FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1830   1831   1832   1833   1834   1835   1836   1837   1838   1839   1840   1841   1842   1843   1844   1845   1846   1847   1848   1849   1850   1851   1852   1853   1854  
1855   1856   1857   1858   1859   1860   1861   1862   1863   1864   1865   1866   1867   1868   1869   1870   1871   1872   1873   1874   1875   1876   1877   1878   1879   >>   >|  
g, Cynthia?" he asked. Now, indeed, they were going to hear something at last. An intuition impelled Cynthia to take advantage of that opportunity. "The learning has become so great, Mr. Satterlee," she said, "that I have come back to try to make some use of it. It shall be wasted no more." She did not dare to look at Jethro, but she was aware that he had sat down abruptly. What sacrifice will not a good woman make to ease the burden of those whom she loves! And Jethro's burden would be heavy enough. Such a woman will speak almost gayly, though her heart be heavy. But Cynthia's was lighter now than it had been. "I was always sure you would not waste your learning, Cynthia," said Mr. Satterlee, gravely; "that you would make the most of the advantages God has given you." "I am going to try, Mr. Satterlee. I cannot be content in idleness. I was wasting time in Boston, and I--I was not happy so far away from you all--from Uncle Jethro. Mr. Satterlee, I am going to teach school. I have always wanted to, and now I have made up my mind to do it." This was Jethro's punishment. But had she not lightened it for him a little by choosing this way of telling him that she could not eat his bread or partake of his bounty? Though by reason of that bounty she was what she was, she could not live and thrive on it longer, coming as it did from such a source. Mr. Satterlee might perhaps surmise the truth, but the town and village would think her ambition a very natural one, certainly no better time could have been chosen to announce it. "To teach school." She was sure now that Mr. Satterlee knew and approved, and perceived something, at least, of her little ruse. He was a man whose talents fitted him for a larger flock than he had at Coniston, but he possessed neither the graces demanded of city ministers nor the power of pushing himself. Never was a more retiring man. The years she had spent in his study had not gone for nothing, for he who has cherished the bud can predict what the flower will be, and Mr. Satterlee knew her spiritually better than any one else in Coniston. He had heard of her return, and had walked over to the tannery house, full of fears, the remembrance of those expressions of simple faith in Jethro coming back to his mind. Had the revelation which he had so long expected come at last? and how had she taken it? would it embitter her? The good man believed that it would not, and now he saw that it had not,
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1830   1831   1832   1833   1834   1835   1836   1837   1838   1839   1840   1841   1842   1843   1844   1845   1846   1847   1848   1849   1850   1851   1852   1853   1854  
1855   1856   1857   1858   1859   1860   1861   1862   1863   1864   1865   1866   1867   1868   1869   1870   1871   1872   1873   1874   1875   1876   1877   1878   1879   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

Satterlee

 

Jethro

 
Cynthia
 

Coniston

 

school

 

burden

 

learning

 

coming

 

bounty

 

surmise


source

 
larger
 
fitted
 

talents

 
natural
 
approved
 

possessed

 

announce

 

perceived

 

village


ambition

 

chosen

 

remembrance

 

expressions

 

tannery

 

return

 

walked

 

simple

 

embitter

 
believed

expected

 

revelation

 
pushing
 

retiring

 

graces

 
demanded
 

ministers

 
predict
 

flower

 
spiritually

cherished

 

abruptly

 

sacrifice

 
wasted
 

intuition

 

impelled

 
advantage
 

opportunity

 

lighter

 
choosing