ged there; the garden is
beautiful, and the care of it is a great pleasure as well as a great
benefit to me; it gives me all the outdoor exercise and recreation that
I require to enable me to sit at my writing or reading all the rest of
the day."
"Ah, Ishmael, my lad, who would think work was recreation except you?
But it is your goodness of heart that turns every duty into a delight,"
said Reuben Gray; and he was not very far from the truth.
"It is his obstinacy as keeps him everlasting a-working himself to
death! Reuben Gray, Ishmael Worth is one of the obstinatest boys that
ever you set your eyes on! He has been obstinate ever since he was a
baby," said Hannah angrily. And her mind reverted to that old time when
the infant Ishmael would live in defiance of everybody.
"I do believe as Ishmael would be as firm as a rock in a good cause; but
I don't believe that he could be obstinate in a bad one," said Reuben
decidedly.
"Yes, he could! else why does he persist in staying home this evening
when we want him to go with us?" complained Hannah.
Now, strength of will is not necessarily self-will. Firmness of purpose
is not always implacability. The strong need not be violent in order to
prove their strength. And Ishmael, firmly resolved as he was to devote
every hour of his leisure to study, knew very well when to make an
exception to his rule, and sacrifice his inclinations to his duty. So he
answered:
"Aunt Hannah, if you really desire me to go with you, I will do so of
course."
"I want you to go because I think you stick too close to your books, you
stubborn fellow; and because I know you haven't been out anywhere for
the last two months; and because I believe it would do you good to go,"
said Mrs. Gray.
"All right, Aunt Hannah. I will run upstairs and dress," laughed
Ishmael, leaving the tea-table.
"And be sure you put on your gold watch and chain," called out Hannah.
Hannah also arose and went to her room to change her plain brown calico
gown for a fine black silk dress and mantle that had been Reuben Gray's
nuptial present to her, and a straw bonnet trimmed with blue.
In a few minutes Ishmael, neatly attired, joined her in the parlor.
"Have you put on your watch, Ishmael?"
"Yes, Aunt Hannah; but I'm wearing it on a guard. I don't like to wear
the chain; it is too showy for my circumstances. You wear it, Aunt
Hannah; and always wear it when you go out; it looks beautiful over
your black sil
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