The Montrose Democrat. (Montrose, Pa.) 1849-1876, June 11, 1857, Image 1

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'4:llt6ottum k- ', : 6trritstrit, tt,tiiprietirs:
*tittt Vfatrg,
Ull' TRI 7 GIRL s.
. „
.1.7 p in the
the
early,
Just at the peep of day,
Straining the milk in Abe dairy, :
Ttirt - tiwz 'Ole cows it.way•,
- Sweeping the floor in the kitehort,
M a king the bed upswirs,
Washing the breakfast Oishes,
- . Dusting tbe 'parlor ,Chairs.
13rnshing crumbs from! the pantry,
Bunting for eggs at': the barn,
'CleaPing turnips for dinner, •
Spinning stocking earn ;
Spreading th 6 wltiterteil linen, -
Down c.tn the bustle:4l,o°w;
Ransacking. evert- meadow -
Where the red btrawberries grow.
Stirelling: the " ilxips'"Tor Stinday . „
Churning.. tile snowyk:rentn. *
Il'lllill ,, the pails and strainer,
Dev,n in the coolingstren . tri; •
Fee , ling t,be - geese and t ni k e y s ,.
Making the plitnpkiri pies, •
Jozzin , * the little one's k eradie,
Di iviog away the flick.
G 1 r ., , 0 in every motion, t• . .
,ini.ie in evelv tone,):' '
il oar q in lottn and feaitlire ..
'flu;u<;:n 'night writ to own : s
Che, , l;s that lival spfing' r o ses',
Tetqh the Sw,bite,t of peark—
One c,f the,e-eonntrs„tniliels i s wor th .
. A I=eore-ef your (lily iirls.
II 1- 7 -1.1.1;1; E It" 0 3,1,T IL
Tcll ma not-that he is ap: I pr man,
1 1 4,qt. his dies is coarse bare.;
Tc;l Inv n his daily
I. a . workinan . s. :•canty flue.
T(11 tne not hiS Lirth ,
lEllat. his vaientn . L . rti is low ;
llot.est l . in his ::t ions ! 1
:;;at is all I t‘at,t.to knw.
, 1 •
Is his word to be "-relied On i
- Ht. , his charactvr no , I.lalnle ? i-
T':.:& I care not if. he', 10w4..,-, ;r--
TTltql I al: not whence Its name.
' Won.id he. from. an . unjuq ai..iton,
.. .
Tkirn away with .!,eornfull eve ? '
Wo.:id 11:' than defraud atqntiter,
So,neron the H.:-:.rfoki die ? . - •
1 .
\Vottll he spend his' hard gttined earning , ,
On. a hiother in 'istress - 1 .
IVoni-i be ,neeir the ale... 0,
- At'.l,l the weak ofitt's Wrongs reilies ?
Thi..r, he 1;• a man deservin:
I If my lure and my esteo;
knd IL axe not I , hat he - I • •
Ifi 'the ~ ye of wan may Aiem.
lAt it hea low thatched hotel ;
Lrt it he a clayit cot];
1,1 it I.? the parish workhunt.e—
. hi Inv eve it matters not;
l , the,rs Will disown him
inf , :rior to ihe.ir
I,:t 'them du bt-friQ.nd Lila
A. a broth e r to the
Jistilaurit.s.
TILE HEUITITD CTIAMBEE, ;
I? 'M",: 111.:17 Qtr,tiEN IN T!1 •SCIIO6L
Or E KESON COLE
c". Ti. NTIT.EY, A,.
Parson Cole was an ereentrqt mil of ebar
nc!er,.thouzb a le'arned divine and an eicel
i,mt man. he lived in the country, on his
own farm, ht•ing, a man- orsabstancr, and he
and his' amiable wife taught a private SetPrt
Sehoj r for young hat:if-sr - he erls were
loan`led anal lodzed by Mr. Cole at ins own
iMall respects trehrea ss mernkers
ref I,i: own family ; and a's-We sanatien wa=
hell:lir, and in }ht of the beautiful„f the school was considered a very
one .by thoF.,e 'who knew the merit.
f,rl . ;:p:lf.v•ters. • The number of scholars was
to twenty. and as no gist under . the
tvq , or ten teas ndinitterl,.and as those who
co — sae - weri , gendrally handsome an,* well .
residence became a spot con.
s , prated in the imaginations of All the young
men in that region of country. The parson%
Luz] tern, as they were called, were a lively.
ri T-)in`''. set, and a4,they, walked out
ia the afternoo4t to gather-flowers, they knew
to r were_o',-erve4 1 y tymehinr• eyes, _but
not in the least restrain's] e'r gaiety.
er preran.!. them from indubring in that frol.
ie glee”' of which school misses are fond,while
their merry. VO;CTS Tang softly and sivectly
Over IA and dale. Now, as we said
''o9 Iva- eccentric ;. he bad .e plaCe,. for every
s',;az, its true, but every body else thonzht.
_mere thing.in the wron7i :Platte. .That 'he
tit'iglis:e a j or his books without the fear of in
tern:vim), in solitary
:;nd holy meditation,' he had' fitted up
n chamber in one end of his house; a cham
• kr admirat.ly suited to . the purposes for
which it was desizned. being removed from
the nut e part.of the labyrinthian, ed ifiee, at t d
'4l)tortelle(l through lotr, narrow, dark and
crooked
pair In this chamber, - for some
Plrposes best known to himself the parson
izt'pt some rare curiorities but it is not to
nur purpose togive a desvriptioa Ilkt or cata
lazme t , f these natural and artificial wonders.
sifft it to say th-y lent an air.of quaintnecs
to the place, and induced the servant and
whels who - bad. been there, readily' to believe
that, Ils Mrs. Cole asserted. the chamber was
Icainted.• The goOd lady often, at table and
in presence of her boarderk, tue•ed her spouse
to fit up a study somewhere else,.datit the old
man deeared that he .liked to sptind his time
vihere familiar spirit.; of another world Aektll^
el fond -of holding counsel, thOnzlt he earn
k,t!t. urged his.pupils to obey bisinjunctions,•
an,i not venture in a. Place 14..tere'tlieir.sofx4r
-t:"i"s: lgnc . ien might ds , oVer' the Most
,TriZitifiii annotations. . became as - 'rule. of
sehofd, in Net nogirl was to' viSit,' on :any
Pretence, the hatinted chamber and thus" as
Psr.son Cole. flattered . *
hitrnif„he could „there
!'are evetrthing his own syay, and enjorlis
studies uninterrupted.
The parson had a nephew' -residing in 'a
distant part of the
. country, dhe . °Mir son and
heir of an eminent citizen or great Wealth,.
and a Younfr mast famine for his. eaConlish;
4z.
meets and manly beauty. Of this youth,
whose name was Edward Cole, every kill in
school had often heard, and the announce
ment that he was sooti-to visit his uncle, cre
ated quite a stir and excitement. Ono day
the-girls got intelligence that a strange- young
man; had arrived, and as may be expected,
they came to 'dinner dressed with unusual
care t and withAertits wildly :butting ; hut
judge of the disappointment of each, as she
entered and was presented to a plainly dress
ed young mail, by the name of Henry Will
iam& 1k was a modest, simple hearted lad,
but learned withal, and won 4rgcly on the
agectious of Parson Cole, who strenuouslv
urged him to study - divinity, and declared
thut,ryoung as he was he intended .to have
him appointed tutor to his ,nephew. The
youth bore these commendations meekly;and
as Ita had come to'seo Parson Cole to solicit
the latter's influence in getting him the situ
ation
-of principal of the village , academy, he
agre'ed t-, Wait until the ['won could see his
nephew. In the menutitne he arnuse'd ; him
self with hookS seeing the young ladies only
at tableoP h time he . and. the parson
discontsed at length on literary, historical,
and relikions suljects.
" Nilb s
tt a bore th at youth is." said Emma
z . A 4
\Vall e
,night 'While in company. with
se,vera . .:l3(ker companions.
i,,,
• - ‘ I I.I
. k*rs to he a- thousand years old,"
teMarked Susan Standi4, " and in his sub
lime Meditations entirely altstracted (*tom the
wdtld., I met so sick of his everlasting talk'
ahout the immortality of the soul, the nature
of man, and the chief good, and such auti•
ipated stuff. P s wonder when Edward Cole
is-coming >"
"And would von think it," again F.polZe
Mi,: c Walters, Ellen &tandem is. delighted
with him r
" With whom I" aAked Aernes Thorpe, the
heih- of the whorl : ; "not !tit-, Cole, hope,
for 1 s.art t to SN., hint first."
" Elward Cole tteleed," exclaimed Miss
Walter;; "poor Ellen never aspires•so hi7h.
The is 'a meek creatum and iimena to the
musty pl,ilo.ophy of Williams as if his words
were the sweetest music."
" Yes, and I have observed," said - .Tang r
Andersc,n; " that she lfas begun to tyke
unit-
Auzl pins w:;11 her dress, and that the sl-nti
mews of Mr. Williams have alreeidy affected
her mind. She will not do what he thinks
is:wrong, and what he praises is her delight.
lint here come: the lovelorn las"sie her. elf.—
Eilen. they say -You 'are. in loYe."
fbe spoken to blushed erims:n and
•
exclaimed ; " -What ! lin love r
." Yes, yeti little saint,"•sabl Miss Tlio` i !.‘.
".and all with his holiness, Mr. what
his name r' -
I don't know what you're talkin..about'''‘ l
said Ellen quietly.; "you are all disposed toil
ji , ke. I sue, but I'll forgive voi, for VCII to
dpubt d.A not intend to wound my r e r-li v o."
" Not for the world, dear Ellen," said Miss!
Thorpe ; "lon are An angel in heart, and
hard
hard indeed would be ours if we could want
only hurt the feelings cf our gentle sister.—
Nit tell me, dearest. what is .the name rf
this MoJern Plato we haveliere, I never van
remember his name; this sae boy who is to
be tlie
. Erd,ruils the second ?"
‘• Dn you mean-Mr. Williams ".' asked El-,
den meel:ly.
"That's the man ?" cried Miles:
" I'hoehus, what a name,
To f.ll the sounding trump of fame." •
"-I came to call you all to prayers," said -
Ellen Saunders, "and they are waiting for
us." •
A few days af;er the above convorsation,
the parson pat his school in a flutter, by in
forrnin his pupils that his nephew- would be
at thtir approaching eNSmination, and :;11 11 t
he intended to giVe Lim a party:
I inform you of this," said Mr. -Col e ,
"that von may write to your parents in time
and be prepared with dresses ouit e d to the
otseasion. That party will' be on 'the first
night of May, and you mad have a Nlay
Queen if yen choose; what-say you I"
. .
`• Agreed? agreed !" euied ail the girls at
once.
" And rott F11:111 stied the .etteen; Raid
sPveral -vi 'pupils to the parson ;. " tr
rrti:rht not al,:e .;1:re,..!."
I was thinking," ' , plied the parson"that
we bad letier ha:4l no Que;ri it's in
iditiJ
tn* honor and tni , iht cause heart burning:"
?he v.iung pri.,teste,l that it Should
not. each ore deelaiing that she would be
With the choice of die parson.
" I cannot difrtin , uiAl among mr ebil.l
- said il:e •rorgi old marl ; " you are all
i n m y ev e •, equally fair.''
'• Bat th.-n , onie im-ty be better than oth
er.," rep l;ed :Miss Awiet , on.
•• S o they may ; but that's fee the wr,rl,l.
not me, to determine," answered the teach
er.
" ppoFp we let your nephew choose:
Mis Cole.
" Oh; that's the very idea," exclaimed Iffss
Thorpe. h t . ( errs gparklicg with -con
sr oto sanerioritv t "Mr. Cole is the very man
to chonce—and as he is a stranger to us all,
he will hare no projaC7e.;."
My nephew ;'DUNS not like the task,"
Fail Cole ; he would not wish to say
that one of is wore handsome; than the
rest."
"11-s, but father,!' interposed Miss. Agnes,
"rou knorc that' some are han.isotner than
°fliers, and so do we—and I'm sure I for one
will not be offended at anychoice yonr neph
ew Can. nuke."
"Nor I." said Miss Anderson.
Nor 1, nor Irtint in all the others
" Suppose ?!r. Williams choose 1" said it,.
parson. The girls tittered: Mi. Williams
bluAed,: and the parson ,continued :
Williams is A putilent young man, and one
of evxlletit judgoment,and certain w ou ld
make a good choice. ,Will pone of you .
.p.ala Whaysay you, meek-eyed dove 'of
glen-Mary i"
Inc r Junked Ellen 'Saund
ers, was from Glen-Marv.
" I d 0 .," answered, the parson ; as con
bare not yet spoken, I should like to have
your views."
• " ludeed," said Elen, " I'd be ea glad . to
hare a May-play frolic, that 1,11 Pe perfect-
Is satisfied with any sort of araugements you
all may agree upon." ..
" Would you not like for Mr. Williams to
choose the Queen l" .asked Miss Standibb,
with a sly glance at the other girls . .
" If the rest of you- would," replied Elle'n.
!" But tell, nie my dear," said the parson,
" who would you prefer to choose the
Queen €.' • •
"1 declare—l have but one choice about
• - i• • . .
" WE ARE ALL EQUAL EEFOERcODAIc . 11 - TilE COIUS - iriTLT.IOI%”-L-Jant s Buchanan,
nelttreSC, ,Sllstlittililllll3 . COlllltll, Pt!Vett,- Tirtt.sha Etenting, yint, 11, 1857.
it," answered Ellen ; ".I.want the others to
".)e satisfied, and all to be happy ; and 'then
and not until then, I'll be satisfied ;end hap.
pv also." •
" Well spoken," said Mrs. Cole ; ." those'
are excellent sentiments,*and I kope all sym
pathize in them."
".No doubt all do." said the parson; "but
I think I can easily settle the. Whole !Matter
to the entire satisfaction of all. I dislike to
see preferences made ; you arc all handsome
enough, and agreeable enough ;. we are 'none
of vs as good M we might he: tht.t beau
ty, goodness, or agreeableness, shall not be
the test : the matter shall be deterniined
partly by accident, and. in a way that will
give general st;tistlction. : To-nto..ro* morn
iug each one of you shall go seperately into
the - garden, and bring me a present; and the
one whose, present most beComes female . roy
alty, shall be queen"'
• i• Who is to determine this I" asked Miss
Thorpe., •
" Al! a cs,". replied the liaison. ."'lf We do
not %ibirg,ree, then the choice shall be ilmerl
mine ! ! in some other way. 'You will find vi
olets, tulips, roses; pinks, hyacinth's, and oth
er flowers in bloom.
" lint sul , po , ki, more than ime of us . bring
the same thing," stigzfe:tcd Ellen Saunders.
"That you will hardly do; but to prevent
it, von mu,t earn bring a compound present.
You alt studied the fame botany, and roc all
ther . clo:c attach the - same language 'to the
same flowers; but it you do Hot, '3ou may
each trtn.late'for Yourselves?'
On the morning rtppo;n!ed,' Mks . ..kgric:
Thorpe,who rm. the first to enter the ft;irdeni
utr4 -orne , Allitt startled as she passed the gale
by the lintAien," Who :ire you:! who are
you?" uttered in a hoanfe, on:into:Al voice
above lierbead.-,She cast t i er eves up, and
saw sitting amoti.,4o the tangled vines over the
a.bor a large gßen parrot, to whose interrog
ators-, often repeated, she made no reply, itirol
IthSse.l still a •li:tle flurried, to cull and .
arrange' a burp:et worthy, of a queen. Miss
tandish was, the next to enter, and she too,
like Miss The!pe,was alai-me:l'lw the strhr.ge
porter at the gate, nor-did she make any re• -
ply. Irdeed every girl that passed' was in
Ler turn - flightened by the grange 'Yoke
above her—some, in their agita',ion, not even
casting their eyes upward to see the mysteri
ous -questioner who vecilerousiv dernanden
their tne4.
The 13:4, to enter was Ellen Stionders, who.
witea que,t:iFtne(i . ar the'gate,imtantly.lut,Lil
~
up, beim more cut ions than fearful, 'batting
as :he so," rin Ellen Stnidertt : who, are
you ?"
'• I'm the parson," replied
the-hi in q,rext . glee at Wm_ a p:lit e in
terim:LA .r: "I:tu the par.on—rtu . the par,en
fearing Gotl—feating Gu(l ; who are you
who are you
The g it NvaS And 7rently amus
ed at the diseourse of the learned bird, and
nearly furgetti2 . 4 her errand,while filial with_ ,
a sudden de s ire fur a fruli*, she intmeliately
overhauled his feathered reveren(te---and trat-
I riinz into the lit.mse, itnint , derately
\lting•the solemn bird into the Midst of the
a! , sembfv, at the same timi! askn, , 4 , it. who it
was. . 4' the parson—l'anihe Par Son," in
stantly replied the parrot, to the infinite
amusement of the whole company—the real
parson himself, though somewhat confus,ed.
joining in the 1aug . .,11.
" And what do you bring the Queen?"
asked Parson Cole : .
" Crown of Love, Crown of-Love," replied
Lis fttutli&ed holiness: " who are you ? who
a:re vou
Afi.er they had all adm7red the bird for a
Par-on Cole i•uddeuly turned to Ellen,
sayir.z;" lint my dear, where's your present
for the Queen !" •
`.lndced,"-ausWered Ellen, "I had
,totally
forgotten it, I AV:IS so :1111 USA by our reverepd
rival there. Where on earth Llid it come
from—l never saw it before !" -
" Did any of yeit . ?" hsked the - parson..:—
" Tell me truly, mr I)..doVed pupil., have any
of you. seen that Li rd•before I How , ;nines it
that none c.f tou, except Ellen, stopped to
question it t" . -
"Father," said Mice Agnes Thorpe—a proud
rnajes.ti.::l;eauty—•• father, will you forgive
in,, f i nd s;ill.,call rte daugrite,r I Will you
h e , ttte ,till'." eontinned‘sha; the tears o,art
in:z her v and her fratm . ,. heaving with evi-`
.ivr.t emo:ion : ".I : haee diAolieveel von? or
ders, tut only knows how . l hate sutler
ed for it.. 1 have L ee n i niserald e e v er s i nce;
I can bear it no lon , rer, and I E-el dint it is
a relief to mo toconfes. my crime t,,,rwe thi‘
whole a!-Fembl-y. I was tempted—l could
not ro=ute's eurio , ity; and ,io an evil
how I lo.iked into tl:e haunted 'Cltatrl,e,„—
SOotl :I'. I 1:r1'11( ., 1 1. 1 .:'• 1100 r, .1 f•!1W the
ca your armed-.hair. and his
lion: , •so frightened me that I ran down stairs,
and have til,vlr vet got over the
1 saw it yesterday I thour•ht the bird
kue* me, and knew tny - gailt, and I avoided
it. you forgive me I kaozo I will
never ag•ain diSoboy."
A n d I know it. too," replied tae parson,
the tows streaming down—his cheeks as be
took Agnes in his arms : "daagliter, I 'Will
say to von as one more mighty:and more ho.-
iv said to one of yoar erring thy sins are
foroiren tbee, go and sin no more.'
There were now ether and • similar codes.
sions to'te made the example of ..V:nes in
spired her snore timid companions with moral
couraze. and goon it appeared that ecerc fine
except Ellen Saunders had taken a rep into
the haunted chamber.
• "And how cornea it 'you never-trangcres
sed," asked the paison.vf Ellen, " were you
afraid of witches and goblins, or had you no
curiosity r •
"I never thouzbt the chamber was haunt
ed," answered }Hen " I suppose you did not
wish me to intrude into it; and ttiough my
curiosity was great, t restitined: it, hoping
that before I left school you.wouid let rue see
the curiositiei of which I had heard so many
strange reports." •
".And so you shall; tou shall all look now
to your heart's content," replied the parson,,
who aceordinaly led his pip' Into the
haunted chamber.
All of course were gratified, and all were
happy; but Ellen. only with a lively relish
turned 'over and eralblued with increasing de
light the many curious relics, amd %pecimens.
of art ant nature, that gags*. strange, -tnys
terioui - air to the parsOn's study. • _
. a And now t " said'. the . parson, after they
had ...left
,the haunted chamber, ".who shall
we make Queen. • ,
" Miss Agnet, of course s " cried - Elleu,'• who
Fyropathized with the soriew that still hung
its - sign4 n he bright eves of Miss Thrope....
" What say youalli" asked the pa*n.
" I say Ellen Saunders," repliel each girl
at the same - time. -•
"1 thought-once she desery.-cd it," , said the
parson, "but I hai-e changed my thin The
first to abase benelf shall be exhalteil
cot:tinned "Misi Agnes shall bold the
first stfitioil on that day, Miss Jane 'the.Se
'Cond,.and so on in the order of you pucces.-
sions ; and you, Ellen, .will bring :upitt the
rear, attended by Mr. Williams.. Whiit-say
you, are you all content 1"
They certainly. all w.ure, and none more FO
than 'Ellen Saunders; w ho very heartily
in the laugh at her own expense, although
she could hot but feel a touch of Pi.ty.fu'sMr.
Wilii ar ns, ;when she saw how reuch.4lt, , his
name excited. .
A good conscience is asu eleTll. onor,
whiTere.lethe latter to Ellen, while the«girls
were now t0..1 busy to notice him.
"d know it," answered Ellen, "and there
fore I think it. right that my rank should by
lowest. Indeed I-wish only that all the .oth
ecs could be as. Lapp - ns I mu."
"They'll" uever bo,'' returned Williams:
"in your heart is a fountain such as their
breasts do not contain; a fountain that •wiil
b!r-s you and ble!..s of you. (lreen, -and
bright, and,fresh in . the bloom of loveliness
which it will for ever produce, and the thrice
had. will I.le be ttiho allowed. to gar
ner fir him - elf the immortal sweetnecs of thy
mit UPC I."
favd turned scarlet, but she
di.l not uteri turn Iler head toward the
, pecker, anil hurried (1 . to join he compan
ions '
Need w- rleseribe the preparations made
to celebrate the: first of Ma v at the house of
Parson Cole t .61ra1) we picture the green,
enameled iuearlow in %%hie's, beneath the
;bade of ni2...1 oaks, the May Queen bas to
he crownol? Can we describe. the floral dec
orations cfi the seats, and especially' of 'the
throne ? Cab we tell how the birds were sing
ing—hoW the sloes smiled,- and all nature
wore • an air of soft repose ? . Shall We tell of
the great crlowd otia-ople •that came to wit
tress the Cl!r qunny-- - --of the songs that rang
so sweetly i those old woods, and of the dtr.
1
ilkhif u l•sp o I ts that: m;:d,r thetas cne of the
happiest th: t any hods had ever seen ?' • •
• ',-•• Well le.tve all these things to the•readet's
imagination; and we will leave him 0, Ler
to fancy if t ley Can the unutterable emotion
of time ireaucfal andmajes!ic - Queen, as Ole
sat upon her throne of flowers, expecting every
moment to have presott6d to her a subject,
whose arrival had that morning been an
nounced. .At length the parson came. !e ul-
jug np sr. elxtremely bandsome and elegant
vours -roan and approaching the roval
said, after a deep reverence, " I present to
lour majesty my nephew, Ed‘vniNl Cole:"
The Queen I ns - eueens on ,, ht. to do on sncil
occasions, tr.mbled violently, and felt as if
she would,lliint. Hei senses reeled, her eves
grew dim': - ;end when she was finallr able , ,,
ter took calrnlyabout her, the' young man,',
the observed" of all observers, came .leadingil
up the Id-ashlar! Ellett Saunders; saying,
" Permit me' to present to your majesty It ,
timid young creature, who i's this niolit to i
figure as a bride at dour msjesty's re l ay." •
The Queen again shook Violently, hut was
her roy self main, and was thus enabled to . ,
see di. Mr / Edward Cola and Mr. Henry'
Willia ins were one and the same person. But
she was every inch a_quecn ; her pride came
to h , .r rescue. and for the rest of the day she
tilled her station with unusual giace and tlig
nity,
•It remains only to" be said that
. yonno.Cole
had got the consent of• her parents bet;:re he
ever hineathed 'love to Ellen; that he dec:ared
himself to leer on the day before the fir4--of
May, and rifler a world of troulite ~o t- h er to
consent to become him own the folloichig
ni7lit. Her I.parents and filenils were there
approving; and on the evenin7 of the first of
May, IS—, beneath a canopy-of tiower, and
in the 'midst of a -delightful assembi+, the.;
meek-eyed (Ike of Glen-Mary declared bef;ire
the world that her resting-place wa., and
lvreter would_ be in the breast of Edward
Cole.
Are rs-T cRAcr.
lIETIY VOLVONE.
wa.4 e6niitig home, 1;illy her heart's
joY. Mrs. Gray smoothed once more the cor
neN:Of the al reatly snil o:11 ra:2:.-earpet, dust e d
nice inor.ry the dii , thtss table, and then with a
klok of infinite s;:tisfaction, took Ler seat in
the cliimm!y-eu:::er to listen, fur Billy was
coming.
"Two tnivures she nii,l thett it
seetne...t t , ) h.e r the ',Lc/la:1z fie would brar:tn
utLtr
tick. S:J t o the she 71 wetit Guiv—
lwr wooilpilewa: scanty, and ettfted
tho,e fveble ul. 11;:nds, but—Billy w:Ls com
b,* borm , ! -
11111v4 liis mother's home should
Clean and Cti . ght arid cheery to the hey, if be
did !Ids, there the pislisheil city furniture,—
Then what a Smile overran this wtinkles in
the Loud old lady's facie, as she thought of
the supper in store; surveil' upon porcelain,
, pice4 with city condiments it might not be;
but there wt it the sweet-cake and the mut
ton chop that Billy hnd reliihis,d when a boy,
and for. the ceoking,what man, rich or poor
with not over that there is but Lind cook in
the world—his mother.
Mrs. Gray shoGk .up the cushion of her
chair and was seating herself, when she saw
that the taide-cloth opposite was just Srt grain
awry ; she evened this, brushed. the -el - eau
hearth agnin, unrolled her knitting, and re
sumed her seat.
Wm. that n Round? Though
. only half
K:ay towards the middle of the needle, Mrs,
thav let fall her sock and ran as fa-t us her
old feet could travel to the door. No, only
the %inter wint.: was beating fur minds - 40n,
Might not the clock have stopped ?its hands
did time so slowly No, younger ears could
have heard its tick out:.idu through the pail
neted door. • I
Weil l - sere the sweet rakei risias", f Was
the supper really so tempting to look upon ?
Could she thin* of no improremere, I Mrs:
Gray opened the cupblard door; and gazed
with doting eyes, upon the viands - which,
should touch her Billy's lips;no connoisseur
ever studied birpictured Adonis or Cleopa
tra, half so lovingly as she the rising dough,
'the uncooked rehop, the three pickles, the
emootb slice - of butter, the scrap - of cheese,
and in a halfiFfaled cup-most precious of
them all—thi pinch of powdered herb, With .
that deliciotis'atisty-,greenhue, that tnakes it
knoWn to lovers'of ge,nnine tes: - • -
"All that for me, mother!"h •
"Bless my heart; Billy j! how Could • you
have come in, and I have'ivatched and Wait
ed' this hour past I Put never mind,.l'M glad
to see you, my, son ; he , re, sit in . ' the rocking.
chair and rest, and wilt take your coat:"
" Seeing that, you are r seventy ono years
old and I am, twenty-one, we'd better reverse
that arrrangement. Do you sit down. Why
mother, how handsome you look ! A
old soul, aren't you 1".. ,
A happy old soul she:was as she watched
her boy, and marked hove spruce and manly
ho bad grown; and yet how he had all the
old familiar Ways, and remethbered all the
old places about the house ; the new
overcoat Upon thepeg, and took his chair for
a seat at . his corner of the fire—dear Billy ! •
" I declae, how good. it is to he home
ao,ain ; how clean and nice. it is here, how
the tables Fhine r ;
how natural that border of
tulips looks around the floor and the rag
carpet—how I remember cutting up the
cloth for it=that pink stripe was poor little
Annie's - baby-cloak .; don't sigh, mother, I
was a thoughtless boy to tease-it away front
von
"-NO, Billy, you wanted to Make my ear
pet handsome ; and Annie wears better (tor
ments now the has, gone to our Father's
home. I was ( nly thinking how she would
enjoy this right—your first return.
" Maybe she does- enjoy it. Who can tell?
If I shou.ld be called above, do von suppose I
would fotr , et my old Mother.? Bat we won't
be oieran Look! this ptirple sttipe
was made from tile first gay waistcoat Lever
had. Didn't I feel proud to wear it when it
was new—and shouldn'tl be ashamed - of such'
a gandv thing LOW' ? Then the stripe
.nex: it
looks black; hat in the day time it's bottle
green—how well I remember! That's the
remainder of pa's rAil military pant—after I
hid worn them a Year or two, cut down."
So the.yonng ran on, seizito , what,ev
er topics seemed to please the goo d lady
.
most. .
-
'• There, Billy. now snorer is ready. And
this is a chop, hill•. And Billy- don't you
tetnember how you used to like sweet-cake?
AVell, bete they are, and-.these are pickles,
Billy."
'• I . deClftre,-1 haven't seeti such bounti
ful supper s;nce I -went away -from- home;
how ;-oot-1 the chop smells ?
Yes, and do taste one of the cale:=, Billy
they're light as puff balls,
good time, I cant eat to many
things at once. Mother, to change the sub
jectject,
, - don't you think that now I'm of age,ve,q
—almost twentv - -two--William sounds I,et
thwt ?
. " I've never called you William; your fath
er never did, and little Aunie, dear f.otil
wouldn't know her mother by that 'Janie.—
Mit William you 1.111111 be, if you wish.; I
promise not to call you any tither name; how
eat your supper,
" I've fini,hed. Come, let us dear the ta
ble tem:ether, and then you shall see how you
like the things brought frorn the Fede
ral city. _
" Wile, more pre.entF, when you sent the
flannel hard's- a wee , !: ago? •
You wouldn't c ,- ,11 flannel a pres"nt ! St.
Anthony, I've brolarn a saucer ! But 'never
mina, 1 retnemberea some, of oar plates w e r e
badlv.eratiked. and so thele3 a whole new-tea
F.et in tnv trunk.
The trunk was . opened,- and Mrs. Gray
smiled and sighed by turns, :to, 064 - Billy
bail spent a good thhd.. or -Iris income in
homely but useful rrifts for her ; patent f,)ot
warrne,s, patent flatirons, patent kettles-:
they wereenough tr,,Yeep the old lady h a ppy
and interes:ed uutilher sou should wurn
again. .
• On the morrow, Master William Gray was
gone. .AtTarting. he ;ace, once more, the
, : t-repeated ii junction condc.trning his awn
name.
'• But what ditrerenee.can it, make in rnt•
lettrN-nultokly heats tne, Billy; like
ahr looks. of the word.
" Doesn't any ene hear them ; 'You know
.how prom! I am of your handsome hand, and
your mood retlectionii ;• suppose the,e
.v.eut a 'fliend that arced mr letters
The oltbiady locked through her specta
des ,hatpiy enom , ir to break them. Billy
blushed. and bade his mother farewell.
The scenes change now to a city; the inte
rior of a huge I wirding-Lous., and the pri
vate pallor Ut its mistress..
Atio;her aged woman nits by •her fireside
at work ; her mind astir with picasa.nt antio
i t i a tions, I , nt far ditrereut ones . from_ those of
M. Gray.
Alt wh,,t Arang,e-e,ontrwts, what. delicate
bad,:s. of d;tforf?nee !mist be seen the lin-
CVe H
,100kti fecall , - above! Take,
t'ur instance, tbe . aged : lifrtlitt • roof.i from a
hundred homes, an listen fur slow f u et s . tep,,,
:ouk fur withered forms-; some you sbalffintl
in the licavoliobl chair of state otAtioned
about by lusuty, ylahning. honor; loye, obeili-
er.ee ; some you shall find eententiA with
ertunk that fall frorri their children's tableir,
slighted and only tolerated in the home ;,
some sit :Ilene by cheerless firesides, with the
Week uhich bath givea comfort to so many
chterless heart , : some seek to forget their
age by derkin? for this world's vanity fair;
while for others, the roof need not be lifted
for above their gray heals stretches only the
starred roof of heaven, and thu book of_ hu
man love, towards which their hungry eyes
turn, in the desolate street. .
IL was cbeerfal in Madam Sri t .lling's little
room :. brightly the. tire blazed, and ibe . eritn.:
son carpet reflected its warm. glow. A door
was opened—not by aged bands,.and a young
zirl appeared. " Oh, grandma, you 4 're . at
work still ; what a - dear soul ! and letting Me
gad about tbo . streeLs."
- But Joel, (Joan y..as the damsel's Mune)
didn't you think to.bny some More spangles?
I need a hundred now.
" And here they are: Bd Cid•l i t it a 16Yely
dress, and shan't I make ..some heartis ache
When its worn ; and shan't 1., care as 'much
AS these steel spangles - for their 'aching tool
" That's right, Joey, don't.fall iti love, .
want you. to choose a linshittid- 'With - - your
eye: wide . open. • 'try' veer.' an 'these
young men, and when Mr. Wright eaniaa . of
yoa'lnre bright , :enough' to catch
him. I have set my beart.upon a.- first-rate
mateh . for yon, child. •
Yes: an elegant . inin,with beautiful Manic
eves and iv ao'veell dreslod,' .. .and
Pa
ti I 1 ". ''
r
NOnsense, rra n .; ; loptnien answering
.that description, P:rok..9gtlarelegant,itrin
neya;Jiny. not' elegant ejes,
.",look out Toirel
egantfamilY,' let' height 4,.,statqra
look out for money to pay for elotlies—his
mid your'n—not 'merely to see if his tailor
his dress: d .
That reminds me, 'graudmi;:--how.ever
tame you to take a tailor to boArdiDeli
says yo - tilg Mr. Gray, that' has the upper
rooni,is notliingrbut a tailor. fin has. 'very.
gooittookine; baggage thonglt .1 peeped
over the Calustride When . the Coat:hum:lr
brought it,up stairs.., .; • ' •
" It's agin my rule, to be sure, to take anv
boarders but the fast. To tell,' the truth,
was 5o pleased with this young: man—he's
very patty. spoken—that I. promised.' the
room before ever asking what his trade wits:
Besides, be isn't one of thecOrnmon sort he's
what tlley,,ealla merchant tailor. Hand Me
more spangles, Jo ';" all this tiMe the old la
dy
"There,
sewing busily.
"
There, don't work too steadily, don't put
vn' eves out, grandipa ; I'll be back in half
a minute; I beard a carriage stop,' and per-,
.bars its Gray: I'll run and watch for
his entrance—itc So droll, the idea of our
boarding a tailor !"
Madam Snelling was a person of more ed
ucation than polish, more.. manner ele- -
gance. Possessing a little fortune, . she' still
preferred the dr.r.ts of her present lire,-aecom
panied as they were, she knew, by a larger
chance in the matrimonial market for.. Juey,
her adopted child. Her ch'aracter pres"entipo
that frequent combination of shrewdness and
simplicity, every one saw through madam,
and humored her. •
But Joey's " nitahre'' was none the less for
the good old lady's' absurdities. Joey was
fair and sp,i(•lttly, with the bloom of seven
teen on , her 'cheeks, a - nd the.tnie?tlef of seven
teen in her behavior. Wit's- if riot wbse, and
7:tetra! if not ele• - •'snt
z.--• merry, coquettish,
- ,
antrcarele-s of all the world, Joan was a
standin ,, favorite - niitidst ilitdatu •Su•Alinrr's
respectable boarde'rs.
Why grantima; be igult latne, after all
anti such a clean bosom and such a stiff
Ji.!he, he mustlavis curve fresh from the
laundress." . •
A very good-lookinkeune man.' .
" t call - him band some. What, eye - A be
has, and. how much dimity, and how Well he
dresses."
Joey, Mr. Gray is a tailor."
"1 know it, grandma, never fear me ? But
I thought all tailors were lame. Don't voti
reniember•old Solger, down to the 'vnes:•ar.!,
how he limped - Ana (Isn't you remember
that Mary walked with a crutch ?"
" Yts you little nonsen , e. ; but two club
tooted men don't wake , . their - slAible eloss
lime. And besides I tell .you ..11... Gray is a
merchant tailor." • .
A week - or two passed. 'Joey went to'her
Part .)lanted daggers or 'spangles in her
suitor's I.l' -ts ; and the sparinded dress had
grown shabby with use, when Joee sat in n the
upper eitatuber, one day, oottversing:=itit
trust Le told—‘4itb Ler grandtuother's . wait
ing-tnaid; .Deb.
•••I found it, Miss Joey, just where he had
hidden it under his pillow. See!" .•
" You did ! -now that's a whe,n for
all my coaxing, he wouldn't --let me read -a
word ; but of course I shall-not meddle with
tis letter, lay: it-in the drawer,.; and hy-the
way. Deb, grandma needs you in her room'
below."
`' Y e g, Ails % Form its eves Ire_ •piked up.
these thing,;." Debtly departed, muttering.
". I %vender-if she takes me bow fora fool,
wonder if I won't eatoh her ipelling out that
letter vet.
Joey sat watching.the elm, whose young
leaves told that spring bad come; ves,. even
into the paved courts of the;eitv. " I sbppose
Wll Gray sits here," she roused, "and thinks
of his mother's cottage zitear •old lady, I
'should like to sea her. But wlutt can the
letter contain, besides - the usual advice / She
can't have beard of his fancy for My humble
self / Ho, ha, perhaps- she objects to: m's,
perhaps I am not worthy of his worship; the
Inerchat t tailor ! It condi' be no other cause
that made him so shy about the letter ; and
if his mother has presumed to - criticize me,
why I have a right to improvel by'. her criti
cism, sure ••
" Yes, here. it is ; how *- el\'''sbe
how neatly the letter is fohled-4,.:Pear
—le never woald let me rend- that - first line',
yet hoW sweet it. is in:the dittir old lady I've
half a-mind to fall in love with the. boy, if on..
Iv for his mother's sake ; or : rather, I should
have half a mind, if poor Will weren't a tai
lor. •
Jciv's face reddened, as her eyes ran over
the mother's letter, " Not„ be-.deceived—
tiot let his senses flatter him 7 ,-not lw smitten
with a pretty face—grandma., poor, simple
shallow soul ; and after all, its true, true, ev
ery word. What are we, that we should
sneer at this good old lady and 'tier son, we
•are not. worthy of them." •
"Joev!" •
Why did the maiden's bee grow reddef ?
Whose eyes had followed her own aero,i4 the
letter line by, line ? • Who dared to dal - ) her
trembling hand in both- of his;? Ah, the new
boarder-41)6 tailor—Billy Gray I
"What makes you tremble, Joey V'
" was so very dishonorable
(NO dream Toe were at home; I•
The tailor laughed : " So the , dishonor all
lay in detection ! On my. • shoulders - .let it
rest then. - ntit why sh6uld you care for my
good opinion. What can I ever be to you any
t"'
. . .
Their eves 'lief: 104 4 s timitl and aShanke4l;
his frank but earl ; a eminettish aassi•er prase
to her lips, but,bis grieved look ebecsed leer
at once... •
" What can. l'ever be r• • - -
The eyes - were nl•erted 4 71Viih
much character, so much 'energy, so
obdnes.4; I think you -end attain to
Any . lot von - choose.':
" Joey; I viqeder if you belisre iri Stich
a sentiment us hive 1 You treat our hearts
as if they were made for playthings."
Fie tunied away—how stiff his collail9ok
•
ed.
-44 And wind we like- best, sometimes We
,piett , nd to scorn because it is net ne6,"
Better strive tor aid.inaki it
• "Tbitt's not my way. I'm a - oiziled
'and expect to.be bumered by Providence. '
don't know bow to strive ;sometittiks Uthink
it is better for a woniart to wait, in 'these mat
What matters - •
' Love for instance. If a ton — - ibvc+i ;ins;
lila I stand ready to give - fratit'itilisrers
Übe connive 10.1
hiot;whrile% fair gittoo for INueirV? - -
. I" , tefililirVhe dare obi -Break.'
eoluint U. Ziumb
tion mat - he anets that irank4neiti
appear impertinent.
Letinna dare, who' would - Min
• • "'Joey, what'd the need of
'all ti
loeutiOn ? You knOw 'that
know tint you know
l3ut, Willie-=-your mother'n-I.
" liut,Joey—your grandaMtha
" Two necmtives ritakesati
morians say.
' I cannot endure - t 6 .bp : 'tan ,
longer. ' Pear .toey witl you be tu
Say noif
. you must, but:7----- .:" -,
..," N ."O, no • - :
,iittii
4, Litin grateful r4i. 'YoUr'' Irani;
Snellinff. Hencefeithi will n '
Y 49 u ------ .
" There were two iieffatiyes?" ..'
NO one knew it,eiceit , Biddy . ,
s eokiii?, through, the -eyhole, :
i',,.who loved heibover better foi
nesi•••:--but tears carne into' the ii
eYe " s. Thi ' I d
stri f' tl 3 e e " rve this an(lthe t !p ifl u i t '6g lie l 7 r
r l
in his," why take it ;".how obtatte.,
Of course I'll be your *Mil - of cot;
in; You
,fora good sun, and. a ' tri
man,- and a lover besides; I ,-thii
'ore lilest, than if 'You .lacked.'- - .t
triii6, !Ind could boast the natn4 - i
or i're;ident. I only feel that Stich
air! as I can naer ge . worthy-, Or:
_ . . . .
lie:' ' ~. - - ' • - '
In tld's last opinion Joey and ty,: - .. Sitii)i
inc . ; - al Wti ys disagreed. The en b crag,e:rnint-*
'tlieold lady a 'sbr,ious illneia ; but. that`6'4,
t-he'poeified herSelfand - herfrienda with:: pro-.
1
eltiminEr;illat--after all-..Joeylli married
a erchwkwilor. . - -
REPORT . - - •
TILE LA,:sie REPORT - Fan ' 11.L 4 ',.Z.A.-
. . . ' ' . DIES:
. . • . . . ~ - --., _. .- _
An exchange states that the fol F lig: - 0.- '
port.waa actually presented:-=`- -- ;--._--
"Re:port , of cueor4mittee'h,', the In ienzo,:::re? ii --
is/atur . c, niade- By ..hfr.--. 1 .--, t 04 1 7iiiir: ;,:*-
i x 4 „. -. . . -
. .: .
"Mn,. ,Srsalcitn : The' elect tiattbie - , -, -:
. . .
to which was referred;. 'the . Peti 'oltY-bUI . t '
~. .
Committee appointed-by- the . Nat enal - Ntre
men's flights Convention' ' at -its- it ithal - tev..
sion held. in New Yorh,Norembe . 1.1151 : 1,:t . : :. 7
t i r
rnettiorialiie _ the Legislatures of e'' sever.,k
States, praying that all lawful "flea a :be rise.,
.to ward .seeurtu& -the rights of 's rage.: - . - t - t : ,
wonien iii the State of Indiana,'ha ',. had-61 ..
...Arne under consideratinti, and.bat*.diiinte• _
.. .
.me. to make thefollowingreport:. Otirceni• .
mitiee tire of the opibien.that - the • ortien.t:
Indiaiia live in -a .Christian-eonn ry ' the.i.
• 1
claim to belt Christian .people,'an" withal.
(.Iristian people the resealed la* il
. ..' . Gbil,-s..
Tar a: applied to the • relations of society, i -
the- eniy foundation of human - laisi. - -Th, .
revealAt law'of God in Indiana . l .. trid . him
p aw l: ami• wives as one - person: Aicritkeir ..
XEK: -1-:3. ' it. teaches that men rUulet gover t -, ..
their fa:nilie . s,.and that Women mil - suhtni* .
to: their laWful = . reiptisitions:.. Coto *Ma Xts:-..
18 t Ei-ihes,ians' - 4:-. 2 t?.-')1. 4 ; ::Tintoth rt.,-18)
i e
1 -Peter iliA. teaches that . the rams bi .
the wife belongs to_ the bushel:A.-4 . Corili-
__
th iaue vu. '2-13. ... ,- .The-petiticners • homplaiti
that the \ lairs of Indiana do net tee.ognist - ; - .
r', , omett as equal with 'men'. • In the opinion 01,
your committee it does;•With a -' 'slight varia
tion! ..They i&o'contplain that i;thi toneett;
of wemen . is not .obtained -to:.-aity measure el:
-entire Stat;3'-policy.' In Indiatia,,a womate:::.
-cement is always obtained 'to' mar 1 -befoil::
't.?r alut the time thdcetemony ift rfonntid;
and 'are willing to trust their husba dsitt_ili
' &natters! of State policy.' Yeti .. wsetitik:
plain, of petition the legislature t rentedy . .. , ,
kvils'tlielv 114;70. broughtbu thentielv They':
'`' Pam '
alSo comp that _they are ‘ 0"14:‘1 . t114)., t l .t , -:
being ref.net:ented:.' .Iu Ihdiana,:e eryttitsift
that. exerei: , es the right . of suffrage, represent:,
at
. least - one .wonian ;-. and some ..weitiett iti-.
Indiana hare a dozen-or. more reptesentatires. - . -•
Your c.Onitnittee feel a: . delicitey.i.recoittf, •
mending leg,h.dittion for . .sing,le.Woni li.'itt bur - .
.oivn State, being`
.singlo 'men ()tine res;- . 4 7 .,..
ing of the opinion thrit ; they (the Women) r
would prefer a legiSlator to legiSlatiti.: .....04t. - , .
sid e of the State this Legislatu're , ha- no:jty,
risdietion.
~ YOur committee are of . opinion
that all women have,-and ought-to , ar,e,:th*
privilege of doing justras they please ailong -
Ns they please to do right.; -and-ry ..ni emu,
triittee cannot better"expresstheir kin regard
for the fair petitioners,-than - brado . tint the
lrn nag of the poet':'.
, -
"' Ye lastly_bonitie blosoms
' Y4.pre,tty lassies dainty;
"leaven finale you good as well as
An' izfie pod bids
•. A -YouNG CIIARACTEIL-41 .1 . 1
man who Ivo a . just senso of his •
will 9,h)rt. rtith iris ebtlracter.,::g_
. 143rd to his charact ! er -,in:oarly,,tockto.
o f itlwmwei vable value to hini in all r I
years of b% i; life. When _tem p ted t'
:from strive propriety of depostrnent,h
a,k • I , itni>ell, '`.Can .1 afford - ibis!"
a 'nazi tw: vim tit. to a you'ng *art tte I
elevated usittd" t . loi _ tide ;s
_the foiri
a .goo,l chat:l4lr. The nritiCiA Or
I
kept plre, lutist b 3 einployed. i0.....t
thought which aro themselves_ Idris,
tend and elevating .,` !Thus dia. i
in ill own power, the ,theraes' of at '
If youth only , knew; how durable A
kli:stnal is" the injuii prOclueed-tty 't, i
geom.- of 4legradiag thcaighte--tf t
realized 'how frightful are the moral,
ties whi ( th a. chesished:,habit of loose
ad - on utoduces—they:- would.-shurt
the "Litt ofa serpent: . '
taf, A: wtover runile at Keipo rt;
_
soy, on-!11e felt,of picking rip . loo : v,
ihe di.litt,nen of 0L.6 - tro!
other, and, returning ititly: theta gm ! !
pinZi - ng ilium in a - I;aAat, 111
was Wt'll 1) . ir 1..40114 MeGea, *ha I
)l shed the feat in forty 7 pine_ mina
teen and three-quarter I
rif The houSe; of a.`l:a an;
is his i tradiS„ siver leaves it
regret,over Oruhis . P?. it htit
floss;
r tbe. - fria'ad Seal, the wit
°MTN' lig ,tet i rtieS hiSl'itpproaab:wit4l-
JOY be l 4 6 on her cheq-t, mu
their tranipaits.
, . .
VI" n exelinttli says - that id.'
nitlea *lira three petikinsto*
'lies's - firm ; one to‘diii - withilni-istle
one to . -iet killed 4aaditu4
wiil4 or tlid"titsitießs. '2: •
:-.. - Ri6iii• - i , - •* . : lte* , 7Miiiii-! - Y7;
,biihin'*:'iita.lie•Oilifii-piiii4'i-.10:;',..-.
di - 'wont&
Tetini•
,41
airtime
ye gitm-:
ini4'-' .1 4 1 ..i!
Or inIYSY
I lift
I t * -
11
sips;_ `
tile- jiaita
k nand(
£ -
;.$-
OOyD;`
young
.11. value,
.Sul re:
will be
graining
deviate
should
It is of
have all
ad& of
er.rto
;pia
,of
ehas
,ind has,
nation.
d
e
ey only
magiu
'tau as
iw
Alio,:
ly and
auk&
!vithoot,
g hicl;
; of 14
I *Amp
us at
Svor,;
:Wit to'
„
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~~t::~s
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