FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37  
38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48   49   >>  
ut it, but the pessimist remarked: "I hope there won't be any trouble. Donald, I think, is a man with decent instincts, but passion could carry him to great lengths. Once aroused, he might prove a dangerous enemy." The young man said these words earnestly enough, no doubt. He had no idea he was uttering a prophecy. How surprised we are sometimes to find that our commonplaces have been verified by fate, with all the added emphasis of tragedy! CHAPTER XII. MODEST, SIMPLE, SWEET. Minnie is in her new home in Springfield. Springfield is a village set at the base of a series of hills, which it is an article of faith to call mountains. They are not on the map, but that matters little. We ought to be thankful that the dullness of the guide-book makers and topographists has still left us here and there serene bits of nature. Springfield had a church, and a school, and a post office, and a tavern. It was a scattered sort of place, and a week of it would have proved the death of a city lady, accustomed to life only as it glows with color, or sparkles with the champagne of passion. Minnie had never seen a city. She was content that her days should be spent close to the calm heart of nature. She felt the parting with old friends at Lake Megantic keenly. She murmured "farewell" to the woods in accents choked with tears. All the associations of childhood, and the more vivid and precious associations of her early womanhood, crowded upon her that last day. Donald occupied the chief place in her thoughts. He was far away. Should they ever meet again? Should their sweet companionships ever be renewed? The cares of her new home won her back to content. Minnie's mother was feeble, and required careful nursing. Her own early life had been darkened by hardships. When a young girl she had often gone supperless to bed. Her bare feet and legs were bitten by the cutting winds of winter. Her people had belonged to the North of Ireland. She herself was born in the south of Antrim. Her mother was early left a widow, without means of support. She worked in the fields for fourpence a day, from six to six, and out of this she had to pay a shilling a week for rent, and buy food and clothing for herself and orphan child. Her employer was a Christian, and deeply interested in the social and spiritual welfare of the heathen! When the outdoor work failed in the winter, she wound cotton upon the old-fashioned spinning-wheel, and Minni
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37  
38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48   49   >>  



Top keywords:

Springfield

 

Minnie

 
mother
 

winter

 

Should

 

content

 

associations

 

nature

 

passion

 

Donald


renewed
 
companionships
 
supperless
 

darkened

 

hardships

 

required

 
careful
 

nursing

 

feeble

 

childhood


decent
 

precious

 

farewell

 

accents

 

choked

 

womanhood

 

crowded

 

trouble

 

thoughts

 

occupied


employer
 

Christian

 

deeply

 

interested

 

orphan

 

clothing

 

shilling

 

social

 

spiritual

 

fashioned


cotton
 

spinning

 

failed

 

welfare

 

heathen

 
outdoor
 

belonged

 

people

 

Ireland

 

remarked