The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 18, No. 110, December, 1866 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 302 pages of information about The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 18, No. 110, December, 1866.

The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 18, No. 110, December, 1866 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 302 pages of information about The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 18, No. 110, December, 1866.

* * * * *

The same children who make the little snow image shall plant dry sticks, etc., and they shall take root and grow in mortal flowers, etc.

* * * * *

Monday, September 17.—­Set out on a journey to Temple, N.H., with E.F.  M——­, to visit his father.  Started by way of Boston, in the half past ten train, and took the Lowell and Nashua Railroad at twelve, as far as Danforth’s Corner, about fifty miles, and thence in stage-coach to Milford, four miles farther, and in a light wagon to Temple, perhaps twelve miles farther.  During the latter drive, the road gradually ascended, with tracts of forest land alongside, and latterly a brook, which we followed for several miles, and finally found it flowing through General M——­’s farm.  The house is an old country dwelling, in good condition, standing beside the road, in a valley surrounded by a wide amphitheatre of high hills.  There is a good deal of copse and forest on the estate, high hills of pasture land, old, cultivated fields, and all such pleasant matters.  The General sat in an easy-chair in the common room of the family, looking better than when in Salem, with an air of quiet, vegetative enjoyment about him, scarcely alive to outward objects.  He did his best to express a hospitable pleasure at seeing me; but did not succeed, so that I could distinguish his words.  He loves to sit amidst the bustle of his family, and is dimly amused by what is going forward; is pleased, also, to look out of the open window and see the poultry—­a guinea-hen, turkeys, a peacock, a tame deer, etc.—­which feed there.  His mind sometimes wanders, and he hardly knows where he is; will not be convinced that he is anywhere but at Salem, until they drag his chair to a window from which he can see a great elm-tree of which he is very fond, standing in front of the house.  Then he acknowledges that he must be at the farm, because, he says, they never could have transplanted that tree.  He is pleased with flowers, which they bring him,—­a kind-hearted old man.  The other day a live partridge was sent him, and he ordered it to be let go, because he would not suffer a life to be taken to supply him with a single meal.  This tenderness has always been characteristic of the old soldier.  His birthplace was within a few miles of this spot,—­the son and descendant of husbandmen,—­and character and fortune together have made him a man of history.

This is a most hospitable family, and they live in a style of plain abundance, rural, but with traits of more refined modes.  Many domestics, both for farm and household work.  Two unmarried daughters; an old maiden aunt; an elderly lady, Mrs. C. of Newburyport, visiting; a young girl of fifteen, a connection of the family, also visiting, and now confined to her chamber by illness.  Ney, a spaniel of easy and affable address, is a prominent personage, and generally

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 18, No. 110, December, 1866 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.