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+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII" />
+<title>Rich Enough</title>
+ <style type="text/css">
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+<h2>
+<a href="#startoftext">Rich Enough, by Hannah Farnham Sawyer Lee</a>
+</h2>
+<pre>
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Rich Enough, by Hannah Farnham Sawyer Lee
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Rich Enough
+ a tale of the times
+
+
+Author: Hannah Farnham Sawyer Lee
+
+
+
+Release Date: October 29, 2007 [eBook #23231]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RICH ENOUGH***
+</pre>
+<p><a name="startoftext"></a></p>
+<p>Transcribed from the 1837 Whipple and Damrell edition by David
+Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org</p>
+<h1>RICH ENOUGH;<br />
+A TALE OF THE TIMES</h1>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">by the author
+of</span><br />
+&ldquo;THREE EXPERIMENTS OF LIVING.&rdquo;</p>
+<blockquote><p>And while they were eating and drinking, there
+came a great wind from the wilderness, and smote the four corners
+of the house, and it fell upon them.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p style="text-align: center">Third Edition.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">BOSTON:<br />
+PUBLISHED BY WHIPPLE &amp; DAMRELL,<br />
+No. 9 Cornhill.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">new
+york</span>:&mdash;<span class="smcap">samuel colman</span>,<br
+/>
+No. 114 Fulton Street.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">1837.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><!-- page 2--><a
+name="page2"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 2</span>Entered
+according to Act of Congress, in the year 1837, by<br />
+<span class="smcap">Whipple and Damrell</span>,<br />
+In the Clerk&rsquo;s Office of the District Court of
+Massachusetts.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 3--><a name="page3"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+3</span>CHAPTER I.</h2>
+<p>&ldquo;Welcome,&rdquo; said Mr. Draper, the rich merchant, to
+his brother, who entered his counting-room one fine spring
+morning.&nbsp; &ldquo;I am truly glad to see you&mdash;but what
+has brought you to the city, at this <i>busy country</i> season,
+when ploughing and planting are its life and sinews?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A motive,&rdquo; said Howard, smiling, &ldquo;that I am
+sure will need no apology with you&mdash;<i>business</i>!&nbsp; I
+have acquired a few hundreds, which I wish to invest safely, and
+I want your advice.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When you say safely, I presume you mean to include
+profitably.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 4--><a name="page4"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+4</span>&ldquo;Ay, profitably and safely.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am just fitting out a ship for Canton; what do you
+think of investing the sum in articles of foreign
+merchandise?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I confess,&rdquo; said Howard, &ldquo;I have great
+distrust of winds and waves.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Suppose you invest it in Eastern lands? many have made
+fortunes in this way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am not seeking to make a fortune,&rdquo; said Howard,
+quietly;&mdash;&ldquo;my object is to secure something for my
+family in case of accident, and I only want to invest what I do
+not require for present use in a manner that will bring compound
+interest.&nbsp; I hope not to be obliged to take up the interest
+for many years, but to be adding it to the principal, with such
+sums as I may be able to spare from our daily
+exertions.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I perceive, brother,&rdquo; replied Mr. Draper, a
+little scornfully, &ldquo;you have not increased in worldly
+wisdom.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have not been much in the way of it,&rdquo; said
+Howard.&mdash;&ldquo;Mine is a still, peaceful life&mdash;I study
+the changes of the atmosphere more than the science of worldly
+wisdom.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 5--><a name="page5"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+5</span>&ldquo;We can get along, however, but poorly without
+it,&rdquo; replied Mr. Draper; &ldquo;the harmlessness of the
+dove is no match for the cunning of the serpent.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;True,&rdquo; said Howard; &ldquo;but if you mean me by
+the dove, there is no necessity for my venturing into the nest of
+serpents.&nbsp; I am well aware that my habits of thinking and
+modes of life are tame and dull, compared to your projects and
+success;&mdash;but we are differently constituted, and while I
+honor your spirit and enterprise, and do justice to the honest
+and intelligent business men of your city, I am contented with my
+own lot, which is that of a farmer, whose object is to earn a
+competency from his native soil, or, in other words, from
+ploughing and planting.&nbsp; I have no desire for speculation,
+no courage for it; neither do I think, with a family like mine, I
+have a right to <i>risk</i> my property.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There you are wrong; every body has a right to do as he
+pleases with his own property.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To be honest, then,&rdquo; replied Howard, &ldquo;I
+have none that I call exclusively my own.&nbsp; <!-- page 6--><a
+name="page6"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 6</span>Property is
+given to us for the benefit of others; every man is accountable
+for his stewardship.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But can you do better than to double and treble it
+every year, or, by some fortunate speculation, convert ten
+thousand dollars into ten times ten thousand?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should say,&rdquo; replied Howard, &ldquo;if this
+were a certainty, it would cease to be <i>speculation</i>, and I
+should feel bound to do it, within honest means.&nbsp; But as the
+guardian of my family, I feel that I have no right to venture my
+little capital in a lottery.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is lucky all men are not of your mind,&rdquo; said
+Mr. Draper, rather impatiently, and taking up his pen, which he
+had laid down;&mdash;&ldquo;but really, brother, I am full of
+engagements, and though I am rejoiced to see you, I must defer
+further conversation till we meet at dinner; then we shall have
+time to talk over your affairs; just now, I am wholly
+engaged.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Near the dinner hour Howard went to his brother&rsquo;s
+house.&nbsp; It was large, and elegantly furnished, and, what in
+the city is rather uncommon, surrounded by trees and
+pleasure-grounds, <!-- page 7--><a name="page7"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 7</span>a fine yard in front, and a large
+garden in the rear.&nbsp; Mr. Draper purchased the place when
+real estate was low, and it had since risen to more than double
+its original value.&nbsp; Howard was conducted to the
+dining-room, where he found his sister-in-law, Mrs. Draper.&nbsp;
+They met with much cordiality&mdash;but he perceived that she was
+thinner and paler than when they last met.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are not well, I fear,&rdquo; said Howard,
+anxiously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have a cold,&rdquo; replied she; and with that
+nervous affection which often follows inquiries after the health,
+she gave a half-suppressed cough.&nbsp; &ldquo;Have you seen my
+husband?&rdquo; she asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I left the stage at the corner of State Street,
+and went directly to his counting-room; but I found him engrossed
+by business, and verily believe I should not have obtained a
+moment&rsquo;s conversation after the brotherly welcome that his
+heart gave me in spite of teas, silks, hides, stocks, and per
+centage, if I had not had a little business of my own,&mdash;a
+little money to invest.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 8--><a name="page8"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+8</span>&ldquo;Are you, too, growing rich?&rdquo; said Mrs.
+Draper, with a languid smile.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O no,&rdquo; replied Howard; &ldquo;we farmers have not
+much prospect of growing <i>rich</i>.&nbsp; If we earn a
+comfortable living, and lay by a little at the end of the year,
+we call ourselves thriving, and that is the most we can
+expect.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have advantages,&rdquo; said Mrs. Draper,
+&ldquo;that do not belong to those who are striving to grow rich;
+you have wealth that money seldom can
+buy,&mdash;<i>time</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We have our seasons of leisure,&rdquo; returned Howard,
+&ldquo;and yet, I assure you, we have employment enough to prize
+those periods.&nbsp; You would be surprised to find how much
+constant occupation every season demands.&nbsp; Spring is the
+great storehouse of our wealth, but we must toil to open its
+treasures; they are hid in the bowels of the earth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You remind me,&rdquo; said Mrs. Draper, &ldquo;of the
+story of the farmer who had two sons.&nbsp; To one he left a
+large sum of gold; to the other his farm, informing him he would
+find an equivalent portion hid in the earth.&nbsp; The one
+invested his money in merchandise, and <!-- page 9--><a
+name="page9"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 9</span>made
+&lsquo;haste to grow rich;&rsquo; the other dug every year with
+renewed hope of finding the gold, and continued planting and
+sowing as his father had done before him.&nbsp; At the end of
+fifteen years, they met on the same spot, the one a bankrupt, the
+other a thriving farmer.&nbsp; I suppose,&rdquo; added she,
+&ldquo;I need not put the moral to the end of my tale, in
+imitation of &AElig;sop&rsquo;s fables; you will find it
+out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is so applicable,&rdquo; said Howard, &ldquo;to our
+present conversation, that I almost think it is an impromptu for
+my benefit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not for yours,&rdquo; said she; &ldquo;you do not want
+it.&nbsp; But now tell me a little about your fanning
+seasons.&nbsp; Spring, I understand, must be a very busy one; but
+when you have ploughed and planted, what have you to do but sit
+down and wait?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear sister,&rdquo; said Howard, &ldquo;you, who
+know so much better than I do how to carry out your comparisons,
+can well understand that there is no time given us for idleness;
+while we wait the result of one part of our labors, we have other
+works to accomplish.&nbsp; Spring-time and harvest follow each
+other rapidly; <!-- page 10--><a name="page10"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 10</span>we have to prepare our barns and
+granaries.&nbsp; Our mowing season is always one of our
+busiest.&nbsp; We have our anxieties, too;&mdash;we watch the
+clouds as they pass over us, and our spirits depend much on
+sunshine and rain; for an unexpected shower may destroy all our
+labors.&nbsp; When the grass is cut, we must make it into hay;
+and, when it is properly prepared, store it in the barns.&nbsp;
+After haying-time, there are usually roads, fences, and stone
+walls to repair, apples to gather in, and butter to pack
+down.&nbsp; Though autumn has come, and the harvest is gathered
+in, you must not suppose our ploughing is over.&nbsp; We turn up
+the ground, and leave it rough, as a preparation for the
+spring.&nbsp; A good farmer never allows the winter to take him
+by surprise.&nbsp; The cellars are to be banked up, the barns to
+be tightened, the cattle looked to,&mdash;the apples carefully
+barrelled, and the produce sent to market.&nbsp; We have long
+evenings for assorting our seeds, and for fireside
+enjoyment.&nbsp; Winter is the season for adjusting the accounts
+of the past year, and finding out whether we <!-- page 11--><a
+name="page11"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 11</span>are thriving
+farmers.&nbsp; Depend upon it, we have no idle time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How curiously we may follow out the cultivation of the
+earth with the striking analogy it bears to the human
+mind,&rdquo; said Mrs. Draper, &ldquo;in sowing the seeds, in
+carefully plucking up the weeds without disturbing what ought to
+be preserved, in doing all we can by our own labors, and trusting
+to Heaven for a blessing on our endeavors!&nbsp; A reflecting
+farmer must be a wise man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am afraid,&rdquo; said Howard, &ldquo;there are not
+many wise men amongst us, according to your estimation.&nbsp; In
+all employments we find hurry and engrossment; we do not stop to
+reason and meditate; many good agricultural men are as destitute
+of moral reflection as the soil they cultivate.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At least,&rdquo; said Mrs. Draper, &ldquo;they have not
+the same temptation to become absorbed by business as
+merchants.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I believe we shall find human nature much the same in
+all situations,&rdquo; said Howard.&nbsp; &ldquo;There is one
+great advantage, however, in farming&mdash;that is, its
+comparative security:&mdash;we are satisfied <!-- page 12--><a
+name="page12"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 12</span>with moderate
+gains; we have none of those tremendous anxieties that come with
+sudden failures, the fall of stocks, and obstructed
+currency.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And this is every thing,&rdquo; said Mrs. Draper, with
+enthusiasm.&nbsp; &ldquo;Nobody knows better than I do, how a
+noble and cultivated mind may be subjugated by the feverish
+pursuit of wealth&mdash;how little time can be spared to the
+tranquil pleasures of domestic life, to the home of early
+affection&mdash;&rdquo;&nbsp; She stopped, and seemed
+embarrassed.&mdash;Howard&rsquo;s color rose high; there was a
+pause.&nbsp; At length he said,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Every situation has its trials; those who best support
+them are the happiest.&nbsp; But we are growing serious.&nbsp; I
+want to see your children&mdash;how they compare with mine in
+health and size, and whether we can build any theory in favor of
+a country life in this respect.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The children were brought; they were both girls.&nbsp; The
+eldest was the picture of health, but the youngest seemed to have
+inherited something of the delicacy of her mother&rsquo;s
+constitution.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can scarcely show one amongst my boys,&rdquo; <!--
+page 13--><a name="page13"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+13</span>said Howard, &ldquo;that gives evidence of more ruddy
+health than your eldest girl, Frances; but my wife&rsquo;s little
+namesake, Charlotte, looks more like a city-bred lady.&mdash;O,
+here comes my brother James.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Draper entered.&nbsp; A close observer would have been
+struck with the difference of expression in the countenances of
+the two brothers, although they were marked by a strong
+resemblance.&nbsp; That of the eldest was eager and flushed; the
+brightness of his eye was not dimmed, but it was unsettled and
+flashing; there were many lines of care and anxiety, and his
+whole air marked him as a business man.&nbsp; Howard&rsquo;s
+exterior was calm, and thoughtful;&mdash;the very hue of his
+sun-burnt complexion seemed to speak of the healthy influence of
+an out-of-door atmosphere.&nbsp; They were both men of education
+and talent; but circumstances early in life rendered them for a
+time less united.&nbsp; Both had fixed their affections on the
+gentle being before them.&nbsp; James was the successful
+suitor.&nbsp; There are often wonderful proofs of St.
+Pierre&rsquo;s proposition that &lsquo;harmony proceeds from
+contrast.&rsquo;&nbsp; Frances and Howard had much <!-- page
+14--><a name="page14"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 14</span>the
+same tastes and pursuits.&nbsp; Howard&rsquo;s attachment was
+deep and silent; James&rsquo;s, ardent and zealously
+expressed;&mdash;he won the prize.&nbsp; Howard&rsquo;s taste led
+him to a country life.&nbsp; He was not rich enough to become a
+gentleman farmer; he therefore became a working one.&nbsp; For
+years, he did not visit his brother; but at length the wound was
+entirely healed by another of the fair creatures whom Heaven has
+destined to become the happiness or misery of man.&nbsp; Still
+the theory of contrast was carried through; his second love was
+unlike his first; she was full of gayety and life, and gave to
+his mind an active impulse, which it often wanted.&nbsp; Frances,
+in the midst of society, drew her most congenial pleasures from
+books.&nbsp; Charlotte, the wife of Howard, though in comparative
+solitude, drew her enjoyment from society.&nbsp; There was not a
+family in the village near, that did not, in some way or other,
+promote her happiness.&nbsp; Her information was gathered from
+intercourse with living beings&mdash;her knowledge from real
+life.&nbsp; If the two sisters had changed situations, the one
+might have become a mere bookworm; the other, from the liveliness
+<!-- page 15--><a name="page15"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+15</span>of her disposition, and the warm interest she took in
+characters, a little of a gossip.&nbsp; As it was, they both
+admirably filled their sphere in life, and influenced and were
+influenced by the characters of their partners.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why did you not persuade Charlotte to come with
+you?&rdquo; said Mrs. Draper.&nbsp; &ldquo;Sisters ought to be
+better acquainted than we are.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I invited her,&rdquo; said Howard, &ldquo;but she
+laughed at my proposing that a farmer and his wife should leave
+the country at the same time.&nbsp; I have brought, however, a
+proposal from her, that you should transport yourself and
+children back with me; we have room enough in our barn-like house
+for any of your attendants that you wish to bring.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For a moment Mrs. Draper seemed disposed to accept the
+invitation; but she immediately added,&mdash;&ldquo;I do not like
+to take my children from their schools.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is just the answer Charlotte anticipated, and she
+desired me to combat it with all my book-learning opposed to
+yours, and now and then fill up the interstices with such plain
+matter-of-fact argument as she could offer; for <!-- page 16--><a
+name="page16"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 16</span>instance,
+that they would improve more in one month passed in the country,
+at this fine season, than in a whole summer at school.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Tell her,&rsquo; said she, &lsquo;to let them</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Leave their books and come away,<br />
+That boys and girls may join in play.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;I really think, Frances,&rdquo; said Mr. Draper,
+&ldquo;this would be an excellent plan; you are not quite well,
+and the country air will be of service to you and
+Charlotte.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We have so much more of country round us,&rdquo; said
+she, with an air of satisfaction, &ldquo;than most of my city
+friends, that I scarcely feel it right to make trees or grass an
+excuse for emigration.&nbsp; I have as much pleasure in seeing
+spring return to unlock my treasures, as you can have,
+Howard.&nbsp; I must show you some of my rare plants.&nbsp; I
+have, too, my grape and strawberry vines; and finer peach trees I
+do not think you can exhibit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I sincerely hope,&rdquo; said Howard, &ldquo;you will
+enjoy this pleasure long, and eat fruit that you have cultivated
+yourself: I dare say, it is sweeter than any you can
+buy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 17--><a name="page17"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+17</span>&ldquo;It ought to be,&rdquo; said Mr. Draper, a little
+seriously, &ldquo;for it certainly costs about six times as much
+as the highest market price that we should pay.&nbsp; We live
+here at a most enormous rent; my conscience often twinges me on
+the subject.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And yet I have heard you say, that you bought this
+place lower,&rdquo; said Howard, &ldquo;than any which you would
+now occupy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is true; but by taking down this building, and
+cutting the land into lots, I might get a house
+clear.&rdquo;&nbsp; A slight flush passed over Mrs.
+Draper&rsquo;s cheek.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have had applications,&rdquo; continued Mr. Draper,
+&ldquo;for the whole estate as it stands; but really, it is such
+a source of pleasure to my wife to have her garden and her
+shrubbery, that I have not listened to them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thank you,&rdquo; said Mrs. Draper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am doubtful, however, whether I am doing right to let
+so much property remain idle and useless.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not useless, brother,&rdquo; said Howard, &ldquo;if it
+gives so much enjoyment to your family.&nbsp; What can you do
+with money but purchase <!-- page 18--><a name="page18"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 18</span>happiness in some form or
+other?&nbsp; The benevolent purchase it by relieving the wants of
+others, and are blessed in blessing; nor can I see why money may
+not as wisely be expended in the purchase of a fine house and
+garden, as by investing it in stocks, or ships and
+cargoes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Simply because the one is dead property, and brings no
+interest; the other is constantly accumulating.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is there no such thing as being <span
+class="smcap">rich enough</span>?&rdquo; said Howard.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Are we to be always striving to acquire, and never sitting
+quietly down to enjoy?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No one can look forward to that time more earnestly
+than I do,&rdquo; said Mr. Draper.&nbsp; &ldquo;Every wise man
+will fix upon a certain sum, that his reason and experience tell
+him will be sufficient for his expenditures; and then he ought to
+retire from business, and hazard no more.&mdash;Now, Howard, as I
+must hurry through dinner, we may as well improve our time.&nbsp;
+I promised to aid you in the disposition of your surplus
+money.&nbsp; As you have a dread of adventure, and do not like to
+run any risk, I <!-- page 19--><a name="page19"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 19</span>will take it myself, and give you
+compound interest.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Howard expressed his thanks.&nbsp; &ldquo;You owe me none; it
+will be a matter of convenience to me to have the use of this
+additional money.&nbsp; I only feel some compunction in deriving
+that profit from it which you might yourself reap.&nbsp; However,
+as I take the risk, and you take none, it is according to your
+own plan;&mdash;and now I must be off; I have already overrun my
+time,&rdquo; said he, looking at his watch.&nbsp; &ldquo;If
+possible, I shall be at home early, but it is a busy season; two
+East India cargoes have just arrived, and several consignments of
+cotton from the south; all are pressing upon us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My brother,&rdquo; said Howard, as he disappeared,
+&ldquo;is the same active, enterprising man he always was.&nbsp;
+I rejoice to hear, however, that he has set some limits to his
+desire for wealth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Our desires grow proportionably to our increase of
+wealth, I believe,&rdquo; said Mrs. Draper.&nbsp; &ldquo;When we
+began life, your brother said, if he was ever worth a hundred
+thousand dollars, <!-- page 20--><a name="page20"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 20</span>he would retire from business; he now
+allows himself to be worth much more than that amount, and yet
+you perceive our homestead becomes too valuable for our own use,
+because it can be converted to money.&nbsp; All this, however,
+would be nothing, if I did not see this eager pursuit of gain
+robbing him of the pleasures of domestic life, of the recreation
+every father ought to allow himself to receive from the innocent
+conversation and sports of his children.&nbsp; He cannot spare
+time for travel&mdash;to become acquainted with the beautiful
+views of our own country.&nbsp; To you, who knew him, as I did,
+full of high and noble perceptions, this is a melancholy
+change.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Howard was silent; he remembered his brother&rsquo;s early
+restless desire of wealth, strikingly contrasted with his own
+indifference to it.&nbsp; Frances judged of his character by that
+period of life when all that is imaginative or sentimental is
+called into action;&mdash;she judged him by the season of
+<i>first love</i>.&nbsp; She little supposed that the man who was
+contented to ramble with her over hill and dale, who could bathe
+in moonbeams, and talk of the dewy breath <!-- page 21--><a
+name="page21"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 21</span>of evening
+and morning, as if it came from &ldquo;Araby the blest,&rdquo;
+would one day refuse to quit the bustle of State Street, or the
+dark, noisy lumber of India Wharf, to gaze on the Falls of
+Niagara, because it could not thunder money in his ear! that his
+excursions were to be confined to manufactories, coal-mines,
+rail-road meetings, and Eastern lands.&nbsp; This development of
+character had been gradual, and she scarcely realized his entire
+devotion to business, till she saw his health affected by that
+scourge of our &ldquo;pleasant vices,&rdquo; dyspepsy.&nbsp; She
+expressed her apprehensions to Howard, and begged him to use all
+his influence to break the spell.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can think of nothing that will have more
+effect,&rdquo; said Howard, &ldquo;than for you to accept my
+wife&rsquo;s invitation, to pass a few weeks with us in the
+country.&nbsp; This will occasionally withdraw my brother from
+the city, and it appears to me that your own health may be
+benefited by the change.&rdquo;&nbsp; He was struck with his
+sister&rsquo;s altered appearance, with the occasional flush, the
+short, low cough; yet she said she was well&mdash;&ldquo;only a
+slight cold.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 22--><a name="page22"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+22</span>At length she promised to be with them the ensuing week,
+provided her husband could make arrangements to go with
+her.&nbsp; &ldquo;If he knows that I depend on him,&rdquo; said
+she, &ldquo;it will be the strongest inducement for him to quit
+the city for a few days.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Draper returned late in the evening, and had only time to
+complete his business affairs with his brother, who departed
+early the next morning.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 23--><a name="page23"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+23</span>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+<p>The spring had returned with its new-born beauty, its swelling
+buds, it tender grass; here and there a tree in the city
+anticipated the season of leaves, and put forth its verdant
+honors.&nbsp; &ldquo;Now, ma&rsquo;am,&rdquo; said Lucy, who had
+long been a faithful domestic in the family, &ldquo;if you are
+going particular, and don&rsquo;t expose yourself by going into
+the garden, and will take the cough-drops regularly, morning and
+evening, you will get rid of your cold.&nbsp; This is just the
+season when every body gets well that got sick as you
+did.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How was that?&rdquo; said Mrs. Draper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, when the sap was going down the trees in the
+autumn; but now it is going up.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But whether the sap had already gone up, or for some other
+reason, which was as clear to human perception, Francis did not
+shake off her wearing cough.&nbsp; Mr. Draper was not alarmed at
+it; it was very unobtruding, and he <!-- page 24--><a
+name="page24"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 24</span>had become
+<i>used to it</i>.&nbsp; It was not one of those vulgar, hoarse
+coughs, that, till we connect danger with it, often excites
+indignation in those who are listening to an interesting
+narrative, or to a reader, who is obliged to wait till the
+impertinent paroxysm is over.&nbsp; Mrs. Draper&rsquo;s was quite
+a lady-like cough, low and gentle, and seemed rather like impeded
+respiration.</p>
+<p>Visiters would sometimes observe, when they went away,
+&ldquo;Mrs. Draper is still a handsome woman, though she has lost
+her bloom.&nbsp; What a pity she has that affected little cough!
+it really spoils her; it is nothing but a habit; she could easily
+break herself of it, if any body would be honest enough to tell
+her.&rdquo;&nbsp; This task rested with Lucy alone; but it was
+all in vain.&nbsp; Frances took the cough-drops morning and
+evening, and still the disagreeable habit remained.&nbsp; Mr.
+Draper was very little at home; and when he was, his mind was
+engaged by new projects.&nbsp; Anxiety, however, did not rob him
+of sleep: he was too successful; he seemed to have the Midas-like
+art of turning every thing to gold:&mdash;his thousands were
+rapidly accumulating, and half a million was now the <!-- page
+25--><a name="page25"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 25</span>point
+at which he determined to stop.&nbsp; Mrs. Draper&rsquo;s slight
+cough did not attract his attention; but if her appetite failed,
+he grew anxious, and feared she was not well.</p>
+<p>Week after week passed, and still it was impossible for Mr.
+Draper to leave the city.&nbsp; At length, a letter arrived from
+Charlotte, claiming the visit; and he substituted one of his
+clerks to conduct his family to his brother&rsquo;s
+residence.&nbsp; Here, though not more than forty miles from the
+city, Mrs. Draper found the freshness and novelty of country
+life.&nbsp; The family were farmers, children and all.&nbsp;
+Charlotte was acquainted with all the little details belonging to
+a farm, and took as much interest as her husband did in the
+growth of grain, the raising of pigs and poultry, and feeding
+cattle in the best and most economical manner.&nbsp; She
+displayed her dairy with its cheese arranged on shelves, her
+white pans of milk, and her newly-churned butter, which
+impregnated the air with its sweetness.</p>
+<p>It was with long-forgotten feelings of health that Frances
+breathed the atmosphere around her; she perceived that her
+respiration was <!-- page 26--><a name="page26"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 26</span>more free.&nbsp; &ldquo;How ignorant
+I was,&rdquo; said she to Howard, &ldquo;to compare my city
+garden to the country!&nbsp; There is music in every accidental
+sound.&nbsp; How fresh is the air! how unlike the mornings to
+which I have been accustomed, where the voice of the teamster
+urging on his over-loaded horse, or the monotonous cry of the
+fishmonger, disturbed my slumbers!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Her heart beat with pleasure as she saw her children go forth
+with their cousins to rural enjoyments: her tender bud, which she
+had often feared would never live to unfold its beauty, her
+little Charlotte, she saw here as joyous and as active as her
+sister.&nbsp; New hopes and anticipations brightened the
+future.&nbsp; How does returning health change the prospect of
+external circumstances!&nbsp; The cough was much less constant,
+and Charlotte, who professed to have wonderful skill in curing
+diseases, had undertaken to eradicate it.&nbsp; She did not
+approve of late slumbers, and every morning she brought her
+patient a tumbler of new milk, and challenged her to come out and
+breathe the fresh air.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do not wait,&rdquo; said she,
+&ldquo;till its wings are clogged by the smoke of the city; <!--
+page 27--><a name="page27"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+27</span>come and win an appetite for our country breakfast, our
+new-laid eggs: the children are hunting for them amongst the hay,
+and here comes my little namesake with her prize: she has brought
+hers for your breakfast.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Draper did not arrive at the time he appointed, and
+Frances often felt the sickness of hope delayed.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Deliver me from such excellent husbands,&rdquo; said
+Charlotte to Howard, &ldquo;who are wasting the best years of
+their lives in acquiring wealth for their families, and yet never
+think themselves <i>rich enough</i>.&nbsp; Here is poor Frances,
+kept in a state of feverish anxiety, when rest and tranquillity
+are absolutely necessary for the restoration of her
+health.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Saturday evening following, Mr. Draper arrived.&nbsp; He
+was delighted to see his wife and children, and thought they
+looked remarkably well.&nbsp; On Sunday morning, he walked with
+his brother over the farm, and calculated the probable receipts
+of the year.&nbsp; Away from the atmosphere of business, his mind
+seemed to recover its former freshness.&nbsp; &ldquo;How
+beautiful this stillness is!&rdquo; said he: &ldquo;it reminds me
+of <!-- page 28--><a name="page28"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+28</span>the mythology of the heathen world; the ancients used to
+say that when Pan slept, all nature held its breath, lest it
+should awake him.&nbsp; You have made an enthusiast of Frances;
+nothing will do for her now but the country.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My wife is anxious about the health of yours,&rdquo;
+said Howard; &ldquo;she thinks her cough an indication of weak
+lungs.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know,&rdquo; said Mr. Draper, stopping short,
+&ldquo;she is subject to a cough; ours is a miserable climate; I
+hope the warm weather will entirely banish it.&nbsp; I have a bad
+cough myself;&rdquo;&mdash;and he coughed with energy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish, brother,&rdquo; said Howard, &ldquo;that period
+had arrived, at which you have so long been aiming, that you
+thought yourself <i>rich enough</i> to devote more time to your
+family.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No one can look forward to it more eagerly than I
+do,&rdquo; replied Mr. Draper; &ldquo;but you can little
+understand the difficulty of withdrawing from business.&nbsp;
+However, I fully mean to do it, when I have secured to my wife
+and children an inheritance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Howard smiled.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O,&rdquo; said Mr. Draper, in reply to the smile, <!--
+page 29--><a name="page29"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+29</span>&ldquo;you must not suppose my wants can be measured by
+yours.&nbsp; Your farm supplies you with the materials of life,
+and you get them at a cheap rate.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I give for them what you give,&rdquo; said Howard,
+&ldquo;time,&mdash;and a little more,&mdash;I give manual labor;
+you know I belong to the working class.&nbsp; In this
+money-making day, men despise small gains, and yet my own
+experience tells me they are sufficient for happiness.&nbsp;
+Great wealth can add but little to our enjoyments; domestic
+happiness, you will allow, is cheaply bought, as far as money is
+concerned, and riches cannot add a great deal to our corporeal
+enjoyment.&nbsp; The pleasures of sense are wisely limited to
+narrow boundaries; the epicure has no prolonged gratification in
+eating; though he may wish for the throat of the crane, he cannot
+obtain it; neither does he enjoy his expensive delicacies more
+than the day-laborer does his simple fare.&nbsp; Of all the
+sources of happiness in this world, overgrown wealth has the
+least that is real; and from my own observation, I should think
+it the most unproductive source of satisfaction to the
+possessor.&nbsp; I have heard of many very <!-- page 30--><a
+name="page30"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 30</span>wealthy men
+that have tormented themselves with the fear of coming to actual
+want, but I never heard of one man in moderate circumstances that
+was afflicted with this monomania.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You talk like a philosopher,&rdquo; said Mr. Draper,
+laughing, &ldquo;who means to live all his life in his tub.&nbsp;
+However, I assure you that I do not intend always to pursue this
+course of hurry and business; in a very short time, I expect to
+agree with you that I am <i>rich enough</i>; now, my only desire
+is to hasten that period, that I may devote myself to my
+family.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is it possible,&rdquo; said Howard, &ldquo;that this
+incessant toil is to purchase a blessing which is already within
+your grasp!&nbsp; At least I hope you mean to devote yourself to
+your family now, for a few days.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I regret to say,&rdquo; said Mr. Draper, &ldquo;that I
+must be off early to-morrow morning.&nbsp; But I am thinking, as
+my wife and children enjoy the country so much, that it is an
+object for me to purchase a snug little place where <!-- page
+31--><a name="page31"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 31</span>they
+may pass the summer.&nbsp; Do you know of any such near
+you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Clyde Farm is up for sale,&rdquo; replied Howard.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should like to ride over and see it,&rdquo; said Mr.
+Draper, musing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not this morning,&rdquo; said Howard.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This afternoon, then, will do as well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Howard; &ldquo;this is the only
+uninterrupted day I have with my family, and it is our regular
+habit to attend public worship.&nbsp; To-morrow morning we will
+ride over as early as you please, but to-day I hope you will
+accept as a day of rest from business.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Draper had thought it quite impossible to give a part of
+the next morning to his family, but he always found time for
+business.&nbsp; Accordingly, when the morning arrived, they rode
+over to Clyde Farm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I remember that farm perfectly well,&rdquo; said Mr.
+Draper; &ldquo;it was my favorite resort when I was a
+boy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I remember those times too,&rdquo; replied Howard,
+&ldquo;when I used to lie stretched at full length by the side of
+the waterfall, getting my <!-- page 32--><a
+name="page32"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 32</span><i>amo,
+amas</i>, and only now and then roused by the distant sound of
+your gun, which put all the little birds to flight.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Has it still that fine run of water?&rdquo; asked Mr.
+Draper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Precisely the same,&rdquo; replied Howard; &ldquo;this
+very stream that flows through my pasture, and sparkles in the
+morning sun, comes from old Clyde.&nbsp; Look this way, and see
+what a leap it takes over those rocks.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Clyde Farm was just such a spot as a romantic, visionary mind
+might choose for its vagaries,&mdash;such a spot as an elevated,
+contemplative one might select for its aspirations after higher
+hopes, which seldom come in the tumult of life.&nbsp; Mr. Draper
+felt at once that the place was congenial to the taste and habits
+of his wife; it awoke in his own mind the recollection of his
+boyish days, and from these he naturally reverted to the days of
+courtship, when he talked of scenery and prospect as eloquently
+as Frances.&nbsp; With a light step he followed his brother along
+the stream that came leaping and bounding from the hills, till
+they arrived at the still little lake whence it took its <!--
+page 33--><a name="page33"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+33</span>course.&nbsp; The mists of the morning had dispersed,
+and the blue sky and white clouds were reflected from its glassy
+surface, while on its borders the deep, dark foliage of the woods
+lay inverted.&nbsp; Both of the brothers stood silent when they
+reached the edge of the water; both were impressed with the
+beauty of the scene.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How delighted Frances would be with this spot!&rdquo;
+said Howard.&nbsp; &ldquo;It is like the calm, tranquil mirror of
+her own mind, which seems formed to reflect only the upper world,
+with its glorious firmament.&nbsp; I think we have before us two
+excellent prototypes of our wives:&mdash;while the clear,
+peaceful lake represents yours, this happy, joyous, busy little
+stream may be likened to my Charlotte, who goes on her way
+rejoicing, and diffusing life and animation wherever she bends
+her course.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish Frances had a little more of her gayety,&rdquo;
+said Mr. Draper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Depend upon it,&rdquo; said Howard, &ldquo;they will
+operate favorably on each other.&nbsp; I perceive already a
+mingling of character.&nbsp; I will venture to predict, Charlotte
+will have a boat <!-- page 34--><a name="page34"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 34</span>with its gay streamers winding the
+shore before long, and persuade her sister to become the
+&lsquo;Lady of the Lake.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The matter was soon decided; the sisters visited the place,
+and were enchanted with it; and Howard was authorized by his
+brother to make the purchase.</p>
+<p>The house had been built many years.&nbsp; It was irregular in
+its form, and certainly belonged to no particular order of
+architecture.&nbsp; There was a large dining-room, and doors that
+opened upon the green, and plenty of small rooms; in short, it
+was just such a house as Frances fancied; it was picturesque, and
+looked, she said, &ldquo;as if it had grown and shot out here and
+there like the old oaks around it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Charlotte begged that on herself might devolve the care of
+furnishing it.&nbsp; &ldquo;I know better than you,&rdquo; said
+she, &ldquo;what will save trouble.&nbsp; Banish brass and
+mahogany; admit nothing that requires daily labor to make it fine
+and showy.&nbsp; I do not despair of setting you up a dairy, and
+teaching you to churn your own butter.&rdquo;&nbsp; She truly
+loved and honored her sister-in-law, and trembled for her life,
+which <!-- page 35--><a name="page35"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 35</span>she was persuaded she held by a frail
+tenure.&nbsp; She was eager to prevent her returning to the city
+during the warm season, and readily undertook to go herself and
+make all necessary arrangements.&nbsp; Frances furnished her with
+a list, and left much discretionary power to her agent.</p>
+<p>In the course of a few days she returned.&mdash;&ldquo;We must
+be at Clyde Farm to-morrow,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;to receive
+the goods and chattels of which I am only the precursor.&nbsp;
+Your husband enters warmly into the furnishing of your country
+residence, and therefore we must let him have a voice in
+it.&nbsp; His taste is not so simple as ours, so we must admit
+some of the finery of the town house; pier and chimney glasses
+are to be sent from it.&nbsp; I did not make much opposition to
+this, for they will not only reflect our rustic figures within,
+but the trees and grass without.&nbsp; How I long to have
+haying-time come!&nbsp; You must ride from the fields with your
+children, as I do, on a load of hay, when the work of the day is
+over, and look down upon all the world.&nbsp; O Frances,&rdquo;
+added <!-- page 36--><a name="page36"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 36</span>she, &ldquo;if we could only persuade
+your husband to turn farmer, our victory would be
+complete.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It will never be,&rdquo; said Frances.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know that,&rdquo; replied Charlotte;
+&ldquo;he seemed to set very little value on the city residence,
+and would fain have stripped his elegant rooms to dignify your
+rustic retreat; but I would not consent to the migration of a
+particle of gilding or damask, but told him he might send the
+marble slabs, with the mirrors,&mdash;and I speak for one of the
+slabs for the dairy.&nbsp; But I have been more thoughtful for
+you than you have for yourself: look at this list of books that I
+have ordered.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Frances was surprised; she had never seen Charlotte with a
+book in her hand, and she candidly expressed her astonishment
+that, amidst all her hurry, she had remembered <i>books</i>.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where do you think I acquired all my knowledge,&rdquo;
+said Charlotte, &ldquo;if I never open a book?&nbsp; But you are
+half right; I certainly do not patronize book-making; and yet all
+summer I am reading the book of Nature.&nbsp; I open it with the
+first snow-drop and crocus which peeps <!-- page 37--><a
+name="page37"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 37</span>from under
+her white robe; and then, when she puts on her green mantle,
+strewed with</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;The yellow cowslip and the pale
+primrose,&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I study the lilies of the field.&nbsp; Depend upon it, there
+is more wisdom without doors than we can find within,&mdash;more
+wisdom there than in books.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I believe it,&rdquo; said Frances; &ldquo;all nature
+speaks of the Creator,&mdash;of the one great Mind which formed
+this endless variety, and can give life to the most insignificant
+flower that grows by the way-side.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should like to know what flower you call
+insignificant,&rdquo; said Charlotte; &ldquo;not this little
+houstonia, I hope; that has a perfection of organization in which
+many of your splendid green-house flowers are deficient.&nbsp;
+But that is the way with us: we call those things sublime which
+are on a large scale, because they are magnified to our narrow
+minds, and we can comprehend them without any trouble.&mdash;But
+I must not display all my wisdom to you at once&mdash;how, like
+Solomon of old, I can speak of trees, from &lsquo;the cedar-tree
+that is in Lebanon <!-- page 38--><a name="page38"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 38</span>even unto the hyssop that springeth
+out of the wall.&rsquo;&mdash;And now, fair sister,</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Up, up, and quit your books,&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>and come with me to one of my studios&mdash;namely, my
+poultry-yard.&nbsp; I hear the bipeds clamorous for their
+supper.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is the woman,&rdquo; thought Frances, &ldquo;that
+I have sometimes wondered Howard, with his reflecting mind, could
+select as his partner for life!&nbsp; Because I saw her, like the
+Deity she worships, attending to the most minute affairs, I
+foolishly imagined she comprehended no others.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>From this time the two sisters resembled in union
+Shakspeare&rsquo;s twin cherries growing on one stem.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 39--><a name="page39"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+39</span>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+<p>The furniture arrived, and the country residence was very soon
+in order.&nbsp; Howard took the direction of the farming
+part.&nbsp; But it was no object to Frances to have much
+ploughing or planting.&nbsp; She loved the &ldquo;green pastures
+and still waters,&rdquo; and often repeated those beautiful lines
+of the hymn&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;To dewy vales and flowery meads,<br />
+My weary, fainting steps he leads,<br />
+Where peaceful rivers, soft and slow,<br />
+Amid the verdant landscape flow.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Clyde Farm was a singularly retired spot, notwithstanding its
+vicinity to a country village, which, on a straight line, was
+about two miles from it.&nbsp; But there was a high hill between,
+that belonged to the farm, and was crowned with oak and chestnut
+trees; while here and there was an opening which gave a perfect
+view of the village, with its church, academy, and square
+four-story tavern, with windows <!-- page 40--><a
+name="page40"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 40</span>enough to
+give it the appearance of a huge lantern.&nbsp; The high road was
+a mile from the house, and no dwelling was nearer.&nbsp; The hill
+overlooked one of those New England landscapes that could not be
+wrought into a well-composed picture; objects were too abundant;
+it was dotted with farms and sheets of water; and beyond, the
+beautiful Merrimac wound its way.&nbsp; On this spot, Frances had
+a little open pavilion erected, and it was her resort at
+sunset.&nbsp; As her health improved, her mind opened to the
+impressions of happiness, and she grew almost gay.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;There is but one thing more,&rdquo; said she to her
+brother and sister, &ldquo;that I now desire in this
+world.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Always one thing wanting for us poor mortals!&rdquo;
+said Charlotte; &ldquo;but let us hear what it is.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That my husband, who is the liberal donor of my
+enjoyment, should partake of it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pray be contented,&rdquo; replied she, &ldquo;and let
+him enjoy himself in his own way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have a letter for you,&rdquo; said Howard,
+&ldquo;that came enclosed in one to me;&rdquo; and, with an air
+of hesitation, he gave it to her.</p>
+<p><!-- page 41--><a name="page41"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+41</span>Frances hastily took it; her color came and went as she
+read.&nbsp; It informed her, that the offers her husband had
+received for his estate in town had not only opened his eyes to
+its value, but had convinced him that, as a patriotic citizen, he
+had no right to retain it for his private use; he had therefore
+come to the conclusion to reap the benefit himself which other
+speculators had proposed to do.&nbsp; He should take down the
+house, make a street through the land, divide it into small lots,
+and erect a number of houses upon it, one of which he meant to
+reserve for himself.&nbsp; &ldquo;I should regret what I conceive
+to be the necessity of this thing,&rdquo; he added, &ldquo;if you
+were not so perfectly satisfied with your Clyde residence.&nbsp;
+As you will always repair to it early in the spring, it matters
+little if you return to walls of brick and mortar in the
+autumn.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>We pass over the involuntary tears that followed this
+communication, as speculators would pronounce them
+unreasonable.&nbsp; It now became necessary for Frances to visit
+the city to make arrangements, and take a last leave of her
+pleasant mansion.&nbsp; In justice, it must be <!-- page 42--><a
+name="page42"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 42</span>said, she
+thought less of her own deprivation than of the new accession of
+care and toil that her husband was bringing upon
+himself.&mdash;When she returned to Clyde, she had lost by
+fatigue nearly all the health she had previously gained.</p>
+<p>Most people have witnessed the rapidity with which the work of
+destruction goes on in modern days.&nbsp; In a very short time
+the splendid mansion was a pile of ruins, a street laid open, and
+buildings erecting on the spot.</p>
+<p>Mr. Draper&rsquo;s visits to Clyde had been hitherto confined
+to the Sabbath, and generally terminated with it: but he now
+wrote to his wife that he intended to &ldquo;pass a month with
+her.&nbsp; It was a comparative season of leisure; his vessels
+had sailed, his buildings were going on well, and he should be
+able to enjoy the quiet of the country.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Frances received this intelligence with new-born hope.&nbsp;
+She felt certain, that one month, passed amidst the tranquil
+pleasures of the country, would regenerate his early
+tastes.&nbsp; She talked eloquently of the corrupting atmosphere
+of the city, and was sanguine that now all would go well; that
+his inordinate engrossment in <!-- page 43--><a
+name="page43"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 43</span>business
+would yield to the influences by which he would find himself
+surrounded.&nbsp; And so it turned out, for a few days.&nbsp; Mr.
+Draper was as happy as an affectionate husband and father must
+naturally be, reunited to the objects of his tenderness.&nbsp; He
+said that &ldquo;he felt uncommonly well, had much less of the
+dyspepsy than he had experienced for years,&rdquo; followed his
+little girls to their favorite haunts, and seemed to realize the
+blessing of leisure.&nbsp; Howard, with his family, passed the
+third day with them.&nbsp; Towards evening, they all ascended the
+hill.&nbsp; Mr. Draper was struck with the extensive view, and
+the beauty of his wife&rsquo;s domain, for he scrupulously called
+it her own.&nbsp; &ldquo;What a waste of water!&rdquo; he
+exclaimed.&nbsp; &ldquo;What a noble run for mills and
+manufactories!&rdquo;&nbsp; Poor Frances actually turned pale;
+but, collecting her spirits, she said, &ldquo;It is hardly right
+to call it a <i>waste</i> of water.&rdquo;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Liberal, not lavish, is kind Nature&rsquo;s
+hand.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In the mean time, Mr. Draper had taken his pencil, and on the
+back of a letter was making lines and dashes.&nbsp; &ldquo;Look
+here,&rdquo; said he to Howard.&nbsp; &ldquo;See how perfectly
+this natural ledge <!-- page 44--><a name="page44"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 44</span>of rocks may be converted into a dam:
+it seems precisely made for it: then, by digging a canal to
+conduct the water a little to the left, there is a fine site for
+a cotton-manufactory, which, built of granite, would add much to
+the beauty of the prospect.&nbsp; Just here, where that old tree
+is thrown across the stream, a bridge may be built, in the form
+of an arch, which also must be of stone.&nbsp; It will make the
+view altogether perfect.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I cannot think,&rdquo; said Howard, &ldquo;the view
+would be improved; you would have a great stone building, with
+its countless windows and abutments, but you would lose the
+still, tranquil effect of the prospect, and take much from the
+beauty of the stream.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not as I shall manage it,&rdquo; said Mr. Draper.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I am sure Frances herself will agree with me that it adds
+fifty per cent. to the beauty of the prospect when she sees it
+completed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In vain Frances protested she was satisfied with it as it was;
+the month that she had hoped was to be given to leisure was one
+of the busiest of her husband&rsquo;s life.&nbsp; Contracts were
+made&mdash;an association formed.&nbsp; Mr. Draper <!-- page
+45--><a name="page45"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 45</span>was
+continually driving to the city, and mechanics were passing to
+and fro.&nbsp; Clyde Farm began to wear the appearance of a
+business place.&nbsp; A manufacturing company was incorporated
+under the title of the Clyde Mills.&nbsp; The stillness of the
+spot was exchanged for the strokes of the pickaxe, the human
+voice urging on oxen and horses, the blasting of rocks; the grass
+was trampled down, the trees were often wantonly injured, and,
+where they obstructed the tracks of wheels, laid prostrate.&nbsp;
+Frances no longer delighted to walk at noon day under the thick
+foliage that threw its shadow on the grass as vividly as a
+painting.&nbsp; All was changed!&nbsp; It is true she now saw her
+husband, but she had but little more of his society; his mind and
+time were wholly engrossed; he came often, and certainly did not,
+as formerly, confine his visits to the Sabbath.</p>
+<p>All went on with wonderful rapidity; story rose upon story,
+till it seemed as if the new manufactory, with its windows and
+abutments, was destined to become another Babel.&nbsp; When
+Charlotte came to Clyde, she gazed with astonishment.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;All this,&rdquo; said she to Howard, <!-- page 46--><a
+name="page46"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 46</span>&ldquo;is the
+project of a speculator!&nbsp; Grown men now-a-days remind me of
+the story of the boy who planted his bean at night, and went out
+in the morning to see how it grew; he found it had nearly reached
+the chamber windows; he went out the next morning, and it was up
+to the eaves of the house; on the third morning, it had shot up
+to the clouds, and he descried a castle, or a manufactory, I
+don&rsquo;t know which, on the top of it.&nbsp; Then it was high
+time to scale it; so up, up, he went, and when he arrived at the
+building, he put his foot into it, and then he perceived it was
+made of vapor; and down came bean, castle, and boy, headlong, in
+<i>three seconds</i>, though it had taken <i>three whole days</i>
+to complete the work.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You must tell your story to my brother,&rdquo; said
+Howard.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; replied Charlotte; &ldquo;he would not
+profit by it; but I will tell it to my children, and teach them
+to train their beans in the good old-fashioned way, near the
+ground.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Thus passed the autumn at Clyde; that period which every
+reflecting mind enjoys as a season of contemplation; that period
+when our <!-- page 47--><a name="page47"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 47</span>New England woods assume every
+variety of color, and shine forth with a splendor that indicates
+decay.&nbsp; Still the two families had much enjoyment together;
+the health of Frances and little Charlotte had decidedly
+improved; but when the leaves began to fall, and the wind to
+whistle through the branches, they quitted Clyde and returned to
+the city.&nbsp; Their new house was not ready for them, and they
+were obliged to take lodgings at one of the hotels.</p>
+<p>Mr. Draper met Dr. B., their friend and physician, in his
+walks, and begged him to call and see his wife.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
+rejoice to say,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;that her health does not
+require any medical advice; she is quite well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Probably Dr. B. thought otherwise, for he suggested the
+advantage that both she and the little girl might derive from
+passing the winter in a warm climate.&nbsp; Never was there a
+fairer opportunity; they had no home to quit, and their residence
+at a hotel was one of necessity, not of choice.&nbsp; But Mr.
+Draper said it was quite impossible.&nbsp; What! leave his
+counting-room, State Street, India Wharf, the insurance offices!
+leave all in the full tide of speculation, <!-- page 48--><a
+name="page48"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 48</span>when he was
+near the El Dorado for which he had so long been toiling! when
+Eastern lands and Western lands, rail-roads and steam-boats,
+cotton, and manufactories, were in all their glory; when his own
+Clyde Mills were just going into operation!&nbsp; It was
+impossible, wholly impossible; and Frances would not go without
+him.&nbsp; The suggestion was given up, and she remained in the
+city almost wholly confined to the atmosphere of a small room
+with a coal fire.&nbsp; Unfortunately the measles appeared among
+the children at the hotel, and Mrs. Draper&rsquo;s were taken
+sick before she knew that the epidemic was there.&nbsp; They had
+the best attendance, but nothing supersedes a mother&rsquo;s
+devotion.&nbsp; Frances passed many a sleepless night in watching
+over them.&nbsp; With the eldest the disorder proved slight, but
+it was otherwise with the youngest; and when she began to grow
+better, the mother drooped.&nbsp; It was a dreary winter for poor
+Mrs. Draper, but not so for her husband.&nbsp; Never had there
+been a season of such profits, such glorious speculations!&nbsp;
+Some <i>croakers</i> said it could not last; and some of our
+gifted statesmen predicted that <!-- page 49--><a
+name="page49"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 49</span>an
+overwhelming blow must inevitably come.&nbsp; But all this was
+nothing to speculators; it certainly would not arrive till after
+<i>they</i> had made their millions.</p>
+<p>Spring approached, with its uncertainty of climate; sometimes,
+the streets were in rivers, and the next day frozen in masses;
+then came volumes of east wind.&nbsp; Mrs. Draper&rsquo;s cough
+returned more frequently than ever, and Charlotte looked too
+frail for earth.&nbsp; The physician informed Mr. Draper that he
+considered it positively necessary to remove the invalids to a
+milder climate, and mentioned Cuba.&nbsp; Mr. Draper, however,
+decided that an inland journey would be best, and, inconvenient
+as it was, determined to travel as far as some of the
+<i>cotton-growing</i> states.&nbsp; After the usual busy
+preparations, they set off, the wife fully realizing that she was
+blighting in the bud her husband&rsquo;s projected speculations
+for a few weeks to come, and feeling that he was making what he
+considered great sacrifices.</p>
+<p>Almost all invalids who have travelled on our continent in
+pursuit of uniformity of climate, have been disappointed.&nbsp;
+At <!-- page 50--><a name="page50"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+50</span>New York they were detained a week by a flight of snow
+and rain, shut up in dreary rooms; then came a glimmering of
+sunshine, and Philadelphia looked bright and serene; but at
+Baltimore the rain again descended.&nbsp; They were so near
+Washington, Mr. Draper thought it best to hurry on, with every
+precaution for the invalids.&nbsp; At Washington, they found the
+straw mattings had superseded woollen carpets, and the
+fire-places were ornamented with green branches.&nbsp; They
+continued their journey south till they at length arrived at
+Charleston.&nbsp; Here they found a milder climate, and a few
+days of sunshine.&nbsp; Mr. Draper was no longer restless; he had
+full employment in shipping cargoes of cotton, and making
+bargains, not only for what was in the market, but for a
+proportion of that which was yet to grow, as confidently as if he
+had previously secured the rain and sunshine of heaven.&nbsp;
+There is a constant change of weather on our coast&mdash;another
+storm came on.&nbsp; The little invalid evidently lost rather
+than gained.&nbsp; Discouraged and disheartened, Frances begged
+they might return.&nbsp; &ldquo;One week at <!-- page 51--><a
+name="page51"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 51</span>Clyde, where
+they might have the comforts of home, would do more for
+them,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;than all this fruitless search for
+a favorable climate.&rdquo;&nbsp; When Mr. Draper had completed
+his bargains, he was equally desirous to return to the city, and
+at the end of a tedious journey, over bad roads in some parts of
+it, rail-roads in others, and a tremendous blow round Point
+Judith, the travellers arrived at Boston on one of those raw,
+piercing, misty days, that seemed to have been accumulating fogs
+for their reception.&nbsp; The physician hastened their departure
+to Clyde, as it was inland and sheltered from the sea.&nbsp; This
+removal was made, and then they had nothing to do but to get
+well.&nbsp; Howard and Charlotte were rejoiced at the reunion,
+and the feeble little invalid tried to resume her former sports
+with her cousins.&nbsp; But all would not answer, and when June
+came on, with its season of roses, she slept at the foot of the
+mount.&nbsp; It was a retired spot that the mother selected for
+the remains, and only a temporary one, for they were to be
+removed to Mount Auburn at the close of autumn.</p>
+<p><!-- page 52--><a name="page52"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+52</span>It were well if we could receive the events of
+Providence in the sublime simplicity with which they come, but
+the sensitive and tender-hearted often add to their poignancy by
+useless self-reproach.&nbsp; Frances thought the journey had,
+perhaps, been the cause of the child&rsquo;s untimely death, and
+lamented that she had not opposed a measure which she had
+undertaken solely for its benefit.&nbsp; The death of friends is
+a calamity that few have not strength enough to bear, if they do
+not exaggerate their sufferings, by imagining that something was
+done, or left undone, for which they were responsible.&nbsp; To
+this nervous state of feeling Frances was peculiarly liable, from
+her ill health; and it was many weeks before her excellent powers
+of mind obtained full exercise.&nbsp; Yet they finally triumphed,
+and she became first resigned, then cheerful.&nbsp; The sorrow of
+the father was of a different character, and exhausted itself in
+proportion to its violence.&nbsp; It was followed by new projects
+and new anticipations; the manufactory had succeeded beyond his
+most sanguine expectations.&nbsp; A discovery had been made that
+enabled <!-- page 53--><a name="page53"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 53</span>them to afford their cloth a cent per
+yard cheaper than any other manufacturing establishment.&nbsp;
+Bales of cotton poured in upon him from the south, and ships
+arrived from various parts of the world.&nbsp; How could he find
+time for grief!</p>
+<h2><!-- page 54--><a name="page54"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+54</span>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+<p>The first visit Frances made to the lake after her return,
+discovered to her, that it was sadly changed.&nbsp; It was no
+longer full to overflowing, but swampy and low; the water was
+constantly drained off to supply the manufactory and mills which
+were erected at a distance.&nbsp; Mr. Draper had found out that
+the little stream could much more than earn its own living, and
+it was made to work hard.&nbsp; One thing, however, was wanting
+to complete his Clyde speculations, and that was a
+rail-road.&nbsp; This had now become necessary.&nbsp; Every thing
+afforded the greatest facility for it.&nbsp; Laborers could be
+procured from the village and farms in the vicinity.&nbsp; Yet
+how could he reconcile his wife to it?&nbsp; The road must pass
+through the hill, and near the house.&nbsp; He was aware that it
+would destroy the rural beauty of the place; but what an increase
+of wealth it would be! what a princely revenue! what a spirit of
+business <!-- page 55--><a name="page55"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 55</span>and speculation it would spread
+through the country!&nbsp; Every man would be able not only to
+make the most of his capital, but to get credit to ten times its
+real amount.&nbsp; He considered it a public benefit, and he was
+imperiously called to accomplish it; and so he stated the matter
+to his wife with as much tenderness towards her feelings as the
+case would admit.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hoped,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;that the sum of your
+public benefits was completed by our sacrifice in the
+city.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is not spoken with your usual generous feeling,
+Frances,&rdquo; replied he.&nbsp; &ldquo;When are patriotic
+exertions to cease?&nbsp; Are we not called upon to be constantly
+making them?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Howard would say it is injuring the cause of the
+country to turn agriculturists into speculators,&rdquo; said
+Frances.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Howard is an excellent man,&rdquo; replied Mr. Draper;
+&ldquo;he is born to be a farmer, and nothing else.&nbsp; I have
+no wish to change his vocation; he dignifies it by uniting
+intelligence with manual labor; but there are many who are
+toiling merely for money, and they can get much more by my method
+than his.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 56--><a name="page56"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+56</span>&ldquo;Will their happiness be increased?&rdquo; said
+Mrs. Draper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly, inasmuch as wealth procures the means of
+happiness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have <i>you</i> found it so?&rdquo; again asked
+Frances.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not precisely.&nbsp; I am still toiling; my season for
+rest and enjoyment has not arrived.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And yet,&rdquo; said Frances, &ldquo;Howard is <i>rich
+enough</i> for enjoyment.&nbsp; You have already a great estate;
+let me ask, what advantage you derive from it beyond your daily
+meals?&nbsp; You take care of this immense property; you are
+continually increasing it, and all the compensation you get is a
+<i>bare living</i>.&nbsp; Would any of the clerks you employ in
+your counting-room labor for such low wages?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear Frances,&rdquo; said Mr. Draper,
+affectionately, &ldquo;I am always contented to admire your
+ingenuity without combating your arguments.&nbsp; Perhaps it
+might be better, if you had cultivated a little more of the
+<i>rationale</i> of life.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; replied she, languidly smiling, &ldquo;I
+am going to prove to you, that I have profited <!-- page 57--><a
+name="page57"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 57</span>by your
+example, and am becoming a business wife.&nbsp; You call this
+farm <i>mine</i>, and tell me you bought it for me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly; all I have is yours.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I claim no title to any thing but this; but this I
+consider your gift, and as such accept it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Draper certainly did not look delighted at this unexpected
+statement, and began to tremble for his rail-road; but he
+remained silent.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have undoubtedly greatly increased the actual value
+of Clyde Farm, by mills and manufactories?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly I have; but all is in a manner useless
+without the rail-road as a means of transportation: that will put
+every thing into complete operation, and make the revenue
+princely.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then,&rdquo; said Frances, &ldquo;I can have no
+hesitation in making my offer.&nbsp; I will sell this place to
+you for what you gave for it.&nbsp; Secure the sum to me
+outright, and I renounce my title to Clyde Farm.&nbsp; Make it,
+if you please, <!-- page 58--><a name="page58"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 58</span>wholly a manufacturing place; do not
+consult me whether there shall be rail-roads or mills.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Upon my word,&rdquo; said Mr. Draper, &ldquo;with an
+estate like mine, I should be mortified to make such a paltry
+purchase of my wife.&nbsp; It is for you and our only child that
+I am accumulating a fortune.&nbsp; Have you ever found me sordid
+or tenacious of money, that you wish a certain sum secured to
+you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never,&rdquo; said she with emotion; &ldquo;all that
+money can purchase, you have been most liberal in procuring
+me.&nbsp; Would that you were as generous to yourself!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We all have our own ideas of happiness,&rdquo; said Mr.
+Draper; &ldquo;but since it is your wish, Frances, I will close
+with your proposal, and secure to you twenty thousand dollars,
+which is a little more than I paid for Clyde Farm.&nbsp; Legal
+instruments shall be immediately drawn up; and to convince you
+that I wish for no control over that sum, I will have it put in
+trust.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let the instrument be so worded,&rdquo; said <!-- page
+59--><a name="page59"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+59</span>Frances, &ldquo;that it shall revert to our child at my
+death.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As you please,&rdquo; said Mr. Draper, coldly;
+&ldquo;it is all the same to me.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><!-- page 60--><a name="page60"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+60</span>CHAPTER V.&mdash;CONCLUSION.</h2>
+<p>From this time, Clyde Farm became wholly a place of
+business.&nbsp; No regard was now paid to the beauty of the
+place.&nbsp; Iron-manufactories, nail-manufactories, and
+saw-mills, were projected, and all was hurry and bustle.&nbsp;
+One more pang, however, remained for Frances.&nbsp; The
+sequestered nook she had selected, where her little
+Charlotte&rsquo;s remains were deposited,&mdash;that spot, so
+still, so tranquil, so shaded by trees, and so sheltered by
+valleys, so removed apparently from the tumult of
+business,&mdash;over that very spot, it was found necessary for
+the rail-road to pass!&nbsp; Strange as it may seem, the worldly
+father appeared to feel more deeply this innovation than the
+mother.</p>
+<p>Twice he repaired to the spot to give his directions for the
+removal of the remains, and twice an impetuous burst of sorrow
+drove him from it.</p>
+<p><!-- page 61--><a name="page61"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+61</span>&ldquo;It is only a temporary resting-place, even for
+the body,&rdquo; said Frances; &ldquo;the spirit is not
+there.&rdquo;&nbsp; She looked calmly on, and gave those
+directions for which the father was unable.</p>
+<p>Another winter was now advancing, and the house in the city
+was ready for occupancy.&nbsp; Mrs. Draper made her preparations
+to return, but they were often interrupted by a pain in her
+side.&nbsp; The cough had entirely changed its character; it was
+now deep and hollow.&nbsp; She certainly looked remarkably well;
+her complexion seemed to have recovered the delicacy and
+transparency of early youth, and her eyes their lustrous
+brightness.&nbsp; As for the color of her cheek, her husband
+sometimes playfully accused her of extracting rouge from her
+carnations.</p>
+<p>Charlotte spoke to him doubtingly of his wife&rsquo;s health,
+and Lucy said she &ldquo;was afraid she would not stand the
+frosty nights when they came on.&rdquo;&nbsp; But Mr. Draper was
+sanguine that Clyde had been her restoration.</p>
+<p>When she arrived at the city, there were arrangements to be
+made, and new furniture to be procured.&nbsp; Her husband gave
+her full permission <!-- page 62--><a name="page62"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 62</span>to do just as she pleased, only
+begged of her not to call upon him, for he had not one moment to
+spare.</p>
+<p>Frances exerted all her strength, but it became evident that
+she drooped.&nbsp; Her nights were restless; and though some
+thought it encouraging, that she coughed so much <i>stronger</i>,
+it was exhausting to her frame.</p>
+<p>Mr. Draper at length perceived that she had rather lost than
+gained; he went for her physician, and requested him to recommend
+quiet to her.&nbsp; &ldquo;I think,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;she
+has over-fatigued herself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Dr. B. came to see her, conversed with her, counted the
+throbbings of her pulse, and made a minute examination of her
+case.&nbsp; The conference was long; when he entered the parlor,
+he found Mr. Draper waiting.&nbsp; He received him with a smile;
+but there was no responsive smile on the doctor&rsquo;s face; it
+was solemn and thoughtful.</p>
+<p>Mr. Draper grew alarmed.&nbsp; &ldquo;You do not think my wife
+very sick, I hope,&rdquo; said he.&nbsp; &ldquo;Her cough is
+troublesome; but you know she has long been subject to it.&nbsp;
+Indeed, I think <!-- page 63--><a name="page63"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 63</span>it is constitutional, like my
+own.&nbsp; You recommended the white mixture to her last year: it
+did her good.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I recommended a voyage and a warm climate,&rdquo; said
+the physician.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I remember you did; but it was impossible for me
+to go away then.&nbsp; In the spring we took that unlucky
+journey; however, it was of benefit to her, and if you think it
+necessary, I will go the same route now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do not,&rdquo; replied Dr. B.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am glad of it; it would be particularly inconvenient
+to me just now to leave the city.&nbsp; Times are perplexing:
+bills come back protested&mdash;bad news from
+England&mdash;sudden and unlooked-for failures&mdash;no one can
+tell where it will end.&nbsp; We have been obliged to stop our
+works at Clyde Farm, and there are from ninety to a hundred
+laborers thrown out of employment.&nbsp; This is peculiarly
+vexatious to me, as they made out before to earn a living in
+their own <i>humdrum</i> way, and they now accuse me of having
+taken the bread from their children&rsquo;s mouths, to promote my
+own speculations, though, while I employed them, I gave <!-- page
+64--><a name="page64"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 64</span>them
+enormous wages.&nbsp; But this, sir, is the gratitude of the
+world.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The doctor still remained silent.&nbsp; It seemed as if Mr.
+Draper began to tremble for something dearer than money, for he
+grasped the hand of the physician.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You do not think my wife dangerously ill, I
+trust,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>The doctor replied, in a low voice, &ldquo;I fear she
+is.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Impossible!&rdquo; exclaimed Mr. Draper; &ldquo;she was
+remarkably well when we left Clyde.&nbsp; But what do you
+prescribe?&nbsp; I will do any thing, every thing, say but the
+word.&nbsp; I will take her to Europe&mdash;I will go to any part
+of the world you recommend.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The physician shook his head.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear doctor, you must go with us.&nbsp; I will
+indemnify you a thousand times for all losses; you can save her
+life; you know her constitution.&nbsp; When shall we go? and
+where?&nbsp; I will charter a vessel; we can be off in three
+days;&rdquo;&mdash;and he actually took his hat.</p>
+<p>Dr. B. said impressively, &ldquo;Pray be seated, and prepare
+yourself to hear, like a man, what <!-- page 65--><a
+name="page65"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 65</span>you must
+inevitably learn.&nbsp; It will not answer any useful purpose to
+go to a milder climate; it is now too late!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You do not mean to say,&rdquo; said Mr. Draper,
+impetuously, &ldquo;that if she had gone last year she would have
+been restored?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, I do not mean to say that; but then, there would
+have been a chance; now, there is none.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why did you not tell me so, sir?&rdquo; said Mr.
+Draper, angrily.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I said all that I was authorized to say.&nbsp; When I
+urged the step as necessary, you replied that it was
+impossible.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is too true!&rdquo; exclaimed he, striking his
+forehead; &ldquo;and yet she is dearer to me than my own
+life;&rdquo;&mdash;and, unable to suppress his feelings, he burst
+into an agony of tears.&nbsp; Suddenly starting up, he said,
+&ldquo;Doctor, I have the highest respect for your skill; but you
+are fallible, like all men.&nbsp; It is my opinion, that a sea
+voyage and change of climate will restore my wife.&nbsp; If you
+will go with us, so much the better; if not, I will seek some
+other physician to accompany her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 66--><a name="page66"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+66</span>&ldquo;It is but right to inform you,&rdquo; said Dr.
+B., &ldquo;that there is no chance of restoration.&nbsp; I
+suggested to her, that there might be alleviation in a warm
+climate; but she positively declines seeking it, and says her
+only wish is to die quietly, at home.&nbsp; She fully estimates
+the strength of your affection, and entreats of you to spare her
+all superfluous agitation.&nbsp; &lsquo;Tell him,&rsquo; said
+she, &lsquo;there is but one thing that can unsettle the calmness
+of my mind; it is to see him wanting in Christian
+resignation.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It would be painful to dwell on the anguish that followed this
+communication.&nbsp; Mr. Draper realized, for the first time, the
+tenderness and watchfulness that a character and constitution
+like his wife&rsquo;s required.&nbsp; In the common acceptation
+of the word, he was an excellent husband; yet, in his eager
+pursuit of wealth, he had left her to struggle alone with many of
+the harassing cares of life.&nbsp; He had, by thinking himself
+unable to accompany her, denied her the necessary recreation of
+travelling; he had deprived her of her favorite residence in the
+city, and when she turned her affections to Clyde, even there
+they found no resting-place.</p>
+<p><!-- page 67--><a name="page67"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+67</span>He recollected their unpropitious journey&mdash;the
+exposure to cold and rain&mdash;that he had hurried on the
+invalids, till he had accomplished his own purposes.&nbsp; One
+had already gone; the other was fast following.&nbsp; Speculators
+have consciences and affections, and his were roused to
+agony.</p>
+<p>Frances shrunk not from the hour of death, which rapidly
+approached.&nbsp; Howard and Charlotte were constantly with
+her.&nbsp; There was nothing gloomy in her views.&nbsp; She
+considered this life as a passage to another; and saw through the
+vista immortality and happiness.&nbsp; To Charlotte, she
+bequeathed her daughter, and this faithful friend promised to
+watch over her with a mother&rsquo;s care.</p>
+<p>Many and long were her conversations with her
+husband&mdash;not on the subject of her death, or arrangements
+after it should take place; but she was earnest that her
+serenity, her high hopes, might be transferred to his mind.&nbsp;
+She had often, in the overflowings of her heart, endeavored to
+communicate to him her animated convictions of a future
+life.&nbsp; Those who live constantly in the present think but
+little of the <!-- page 68--><a name="page68"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 68</span>future.&nbsp; Mr. Draper usually cut
+short the conversation, with the apparently devout
+sentiment,&mdash;&ldquo;I am quite satisfied on this subject;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Whatever is, is right.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Now, however, when he realized that the being he most tenderly
+loved was fast retreating from his view, he felt that there was a
+vast difference between the reasonings of philosophy and the
+revelations of Christianity; and, in the agony of his soul, he
+would have given worlds for the assurance of a reunion.&nbsp; On
+this subject Frances dwelt; and he now listened patiently,
+without once looking at his watch, or being seized with one of
+his paroxysms of coughing.&nbsp; Still, however, he doubted; for
+how could he trust without <i>bonds</i> and
+<i>contracts</i>?&nbsp; No one had come back to tell him
+<i>individually</i> the whole truth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I acknowledge,&rdquo; said he, somewhat reproachfully,
+&ldquo;that this conviction is earnestly to be desired.&nbsp; If
+saves you from the agony that at this moment rends my
+heart.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear friend,&rdquo; replied Frances, in a voice
+interrupted by deep and solemn emotion, <!-- page 69--><a
+name="page69"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+69</span>&ldquo;religion is not given us for an opiate to be used
+at a last extremity, merely to lull the sense of pain.&nbsp; The
+views I express are not new to me; they have been for many years
+my daily food; they have supported me through hours of bodily
+anguish; . . . the human frame does not decay as gradually as
+mine without repeated warnings; . . . they will conduct me
+through the dark valley of death, when I can no longer lean upon
+your arm . . . Their efficacy does not merely consist in soothing
+the bitterness of parting; they have a health giving energy that
+infuses courage and fortitude amidst the disappointments and
+evils of life.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Henceforth,&rdquo; exclaimed Mr. Draper,&mdash;and at
+that moment he was sincere,&mdash;&ldquo;every thing of a worldly
+nature is indifferent to me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All men,&rdquo; continued Frances, without replying to
+his exclamation, &ldquo;are subject to the reverses of life, but
+particularly men of extensive business connections.&nbsp; They
+are like the spider in his cobweb dwelling; touch but one of the
+thousand filaments that compose it, and it vibrates to the
+centre, and often the fabric is destroyed that has been so
+skilfully woven.&nbsp; There is a divine teaching in religion,
+which at <!-- page 70--><a name="page70"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 70</span>such times restores equanimity to the
+mind, gives new aspirations, and proves that all in this life is
+not lost, and nothing for that to come.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>New scenes were opening upon Mr. Draper.&nbsp; It became
+evident that a dark cloud hung over the business
+atmosphere.&nbsp; Unexpected failures every day took place.&nbsp;
+Some attributed the thick-coming evils to the removal of the
+deposits, others to interrupted currency; some to overtrading,
+and some to extravagance.&nbsp; Whatever was the cause, the
+distress was real.&nbsp; Mr. Draper&rsquo;s cotton became a drug
+in the market; manufactories stopped, or gave no dividends.&nbsp;
+Eastern lands lost even their nominal value, and western towns
+became bankrupt.&nbsp; Ships stood in the harbor, with their
+sails unbent and masts dismantled.&nbsp; Day laborers looked
+aghast, not knowing where to earn food for their families.&nbsp;
+The whirlwind came; it made no distinction of persons.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;It smote the four corners of the house,&rdquo; and the
+high-minded and honorable fell indiscriminately with the
+rest.&nbsp; Well may it be asked, Whence came this desolation
+upon the community?&nbsp; No pestilence visited our land; it <!--
+page 71--><a name="page71"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+71</span>was not the plague; it was not the yellow fever, or
+cholera.&nbsp; Health was borne on every breeze; the earth
+yielded her produce, and Peace still dwelt among us.</p>
+<p>Mr. Draper felt as if &ldquo;his mountain stood strong,&rdquo;
+yet it began to totter.&nbsp; Frances was ignorant of the state
+of public affairs.&nbsp; Who would intrude the perplexities of
+the times into a dying chamber?&nbsp; Softly and gently she sank
+to rest, her last look of affection beaming upon her husband.</p>
+<p>The next morning, the bankruptcy of Mr. Draper was
+announced.&nbsp; No blame was attached to him, though the sum for
+which he became insolvent was immense, and swallowed up many a
+hard-earned fortune.&nbsp; Where was Howard&rsquo;s little
+capital?&mdash;Gone with the rest&mdash;principal and <i>compound
+interest</i>!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am a ruined man!&rdquo; said Mr. Draper to Howard;
+&ldquo;I have robbed you, and beggared my child; but one resource
+remains to me;&rdquo;&mdash;and he looked around with the
+desperation of insanity.</p>
+<p>Howard grasped his hand.&nbsp; &ldquo;My dear brother,&rdquo;
+said he, &ldquo;your wife, with an almost <!-- page 72--><a
+name="page72"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 72</span>prophetic
+spirit, foresaw this hour.&nbsp; &lsquo;Comfort him,&rsquo; said
+she, &lsquo;when it arrives, and lead his mind to higher
+objects.&rsquo;&nbsp; Your child has an ample provision, by the
+sum settled on her mother.&nbsp; I have lost property which I did
+not use, and, with the blessing of God, may never want.&nbsp;
+Come home with me; I have means for us both.&nbsp; You will have
+all the indulgences you ever coveted.&nbsp; No one has led a
+harder life than you have.&nbsp; You have labored like the
+galley-slave, without wages; come, and learn that, beyond what we
+can use for our own or others&rsquo; benefit, wealth has only an
+imaginary value.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Perhaps it was an additional mortification to Mr. Draper, to
+find that, a few days after his failure, the banks concluded to
+issue no specie.&nbsp; Many were kept along by this resolution;
+while others stopped, with the conviction, that, had they been
+contented with moderate gains, they might, in this day of trouble
+and perplexity, have been <span class="smcap">rich
+enough</span>.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span
+class="smcap">finis</span></p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RICH ENOUGH***</p>
+<pre>
+
+
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Rich Enough, by Hannah Farnham Sawyer Lee
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Rich Enough
+ a tale of the times
+
+
+Author: Hannah Farnham Sawyer Lee
+
+
+
+Release Date: October 29, 2007 [eBook #23231]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RICH ENOUGH***
+
+
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1837 Whipple and Damrell edition by David Price,
+email ccx074@pglaf.org
+
+
+
+
+
+RICH ENOUGH;
+A TALE OF THE TIMES
+
+
+BY THE AUTHOR OF
+"THREE EXPERIMENTS OF LIVING."
+
+ And while they were eating and drinking, there came a great wind from
+ the wilderness, and smote the four corners of the house, and it fell
+ upon them.
+
+Third Edition.
+
+BOSTON:
+PUBLISHED BY WHIPPLE & DAMRELL,
+No. 9 Cornhill.
+
+NEW YORK:--SAMUEL COLMAN,
+No. 114 Fulton Street.
+
+1837.
+
+Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1837, by
+WHIPPLE AND DAMRELL,
+In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of Massachusetts.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+"Welcome," said Mr. Draper, the rich merchant, to his brother, who
+entered his counting-room one fine spring morning. "I am truly glad to
+see you--but what has brought you to the city, at this _busy country_
+season, when ploughing and planting are its life and sinews?"
+
+"A motive," said Howard, smiling, "that I am sure will need no apology
+with you--_business_! I have acquired a few hundreds, which I wish to
+invest safely, and I want your advice."
+
+"When you say safely, I presume you mean to include profitably."
+
+"Ay, profitably and safely."
+
+"I am just fitting out a ship for Canton; what do you think of investing
+the sum in articles of foreign merchandise?"
+
+"I confess," said Howard, "I have great distrust of winds and waves."
+
+"Suppose you invest it in Eastern lands? many have made fortunes in this
+way."
+
+"I am not seeking to make a fortune," said Howard, quietly;--"my object
+is to secure something for my family in case of accident, and I only want
+to invest what I do not require for present use in a manner that will
+bring compound interest. I hope not to be obliged to take up the
+interest for many years, but to be adding it to the principal, with such
+sums as I may be able to spare from our daily exertions."
+
+"I perceive, brother," replied Mr. Draper, a little scornfully, "you have
+not increased in worldly wisdom."
+
+"I have not been much in the way of it," said Howard.--"Mine is a still,
+peaceful life--I study the changes of the atmosphere more than the
+science of worldly wisdom."
+
+"We can get along, however, but poorly without it," replied Mr. Draper;
+"the harmlessness of the dove is no match for the cunning of the
+serpent."
+
+"True," said Howard; "but if you mean me by the dove, there is no
+necessity for my venturing into the nest of serpents. I am well aware
+that my habits of thinking and modes of life are tame and dull, compared
+to your projects and success;--but we are differently constituted, and
+while I honor your spirit and enterprise, and do justice to the honest
+and intelligent business men of your city, I am contented with my own
+lot, which is that of a farmer, whose object is to earn a competency from
+his native soil, or, in other words, from ploughing and planting. I have
+no desire for speculation, no courage for it; neither do I think, with a
+family like mine, I have a right to _risk_ my property."
+
+"There you are wrong; every body has a right to do as he pleases with his
+own property."
+
+"To be honest, then," replied Howard, "I have none that I call
+exclusively my own. Property is given to us for the benefit of others;
+every man is accountable for his stewardship."
+
+"But can you do better than to double and treble it every year, or, by
+some fortunate speculation, convert ten thousand dollars into ten times
+ten thousand?"
+
+"I should say," replied Howard, "if this were a certainty, it would cease
+to be _speculation_, and I should feel bound to do it, within honest
+means. But as the guardian of my family, I feel that I have no right to
+venture my little capital in a lottery."
+
+"It is lucky all men are not of your mind," said Mr. Draper, rather
+impatiently, and taking up his pen, which he had laid down;--"but really,
+brother, I am full of engagements, and though I am rejoiced to see you, I
+must defer further conversation till we meet at dinner; then we shall
+have time to talk over your affairs; just now, I am wholly engaged."
+
+Near the dinner hour Howard went to his brother's house. It was large,
+and elegantly furnished, and, what in the city is rather uncommon,
+surrounded by trees and pleasure-grounds, a fine yard in front, and a
+large garden in the rear. Mr. Draper purchased the place when real
+estate was low, and it had since risen to more than double its original
+value. Howard was conducted to the dining-room, where he found his
+sister-in-law, Mrs. Draper. They met with much cordiality--but he
+perceived that she was thinner and paler than when they last met.
+
+"You are not well, I fear," said Howard, anxiously.
+
+"I have a cold," replied she; and with that nervous affection which often
+follows inquiries after the health, she gave a half-suppressed cough.
+"Have you seen my husband?" she asked.
+
+"Yes, I left the stage at the corner of State Street, and went directly
+to his counting-room; but I found him engrossed by business, and verily
+believe I should not have obtained a moment's conversation after the
+brotherly welcome that his heart gave me in spite of teas, silks, hides,
+stocks, and per centage, if I had not had a little business of my own,--a
+little money to invest."
+
+"Are you, too, growing rich?" said Mrs. Draper, with a languid smile.
+
+"O no," replied Howard; "we farmers have not much prospect of growing
+_rich_. If we earn a comfortable living, and lay by a little at the end
+of the year, we call ourselves thriving, and that is the most we can
+expect."
+
+"You have advantages," said Mrs. Draper, "that do not belong to those who
+are striving to grow rich; you have wealth that money seldom can
+buy,--_time_."
+
+"We have our seasons of leisure," returned Howard, "and yet, I assure
+you, we have employment enough to prize those periods. You would be
+surprised to find how much constant occupation every season demands.
+Spring is the great storehouse of our wealth, but we must toil to open
+its treasures; they are hid in the bowels of the earth."
+
+"You remind me," said Mrs. Draper, "of the story of the farmer who had
+two sons. To one he left a large sum of gold; to the other his farm,
+informing him he would find an equivalent portion hid in the earth. The
+one invested his money in merchandise, and made 'haste to grow rich;' the
+other dug every year with renewed hope of finding the gold, and continued
+planting and sowing as his father had done before him. At the end of
+fifteen years, they met on the same spot, the one a bankrupt, the other a
+thriving farmer. I suppose," added she, "I need not put the moral to the
+end of my tale, in imitation of AEsop's fables; you will find it out."
+
+"It is so applicable," said Howard, "to our present conversation, that I
+almost think it is an impromptu for my benefit."
+
+"Not for yours," said she; "you do not want it. But now tell me a little
+about your fanning seasons. Spring, I understand, must be a very busy
+one; but when you have ploughed and planted, what have you to do but sit
+down and wait?"
+
+"My dear sister," said Howard, "you, who know so much better than I do
+how to carry out your comparisons, can well understand that there is no
+time given us for idleness; while we wait the result of one part of our
+labors, we have other works to accomplish. Spring-time and harvest
+follow each other rapidly; we have to prepare our barns and granaries.
+Our mowing season is always one of our busiest. We have our anxieties,
+too;--we watch the clouds as they pass over us, and our spirits depend
+much on sunshine and rain; for an unexpected shower may destroy all our
+labors. When the grass is cut, we must make it into hay; and, when it is
+properly prepared, store it in the barns. After haying-time, there are
+usually roads, fences, and stone walls to repair, apples to gather in,
+and butter to pack down. Though autumn has come, and the harvest is
+gathered in, you must not suppose our ploughing is over. We turn up the
+ground, and leave it rough, as a preparation for the spring. A good
+farmer never allows the winter to take him by surprise. The cellars are
+to be banked up, the barns to be tightened, the cattle looked to,--the
+apples carefully barrelled, and the produce sent to market. We have long
+evenings for assorting our seeds, and for fireside enjoyment. Winter is
+the season for adjusting the accounts of the past year, and finding out
+whether we are thriving farmers. Depend upon it, we have no idle time."
+
+"How curiously we may follow out the cultivation of the earth with the
+striking analogy it bears to the human mind," said Mrs. Draper, "in
+sowing the seeds, in carefully plucking up the weeds without disturbing
+what ought to be preserved, in doing all we can by our own labors, and
+trusting to Heaven for a blessing on our endeavors! A reflecting farmer
+must be a wise man."
+
+"I am afraid," said Howard, "there are not many wise men amongst us,
+according to your estimation. In all employments we find hurry and
+engrossment; we do not stop to reason and meditate; many good
+agricultural men are as destitute of moral reflection as the soil they
+cultivate."
+
+"At least," said Mrs. Draper, "they have not the same temptation to
+become absorbed by business as merchants."
+
+"I believe we shall find human nature much the same in all situations,"
+said Howard. "There is one great advantage, however, in farming--that
+is, its comparative security:--we are satisfied with moderate gains; we
+have none of those tremendous anxieties that come with sudden failures,
+the fall of stocks, and obstructed currency."
+
+"And this is every thing," said Mrs. Draper, with enthusiasm. "Nobody
+knows better than I do, how a noble and cultivated mind may be subjugated
+by the feverish pursuit of wealth--how little time can be spared to the
+tranquil pleasures of domestic life, to the home of early affection--"
+She stopped, and seemed embarrassed.--Howard's color rose high; there was
+a pause. At length he said,
+
+"Every situation has its trials; those who best support them are the
+happiest. But we are growing serious. I want to see your children--how
+they compare with mine in health and size, and whether we can build any
+theory in favor of a country life in this respect."
+
+The children were brought; they were both girls. The eldest was the
+picture of health, but the youngest seemed to have inherited something of
+the delicacy of her mother's constitution.
+
+"I can scarcely show one amongst my boys," said Howard, "that gives
+evidence of more ruddy health than your eldest girl, Frances; but my
+wife's little namesake, Charlotte, looks more like a city-bred lady.--O,
+here comes my brother James."
+
+Mr. Draper entered. A close observer would have been struck with the
+difference of expression in the countenances of the two brothers,
+although they were marked by a strong resemblance. That of the eldest
+was eager and flushed; the brightness of his eye was not dimmed, but it
+was unsettled and flashing; there were many lines of care and anxiety,
+and his whole air marked him as a business man. Howard's exterior was
+calm, and thoughtful;--the very hue of his sun-burnt complexion seemed to
+speak of the healthy influence of an out-of-door atmosphere. They were
+both men of education and talent; but circumstances early in life
+rendered them for a time less united. Both had fixed their affections on
+the gentle being before them. James was the successful suitor. There
+are often wonderful proofs of St. Pierre's proposition that 'harmony
+proceeds from contrast.' Frances and Howard had much the same tastes and
+pursuits. Howard's attachment was deep and silent; James's, ardent and
+zealously expressed;--he won the prize. Howard's taste led him to a
+country life. He was not rich enough to become a gentleman farmer; he
+therefore became a working one. For years, he did not visit his brother;
+but at length the wound was entirely healed by another of the fair
+creatures whom Heaven has destined to become the happiness or misery of
+man. Still the theory of contrast was carried through; his second love
+was unlike his first; she was full of gayety and life, and gave to his
+mind an active impulse, which it often wanted. Frances, in the midst of
+society, drew her most congenial pleasures from books. Charlotte, the
+wife of Howard, though in comparative solitude, drew her enjoyment from
+society. There was not a family in the village near, that did not, in
+some way or other, promote her happiness. Her information was gathered
+from intercourse with living beings--her knowledge from real life. If
+the two sisters had changed situations, the one might have become a mere
+bookworm; the other, from the liveliness of her disposition, and the warm
+interest she took in characters, a little of a gossip. As it was, they
+both admirably filled their sphere in life, and influenced and were
+influenced by the characters of their partners.
+
+"Why did you not persuade Charlotte to come with you?" said Mrs. Draper.
+"Sisters ought to be better acquainted than we are."
+
+"I invited her," said Howard, "but she laughed at my proposing that a
+farmer and his wife should leave the country at the same time. I have
+brought, however, a proposal from her, that you should transport yourself
+and children back with me; we have room enough in our barn-like house for
+any of your attendants that you wish to bring."
+
+For a moment Mrs. Draper seemed disposed to accept the invitation; but
+she immediately added,--"I do not like to take my children from their
+schools."
+
+"That is just the answer Charlotte anticipated, and she desired me to
+combat it with all my book-learning opposed to yours, and now and then
+fill up the interstices with such plain matter-of-fact argument as she
+could offer; for instance, that they would improve more in one month
+passed in the country, at this fine season, than in a whole summer at
+school. 'Tell her,' said she, 'to let them
+
+ 'Leave their books and come away,
+ That boys and girls may join in play.'"
+
+"I really think, Frances," said Mr. Draper, "this would be an excellent
+plan; you are not quite well, and the country air will be of service to
+you and Charlotte."
+
+"We have so much more of country round us," said she, with an air of
+satisfaction, "than most of my city friends, that I scarcely feel it
+right to make trees or grass an excuse for emigration. I have as much
+pleasure in seeing spring return to unlock my treasures, as you can have,
+Howard. I must show you some of my rare plants. I have, too, my grape
+and strawberry vines; and finer peach trees I do not think you can
+exhibit."
+
+"I sincerely hope," said Howard, "you will enjoy this pleasure long, and
+eat fruit that you have cultivated yourself: I dare say, it is sweeter
+than any you can buy."
+
+"It ought to be," said Mr. Draper, a little seriously, "for it certainly
+costs about six times as much as the highest market price that we should
+pay. We live here at a most enormous rent; my conscience often twinges
+me on the subject."
+
+"And yet I have heard you say, that you bought this place lower," said
+Howard, "than any which you would now occupy."
+
+"That is true; but by taking down this building, and cutting the land
+into lots, I might get a house clear." A slight flush passed over Mrs.
+Draper's cheek.
+
+"I have had applications," continued Mr. Draper, "for the whole estate as
+it stands; but really, it is such a source of pleasure to my wife to have
+her garden and her shrubbery, that I have not listened to them."
+
+"Thank you," said Mrs. Draper.
+
+"I am doubtful, however, whether I am doing right to let so much property
+remain idle and useless."
+
+"Not useless, brother," said Howard, "if it gives so much enjoyment to
+your family. What can you do with money but purchase happiness in some
+form or other? The benevolent purchase it by relieving the wants of
+others, and are blessed in blessing; nor can I see why money may not as
+wisely be expended in the purchase of a fine house and garden, as by
+investing it in stocks, or ships and cargoes."
+
+"Simply because the one is dead property, and brings no interest; the
+other is constantly accumulating."
+
+"Is there no such thing as being RICH ENOUGH?" said Howard. "Are we to
+be always striving to acquire, and never sitting quietly down to enjoy?"
+
+"No one can look forward to that time more earnestly than I do," said Mr.
+Draper. "Every wise man will fix upon a certain sum, that his reason and
+experience tell him will be sufficient for his expenditures; and then he
+ought to retire from business, and hazard no more.--Now, Howard, as I
+must hurry through dinner, we may as well improve our time. I promised
+to aid you in the disposition of your surplus money. As you have a dread
+of adventure, and do not like to run any risk, I will take it myself, and
+give you compound interest."
+
+Howard expressed his thanks. "You owe me none; it will be a matter of
+convenience to me to have the use of this additional money. I only feel
+some compunction in deriving that profit from it which you might yourself
+reap. However, as I take the risk, and you take none, it is according to
+your own plan;--and now I must be off; I have already overrun my time,"
+said he, looking at his watch. "If possible, I shall be at home early,
+but it is a busy season; two East India cargoes have just arrived, and
+several consignments of cotton from the south; all are pressing upon us."
+
+"My brother," said Howard, as he disappeared, "is the same active,
+enterprising man he always was. I rejoice to hear, however, that he has
+set some limits to his desire for wealth."
+
+"Our desires grow proportionably to our increase of wealth, I believe,"
+said Mrs. Draper. "When we began life, your brother said, if he was ever
+worth a hundred thousand dollars, he would retire from business; he now
+allows himself to be worth much more than that amount, and yet you
+perceive our homestead becomes too valuable for our own use, because it
+can be converted to money. All this, however, would be nothing, if I did
+not see this eager pursuit of gain robbing him of the pleasures of
+domestic life, of the recreation every father ought to allow himself to
+receive from the innocent conversation and sports of his children. He
+cannot spare time for travel--to become acquainted with the beautiful
+views of our own country. To you, who knew him, as I did, full of high
+and noble perceptions, this is a melancholy change."
+
+Howard was silent; he remembered his brother's early restless desire of
+wealth, strikingly contrasted with his own indifference to it. Frances
+judged of his character by that period of life when all that is
+imaginative or sentimental is called into action;--she judged him by the
+season of _first love_. She little supposed that the man who was
+contented to ramble with her over hill and dale, who could bathe in
+moonbeams, and talk of the dewy breath of evening and morning, as if it
+came from "Araby the blest," would one day refuse to quit the bustle of
+State Street, or the dark, noisy lumber of India Wharf, to gaze on the
+Falls of Niagara, because it could not thunder money in his ear! that his
+excursions were to be confined to manufactories, coal-mines, rail-road
+meetings, and Eastern lands. This development of character had been
+gradual, and she scarcely realized his entire devotion to business, till
+she saw his health affected by that scourge of our "pleasant vices,"
+dyspepsy. She expressed her apprehensions to Howard, and begged him to
+use all his influence to break the spell.
+
+"I can think of nothing that will have more effect," said Howard, "than
+for you to accept my wife's invitation, to pass a few weeks with us in
+the country. This will occasionally withdraw my brother from the city,
+and it appears to me that your own health may be benefited by the
+change." He was struck with his sister's altered appearance, with the
+occasional flush, the short, low cough; yet she said she was well--"only
+a slight cold."
+
+At length she promised to be with them the ensuing week, provided her
+husband could make arrangements to go with her. "If he knows that I
+depend on him," said she, "it will be the strongest inducement for him to
+quit the city for a few days."
+
+Mr. Draper returned late in the evening, and had only time to complete
+his business affairs with his brother, who departed early the next
+morning.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+The spring had returned with its new-born beauty, its swelling buds, it
+tender grass; here and there a tree in the city anticipated the season of
+leaves, and put forth its verdant honors. "Now, ma'am," said Lucy, who
+had long been a faithful domestic in the family, "if you are going
+particular, and don't expose yourself by going into the garden, and will
+take the cough-drops regularly, morning and evening, you will get rid of
+your cold. This is just the season when every body gets well that got
+sick as you did."
+
+"How was that?" said Mrs. Draper.
+
+"Why, when the sap was going down the trees in the autumn; but now it is
+going up."
+
+But whether the sap had already gone up, or for some other reason, which
+was as clear to human perception, Francis did not shake off her wearing
+cough. Mr. Draper was not alarmed at it; it was very unobtruding, and he
+had become _used to it_. It was not one of those vulgar, hoarse coughs,
+that, till we connect danger with it, often excites indignation in those
+who are listening to an interesting narrative, or to a reader, who is
+obliged to wait till the impertinent paroxysm is over. Mrs. Draper's was
+quite a lady-like cough, low and gentle, and seemed rather like impeded
+respiration.
+
+Visiters would sometimes observe, when they went away, "Mrs. Draper is
+still a handsome woman, though she has lost her bloom. What a pity she
+has that affected little cough! it really spoils her; it is nothing but a
+habit; she could easily break herself of it, if any body would be honest
+enough to tell her." This task rested with Lucy alone; but it was all in
+vain. Frances took the cough-drops morning and evening, and still the
+disagreeable habit remained. Mr. Draper was very little at home; and
+when he was, his mind was engaged by new projects. Anxiety, however, did
+not rob him of sleep: he was too successful; he seemed to have the Midas-
+like art of turning every thing to gold:--his thousands were rapidly
+accumulating, and half a million was now the point at which he determined
+to stop. Mrs. Draper's slight cough did not attract his attention; but
+if her appetite failed, he grew anxious, and feared she was not well.
+
+Week after week passed, and still it was impossible for Mr. Draper to
+leave the city. At length, a letter arrived from Charlotte, claiming the
+visit; and he substituted one of his clerks to conduct his family to his
+brother's residence. Here, though not more than forty miles from the
+city, Mrs. Draper found the freshness and novelty of country life. The
+family were farmers, children and all. Charlotte was acquainted with all
+the little details belonging to a farm, and took as much interest as her
+husband did in the growth of grain, the raising of pigs and poultry, and
+feeding cattle in the best and most economical manner. She displayed her
+dairy with its cheese arranged on shelves, her white pans of milk, and
+her newly-churned butter, which impregnated the air with its sweetness.
+
+It was with long-forgotten feelings of health that Frances breathed the
+atmosphere around her; she perceived that her respiration was more free.
+"How ignorant I was," said she to Howard, "to compare my city garden to
+the country! There is music in every accidental sound. How fresh is the
+air! how unlike the mornings to which I have been accustomed, where the
+voice of the teamster urging on his over-loaded horse, or the monotonous
+cry of the fishmonger, disturbed my slumbers!"
+
+Her heart beat with pleasure as she saw her children go forth with their
+cousins to rural enjoyments: her tender bud, which she had often feared
+would never live to unfold its beauty, her little Charlotte, she saw here
+as joyous and as active as her sister. New hopes and anticipations
+brightened the future. How does returning health change the prospect of
+external circumstances! The cough was much less constant, and Charlotte,
+who professed to have wonderful skill in curing diseases, had undertaken
+to eradicate it. She did not approve of late slumbers, and every morning
+she brought her patient a tumbler of new milk, and challenged her to come
+out and breathe the fresh air. "Do not wait," said she, "till its wings
+are clogged by the smoke of the city; come and win an appetite for our
+country breakfast, our new-laid eggs: the children are hunting for them
+amongst the hay, and here comes my little namesake with her prize: she
+has brought hers for your breakfast."
+
+Mr. Draper did not arrive at the time he appointed, and Frances often
+felt the sickness of hope delayed. "Deliver me from such excellent
+husbands," said Charlotte to Howard, "who are wasting the best years of
+their lives in acquiring wealth for their families, and yet never think
+themselves _rich enough_. Here is poor Frances, kept in a state of
+feverish anxiety, when rest and tranquillity are absolutely necessary for
+the restoration of her health."
+
+The Saturday evening following, Mr. Draper arrived. He was delighted to
+see his wife and children, and thought they looked remarkably well. On
+Sunday morning, he walked with his brother over the farm, and calculated
+the probable receipts of the year. Away from the atmosphere of business,
+his mind seemed to recover its former freshness. "How beautiful this
+stillness is!" said he: "it reminds me of the mythology of the heathen
+world; the ancients used to say that when Pan slept, all nature held its
+breath, lest it should awake him. You have made an enthusiast of
+Frances; nothing will do for her now but the country."
+
+"My wife is anxious about the health of yours," said Howard; "she thinks
+her cough an indication of weak lungs."
+
+"I know," said Mr. Draper, stopping short, "she is subject to a cough;
+ours is a miserable climate; I hope the warm weather will entirely banish
+it. I have a bad cough myself;"--and he coughed with energy.
+
+"I wish, brother," said Howard, "that period had arrived, at which you
+have so long been aiming, that you thought yourself _rich enough_ to
+devote more time to your family."
+
+"No one can look forward to it more eagerly than I do," replied Mr.
+Draper; "but you can little understand the difficulty of withdrawing from
+business. However, I fully mean to do it, when I have secured to my wife
+and children an inheritance."
+
+Howard smiled.
+
+"O," said Mr. Draper, in reply to the smile, "you must not suppose my
+wants can be measured by yours. Your farm supplies you with the
+materials of life, and you get them at a cheap rate."
+
+"I give for them what you give," said Howard, "time,--and a little
+more,--I give manual labor; you know I belong to the working class. In
+this money-making day, men despise small gains, and yet my own experience
+tells me they are sufficient for happiness. Great wealth can add but
+little to our enjoyments; domestic happiness, you will allow, is cheaply
+bought, as far as money is concerned, and riches cannot add a great deal
+to our corporeal enjoyment. The pleasures of sense are wisely limited to
+narrow boundaries; the epicure has no prolonged gratification in eating;
+though he may wish for the throat of the crane, he cannot obtain it;
+neither does he enjoy his expensive delicacies more than the day-laborer
+does his simple fare. Of all the sources of happiness in this world,
+overgrown wealth has the least that is real; and from my own observation,
+I should think it the most unproductive source of satisfaction to the
+possessor. I have heard of many very wealthy men that have tormented
+themselves with the fear of coming to actual want, but I never heard of
+one man in moderate circumstances that was afflicted with this
+monomania."
+
+"You talk like a philosopher," said Mr. Draper, laughing, "who means to
+live all his life in his tub. However, I assure you that I do not intend
+always to pursue this course of hurry and business; in a very short time,
+I expect to agree with you that I am _rich enough_; now, my only desire
+is to hasten that period, that I may devote myself to my family."
+
+"Is it possible," said Howard, "that this incessant toil is to purchase a
+blessing which is already within your grasp! At least I hope you mean to
+devote yourself to your family now, for a few days."
+
+"I regret to say," said Mr. Draper, "that I must be off early to-morrow
+morning. But I am thinking, as my wife and children enjoy the country so
+much, that it is an object for me to purchase a snug little place where
+they may pass the summer. Do you know of any such near you?"
+
+"Clyde Farm is up for sale," replied Howard.
+
+"I should like to ride over and see it," said Mr. Draper, musing.
+
+"Not this morning," said Howard.
+
+"This afternoon, then, will do as well."
+
+"No," said Howard; "this is the only uninterrupted day I have with my
+family, and it is our regular habit to attend public worship. To-morrow
+morning we will ride over as early as you please, but to-day I hope you
+will accept as a day of rest from business."
+
+Mr. Draper had thought it quite impossible to give a part of the next
+morning to his family, but he always found time for business.
+Accordingly, when the morning arrived, they rode over to Clyde Farm.
+
+"I remember that farm perfectly well," said Mr. Draper; "it was my
+favorite resort when I was a boy."
+
+"I remember those times too," replied Howard, "when I used to lie
+stretched at full length by the side of the waterfall, getting my _amo,
+amas_, and only now and then roused by the distant sound of your gun,
+which put all the little birds to flight."
+
+"Has it still that fine run of water?" asked Mr. Draper.
+
+"Precisely the same," replied Howard; "this very stream that flows
+through my pasture, and sparkles in the morning sun, comes from old
+Clyde. Look this way, and see what a leap it takes over those rocks."
+
+Clyde Farm was just such a spot as a romantic, visionary mind might
+choose for its vagaries,--such a spot as an elevated, contemplative one
+might select for its aspirations after higher hopes, which seldom come in
+the tumult of life. Mr. Draper felt at once that the place was congenial
+to the taste and habits of his wife; it awoke in his own mind the
+recollection of his boyish days, and from these he naturally reverted to
+the days of courtship, when he talked of scenery and prospect as
+eloquently as Frances. With a light step he followed his brother along
+the stream that came leaping and bounding from the hills, till they
+arrived at the still little lake whence it took its course. The mists of
+the morning had dispersed, and the blue sky and white clouds were
+reflected from its glassy surface, while on its borders the deep, dark
+foliage of the woods lay inverted. Both of the brothers stood silent
+when they reached the edge of the water; both were impressed with the
+beauty of the scene.
+
+"How delighted Frances would be with this spot!" said Howard. "It is
+like the calm, tranquil mirror of her own mind, which seems formed to
+reflect only the upper world, with its glorious firmament. I think we
+have before us two excellent prototypes of our wives:--while the clear,
+peaceful lake represents yours, this happy, joyous, busy little stream
+may be likened to my Charlotte, who goes on her way rejoicing, and
+diffusing life and animation wherever she bends her course."
+
+"I wish Frances had a little more of her gayety," said Mr. Draper.
+
+"Depend upon it," said Howard, "they will operate favorably on each
+other. I perceive already a mingling of character. I will venture to
+predict, Charlotte will have a boat with its gay streamers winding the
+shore before long, and persuade her sister to become the 'Lady of the
+Lake.'"
+
+The matter was soon decided; the sisters visited the place, and were
+enchanted with it; and Howard was authorized by his brother to make the
+purchase.
+
+The house had been built many years. It was irregular in its form, and
+certainly belonged to no particular order of architecture. There was a
+large dining-room, and doors that opened upon the green, and plenty of
+small rooms; in short, it was just such a house as Frances fancied; it
+was picturesque, and looked, she said, "as if it had grown and shot out
+here and there like the old oaks around it."
+
+Charlotte begged that on herself might devolve the care of furnishing it.
+"I know better than you," said she, "what will save trouble. Banish
+brass and mahogany; admit nothing that requires daily labor to make it
+fine and showy. I do not despair of setting you up a dairy, and teaching
+you to churn your own butter." She truly loved and honored her sister-in-
+law, and trembled for her life, which she was persuaded she held by a
+frail tenure. She was eager to prevent her returning to the city during
+the warm season, and readily undertook to go herself and make all
+necessary arrangements. Frances furnished her with a list, and left much
+discretionary power to her agent.
+
+In the course of a few days she returned.--"We must be at Clyde Farm to-
+morrow," said she, "to receive the goods and chattels of which I am only
+the precursor. Your husband enters warmly into the furnishing of your
+country residence, and therefore we must let him have a voice in it. His
+taste is not so simple as ours, so we must admit some of the finery of
+the town house; pier and chimney glasses are to be sent from it. I did
+not make much opposition to this, for they will not only reflect our
+rustic figures within, but the trees and grass without. How I long to
+have haying-time come! You must ride from the fields with your children,
+as I do, on a load of hay, when the work of the day is over, and look
+down upon all the world. O Frances," added she, "if we could only
+persuade your husband to turn farmer, our victory would be complete."
+
+"It will never be," said Frances.
+
+"I don't know that," replied Charlotte; "he seemed to set very little
+value on the city residence, and would fain have stripped his elegant
+rooms to dignify your rustic retreat; but I would not consent to the
+migration of a particle of gilding or damask, but told him he might send
+the marble slabs, with the mirrors,--and I speak for one of the slabs for
+the dairy. But I have been more thoughtful for you than you have for
+yourself: look at this list of books that I have ordered."
+
+Frances was surprised; she had never seen Charlotte with a book in her
+hand, and she candidly expressed her astonishment that, amidst all her
+hurry, she had remembered _books_.
+
+"Where do you think I acquired all my knowledge," said Charlotte, "if I
+never open a book? But you are half right; I certainly do not patronize
+book-making; and yet all summer I am reading the book of Nature. I open
+it with the first snow-drop and crocus which peeps from under her white
+robe; and then, when she puts on her green mantle, strewed with
+
+ 'The yellow cowslip and the pale primrose,'
+
+I study the lilies of the field. Depend upon it, there is more wisdom
+without doors than we can find within,--more wisdom there than in books."
+
+"I believe it," said Frances; "all nature speaks of the Creator,--of the
+one great Mind which formed this endless variety, and can give life to
+the most insignificant flower that grows by the way-side."
+
+"I should like to know what flower you call insignificant," said
+Charlotte; "not this little houstonia, I hope; that has a perfection of
+organization in which many of your splendid green-house flowers are
+deficient. But that is the way with us: we call those things sublime
+which are on a large scale, because they are magnified to our narrow
+minds, and we can comprehend them without any trouble.--But I must not
+display all my wisdom to you at once--how, like Solomon of old, I can
+speak of trees, from 'the cedar-tree that is in Lebanon even unto the
+hyssop that springeth out of the wall.'--And now, fair sister,
+
+ 'Up, up, and quit your books,'
+
+and come with me to one of my studios--namely, my poultry-yard. I hear
+the bipeds clamorous for their supper."
+
+"This is the woman," thought Frances, "that I have sometimes wondered
+Howard, with his reflecting mind, could select as his partner for life!
+Because I saw her, like the Deity she worships, attending to the most
+minute affairs, I foolishly imagined she comprehended no others."
+
+From this time the two sisters resembled in union Shakspeare's twin
+cherries growing on one stem.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+The furniture arrived, and the country residence was very soon in order.
+Howard took the direction of the farming part. But it was no object to
+Frances to have much ploughing or planting. She loved the "green
+pastures and still waters," and often repeated those beautiful lines of
+the hymn--
+
+ "To dewy vales and flowery meads,
+ My weary, fainting steps he leads,
+ Where peaceful rivers, soft and slow,
+ Amid the verdant landscape flow."
+
+Clyde Farm was a singularly retired spot, notwithstanding its vicinity to
+a country village, which, on a straight line, was about two miles from
+it. But there was a high hill between, that belonged to the farm, and
+was crowned with oak and chestnut trees; while here and there was an
+opening which gave a perfect view of the village, with its church,
+academy, and square four-story tavern, with windows enough to give it the
+appearance of a huge lantern. The high road was a mile from the house,
+and no dwelling was nearer. The hill overlooked one of those New England
+landscapes that could not be wrought into a well-composed picture;
+objects were too abundant; it was dotted with farms and sheets of water;
+and beyond, the beautiful Merrimac wound its way. On this spot, Frances
+had a little open pavilion erected, and it was her resort at sunset. As
+her health improved, her mind opened to the impressions of happiness, and
+she grew almost gay. "There is but one thing more," said she to her
+brother and sister, "that I now desire in this world."
+
+"Always one thing wanting for us poor mortals!" said Charlotte; "but let
+us hear what it is."
+
+"That my husband, who is the liberal donor of my enjoyment, should
+partake of it."
+
+"Pray be contented," replied she, "and let him enjoy himself in his own
+way."
+
+"I have a letter for you," said Howard, "that came enclosed in one to
+me;" and, with an air of hesitation, he gave it to her.
+
+Frances hastily took it; her color came and went as she read. It
+informed her, that the offers her husband had received for his estate in
+town had not only opened his eyes to its value, but had convinced him
+that, as a patriotic citizen, he had no right to retain it for his
+private use; he had therefore come to the conclusion to reap the benefit
+himself which other speculators had proposed to do. He should take down
+the house, make a street through the land, divide it into small lots, and
+erect a number of houses upon it, one of which he meant to reserve for
+himself. "I should regret what I conceive to be the necessity of this
+thing," he added, "if you were not so perfectly satisfied with your Clyde
+residence. As you will always repair to it early in the spring, it
+matters little if you return to walls of brick and mortar in the autumn."
+
+We pass over the involuntary tears that followed this communication, as
+speculators would pronounce them unreasonable. It now became necessary
+for Frances to visit the city to make arrangements, and take a last leave
+of her pleasant mansion. In justice, it must be said, she thought less
+of her own deprivation than of the new accession of care and toil that
+her husband was bringing upon himself.--When she returned to Clyde, she
+had lost by fatigue nearly all the health she had previously gained.
+
+Most people have witnessed the rapidity with which the work of
+destruction goes on in modern days. In a very short time the splendid
+mansion was a pile of ruins, a street laid open, and buildings erecting
+on the spot.
+
+Mr. Draper's visits to Clyde had been hitherto confined to the Sabbath,
+and generally terminated with it: but he now wrote to his wife that he
+intended to "pass a month with her. It was a comparative season of
+leisure; his vessels had sailed, his buildings were going on well, and he
+should be able to enjoy the quiet of the country."
+
+Frances received this intelligence with new-born hope. She felt certain,
+that one month, passed amidst the tranquil pleasures of the country,
+would regenerate his early tastes. She talked eloquently of the
+corrupting atmosphere of the city, and was sanguine that now all would go
+well; that his inordinate engrossment in business would yield to the
+influences by which he would find himself surrounded. And so it turned
+out, for a few days. Mr. Draper was as happy as an affectionate husband
+and father must naturally be, reunited to the objects of his tenderness.
+He said that "he felt uncommonly well, had much less of the dyspepsy than
+he had experienced for years," followed his little girls to their
+favorite haunts, and seemed to realize the blessing of leisure. Howard,
+with his family, passed the third day with them. Towards evening, they
+all ascended the hill. Mr. Draper was struck with the extensive view,
+and the beauty of his wife's domain, for he scrupulously called it her
+own. "What a waste of water!" he exclaimed. "What a noble run for mills
+and manufactories!" Poor Frances actually turned pale; but, collecting
+her spirits, she said, "It is hardly right to call it a _waste_ of
+water."
+
+ "Liberal, not lavish, is kind Nature's hand."
+
+In the mean time, Mr. Draper had taken his pencil, and on the back of a
+letter was making lines and dashes. "Look here," said he to Howard. "See
+how perfectly this natural ledge of rocks may be converted into a dam: it
+seems precisely made for it: then, by digging a canal to conduct the
+water a little to the left, there is a fine site for a
+cotton-manufactory, which, built of granite, would add much to the beauty
+of the prospect. Just here, where that old tree is thrown across the
+stream, a bridge may be built, in the form of an arch, which also must be
+of stone. It will make the view altogether perfect."
+
+"I cannot think," said Howard, "the view would be improved; you would
+have a great stone building, with its countless windows and abutments,
+but you would lose the still, tranquil effect of the prospect, and take
+much from the beauty of the stream."
+
+"Not as I shall manage it," said Mr. Draper. "I am sure Frances herself
+will agree with me that it adds fifty per cent. to the beauty of the
+prospect when she sees it completed."
+
+In vain Frances protested she was satisfied with it as it was; the month
+that she had hoped was to be given to leisure was one of the busiest of
+her husband's life. Contracts were made--an association formed. Mr.
+Draper was continually driving to the city, and mechanics were passing to
+and fro. Clyde Farm began to wear the appearance of a business place. A
+manufacturing company was incorporated under the title of the Clyde
+Mills. The stillness of the spot was exchanged for the strokes of the
+pickaxe, the human voice urging on oxen and horses, the blasting of
+rocks; the grass was trampled down, the trees were often wantonly
+injured, and, where they obstructed the tracks of wheels, laid prostrate.
+Frances no longer delighted to walk at noon day under the thick foliage
+that threw its shadow on the grass as vividly as a painting. All was
+changed! It is true she now saw her husband, but she had but little more
+of his society; his mind and time were wholly engrossed; he came often,
+and certainly did not, as formerly, confine his visits to the Sabbath.
+
+All went on with wonderful rapidity; story rose upon story, till it
+seemed as if the new manufactory, with its windows and abutments, was
+destined to become another Babel. When Charlotte came to Clyde, she
+gazed with astonishment. "All this," said she to Howard, "is the project
+of a speculator! Grown men now-a-days remind me of the story of the boy
+who planted his bean at night, and went out in the morning to see how it
+grew; he found it had nearly reached the chamber windows; he went out the
+next morning, and it was up to the eaves of the house; on the third
+morning, it had shot up to the clouds, and he descried a castle, or a
+manufactory, I don't know which, on the top of it. Then it was high time
+to scale it; so up, up, he went, and when he arrived at the building, he
+put his foot into it, and then he perceived it was made of vapor; and
+down came bean, castle, and boy, headlong, in _three seconds_, though it
+had taken _three whole days_ to complete the work."
+
+"You must tell your story to my brother," said Howard.
+
+"No," replied Charlotte; "he would not profit by it; but I will tell it
+to my children, and teach them to train their beans in the good
+old-fashioned way, near the ground."
+
+Thus passed the autumn at Clyde; that period which every reflecting mind
+enjoys as a season of contemplation; that period when our New England
+woods assume every variety of color, and shine forth with a splendor that
+indicates decay. Still the two families had much enjoyment together; the
+health of Frances and little Charlotte had decidedly improved; but when
+the leaves began to fall, and the wind to whistle through the branches,
+they quitted Clyde and returned to the city. Their new house was not
+ready for them, and they were obliged to take lodgings at one of the
+hotels.
+
+Mr. Draper met Dr. B., their friend and physician, in his walks, and
+begged him to call and see his wife. "I rejoice to say," said he, "that
+her health does not require any medical advice; she is quite well."
+
+Probably Dr. B. thought otherwise, for he suggested the advantage that
+both she and the little girl might derive from passing the winter in a
+warm climate. Never was there a fairer opportunity; they had no home to
+quit, and their residence at a hotel was one of necessity, not of choice.
+But Mr. Draper said it was quite impossible. What! leave his counting-
+room, State Street, India Wharf, the insurance offices! leave all in the
+full tide of speculation, when he was near the El Dorado for which he had
+so long been toiling! when Eastern lands and Western lands, rail-roads
+and steam-boats, cotton, and manufactories, were in all their glory; when
+his own Clyde Mills were just going into operation! It was impossible,
+wholly impossible; and Frances would not go without him. The suggestion
+was given up, and she remained in the city almost wholly confined to the
+atmosphere of a small room with a coal fire. Unfortunately the measles
+appeared among the children at the hotel, and Mrs. Draper's were taken
+sick before she knew that the epidemic was there. They had the best
+attendance, but nothing supersedes a mother's devotion. Frances passed
+many a sleepless night in watching over them. With the eldest the
+disorder proved slight, but it was otherwise with the youngest; and when
+she began to grow better, the mother drooped. It was a dreary winter for
+poor Mrs. Draper, but not so for her husband. Never had there been a
+season of such profits, such glorious speculations! Some _croakers_ said
+it could not last; and some of our gifted statesmen predicted that an
+overwhelming blow must inevitably come. But all this was nothing to
+speculators; it certainly would not arrive till after _they_ had made
+their millions.
+
+Spring approached, with its uncertainty of climate; sometimes, the
+streets were in rivers, and the next day frozen in masses; then came
+volumes of east wind. Mrs. Draper's cough returned more frequently than
+ever, and Charlotte looked too frail for earth. The physician informed
+Mr. Draper that he considered it positively necessary to remove the
+invalids to a milder climate, and mentioned Cuba. Mr. Draper, however,
+decided that an inland journey would be best, and, inconvenient as it
+was, determined to travel as far as some of the _cotton-growing_ states.
+After the usual busy preparations, they set off, the wife fully realizing
+that she was blighting in the bud her husband's projected speculations
+for a few weeks to come, and feeling that he was making what he
+considered great sacrifices.
+
+Almost all invalids who have travelled on our continent in pursuit of
+uniformity of climate, have been disappointed. At New York they were
+detained a week by a flight of snow and rain, shut up in dreary rooms;
+then came a glimmering of sunshine, and Philadelphia looked bright and
+serene; but at Baltimore the rain again descended. They were so near
+Washington, Mr. Draper thought it best to hurry on, with every precaution
+for the invalids. At Washington, they found the straw mattings had
+superseded woollen carpets, and the fire-places were ornamented with
+green branches. They continued their journey south till they at length
+arrived at Charleston. Here they found a milder climate, and a few days
+of sunshine. Mr. Draper was no longer restless; he had full employment
+in shipping cargoes of cotton, and making bargains, not only for what was
+in the market, but for a proportion of that which was yet to grow, as
+confidently as if he had previously secured the rain and sunshine of
+heaven. There is a constant change of weather on our coast--another
+storm came on. The little invalid evidently lost rather than gained.
+Discouraged and disheartened, Frances begged they might return. "One
+week at Clyde, where they might have the comforts of home, would do more
+for them," she said, "than all this fruitless search for a favorable
+climate." When Mr. Draper had completed his bargains, he was equally
+desirous to return to the city, and at the end of a tedious journey, over
+bad roads in some parts of it, rail-roads in others, and a tremendous
+blow round Point Judith, the travellers arrived at Boston on one of those
+raw, piercing, misty days, that seemed to have been accumulating fogs for
+their reception. The physician hastened their departure to Clyde, as it
+was inland and sheltered from the sea. This removal was made, and then
+they had nothing to do but to get well. Howard and Charlotte were
+rejoiced at the reunion, and the feeble little invalid tried to resume
+her former sports with her cousins. But all would not answer, and when
+June came on, with its season of roses, she slept at the foot of the
+mount. It was a retired spot that the mother selected for the remains,
+and only a temporary one, for they were to be removed to Mount Auburn at
+the close of autumn.
+
+It were well if we could receive the events of Providence in the sublime
+simplicity with which they come, but the sensitive and tender-hearted
+often add to their poignancy by useless self-reproach. Frances thought
+the journey had, perhaps, been the cause of the child's untimely death,
+and lamented that she had not opposed a measure which she had undertaken
+solely for its benefit. The death of friends is a calamity that few have
+not strength enough to bear, if they do not exaggerate their sufferings,
+by imagining that something was done, or left undone, for which they were
+responsible. To this nervous state of feeling Frances was peculiarly
+liable, from her ill health; and it was many weeks before her excellent
+powers of mind obtained full exercise. Yet they finally triumphed, and
+she became first resigned, then cheerful. The sorrow of the father was
+of a different character, and exhausted itself in proportion to its
+violence. It was followed by new projects and new anticipations; the
+manufactory had succeeded beyond his most sanguine expectations. A
+discovery had been made that enabled them to afford their cloth a cent
+per yard cheaper than any other manufacturing establishment. Bales of
+cotton poured in upon him from the south, and ships arrived from various
+parts of the world. How could he find time for grief!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+The first visit Frances made to the lake after her return, discovered to
+her, that it was sadly changed. It was no longer full to overflowing,
+but swampy and low; the water was constantly drained off to supply the
+manufactory and mills which were erected at a distance. Mr. Draper had
+found out that the little stream could much more than earn its own
+living, and it was made to work hard. One thing, however, was wanting to
+complete his Clyde speculations, and that was a rail-road. This had now
+become necessary. Every thing afforded the greatest facility for it.
+Laborers could be procured from the village and farms in the vicinity.
+Yet how could he reconcile his wife to it? The road must pass through
+the hill, and near the house. He was aware that it would destroy the
+rural beauty of the place; but what an increase of wealth it would be!
+what a princely revenue! what a spirit of business and speculation it
+would spread through the country! Every man would be able not only to
+make the most of his capital, but to get credit to ten times its real
+amount. He considered it a public benefit, and he was imperiously called
+to accomplish it; and so he stated the matter to his wife with as much
+tenderness towards her feelings as the case would admit.
+
+"I hoped," said she, "that the sum of your public benefits was completed
+by our sacrifice in the city."
+
+"That is not spoken with your usual generous feeling, Frances," replied
+he. "When are patriotic exertions to cease? Are we not called upon to
+be constantly making them?"
+
+"Howard would say it is injuring the cause of the country to turn
+agriculturists into speculators," said Frances.
+
+"Howard is an excellent man," replied Mr. Draper; "he is born to be a
+farmer, and nothing else. I have no wish to change his vocation; he
+dignifies it by uniting intelligence with manual labor; but there are
+many who are toiling merely for money, and they can get much more by my
+method than his."
+
+"Will their happiness be increased?" said Mrs. Draper.
+
+"Certainly, inasmuch as wealth procures the means of happiness."
+
+"Have _you_ found it so?" again asked Frances.
+
+"Not precisely. I am still toiling; my season for rest and enjoyment has
+not arrived."
+
+"And yet," said Frances, "Howard is _rich enough_ for enjoyment. You
+have already a great estate; let me ask, what advantage you derive from
+it beyond your daily meals? You take care of this immense property; you
+are continually increasing it, and all the compensation you get is a
+_bare living_. Would any of the clerks you employ in your counting-room
+labor for such low wages?"
+
+"My dear Frances," said Mr. Draper, affectionately, "I am always
+contented to admire your ingenuity without combating your arguments.
+Perhaps it might be better, if you had cultivated a little more of the
+_rationale_ of life."
+
+"Well," replied she, languidly smiling, "I am going to prove to you, that
+I have profited by your example, and am becoming a business wife. You
+call this farm _mine_, and tell me you bought it for me?"
+
+"Certainly; all I have is yours."
+
+"I claim no title to any thing but this; but this I consider your gift,
+and as such accept it."
+
+Mr. Draper certainly did not look delighted at this unexpected statement,
+and began to tremble for his rail-road; but he remained silent.
+
+"You have undoubtedly greatly increased the actual value of Clyde Farm,
+by mills and manufactories?"
+
+"Certainly I have; but all is in a manner useless without the rail-road
+as a means of transportation: that will put every thing into complete
+operation, and make the revenue princely."
+
+"Then," said Frances, "I can have no hesitation in making my offer. I
+will sell this place to you for what you gave for it. Secure the sum to
+me outright, and I renounce my title to Clyde Farm. Make it, if you
+please, wholly a manufacturing place; do not consult me whether there
+shall be rail-roads or mills."
+
+"Upon my word," said Mr. Draper, "with an estate like mine, I should be
+mortified to make such a paltry purchase of my wife. It is for you and
+our only child that I am accumulating a fortune. Have you ever found me
+sordid or tenacious of money, that you wish a certain sum secured to
+you?"
+
+"Never," said she with emotion; "all that money can purchase, you have
+been most liberal in procuring me. Would that you were as generous to
+yourself!"
+
+"We all have our own ideas of happiness," said Mr. Draper; "but since it
+is your wish, Frances, I will close with your proposal, and secure to you
+twenty thousand dollars, which is a little more than I paid for Clyde
+Farm. Legal instruments shall be immediately drawn up; and to convince
+you that I wish for no control over that sum, I will have it put in
+trust."
+
+"Let the instrument be so worded," said Frances, "that it shall revert to
+our child at my death."
+
+"As you please," said Mr. Draper, coldly; "it is all the same to me."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.--CONCLUSION.
+
+
+From this time, Clyde Farm became wholly a place of business. No regard
+was now paid to the beauty of the place. Iron-manufactories,
+nail-manufactories, and saw-mills, were projected, and all was hurry and
+bustle. One more pang, however, remained for Frances. The sequestered
+nook she had selected, where her little Charlotte's remains were
+deposited,--that spot, so still, so tranquil, so shaded by trees, and so
+sheltered by valleys, so removed apparently from the tumult of
+business,--over that very spot, it was found necessary for the rail-road
+to pass! Strange as it may seem, the worldly father appeared to feel
+more deeply this innovation than the mother.
+
+Twice he repaired to the spot to give his directions for the removal of
+the remains, and twice an impetuous burst of sorrow drove him from it.
+
+"It is only a temporary resting-place, even for the body," said Frances;
+"the spirit is not there." She looked calmly on, and gave those
+directions for which the father was unable.
+
+Another winter was now advancing, and the house in the city was ready for
+occupancy. Mrs. Draper made her preparations to return, but they were
+often interrupted by a pain in her side. The cough had entirely changed
+its character; it was now deep and hollow. She certainly looked
+remarkably well; her complexion seemed to have recovered the delicacy and
+transparency of early youth, and her eyes their lustrous brightness. As
+for the color of her cheek, her husband sometimes playfully accused her
+of extracting rouge from her carnations.
+
+Charlotte spoke to him doubtingly of his wife's health, and Lucy said she
+"was afraid she would not stand the frosty nights when they came on." But
+Mr. Draper was sanguine that Clyde had been her restoration.
+
+When she arrived at the city, there were arrangements to be made, and new
+furniture to be procured. Her husband gave her full permission to do
+just as she pleased, only begged of her not to call upon him, for he had
+not one moment to spare.
+
+Frances exerted all her strength, but it became evident that she drooped.
+Her nights were restless; and though some thought it encouraging, that
+she coughed so much _stronger_, it was exhausting to her frame.
+
+Mr. Draper at length perceived that she had rather lost than gained; he
+went for her physician, and requested him to recommend quiet to her. "I
+think," said he, "she has over-fatigued herself."
+
+Dr. B. came to see her, conversed with her, counted the throbbings of her
+pulse, and made a minute examination of her case. The conference was
+long; when he entered the parlor, he found Mr. Draper waiting. He
+received him with a smile; but there was no responsive smile on the
+doctor's face; it was solemn and thoughtful.
+
+Mr. Draper grew alarmed. "You do not think my wife very sick, I hope,"
+said he. "Her cough is troublesome; but you know she has long been
+subject to it. Indeed, I think it is constitutional, like my own. You
+recommended the white mixture to her last year: it did her good."
+
+"I recommended a voyage and a warm climate," said the physician.
+
+"Yes, I remember you did; but it was impossible for me to go away then.
+In the spring we took that unlucky journey; however, it was of benefit to
+her, and if you think it necessary, I will go the same route now."
+
+"I do not," replied Dr. B.
+
+"I am glad of it; it would be particularly inconvenient to me just now to
+leave the city. Times are perplexing: bills come back protested--bad
+news from England--sudden and unlooked-for failures--no one can tell
+where it will end. We have been obliged to stop our works at Clyde Farm,
+and there are from ninety to a hundred laborers thrown out of employment.
+This is peculiarly vexatious to me, as they made out before to earn a
+living in their own _humdrum_ way, and they now accuse me of having taken
+the bread from their children's mouths, to promote my own speculations,
+though, while I employed them, I gave them enormous wages. But this,
+sir, is the gratitude of the world."
+
+The doctor still remained silent. It seemed as if Mr. Draper began to
+tremble for something dearer than money, for he grasped the hand of the
+physician.
+
+"You do not think my wife dangerously ill, I trust," said he.
+
+The doctor replied, in a low voice, "I fear she is."
+
+"Impossible!" exclaimed Mr. Draper; "she was remarkably well when we left
+Clyde. But what do you prescribe? I will do any thing, every thing, say
+but the word. I will take her to Europe--I will go to any part of the
+world you recommend."
+
+The physician shook his head.
+
+"My dear doctor, you must go with us. I will indemnify you a thousand
+times for all losses; you can save her life; you know her constitution.
+When shall we go? and where? I will charter a vessel; we can be off in
+three days;"--and he actually took his hat.
+
+Dr. B. said impressively, "Pray be seated, and prepare yourself to hear,
+like a man, what you must inevitably learn. It will not answer any
+useful purpose to go to a milder climate; it is now too late!"
+
+"You do not mean to say," said Mr. Draper, impetuously, "that if she had
+gone last year she would have been restored?"
+
+"No, I do not mean to say that; but then, there would have been a chance;
+now, there is none."
+
+"Why did you not tell me so, sir?" said Mr. Draper, angrily.
+
+"I said all that I was authorized to say. When I urged the step as
+necessary, you replied that it was impossible."
+
+"It is too true!" exclaimed he, striking his forehead; "and yet she is
+dearer to me than my own life;"--and, unable to suppress his feelings, he
+burst into an agony of tears. Suddenly starting up, he said, "Doctor, I
+have the highest respect for your skill; but you are fallible, like all
+men. It is my opinion, that a sea voyage and change of climate will
+restore my wife. If you will go with us, so much the better; if not, I
+will seek some other physician to accompany her."
+
+"It is but right to inform you," said Dr. B., "that there is no chance of
+restoration. I suggested to her, that there might be alleviation in a
+warm climate; but she positively declines seeking it, and says her only
+wish is to die quietly, at home. She fully estimates the strength of
+your affection, and entreats of you to spare her all superfluous
+agitation. 'Tell him,' said she, 'there is but one thing that can
+unsettle the calmness of my mind; it is to see him wanting in Christian
+resignation.'"
+
+It would be painful to dwell on the anguish that followed this
+communication. Mr. Draper realized, for the first time, the tenderness
+and watchfulness that a character and constitution like his wife's
+required. In the common acceptation of the word, he was an excellent
+husband; yet, in his eager pursuit of wealth, he had left her to struggle
+alone with many of the harassing cares of life. He had, by thinking
+himself unable to accompany her, denied her the necessary recreation of
+travelling; he had deprived her of her favorite residence in the city,
+and when she turned her affections to Clyde, even there they found no
+resting-place.
+
+He recollected their unpropitious journey--the exposure to cold and
+rain--that he had hurried on the invalids, till he had accomplished his
+own purposes. One had already gone; the other was fast following.
+Speculators have consciences and affections, and his were roused to
+agony.
+
+Frances shrunk not from the hour of death, which rapidly approached.
+Howard and Charlotte were constantly with her. There was nothing gloomy
+in her views. She considered this life as a passage to another; and saw
+through the vista immortality and happiness. To Charlotte, she
+bequeathed her daughter, and this faithful friend promised to watch over
+her with a mother's care.
+
+Many and long were her conversations with her husband--not on the subject
+of her death, or arrangements after it should take place; but she was
+earnest that her serenity, her high hopes, might be transferred to his
+mind. She had often, in the overflowings of her heart, endeavored to
+communicate to him her animated convictions of a future life. Those who
+live constantly in the present think but little of the future. Mr.
+Draper usually cut short the conversation, with the apparently devout
+sentiment,--"I am quite satisfied on this subject;
+
+ 'Whatever is, is right.'"
+
+Now, however, when he realized that the being he most tenderly loved was
+fast retreating from his view, he felt that there was a vast difference
+between the reasonings of philosophy and the revelations of Christianity;
+and, in the agony of his soul, he would have given worlds for the
+assurance of a reunion. On this subject Frances dwelt; and he now
+listened patiently, without once looking at his watch, or being seized
+with one of his paroxysms of coughing. Still, however, he doubted; for
+how could he trust without _bonds_ and _contracts_? No one had come back
+to tell him _individually_ the whole truth.
+
+"I acknowledge," said he, somewhat reproachfully, "that this conviction
+is earnestly to be desired. If saves you from the agony that at this
+moment rends my heart."
+
+"My dear friend," replied Frances, in a voice interrupted by deep and
+solemn emotion, "religion is not given us for an opiate to be used at a
+last extremity, merely to lull the sense of pain. The views I express
+are not new to me; they have been for many years my daily food; they have
+supported me through hours of bodily anguish; . . . the human frame does
+not decay as gradually as mine without repeated warnings; . . . they will
+conduct me through the dark valley of death, when I can no longer lean
+upon your arm . . . Their efficacy does not merely consist in soothing
+the bitterness of parting; they have a health giving energy that infuses
+courage and fortitude amidst the disappointments and evils of life."
+
+"Henceforth," exclaimed Mr. Draper,--and at that moment he was
+sincere,--"every thing of a worldly nature is indifferent to me!"
+
+"All men," continued Frances, without replying to his exclamation, "are
+subject to the reverses of life, but particularly men of extensive
+business connections. They are like the spider in his cobweb dwelling;
+touch but one of the thousand filaments that compose it, and it vibrates
+to the centre, and often the fabric is destroyed that has been so
+skilfully woven. There is a divine teaching in religion, which at such
+times restores equanimity to the mind, gives new aspirations, and proves
+that all in this life is not lost, and nothing for that to come."
+
+New scenes were opening upon Mr. Draper. It became evident that a dark
+cloud hung over the business atmosphere. Unexpected failures every day
+took place. Some attributed the thick-coming evils to the removal of the
+deposits, others to interrupted currency; some to overtrading, and some
+to extravagance. Whatever was the cause, the distress was real. Mr.
+Draper's cotton became a drug in the market; manufactories stopped, or
+gave no dividends. Eastern lands lost even their nominal value, and
+western towns became bankrupt. Ships stood in the harbor, with their
+sails unbent and masts dismantled. Day laborers looked aghast, not
+knowing where to earn food for their families. The whirlwind came; it
+made no distinction of persons. "It smote the four corners of the
+house," and the high-minded and honorable fell indiscriminately with the
+rest. Well may it be asked, Whence came this desolation upon the
+community? No pestilence visited our land; it was not the plague; it was
+not the yellow fever, or cholera. Health was borne on every breeze; the
+earth yielded her produce, and Peace still dwelt among us.
+
+Mr. Draper felt as if "his mountain stood strong," yet it began to
+totter. Frances was ignorant of the state of public affairs. Who would
+intrude the perplexities of the times into a dying chamber? Softly and
+gently she sank to rest, her last look of affection beaming upon her
+husband.
+
+The next morning, the bankruptcy of Mr. Draper was announced. No blame
+was attached to him, though the sum for which he became insolvent was
+immense, and swallowed up many a hard-earned fortune. Where was Howard's
+little capital?--Gone with the rest--principal and _compound interest_!
+
+"I am a ruined man!" said Mr. Draper to Howard; "I have robbed you, and
+beggared my child; but one resource remains to me;"--and he looked around
+with the desperation of insanity.
+
+Howard grasped his hand. "My dear brother," said he, "your wife, with an
+almost prophetic spirit, foresaw this hour. 'Comfort him,' said she,
+'when it arrives, and lead his mind to higher objects.' Your child has
+an ample provision, by the sum settled on her mother. I have lost
+property which I did not use, and, with the blessing of God, may never
+want. Come home with me; I have means for us both. You will have all
+the indulgences you ever coveted. No one has led a harder life than you
+have. You have labored like the galley-slave, without wages; come, and
+learn that, beyond what we can use for our own or others' benefit, wealth
+has only an imaginary value."
+
+Perhaps it was an additional mortification to Mr. Draper, to find that, a
+few days after his failure, the banks concluded to issue no specie. Many
+were kept along by this resolution; while others stopped, with the
+conviction, that, had they been contented with moderate gains, they
+might, in this day of trouble and perplexity, have been RICH ENOUGH.
+
+FINIS
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RICH ENOUGH***
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