登陆注册
15704700000040

第40章 BY THE RIVER(2)

I was as tall as a woman at thirteen,and my older sisters insisted upon lengthening my dresses,and putting up my mop of hair with a comb.I felt injured and almost outraged because my protestations against this treatment were unheeded and when the transformation in my visible appearance was effected,I went away by myself and had a good cry,which I would not for the world have had them know about,as that would have added humiliation to my distress.And the greatest pity about it was that I too soon became accustomed to the situation.I felt like a child,but considered it my duty to think and behave like a woman.I began to look upon it as a very serious thing to live.The untried burden seemed already to have touched my shoulders.For a time Iwas morbidly self-critical,and at the same time extremely reserved.The associates I chose were usually grave young women,ten or fifteen years older than myself;but I think I felt older and appeared older than they did.

Childhood,however,is not easily defrauded of its birthright,and mine soon reasserted itself.At home I was among children of my own age,for some cousins and other acquaintances had come to live and work with us.We had our evening frolics and entertain-ments together,and we always made the most of our brief holiday hours.We had also with us now the sister Emilie of my fairy-tale memories,who had grown into a strong,earnest-hearted woman.We all looked up to her as our model,and the ideal of our heroine-worship;for our deference to her in every way did amount to that.

She watched over us,gave us needed reproof and commendation,rarely cosseted us,but rather made us laugh at what many would have considered the hardships of our lot.She taught us not only to accept the circumstances in which we found ourselves,but to win from them courage and strength.When we came in shivering from our work,through a snowstorm,complaining of numb hands and feet,she would say cheerily,"But it doesn't make you any warmer to say you are cold;"and this was typical of the way she took life generally,and tried to have us take it.She was constantly denying herself for our sakes,without making us feel that she was doing so.But she did not let us get into the bad habit of pitying ourselves because we were not as "well off"as many other children.And indeed we considered ourselves pleasantly situated;but the best of it all was that we had her.

Her theories for herself,and her practice,too,were rather severe;but we tried to follow them,according to our weaker abilities.Her custom was,for instance,to take a full cold bath every morning before she went to her work,even though the water was chiefly broken ice;and we did the same whenever we could be resolute enough.It required both nerve and will to do this at five o'clock on a zero morning,in a room without a fire;but it helped us to harden ourselves,while we formed a good habit.The working-day in winter began at the very earliest daylight,and ended at half-past seven in the evening.

Another habit of hers was to keep always beside her at her daily work something to study or to think about.At first it was "Watts on the Improvement of the Mind,"arranged as a textbook,with questions and answers,by the minister of Beverly who had made the thought of the millennium such a reality to his people.She quite wore this book out,carrying it about with her in her working-dress pocket.After that,"Locke on the Understanding"was used in the same way.She must have known both books through and through by heart.Then she read Combe and Abercrombie,and discussed their physics and metaphysics with our girl boarders,some of whom had remarkably acute and well-balanced minds.Her own seemed to have turned from its early bent toward the romantic,her taste being now for serious and practical,though sometimes abstruse,themes.I remember that Young and Pollock were her favorite poets.

I could not keep up with her in her studies and readings,for many of the books she liked seemed to me very dry.I did not easily take to the argumentative or moralizing method,which Icame to regard as a proof of the weakness of my own intellect in comparison with hers.I would gladly have kept pace with her if Icould.Anything under the heading of "Didactick,"like some of the pieces in the old "English Reader,"used by school-children in the generation just before ours,always repelled me.But Ithough it necessary to discipline myself by reading such pieces,and my first attempt at prose composition,"On Friendship,"was stiffly modeled after a certain "Didactick Essay"in that same English Reader.

My sister,however,cared more to watch the natural development of our minds than to make us follow the direction of hers.She was really our teacher,although she never assumed that position.

Certainly I learned more from her about my own capabilities,and how I might put them to use,than I could have done at any school we knew of,had it been possible for me to attend one.

I think she was determined that we should not be mentally defrauded by the circumstances which had made it necessary for us to begin so early to win our daily bread.This remark applies especially to me,as my older sisters (only two or three of them had come to Lowell)soon drifted away from us into their own new homes or occupations,and she and I were left together amid the whir of spindles and wheels.

One thing she planned for us,her younger housemates,--a dozen or so of cousins,friends,and sisters,some attending school,and some at work in the mill,--was a little fortnightly paper,to be filled with our original contributions,she herself acting as editor.

I do not know where she got the idea,unless it was from Mrs.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 魔登新世界

    魔登新世界

    魔法世纪在与地球平行的空间,那里和地球一样,是个现代化城市,然而,经过无数生化人,丧尸,魔兽的摧残,整个世界一片荒凉,满地苍夷,百废待兴,尹天心,一个,,,,标准宅男,在通宵上网之后,头脑发热,英雄救美,额!理想很丰满,现实很骨感啊!人没救着,结果两人纷纷被大货车送了张免费车票,来到了魔法世纪,欲知后事,且看魔登新世界
  • 大话解嘲故事

    大话解嘲故事

    担心妻子对丈夫说:“你每次出门,我都会非常担心。”“亲爱的,别担心,”丈夫安慰她道:“我会随时回来的。”“这正是我所担心的。”上班丈夫早晨6点回家,妻子还在睡觉。他轻轻脱掉衣服,悄悄向床走去。“你从哪里这么晚回来”?……
  • 枪神纪之下一个枪神

    枪神纪之下一个枪神

    小镇的覆灭,死去的母亲,激起了少年(格兰)心中的复仇之火,发誓一定要成为枪神,屠杀血族,为母亲报仇,儿时的梦想会实现吗?他将面对的会是什么。。。。。
  • 金融:丰富金融形态

    金融:丰富金融形态

    本书包括山西票号产生的背景、钱庄的产生与消亡、当铺的特色经营、账局业务的兴衰等内容。
  • 王爷在上:美人有点凉

    王爷在上:美人有点凉

    她笑颜如花,抵不过江山如画。她倾国倾城,抵不过一句质问。初见,他的一句告白,惹她一阵波澜。再见,他的倾城一吻,使她情定今生。又见,他的一句娶你,使她心花怒放。殊不知,那一刻,所为的捉弄便由此开始;殊不知,一句至死不渝,一生爱恨情仇。为他,她亲手毁了另一个爱她的人!为他,她亲手断送了自己的一生!“你既爱我,为何伤我至深?”“过去了,都已经是从前了。我只是把你当作一个棋子而已。”“棋子?桃花树,你许下的承诺,你会爱我…果然…”最后的最后,她所有为他做的一切,竟做了别人的嫁衣……“我自认自负,冰冷无情,却终究再毁在你的手中。只望我东山再起之时,能亲手断送你的江山,你的一切!”
  • 剑剑见溅

    剑剑见溅

    秦河的游戏人生!休闲快乐地练生活职业,跟朋友一起赚大钱、泡美妞。
  • 一品风水师

    一品风水师

    魔王附体的王源,从小到大,拥有王家祖传的茅山术,在偶遇一个女鬼之后,王源就一连遇到了很多意想不到的事情,而且这些事情的背后,都有一个让人悲痛的故事…
  • 末世闺中秀

    末世闺中秀

    重生到古代,为什么古代居然还有末世的?!幸好有异能傍身,不然在这个奇葩的世界,她要怎么活!
  • 相思谋:妃常难娶

    相思谋:妃常难娶

    某日某王府张灯结彩,婚礼进行时,突然不知从哪冒出来一个小孩,对着新郎道:“爹爹,今天您的大婚之喜,娘亲让我来还一样东西。”说完提着手中的玉佩在新郎面前晃悠。此话一出,一府宾客哗然,然当大家看清这小孩与新郎如一个模子刻出来的面容时,顿时石化。此时某屋顶,一个绝色女子不耐烦的声音响起:“儿子,事情办完了我们走,别在那磨矶,耽误时间。”新郎一看屋顶上的女子,当下怒火攻心,扔下新娘就往女子所在的方向扑去,吼道:“女人,你给本王站住。”一场爱与被爱的追逐正式开始、、、、、、、
  • 重生之全能大老板

    重生之全能大老板

    身为一个老板。就要玩转所有行业。看掌控天下万鬼之主是如何玩转各个行业的。求收藏,求推荐,新人新作求支持!!!!!