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Merry´s Museum, Parley´s Magazine, Woodworth´s Cabinet, and the Schoolfellow, Vol. 255 (Classic Reprint)




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Hersteller:Forgotten Books (Merry, Robert)
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Excerpt from Merry´s Museum, Parley´s Magazine, Woodworth´s Cabinet, and the Schoolfellow, Vol. 255 One summer, when August was about twelve years old, he went to spend one of his vacations with his uncle and aunt, who lived near a pleasant village on the banks of the Connecticut River, at some distance below Hartford. The house in which August´s uncle lived was situated on a rising ground near a wood, just beyond the margin of the village. There was a piazza near one end of the house, that commanded a very pretty view of the river. Euphrazia, August´s cousin, used to sit upon this piazza summer afternoons, and watch for the steamboat coming up on her way from New York to Hartford. Euphrazia, I am sorry to say, was rather a wild girl. The truth was, she had always been so much indulged by her mother, and allowed to have her own way from her earliest childhood, that she was now entirely unmanageable. Her mother attempted to exercise some control over her from time to time, but she acted in so feeble and ineffectual a manner that she accomplished nothing. It is true that Euphrazia did not in most cases openly and avowedly refuse to obey her mother, still she always contrived to carry her point, and her mothers resistance to her will ended almost always in useless remonstrances and murmurings. One or two instances will best show how Euphrazia was, accustomed to manage affairs with her mother. One day when Mrs. Gale, Euphrazia´s mother, was sitting at one of the windows in her little back parlor, at her work, Euphrazia came up toner and began tumbling over the things in Mrs. Gale´s work-table drawer. "Frazie," said Mrs. Gale, "what are you doing in. my drawer? Let it alone. How many times have I told you that you must never touch anything in my drawers?" "But, mother," replied Euphrazia, "I want a string." As she said this she went on ransacking the drawer. "What kind of a string do you want?" asked Mrs. Gale in an impatient tone. "I want a good strong string to tie up some flowers," said Euphrazia. "But, Frazie, I can´t let you have any flowers, at least not from my borders," said her mother. "I´m going to get them in the garden, mother," said Euphrazia, "all except two or three." "And you are putting my drawer all in confusion," said her mother. "Look at my spools, all topsy-turvy-and I took so much pains to arrange them this very morning." "I did it pulling out this skein of linen thread," said Euphrazia. "This is just what I want." "Take it, then," said her mother, "and go away; and the next time you want anything out of my drawers ask me, and let me get it for you, instead of tumbling over my things in that way." About the Publisher Forgotten Books publishes hundreds of thousands of rare and classic books. Find more at www.forgottenbooks.com This book is a reproduction of an important historical work. Forgotten Books uses state-of-the-art technology to digitally reconstruct the work, preserving the original format whilst repairing imperfections present in the aged copy. In rare cases, an imperfection in the original, such as a blemish or missing page, may be replicated in our edition. We do, however, repair the vast majority of imperfections successfully; any imperfections that remain are intentionally left to preserve the state of such historical works.


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