Juliana Horatia Ewing And Her Books eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 318 pages of information about Juliana Horatia Ewing And Her Books.

Juliana Horatia Ewing And Her Books eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 318 pages of information about Juliana Horatia Ewing And Her Books.

[Footnote 10:  Letters, Advent Sunday, 1881, 25th November, 1881, January 18, 1884.]

On June 1, 1867, my sister was married to Alexander Ewing, A.P.D., son of the late Alexander Ewing, M.D., of Aberdeen, and a week afterwards they sailed for Fredericton, New Brunswick, where he was to be stationed.

A gap now occurred in the continuation of “Mrs. Overtheway’s Remembrances.”  The first contributions that Julie sent from her new home were, “An Idyl of the Wood,” and “The Three Christmas Trees."[11] In these tales the experiences of her voyage and fresh surroundings became apparent; but in June 1868, “Mrs. Overtheway” was continued by the story of “Reka Dom.”

[Footnote 11:  Letter, 19th Sunday after Trinity, 1867.]

In this Julie reverted to the scenery of another English home where she had spent a good deal of time during her girlhood.  The winter of 1862-3 was passed by her at Clyst St. George, near Topsham, with the family of her kind friend, Rev. H.T.  Ellacombe, and she evolved Mrs. Overtheway’s “River House"[12] out of the romance roused by the sight of quaint old houses, with quainter gardens, and strange names that seemed to show traces of foreign residents in days gone by.  “Reka Dom” was actually the name of a house in Topsham, where a Russian family had once lived.  Speaking of this house, Major Ewing said:—­On the evening of our arrival at Fredericton, New Brunswick, which stands on the river St. John, we strolled down, out of the principal street, and wandered on the river shore.  We stopped to rest opposite to a large old house, then in the hands of workmen.  There was only the road between this house and the river, and, on the banks, one or two old willows.  We said we should like to make our first home in some such spot.  Ere many weeks were over, we were established in that very house, where we spent the first year, or more, of our time in Fredericton.  We called it “Reka Dom,” the River House.

[Footnote 12:  Letter, February 3, 1868.]

[Illustration:  THE RIVER HOUSE.  VIEW FROM THE WINDOW OF REKA DOM.]

For the descriptions of Father and Mother Albatross and their island home, in the last and most beautiful tale of “Kerguelen’s Land,” she was indebted to her husband, a wide traveller and very accurate observer of nature.

To the volume of Aunt Judy’s Magazine for 1869 she only sent “The Land of Lost Toys,"[13] a short but very brilliant domestic story, the wood described in it being the “Upper Shroggs,” near Ecclesfield, which had been a very favourite haunt in her childhood.  In October 1869, she and Major Ewing returned to England, and from this time until May 1877, he was stationed at Aldershot.

[Footnote 13:  Letter, December 8, 1868.]

Whilst living in Fredericton my sister formed many close friendships.  It was here she first met Colonel and Mrs. Fox Strangways.  In the society of Bishop Medley and his wife she had also great happiness, and with the former she and Major Ewing used to study Hebrew.  The cathedral services were a never-failing source of comfort, and at these her husband frequently played the organ, especially on occasions when anthems, which he had written at the bishop’s request, were sung.

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Juliana Horatia Ewing And Her Books from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.