpected
question. “I have scarcely formed an opinion,” she answered:
“it may not be just to decide from impressions only. If I did
so, the decision would not be favorable to him.”

“You are right!” he exclaimed, with energy. “Do not
speak to him again! I beg pardon,” he added, apologetically,

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“I did not mean to be dictatorial; but the man is thoroughly
false and bad.”

“Do you know any thing of him?” she asked.

“Only what I have myself observed. I have learned to
trust my instincts, because I find that what we call instinct is
only a rapid and subtle faculty of observation. A man can
never completely disguise himself, and we therefore see him
most truly at the first glance, before his powers of deception
can be exercised upon us.”

“It may be true,” she said, as if speaking to herself, “but
one's prejudices are so arbitrary. How can we know that we
are right, in yielding to them?”

For a moment, a sharp retort hovered on Woodbury's
tongue. How can we know, he might have said, that we are
right in accepting views, the extreme character of which is
self-evident? How can we, occupying an exceptional place,
dare to pronounce rigid, unmitigated judgment on all the rest
of mankind? But the balmy spring day toned him to gentleness.
The old enchantment of female presence stole over him,
as when it surrounded each fair face with a nimbus, to the narcotized
vision of youth. One glance at his companion swept
away the harsh words. A tender gleam of color flushed her
cheeks, and the lines of her perfect lips were touched with a
pensive softness. Her eyes, fixed at the moment on the hill
beyond the farther valley, were almost as soft as a violet in hue.
He had never before seen her in the strong test of sunshine,
and remarked that for a face like hers it was no disenchantment.
She might be narrow and bigoted, he felt, but she was
nevertheless true, earnest, and pure.

“We are not required to exhibit our prejudices,” he said.
“In Society, disagreeable persons are still individuals, and
have certain claims upon us. But, after all the latitude we are
required to grant, a basis of character must be exacted. Do
you think a man consciously false and depraved should be tolerated
on account of a coincidence in opinions?”

“Certainly not,” she replied.

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Woodbury then related the incident of the piano. He began
to feel a friendly pity for the girl walking beside him.
Her intense earnestness, he saw, and her ignorance of the true
nature of men, were likely to betray her, as in the present case,
into associations, the thought of which made him shudder. He
would at least save her from this, and therefore told the story,
with an uncomfortable sense, all the while, of the pamphlet in
his pocket.

Hannah Thurston was unfeignedly shocked at the deception
of Mr. Dyce. “I am glad you have told me this,” said she,
“for I wanted a justification for avoiding him. Have you
mentioned it to the Merryfields?”

“No.”

“Why not?”

“In the first place, you know that they are too infatuated
with the spiritual delusion to believe it. He would have an
explanation ready, as he had that night. Moreover, it would
cost Bute, who gave me the details in confidence, the loss of
two friends. For his sake let it still be confidential.”

She met his deep brown eyes, and bowed in reply. He
plucked the stalk of a dandelion, as they went along, pinched
off the flower, split the lower end, and putting it into his
mouth, blew a tiny note, as from a fairy trumpet. His manner
was so serious that Hannah Thurston looked away lest he
should see her smile.

“You are laughing, I know,” said he, taking the stalk from
his mouth, “and no wonder. I suddenly recollected having
blown these horns, as a boy. It is enough to make one boyish,
to see spring again, for the first time in fifteen years. I
wonder if the willow switches are too dry. Henry Denison
and I used to make very tolerable flutes of them, but we never
could get more than four or five notes.”

“Then you value your early associations?” she asked.

“Beyond all others of my life, I think. Is it not pleasant,
to look back to a period when every thing was good, when all
men and women were infinitely wise and benevolent, when life

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took care of itself and the future was whatever you chose to
make it? Now, when I know the world—know it, Miss
Thurston”—and his voice was grave and sad—“to be far
worse than you, or any other pure woman suspects, and still
keep my faith in the Good that shall one day be triumphant,
I can smile at my young ignorance, but there is still a glory
around it. Do you know Wordsworth's Ode?”

“Yes—`the light that never was on sea or land.'”

“Never—until after it has gone by. We look back and see
it. Why, do you know that I looked on Mrs. Merryfield as a
Greek must have looked on the Delphian Pythoness?”

Hannah Thurston laughed, and then suddenly checked herself.
She could not see one of her co-workers in the Great
Cause ridiculed, even by intimation. The chord he had
touched ceased to vibrate. The ease with which he recovered
from a deeper tone and established conversation again in
mental shallows, annoyed her all the more, that it gratified
some latent instinct of her own mind. She distrusted the
influence which, in spite of herself, Woodbury exercised upon
her.

“I see your eyes wander off to the hills,” he said, after an
interval of silence. “They are very lovely to-day. In this
spring haze the West Ridge appears to be as high as the
Jura. How it melts into the air, far up the valley! The
effect of mountains, I think, depends more on atmosphere
than on their actual height. You could imagine this valley to
be one of the lower entrances to the Alps. By the way, Miss
Thurston, this must have given you a suggestion of them.
How did you manage to get such a correct picture in your
mind?”

She turned her surprised face full towards him. The
dreamy expression which softened its outline, and hovered
in the luminous depth of her eyes, did not escape him.

“Oh, I know it,” he added, laughing. “What was the
song you sang at Mr. Bue's? Something about an Alpine
hunter: it made me think I was standing on the

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Scheideck, watching the avalanches tumbling down from the Jungfrau.”

“You have been in Switzerland, Mr. Woodbury!” she
exclaimed, with animation.

“Yes, on my way from England to India.”

He described to her his Swiss tour, inspired to prolong the
narrative by the eager interest she exhibited. The landscapes
of the higher Alps stood clear in his memory, and he had the
faculty of translating them distinctly into words. Commencing
with the valley of the Reuss, he took her with him over
the passes of the Furca and the Grimsel, and had only reached
the falls of the Aar, when the gate of the Widow Thurston's
cottage shut down upon the Alpine trail.

“We will finish the trip another time,” said Woodbury, as
he opened the gate for her.

“How much I thank you! I seem to have been in Switzerland,
myself. I think I shall be able to sing the song better,
from knowing its scenery.”

She offered him her hand, which he pressed cordially. “I
should like to call upon your mother again,” he said.

“She will be very glad to see you.”

As he walked down the street towards the Cimmerian parsonage,
his thoughts ran somewhat in this wise: “How much
natural poetry and enthusiasm that girl has in her nature! It
is refreshing to describe any thing to her, she is so absorbed in
receiving it. What a splendid creature she might have become,
under other circumstances! But here she is hopelessly
warped and distorted. Nature intended her for a woman and
a wife, and the rôle of a man and an apostle is a monstrous perversion.
I do not know whether she most attracts me through
what she might have been, or repels me through what she is.
She suggests the woman I am seeking, only to show me how
vain the search must be. I am afraid I shall have to give it up.”

Pursuing these reflections, he was about passing the parsonage
without recognizing it, when a cheery voice rang out to
him from the open door:

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“Have you lost the way, Mr. Woodbury?”

“`Not lost, but gone before,'” said he, as he turned back
to the gate.

“What profanity!” exclaimed Mrs. Waldo, though she
laughed at the same time. “Come in: our serious season is
over. I suppose I ought to keep a melancholy face, for two
weeks longer, to encourage the new converts, but what is one
to do, when one's nature is dead against it?”

“Ah, Mrs. Waldo,” replied Woodbury, “if you suffered
under your faith, instead of rejoicing in it, I should doubt your
Christianity. I look upon myself as one of your converts.”

“I am afraid you are given to backsliding.”

“Only for the pleasure of being reconverted,” said he; “but
come—be my mother-confessoress. I am in great doubt and
perplexity.”

“And you come to a woman for help? Delightful!”

“Even so. Do you remember what you said to me, when
I picked you up out of the wreck, last winter? But I see you
do not. Mrs. Fortitude Babb is a tyrant.”

Mrs. Waldo was not deceived by this mock lamentation.
He would not first have felt the tyranny now, she knew, unless
a stronger feeling made it irksome.

“Ah ha! you have found it out,” she said. “Well—you
know the remedy.”

“Yes, I know it; but what I do not know is—the woman
who should take her place.”

“Don't you?” said Mrs. Waldo, with a sigh, “then, of
course, I do not.”

“I walked from Merryfield's, this afternoon, with Hannah
Thurston,” he presently remarked.

“Well?” she asked eagerly.

“What a perversion of a fine woman! I lose my temper
when I think of it. I came very near being rude to her.”

You rude?” exclaimed Mrs. Waldo, “then she must have
provoked you beyond endurance.”

“Not by any thing she said, but simply by what she is.”

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“What, pray?”

“A `strong-minded woman.' Heaven keep me from all
such! I have will enough for two, and my household shall
never have more than one head.”

“That's sound doctrine,” said Mr. Waldo, hearing the last
words as he entered the room.

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p713-194 CHAPTER XV. WHICH COMES NEAR BEING TRAGIC.

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In the beginning of June, the Merryfields received additional
guests. Among their acquaintances in New York
city were Mr. and Mrs. Whitlow, whom they had met during
the Annual Convention of the Anti-Slavery Society. Mr.
Whitlow was a prosperous grocer, who had profited by selling
“free sugar” at two cents a pound more than the product of
slave labor, although the former was an inferior article. He
was very bitter in his condemnation of the Manchester manufacturers,
on account of their consumption of cotton. The
Merryfields had been present at a tea-party given by him to
Mr. Wendell Phillips, and the circumstance was not forgotten
by their hosts. When the latter shut up their house in the
respectable upper part of Mercer street, in order to make a
summer trip to Lake Superior by way of Niagara, they determined
to claim a return for their hospitality. Tea in Mercer
street was equivalent, in their eyes, to a week's entertainment
at Ptolemy. If not, they could invite the Merryfields again,
at the next Convention, which would certainly balance the
account.

Accordingly, one fine evening, the stage from Atauga City
brought to Ptolemy, and a carriage from Fairlamb's livery-stable
forwarded to the Merryfield farm, Mr. and Mrs. Whitlow,
and their two daughters, Mary Wollstonecraft Whitlow,
aged thirteen, and Phillis Wheatley Whitlow, aged nine—
together with four trunks. The good-natured host was
overwhelmed with this large and unexpected visit, and feebly
endeavored to obtain a signal from his wife as to whether they

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could be conveniently accommodated, during the bustle of
arrival.

“If I had knowed, as it were, that you were coming,”
said he.

“Oh, we thought we would take you by surprise: it's so
much pleasanter,” exclaimed Mrs. Whitlow, a tall, gaunt
woman, who displayed a pair of large feet as she clambered
down from the carriage. She thereupon saluted Mrs. Merryfield
with a kiss which sounded like the splitting of a
dry chip.

Mary Wollstonecraft and Phillis Wheatley scampered off
around the house and into the garden as soon as they touched
ground. They amused themselves at first by pulling up the
early radishes, to see how long their roots were, but after a
while were attracted by the tulips, and returned to the house
with handfuls of the finest.

“Where did you get those?” said their mother; “I am
afraid they have taken too many,” she added, turning towards
Mrs. Merryfield, “but the dear children are so fond of flowers.
I think it elevates them and helps to form their character.
The Beautiful and the Good, you know, are one and the same.”

“Yes, but it ought to be directed,” replied Mrs. Merryfield,
without exactly knowing what she was saying. She saw, in
imagination, her garden stripped bare, and was meditating
how she could prevent it. Her husband put a padlock on the
gate next morning, and in the course of the forenoon Phillis
Wheatley was discovered hanging by her frock from the
paling.

There was no help for it. The Whitlows had come to stay,
and they stayed. Mr. Dyce was obliged to give up his occupancy
of the best bedroom, and take a small chamber under
the roof. Merryfield hoped, but in vain, that this new discomfort
would drive him away. The new-comers were acquaintances
of his, and although not spiritualists, yet they were
very free to discuss the peculiar doctrines of the Aqueanda
community.

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Day by day, Mrs. Merryfield saw her choice hams and her
cherished fowls disappearing before the onslaught of her
guests. Her reserve of jams and marmalades was so drawn
upon that she foresaw its exhaustion before the summer's fruit
could enable her to replenish it. Mary Wollstonecraft and
Phillis Wheatley were especially destructive, in this respect,
and very frankly raised a clamor for “preserves,” when there
happened to be none on the table. Their mother mildly tolerated
this infraction of good behavior on their part.

“They make themselves at home,” she would remark, turning
to the hostess with an amiable smile. “I think we should
allow some liberty to the dietetic instincts of children. Alcott
says, you know, that `like feeds like—the unclean spirit licks
carnage and blood from his trencher.'”

“Gracious me!” exclaimed Mrs. Merryfield, shuddering.

“Yes: and in the scale of Correspondences saccharine substances
are connected with gentleness of heart. I rejoice to
see this development in the dear children. Do you preserve
with free sugar?”

“No,” replied the hostess, with a faint salmon-colored blush,
“we can't get it in Ptolemy. I should like to bear testimony
in this way, if it was possible, but there are so few in this
neighborhood who are interested in the cause of Humanity,
that we cannot do as much as we desire.”

“Why don't you apply to me?” said Mr. Whitlow. “Nothing
easier than to buy two or three barrels at a time, and
have it sent by rail. It will cost you no more than this”—
putting a spoonful of quince jelly into his mouth—“which is
stained with the blood of the slave.” He said nothing, however,
about the quality of the sugar, which was a very coarse,
brown article, purporting to come from Port-au-Prince.

Fortunately, Mr. Merryfield's corn had been planted before
the arrival of his guests. Otherwise, there would have been a
serious interference with his farming operations. Every
pleasant afternoon, the Whitlows laid claim to his carriage and
horses, and, accepting the services of Mr. Dyce as coachman,

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drove up and down the valleys, and even to the summits of
the hills, to obtain the best views. The very freedom with
which they appropriated to their use and comfort all the appliances
which the farm furnished, imposed upon their kindhearted
hosts. In the eyes of the latter, claims so openly
made involved the existence of a right of some kind, though
precisely what the right was, they could not clearly understand.

When Mrs. Whitlow, therefore, whose devotion to “Nature”
was one of her expressed characteristics, proposed a
pic-nic for the following Saturday afternoon, it was accepted
without demur, as one of the ordinances of Destiny. The
weather had suddenly grown warm, and the deciduous trees
burst into splendid foliage, the luxuriant leaves of summer still
wearing the fresh green of spring-time. All the lower portion
of the valley, and its cleft branches beyond Ptolemy, from
rim to rim of the enclosing hills, hummed and stirred with
an overplus of life. The woods were loud with birds; a tiny
overture of insect horns and drums, in the meadows, preluded
the drama of their ephemeral life; the canes of maize shot the
brown fields with points of shining green, and the wheat began
to roll in shallow ripples under the winds of the lake.
Mrs. Whitlow's proposal was well-timed, in a land where the
beautiful festival of Pentecost is unknown, and it did the
Merryfields no harm that they were forced, against their habit,
to celebrate the opening season.

Not more than a mile from the farm-house there was a spot
admirably adapted for the purpose. It was a favorite resort,
during the summer, of the young gentlemen and ladies of
Ptolemy, and sometimes, even, had been honored by the visit
of a party from Tiberius. Roaring Brook, which had its rise
some miles distant, among the hollows of the upland, issued
from a long glen which cleft East Atauga Hill at the point
where it bent away from the head of the lake, to make its
wider sweep around to the cape beyond Lakeside. At this
point there was a slightly shelving terrace, a quarter of a mile

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in breadth, thrust out like the corner of a pedestal upon which
the hill had formerly rested. The stream, after lending a part
of its strength to drive a saw-mill at the mouth of the glen,
passed swiftly across the terrace, twisting its way through
broken, rocky ground, to the farther edge, whence it tumbled
in a cataract to the valley. The wall of rock was crowned
with a thick growth of pine, cedar, maple, and aspen trees, and
the stream, for the last hundred yards of its course, slid
through deep, cool shadows, to flash all the more dazzlingly
into the sunshine of its fall. From the brink there were lovely
views of the valley and lake; and even within the grove, as
far as a flat rock, which served as a table for the gay parties,
penetrated glimpses of the airy distance.

The other members of the little band of “Reformers” in
Ptolemy were invited to take part in the pic-nic. The Whitlows
desired and expected this, and would have considered
themselves slighted, had the invitations been omitted. Mrs.
Waldo was included, at the request of Hannah Thurston, who
knew her need of recreation and her enjoyment of it. Besides,
she was sure that Mr. Dyce would be there, and suspected
the presence of Seth Wattles, and she felt the advantage
of being accompanied by a brave and sensible friend.
Mr. Waldo was obliged to attend a meeting of the Trustees
of the Cimmerian Church, and so the two women, taking possession
of his phlegmatic horse and superannuated gig, started
early in the afternoon for the appointed spot. Before reaching
the gate to the farm-house, they overtook Seth Wattles and
Mr. Tanner, on foot, the latter carrying his flute in his hand.
He was celebrated throughout the neighborhood for his performance
of “Love Not” and “The Pirate's Serenade,” on
that instrument.

The spot was reached by following the highway, past the
foot of Roaring Brook cataract, and then taking a side-road
which led across the embaying curve of the valley and, ascended
to the saw-mill at the mouth of the glen. Some of the
party had gone directly across the fields from the Merryfield

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farm-house, as there was one point in the rocky front of the
terrace where an ascent was practicable without danger. Thus
they nearly all met in the grove at the same time.

The day was warm and still, oppressively sultry in the sunshine,
but there, under the trees and beside the mossy rocks,
the swift brook seemed to bring a fresh atmosphere with it,
out of the heart of the hills. A light wind, imperceptible elsewhere,
softly rustled among the aspen-leaves, and sighed off
from the outer pine-boughs into the silence of the air. The
stream, swollen by late rains, yet cleansed of their stain, ran
deep and strong, curving like bent glass over the worn rocks
in its bed, with a suppressed noise, as if hoarding its shout for
the leap from the cliff. The shade was sprinkled with patches
of intense golden light, where the sun leaked through, and the
spirit of the place seemed to say, in every feature, “I wait
for color and life.” Both were soon given. The Whitlow
children, in pink frocks, scampered here and there; Mrs.
Waldo's knot of crimson ribbon took its place, like a fiery tropical
blossom, among the green; Mrs. Merryfield hung her
orange-colored crape shawl on a bough; and even Seth's ungainly
figure derived some consistency from a cravat of skyblue
satin, the ends of which hung over his breast. Mr. Tanner
screwed together the pieces of his flute, wet his lips several
times with his tongue, and played, loud and shrill, the “Macgregor's
Gathering.”

“The moon's on the lake and the mist's on the brae,”

sang Hannah Thurston to herself, as she stood on the edge of
the stream, a little distance from the others. The smell of the
moss, and of the woolly tufts of unrolling ferns, powerfully excited
and warmed her imagination. She was never heard to
say, in such a spot, like many young ladies, “How romantic!”
but her eyes seemed to grow larger and darker, her pale cheek
glowed without an increase of color, and her voice was thrilled
with an indescribable mixture of firmness and sweetness. This
was her first true enjoyment of the summer. The anxiety

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occasioned by her mother's failing health, the reawakening of
dreams she had once conquered, the painful sense of incompleteness
in her own aspirations, and the growing knowledge
of unworthiness in others, which revealed more clearly her
spiritual isolation, were all forgotten. She bathed her soul in
the splendor of summer, and whatever pain remained was not
distinguishable from that which always dwells in the heart of
joy.

As she reached the line:

“O'er the peak of Ben Lomond the galley shall steer,”

a coarse bass voice behind her joined in the song. She turned
and beheld Seth Wattles and Dyce, seated on a rock. They
had been listening, and might have heard her to the end, had
not the former been too anxious to display his accomplishments.
Her repugnance to both the men had unconsciously
increased, and she could no longer resist the impulse which
prompted her to avoid them. Mary Wollstonecraft was fortunately
at hand, in the act of chewing fern-stems, and Hannah
Thurston, unacquainted with the young lady's “dietetic instincts,”
seized her arm in some alarm and conducted her to
her mother.

“Let go!” cried the girl; “mamma lets me eat what I
please.”

“But, my dear,” mildly expostulated the mother, “these
are strange plants, and they might not agree with you.”

“I don't care; they're good,” was the amiable reply.

“Would you not rather have a cake?” said Mrs. Waldo,
coming to the rescue. “I have some in my basket, and will
bring you one, if you will not put those stems in your mouth.”

“I was playing cow, but I'll stop if you'll bring me two.”

Mrs. Waldo took her way towards the old gig, which was
left, with the other vehicles, at the edge of the grove. As she
emerged from the shade, and looked up towards the saw-mill,
where the sawyer, in his shirt-sleeves, was tilting about over
a pile of scantling, she saw a horseman coming down the glen

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road. Something in his appearance caused her to stop and
scan him more closely. At the same instant he perceived her,
turned his horse out of the road, and cantered lightly up to
the grove.

“You here!” he exclaimed; “is it a camp-meeting?”

“You there, Mr. Woodbury! Where have you been?
Are you to monopolize all the secular enjoyments? No; it is
a pic-nic, small, but select, though I say it.”

“Ah! who are here?” he asked, leaning forward on his
horse and peering into the shade—“My God!”

Mrs. Waldo, watching his countenance with merry eyes, saw
a flush of horror, quick as lightning, pass over it. With one
bound he was off the horse, which sprang away startled, and
trotted back towards the road. The next instant she saw him
plunge headlong into the stream.

Phillis Wheatley, in whom the climbing propensity was at
its height, had caught sight of a bunch of wild scarlet columbine,
near the top of a rock, around which the stream turned.
Scrambling up the sloping side, she reached down for the
flowers, which were still inaccessible, yet so near as to be tantalizing.
She then lay down on her face, and, stretching her
arm, seized the bunch, at which she jerked with all her force.
The roots, grappling fast in the crevices of the rock, did not
give way as she expected. On the contrary, the resistance of
the plant destroyed her own balance, and she whirled over
into the water.

Woodbury saw her dangerous position on the rock, at the
very moment the catastrophe occurred. With an instant intuition,
he perceived that the nearest point of the stream was a
bend a little below; a few bounds brought him to the bank,
in time to plunge in and catch the pink frock as it was swept
down the swift current. He had no time to think or calculate
chances. The stream, although not more than four or five
feet deep and twenty in breadth, bore him along with such
force that he found it impossible to gain his feet. At the last
turn where the current sheered toward the opposite bank, a

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shrub hung over the water. His eye caught it, and, half
springing up as he dashed along, he seized it with one hand.
The momentary support enabled him to resist the current sufficiently
to get his feet on the bottom, but they could gain no
hold on the slippery rock. As he slipped and caught alternately,
in a desperate struggle, Phillis, struggling blindly with
him, managed to get her arms around his neck. Thin as they
were, they seemed to have the mascular power of snakes, and,
in his hampered condition, he found it impossible to loosen
her hold. The branch of the shrub gave way, and the resistless
current once more bore them down.

Mrs. Waldo's fearful shriek rang through the grove, and
startled the light-hearted company from their discussion of the
evils of Society. Every one felt that something dreadful had
happened, and rushed towards the sound in helpless and uncertain
terror. She was already on the bank of the stream,
her hair torn by the branches through which she had plunged,
and her face deadly pale, as she pointed to the water, gasping,
“Help!” One glance told the whole story. Mrs. Whitlow
covered her face and dropped on the ground. Merryfield
and the father ran down the bank, stretching out their
hands with a faint hope of catching the two as the current
brought them along. Hannah Thurston looked around in a
desperate search for some means of help, and caught sight of a
board which had been placed across two low rocks, for a seat
“The board—quick!” she cried, to Seth and Dyce, who stood
as if paralyzed—“at the head of the fall!” Mechanically, but
as rapidly as possible, they obeyed her.

Woodbury, after letting go his hold of the shrub, turned
his face with the stream, to spy, in advance, some new point
of escape. He saw, a hundred feet ahead, the sharp edge of
silver where the sun played on the top of the fall: the sudden
turns of the stream were all behind him, and it now curved
gradually to the right, slightly widening as it approached the
brink. His perceptions, acting with the rapidity of lightning,
told him that he must either gain the left bank before making

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half the remaining distance, or keep in the middle of the current,
and trust to the chance of grasping a rock which rose a
little above the water, a few feet in advance of the fall. He
was an experienced swimmer, but a few strokes convinced
him that the first plan would not succeed. Before reaching
the rock the water grew deeper, and the current whirled in
strong eddies, which would give him some little power to direct
his course. In a second they seethed around him, and,
though the bottom fell away from under his feet, he felt a sudden
support from the back water from the rock. One tremendous
effort and he reached it.

To the agonized spectators on the bank, the scene was terrible.
Unable to avert their eyes from the two lives sweeping
like a flash to destruction—feeling, instinctively, that there
was no instantaneous power of action which could save—they
uttered low, incoherent cries, too benumbed to speak or think.
Only Seth and Dyce, who had conveyed the board to the head
of the fall, were hurriedly endeavoring to thrust it out over
the water. In their excitement they had placed it too low to
reach the rock.

“Bring it further up!” shouted Mr. Whitlow.

Seth, nervously attempting to slide it up the bank, allowed
the outer end to drop into the current. It was instantly twisted
out of his hands and whirled over the fall.

Woodbury had gained a firm hold of the rock, but the
water was up to his shoulders, the conflicting currents tugged
him this way and that, and he was unable to clasp his charge
securely. Her arms were still tight about his neck, but if her
strength should give way, their situation would become critical.
He saw the effort made for their rescue, and its failure.

“Another board!” he shouted.

Seth and Dyce darted through the grove in search of one,
while Merryfield, more practical, made off with his utmost
speed for the saw-mill. Hannah Thurston, in spite of her relief
at the escape, recognized the danger which still impended.
A single glance showed her the difficulty under which

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Woodbury labored, and a sickening anxiety again overcame her.
To stand still was impossible; but what could she do? On a
stump near her lay a fragment of board about four feet in
length. The distance from the bank to the rock was at least
twelve. Another glance at the rapid current, and an idea,
which, it seemed to her afterwards, some passing angel must
have let fall, flashed through her brain. Snatching her silk
summer-shawl from the bough where it hung, she tied one end
of it tightly around the middle of the board, drawing it to a
firm knot on the edge. Mrs. Waldo was no less quick in comprehending
what she intended. By the time the knot was tied,
her own and Mrs. Merryfield's shawls were brought and quickly
fastened, one to another. By this means a length considerably
greater than the breadth of the stream was obtained.

“One thing more,” said Hannah Thurston, breathlessly, as
she took the scarf from her neck. Knotting one end and
drawing the other through, so as to form a running noose, she
fastened it to her shawl, near the board. Her plan came to
her in a complete form, and hence there was no delay in putting
it into execution. Taking her stand on a point of the
bank, some feet above the rock where Woodbury clung, she
gathered the shawls in loose links and held the board ready to
throw. Woodbury, whose position was such that he could
see her movements without risking his hold, now called to her:

“As far as you can throw!”

Mrs. Waldo had followed to the bank, and stood behind
Hannah Thurston, grasping a handful of her dress, lest she,
too, should lose her balance. But excitement gave Hannah
firmness of nerve, when other women trembled. She flung the
board with a steady hand, throwing the weight of the shawls,
as much as possible, with it. It fell beyond the centre of the
current, whirled around once or twice upon an eddy, and was
sheering back towards the bank again, when Woodbury,
whispering to Phillis, “Hold fast, darling!” put out one hand
and caught it. With some difficulty, and with more risk to
himself than the two anxious women on the bank were aware

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of, he drew the wet, sticky slip-noose of the scarf over Phillis's
head and one arm, bringing it under her elbow before he could
loosen her hold upon his neck. Thrusting the board under this
arm, it was an easier task to disengage the other.

“Wind the end of the shawl around that sapling beside
you!” he called to Hannah Thurston. “One of you go below
to meet her.”

Mrs. Waldo was on the spot before his words were finished.

“Now, hold fast, my little girl, and you will be safe in a
minute. Ready!” he cried.

Phillis obeyed, rather through blind trust in him, than from
her consciousness of what was going on. The poor creature
was chilled and exhausted, half strangled by the water she had
swallowed, and wild with terror. Her arms having once been
loosened, she clasped them again around the board in a last
convulsive effort of strength. Woodbury let go the frail raft,
which, impelled by the dragging weight of the shawls, darted
at once half-way across the stream. Then it began to move
more slowly, and the force of the current seemed to ingulf it.
For a moment the water rushed over the child's head, but her
dress was already within reach of Mrs. Waldo's hand, and she
was drawn upon the bank, gasping and nearly insensible. Mrs.
Merryfield picked her up and carried her to the mother, who
still lay upon the ground, with her face in her hands.

Woodbury, relieved of his burden, now held his position
with less difficulty. The coldness of the water, not yet tempered
by the few days of summer, nevertheless, began to be
numb him, and he was obliged to struggle against a growing
exhaustion. Hannah Thurston, as soon as the child was
rescued, drew in the board, examined the knots of the shawls,
and gathered them together for another throw; but at the
same instant Mr. Merryfield, out of breath and unable to speak,
appeared with a plank on his shoulder. With the aid of the
others, the end was secured between two trees, and it was
then run out above the water, a little below the rock, where
the stream was shallower. Woodbury cautiously slid down,

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gained a firm foothold, and slowly crossed, walking sidewise,
supported by the plank. As he neared the bank, he stretched
out his left hand, which was grasped by Merryfield, who drew
so tremendously that he almost lost his footing at the last
moment. As he felt the dry earth under him, a singular
numbness fell upon him. He saw, as in a dream, Mrs. Waldo
and Hannah Thurston; the former streaming with grateful
tears, the latter pale and glad, with a moist light in her eyes.
He sat down upon the nearest rock, chilled to the bone; his
lips were blue and his teeth chattered.

“It is cold bathing,” said he: “have you any wine?”

“We do not use intoxicating beverages,” said Mr. Whitlow,
who could not forget, even in his gratitude for his daughter's
rescue, the necessity of bearing testimony against popular vices.

Mrs. Waldo, however, hastily left the company. Mr.
Merryfield took off his coat, and having removed Woodbury's
with some little trouble, substituted it. The dry warmth began
to revive him. “Where is my new acquaintance?” he asked.

Mrs. Whitlow, after an hysterical outburst of alternate
laughter and tears, had wrapped Phillis Wheatley in the
only remaining dry shawl and given her a saucer of marmalade;
but the child was still too much frightened to eat.
Her father brought her in his arms and set her down before
Woodbury. “There, Phillis,” said he, and his voice trembled
a little, “you must thank the gentleman for saving your life.”

“Thank you for saving my life!” said Phillis, in a rueful
voice.

“Not me,” said Woodbury, rising slowly and wearily, and
turning towards Hannah, “but Miss Thurston. Your coolness
and presence of mind saved both of us.”

He took her hand. His fingers were as cold as ice, yet a
warmth she never before felt streamed from them through her
whole frame.

Mrs. Waldo suddenly made her appearance, as breathless as
before Mr. Merryfield had been, with the plank on his shoulder.
She carried in her hand a tumbler full of a yellowish liquid.

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“There,” she panted, “drink it. Thankful am I that there
are still sinners in the world. The sawyer had a black jug.
It's poisonous stuff, I know—leads to the gates of death, and
all that—but I thanked God when I saw it.”

“Good Samaritan!” exclaimed Woodbury fervently, as he
drank. It was, in truth, the vilest form of whiskey, but it
steadied his teeth and thawed his frozen blood.

“Now for my horse and a gallop home!” he said.

“Where is the horse?” they asked.

“I'll get him,” exclaimed Seth, with alacrity.

“Hadn't you better go up to Jones's, as it were,” said
Merryfield “He's stopped the saw-mill, and run to the house
to get a fire kindled. You can dry yourself first, and Sarah
can make you some tea or coffee.”

Jones made his appearance at almost the same instant.
“I ketched y'r horse, Mr. Maxwood,” said he, running the
names together in his excitement. “He's all right. Come up
t' th' house: Mary Jane's made a rousin' fire, and you kin
dry y'rself.”

“Thank you, my friends,” Woodbury answered. “Your
whiskey has done me great service, Mr. Jones, and what I now
want more than any thing else is a little lively motion. Will
you please lend Mr. Merryfield one of your coats, since he has
kindly given me his? I shall ride over and see you to-morrow;
but now let me get to my horse as soon as possible.”

He put his hand on the sawyer's shoulder, to steady himself,
for his steps were still tottering, and was turning away,
when he perceived his wet coat, spread out on a rock. Picking
it up, he took a note-book and some pulpy letters from the
breast-pocket. After examining the latter, he crushed them
in his hand, and tossed them into the stream. He then felt
the deep side-pockets: in one there was a wet handkerchief,
but on reaching the other he dropped the coat.

“There, Mr. Dyce,” said he, “you will find your pamphlet.
I had it in my pocket, intending to leave it with Mr. Merryfield
this afternoon. It is pretty thoroughly soaked by this

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time, but all the waters of Roaring Brook could not wash it
clean.”

Nodding a cheerful good-by to Mrs. Waldo, a respectful
one to Hannah Thurston, and giving Phillis a kiss which left
her staring at him in open-mouthed astonishment, he left the
company. The sawyer, with a rough tenderness, insisted on
keeping his arm around Woodbury's waist, and on reaching
the mill produced the black jug, from which it was impossible
to escape without a mild libation. Woodbury repaid it the
next day with a bottle of smoky “Islay,” the remembrance of
which made Jones's mouth water for years afterwards.

The pic-nic, of course, was at an end. Without unpacking
the refreshments, the party made immediate preparations to
return. The fire Mrs. Jones had kindled was employed to dry
Phillis and the shawls, while the gentlemen harnessed the
horses. Mr. Merryfield went about in the sawyer's Sunday
coat, which had been first made for his wedding, sixteen years
before. It was blue, with brass buttons, a high rolling collar,
very short waist, and tails of extraordinary length. No one
laughed, however, except Mary Wollstonecraft.

In spite of the accident, which left an awed and subdued
impression upon all minds, the ride home was very animated.
Each was anxious to describe his or her feelings, but Mrs.
Whitlow was tacitly allowed to play the chief part.

“You were all running here and there,” said she, “and the
movement was some relief. What I suffered, no tongue can
describe. But I am reconciled to it now. I see in it a
mysterious sign that Phillis Wheatley is to have an important
mission in the world, and my duty is to prepare her
for it.”

Fortunately, no injury resulted to the girl thus mysteriously
commissioned, from the manner in which it was done. She
was obliged, very much against her will, to lie down for the
rest of the day; but the next morning she was discovered in
the stable, pulling the tail-feathers out of an old cock she had
caught.

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On Monday, the Wintlows took their departure for Niagara,
greatly to the relief of their hosts. As they do not appear
again in the course of this history, we may hope that the remainder
of their journey was agreeable.

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p713-210 CHAPTER XVI. CONCERNING AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY TO TIBERIUS.

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Two days after the departure of the Whitlows, Mr. Dyce,
during breakfast, announced his intention of leaving Ptolemy.
“I have promised to visit the Community,” said he, “and it is
now a pleasant time to be there. Could you lend me your
horse and carriage as far as Tiberius, Merryfield?”

“Not to-day, I guess,” said the farmer; “I must go to
Mulligansville this afternoon, to see about buying another cow,
and Henry has the hill-field to hoe. You could take Jinny and
the carriage, but how would I get them back again?”

“I will go,” said his wife, with an unusual eagerness. “I
must go there soon, any way. I've things to buy, you know,
James, and there's Mrs. Nevins that I've been owing a visit
to, this ever so long.”

“Well, if you want to, Sarah,” he answered, “I've nothing
against it. Are you sure it won't be too much for you? You
know you've been having extra work, and you're not strong.”

Mrs. Merryfield drew up the corners of her mouth, and gave
a spasmodic sob. “Yes, I know I am the weaker vessel,” she
wailed, “and my own judgment don't pass for any thing.”

“Sarah, Sarah, don't be foolish!” said her husband; “you
know I never interfere unreasonably with your ways. You
can do as you please. I spoke for your own good, and you
needn't cry about it.”

He rose with an impatient air, and left the table. He could
not but admit to himself, sometimes, that the happiness of his
married life had not increased in proportion to his progress in

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the knowledge of Reform. When he looked back and recalled
the lively, rosy young woman, with her first nuptial bashfulness
and air of dependence on her husband fresh about her,
whom he had brought to the farm-house twenty-five years
before, when they lived in utter ignorance of dietetic laws and
solemn duties towards the Human Race, he could not repress
a feeling of pain. The sallow, fretful woman, who now considered
her years of confiding love as a period of servitude,
which she strove to balance by claiming more than an equal
share in the direction of the household, was another (and less
agreeable) creature, in comparison with her former self. Of
late, she had grown more than usually irritable and unsatisfied,
and, although he had kindly ascribed the fact to housekeeping
perplexities, his patience was sorely tried. There was no
remedy but endurance, so far as he could see. It was impossible,
now, to change his convictions in regard to woman's
rights, and he was too sincere to allow the practice of his life
to be inconsistent with them.

When he returned at noon from a distant field, where he had
been engaged all the morning, he was surprised to find the
carriage still at home, although his man Henry was engaged
in greasing the hubs of the wheels. “Why, Sarah,” said he,
as he sat down to dinner, “I thought you would have been
off.”

“I couldn't get ready,” she answered, rather sullenly. “But
I need not come back to-night. It will be better for Jinny,
anyhow.”

Mr. Dyce was unusually talkative on the subject of the Community,
the charms of which he painted in the liveliest colors.
His host was tired of the subject, but listened with an air of
tolerance, as he was so soon to get rid of the speaker.

Bidding the latter good-by, immediately after dinner, he
saddled his horse and rode to Mulligansville. The new cow
met his requirements, and a bargain was soon concluded. She
was to be brought to the farm next day, when the price agreed
upon would be paid. Mr. Merryfield had adopted the sensible

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rule of defraying all such expenses as they arose. Hence his
crops were never mortgaged in advance, and by waiting until
they could be sold to the best advantage, he prospered from
year to year.

When he reached home again, it was nearly four o'clock.
Putting up his horse, he entered the house and went directly
to the old-fashioned mixture of book-case, writing-desk, and
chest of drawers, which stood in a corner of the sitting-room.
He must make a note of the purchase, and, since he was alone,
might as well spend an hour, he thought, in looking over his
papers and making his calculations for the summer.

He was very methodical in his business arrangements, and
the desk was in such perfect order that he always knew the
exact place of each particular paper. This was one of the
points of controversy with his wife, which he never yielded:
he insisted that she should not open the desk in his absence.
This time, however, as he seated himself, drew out the supports
for the lid, and let it down upon them, his exact eye
showed him that something had been disturbed. The papers
in one of the pigeon-holes projected a little further than usual,
and the corners were not square as they should be. Besides,
the pile appeared to be diminished in height. He knew every
paper the pigeon-hole contained, took them out and ran rapidly
through them. One was missing!—an envelope, containing
bonds of the New York Central Railroad, to the amount of
three thousand dollars, the private property of his wife. It
was the investment of a sum which she had inherited at her
father's death, made in her own name, and the interest of
which she had always received for her separate use.

He leaned back in his chair, thunderstruck at the discovery.
Could one of the servants have taken the envelope? Impossible.
Dyce?—how should he know where to find it? Evidently,
nothing else had been touched. Had his wife, perhaps,
taken it with her, to draw the semi-annual interest at Tiberius?
It was not yet due. Mechanically, hardly conscious of what he
suspected or feared, he arose and went up-stairs. In the

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bedroom which Dyce had last occupied, every thing was in order.
He passed into his own, opening closets and wardrobes, expecting
either to find or miss something which might enlighten
him. In his wife's wardrobe three pegs, upon which dresses
had hung, were empty. He jerked open, in haste, the drawers
of her bureau: many things had apparently been removed.
Closing them again, he raised his head, and a little note, sticking
among the bristles of the hair-brush, which lay on its back
in front of the looking-glass, caught his eye. He seized it, unfolded
it with shaking hands, put on his spectacles and read.
There were but two lines:

“Send to Tiberius for the carriage. I am going to the
Community.”

It was a hard blow for the poor man. The idea of conjugal
infidelity on the part of his wife was simply incredible, and no
suspicion of that nature entered his mind. It was a deliberate
case of desertion, and the abstraction of the bonds indicated
that it was meant to be final. What her motives were, he
could only guess at in a confused way; but he knew that she
would never, of her own accord, have determined upon a course
so mad and ruinous. Many things were suddenly clear to him.
The evil influence of Dyce, strengthened by his assumed power,
as a medium, of bringing her children near to her; the magnetic
strength, morbid though it was, of the man's words and
presence; the daily opportunities of establishing some intangible
authority over the wife, during her husband's absence,
until she became, finally, the ignorant slave of his will—all this,
or the possibility of it, presented itself to Merryfield's mind in
a rush of dim and tangled impressions. He had neither the
time nor the power to unravel them, but he felt that there was
truth at the core. Following this conviction came the determination
to save her—yes! save her at once. There was no
time to be lost. Tiberius was eighteen miles distant, and they
could not yet have arrived there. He must follow instantly,
and overtake them, if possible, before the departure of the train
from the west.

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Why was he delaying there? The ten minutes that he had
been standing, motionless, in the centre of the room, with the
note in his hand, his eyes mechanically reading the two lines
over and over, until the first terrible chaos of his feelings subsided,
had lengthened themselves into hours. Breaking the
spell at last, he drew a long breath, which resolved itself into
a groan, and lifted his head. The little looking-glass on the
bureau was before him: moving a step nearer, he examined his
own face with a pitiful curiosity. It looked old and haggard;
the corners of his mouth were rigidly drawn and tightened, and
the pinched nostrils twitched in spite of himself, but his eyes
were hard and dry.

“It don't make much difference in my looks, after all,” he
said to himself, with a melancholy laugh; and the next instant
the eyes overflowed.

After this brief outbreak, he recovered some strength and
steadiness, and rapidly arranged in his mind what was first to
be done. Taking off his work-day clothes, he put on a better
suit, and descended the stairs. Calling to the servant-girl in
the kitchen, he informed her, in a voice which he strove to
make natural and unconcerned, that he was suddenly obliged
to visit Tiberius on business, but would return the next day,
with his wife. He left directions with her for Henry, the
field-hand, regarding the morrow's work, then resaddled his
horse and rode rapidly to Ptolemy.

On the way, his thoughts involuntarily went in advance, and
he endeavored to prefigure the meeting with his wife. It was
impossible for him, however, to decide what course he should
pursue in case she should persist in her determination. It was
not enough to overtake her; he must be armed at all points
to subdue and reclaim her. She had a stubborn power of resistance
with which he was well acquainted; and, moreover,
Dyce would be ready enough to assist her. He foreboded his
own helplessness in such a case, though the right was on his
side and the flagrant wrong on hers.

“It's my own fault,” he groaned, bitterly; “I've given

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way to her so long that I've lost my rightful influence over
her.”

One means of help suggested itself to his mind, and was
immediately accepted. Leaving his horse at the livery stable,
and ordering a fast, fresh animal and a light buggy to be sent
to the Cimmerian Parsonage, he proceeded thither on foot.

Mr. Waldo was in his “study,” which was one corner of
his wife's sitting-room. He was engaged in an epistolary controversy
with a clergyman of the Free-will Baptists, occasionally
reading aloud a paragraph as he wrote. His wife, busily
at work in remaking an old dress, listened and commended.
They were both startled by the entrance of Mr. Merryfield,
whose agitation was apparent in his face, and still more so in
his voice, as he greeted them.

“What has happened?” exclaimed Mrs. Waldo.

“I don't hardly know, as yet,” he stammered. “I want
your help, Mr. Waldo. Come with me—I'm going to Tiberius.
My wife”— Here he paused, blushing with utter shame
for her.

“Would you rather speak to my husband alone?” said Mrs.
Waldo, rising from her seat.

“No, you must hear the rest, now,” he answered. “You're
a good woman, Mrs. Waldo—good and true, and perhaps you,
too, can help. Sarah wants to leave me, and I must bring her
back—I must, this night.”

He then told them, briefly and brokenly, his painful story.
Amazement and pity filled the hearts of the two good people,
who felt his misfortune almost as keenly as if it were their
own. Mrs. Waldo commenced making the few preparations
necessary for her husband's departure, even before his consent
was uttered. When the team was announced as ready, she
took Mr. Merryfield's hand and bade him God-speed, with tears
in her eyes. The poor man was too much moved to reply.
Then, catching her husband's arm, as he was issuing from the
room, she whispered earnestly, “No harshness—I know her:
she must be coaxed and persuaded.”

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“I wish it were you who were going, my good wife,” said
Mr. Waldo, kissing her; “you would make no mistake. But
be sure that I will act tenderly and carefully.”

They drove away. She watched them turn the next corner,
and went into the house powerfully excited by such a sudden
and singular catastrophe. Her quick, intuitive mind, and her
knowledge of Mrs. Merryfield's weak points, enabled her to
comprehend the action more correctly than the husband himself.
This very knowledge was the source of her greatest
anxiety; for she saw that the success of the journey hung by
a hair. Having already committed herself, Mrs. Merryfield,
she foresaw, would not give up her plan from the discovery
of it, merely. She was not the woman to fall at her husband's
feet, repentant, at the first sight of him, and meekly return to
her forsaken home. The utmost tact would be required—tact
of a kind, of which, with all her respect for the sex, she felt
that a man was not capable.

The more she pondered on the matter, the more restless
and anxious she grew. Her husband's last words remained
in her ears: “You would make no mistake.” That was not
certain, but she would make none, she knew, which could not
at once be rectified. An inner voice continually said to her,
“Go!” Her unrest became at last insupportable; she went
to the stable, and harnessed their horse to the old gig with her
own hands. Then taking her shawl, and thrusting some refreshments
into a basket—for she would not delay even long
enough to make a cup of tea—she clambered into the creaking
vehicle, and drove off.

Mrs. Waldo, however, like many good women whose moral
courage is equal to any emergency, was in some respects a
ridiculous coward. Even in company with her husband, she
never passed along the country roads, at night, without an incessant
sensation of fear, which had no positive shape, and
therefore could not be battled against. It was now six o'clock,
and the darkness would be upon her long before she could
reach Tiberius. The thought of making the journey alone,

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was dreadful; if the suspended fate of the Merryfields was to
be decided by her alone, she would have been almost ready
to hesitate. There was but one person in Ptolemy to whom
she dared tell the story, and who was equally authorized with
herself, to go—that person was Hannah Thurston.

All these thoughts passed through her mind, and her resolution
was taken, while she was harnessing the horse. She
drove at once to the Widow Thurston's cottage, and was fortunate
enough to find her and her daughter at their early tea.
Summoning them into the next room, out of ear-shot of the
little servant, she communicated the story and her request in
the fewest possible words. She left them no time to recover
from the news. “Don't stop to consider, Hannah,” she said,
“we can talk on the way. There is not a moment to lose.”

Miss Thurston hesitated, overcome by a painful perplexity.
The matter had been confided to her, without the knowledge
of the principal actors, and she was not sure that her unexpected
appearance before them would lead to good. Besides,
Mrs. Merryfield's act was utterly abhorrent to all her womanly
instincts, and her virgin nature shrank from an approach to it,
even in the way of help. She stood irresolute.

The widow saw what was passing in her mind. “I know
how thee feels, Hannah,” said she, “and I would not advise
thee, if thy way were not clear to my mind. I feel that it is
right for thee to go. The Saviour took the hand of the fallen
woman, and thee may surely take Sarah's hand to save her,
maybe, from falling. Now, when thy gift may be of service—
now is the time to use it freely. Something tells me that
thy help will not be altogether in vain.”

“I will go, mother,” the daughter replied. “Thy judgment
is safer than mine.”

In five minutes more the two women were on their way.
The loveliest evening sunshine streamed across the valley,
brightening the meadows and meadow-trees, and the long,
curving sweep of the eastern hill. The vernal grass, which, in
its flowering season, has a sweeter breath than the roses of

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Gulistan, was cut in many places, and lay in balmy windrows. The
air was still and warm, and dragon-flies, emitting blue and
emerald gleams from their long wings, hovered in zigzag lines
along the brooksides. Now and then a thrush fluted from
the alder-thickets, or an oriole flashed like a lighted brand
through the shadows of the elms. The broad valley basked
in the lazy enjoyment of its opulent summer hues; and whatever
sounds arose from its bosom, they all possessed a tone of
passive content or active joy. But the travellers felt nothing
of all this beauty: that repose of the spiritual nature, in which
the features of the external world are truly recognized, had
been rudely disturbed.

They passed the Merryfield farm-house. How sadly at variance
with its sunny air of peace was the tragic secret of its
owners, which the two women carried with them! The huge
weeping willow trailed its hanging masses of twigs against the
gable, and here and there a rose-tree thrust its arm through
the white garden paling and waved a bunch of crimson, as if
to say: “Come in and see how we are blooming!” Towards
the barn, the field-hand was letting down bars for the waiting
cows, and the servant-girl issued from the kitchen-door with
her tin milk-kettle, as they gazed. What a mockery it all
seemed!

A little further, and the cataract thundered on their right.
All below the rocky wall lay in shadow, but the trees on its
crest were still touched by the sun, and thin wreaths of spray,
whirling upward, were suddenly converted into dust of gold.
Hannah Thurston looked up at the silent grove, and shuddered
as she recalled the picture she had last seen there. The brook
could never again wear to her its former aspect of wayward,
impetuous jubilation. Under its green crystal and glassy
slides lurked an element of terror, of pitiless cruelty. Yet
even the minutes of agonizing suspense she had there endured
were already softened in her memory, and seemed less terrible
than the similar trial which awaited her.

Near the entrance to Lakeside they met Bute Wilson, with

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a yoke of oxen. He recognized the old gig, and with a loud
“Haw, Buck,—come hither!” drew his team off the road.”

“Takin' a drive, are ye? How d'you do, Mrs. Waldo—
Miss Hannah?”

“Good-evening, Bute!” said Mrs. Waldo. “How is Mr.
Woodbury? I hope he has not suffered from being so long
in the water.”

“Bless you, no! Mr. Max. is as sound as a roach. He rid
over to Tiberius this afternoon. I say, wasn't it lucky that
jist he should ha' come along at the right time?” Bute's face
glowed with pride and delight.

“It was Providential: good-by!”

Slowly climbing the long ravine, through dark woods, it
was after sunset when they reached the level of the upland.
The village of Anacreon soon came in sight, and they drove
rapidly through, not wishing to be recognized. Beyond this
point the road was broad, straight, and firm, and they could
make better progress. A low arch of orange light lingered
in the west, but overhead the larger stars came out, one after
another. Belts of warm air enveloped them on the heights,
but the dusky hollows were steeped in grateful coolness, and
every tree by the roadside gave out its own peculiar odor.
The ripe, antique breath of the oak, the honeyed bitter of the
tulip-tree, and the perfect balsam of the hickory, were breathed
upon them in turn. A few insects still chirped among the
clover, and the unmated frogs serenaded, by fits, their reluctant
sweethearts. At one of the farm-houses they passed, a girl,
seated in the porch, was singing:



“We have lived and loved together,
Through many changing years.”

Every circumstance seemed to conspire, by involuntary contrast,
to force the difficult and painful task they had undertaken
more distinctly upon their minds. After Mrs. Waldo
had imparted all she knew, with her own conjectures of the

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causes of the desertion, both women were silent for a long
time, feeling, perhaps, that it was impossible to arrange, in
advance, any plan of action. They must trust to the suggestions
which the coming interview would supply.

“I cannot understand it,” said Hannah Thurston, at last.
“After so many years of married life—after having children
born to them, and lost, uniting them by the more sacred bond
of sorrow—how is it possible? They certainly loved each
other: what has become of her love?”

“She has it somewhere, yet, you may be sure,” said Mrs.
Waldo. “She is weak and foolish, but she does not mean to
be criminal. Dyce is a dangerous man, and he has led her to
the step. No other man she knows could have done it.”

“Can she love him?”

“Probably not. But a strong, unscrupulous man who
knows our sex, Hannah, has a vast power which most women
do not understand. He picks up a hundred little threads of
weakness, each of which is apparently insignificant, and
twists them into a chain. He surprises us at times when our
judgment is clouded, his superior reason runs in advance of
our thoughts—and we don't think very hard, you know—and
will surely bind us hand and foot, unless some new personality
comes in to interrupt him. We women are governed by personal
influences—there is no use in denying the fact. And
men, of course, have the strongest.”

“I have sometimes feared as much,” said Hannah Thurston,
sadly, “but is it not owing to a false education? Are not
women trained to consider themselves inferior, and thus dependent?
Do not the daughters learn the lesson of their
mothers, and the fathers impress the opposite lesson on their
sons?”

“I know what you mean, and you are partly right. But
that is not all. There are superior women whom we look up
to—I look up to you, Hannah, who are, intellectually, so far
above me—but they never impress us with the same sense of
power, of protecting capacity, that we feel in the presence of

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almost any man. It is something I cannot explain—a sort of
physical magnetism, I suppose. I respect men: I like them
because they are men, I am not ashamed to confess: and I am
not humiliated as a woman, by acknowledging the difference.”

“Habit and tradition!” Hannah Thurston exclaimed.

“I know you will think so, Hannah, and I am not able to answer
you. When I hear you speak, sometimes, every word you
say seems just and true, but my instincts, as a woman, remain
the same. Your life has been very different from mine, and
perhaps you have taken, without knowing it, a sort of warlike
position towards men, and have wilfully resisted their natural
influence over you. For your sake, I have often longed—and
you must pardon me, if I ought not to say such a thing—that
some man, in every respect worthy of you, should come to
know you as you are, and love you, and make you his wife.”

“Don't—don't speak of that,” she whispered.

“I couldn't help it, to-night, dear,” Mrs. Waldo soothingly
replied. “I have been thinking as I came along, what cause
I have to thank God for having given me a good and faithful
husband. I should never have been happy as a single woman,
and for that reason, no doubt, your life seems imperfect to
me. But we cannot always judge the hearts of others by our
own.”

By this time the glimmering arch of summer twilight had
settled behind the hills, and only the stars lighted them on
their way. The road stretched before them like a dusky
band, between the shapeless darkness of woods and fields, on
either side. Indistinct murmurs of leaves and rustlings among
the grass began to be heard, and at every sound Mrs. Waldo
started nervously.

“Was there ever such a coward as I am!” she exclaimed,
in a low voice. “If you were not with me, I should go wild
with fear. Do you suppose any man in the world is so
timid?”

“There, again, I cannot judge,” Miss Thurston answered.
“I only know that I am never alarmed at night, and that this

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journey would be a perfect enjoyment, if we were not going
on such an unfortunate errand.”

“I always knew you were an exception among women.
Your nerves are like a man's, but mine are altogether feminine,
and I can't help myself.”

The horse stopped at a toll-gate. They were only two
miles from Tiberius, and the road descended the greater part
of the way. Mrs. Waldo recovered her courage, for the
houses were now more thickly scattered, and the drive would
soon be at an end. The old horse, too, had by this time recognized
the extent of his task, and determined to get through
with it. They rattled rapidly onwards, and from the next rise
saw the lights of the town, twinkling around the foot of
Atauga Lake.

As they reached the suburban belt, where every square,
flat-roofed, chocolate-colored villa stood proudly in the centre
of its own square plot of ground, Hannah Thurston asked:

“Where shall we go?”

“Bless me, I never thought of that. But I think my husband
generally stops at `The Eagle,' and we can at least leave
the horse there. Then we must try to find him and—the
others. I think our best plan would be to go to the railroad
station.”

The gardens and villas gradually merged into the irregular,
crowded buildings which lined the principal street. Many
stores were open, the side-walks were lively with people,
transparencies gleamed before ice-cream saloons, and gaslamps
burned brilliantly at the corners.

“What time is it?” asked Mrs. Waldo.

Hannah Thurston looked at her watch. “A quarter past
nine.”

“We have made good time,” said her companion; “Heaven
grant that we are not too late!”

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p713-223 CHAPTER XVII. WHICH SOLVES THE PRECEDING ONE.

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Mrs. Merryfield, on forsaking her home, had not anticipated
the possibility of an immediate pursuit. She supposed, of
course, that her husband would first discover her intention the
next morning, when he would have occasion to use the hair-brush.
He would then, sooner or later, she believed, follow
her to the Community, where the sight of a Perfect Society,
of an Eden replanted on the Earth, would not only convince
him of the wisdom of her act, but compel him to imitate it.
If their convictions had been reversed, and he had desired to
try the new social arrangement, could he not have done so
with impunity, regardless of her opposition? Then, their
rights being equal, why should she consult his pleasure?

Thus she reasoned, or, rather, Dyce reasoned for her. She
was a very weak and foolish woman, afflicted with that worst
of temperaments which is at the same time peevish and stubborn,
and did not at all appreciate the gravity of the step she
had taken. An inner voice, indeed, told her that its secrecy
was unjustifiable—that she should openly and boldly declare
her intention to her husband; but her base friend easily persuaded
her that it was better to draw him after her when she
had reached the Community, and settle the difference there.
His own eyes would then convince him of her wisdom: opposition
would be impossible, with the evidence before him. She
would thus spare herself a long and perhaps fruitless encounter
of opinions, which, owing to the finer organization of her
spiritual nature, she ought to avoid. Such differences, he
said, disturbed the atmosphere in which spirits most readily

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approached and communicated with her. In the pure and
harmonious life of the Community, she might perhaps attain to
the condition of a medium, and be always surrounded by angelic
company.

The afternoon was hot and they drove slowly, so that even
before they reached Tiberius, the two parties of pursuers were
on the way. Just as they entered the town, Mr. Woodbury
passed the carriage on horseback. Glancing at its occupants,
he recognized Mrs. Merryfield, bowed, and reined in his horse
as if to speak, but seeing Dyce, his cordial expression became
suddenly grave, and he rode on. This encounter troubled
Mrs. Merryfield. A secret uneasiness had been growing upon
her during the latter part of the way, and Woodbury's look
inspired her with a vague fear. She involuntarily hoped that
she might not meet him again, or any one she knew, before
leaving Tiberius. She would not even visit Mrs. Nevins, as
she had proposed. Moreover, Woodbury would probably put
up at the hotel which she and her husband usually visited.
Another must be selected, and she accordingly directed Dyce
to drive through the town to a tavern on its northern side, not
far from the railroad station.

At half-past eight in the evening her husband and Mr.
Waldo alighted in front of “The Eagle.” As the former was
giving orders about the horse to the attendant ostler, Woodbury
came down the steps and immediately recognized the
new arrivals.

“What!” he exclaimed, “is all Ptolemy coming to Tiberius
to-day? Your wife has the start of you, Mr. Merryfield: I
passed her this evening”—

A violent grasp on his arm interrupted him. “Where is
she? Have they left?” the husband hoarsely asked.

The light from the corner-lamp fell full upon his face. Its
expression of pain and anxiety was unmistakable, and a presentiment
of the incredible truth shot through Woodbury's
mind.

“Hush, my friend!” said Mr. Waldo. “Control yourself

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while we register our names, and then we will go to work.
It is fortunate that you have betrayed yourself to Mr. Woodbury
instead of some one else. Come with us!” he added,
turning to the latter; “you must now know the rest. We
can trust every thing to your honor.”

They entered the office of the hotel. Merryfield, after
drinking a large tumbler of ice-water, recovered some degree
of composure. Mr. Waldo ascertained from the landlord that
the next train for the east would leave at midnight, the previous
train having left at five o'clock. Woodbury, seeing the
necessity of a private understanding, invited them both to his
room, where the whole affair was explained to him, and he
was able to assure them, by recalling the hour of his own arrival,
that Dyce and Mrs. Merryfield must be still in the town.

“We have three hours,” said he, “and they must be found
in half the time. There must not be a meeting at the station.
Have you no idea, Mr. Merryfield, where your wife would go?”

“She spoke of visiting Mrs. Nevins, as it were,” he replied.

“Then it is quite unlikely that she is there,” said Woodbury.
“But we must first settle the point. Let us go at once: where
is the house?”

Merryfield led the way, much supported and encouraged by
Woodbury's prompt, energetic manner. He had now less
dread of the inevitable encounter with Dyce.

A walk of ten minutes brought them to the Nevins mansion.
It was a small villa, with a Grecian portico, seated in a diminutive
garden. There was a light in the front room. Mr.
Waldo was unacquainted with the inmates, and afraid to
allow Merryfield to enter the house alone. There was a
moment of perplexity.

“I have it,” said Woodbury, suddenly. “Move on a little,
and wait for me.” He boldly entered the garden and stepped
upon the Grecian portico. The windows had muslin curtains
across their lower half, but he easily looked over them into
the room. A middle-aged woman, in a rocking-chair, was
knitting some worsted stuff with a pair of wooden needles.

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On the other side of the lamp, with his back to her, sat a man,
absorbed in a newspaper. A boy of ten years old lay asleep
on the carpet. Noting all this at a glance, Woodbury knocked
at the door. A rustling of the newspaper followed, footsteps
entered the hall, and the outer door was opened.

Woodbury assumed a natural air of embarrassed disappointment.
“I am afraid,” said he, “that I have made a mistake.
Does Mr. Israel Thompson live here?”

“Israel Thompson? I don't know any such person. There's
James Thompson, lives further down the street, on the other
side.”

“Thank you. I will inquire of him. I am a stranger here,”
and he rejoined his friends. “Now,” said he, “to save time,
Mr. Waldo, you and I must visit the other hotels, dividing
them between us. Mr. Merryfield had better not take any part
in the search. Let him wait for us on the corner opposite
`The Eagle.' We can make our separate rounds in twenty
minutes, and I am sure we shall have discovered them by that
time.”

An enumeration of the hotels was made, and the two gentlemen
divided them in such a manner as to economize time
in making their rounds. They then set out in different directions,
leaving Merryfield to walk back alone to the rendezvous.
Hitherto, the motion and excitement of the pursuit had kept
him up, but now he began to feel exhausted and desponding.
He had not eaten since noon, and experienced all the weakness
without the sensation of hunger. A powerful desire for an
artificial stimulant came over him, and, for a moment, he halted
before the red light of a drinking-saloon, wondering whether
there was any one inside who could recognize him. The door
opened, and an atmosphere of rank smoke, tobacco-soaked sawdust,
and pungent whiskey gushed out; oaths and fragments
of obscene talk met his ears, and he hurried away in disgust.
At “The Eagle” he fortified himself again with ice-water,
and then took his stand on the opposite corner, screened from
the lamp-light by an awning-post.

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The late storekeepers up and down the street were putting
up their shutters, but the ice-cream transparencies still shone
brightly, and the number of visitors rather increased than diminished.
From a neighboring house came the sound of a
piano, and presently a loud, girlish voice which sang: “I dreamt
that I dwe-helt in ma-harble halls.” What business, he
thought, had people to be eating ice-cream and singing songs?
It was an insulting levity. How long a time his friends had
been absent! A terrible fear came over him—what if he
should not find his wife? At night—no, he dared not think
of it. He looked down the crossing streets, in all four directions,
as far as his eye could pierce, and inspected the approaching
figures. Now he was sure he recognized Woodbury's
commanding form; now the brisk gait of the short clergyman.
But they came nearer and resolved themselves into
strangers. Then he commenced again, striving to keep an
equal watch on all the streets. The appointed time was past,
and they did not come! A cold sweat began to gather on
his forehead, and he was ready to despair. All at once, Mr.
Waldo appeared, close at hand, and hurried up to him, breathless.

“I have finished my list,” said he.

“Have you found them?”

“No, but—what does this mean!” cried the clergyman,
starting. “That is my horse, certainly—and the old gig!
Can my wife”—

He did not finish the sentence, but sprang into the street
and called. The horse turned his head from a sudden jerk of
the lines, and in a moment was drawn up beside the pavement.

“How glad I am we have met you! I could not stay at
home, indeed. You will let us help, will you not? Are we
in time?” cried Mrs. Waldo, apology, entreaty, and anxiety
all mingling in her voice.

“With God's favor, we are still in time,” her husband answered.

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“I thank you for coming—you and Hannah, both,” Merryfield
sadly added, “but I'm afraid it's no use.”

“Cheer up,” said the clergyman, “Mr. Woodbury will be
here in a moment.”

“He is here already,” said Woodbury, joining them at the
instant. “I have”—— He paused, recognizing the gig and
its occupants, and looked inquiringly at Mr. Waldo.

“They know it,” answered the latter, “and for that reason
they have come.”

“Brave women! We may need their help. I have found
the persons we are looking for—at the Beaver House, in the
second-story parlor, waiting for the midnight train.”

“Then drive on, wife,” said Mr. Waldo; “you can put up the
horse there. You are known at the Eagle, and we had better
avoid curiosity. Follow us: Mr. Woodbury will lead the way.”

They passed up the street, attracting no notice, as the connection
between the movements of the women in the gig, and
the three men on the sidewalk, was not apparent. In a short
time they reached the Beaver House, a second-rate hotel, with
a deserted air, on a quiet street, and near the middle of the
block. Two or three loafers were in the office, half sliding
out of the short arm-chairs as they lounged, and lazily talking.
Woodbury called the landlord to the door, gave the
horse into his charge, and engaged a private room until midnight.
There was one, he had already ascertained, adjoining
the parlor on the second story. He offered liberal pay, provided
no later visitors were thrust upon them, and the landlord
was very willing to make the arrangement. It was not often
that he received so much patronage in one evening.

After a hurried consultation, in whispers, they entered the
house. The landlord preceded them up-stairs with a lamp,
and ushered them into the appointed room. It was a small
oblong chamber, the floor decorated with a coarse but very
gaudy carpet, and the furniture covered with shiny hair-cloth,
very cold, and stiff, and slippery. There was a circular table
of mahogany, upon which lay a Bible, and the Odd-Fellow's

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Annual, bound in red. Beside it was a huge spittoon of brown
stone-ware. Folding-doors connected with the adjoining parlor,
and the wood-work, originally of unseasoned pine, gotten
up without expense but regardless of durability, was so
warped and sprung that these doors would not properly close.
Privacy, so far as conversation was concerned, was impossible.
In fact, no sooner had the landlord departed, and the noise of
entrance subsided a little, than Dyce's voice was distinctly
heard:

“You should overcome your restlessness. All pioneers in
great works have their moments of doubt, but they are caused
by the attacks of evil spirits.”

Merryfield arose in great agitation. Perhaps he would have
spoken, but Mr. Waldo lifted his hand to command silence,
beckoned to his wife, and the three left the room. At the
door the clergyman turned and whispered to Woodbury and
Hannah Thurston: “You may not be needed: wait until I
summon you.”

The next instant he knocked on the door of the parlor.
Dyce's voice replied: “Come in.” He entered first, followed
by his wife, and, last of all, the injured husband. Dyce and
Mrs. Merryfield were seated side by side, on a sofa. Both, as
by an involuntary impulse, rose to their feet. The latter
turned very pale; her knees trembled under her, and she sank
down again upon her seat. Dyce, however, remained standing,
and, after the first surprise was over, regained his brazen
effrontery.

Merryfield was the first to speak. “Sarah,” he cried,
“What does this mean?”

She turned her head towards the window, and made no
answer.

“Mrs. Merryfield,” said Mr. Waldo, gravely, yet with no
harshness in his tone, “we have come, as your friends, believing
that you have taken this step hastily, and without considering
what its consequences would be. We do not think
you appreciate its solemn importance, both for time and for

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eternity. It is not yet too late to undo what you have done,
and we are ready to help you, in all kindness and tenderness.”

“I want nothing more than my rights,” said Mrs. Merryfield,
in a hard, stubborn voice, without turning her head.

“I will never interfere with your just rights, as a woman, a
wife, and an immortal soul,” the clergyman replied. “But
you have not alone rights to receive: you have duties to perform.
You have bound yourself to your husband in holy
marriage; you cannot desert him, whose faith to you has never
been broken, who now stands ready to pardon your present
fault, as he has pardoned all your past ones, without incurring
a greater sin than infidelity to him. Your married relation
includes both the moral laws by which society is bound, and
the Divine laws by which we are saved.”

“The usual cant of theologians!” interrupted Dyce, with a
sneer. “Mrs. Merryfield owes nothing to the selfish and artificial
machinery which is called Society. Marriage is a part
of the machinery, and just as selfish as the rest. She claims
equal rights with her husband, and is doing no more than he
would do, if he possessed all of her convictions.”

“I would never do it!” cried Merryfield,—“not for all the
Communities in the world! Sarah, I've been faithful to you,
in every thought, since you first agreed to be my wife. If I've
done you wrong in any way, tell me!”

“I only want my rights,” she repeated, still looking away.

“If you really think you are deprived of them,” said Mr.
Waldo, “come home with us, and you shall be fairly heard
and fairly judged. I promise you, as an impartial friend, that
no advantage shall be taken of your mistake: you shall be
treated as if it had not occurred. Have you reflected how
this act will be interpreted, in the eyes of the world? Can
you bear, no matter how innocent you may be, to be followed,
through all the rest of your life, by the silent suspicion, if not
the open reproach, of the worst shame that can happen to
woman? Suppose you reach your Community. These experiments
have often been tried, and they have always failed.

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You might hide yourself for a while from the judgment of the
world, but if the association should break to pieces—what
then? Does the possession of some right which you fancy is
withheld, compensate you for incurring this fearful risk—nay,
for enduring this fearful certainty?”

“What do you know about it?” Dyce roughly exclaimed.
“You, a petrified fossil of the false Society! What right have
you to judge for her? She acts from motives which your
narrow mind cannot comprehend. She is a disciple of the
Truth, and is not afraid to show it in her life. If she lived
only for the sake of appearances, like the rest of you, she
might still be a Vegetable!”

Mrs. Merryfield, who had colored suddenly and violently, as
the clergyman spoke, and had turned her face towards him, for
a moment, with an agitation which she could not conceal, now
lifted her head a little, and mechanically rocked on her lap a
travelling-satchel, which she had grasped with both hands.
She felt her own inability to defend herself, and recovered a
little courage at hearing it done so fiercely by her companion.

Mr. Waldo, without noticing the latter, turned to her again.
“I will not even condemn the motives which lead you to this
step,” said he, “but I must show you its inevitable consequences.
Only the rarest natures, the most gifted intellects,
may seem to disregard the ruling habits and ideas of mankind,
because God has specially appointed them to some great
work. You know, Mrs. Merryfield, as well as I do, that you
are not one of such. The world will make no exception in
your favor. It cannot put our kindly and tolerant construction
upon your motives: it will be pitiless and inflexible, and
its verdict will crush you to the dust.”

“Sarah,” said her husband, more in pity than in reproach,
“do stop and think what you are doing! What Mr. Waldo
says is true: you will bring upon yourself more than you can
bear, or I can bear for you. I don't charge you with any
thing wrong; I don't believe you would be guilty of—of—I

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can't say it—but I couldn't hold up my head, as—as it were,
and defend you by a single word.”

“Oh, no! of course you couldn't!” Dyce broke in again,
with an insufferable impudence. “You know, as well as I do,—
or Mr. Waldo, for that matter,—what men are. Don't brag
to me about your morality, and purity, and all that sort of
humbug: what's fit for one sex is fit for the other. Men, you
know, have a natural monopoly in the indulgence of passion:
it's allowed to them, but woman is damned by the very suspicion.
You know, both of you, that any man would as lief
be thought wicked as chaste—that women are poor, ignorant
fools”—

One of the folding-doors which communicated with the adjoining
room was suddenly torn open, and Woodbury appeared.
His brown eyes, flashing indignant fire, were fixed
upon Dyce. The sallow face of the latter grew livid with
mingled emotions of rage and fear. With three strides,
Woodbury was before him.

“Stop!” he cried, “you have been allowed to say too much
already. If you,” he added, turning to the others, “have
patience with this beast, I have not.”

“Ah! he thinks he's among his Sepoys,” Dyce began, but
was arrested by a strong hand upon his collar. Woodbury's
face was pale, but calm, and his lips parted in a smile, the
expression of which struck terror to the heart of the medium.

“Now, leave!” said he, in a low, stern voice, “leave, or I
hurl you through that window!” Relinquishing his grasp on
the collar, he opened the door leading to the staircase, and
waited. For a moment, the eyes of the two men met, and in
that moment each took the measure of the other. Dyce's
figure seemed to contract; his breast narrowed, his shoulders
fell, and his knees approached each other. He walked slowly
and awkwardly to the end of the sofa, picked up his valise,
and shuffled out of the room without saying a word. Woodbury
followed him to the door, and said, before he closed it:

“Recollect, you leave here by the midnight train.” None

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of those who heard it had any doubt that the command would
be obeyed.

Mr. Merryfield experienced an unbounded sensation of relief
on Dyce's departure; but his wife was only frightened, not
conquered. Although pale and trembling, she stubbornly held
out, her attitude expressing her collective defiance of the company.
She avoided directly addressing or meeting the eyes
of any one in particular. For a few moments there was silence
in the room, and she took advantage of it to forestall the
appeals which she knew would be made, by saying:

“Well, now you've got me all to yourselves, I suppose you'll
try to bully me out of my rights.”

“We have no intention to meddle with any of your rights,
as a wife,” Mr. Waldo answered. “You must settle that
question with your husband. But does not your heart tell
you that he has rights, as well? And what has he done to
justify you in deserting him?”

“He needn't be deserted,” she said; “he can come after me.”

“Never!” exclaimed her husband. “If you leave me now,
and in this way, Sarah, you will not see me again until you
voluntarily come back to me. And think, if you go to that
place, what you must then seem to me! I've defended you,
Sarah, and will defend you against all the world; but if you
go on, you'll take the power of doing it away from me.
Whether you deserve shame, or not, it'll come to you—and
it'll come to me, just the same.”

The deluded wife could make no reply. The consequences
of her step, if persisted in, were beginning to dawn upon her
mind, but, having defended it on the ground of her equal
rights as a woman, a pitiful vanity prevented her from yielding.
It was necessary, therefore, to attack her from another
quarter. Hannah Thurston felt that the moment had arrived
when she might venture to speak, and went gently forward to
the sofa.

“Sarah,” she said, “I think you feel that I am your friend.
Will you not believe me, then, when I say to you that we

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have all followed you, prompted only by the pity and distress
which we feel for your sake and your husband's? We beg
you not to leave us, your true friends, and go among strangers.
Listen to us calmly, and if we convince you that you are mistaken,
the admission should not be difficult.”

“You, too, Hannah!” cried Mrs. Merryfield. “You, that
taught me what my rights were! Will you confess, first, that
you are mistaken?”

An expression of pain passed over Hannah Thurston's face.
“I never meant to claim more than natural justice for woman,”
said she, “but I may have been unhappy in my advocacy of it.
I may even,” turning towards Mrs. Waldo, “have seemed to
assume a hostile position towards man. If so, it was a mistake.
If what I have said has prompted you to this step, I
will take my share of humiliation. But we will not talk of
that now. Blame me, Sarah, if you like, so you do not forget
the tenderness you cannot wholly have lost, for him whose life
is a part of yours, here and hereafter. Think of the children
who are waiting for you in the other life—waiting for both
parents, Sarah.”

The stubborn resistance of the wife began to give way.
Tears came to her eyes, and she shook as if a mighty struggle
had commenced in her heart. “It was for them,” she murmured,
in a broken voice, “that I was going. He said they
would be nearer to me.”

“Can they be nearer to you when you are parted from their
father? Was it only your heart that was wrung at their loss?
If all other bonds were broken between you, the equal share
in the beings of those Immortals should bind you in life and
death! Pardon me for renewing your sorrow, but I must
invoke the purer spirit that is born of trial. If your mutual
watches over their cradles cannot bring back the memory of
your married love, I must ask you to remember who held
your hand beside their coffins, whose arm supported you inthe
lonely nights!”

The husband could endure no more. Lifting his face from

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his hands, he cried: “It was me, Sarah. And now, if you
leave me, there will be no one to talk with me about Absalom,
and Angelina, and our dear little Robert. Don't you mind
how I used to dance him on my knee, as—as it were, and tell
him he should have a horse when he was big? He had such
pretty hair; you always said he'd make a handsome man,
Sarah: but now they're all gone. There's only us two, now,
as it were, and we can't—no, we daren't part. We won't
part, will we?”

Mrs. Waldo made a quiet sign, and they stole gently from
the room. As he closed the door, Woodbury saw the conquered
and penitent wife look up with streaming eyes, sobbing
convulsively, and stretch out her arms. The next instant, Mrs.
Waldo had half embraced him, in the rush of her pent-up
gratitude.

“Oh!” she exclaimed, striving to subdue her voice, “how
grand it was that you put down that—that man. I never
believed in non-resistance, and now I know that I am right.”

Hannah Thurston said nothing, but her face was radiant
with a tranquil light. She could not allow the doubts which
had arisen in her mind—the disturbing influences which had, of
late, beset her, to cloud the happy ending of such a painful
day. A whispered conversation was carried on between
Woodbury and the Waldos, so as not to disturb the low voices
in the next room; but at the end of ten minutes the door
opened and Merryfield appeared.

“We will go home to-night, as it were,” said he. “The
moon rises about this time, and the night is warm.”

“Then we will all go!” was Mrs. Waldo's decision. “The
carriages will keep together—husband, you must drive one of
them, alone—and I shall not be so much alarmed. It is better
so: curious folks will not see that we have been absent, and
need not know.”

Woodbury whispered to her: “I shall wait until the train
leaves.”

“Will you follow, afterwards?”

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“Yes—but no: my intention to stay all night is known, and
I ought properly to remain, unless you need my escort.”

“Stay,” said Hannah Thurston.

The vehicles left the two hotels with the same persons who
had arrived in them—Dyce excepted. Outside of Tiberius
they halted, and Merryfield joined his wife. The two women
followed, and Mr. Waldo, alone, acted as rear-guard. Thus, in
the silent night, over the moonlit hills, and through the rustling
darkness of the woods, they went homewards.

Vague suspicions of something haunted the community of
Ptolemy for a while, but nothing was ever discovered or betrayed
which could give them a definite form. And yet, of
the five persons to whom the truth was known, three were
women.

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p713-237 CHAPTER XVIII. ONE OF THE SUMMER DIVERSIONS OF PTOLEMY.

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Ten days after the journey to Tiberius, the highways in
both valleys, and those descending from the hills on either
side, were unusually thronged. Country carriages, buggies
of all fashions, and light open carts, rapidly succeeded each
other, all directing their course towards the village. They
did not halt there, however, but passed through, and, climbing
the gentle acclivity of the southern hill, halted at a grove,
nearly a mile distant. Here the Annual Temperance Convention
of Atauga County was to be held. The cause had been
languishing for the past year or two; many young men had
become careless of their pledges, and the local societies were
beginning to fall to pieces, because the members had heard all
that was to be said on the subject, and had done all that could
conveniently be done. The plan of procuring State legislation
in their favor rendered it necessary to rekindle, in some measure,
the fires of zeal—if so warm an expression can be applied
to so sober a cause—and one of the most prominent speakers
on Temperance, Mr. Abiram Stokes, was called upon to brush
up his well-used images and illustrations for a new campaign.

It was announced, by means of large placards, posted
in all the village stores, post-offices, and blacksmiths' shops,
far and wide, that not only he, but Mr. Grindle and several
other well-known speakers were to address the Convention.
Strange as it may seem, the same placard was conspicuously
displayed in the bar-room of the Ptolemy House, the landlord
candidly declaring that he would be glad if such a convention

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were held every week, as it brought him a great deal of custom.
The friends of the cause were called upon for a special
effort; the day was carefully arranged to come at the end of
haying, yet before the wheat-harvest had fairly commenced;
moreover, it was Saturday, and the moon was nearly full.
The weather favored the undertaking, and by noon the line of
the roads could be distinguished, at some distance, by the
dust which arose from the strings of vehicles.

The principal members of the local societies—especially
those of Atauga City, Anacreon, Nero Corners, Mulligansville,
and New Pekin—came in heavy lumber-wagons, decorated
with boughs of spruce and cedar, carrying with them their
banners, whenever they had any. With some difficulty, a
sufficient sum was raised to pay for the services of the Ptolemy
Cornet Band, in performing, as the placard stated, “melodies
appropriate to the occasion.” What those melodies were, it
was not very easy to determine, and the managing committee of
the Ptolemy Society had a special meeting on the subject, the
night before. A wag suggested “The Meeting of the Waters,”
which was at once accepted with delight. “Bonny Doon”
found favor, as it “minded” the hearers of a Scottish brook.
“The Campbells are Comin'” was also on the list, until some
one remembered that the landlord of the Ptolemy House bore
the name of that clan. “A wet sheet and a flowing sea” hinted
too strongly at “half-seas over,” and all the familiar Irish airs
were unfortunately associated with ideas of wakes and Donnybrook
Fairs. After much painful cogitation, the “Old Oaken
Bucket,” “Allan Water,” “Zurich's Waters,” and “The
Haunted Spring” were discovered; but the band was not able
to play more than half of them. Its most successful performance,
we are bound to confess, was the air of “Landlord, fill
the flowing bowl,” which the leader could not resist giving
once or twice during the day, to the great scandal of those
votaries of the cause who had once been accustomed to sing it
in character.

The grove was a beautiful piece of oak and hickory timber,

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sloping towards the north, and entirely clear of underbrush.
It covered about four acres of ground, and was neither so
dense nor fell so rapidly as to shut out a lovely glimpse of
the valley and the distant, dark-blue sheet of the lake, between
the boles. It was pervaded with a grateful smell, from the
trampled grass and breathing leaves; and wherever a beam of
sunshine pierced the boughs, it seemed to single out some bit
of gay color, in shawl, or ribbon, or parasol, to play upon and
utilize its brightness. At the bottom of the grove, against
two of the largest trees, a rough platform was erected, in
front of which, rising and radiating amphitheatrically, were
plank benches, capable of seating a thousand persons. Those
who came from a distance were first on hand, and took their
places long before the proceedings commenced. Near the
main entrance, venders of refreshments had erected their
stands, and displayed to the thronging visitors a tempting
variety of indigestible substances. There was weak lemonade,
in tin buckets, with huge lumps of ice glittering defiantly at
the sun; scores of wired bottles, filled with a sarsaparilla mixture,
which popped out in a rush of brown suds; ice-cream,
the cream being eggs beaten up with water, and flavored with
lemon sirup; piles of dark, leathery ginger-cakes, and rows
of glass jars full of candy-sticks; while the more enterprising
dealers exhibited pies cut into squares, hard-boiled eggs, and
even what they called coffee.

Far down the sides of the main road to Ptolemy the vehicles
were ranged, and even inside the adjoining fields—the owner
of which, being a friend to the cause, had opened his bars to
the multitude. Many of the farmers from a distance brought
their own oats with them, and unharnessed and fed their horses
in the fence-corners, before joining the crowd in the grove.
Then, accompanied by their tidy wives, who, meanwhile, examined
the contents of the dinner-baskets and saw that every
thing was in order, they approached the meeting with satisfied
and mildly exhilarated spirits, occasionally stopping to greet
an acquaintance or a relative. The daughters had already

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preceded them, with their usual independence, well knowing the
impatience of the young men, and hoping that the most agreeable
of the latter would discover them before the meeting was
called to order. This was the real charm of the occasion, to
old as well as young. The American needs a serious pretext
for his recreation. He does not, in fact, recognize its necessity,
and would have none at all, did not Nature, with
benevolent cunning, occasionally furnish him with diversion
under the disguise of duty.

As the banners of the local societies arrived, they were set
up in conspicuous positions, on and around the speaker's platform.
That of Tiberius was placed in the centre. It was of
blue silk, with a gold fringe, and an immense geyser-like fountain
in its field, under which were the words: “Ho! every one
that thirsteth!” On the right was the banner of Ptolemy—a
brilliant rainbow, on a white ground, with the warning: “Look
not upon the Wine when it is Red.” What connection there
was between this sentence and the rainbow was not apparent,
unless the latter was meant to represent a watery deluge. The
banner of Anacreon, on the left, held forth a dancing female,
in a crimson dress. One foot was thrown far out behind her,
and she was violently pitching forward; yet, in this uncomfortable
position, she succeeded in pouring a thick
stream of water from a ewer of blue china into the open
mouth of a fat child, who wore a very scanty dress. The
inscription was: “The Fountain of Youth.” The most ingenious
device, however, was that from Nero Corners. This little
community, too poor or too economical to own a temperance
banner, took a political one, which they had used in the
campaign of the previous year. Upon it were the names of
the candidates for President and Vice-President: “Pierce
and King.” A very little alteration turned the word “Pierce”
into “Prince,” and the word “Water” being prefixed, the
inscription became: “Water,—Prince and King.” Those
from other neighborhoods, who were not in the secret, greatly
admired the simplicity and force of the expression.

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Woodbury, who was early upon the ground, was much interested
in the scene. Between two and three thousand persons
were present, but an order and decorum prevailed, which
would be miraculous in lands where the individual is not permitted
to grow up self-ruled, or swayed only by the example
of his fellows, and self-reliant. No servant of the law was present
to guard against disorder, because each man was his own
policeman. Even some tipsy rowdies, who came out from
Ptolemy towards the close of the afternoon, were sobered
by the atmosphere of the place, and had no courage to make
their intended interruptions. The effect of such meetings,
Woodbury confessed to himself, could not be otherwise
than good; the reform was necessary among a people whose
excitable temperament naturally led them to excesses, and
perhaps it was only one extreme which could counteract
the other. There was still too little repose, too little mental
balance among them, to halt upon the golden middle-ground
of truth.

The band occupied the platform for some time after he arrived,
and its performances gave intense satisfaction to the
people. The clear tones of the horns and clarionets pealed
triumphantly through the shade, and an occasional slip in an
instrument was unnoticed in the hum of voices. Gradually,
the hearers were lifted a little out of the material sphere in
which they habitually moved, and were refreshed accordingly.
They were made capable, at least, of appreciating some sentiment
and imagination in the speakers, and words were now
heard with delight, which, in their common moods, would have
been vacant sound. They touched, in spite of themselves, that
upper atmosphere of poetry which hangs over all human life—
where the cold marsh-fogs in which we walk become the rosy
cloud-islands of the dawn!

At two o'clock, the band vacated the platform, and the Convention
was called to order. After an appropriate prayer by
the Rev. Lemuel Styles, a temperance song was sung by a large
chorus of the younger members. It was a parody on

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Hoffman's charming anacreontic: “Sparkling and Bright,” the
words of which were singularly transformed. Instead of:


“As the bubbles that swim on the beaker's brim,
And break on the lips at meeting,”
the refrain terminated with:


“There's nothing so good for the youthful blood,
Or so sweet as the sparkling water!”
—in the style of a medicinal prescription. Poor Hoffman!
Noble heart and fine mind, untimely darkened! He was at
least spared this desecration; or perhaps, with the gay humor
with which even that darkness is still cheered, he would have
parodied the parody to death.

The Annual Report was then read. It was of great length,
being mainly a furious appeal to voters. The trick of basing
a political issue upon a personal habit was an innovation in the
science of government, which the natural instincts of the people
were too enlightened to accept without question. The
County Committee, foreseeing this difficulty, adopted the usual
tactics of party, and strove to create a headlong tide of sympathy
which would overbear all hesitancy as to the wisdom of
the movement, or the dangerous precedent which it introduced
into popular legislation. “Vote for the Temperance Candidates,”
they cried, in the Report, “and you vote for morality,
and virtue, and religion! Vote against them, and you vote for
disease, and misery, and crime! Vote for them, and you vote
reason to the frantic brain, clearness to the bleared eye, steadiness
to the trembling hand, joy to the heart of the forsaken
wife, and bread to the mouths of the famishing children! Vote
against them, and you vote to fill our poor-houses and penitentiaries—
to tighten the diabolical hold of the rumseller on his
struggling victim—to lead our young men into temptation, and
bring ruin on our beloved land! Yes, you would vote to fill
the drunkard's bottle; you would vote oaths and obscenity into
his speech; you would vote curses to his wife, blows to his
children, the shoes off their feet, the shirts off their backs,
the beds from under them, and the roofs from over their heads.”

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The Report was adopted with tremendous unanimity, and
the faces of the members of the Committee beamed with satisfaction.
The political movement might be considered as
successfully inaugurated. This was the main object of the
Convention, and the waiting orators now saw that they had a
clear and pleasant field before them. Woodbury, who was
leaning against a tree, near the end of a plank upon which his
friends the Waldos were seated, listened with an involuntary
sensation of pain and regret. The very character of the Report
strengthened him in the conviction that the vice to be cured
had its origin in a radical defect of the national temperament,
which no legislation could reach.

Mrs. Waldo looked up at him, inquiringly. He shook his
head. “It is a false movement,” said he; “good works are
not accomplished by violence.”

“But sometimes by threatening it,” she answered, with a
meaning smile.

He was about to reply, when the President announced that
Byron Baxter, of the Anacreon Seminary, would recite a poem,
after which the meeting would be addressed by Mr. Abiram
Stokes.

Byron Baxter, who was an overgrown, knock-kneed youth
of nineteen, with long hair, parted in the middle, advanced to
the front of the platform, bowed, and then suddenly started
back, with both hands extended before him, in an attitude of
horror. In a loud voice, he commenced to recite:



“Oh, take the maddening bowl away!
Remove the poisonous cup!
My soul is sick; its burning ray
Hath drunk my spirit up.
“Take, take it from my loathing lip
Ere madness fires my brain:
Oh, take it hence, nor let me sip
Its liquid death again!”

As the young man had evidently never tasted any thing

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stronger than molasses-and-water, the expression of his abhorrence
was somewhat artificial. Nevertheless, a shudder ran
through the audience at the vehemence of his declamation,
and he was greeted with a round of applause, at the close.

The orator of the day, Mr. Abiram Stokes, then made his
appearance. He was a man of forty-five, with a large, handsome
head, and an imposing presence. His hair and eyes were
dark, and his complexion slightly tinted with olive. This trait,
with his small hands and showy teeth, seemed to indicate a
mixture of Spanish blood. He had a way of throwing his
head forward, so as to let a large lock of his hair fall over his
forehead with a picturesque effect, and then tossing it back to
its place with a reverse motion. His voice was full and sonorous;
although, to a practised ear, its pathos, in passages intended
for effect, was more dramatic than real. Few of his
present auditors, however, were able to discriminate in this
respect; the young ladies, especially, were in raptures. It
was rumored that his early life had been very wild and dissipated,
and he was looked upon as one of the most conspicuous
brands which had been snatched from the burning. This rumor
preceded him wherever he went, created a personal interest
for him, in advance, and added to the effect of his oratory.

His style of speaking, nevertheless, was showy and specious.
He took no wide range, touched but slightly on the practical
features of the subject, and indulged sparingly in anecdotes
and illustrations. None of the latter professed to be drawn
from his personal experience: his hearers might make whatever
inference they pleased, he knew the value of mystery too
well, to enlighten them further. He was greatest in apostrophes
to Water, to Reform, to Woman, to any thing that permitted
him, according to his own expression, “to soar.” This
feature of his orations was usually very effective, the first time
he was heard. He was in the habit of introducing some of
his favorite passages on every occasion. Woodbury, who was
not aware of this trick, was agreeably surprised at the natural
warmth and eloquence of the speaker's language.

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His peroration ran something in this wise: “This, the purest
and most beneficent of the Virtues, comes not to achieve her
victory in battles and convulsions. Soft as the dews of heaven,
her white feet are beautiful upon the mountains, bringing glad
tidings of great joy! Blessed are we that she has chosen her
abode among us, and that she has selected us to do her work!
No other part of the world was fitted to receive her. She
never could have been produced by the mouldering despotisms
of Europe, where the instincts of Freedom are stifled by wine
and debauchery; the Old World is too benighted to behold
her face. Here only—here on the virgin bosom of a new Continent—
here, in the glorious effulgence of the setting sun—
here only could she be born! She is the child of the West—
Temperance—and before her face the demon Alcohol flees
to his caverns and hides himself among the bones of his victims,
while Peace sits at her right hand and Plenty at her left!”

“Beautiful!” “splendid!” was whispered through the audience,
as the speaker took his seat. Miss Carrie Dilworth
wiped her eyes with a very small batiste handkerchief, and
sighed as she reflected that this man, her beau-idèal (which
she understood to mean an ideal beau), would never know what
an appreciative helpmeet she would have made him.

“Oh, Hannah!” she whispered, leaning forward, to Miss
Thurston, who was seated on the next plank, “did you ever
hear any thing so beautiful?”

“I thought it fine, the first time I heard it,” Hannah replied,
with a lack of enthusiasm which quite astounded the
little sempstress. She began to fear she had made a mistake,
when the sight of Miss Ruhaney Goodwin, equally in tears,
(and no wonder, for her brother Elisha had been a miserable
drunkard), somewhat revived her confidence.

“Flashy, but not bad of its kind,” said Woodbury, in reply
to Mrs. Waldo's question.

“Are you not ashamed? It's magnificent. And he's such
a handsome man!” she exclaimed. “But I see, you are determined
not to admire any of them; you've not forgotten

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Grindle's attack. Or else you're a pess— what's the name of
it? Mr. Waldo explained the word to me yesterday—pess”—

“Oh, a pessimist? Not at all, Mrs. Waldo. On the contrary,
I am almost an optimist.”

“Well, that's just as bad—though I am not sure I know
what it is. Oh, there's Grindle going to speak. Now you'll
catch it!”

She shook her hand menacingly, and Woodbury, much
amused and not a little curious to hear the speaker, resumed
his position against the tree.

Mr. Grindle, who carried on a moderate lumber business in
Atauga City, neglected no opportunity of making himself heard
in public. He was a man of shallow faculties, but profound
conceit of himself, and would have preferred, at any time, to
be abused rather than ignored. His naturally fluent speech
had been cultivated by the practice of years, but as he was
neither an earnest thinker nor a close reasoner, and, moreover,
known to be unscrupulous in the statement of facts, the consideration
which he enjoyed as a speaker would soon have become
exhausted, but for the boldness and indecency of his personal
attacks, whereby he replenished that element of hot water in
which he rejoiced. Mr. Campbell, the landlord of the Ptolemy
House, had several times threatened him with personal chastisement,
and he only escaped by avoiding an encounter until
the landlord's wrath had a little cooled. He was so accustomed
to insulting epithets that they never produced the slightest
impression upon him.

He had spoken nearly half an hour, airing a quantity of statistics,
which he had mostly committed to memory—where
that failed, he supplied the figures from his imagination—
when he perceived that the audience, after having tasted the
spiced meats of Mr. Abiram Stokes, seemed to find the plain
food he offered them rather insipid. But he had still the resource
of personality, which he knew, from long experience, is
always entertaining, whether or not the hearers approve of it.
The transition was easily made. “Looking at this terrible

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array of facts,” said he, “how can any man, who is worthy the
name of a human being, dare to oppose the doctrines of Temperance?
How dare any man suppose that his own miserable
personal indulgences are of more consequence than the moral
salvation of his fellow-creatures? Yet there are such men—
not poor, ignorant, deluded creatures, who know no better,
and are entitled to some allowances—but men who are rich,
who appear to be educated, and who claim to be highly moral
and respectable. What are we to think of those men?”

Mrs. Waldo glanced up at Woodbury with a look which
said: “Now it's coming!”

“Let it come!” his look replied.

“They think, perhaps,” the speaker continued, “that there
are different laws of morality for different climates—that they
can bring here among us the detestable practices of heathen
races, which we are trying to root out! I tell such, they had
better go back, and let their unhappy slaves hand them the
hookah, filled with its intoxicating draught, or steady their
tottering steps when the fumes of sherbet have mounted to
their brains!”

Many persons in the assembly knew who was meant, and
as Woodbury's position made him easily distinguished, they
watched him with curiosity as the speaker proceeded. He
leaned against the tree, with his arms folded, and an amused
half-smile on his face, until the foregoing climax was reached,
when, to the astonishment of the spectators, he burst into an
uncontrollable fit of laughter.

Mr. Grindle, too, had discovered his victim, and occasionally
darted a side look at him, calculating how far he might carry
the attack with safety to himself. Woodbury's sudden and
violent merriment encouraged while it disconcerted him: there
was, at least, nothing to be feared, and he might go on.

“Yes, I repeat it,” he continued; “whatever name may be
given to the beverage, we are not to be cheated. Such men
may drink their sherbet, or their Heidsick; they may call their
drinks by respectable names, and the demon of Alcohol laughs

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as he claims them for his own. St. Paul says `the Prince of
Darkness is a gentleman:' beware, beware, my friends, lest the
accursed poison, which is harmless to you under its vulgar
names, should beguile you with an aristocratic title!”

“Will the speaker allow me to make a remark?”

Woodbury, controlling his laughter with some difficulty,
straightened himself from his leaning position against the tree,
and, yielding to the impulse of the moment, spoke. His voice,
not loud, but very clear, was distinctly heard all over the
crowd, and there was a general rustling sound, as hundreds of
heads turned towards him. Mr. Grindle involuntarily paused
in his speech, but made no reply.

“I will only interrupt the proceedings for a moment,” Woodbury
resumed, in a cool, steady tone, amidst the perfect silence
of the multitude—“in order to make an explanation. I will
not wrong the speaker by supposing that his words have a
personal application to myself; because that would be charging
him with advocating truth by means of falsehood, and defending
morality by the weapons of ignorance and insult. But
I know the lands of which he speaks and the habits of their
people. So far from drunkenness being a `detestable heathen
habit' of theirs, it is really we who should go to them to learn
temperance. I must confess, also, my great surprise at hearing
the speaker's violent denunciation of the use of sherbet, after
seeing that it is openly sold, to-day, in this grove—after having,
with my own eyes, observed the speaker, himself, drink
a large glass of it with evident satisfaction.”

There was a sudden movement, mixed here and there with
laughter, among the audience. Mr. Grindle cried out, in a
hoarse, excited voice: “The charge is false! I never use intoxicating
beverages!”

“I made no such charge,” said Woodbury, calmly, “but it
may interest the audience to know that sherbet is simply the
Arabic name for lemonade.”

The laughter was universal, Mr. Grindle excepted.

“The speaker, also,” he continued, “mentioned the

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intoxicating beverage of the hookah. As the hookah is a pipe, in
which the smoke of the tobacco passes through water before
reaching the mouth, it may be considered a less dangerous
beverage than the clay-pipe of the Irish laborer. I beg pardon
of the meeting for my interruption.”

The laughter was renewed, more heartily than before, and
for a minute after Woodbury ceased the tumult was so great
that Mr. Grindle could not be heard. To add to the confusion,
the leader of the Ptolemy band, taking the noise as a sign that
the Convention had adjourned, struck up “Malbrook,” which
air, unfortunately, was known in the neighborhood by the less
classical title of “We won't go home till morning.”

The other members of the Committee, on the platform, privately
begged Mr. Grindle to take his seat and allow them to
introduce a new orator; but he persisted in speaking for another
quarter of an hour, to show that he was not discomfited.
The greater portion of the audience, nevertheless, secretly rejoiced
at the lesson he had received, and the remainder of his
speech was not heard with much attention. Woodbury, to
escape the curious gaze of the multitude, took a narrow and
uncomfortable seat on the end of the plank, beside Mrs. Waldo.
He was thenceforth, very much against his will, an object of
great respect to the rowdies of Ptolemy, who identified him
with the opposite cause.

There was another song, commencing:


“The wine that all are praising
Is not the drink for me,
But there's a spring in yonder glen,
Whose waters flow for Temperance men,” etc.,
which was likewise sung in chorus. Then succeeded other
speakers, of less note, to a gradually diminishing circle of hearers.
The farmers and their wives strayed off to gossip with
acquaintances on the edges of the grove; baskets of provisions
were opened and the contents shared, and the stalls of cake
and sarsaparilla suds experienced a reflux of custom. As the

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young men were not Lord Byrons, the young ladies did not
scruple to eat in their presence, and flirtations were carried on
with a chicken-bone in one hand and a piece of bread in the
other. The sun threw softer and slanter lights over the beautiful
picture of the valley, and, gradually creeping below the
boughs, shot into the faces of those who were still seated in
front of the platform. It was time to close the performances
of the day, and they were accordingly terminated with a third
song, the refrain of which was:



“Oh, for the cause is rolling on, rolling on, rolling on,
Over the darkened land.”

Woodbury and the Waldos, to avoid the dust of the road,
walked back to Ptolemy by a pleasant path across the fields.
Ere long they overtook Hannah Thurston and Miss Dilworth.
Mr. Grindle was, of course, the theme of conversation.

“Wasn't he rightly served, Hannah?” Mrs. Waldo exclaimed,
with enthusiasm. Woodbury was fact assuming
heroic proportions, in her mind.

“I think Mr. Woodbury was entirely justifiable in his interruption,”
Miss Thurston answered, “and yet I almost wish
that it had not occurred.”

“So do I!” Woodbury exclaimed.

“Well—you two are queer people!” was Mrs. Waldo's
amazed remark.

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Taylor, Bayard, 1825-1878 [1863], Hannah Thurston: a story of American life (G. P. Putnam, New York) [word count] [eaf713T].
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