Hills of the Shatemuc
e played rou
s and dimple
d the bow
dily at a
ice that was
"ere long w
odly, and stro
athered a
GFE
ank fortune!" exclaimed Rufus
t there in the middle of t
the tea-cups and saucers off t
ur balance," said his brother tartly.
ff anything!" said Asah
where your
N
atter, Will?" s
doors, on the handl
ai
- on the g
I've got it here. There - see to it, Asahel
his hat, but n
ernor - she has been c
s old, at his feet, and took her up, to the perfect satisfaction of both parties. Her head n
makes you call Winthrop Gove
nd run and tell him
emains of the fire that had boiled the kettle were not amiss after the damps of evening fell; and the room itself, with its big fireplace, high dark-painted wainscoting, and e
hrough with that wh
e disposed of
hrough sowing?"
go into the garden to-morrow - I can't att
this year, Mr. Landholm? - it's
sweet enough. I haven't much time to attend to
gs substantial, si
le fat creature who was still in her brother's arms and giving him the charge of her
m, "there's wood wanting to be got. I am alm
without supper. - Rufus, I guess you'll have to go up into the woods to-morrow with the ox-sled
are called substantial things are the least substantia
her?" said
belong to the mind - things which have to do with somethin
id his father dryly; "we must eat, in the first place. You must keep the body aliv
r kind of work, sir, do you?" said Winthr
I do. It has always been my desire that you and Will should be better off in this r
ilence of
hich 'really last,' Ru
very direct answer, but the que
n of cultivation and refinement and elegant leisure; - hugely unknown, and yet surely laid hold of by the mind's want. But though fancy saw her for a moment in some strange travestie of years and education and circumstances, that was only a flash of fancy - not dwelt upon. Other thoughts were more near and pressing, though almost as vague. In vain he endeavoured to calculate expenses that he did not know, wants that he could not estimate, difficulties that loomed up with no certain outline, means that were far beyond k
ady to go than his parents were to send him, - if they could; and in their case, as in his, the lack of power was made up by will. Rufus should have an education. He should go to College. Not more cheerfully on his pa
on to College was already a great stretch of effort, and of possibility; to send two
he hope that it might take root and thrive better on its own stock elsewhere. It was cheerfully done, all round. The father took bravely the added burden with the lessened means; the mother gave her strength and her eyesight to make the needed preparations; and to supply the means for them, all pinched themsel
ne, to see a neighbour come in. Even that, Winthrop shunned; he was cleaning the harness of the wagon, and he took it out into
ll, - "I hear tell one of your s
and sorrow struggling together i
's he
l - in the
h? - What's
do you
e goin' t
ies - there's an Ac
- And so he's goin'
farmer do with
- send for you, n
on I've got enough to d
ch but fish, do you? - t
ound. You can't run corn straight up a hill
very
that kind o' way o' farmin
aid Mr. Landholm, with a
hodel; then he aint going to - a - what d
y and by he'll go to
at he wan
nt it too,
ld by them all," said the father, with a mixture of pride express
inthrop quit the stoop. "He'll never run a plough up the side of a hous
Landholm with a sigh. "That m
to hum," said Mr. Underhill; - "but that's not my affair. Well, I
e laws for you," Mr. La
his hat, - "I wish they'd put you u
k you
'd give me somethin' nother
is own wit, Mr. U