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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Village Life in America 1852-1872, by
+Caroline Cowles Richards
+
+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: Village Life in America 1852-1872
+ Including the period of the American Civil War as told in
+ the diary of a school-girl
+
+Author: Caroline Cowles Richards
+
+Release Date: September 18, 2010 [EBook #33756]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK VILLAGE LIFE IN AMERICA 1852-1872 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.fadedpage.net
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Caroline Cowles Richards (From a daguerreotype taken
+in 1860)]
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+VILLAGE LIFE IN AMERICA
+
+1852-1872
+
+INCLUDING THE PERIOD OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR
+
+AS TOLD IN THE DIARY OF A SCHOOL-GIRL
+
+By
+
+CAROLINE COWLES RICHARDS
+
+WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY
+
+MARGARET E. SANGSTER
+
+NEW AND ENLARGED EDITION
+
+NEW YORK
+
+HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
+
+1913
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+Copyright, 1908, by CAROLINE RICHARDS CLARKE
+
+Copyright, 1913, by HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
+
+THE QUINN & BODEN CO. PRESS
+
+RAHWAY, N. J.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+To My dear brothers, JAMES AND JOHN, who, by precept and example, have
+encouraged me, and to my beloved sister, ANNA, whose faith and affection
+have been my chief inspiration, this little volume is lovingly
+inscribed.
+
+Naples, N. Y.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ PAGE
+ Introduction, by Mrs. Margaret E. Sangster ix
+ The Villages xiii
+ The Villagers xiv
+ 1852.--Family Notes--Famous School--Girls--Hoop Skirts 1
+ 1853.--Runaways--Bible Study--Essays--Catechism 10
+ 1854.--Lake Picnic--Pyramid of Beauty--Governor Clark 20
+ 1855.--Preachers--James and John--Votes for Women 43
+ 1856.--the Fire--Sleighing and Prayer--Father's Advice 52
+ 1857.--Truants and Pickles--Candle Stories--the Snuffers 77
+ 1858.--Tableaux and Charades--Spiritual Seance 95
+ 1859.--E. M. Morse--Letter from the North Pole 106
+ 1860.--Gymnastics--Troublesome Comforts 118
+ 1861.--President Lincoln's Inauguration--Civil War--School
+ Enthusiasm 130
+ 1862.--Gough Lectures--President's Call for Three Hundred
+ Thousand Men--Mission Zeal 138
+ 1863.--A Soldier's Death--General M'Clellan's Letter--President
+ Lincoln's Address at Gettysburg 148
+ 1864.--Grandfather Beals' Death--Anna Graduates 162
+ 1865.--President Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address--Fall of
+ Richmond--Murder of Lincoln 176
+ 1866.--Freedman's Fair--General Grant and Admiral Farragut
+ Visit Canandaigua 200
+ 1867.--Brother John and Wife Go to London--Lecture by
+ Charles Dickens 208
+ 1871.--Hon. George H. Stuart Speaks in Canandaigua--A Large
+ Collection 210
+ 1872.--Grandmother Beals' Death--Biography 211
+ 1880.--Anna's Marriage 225
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+ Caroline Cowles Richards Frontispiece
+ FACING PAGE
+ Grandfather Beals 8
+ Grandmother Beals 8
+ Mr. Noah T. Clarke 30
+ Miss Upham 30
+ First Congregational Church 38
+ Rev. Oliver E. Daggett, D.D. 54
+ Judge Henry W. Taylor 54
+ Miss Zilpha Clark 54
+ "Frankie Richardson" 54
+ Horace Finley 54
+ Tom Eddy and Eugene Stone 66
+ "Uncle David Dudley Field" 66
+ Grandmother's Rocking Chair 88
+ The Grandfather Clock 88
+ Hon. Francis Granger 100
+ Mr. Gideon Granger 100
+ The Old Canandaicua Academy 124
+ The Ontario Female Seminary 132
+ "Old Friend Burling" 138
+ Madame Anna Bishop 138
+ "Abbie Clark and I Had Our Ambrotypes Taken To-day" 152
+ "Mr. Noah T. Clarke's Brother and I" 152
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+PUBLISHERS' NOTE
+
+After this book was in type, on March 29, 1913, the author, Mrs.
+Caroline Richards Clarke, died at Naples, New York.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+The Diary of Caroline Cowles Richards fell into my hands, so to speak,
+out of space. I had no previous acquaintance with the author, and I sat
+down to read the book one evening in no especial mood of anticipation.
+From the first page to the last my attention was riveted. To call it
+fascinating barely expresses the quality of the charm. Caroline Richards
+and her sister Anna, having early lost their mother, were sent to the
+home of her parents in Canandaigua, New York, where they were brought up
+in the simplicity and sweetness of a refined household, amid Puritan
+traditions. The children were allowed to grow as plants do, absorbing
+vitality from the atmosphere around them. Whatever there was of gracious
+formality in the manners of aristocratic people of the period, came to
+them as their birthright, while the spirit of the truest democracy
+pervaded their home. Of this Diary it is not too much to say that it is
+a revelation of childhood in ideal conditions.
+
+The Diary begins in 1852, and is continued until 1872. Those of us who
+lived in the latter half of the nineteenth century recall the swift
+transitions, the rapid march of science and various changes in social
+customs, and as we meet allusions to these in the leaves of the girl's
+Diary we live our past over again with peculiar pleasure.
+
+Far more has been told us concerning the South during the Civil War than
+concerning the North. Fiction has found the North a less romantic field,
+and the South has been chosen as the background of many a stirring
+novel, while only here and there has an author been found who has known
+the deep-hearted loyalty of the Northern States and woven the story into
+narrative form. The girl who grew up in Canandaigua was intensely
+patriotic, and from day to day vividly chronicled what she saw, felt,
+and heard. Her Diary is a faithful record of impressions of that stormy
+time in which the nation underwent a baptism of fire. The realism of her
+paragraphs is unsurpassed.
+
+Beyond the personal claim of the Diary and the certainty to give
+pleasure to a host of readers, the author appeals to Americans in
+general because of her family and her friends. Her father and
+grandfather were Presbyterian ministers. Her Grandfather Richards was
+for twenty years President of Auburn Theological Seminary. Her brother,
+John Morgan Richards of London, has recently given to the world the Life
+and Letters of his gifted and lamented daughter, Pearl Mary-Terèse
+Craigie, known best as John Oliver Hobbes. The famous Field brothers and
+their father, Rev. David Dudley Field, and their nephew, Justice David
+J. Brewer, of the United States Supreme Court, were her kinsmen. Miss
+Hannah Upham, a distinguished teacher mentioned in the Diary, belongs to
+the group of American women to whom we owe the initiative of what we now
+choose to call the higher education of the sex. She, in common with Mary
+Lyon, Emma Willard, and Eliza Bayliss Wheaton, gave a forward impulse to
+the liberal education of women, and our privilege is to keep their
+memory green. They are to be remembered by what they have done and by
+the tender reminiscences found here and there like pressed flowers in a
+herbarium, in such pages as these.
+
+Miss Richards' marriage to Mr. Edmund C. Clarke occurred in 1866. Mr.
+Clarke is a veteran of the Civil War and a Commander in the Grand Army
+of the Republic. His brother, Noah T. Clarke, was the Principal of
+Canandaigua Academy for the long term of forty years. The dignified,
+amusing and remarkable personages who were Mrs. Clarke's contemporaries,
+teachers, or friends are pictured in her Diary just as they were, so
+that we meet them on the street, in the drawing-room, in church, at
+prayer-meeting, anywhere and everywhere, and grasp their hands as if we,
+too, were in their presence.
+
+Wherever this little book shall go it will carry good cheer. Fun and
+humor sparkle through the story of this childhood and girlhood so that
+the reader will be cheated of ennui, and the sallies of the little
+sister will provoke mirth and laughter to brighten dull days. I have
+read thousands of books. I have never read one which has given me more
+delight than this.
+
+ Margaret E. Sangster.
+
+Glen Ridge, New Jersey,
+June, 1911.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+THE VILLAGES
+
+CANANDAIGUA, NEW YORK.--A beautiful village, the county seat of Ontario
+County, situated at the foot of Canandaigua Lake, which is called "the
+gem of the inland lakes" of Western New York, about 325 miles from New
+York city.
+
+NAPLES, NEW YORK.--A small village at the head of Canandaigua Lake,
+famous for its vine-clad hills and unrivaled scenery.
+
+GENEVA, NEW YORK.--A beautiful town about 16 miles from Canandaigua.
+
+EAST BLOOMFIELD, NEW YORK.--An ideal farming region and suburban village
+about 8 miles from Canandaigua.
+
+PENN YAN, NEW YORK.--The county seat of Yates County, a grape center
+upon beautiful Lake Keuka.
+
+ROCHESTER, NEW YORK.--A nourishing manufacturing city, growing rapidly,
+less than 30 miles from Canandaigua, and 120 miles from Niagara Falls.
+
+AUBURN, NEW YORK.--Noted for its Theological Seminary, nearly one
+hundred years old, and for being the home of William H. Seward and other
+American Statesmen.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+THE VILLAGERS
+
+ Mr. and Mrs. THOMAS BEALS, Grandfather and Grandmother
+
+ CAROLINE and ANNA Grandchildren of Mr. and
+ JAMES and JOHN RICHARDS Mrs. Beals
+
+ "AUNT ANN"
+ "AUNT MARY" CARR Sons and daughters of
+ "AUNT GLORIANNA" Mr. and Mrs. Beals
+ "UNCLE HENRY"
+ "UNCLE THOMAS"
+
+ Rev. O. E. DAGGETT, D.D. Pastor of Canandaigua Congregational
+ Church
+
+ NOAH T. CLARKE Principal Canandaigua Academy for Boys
+
+ Hon. FRANCIS GRANGER Postmaster-General, U.S.A.
+
+ General JOHN A. GRANGER Of New York State Militia
+
+ GIDEON GRANGER Son of Hon. Francis
+
+ ALBERT GRANGER Son of General Granger
+
+ JOHN GREIG Wealthy Scotsman long time resident
+ of Canandaigua
+
+ MYRON H. CLARK Governor, State of New York
+
+ JUDGE H. W. TAYLOR Prominent lawyer and jurist
+
+ E. M. MORSE A leading lawyer in Canandaigua
+
+ Miss ZILPHA CLARKE School teacher of note
+
+ Miss CAROLINE CHESEBRO Well-known writers
+ Mrs. GEORGE WILLSON
+
+ Miss HANNAH UPHAM Eminent instructress and lady principal
+ of Ontario Female Seminary
+
+ Mr. FRED THOMPSON Prominent resident, married Miss
+ Mary Clark, daughter of Governor
+ Myron H. Clark.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+School Boys
+
+ WILLIAM T. SCHLEY
+ HORACE M. FINLEY
+ ALBERT MURRAY
+ S. GURNEY LAPHAM Residing with parents in
+ CHARLES COY Canandaigua
+ ELLSWORTH DAGGETT
+ CHARLIE PADDOCK
+ MERRITT C. WILLCOX
+
+ WILLIAM H. ADAMS Law Students
+ GEORGE N. WILLIAMS
+
+ WILLIS P. FISKE Teachers in Academy
+ EDMUND C. CLARKE
+
+School Girls
+
+ LOUISA FIELD
+ MARY WHEELER
+ EMMA WHEELER
+ LAURA CHAPIN
+ JULIA PHELPS
+ MARY PAUL
+ BESSIE SEYMOUR
+ LUCILLA FIELD
+ MARY FIELD
+ ABBIE CLARK
+ SUSIE DAGGETT Residing with parents in
+ FRANKIE RICHARDSON Canandaigua
+ FANNY GAYLORD
+ MARY COY
+ HELEN COY
+ HATTIE PADDOCK
+ SARAH ANTES
+ LOTTIE LAPHAM
+ CLARA WILSON
+ FANNIE PALMER
+ RITIE TYLER
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+VILLAGE LIFE IN AMERICA
+
+
+
+
+1852
+ Canandaigua, N. Y.
+
+_November_ 21, 1852.--I am ten years old to-day, and I think I will
+write a journal and tell who I am and what I am doing. I have lived with
+my Grandfather and Grandmother Beals ever since I was seven years old,
+and Anna, too, since she was four. Our brothers, James and John, came
+too, but they are at East Bloomfield at Mr. Stephen Clark's Academy.
+Miss Laura Clark of Naples is their teacher.
+
+Anna and I go to school at District No. 11. Mr. James C. Cross is our
+teacher, and some of the scholars say he is cross by name and cross by
+nature, but I like him. He gave me a book by the name of "Noble Deeds of
+American Women," for reward of merit, in my reading class. To-day, a
+nice old gentleman, by the name of Mr. William Wood, visited our school.
+He is Mrs. Nat Gorham's uncle, and Wood Street is named for him. He had
+a beautiful pear in his hand and said he would give it to the boy or
+girl who could spell "virgaloo," for that was the name of the pear. I
+spelt it that way, but it was not right. A little boy, named William
+Schley, spelt it right and he got the pear. I wish I had, but I can't
+even remember now how he spelt it. If the pear was as hard as the name I
+don't believe any one would want it, but I don't see how they happened
+to give such a hard name to such a nice pear. Grandfather says perhaps
+Mr. Wood will bring in a Seckle pear some day, so I had better be ready
+for him.
+
+Grandmother told us such a nice story to-day I am going to write it down
+in my journal. I think I shall write a book some day. Miss Caroline
+Chesebro did, and I don't see why I can't. If I do, I shall put this
+story in it. It is a true story and better than any I found in three
+story books Grandmother gave us to read this week, "Peep of Day," "Line
+Upon Line," and "Precept Upon Precept," but this story was better than
+them all. One night Grandfather was locking the front door at nine
+o'clock and he heard a queer sound, like a baby crying. So he unlocked
+the door and found a bandbox on the stoop, and the cry seemed to come
+from inside of it. So he took it up and brought it into the dining-room
+and called the two girls, who had just gone upstairs to bed. They came
+right down and opened the box, and there was a poor little girl baby,
+crying as hard as could be. They took it out and rocked it and sung to
+it and got some milk and fed it and then sat up all night with it, by
+the fire. There was a paper pinned on the baby's dress with her name on
+it, "Lily T. LaMott," and a piece of poetry called "Pity the Poor
+Orphan." The next morning, Grandfather went to the overseer of the poor
+and he said it should be taken to the county house, so our hired man got
+the horse and buggy, and one of the girls carried the baby and they took
+it away. There was a piece in the paper about it, and Grandmother pasted
+it into her "Jay's Morning and Evening Exercises," and showed it to us.
+It said, "A Deposit After Banking Hours." "Two suspicious looking
+females were seen about town in the afternoon, one of them carrying an
+infant. They took a train early in the morning without the child. They
+probably secreted themselves in Mr. Beals' yard and if he had not taken
+the box in they would have carried it somewhere else." When Grandfather
+told the clerks in the bank about it next morning, Mr. Bunnell, who
+lives over by Mr. Daggett's, on the park, said, if it had been left at
+some people's houses it would not have been sent away. Grandmother says
+they heard that the baby was adopted afterwards by some nice people in
+Geneva. People must think this is a nice place for children, for they
+had eleven of their own before we came. Mrs. McCoe was here to call this
+afternoon and she looked at us and said: "It must be a great
+responsibility, Mrs. Beals." Grandmother said she thought "her strength
+would be equal to her day." That is one of her favorite verses. She said
+Mrs. McCoe never had any children of her own and perhaps that is the
+reason she looks so sad at us. Perhaps some one will leave a bandbox and
+a baby at her door some dark night.
+
+_Saturday._--Our brother John drove over from East Bloomfield to-day to
+see us and brought Julia Smedley with him, who is just my age. John
+lives at Mr. Ferdinand Beebe's and goes to school and Julia is Mr.
+Beebe's niece. They make quantities of maple sugar out there and they
+brought us a dozen little cakes. They were splendid. I offered John one
+and he said he would rather throw it over the fence than to eat it. I
+can't understand that. Anna had the faceache to-day and I told her that
+I would be the doctor and make her a ginger poultice. I thought I did it
+exactly right but when I put it on her face she shivered and said:
+"Carrie, you make lovely poultices only they are so cold." I suppose I
+ought to have warmed it.
+
+_Tuesday._--Grandfather took us to ride this afternoon and let us ask
+Bessie Seymour to go with us. We rode on the plank road to Chapinville
+and had to pay 2 cents at the toll gate, both ways. We met a good many
+people and Grandfather bowed to them and said, "How do you do,
+neighbor?"
+
+We asked him what their names were and he said he did not know. We went
+to see Mr. Munson, who runs the mill at Chapinville. He took us through
+the mill and let us get weighed and took us over to his house and out
+into the barn-yard to see the pigs and chickens and we also saw a colt
+which was one day old. Anna just wrote in her journal that "it was a
+very amusing site."
+
+_Sunday._--Rev. Mr. Kendall, of East Bloomfield, preached to-day. His
+text was from Job 26, 14: "Lo these are parts of his ways, but how
+little a portion is heard of him." I could not make out what he meant.
+He is James' and John's minister.
+
+_Wednesday._--Captain Menteith was at our house to dinner to-day and he
+tried to make Anna and me laugh by snapping his snuff-box under the
+table. He is a very jolly man, I think.
+
+_Thursday._--Father and Uncle Edward Richards came to see us yesterday
+and took us down to Mr. Corson's store and told us we could have
+anything we wanted. So we asked for several kinds of candy, stick candy
+and lemon drops and bulls' eyes, and then they got us two rubber balls
+and two jumping ropes with handles and two hoops and sticks to roll them
+with and two red carnelian rings and two bracelets. We enjoyed getting
+them very much, and expect to have lots of fun. They went out to East
+Bloomfield to see James and John, and father is going to take them to
+New Orleans. We hate to have them go.
+
+_Friday._--We asked Grandmother if we could have some hoop skirts like
+the seminary girls and she said no, we were not old enough. When we were
+downtown Anna bought a reed for 10 cents and ran it into the hem of her
+underskirt and says she is going to wear it to school to-morrow. I think
+Grandmother will laugh out loud for once, when she sees it, but I don't
+think Anna will wear it to school or anywhere else. She wouldn't want to
+if she knew how terrible it looked.
+
+I threaded a dozen needles on a spool of thread for Grandmother, before
+I went to school, so that she could slip them along and use them as she
+needed them. She says it is a great help.
+
+Grandmother says I will have a great deal to answer for, because Anna
+looks up to me so and tries to do everything that I do and thinks
+whatever I say is "gospel truth." The other day the girls at school were
+disputing with her about something and she said, "It is so, if it ain't
+so, for Calline said so." I shall have to "toe the mark," as Grandfather
+says, if she keeps watch of me all the time and walks in my footsteps.
+
+We asked Grandmother this evening if we could sit out in the kitchen
+with Bridget and Hannah and the hired man, Thomas Holleran. She said we
+could take turns and each stay ten minutes by the clock. It gave us a
+little change. I read once that "variety is the spice of life." They sit
+around the table and each one has a candle, and Thomas reads aloud to
+the girls while they sew. He and Bridget are Catholics, but Hannah is a
+member of our Church. The girls have lived here always, I think, but I
+don't know for sure, as I have not lived here always myself, but we have
+to get a new hired man sometimes. Grandmother says if you are as good to
+your girls as you are to yourself they will stay a long time. I am sure
+that is Grandmother's rule. Mrs. McCarty, who lives on Brook Street
+(some people call it Cat Alley but Grandmother says that is not proper),
+washes for us Mondays, and Grandmother always has a lunch for her at
+eleven o'clock and goes out herself to see that she sits down and eats
+it. Mrs. McCarty told us Monday that Mrs. Brockle's niece was dead, who
+lives next door to her. Grandmother sent us over with some things for
+their comfort and told us to say that we were sorry they were in
+trouble. We went and when we came back Anna told Grandmother that I
+said, "Never mind, Mrs. Brockle, some day we will all be dead." I am
+sure that I said something better than that.
+
+_Wednesday_.--Mr. Cross had us speak pieces to-day. He calls our names,
+and we walk on to the platform and toe the mark and make a bow and say
+what we have got to say. He did not know what our pieces were going to
+be and some of them said the same ones. Two boys spoke: "The boy stood
+on the burning deck, whence all but him had fled." William Schley was
+one, and he spoke his the best. When he said, "The flames that lit the
+battle wreck shone round him o'er the dead," we could almost see the
+fire, and when he said, "My father, must I stay?" we felt like telling
+him, no, he needn't. He is going to make a good speaker. Mr. Cross said
+so. Albert Murray spoke "Excelsior," and Horace Finley spoke nice, too.
+My piece was, "Why, Phoebe, are you come so soon? Where are your
+berries, child?" Emma Van Arsdale spoke the same one. We find them all
+in our reader. Sometime I am going to speak, "How does the water come
+down at Ladore?" Splashing and flashing and dashing and clashing and all
+that--it rhymes, so it is easy to remember.
+
+We played snap the whip at recess to-day and I was on the end and was
+snapped off against the fence. It hurt me so, that Anna cried. It is not
+a very good game for girls, especially for the one on the end.
+
+[Illustration: Grandfather Beals, Grandmother Beals]
+
+_Tuesday._--I could not keep a journal for two weeks, because
+Grandfather and Grandmother have been very sick and we were afraid
+something dreadful was going to happen. We are so glad that they are
+well again. Grandmother was sick upstairs and Grandfather in the bedroom
+downstairs, and we carried messages back and forth for them. Dr. Carr
+and Aunt Mary came over twice every day and said they had the influenza
+and the inflammation of the lungs. It was lonesome for us to sit down to
+the table and just have Hannah wait on us. We did not have any blessing
+because there was no one to ask it. Anna said she could, but I was
+afraid she would not say it right, so I told her she needn't. We had
+such lumps in our throats we could not eat much and we cried ourselves
+to sleep two or three nights. Aunt Ann Field took us home with her one
+afternoon to stay all night. We liked the idea and Mary and Louisa and
+Anna and I planned what we would play in the evening, but just as it was
+dark our hired man, Patrick McCarty, drove over after us. He said
+Grandfather and Grandmother could not get to sleep till they saw the
+children and bid them good-night. So we rode home with him. We never
+stayed anywhere away from home all night that we can remember. When
+Grandmother came downstairs the first time she was too weak to walk, so
+she sat on each step till she got down. When Grandfather saw her, he
+smiled and said to us: "When she will, she will, you may depend on't;
+and when she won't she won't, and that's the end on't." But we knew all
+the time that he was very glad to see her.
+
+
+
+
+1853
+
+
+_Sunday, March 20._--It snowed so, that we could not go to church to-day
+and it was the longest day I ever spent. The only excitement was seeing
+the snowplow drawn by two horses, go up on this side of the street and
+down on the other. Grandfather put on his long cloak with a cape, which
+he wears in real cold weather, and went. We wanted to pull some long
+stockings over our shoes and go too but Grandmother did not think it was
+best. She gave us the "Dairyman's Daughter" and "Jane the Young
+Cottager," by Leigh Richmond, to read. I don't see how they happened to
+be so awfully good. Anna says they died of "early piety," but she did
+not say it very loud. Grandmother said she would give me 10 cents if I
+would learn the verses in the New England Primer that John Rogers left
+for his wife and nine small children and one at the breast, when he was
+burned at the stake, at Smithfield, England, in 1555. One verse is, "I
+leave you here a little book for you to look upon that you may see your
+father's face when he is dead and gone." It is a very long piece but I
+got it. Grandmother says "the blood of the martyrs is the seed of the
+church." Anna learned
+
+ "In Adam's fall we sinned all.
+ My Book and heart shall never part.
+ The Cat doth play and after slay.
+ The Dog doth bite a thief at night."
+
+When she came to the end of it and said,
+
+ "Zaccheus he, did climb a tree, his Lord to see."
+
+she said she heard some one say, "The tree broke down and let him fall
+and he did not see his Lord at all." Grandmother said it was very wicked
+indeed and she hoped Anna would try and forget it.
+
+_April 1._--Grandmother sent me up into the little chamber to-day to
+straighten things and get the room ready to be cleaned. I found a little
+book called "Child's Pilgrim Progress, Illustrated," that I had never
+seen before. I got as far as Giant Despair when Anna came up and said
+Grandmother sent her to see what I was doing, and she went back and told
+her that I was sitting on the floor in the midst of books and papers and
+was so absorbed in "Pilgrim's Progress" that I had made none myself. It
+must be a good book for Grandmother did not say a word. Father sent us
+"Gulliver's Travels" and there is a gilt picture on the green cover, of
+a giant with legs astride and little Lilliputians standing underneath,
+who do not come up to his knees. Grandmother did not like the picture,
+so she pasted a piece of pink calico over it, so we could only see the
+giant from his waist up. I love the story of Cinderella and the poem,
+"'Twas the night before Christmas," and I am sorry that there are no
+fairies and no Santa Claus.
+
+We go to school to Miss Zilpha Clark in her own house on Gibson Street.
+Other girls who go are Laura Chapin, Julia Phelps, Mary Paul, Bessie
+Seymour, Lucilla and Mary Field, Louisa Benjamin, Nannie Corson, Kittie
+Marshall, Abbie Clark and several other girls. I like Abbie Clark the
+best of all the girls in school excepting of course my sister Anna.
+
+Before I go to school every morning I read three chapters in the Bible.
+I read three every day and five on Sunday and that takes me through the
+Bible in a year. Those I read this morning were the first, second and
+third chapters of Job. The first was about Eliphaz reproveth Job;
+second, Benefit of God's correction; third, Job justifieth his
+complaint. I then learned a text to say at school. I went to school at
+quarter to nine and recited my text and we had prayers and then
+proceeded with the business of the day. Just before school was out, we
+recited in "Science of Things Familiar," and in Dictionary, and then we
+had calisthenics.
+
+We go through a great many figures and sing "A Life on the Ocean Wave,"
+"What Fairy-like Music Steals Over the Sea," "Lightly Row, Lightly Row,
+O'er the Glassy Waves We Go," and "O Come, Come Away," and other songs.
+Mrs. Judge Taylor wrote one song on purpose for us.
+
+_May 1._--I arose this morning about the usual time and read my three
+chapters in the Bible and had time for a walk in the garden before
+breakfast. The polyanthuses are just beginning to blossom and they
+border all the walk up and down the garden. I went to school at quarter
+of nine, but did not get along very well because we played too much. We
+had two new scholars to-day, Miss Archibald and Miss Andrews, the former
+about seventeen and the latter about fifteen. In the afternoon old Mrs.
+Kinney made us a visit, but she did not stay very long. In dictionary
+class I got up sixth, although I had not studied my lesson very much.
+
+_July._--Hiram Goodrich, who lives at Mr. Myron H. Clark's, and George
+and Wirt Wheeler ran away on Sunday to seek their fortunes. When they
+did not come back every one was frightened and started out to find them.
+They set out right after Sunday School, taking their pennies which had
+been given them for the contribution, and were gone several days. They
+were finally found at Palmyra. When asked why they had run away, one
+replied that he thought it was about time they saw something of the
+world. We heard that Mr. Clark had a few moments' private conversation
+with Hiram in the barn and Mr. Wheeler the same with his boys and we do
+not think they will go traveling on their own hook again right off. Miss
+Upham lives right across the street from them and she was telling little
+Morris Bates that he must fight the good fight of faith and he asked her
+if that was the fight that Wirt Wheeler fit. She probably had to make
+her instructions plainer after that.
+
+_July._--Every Saturday our cousins, Lucilla and Mary and Louisa Field,
+take turns coming to Grandmother's to dinner. It was Mary's turn to-day,
+but she was sick and couldn't come, so Grandmother told us that we could
+dress up and make some calls for her. We were very glad. She told us to
+go to Mrs. Gooding's first, so we did and she was glad to see us and
+gave us some cake she had just made. Then we went on to Mr. Greig's. We
+walked up the high steps to the front door and rang the bell and Mr.
+Alexander came. We asked if Mrs. Greig and Miss Chapin were at home and
+he said yes, and asked us into the parlor. We looked at the paintings on
+the wall and looked at ourselves in the long looking-glass, while we
+were waiting. Mrs. Irving came in first. She was very nice and said I
+looked like her niece, Julie Jeffrey. I hope I do, for I would like to
+look like her. Mrs. Greig and Miss Chapin came in and were very glad to
+see us, and took us out into the greenhouse and showed us all the
+beautiful plants. When we said we would have to go they said goodbye and
+sent love to Grandmother and told us to call again. I never knew Anna to
+act as polite as she did to-day. Then we went to see Mrs. Judge Phelps
+and Miss Eliza Chapin, and they were very nice and gave us some flowers
+from their garden. Then we went on to Miss Caroline Jackson's, to see
+Mrs. Holmes. Sometimes she is my Sunday School teacher, and she says she
+and our mother used to be great friends at the seminary. She said she
+was glad we came up and she hoped we would be as good as our mother was.
+That is what nearly every one says. On our way back, we called on Mrs.
+Dana at the Academy, as she is a friend of Grandmother. She is Mrs. Noah
+T. Clarke's mother. After that, we went home and told Grandmother we had
+a very pleasant time calling on our friends and they all asked us to
+come again.
+
+_Sunday, August 15._--To-day the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper was held
+in our church, and Mr. Daggett baptized several little babies. They
+looked so cunning when he took them in his arms and not one of them
+cried. I told Grandmother when we got home that I remembered when
+Grandfather Richards baptized me in Auburn, and when he gave me back to
+mother he said, "Blessed little lambkin, you'll never know your
+grandpa." She said I was mistaken about remembering it, for he died
+before I was a year old, but I had heard it told so many times I thought
+I remembered it. Probably that is the way it was but I know it happened.
+
+_November 22._--I wrote a composition to-day, and the subject was,
+"Which of the Seasons Is the Pleasantest?" Anna asked Grandmother what
+she should write about, and Grandmother said she thought "A Contented
+Mind" would be a very good subject, but Anna said she never had one and
+didn't know what it meant, so she didn't try to write any at all.
+
+A squaw walked right into our kitchen to-day with a blanket over her
+head and had beaded purses to sell.
+
+This is my composition which I wrote: "Which of the seasons is the
+pleasantest? Grim winter with its cold snows and whistling winds, or
+pleasant spring with its green grass and budding trees, or warm summer
+with its ripening fruit and beautiful flowers, or delightful autumn with
+its golden fruit and splendid sunsets? I think that I like all the
+seasons very well. In winter comes the blazing fire and Christmas treat.
+Then we can have sleigh-rides and play in the snow and generally get
+pretty cold noses and toses. In spring we have a great deal of rain and
+very often snow and therefore we do not enjoy that season as much as we
+would if it was dry weather, but we should remember that April showers
+bring May flowers. In summer we can hear the birds warbling their sweet
+notes in the trees and we have a great many strawberries, currants,
+gooseberries and cherries, which I like very much, indeed, and I think
+summer is a very pleasant season. In autumn we have some of our choicest
+fruits, such as peaches, pears, apples, grapes and plums and plenty of
+flowers in the former part, but in the latter, about in November, the
+wind begins to blow and the leaves to fall and the flowers to wither and
+die. Then cold winter with its sleigh-rides comes round again." After I
+had written this I went to bed. Anna tied her shoe strings in hard knots
+so she could sit up later.
+
+_November 23._--We read our compositions to-day and Miss Clark said mine
+was very good. One of the girls had a Prophecy for a composition and
+told what we were all going to be when we grew up. She said Anna
+Richards was going to be a missionary and Anna cried right out loud. I
+tried to comfort her and told her it might never happen, so she stopped
+crying.
+
+_November 24._--Three ladies visited our school to-day, Miss Phelps,
+Miss Daniels and Mrs. Clark. We had calisthenics and they liked them.
+
+_Sunday._--Mr. Tousley preached to-day. Mr. Lamb is Superintendent of
+the Sunday School. Mr. Chipman used to be. Miss Mollie Bull played the
+melodeon. Mr. Fairchild is my teacher when he is there. He was not there
+to-day and Miss Mary Howell taught our class. I wish I could be as good
+and pretty as she is. We go to church morning and afternoon and to
+Sunday School, and learn seven verses every week and recite catechism
+and hymns to Grandmother in the evening. Grandmother knows all the
+questions by heart, so she lets the book lie in her lap and she asks
+them with her eyes shut. She likes to hear us sing:
+
+ "'Tis religion that can give
+ Sweetest pleasure while we live,
+ 'Tis religion can supply
+ Solid comfort when we die."
+
+_December 1._--Grandfather asked me to read President Pierce's message
+aloud to him this evening. I thought it was very long and dry, but he
+said it was interesting and that I read it very well. I am glad he liked
+it. Part of it was about the Missouri Compromise and I didn't even know
+what it meant.
+
+_December 8._--We are taking dictation lessons at school now. Miss Clark
+reads to us from the "Life of Queen Elizabeth" and we write it down in a
+book and keep it. She corrects it for us. I always spell "until" with
+two l's and she has to mark it every time. I hope I will learn how to
+spell it after a while.
+
+_Saturday, December 9._--We took our music lessons to-day. Miss Hattie
+Heard is our teacher and she says we are getting along well. Anna
+practiced her lesson over sixty-five times this morning before breakfast
+and can play "Mary to the Saviour's Tomb" as fast as a waltz.
+
+We chose sides and spelled down at school to-day. Julia Phelps and I
+stood up the last and both went down on the same word--eulogism. I don't
+see the use of that "e." Miss Clark gave us twenty words which we had to
+bring into some stories which we wrote. It was real fun to hear them.
+Every one was different.
+
+This evening as we sat before the fire place with Grandmother, she
+taught us how to play "Cat's Cradle," with a string on our fingers.
+
+_December 25._--Uncle Edward Richards sent us a basket of lovely things
+from New York for Christmas. Books and dresses for Anna and me, a
+kaleidoscope, large cornucopias of candy, and games, one of them being
+battledore and shuttlecock. Grandmother says we will have to wait until
+spring to play it, as it takes so much room. I wish all the little girls
+in the world had an Uncle Edward.
+
+
+
+
+1854
+
+
+_January 1, 1854._--About fifty little boys and girls at intervals
+knocked at the front door to-day, to wish us Happy New Year. We had
+pennies and cakes and apples ready for them. The pennies, especially,
+seemed to attract them and we noticed the same ones several times. Aunt
+Mary Carr made lovely New Year cakes with a pretty flower stamped on
+before they were baked.
+
+_February_ 4, 1854.--We heard to-day of the death of our little
+half-sister, Julia Dey Richards, in Penn Yan, yesterday, and I felt so
+sorry I couldn't sleep last night so I made up some verses about her and
+this morning wrote them down and gave them to Grandfather. He liked them
+so well he wanted me to show them to Miss Clark and ask her to revise
+them. I did and she said she would hand them to her sister Mary to
+correct. When she handed them back they were very much nicer than they
+were at first and Grandfather had me copy them and he pasted them into
+one of his Bibles to keep.
+
+_Saturday._--Anna and I went to call on Miss Upham to-day. She is a real
+old lady and lives with her niece, Mrs. John Bates, on Gibson Street.
+Our mother used to go to school to her at the Seminary. Miss Upham said
+to Anna, "Your mother was a lovely woman. You are not at all like her,
+dear." I told Anna she meant in looks I was sure, but Anna was afraid
+she didn't.
+
+_Sunday._--Mr. Daggett's text this morning was the 22nd chapter of
+Revelation, 16th verse, "I am the root and offspring of David and the
+bright and morning star." Mrs. Judge Taylor taught our Sunday School
+class to-day and she said we ought not to read our S. S. books on
+Sunday. I always do. Mine to-day was entitled, "Cheap Repository Tracts
+by Hannah More," and it did not seem unreligious at all.
+
+_Tuesday._--A gentleman visited our school to-day whom we had never
+seen. Miss Clark introduced him to us. When he came in, Miss Clark said,
+"Young ladies," and we all stood up and bowed and said his name in
+concert. Grandfather says he would rather have us go to school to Miss
+Clark than any one else because she teaches us manners as well as books.
+We girls think that he is a very particular friend of Miss Clark. He is
+very nice looking, but we don't know where he lives. Laura Chapin says
+he is an architect. I looked it up in the dictionary and it says one who
+plans or designs. I hope he does not plan to get married to Miss Clark
+and take her away and break up the school, but I presume he does, for
+that is usually the way.
+
+_Monday._--There was a minister preached in our church last night and
+some people say he is the greatest minister in the world. I think his
+name was Mr. Finney. Grandmother said I could go with our girl, Hannah
+White. We sat under the gallery, in Miss Antoinette Pierson's pew. There
+was a great crowd and he preached good. Grandmother says that our mother
+was a Christian when she was ten years old and joined the church and she
+showed us some sermons that mother used to write down when she was
+seventeen years old, after she came home from church, and she has kept
+them all these years. I think children in old times were not as bad as
+they are now.
+
+_Tuesday._--Mrs. Judge Taylor sent for me to come over to see her
+to-day. I didn't know what she wanted, but when I got there she said she
+wanted to talk and pray with me on the subject of religion. She took me
+into one of the wings. I never had been in there before and was
+frightened at first, but it was nice after I got used to it. After she
+prayed, she asked me to, but I couldn't think of anything but "Now I lay
+me down to sleep," and I was afraid she would not like that, so I didn't
+say anything. When I got home and told Anna, she said, "Caroline, I
+presume probably Mrs. Taylor wants you to be a Missionary, but I shan't
+let you go." I told her she needn't worry for I would have to stay at
+home and look after her. After school to-night I went out into Abbie
+Clark's garden with her and she taught me how to play "mumble te peg."
+It is fun, but rather dangerous. I am afraid Grandmother won't give me a
+knife to play with. Abbie Clark has beautiful pansies in her garden and
+gave me some roots.
+
+_April 1._--This is April Fool's Day. It is not a very pleasant day, but
+I am not very pleasant either. I spent half an hour this morning very
+pleasantly writing a letter to my Father but just as I had finished it,
+Grandmother told me something to write which I did not wish to and I
+spoke quite disrespectfully, but I am real sorry and I won't do so any
+more.
+
+Lucilla and Louisa Field were over to our house to dinner to-day. We had
+a very good dinner indeed. In the afternoon, Grandmother told me that I
+might go over to Aunt Ann's on condition that I would not stay, but I
+stayed too long and got my indian rubbers real muddy and Grandmother did
+not like it. I then ate my supper and went to bed at ten minutes to
+eight o'clock.
+
+_Monday, April 3._--I got up this morning at quarter before six o'clock.
+I then read my three chapters in the Bible, and soon after ate my
+breakfast, which consisted of ham and eggs and buckwheat cakes. I then
+took a morning walk in the garden and rolled my hoop. I went to school
+at quarter before 9 o'clock. Miss Clark has us recite a verse of
+scripture in response to roll call and my text for the morning was the
+8th verse of the 6th chapter of Matthew, "Be ye not therefore like unto
+them; for your Father knoweth what things ye have need of before ye ask
+him." We then had prayers. I then began to write my composition and we
+had recess soon after. In the afternoon I recited grammar, wrote my
+dictation lesson and Dictionary lesson. I was up third in my Dictionary
+class but missed two words, and instead of being third in the class, I
+was fifth. After supper I read my Sunday School book, "A Shepherd's Call
+to the Lambs of his Flock." I went to bed as usual at ten minutes to 8
+o'clock.
+
+_April_ 4.--We went into our new schoolroom to-day at Miss Clark's
+school. It is a very nice room and much larger than the one we occupied
+before. Anna and I were sewing on our dolls' clothes this afternoon and
+we talked so much that finally Grandmother said, "the one that speaks
+first is the worst; and the one that speaks last is the best." We kept
+still for quite a while, which gave Grandmother a rest, but was very
+hard for us, especially Anna. Pretty soon Grandmother forgot and asked
+us a question, so we had the joke on her. Afterwards Anna told me she
+would rather "be the worst," than to keep still so long again.
+
+_Wednesday._--Grandmother sent Anna and me up to Butcher Street after
+school to-day to invite Chloe to come to dinner. I never saw so many
+black people as there are up there. We saw old Lloyd and black Jonathan
+and Dick Valentine and Jerusha and Chloe and Nackie. Nackie was pounding
+up stones into sand, to sell, to scour with. Grandmother often buys it
+of her. I think Chloe was surprised, but she said she would be ready,
+to-morrow, at eleven o'clock, when the carriage came for her. I should
+hate to be as fat as Chloe. I think she weighs 300. She is going to sit
+in Grandfather's big arm chair, Grandmother says.
+
+We told her we should think she would rather invite white ladies, but
+she said Chloe was a poor old slave and as Grandfather had gone to
+Saratoga she thought it was a good time to have her. She said God made
+of one blood all the people on the face of the earth, so we knew she
+would do it and we didn't say any more. When we talk too much,
+Grandfather always says N. C. (nuff ced). She sent a carriage for Chloe
+and she came and had a nice dinner, not in the kitchen either.
+Grandmother asked her if there was any one else she would like to see
+before she went home and she said, "Yes, Miss Rebekah Gorham," so she
+told the coachman to take her down there and wait for her to make a call
+and then take her home and he did. Chloe said she had a very nice time,
+so probably Grandmother was all right as she generally is, but I could
+not be as good as she is, if I should try one hundred years.
+
+_June._--Our cousin, George Bates, of Honolulu, came to see us to-day.
+He has one brother, Dudley, but he didn't come. George has just
+graduated from college and is going to Japan to be a doctor. He wrote
+such a nice piece in my album I must copy it, "If I were a poet I would
+celebrate your virtues in rhyme, if I were forty years old, I would
+write a homily on good behavior; being neither, I will quote two
+familiar lines which if taken as a rule of action will make you a good
+and happy woman:
+
+ "Honor and shame from no condition rise,
+ Act well your part, there all the honor lies."
+
+I think he is a very smart young man and will make a good doctor to the
+heathen.
+
+_Saturday._--Grandfather took us down street to be measured for some new
+patten leather shoes at Mr. Ambler's. They are going to be very nice
+ones for best. We got our new summer hats from Mrs. Freshour's millinery
+and we wore them over to show to Aunt Ann and she said they were the
+very handsomest bonnets she had seen this year.
+
+_Tuesday._--When we were on our way to school this morning we met a lot
+of people and girls and boys going to a picnic up the lake. They asked
+us to go, too, but we said we were afraid we could not. Mr. Alex. Howell
+said, "Tell your Grandfather I will bring you back safe and sound unless
+the boat goes to the bottom with all of us." So we went home and told
+Grandfather and much to our surprise he said we could go. We had never
+been on a boat or on the lake before. We went up to the head on the
+steamer "_Joseph Wood_" and got off at Maxwell's Point. They had a
+picnic dinner and lots of good things to eat. Then we all went into the
+glen and climbed up through it. Mr. Alex. Howell and Mrs. Wheeler got to
+the top first and everybody gave three cheers. We had a lovely time
+riding back on the boat and told Grandmother we had the very best time
+we ever had in our whole lives.
+
+_May 26._--There was an eclipse of the sun to-day and we were very much
+excited looking at it. General Granger came over and gave us some pieces
+of smoked glass. Miss Clark wanted us to write compositions about it so
+Anna wrote, "About eleven o'clock we went out to see if it had come yet,
+but it hadn't come yet, so we waited awhile and then looked again and it
+had come, and there was a piece of it cut out of it." Miss Clark said it
+was a very good description and she knew Anna wrote it all herself.
+
+I handed in a composition, too, about the eclipse, but I don't think
+Miss Clark liked it as well as she did Anna's, because it had something
+in it about "the beggarly elements of the world." She asked me where I
+got it and I told her that it was in a nice story book that Grandmother
+gave me to read entitled "Elizabeth Thornton or the Flower and Fruit of
+Female Piety, and other sketches," by Samuel Irenaeus Prime. This was
+one of the other sketches: It commenced by telling how the moon came
+between the sun and the earth, and then went on about the beggarly
+elements. Miss Clark asked me if I knew what they meant and I told her
+no, but I thought they sounded good. She just smiled and never scolded
+me at all. I suppose next time I must make it all up myself.
+
+There is a Mr. Packer in town, who teaches all the children to sing. He
+had a concert in Bemis Hall last night and he put Anna on the top row of
+the pyramid of beauty and about one hundred children in rows below. She
+ought to have worn a white dress as the others did but Grandmother said
+her new pink barège would do. I curled her hair all around in about
+thirty curls and she looked very nice. She waved the flag in the shape
+of the letter S and sang "The Star Spangled Banner," and all the others
+joined in the chorus. It was perfectly grand.
+
+_Monday._--When we were on our way to school this morning we saw General
+Granger coming, and Anna had on such a homely sunbonnet she took it off
+and hid it behind her till he had gone by. When we told Grandmother she
+said, "Pride goeth before destruction and a haughty spirit before a
+fall." I never heard of any one who knew so many Bible verses as
+Grandmother. Anna thought she would be sorry for her and get her a new
+sunbonnet, but she didn't.
+
+_Sunday._--We have Sunday School at nine o'clock in the morning now.
+Grandfather loves to watch us when we walk off together down the street,
+so he walks back and forth on the front walk till we come out, and gives
+us our money for the contribution. This morning we had on our new white
+dresses that Miss Rosewarne made and new summer hats and new patten
+leather shoes and our mitts. When he had looked us all over he said,
+with a smile, "The Bible says, let your garments be always white." After
+we had gone on a little ways, Anna said: "If Grandmother had thought of
+that verse I wouldn't have had to wear my pink barège dress to the
+concert." I told her she need not feel bad about that now, for she sang
+as well as any of them and looked just as good. She always believes
+everything I say, although she does not always do what I tell her to.
+Mr. Noah T. Clarke told us in Sunday School last Sunday that if we
+wanted to take shares in the missionary ship, _Morning Star,_ we could
+buy them at 10 cents apiece, and Grandmother gave us $1 to-day so we
+could have ten shares. We got the certificate with a picture of the ship
+on it, and we are going to keep it always. Anna says if we pay the
+money, we don't have to go.
+
+_Sunday._--I almost forgot that it was Sunday this morning and talked
+and laughed just as I do week days. Grandmother told me to write down
+this verse before I went to church so I would remember it: "Keep thy
+foot when thou goest to the house of God, and be more ready to hear than
+to offer the sacrifice of fools." I will remember it now, sure. My feet
+are all right any way with my new patten leather shoes on but I shall
+have to look out for my head. Mr. Thomas Howell read a sermon to-day as
+Mr. Daggett is out of town. Grandmother always comes upstairs to get the
+candle and tuck us in before she goes to bed herself, and some nights we
+are sound asleep and do not hear her, but last night we only pretended
+to be asleep. She kneeled down by the bed and prayed aloud for us, that
+we might be good children and that she might have strength given to her
+from on high to guide us in the straight and narrow path which leads to
+life eternal. Those were her very words. After she had gone downstairs
+we sat up in bed and talked about it and promised each other to be good,
+and crossed our hearts and "hoped to die" if we broke our promise. Then
+Anna was afraid we would die, but I told her I didn't believe we would
+be as good as that, so we kissed each other and went to sleep.
+
+[Illustration: Mr. Noah T. Clarke, Miss Upham]
+
+_Monday._--"Old Alice" was at our house to-day and Grandmother gave her
+some flowers. She hid them in her apron for she said if she should meet
+any little children and they should ask for them she would have to let
+them go. Mrs. Gooding was at our house to-day and made a carpet. We went
+over to Aunt Mary Carr's this evening to see the gas and the new
+chandeliers. They are brontz.
+
+_Tuesday._--My three chapters that I read this morning were about
+Josiah's zeal and reformation; 2nd, Jerusalem taken by Nebuchadnezzar;
+3rd, Jerusalem besieged and taken. The reason that we always read the
+Bible the first thing in the morning is because it says in the Bible,
+"Seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness and all these
+things shall be added unto you." Grandmother says she hopes we will
+treasure up all these things in our hearts and practice them in our
+lives. I hope so, too. This morning Anna got very mad at one of the
+girls and Grandmother told her she ought to return good for evil and
+heap coals of fire on her head. Anna said she wished she could and burn
+her all up, but I don't think she meant it.
+
+_Wednesday._--I got up this morning at twenty minutes after five. I
+always brush my teeth every morning, but I forget to put it down here. I
+read my three chapters in Job and played in the garden and had time to
+read Grandmother a piece in the paper about some poor children in New
+York. Anna and I went over to Aunt Ann's before school and she gave us
+each two sticks of candy apiece. Part of it came from New York and part
+from Williamstown, Mass., where Henry goes to college. Ann Eliza is
+going down street with us this afternoon to buy us some new summer
+bonnets. They are to be trimmed with blue and white and are to come to
+five dollars. We are going to Mr. Stannard's store also, to buy us some
+stockings. I ought to buy me a new thimble and scissors for I carried my
+sewing to school to-day and they were inside of it very carelessly and
+dropped out and got lost. I ought to buy them with my own money, but I
+haven't got any, for I gave all I had (two shillings) to Anna to buy
+Louisa Field a cornelian ring. Perhaps Father will send me some money
+soon, but I hate to ask him for fear he will rob himself. I don't like
+to tell Grandfather how very careless I was, though I know he would say,
+"Accidents will happen."
+
+_Thursday._--I was up early this morning because a dressmaker, Miss
+Willson, is coming to make me a new calico dress. It is white with pink
+spots in it and Grandfather bought it in New York. It is very nice
+indeed and I think Grandfather was very kind to get it for me. I had to
+stay at home from school to be fitted. I helped sew and run my dress
+skirt around the bottom and whipped it on the top. I went to school in
+the afternoon, but did not have my lessons very well. Miss Clark excused
+me because I was not there in the morning. Some girls got up on our
+fence to-day and walked clear across it, the whole length. It is iron
+and very high and has a stone foundation. Grandmother asked them to get
+down, but I think they thought it was more fun to walk up there than it
+was on the ground. The name of the little girl that got up first was
+Mary Lapham. She is Lottie Lapham's cousin. I made the pocket for my
+dress after I got home from school and then Grandfather said he would
+take us out to ride, so he took us way up to Thaddeus Chapin's on the
+hill. Julia Phelps was there, playing with Laura Chapin, for she is her
+cousin. Henry and Ann Eliza Field came over to call this evening. Henry
+has come home from Williams College on his vacation and he is a very
+pleasant young man, indeed. I am reading a continued story in _Harper's
+Magazine_. It is called Little Dorritt, by Charles Dickens, and is very
+interesting.
+
+_Friday, May._--Miss Clark told us we could have a picnic down to Sucker
+Brook this afternoon and she told us to bring our rubbers and lunches by
+two o'clock; but Grandmother was not willing to let us go; not that she
+wished to deprive us of any pleasure for she said instead we could wear
+our new black silk basks and go with her to Preparatory lecture, so we
+did, but when we got there we found that Mr. Daggett was out of town so
+there was no meeting. Then she told us we could keep dressed up and go
+over to Aunt Mary Carr's and take her some apples, and afterwards
+Grandfather took us to ride to see old Mrs. Sanborn and old Mr. and Mrs.
+Atwater. He is ninety years old and blind and deaf, so we had quite a
+good time after all.
+
+Rev. Mr. Dickey, of Rochester, agent for the Seaman's Friend Society,
+preached this morning about the poor little canal boy. His text was from
+the 107th Psalm, 23rd verse, "They that go down into the sea in ships."
+He has the queerest voice and stops off between his words. When we got
+home Anna said she would show us how he preached and she described what
+he said about a sailor in time of war. She said, "A ball came--and
+struck him there--another ball came--and struck him there--he raised his
+faithful sword--and went on--to victory--or death." I expected
+Grandfather would reprove her, but he just smiled a queer sort of smile
+and Grandmother put her handkerchief up to her face, as she always does
+when she is amused about anything. I never heard her laugh out loud, but
+I suppose she likes funny things as well as anybody. She did just the
+same, this morning, when Grandfather asked Anna where the sun rose, and
+she said "over by Gen. Granger's house and sets behind the Methodist
+church." She said she saw it herself and should never forget it when any
+one asked her which was east or west. I think she makes up more things
+than any one I know of.
+
+_Sunday._--Rev. M. L. R. P. Thompson preached to-day. He used to be the
+minister of our church before Mr. Daggett came. Some people call him
+Rev. "Alphabet" Thompson, because he has so many letters in his name. He
+preached a very good sermon from the text, "Dearly beloved, as much as
+lieth in you, live peaceably with all men." I like to hear him preach,
+but not as well as I do Mr. Daggett. I suppose I am more used to him.
+
+_Thursday._--Edward Everett, of Boston, lectured in our church this
+evening. They had a platform built even with the tops of the pews, so he
+did not have to go up into the pulpit. Crowds and crowds came to hear
+him from all over everywhere. Grandmother let me go. They say he is the
+most eloquent speaker in the U. S., but I have heard Mr. Daggett when I
+thought he was just as good.
+
+_Sunday._--We went to church to-day and heard Rev. Mr. Stowe preach. His
+text was, "The poor ye have with you always and whensoever ye will ye
+may do them good." I never knew any one who liked to go to church as
+much as Grandmother does. She says she "would rather be a doorkeeper in
+the house of our God, than to dwell in the tents of wickedness." They
+don't have women doorkeepers, and I know she would not dwell a minute in
+a tent. Mr. Coburn is the doorkeeper in our church and he rings the bell
+every day at nine in the morning and at twelve and at nine in the
+evening, so Grandfather knows when it is time to cover up the fire in
+the fireplace and go to bed. I think if the President should come to
+call he would have to go home at nine o'clock. Grandfather's motto is:
+
+ "Early to bed and early to rise
+ Makes a man healthy, wealthy and wise."
+
+_Tuesday._--Mrs. Greig and Miss Chapin called to see us to-day.
+Grandmother says that we can return the calls as she does not visit any
+more. We would like to, for we always enjoy dressing up and making
+calls. Anna and I received two black veils in a letter to-day from Aunt
+Caroline Dey. Just exactly what we had wanted for a long while. Uncle
+Edward sent us five dollars and Grandmother said we could buy just what
+we wanted, so we went down street to look at black silk mantillas. We
+went to Moore's store and to Richardson's and to Collier's, but they
+asked ten, fifteen or twenty dollars for them, so Anna said she resolved
+from now, henceforth and forever not to spend her money for black silk
+mantillas.
+
+_Sunday._--Rev. Mr. Tousley preached to-day to the children and told us
+how many steps it took to be bad. I think he said lying was first, then
+disobedience to parents, breaking the Sabbath, swearing, stealing,
+drunkenness. I don't remember just the order they came. It was very
+interesting, for he told lots of stories and we sang a great many times.
+I should think Eddy Tousley would be an awful good boy with his father
+in the house with him all the while, but probably he has to be away part
+of the time preaching to other children.
+
+_Sunday._--Uncle David Dudley Field and his daughter, Mrs. Brewer, of
+Stockbridge, Mass., are visiting us. Mrs. Brewer has a son, David
+Josiah, who is in Yale College. After he graduates he is going to be a
+lawyer and study in his Uncle David Dudley Field's office in New York.
+He was born in Smyrna, Asia Minor, where his father and mother were
+missionaries to the Greeks, in 1837. Our Uncle David preached for Mr.
+Daggett this afternoon. He is a very old man and left his sermon at home
+and I had to go back after it. His brother, Timothy, was the first
+minister in our church, about fifty years ago. Grandmother says she
+came all the way from Connecticut with him on horseback on a pillion
+behind him. Rather a long ride, I should say. I heard her and Uncle
+David talking about their childhood and how they lived in Guilford,
+Conn., in a house that was built upon a rock. That was some time in the
+last century like the house that it tells about in the Bible that was
+built on a rock.
+
+_Sunday, August 10, 1854._--Rev. Mr. Daggett's text this morning was,
+"Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy." Grandmother said she thought
+the sermon did not do us much good for she had to tell us several times
+this afternoon to stop laughing. Grandmother said we ought to be good
+Sundays if we want to go to heaven, for there it is one eternal Sabbath.
+Anna said she didn't want to be an angel just yet and I don't think
+there is the least danger of it, as far as I can judge. Grandmother said
+there was another verse, "If we do not have any pleasure on the Sabbath,
+or think any thoughts, we shall ride on the high places of the earth,"
+and Anna said she liked that better, for she would rather ride than do
+anything else, so we both promised to be good. Grandfather told us they
+used to be more strict about Sunday than they are now. Then he told us a
+story, how he had to go to Geneva one Saturday morning in the stage and
+expected to come back in the evening, but there was an accident, so the
+stage did not come till Sunday morning. Church had begun and he told the
+stage driver to leave him right there, so he went in late and the stage
+drove on. The next day he heard that he was to come before the minister,
+Rev. Mr. Johns, and the deacons and explain why he had broken the fourth
+commandment. When he got into the meeting Mr. Johns asked him what he
+had to say, and he explained about the accident and asked them to read a
+verse from the 8th chapter of John, before they made up their minds what
+to do to him. The verse was, "Let him that is without sin among you cast
+the first stone." Grandfather said they all smiled, and the minister
+said the meeting was out. Grandfather says that shows it is better to
+know plenty of Bible verses, for some time they may do you a great deal
+of good. We then recited the catechism and went to bed.
+
+[Illustration: First Congregational Church]
+
+_August 21._--Anna says that Alice Jewett feels very proud because she
+has a little baby brother. They have named him John Harvey Jewett after
+his father, and Alice says when he is bigger she will let Anna help her
+take him out to ride in his baby-carriage. I suppose they will throw
+away their dolls now.
+
+_Tuesday, September_ 1.--I am sewing a sheet over and over for
+Grandmother and she puts a pin in to show me my stint, before I can go
+out to play. I am always glad when I get to it. I am making a sampler,
+too, and have all the capital letters worked and now will make the small
+ones. It is done in cross stitch on canvas with different color silks. I
+am going to work my name, too. I am also knitting a tippet on some
+wooden needles that Henry Carr made for me. Grandmother has raveled it
+out several times because I dropped stitches. It is rather tedious, but
+she says, "If at first you don't succeed, try, try again." Some military
+soldiers went by the house to-day and played some beautiful music.
+Grandfather has a teter and swing for us in the back yard and we enjoy
+them usually, but to-night Anna slid off the teter board when she was on
+the ground and I was in the air and I came down sooner than I expected.
+There was a hand organ and monkey going by and she was in a hurry to get
+to the street to see it. She got there a good while before I did. The
+other day we were swinging and Grandmother called us in to dinner, but
+Anna said we could not go until we "let the old cat die." Grandmother
+said it was more important that we should come when we are called.
+
+_October._--Grandmother's name is Abigail, but she was always called
+"Nabby" at home. Some of the girls call me "Carrie," but Grandmother
+prefers "Caroline." She told us to-day, how when she was a little girl,
+down in Connecticut in 1794, she was on her way to school one morning
+and she saw an Indian coming and was so afraid, but did not dare run for
+fear he would chase her. So she thought of the word sago, which means
+"good morning," and when she got up close to him she dropped a curtesy
+and said "Sago," and he just went right along and never touched her at
+all. She says she hopes we will always be polite to every one, even to
+strangers.
+
+_November._--Abbie Clark's father has been elected Governor and she is
+going to Albany to live, for a while. We all congratulated her when she
+came to school this morning, but I am sorry she is going away. We will
+write to each other every week. She wrote a prophecy and told the girls
+what they were going to be and said I should be mistress of the White
+House. I think it will happen, about the same time that Anna goes to be
+a missionary.
+
+_December._--There was a moonlight sleigh-ride of boys and girls last
+night, but Grandfather did not want us to go, but to-night he said he
+was going to take us to one himself. So after supper he told Mr. Piser
+to harness the horse to the cutter and bring it around to the front
+gate. Mr. Piser takes care of our horse and the Methodist Church. He
+lives in the basement. Grandfather sometimes calls him Shakespeare to
+us, but I don't know why. He doesn't look as though he wrote poetry.
+Grandfather said he was going to take us out to Mr. Waterman Powers' in
+Farmington and he did. They were quite surprised to see us, but very
+glad and gave us apples and doughnuts and other good things. We saw Anne
+and Imogene and Morey and one little girl named Zimmie. They wanted us
+to stay all night, but Grandmother was expecting us. We got home safe
+about ten o'clock and had a very nice time. We never sat up so late
+before.
+
+
+
+
+1855
+
+
+_Wednesday, January_ 9.--I came downstairs this morning at ten minutes
+after seven, almost frozen. I never spent such a cold night before in
+all my life. It is almost impossible to get warm even in the
+dining-room. The thermometer is 10° below zero. The schoolroom was so
+cold that I had to keep my cloak on. I spoke a piece this afternoon. It
+was "The Old Arm Chair," by Eliza Cook. It begins, "I love it, I love
+it, and who shall dare to chide me for loving that old arm chair?" I
+love it because it makes me think of Grandmother. After school to-night
+Anna and I went downtown to buy a writing book, but we were so cold we
+thought we would never get back. Anna said she knew her toes were
+frozen. We got as far as Mr. Taylor's gate and she said she could not
+get any farther; but I pulled her along, for I could not bear to have
+her perish in sight of home. We went to bed about eight o'clock and
+slept very nicely indeed, for Grandmother put a good many blankets on
+and we were warm.
+
+_January_ 23.--This evening after reading one of Dickens' stories I
+knit awhile on my mittens. I have not had nice ones in a good while.
+Grandmother cut out the ones that I am wearing of white flannel, bound
+round the wrist with blue merino. They are not beautiful to be sure, but
+warm and will answer all purposes until I get some that are better. When
+I came home from school to-day Mrs. Taylor was here. She noticed how
+tall I was growing and said she hoped that I was as good as I was tall.
+A very good wish, I am sure.
+
+_Sunday, January_ 29.--Mr. Daggett preached this morning from the text,
+Deut. 8: 2: "And thou shalt remember all the way which the Lord thy God
+led thee." It is ten years to-day since Mr. Daggett came to our church,
+and he told how many deaths there had been, and how many baptisms, and
+how many members had been added to the church. It was a very interesting
+sermon, and everybody hoped Mr. Daggett would stay here ten years more,
+or twenty, or thirty, or always. He is the only minister that I ever
+had, and I don't ever want any other. We never could have any one with
+such a voice as Mr. Daggett's, or such beautiful eyes. Then he has such
+good sermons, and always selects the hymns we like best, and reads them
+in such a way. This morning they sang: "Thus far the Lord has led me on,
+thus far His power prolongs my days." After he has been away on a
+vacation he always has for the first hymn, and we always turn to it
+before he gives it out:
+
+ "Upward I lift mine eyes,
+ From God is all my aid;
+ The God that built the skies,
+ And earth and nature made.
+
+ "God is the tower
+ To which I fly
+ His grace is nigh
+ In every hour."
+
+He always prays for the oil of joy for mourning and the garment of
+praise for the spirit of heaviness.
+
+_January,_ 1855.--Johnny Lyon is dead. Georgia Wilkinson cried awfully
+in school because she said she was engaged to him.
+
+_April._--Grandmother received a letter from Connecticut to-day telling
+of the death of her only sister. She was knitting before she got it and
+she laid it down a few moments and looked quite sad and said, "So sister
+Anna is dead." Then after a little she went on with her work. Anna
+watched her and when we were alone she said to me, "Caroline, some day
+when you are about ninety you may be eating an apple or reading or doing
+something and you will get a letter telling of my decease and after you
+have read it you will go on as usual and just say, 'So sister Anna is
+dead.'" I told her that I knew if I lived to be a hundred and heard that
+she was dead I should cry my eyes out, if I had any.
+
+_May._--Father has sent us a box of fruit from New Orleans. Prunes,
+figs, dates and oranges, and one or two pomegranates. We never saw any
+of the latter before. They are full of cells with jelly in, very nice.
+He also sent some seeds of sensitive plant, which we have sown in our
+garden.
+
+This evening I wrote a letter to John and a little "poetry" to Father,
+but it did not amount to much. I am going to write some a great deal
+better some day. Grandfather had some letters to write this morning, and
+got up before three o'clock to write them! He slept about three-quarters
+of an hour to-night in his chair.
+
+_Sunday._--There was a stranger preached for Dr. Daggett this morning
+and his text was, "Man looketh upon the outward appearance but the Lord
+looketh on the heart." When we got home Anna said the minister looked as
+though he had been sick from birth and his forehead stretched from his
+nose to the back of his neck, he was so bald. Grandmother told her she
+ought to have been more interested in his words than in his looks, and
+that she must have very good eyes if she could see all that from our
+pew, which is the furthest from the pulpit of any in church, except Mr.
+Gibson's, which is just the same. Anna said she couldn't help seeing it
+unless she shut her eyes, and then every one would think she had gone to
+sleep. We can see the Academy boys from our pew, too.
+
+Mr. Lathrop, of the seminary, is superintendent of the Sunday School now
+and he had a present to-day from Miss Betsey Chapin, and several
+visitors came in to see it presented: Dr. Daggett, Mr. and Mrs. Alex.
+Howell, Mr. Tousley, Mr. Stowe, Mr. and Mrs. Gideon Granger and several
+others. The present was a certificate of life membership to something; I
+did not hear what. It was just a large piece of parchment, but they said
+it cost $25. Miss Lizzie Bull is my Sunday School teacher now. She asked
+us last Sunday to look up a place in the Bible where the trees held a
+consultation together, to see which one should reign over them. I did
+not remember any such thing, but I looked it up in the concordance and
+found it in Judges 9: 8. I found the meaning of it in Scott's Commentary
+and wrote it down and she was very much pleased, and told us next Sunday
+to find out all about Absalom.
+
+_July._--Our sensitive plant is growing nicely and it is quite a
+curiosity. It has fern-like leaves and when we touch them, they close,
+but soon come out again. Anna and I keep them performing.
+
+_September_ 1.--Anna and I go to the seminary now. Mr. Richards and Mr.
+Tyler are the principals. Anna fell down and sprained her ankle to-day
+at the seminary, and had to be carried into Mrs. Richards' library. She
+was sliding down the bannisters with little Annie Richards. I wonder
+what she will do next. She has good luck in the gymnasium and can beat
+Emma Wheeler and Jennie Ruckle swinging on the pole and climbing the
+rope ladder, although they and Sarah Antes are about as spry as
+squirrels and they are all good at ten pins. Susie Daggett and Lucilla
+Field have gone to Farmington, Conn., to school.
+
+_Monday._--I received a letter from my brother John in New Orleans, and
+his ambrotype. He has grown amazingly. He also sent me a N. O. paper and
+it gave an account of the public exercises in the school, and said John
+spoke a piece called "The Baron's Last Banquet," and had great applause
+and it said he was "a chip off the old block." He is a very nice boy, I
+know that. James is sixteen years old now and is in Princeton College.
+He is studying German and says he thinks he will go to Germany some day
+and finish his education, but I guess in that respect he will be very
+much disappointed. Germany is a great ways off and none of our relations
+that I ever heard of have ever been there and it is not at all likely
+that any of them ever will. Grandfather says, though, it is better to
+aim too high than not high enough. James is a great boy to study. They
+had their pictures taken together once and John was holding some flowers
+and James a book and I guess he has held on to it ever since.
+
+_Sunday._--Polly Peck looked so funny on the front seat of the gallery.
+She had on one of Mrs. Greig's bonnets and her lace collar and cape and
+mitts. She used to be a milliner so she knows how to get herself up in
+style. The ministers have appointed a day of fasting and prayer and Anna
+asked Grandmother if it meant to eat as fast as you can. Grandmother was
+very much surprised.
+
+_November_ 25.--I helped Grandmother get ready for Thanksgiving Day by
+stoning some raisins and pounding some cloves and cinnamon in the mortar
+pestle pounder. It is quite a job. I have been writing with a quill pen
+but I don't like it because it squeaks so. Grandfather made us some
+to-day and also bought us some wafers to seal our letters with, and some
+sealing wax and a stamp with "R" on it. He always uses the seal on his
+watch fob with "B." He got some sand, too. Our inkstand is double and
+has one bottle for ink and the other for sand to dry the writing.
+
+_December_ 20, 1855.--Susan B. Anthony is in town and spoke in Bemis
+Hall this afternoon. She made a special request that all the seminary
+girls should come to hear her as well as all the women and girls in
+town. She had a large audience and she talked very plainly about our
+rights and how we ought to stand up for them, and said the world would
+never go right until the women had just as much right to vote and rule
+as the men. She asked us all to come up and sign our names who would
+promise to do all in our power to bring about that glad day when equal
+rights should be the law of the land. A whole lot of us went up and
+signed the paper. When I told Grandmother about it she said she guessed
+Susan B. Anthony had forgotten that St. Paul said the women should keep
+silence. I told her, no, she didn't for she spoke particularly about St.
+Paul and said if he had lived in these times, instead of 1800 years ago,
+he would have been as anxious to have the women at the head of the
+government as she was. I could not make Grandmother agree with her at
+all and she said we might better all of us stayed at home. We went to
+prayer meeting this evening and a woman got up and talked. Her name was
+Mrs. Sands. We hurried home and told Grandmother and she said she
+probably meant all right and she hoped we did not laugh.
+
+_Monday._--I told Grandfather if he would bring me some sheets of
+foolscap paper I would begin to write a book. So he put a pin on his
+sleeve to remind him of it and to-night he brought me a whole lot of it.
+I shall begin it to-morrow. This evening I helped Anna do her Arithmetic
+examples, and read her Sunday School book. The name of it is "Watch and
+Pray." My book is the second volume of "Stories on the Shorter
+Catechism."
+
+_Tuesday._--I decided to copy a lot of choice stories and have them
+printed and say they were "compiled by Caroline Cowles Richards," it is
+so much easier than making them up. I spent three hours to-day copying
+one and am so tired I think I shall give it up. When I told Grandmother
+she looked disappointed and said my ambition was like "the morning cloud
+and the early dew," for it soon vanished away. Anna said it might spring
+up again and bear fruit a hundredfold. Grandfather wants us to amount to
+something and he buys us good books whenever he has a chance. He bought
+me Miss Caroline Chesebro's book, "The Children of Light," and Alice and
+Phoebe Cary's _Poems_. He is always reading Channing's memoirs and
+sermons and Grandmother keeps "Lady Huntington and Her Friends," next to
+"Jay's Morning and Evening Exercises" and her Testament. Anna told
+Grandmother that she saw Mrs. George Willson looking very steadily at us
+in prayer meeting the other night and she thought she might be planning
+to "write us up." Grandmother said she did not think Mrs. Willson was so
+short of material as that would imply, and she feared she had some other
+reason for looking at us. I think dear Grandmother has a little grain of
+sarcasm in her nature, but she only uses it on extra occasions. Anna
+said, "Oh, no; she wrote the lives of the three Mrs. Judsons and I
+thought she might like for a change to write the biographies of the 'two
+Miss Richards.'" Anna has what might be called a vivid imagination.
+
+
+
+
+1856
+
+
+_January_ 23.--This is the third morning that I have come down stairs at
+exactly twenty minutes to seven. I went to school all day. Mary Paul and
+Fannie Palmer read "_The Snow Bird_" to-day. There were some funny
+things in it. One was: "Why is a lady's hair like the latest news?
+Because in the morning we always find it in the papers." Another was:
+"One rod makes an acher, as the boy said when the schoolmaster flogged
+him."
+
+This is Allie Field's birthday. He got a pair of slippers from Mary with
+the soles all on; a pair of mittens from Miss Eliza Chapin, and Miss
+Rebecca Gorham is going to give him a pair of stockings when she gets
+them done.
+
+_January_ 30.--I came home from school at eleven o'clock this morning
+and learned a piece to speak this afternoon, but when I got up to school
+I forgot it, so I thought of another one. Mr. Richards said that he must
+give me the praise of being the best speaker that spoke in the
+afternoon. Ahem!
+
+_February_ 6.--We were awakened very early this morning by the cry of
+fire and the ringing of bells and could see the sky red with flames and
+knew it was the stores and we thought they were all burning up. Pretty
+soon we heard our big brass door knocker being pounded fast and
+Grandfather said, "Who's there?" "Melville Arnold for the bank keys," we
+heard. Grandfather handed them out and dressed as fast as he could and
+went down, while Anna and I just lay there and watched the flames and
+shook. He was gone two or three hours and when he came back he said that
+Mr. Palmer's hat store, Mr. Underhill's book store, Mr. Shafer's tailor
+shop, Mrs. Smith's millinery, Pratt & Smith's drug store, Mr.
+Mitchell's dry goods store, two printing offices and a saloon were
+burned. It was a very handsome block. The bank escaped fire, but the
+wall of the next building fell on it and crushed it. After school
+to-night Grandmother let us go down to see how the fire looked. It
+looked very sad indeed. Judge Taylor offered Grandfather one of the
+wings of his house for the bank for the present but he has secured a
+place in Mr. Buhre's store in the Franklin Block.
+
+_Thursday, February_ 7.--Dr. and Aunt Mary Carr and Uncle Field and Aunt
+Ann were over at our house to dinner to-day and we had a fine fish
+dinner, not one of Gabriel's (the man who blows such a blast through the
+street, they call him Gabriel), but one that Mr. Francis Granger sent to
+us. It was elegant. Such a large one it covered a big platter. This
+evening General Granger came in and brought a gentleman with him whose
+name was Mr. Skinner. They asked Grandfather, as one of the trustees of
+the church, if he had any objection to a deaf and dumb exhibition there
+to-morrow night. He had no objection, so they will have it and we will
+go.
+
+_Friday_.--We went and liked it very much. The man with them could talk
+and he interpreted it. There were two deaf and dumb women and three
+children. They performed very prettily, but the smartest boy did the
+most. He acted out David killing Goliath and the story of the boy
+stealing apples and how the old man tried to get him down by throwing
+grass at him, but finding that would not do, he threw stones which
+brought the boy down pretty quick. Then he acted a boy going fishing and
+a man being shaved in a barber shop and several other things. I laughed
+out loud in school to-day and made some pictures on my slate and showed
+them to Clara Willson and made her laugh, and then we both had to stay
+after school. Anna was at Aunt Ann's to supper to-night to meet a little
+girl named Helen Bristol, of Rochester. Ritie Tyler was there, too, and
+they had a lovely time.
+
+[Illustration: Judge Henry W. Taylor, Miss Zilpha Clark,
+Rev. Oliver E. Daggett, D.D., "Frankie Richardson", Horace Finley]
+
+_February_ 8.--I have not written in my journal for several days,
+because I never like to write things down if they don't go right. Anna
+and I were invited to go on a sleigh-ride, Tuesday night, and
+Grandfather said he did not want us to go. We asked him if we could
+spend the evening with Frankie Richardson and he said yes, so we went
+down there and when the load stopped for her, we went too, but we did
+not enjoy ourselves at all and did not join in the singing. I had no
+idea that sleigh-rides could make any one feel so bad. It was not very
+cold, but I just shivered all the time. When the nine o'clock bell rang
+we were up by the "Northern Retreat," and I was so glad when we got near
+home so we could get out. Grandfather and Grandmother asked us if we had
+a nice time, but we got to bed as quick as we could. The next day
+Grandfather went into Mr. Richardson's store and told him he was glad he
+did not let Frankie go on the sleigh-ride, and Mr. Richardson said he
+did let her go and we went too. We knew how it was when we got home from
+school, because they acted so sober, and, after a while, Grandmother
+talked with us about it. We told her we were sorry and we did not have a
+bit good time and would never do it again. When she prayed with us the
+next morning, as she always does before we go to school, she said,
+"Prepare us, Lord, for what thou art preparing for us," and it seemed as
+though she was discouraged, but she said she forgave us. I know one
+thing, we will never run away to any more sleigh-rides.
+
+_February_ 20.--Mr. Worden, Mrs. Henry Chesebro's father, was buried
+to-day, and Aunt Ann let Allie stay with us while she went to the
+funeral. I am going to Fannie Gaylord's party to-morrow night.
+
+I went to school this afternoon and kept the rules, so to-night I had
+the satisfaction of saying "perfect" when called upon, and if I did not
+like to keep the rules, it is some pleasure to say that.
+
+_February_ 21.--We had a very nice time at Fannie Gaylord's party and a
+splendid supper. Lucilla Field laughed herself almost to pieces when she
+found on going home that she had worn her leggins all the evening. We
+had a pleasant walk home but did not stay till it was out. Some one
+asked me if I danced every set and I told them no, I set every dance. I
+told Grandmother and she was very much pleased. Some one told us that
+Grandfather and Grandmother first met at a ball in the early settlement
+of Canandaigua. I asked her if it was so and she said she never had
+danced since she became a professing Christian and that was more than
+fifty years ago.
+
+Grandfather heard to-day of the death of his sister, Lydia, who was Mrs.
+Lyman Beecher. She was Rev. Dr. Lyman Beecher's third wife. Grandmother
+says that they visited her once and she was quite nervous thinking about
+having such a great man as Dr. Lyman Beecher for her guest, as he was
+considered one of the greatest men of his day, but she said she soon got
+over this feeling, for he was so genial and pleasant and she noticed
+particularly how he ran up and down stairs like a boy. I think that is
+very apt to be the way for "men are only boys grown tall."
+
+There was a Know Nothing convention in town to-day. They don't want any
+one but Americans to hold office, but I guess they will find that
+foreigners will get in. Our hired man is an Irishman and I think he
+would just as soon be "Prisidint" as not.
+
+_February_ 22.--This is such a beautiful day, the girls wanted a
+holiday, but Mr. Richards would not grant it. We told him it was
+Washington's birthday and we felt very patriotic, but he was inexorable.
+We had a musical review and literary exercises instead in the afternoon
+and I put on my blue merino dress and my other shoes. Anna dressed up,
+too, and I curled her hair. The Primary scholars sit upstairs this term
+and do not have to pay any more. Anna and Emma Wheeler like it very
+much, but they do not sit together. We are seated alphabetically, and I
+sit with Mary Reznor and Anna with Mittie Smith. They thought she would
+behave better, I suppose, if they put her with one of the older girls,
+but I do not know as it will have the "desired effect," as Grandmother
+says. Miss Mary Howell and Miss Carrie Hart and Miss Lizzie and Miss
+Mollie Bull were visitors this afternoon. Gertrude Monier played and
+sang. Mrs. Anderson is the singing teacher. Marion Maddox and Pussie
+Harris and Mary Daniels played on the piano. Mr. Hardick is the teacher,
+and he played too. You would think he was trying to pound the piano all
+to pieces but he is a good player. We have two papers kept up at school,
+_The Snow Bird_ and _The Waif_--one for the younger and the other for
+the older girls. Miss Jones, the composition teacher, corrects them
+both. Kate Buell and Anna Maria Chapin read _The Waif_ to-day and Gusta
+Buell and I read _The Snow Bird_. She has beautiful curls and has two
+nice brothers also, Albert and Arthur, and the girls all like them. They
+have not lived in town very long.
+
+_February_ 25.--I guess I won't fill up my journal any more by saying I
+arose this morning at the usual time, for I don't think it is a matter
+of life or death whether I get up at the usual time or a few minutes
+later and when I am older and read over the account of the manner in
+which I occupied my time in my younger days I don't think it will add
+particularly to the interest to know whether I used to get up at 7 or at
+a quarter before. I think Miss Sprague, our schoolroom teacher, would
+have been glad if none of us had got up at all this morning for we acted
+so in school. She does not want any noise during the three minute
+recess, but there has been a good deal all day. In singing class they
+disturbed Mr. Kimball by blowing through combs. We took off our round
+combs and put paper over them and then blew--Mary Wheeler and Lottie
+Lapham and Anna sat nearest me and we all tried to do it, but Lottie was
+the only one who could make it go. He thought we all did, so he made us
+come up and sit by him. I did not want to a bit. He told Miss Sprague of
+us and she told the whole school if there was as much noise another day
+she would keep every one of us an hour after half-past 4. As soon as she
+said this they all began to groan. She said "Silence." I only made the
+least speck of a noise that no one heard.
+
+_February_ 26.--To-night, after singing class, Mr. Richards asked all
+who blew through combs to rise. I did not, because I could not make it
+go, but when he said all who groaned could rise, I did, and some others,
+but not half who did it. He kept us very late and we all had to sign an
+apology to Miss Sprague.
+
+Grandfather made me a present of a beautiful blue stone to-day called
+Malachite. Anna said she always thought Malachite was one of the
+prophets.
+
+_March_ 3, 1856.--Elizabeth Spencer sits with me in school now. She is
+full of fun but always manages to look very sober when Miss Chesebro
+looks up to see who is making the noise over our way. I never seem to
+have that knack. Anna had to stay after school last night and she wrote
+in her journal that the reason was because "nature will out" and because
+"she whispered and didn't have her lessons, etc., etc., etc." Mr.
+Richards has allowed us to bring our sewing to school but now he says we
+cannot any more. I am sorry for I have some embroidery and I could get
+one pantalette done in a week, but now it will take me longer.
+Grandmother has offered me one dollar if I will stitch a linen shirt
+bosom and wrist bands for Grandfather and make the sleeves. I have
+commenced but, Oh my! it is an undertaking. I have to pull the threads
+out and then take up two threads and leave three. It is very particular
+work and Anna says the stitches must not be visible to the naked eye. I
+have to fell the sleeves with the tiniest seams and stroke all the
+gathers and put a stitch on each gather. Minnie Bellows is the best one
+in school with her needle and is a dabster at patching. She cut a piece
+right out of her new calico dress and matched a new piece in and none of
+us could tell where it was. I am sure it would not be safe for me to try
+that. Grandmother let me ask three of the girls to dinner Saturday,
+Abbie Clark, Mary Wheeler and Mary Field. We had a big roast turkey and
+everything else to match. Good enough for Queen Victoria. That reminds
+me of a conundrum we had in _The Snow Bird:_ What does Queen Victoria
+take her pills in? In cider. (Inside her.)
+
+_March_ 7.--The reports were read at school to-day and mine was,
+Attendance 10, Deportment 8, Scholarship 7 1/2, and Anna's 10, 10 and 7.
+I think they got it turned around, for Anna has not behaved anything
+uncommon lately.
+
+_March_ 10.--My teacher Miss Sprague kept me after school to-night for
+whispering, and after all the others were gone she came to my seat and
+put her arm around me and kissed me and said she loved me very much and
+hoped I would not whisper in school any more. This made me feel very
+sorry and I told her I would try my best, but it seemed as though it
+whispered itself sometimes. I think she is just as nice as she can be
+and I shall tell the other girls so. Her home is in Glens Falls.
+
+Anna jumped the rope two hundred times to-day without stopping, and I
+told her that I read of a girl who did that and then fell right down
+stone dead. I don't believe Anna will do it again. If she does I shall
+tell Grandmother.
+
+_April_ 5.--I walked down town with Grandfather this morning and it is
+such a beautiful day I felt glad that I was alive. The air was full of
+tiny little flies, buzzing around and going in circles and semicircles
+as though they were practising calisthenics or dancing a quadrille. I
+think they were glad they were alive, too. I stepped on a big bug
+crawling on the walk and Grandfather said I ought to have brushed it
+aside instead of killing it. I asked him why and he said, "Shakespeare
+says, 'The beetle that we tread upon feels a pang as great as when a
+giant dies.'"
+
+A man came to our door the other day and asked if "Deacon" Beals was at
+home. I asked Grandmother afterwards if Grandfather was a Deacon and she
+said no and never had been, that people gave him the name when he was a
+young man because he was so staid and sober in his appearance. Some one
+told me once that I would not know my Grandfather if I should meet him
+outside the Corporation. I asked why and he said because he was so
+genial and told such good stories. I told him that was just the way he
+always is at home. I do not know any one who appreciates real wit more
+than he does. He is quite strong in his likes and dislikes, however. I
+have heard him say,
+
+ "I do not like you, Dr. Fell,
+ The reason why, I cannot tell;
+ But this one thing I know full well,
+ I do not like you, Dr. Fell."
+
+Bessie Seymour wore a beautiful gold chain to school this morning and I
+told Grandmother that I wanted one just like it. She said that outward
+adornments were not of as much value as inward graces and the ornament
+of a meek and quiet spirit, in the sight of the Lord, was of great
+price. I know it is very becoming to Grandmother and she wears it all
+the time but I wish I had a gold chain just the same.
+
+Aunt Ann received a letter to-day from Lucilla, who is at Miss Porter's
+school at Farmington, Connecticut. She feels as if she were a Christian
+and that she has experienced religion.
+
+Grandfather noticed how bright and smart Bentley Murray was, on the
+street, and what a business way he had, so he applied for a place for
+him as page in the Legislature at Albany and got it. He is always
+noticing young people and says, "As the twig is bent, the tree is
+inclined." He says we may be teachers yet if we are studious now. Anna
+says, "Excuse me, please."
+
+Grandmother knows the Bible from Genesis to Revelation excepting the
+"begats" and the hard names, but Anna told her a new verse this morning,
+"At Parbar westward, four at the causeway and two at Parbar."
+Grandmother put her spectacles up on her forehead and just looked at
+Anna as though she had been talking in Chinese. She finally said, "Anna,
+I do not think that is in the Bible." She said, "Yes, it is; I found it
+in 1 Chron. 26: 18." Grandmother found it and then she said Anna had
+better spend her time looking up more helpful texts. Anna then asked her
+if she knew who was the shortest man mentioned in the Bible and
+Grandmother said "Zaccheus." Anna said that she just read in the
+newspaper, that one said "Nehimiah was" and another said "Bildad the
+Shuhite" and another said "Tohi." Grandmother said it was very wicked to
+pervert the Scripture so, and she did not approve of it at all. I don't
+think Anna will give Grandmother any more Bible conundrums.
+
+_April_ 12.--We went down town this morning and bought us some shaker
+bonnets to wear to school. They cost $1 apiece and we got some green
+silk for capes to put on them. We fixed them ourselves and wore them to
+school and some of the girls liked them and some did not, but it makes
+no difference to me what they like, for I shall wear mine till it is
+worn out. Grandmother says that if we try to please everybody we please
+nobody. The girls are all having mystic books at school now and they are
+very interesting to have. They are blank books and we ask the girls and
+boys to write in them and then they fold the page twice over and seal it
+with wafers or wax and then write on it what day it is to be opened.
+Some of them say, "Not to be opened for a year," and that is a long time
+to wait. If we cannot wait we can open them and seal them up again. I
+think Anna did look to see what Eugene Stone wrote in hers, for it does
+not look as smooth as it did at first. We have autograph albums too and
+Horace Finley gave us lots of small photographs. We paste them in the
+books and then ask the people to write their names. We have got Miss
+Upham's picture and Dr. and Mrs. Daggett, General Granger's and Hon.
+Francis Granger's and Mrs. Adele Granger Thayer and Friend Burling, Dr.
+Jewett, Dr. Cheney, Deacon Andrews and Dr. Carr, and Johnnie Thompson's,
+Mr. Noah T. Clarke, Mr. E. M. Morse, Mrs. George Willson, Theodore
+Barnum, Jim Paton's and Will Schley, Merritt Wilcox, Tom Raines, Ed.
+Williams, Gus Coleman's, W. P. Fisk and lots of the girls' pictures
+besides. Eugene Stone and Tom Eddy had their ambrotypes taken together,
+in a handsome case, and gave it to Anna. We are going to keep them
+always.
+
+_April_.--The Siamese twins are in town and a lot of the girls went to
+see them in Bemis Hall this afternoon. It costs 10 cents. Grandmother
+let us go. Their names are Eng and Chang and they are not very handsome.
+They are two men joined together. I hope they like each other but I
+don't envy them any way. If one wanted to go somewhere and the other one
+didn't I don't see how they would manage it. One would have to give up,
+that's certain. Perhaps they are both Christians.
+
+_April_ 30.--Rev. Henry M. Field, editor of the _New York Evangelist,_
+and his little French wife are here visiting. She is a wonderful woman.
+She has written a book and paints beautiful pictures and was teacher of
+art in Cooper Institute, New York. He is Grandmother's nephew and he
+brought her a picture of himself and his five brothers, taken for
+Grandmother, because she is the only aunt they have in the world. The
+rest are all dead. The men in the picture are Jonathan and Matthew and
+David Dudley and Stephen J. and Cyrus W. and Henry M. They are all very
+nice looking and Grandmother thinks a great deal of the picture.
+
+_May_ 15.--Miss Anna Gaylord is one of my teachers at the seminary and
+when I told her that I wrote a journal every day she wanted me to bring
+her my last book and let her read it. I did so and she said she enjoyed
+it very much and she hoped I would keep them for they would be
+interesting for me to read when I am old. I think I shall do so. She has
+a very particular friend, Rev. Mr. Beaumont, who is one of the teachers
+at the Academy. I think they are going to be married some day. I guess I
+will show her this page of my journal, too. Grandmother let me make a
+pie in a saucer to-day and it was very good.
+
+_May_.--We were invited to Bessie Seymour's party last night and
+Grandmother said we could go. The girls all told us at school that they
+were going to wear low neck and short sleeves. We have caps on the
+sleeves of our best dresses and we tried to get the sleeves out, so we
+could go bare arms, but we couldn't get them out. We had a very nice
+time, though, at the party. Some of the Academy boys were there and they
+asked us to dance but of course we couldn't do that. We promenaded
+around the rooms and went out to supper with them. Eugene Stone and Tom
+Eddy asked to go home with us but Grandmother sent our two girls for us,
+Bridget Flynn and Hannah White, so they couldn't. We were quite
+disappointed, but perhaps she won't send for us next time.
+
+[Illustration: Tom Eddy and Eugene Stone, "Uncle David Dudley Field"]
+
+_May._--Grandmother is teaching me how to knit some mittens now, but if
+I ever finish them it will be through much tribulation, the way they
+have to be raveled out and commenced over again. I think I shall know
+how to knit when I get through, if I never know how to do anything else.
+Perhaps I shall know how to write, too, for I write all of Grandmother's
+letters for her, because it tires her to write too much. I have sorted
+my letters to-day and tied them in packages and found I had between 500
+and 600. I have had about two letters a week for the past five years and
+have kept them all. Father almost always tells me in his letters to read
+my Bible and say my prayers and obey Grandmother and stand up straight
+and turn out my toes and brush my teeth and be good to my little sister.
+I have been practising all these so long I can say, as the young man did
+in the Bible when Jesus told him what to do to be saved, "all these have
+I kept from my youth up." But then, I lack quite a number of things
+after all. I am not always strictly obedient. For instance, I know
+Grandmother never likes to have us read the secular part of the _New
+York Observer_ on Sunday, so she puts it in the top drawer of the
+sideboard until Monday, but I couldn't find anything interesting to read
+the other Sunday so I took it out and read it and put it back. The jokes
+and stories in it did not seem as amusing as usual so I think I will not
+do it again.
+
+Grandfather's favorite paper is the _Boston Christian Register._ He
+could not have one of them torn up any more than a leaf of the Bible. He
+has barrels of them stored away in the garret.
+
+I asked Grandmother to-day to write a verse for me to keep always and
+she wrote a good one: "To be happy and live long the three grand
+essentials are: Be busy, love somebody and have high aims." I think,
+from all I have noticed about her, that she has had this for her motto
+all her life and I don't think Anna and I can do very much better than
+to try and follow it too. Grandfather tells us sometimes, when she is
+not in the room, that the best thing we can do is to be just as near
+like Grandmother as we can possibly be.
+
+_Saturday, May_ 30.--Louisa Field came over to dinner to-day and brought
+Allie with her. We had roast chickens for dinner and lots of other nice
+things. Grandmother taught us how to string lilac blossoms for necklaces
+and also how to make curls of dandelion stems. She always has some
+things in the parlor cupboard which she brings out on extra occasions,
+so she got them out to-day. They are some Chinamen which Uncle Thomas
+brought home when he sailed around the world. They are wooden images
+standing in boxes, packing tea with their feet.
+
+Last week Jennie Howell invited us to go up to Black Point Cabin with
+her and to-day with a lot of grown-up people we went and enjoyed it.
+There was a little colored girl there who waits on the table and can row
+the boats too. She is Polly Carroll's granddaughter, Mary Jane. She sang
+for us,
+
+ "Nellie Ely shuts her eye when she goes to sleep,
+ When she opens them again her eyes begin to peep;
+ Hi Nellie, Ho Nellie, listen love to me,
+ I'll sing for you, I'll play for you,
+ A dulcet melody."
+
+She is just as cute as she can be. She said Mrs. Henry Chesebro taught
+her to read.
+
+_Sunday, June_ 1.--Rev. Dr. Shaw, of Rochester, preached for Dr. Daggett
+to-day and his text was: "Whosoever drinketh of this water shall thirst
+again, but whosoever drinketh of the water that I shall give him shall
+never thirst." He said by this water he meant the pleasures of this
+life, wealth and fame and honor, of which the more we have the more we
+want and are never satisfied, but if we drink of the water that Christ
+can give us we will have happiness here and forever. It was a very good
+sermon and I love to hear him preach. Grandmother never likes to start
+for church until after all the Seminary girls and Academy boys have gone
+by, but this morning we got to the gate just as the boys came along.
+When Grandmother saw five or six hats come off and knew they were bowing
+to us, she asked us how we got acquainted with them. We told her that
+almost all the girls knew the Academy boys and I am sure that is true.
+
+_Tuesday, June_ 8.--We are cleaning house now and Grandmother asked Anna
+and me to take out a few tacks in the dining-room carpet. We did not
+like it so very well but we liked eating dinner in the parlor, as the
+table had to be set in there. Anna told us that when she got married we
+could come to visit her any time in the year as she was never going to
+clean house. We went down street on an errand to-night and hurried right
+back, as Grandmother said she should look at the clock and see how long
+we were gone. Emma Wheeler went with us. Anna says she and Emma are as
+"thick as hasty pudding."
+
+_June._--Rev. Frederick Starr, of Penn Yan, had an exhibition in Bemis
+Hall to-day of a tabernacle just like the children of Israel carried
+with them to the Promised Land. We went to see it. He made it himself
+and said he took all the directions from the Bible and knew where to put
+the curtains and the poles and everything. It was interesting but we
+thought it would be queer not to have any church to go to but one like
+that, that you could take down and put up and carry around with you
+wherever you went.
+
+_June._--Rev. Mr. Kendall is not going to preach in East Bloomfield any
+more. The paper says he is going to New York to live and be Secretary of
+the A.B.C.F.M. I asked Grandmother what that meant, and she said he
+would have to write down what the missionaries do. I guess that will
+keep him busy. Grandfather's nephew, a Mr. Adams of Boston and his wife,
+visited us about two weeks ago. He is the head of the firm Adams'
+Express Co. Anna asked them if they ever heard the conundrum "What was
+Eve made for?" and they said no, so she told them the answer, "for
+Adam's express company." They thought it was quite good. When they
+reached home, they sent us each a reticule, with scissors, thimble,
+stiletto, needle-case and tiny penknife and some stamped embroidery.
+They must be very rich.
+
+_Saturday Night, July._--Grandfather was asking us to-night how many
+things we could remember, and I told him I could remember when Zachary
+Taylor died, and our church was draped in black, and Mr. Daggett
+preached a funeral sermon about him, and I could remember when Daniel
+Webster died, and there was service held in the church and his last
+words, "I still live," were put up over the pulpit. He said he could
+remember when George Washington died and when Benjamin Franklin died. He
+was seven years old then and he was seventeen when Washington died. Of
+course his memory goes farther back than mine, but he said I did very
+well, considering.
+
+_July._--I have not written in my journal for several days because we
+have been out of town. Grandfather had to go to Victor on business and
+took Anna and me with him. Anna says she loves to ride on the cars as it
+is fun to watch the trees and fences run so. We took dinner at Dr.
+Ball's and came home on the evening train. Then Judge Ellsworth came
+over from Penn Yan to see Grandfather on business and asked if he could
+take us home with him and he said yes, so we went and had a splendid
+time and stayed two days. Stewart was at home and took us all around
+driving and took us to the graveyard to see our mother's grave. I copied
+this verse from the gravestone:
+
+ "Of gentle seeming was her form
+ And the soft beaming of her radiant eye
+ Was sunlight to the beauty of her face.
+ Peace, sacred peace, was written on her brow
+ And flowed in the low music of her voice
+ Which came unto the list'ner like the tones of soothing Autumn winds.
+ Her hands were full of consolations which she scattered free to
+ all--the poor, the sick, the sorrowful."
+
+I think she must have been exactly like Grandmother only she was 32 and
+Grandmother is 72.
+
+Stewart went to prayer meeting because it was Wednesday night, and when
+he came home his mother asked him if he took part in the meeting. He
+said he did and she asked him what he said. He said he told the story of
+Ethan Allen, the infidel, who was dying, and his daughter asked him
+whose religion she should live by, his or her mother's, and he said,
+"Your mother's, my daughter, your mother's." This pleased Mrs. Ellsworth
+very much. Stewart is a great boy and you never can tell whether he is
+in earnest or not. It was very warm while we were gone and when we got
+home Anna told Grandmother she was going to put on her barège dress and
+take a rocking-chair and a glass of ice water and a palm leaf fan and go
+down cellar and sit, but Grandmother told her if she would just sit
+still and take a book and get her mind on something else besides the
+weather, she would be cool enough. Grandmother always looks as cool as a
+cucumber even when the thermometer is 90 in the shade.
+
+_Sunday, August._--Rev. Anson D. Eddy preached this morning. His text
+was from the sixth chapter of John, 44th verse. "No man can come to me,
+except the Father which hath sent me, draw him." He is Tom Eddy's
+father, and very good-looking and smart too. He used to be one of the
+ministers of our church before Mr. Daggett came. He wrote a book in our
+Sunday School library, about Old Black Jacob, and Grandmother loves to
+read it. We had a nice dinner to-day, green peas, lemonade and
+gooseberry pie. We had cold roast lamb too, because Grandmother never
+has any meat cooked on Sunday.
+
+_Sunday._--Mr. Noah T. Clarke is superintendent of our Sunday School
+now, and this morning he asked, "What is prayer?" No one answered, so I
+stood up and gave the definition from the catechism. He seemed pleased
+and so was Grandmother when I told her. Anna said she supposes she was
+glad that "her labor was not in vain in the Lord." I think she is trying
+to see if she can say Bible verses, like grown-up people do.
+
+Grandfather said that I did better than the little boy he read about
+who, when a visitor asked the Sunday School children what was the
+ostensible object of Sabbath School instruction, waited till the
+question was repeated three times and then stood up and said, "Yes,
+sir."
+
+_Wednesday._--We could not go to prayer meeting to-night because it
+rained, so Grandmother said we could go into the kitchen and stand by
+the window and hear the Methodists. We could hear every word that old
+Father Thompson said, and every hymn they sung, but Mr. Jervis used such
+big words we could not understand him at all.
+
+_Sunday._--Grandmother says she loves to look at the beautiful white
+heads of Mr. Francis Granger and General Granger as they sit in their
+pews in church. She says that is what it means in the twelfth chapter of
+Ecclesiastes where it says, "And the almond tree shall flourish." I
+don't know exactly why it means them, but I suppose she does. We have
+got a beautiful almond tree in our front yard covered with flowers, but
+the blossoms are pink. Probably they had white ones in Jerusalem, where
+Solomon lived.
+
+_Monday._--Mr. Alex. Jeffrey has come from Lexington, Ky., and brought
+Mrs. Ross and his three daughters, Julia, Shaddie and Bessie Jeffrey.
+Mrs. Ross knows Grandmother and came to call and brought the girls. They
+are very pretty and General Granger's granddaughters. I think they are
+going to stay all summer.
+
+_Thanksgiving Day._--We all went to church and Dr. Daggett's text was:
+"He hath not dealt so with any nation." Aunt Glorianna and her children
+were here and Uncle Field and all their family and Dr. Carr and all his
+family. There were about sixteen of us in all and we children had a
+table in the corner all by ourselves. We had roast turkey and everything
+else we could think of. After dinner we went into the parlor and Aunt
+Glorianna played on the piano and sang, "Flow gently, sweet Afton, among
+thy green braes," and "Poor Bessie was a sailor's wife." These are
+Grandfather's favorites. Dr. Carr sang "I'm sitting on the stile, Mary,
+where we sat side by side." He is a beautiful singer. It seemed just
+like Sunday, for Grandmother never likes to have us work or play on
+Thanksgiving Day, but we had a very good time, indeed, and were sorry
+when they all went home.
+
+_Saturday, December_ 20.--Lillie Reeve and her brother, Charlie, have
+come from Texas to live. He goes to the Academy and she boards with Miss
+Antoinette Pierson. Miss Pierson invited me up to spend the afternoon
+and take tea with her and I went and had a very nice time. She told me
+about their camp life in Texas and how her mother died, and her little
+baby sister, Minnie, lives with her Grandmother Sheppard in Dansville.
+She is a very nice girl and I like her very much, indeed.
+
+
+
+
+1857
+
+_January_ 8.--Anna and Alice Jewett caught a ride down to the lake this
+afternoon on a bob-sleigh, and then caught a ride back on a load of
+frozen pigs. In jumping off, Anna tore her flannel petticoat from the
+band down. I did not enjoy the situation as much as Anna, because I had
+to sit up after she had gone to bed, and darn it by candle light,
+because she was afraid Grandmother might see the rent and inquire into
+it, and that would put an end to bobsled exploits.
+
+_March_ 6.--Anna and her set will have to square accounts with Mr.
+Richards to-morrow, for nine of them ran away from school this
+afternoon, Alice Jewett, Louisa Field, Sarah Antes, Hattie Paddock,
+Helen Coy, Jennie Ruckel, Frankie Younglove, Emma Wheeler and Anna. They
+went out to Mr. Sackett's, where they are making maple sugar. Mr. and
+Mrs. Sackett were at home and two Miss Sacketts and Darius, and they
+asked them in and gave them all the sugar they wanted, and Anna said
+pickles, too, and bread and butter, and the more pickles they ate the
+more sugar they could eat. I guess they will think of pickles when Mr.
+Richards asks them where they were. I think Ellie Daggett and Charlie
+Paddock went, too, and some of the Academy boys.
+
+_March 7._--They all had to stay after school to-night for an hour and
+copy Dictionary. Anna seems reconciled, for she just wrote in her
+journal: "It was a very good plan to keep us because no one ever ought
+to stay out of school except on account of sickness, and if they once
+get a thing fixed in their minds it will stay there, and when they grow
+up it will do them a great deal of good."
+
+_April._--Grandfather gave us 10 cents each this morning for learning
+the 46th Psalm and has promised us $1 each for reading the Bible through
+in a year. We were going to any way. Some of the girls say they should
+think we would be afraid of Grandfather, he is so sober, but we are not
+the least bit. He let us count $1,000 to-night which a Mr. Taylor, a
+cattle buyer, brought to him in the evening after banking hours. Anybody
+must be very rich who has all that money of their own.
+
+_Friday._--Our old horse is dead and we will have to buy another. He was
+very steady and faithful. One day Grandfather left him at the front gate
+and he started along and turned the corner all right, down the Methodist
+lane and went way down to our barn doors and stood there until Mr. Piser
+came and took him into the barn. People said they set their clocks by
+him because it was always quarter past 12 when he was driven down to the
+bank after Grandfather and quarter of 1 when he came back. I don't think
+the clocks would ever be too fast if they were set by him. We asked
+Grandfather what he died of and he said he had run his race but I think
+he meant he had walked it, for I never saw him go off a jog in my life.
+Anna used to say he was taking a nap when we were out driving with
+Grandfather. I have written some lines in his memory and if I knew where
+he was buried, I would print it on his head board.
+
+ Old Dobbin's dead, that good old horse,
+ We ne'er shall see him more,
+ He always used to lag behind
+ But now he's gone before.
+
+It is a parody on old Grimes is dead, which is in our reader, only that
+is a very long poem. I am not going to show mine to Grandfather till he
+gets over feeling bad about the horse.
+
+_Sunday._--Grandmother gave Anna, Doddridge's "Rise and Progress of
+Religion in the Soul" to read to-day. Anna says she thinks she will have
+to rise and progress a good deal before she will be able to appreciate
+it. Baxter's "Saints Rest" would probably suit her better.
+
+_Sunday, April_ 5.--An agent for the American Board of Foreign Missions
+preached this morning in our church from Romans 10: 15: "How shall they
+hear without a preacher and how shall they preach except they be sent."
+An agent from every society presents the cause, whatever it is, once a
+year and some people think the anniversary comes around very often. I
+always think of Mrs. George Wilson's poem on "A apele for air, pewer
+air, certin proper for the pews, which, she sez, is scarce as piety, or
+bank bills when ajents beg for mischuns, wich sum say is purty often,
+(taint nothin' to me, wat I give aint nothin' to nobody)." I think that
+is about the best poem of its kind I ever read.
+
+Miss Lizzie Bull told us in Sunday School to-day that she cannot be our
+Sunday School teacher any more, as she and her sister Mary are going to
+join the Episcopal Church. We hate to have her go, but what can't be
+cured must be endured. Part of our class are going into Miss Mary
+Howell's class and part into Miss Annie Pierce's. They are both splendid
+teachers and Miss Lizzie Bull is another. We had preaching in our church
+this afternoon, too. Rev. Samuel Hanson Cox, of Le Roy Female Seminary,
+preached. He is a great man, very large, long white hair combed back. I
+think if a person once saw him they would never forget him. He preached
+about Melchisidek, who had neither "beginning of days or end of life."
+Some people thought that was like his sermon, for it was more than one
+hour long. Dr. Cox and Mrs. Taylor came to call and asked Grandfather to
+let me go to Le Roy Female Seminary, but Grandfather likes Ontario
+Female Seminary better than any other in the world. We wanted
+Grandmother to have her picture taken, but she did not feel able to go
+to Mr. Finley's, so he came up Tuesday and took it in our dining-room.
+She had her best cap on and her black silk dress and sat in her high
+back rocking chair in her usual corner near the window. He brought one
+up to show us and we like it so much. Anna looked at it and kissed it
+and said, "Grandmother, I think you are perfectly beautiful." She smiled
+and very modestly put her handkerchief up to her face and said, "You
+foolish child," but I am sure she was pleased, for how could she help
+it? A man came up to the open window one day where she was sitting, with
+something to sell, and while she was talking to him he said, "You must
+have been handsome, lady, when you were young." Grandmother said it was
+because he wanted to sell his wares, but we thought he knew it was so.
+We told her she couldn't get around it that way and we asked Grandfather
+and he said it was true. Our Sunday School class went to Mr. Finley's
+to-day and had a group ambrotype taken for our teacher, Miss Annie
+Pierce; Susie Daggett, Clara Willson, Sarah Whitney, Mary Field and
+myself. Mary Wheeler ought to have been in it, too, but we couldn't get
+her to come. We had very good success.
+
+_Thursday_.--We gave the ambrotype to Miss Pierce and she liked it very
+much and so does her mother and Fannie. Her mother is lame and cannot go
+anywhere so we often go to see her and she is always glad to see us and
+so pleasant.
+
+_May_ 9.--Miss Lizzie Bull came for me to go botanising with her this
+morning and we were gone from 9 till 12, and went clear up to the orphan
+asylum. I am afraid I am not a born botanist, for all the time she was
+analysing the flowers and telling me about the corona and the corolla
+and the calyx and the stamens and petals and pistils, I was thinking
+what beautiful hands she had and how dainty they looked, pulling the
+blossoms all to pieces. I am afraid I am commonplace, like the man we
+read of in English literature, who said "a primrose by the river brim, a
+yellow primrose, was to him, and it was nothing more."
+
+Mr. William Wood came to call this afternoon and gave us some
+morning-glory seeds to sow and told us to write down in our journals
+that he did so. So here it is. What a funny old man he is. Anna and Emma
+Wheeler went to Hiram Tousley's funeral to-day. She has just written in
+her journal that Hiram's corpse was very perfect of him and that Fannie
+looked very pretty in black. She also added that after the funeral
+Grandfather took Aunt Ann and Lucilla out to ride to Mr. Howe's and just
+as they got there it sprinkled. She says she don't know "weather" they
+got wet or not. She went to a picnic at Sucker Brook yesterday
+afternoon, and this is the way she described it in her journal. "Miss
+Hurlburt told us all to wear rubbers and shawls and bring some cake and
+we would have a picnic. We had a very warm time. It was very warm indeed
+and I was most roasted and we were all very thirsty indeed. We had in
+all the party about 40 of us. It was very pleasant and I enjoyed myself
+exceedingly. We had boiled eggs, pickles, Dutch cheese and sage cheese
+and loaf cake and raisin cake, pound cake, dried beef and capers, jam
+and tea cakes and gingerbread, and we tried to catch some fish but we
+couldn't, and in all we had a very nice time. I forgot to say that I
+picked some flowers for my teacher. I went to bed tired out and worn
+out."
+
+Her next entry was the following day when she and the other scholars
+dressed up to "speak pieces." She says, "After dinner I went and put on
+my rope petticoat and lace one over it and my barège de laine dress and
+all my rings and white bask and breastpin and worked handkerchief and
+spoke my piece. It was, 'When I look up to yonder sky.' It is very
+pretty indeed and most all the girls said I looked nice and said it
+nice. They were all dressed up, too."
+
+_Thursday_.--I asked Grandfather why we do not have gas in the house
+like almost every one else and he said because it was bad for the eyes
+and he liked candles and sperm oil better. We have the funniest little
+sperm oil lamp with a shade on to read by evenings and the fire on the
+hearth gives Grandfather and Grandmother all the light they want, for
+she knits in her corner and we read aloud to them if they want us to. I
+think if Grandfather is proud of anything besides being a Bostonian, it
+is that everything in the house is forty years old. The shovel and tongs
+and andirons and fender and the haircloth sofa and the haircloth rocking
+chair and the flag bottomed chairs painted dark green and the two old
+arm-chairs which belong to them and no one else ever thinks of touching.
+There is a wooden partition between the dining-room and parlor and they
+say it can slide right up out of sight on pulleys, so that it would be
+all one room. We have often said that we wished we could see it go up
+but they say it has never been up since the day our mother was married
+and as she is dead I suppose it would make them feel bad, so we probably
+will always have it down. There are no curtains or even shades at the
+windows, because Grandfather says, "light is sweet and a pleasant thing
+it is to behold the sun." The piano is in the parlor and it is the same
+one that our mother had when she was a little girl but we like it all
+the better for that. There are four large oil paintings on the parlor
+wall, De Witt Clinton, Rev. Mr. Dwight, Uncle Henry Channing Beals and
+Aunt Lucilla Bates, and no matter where we sit in the room they are
+watching and their eyes seem to move whenever we do. There is quite a
+handsome lamp on a mahogany center table, but I never saw it lighted. We
+have four sperm candles in four silver candlesticks and when we have
+company we light them. Johnnie Thompson, son of the minister, Rev. M. L.
+R. P., has come to the academy to school and he is very full of fun and
+got acquainted with all the girls very quick. He told us this afternoon
+to have "the other candle lit" for he was coming down to see us this
+evening. Will Schley heard him say it and he said he was coming too. His
+mother says she always knows when he has been at our house, because she
+finds sperm on his clothes and has to take brown paper and a hot
+flatiron to get it out, but still I do not think that Mrs. Schley cares,
+for she is a very nice lady and she and I are great friends. I presume
+she would just as soon he would spend part of his time with us as to be
+with Horace Finley all the time. Those boys are just like twins. We
+never see one without being sure that the other is not far away.
+
+_Later_.--The boys came and we had a very pleasant evening but when the
+9 o'clock bell rang we heard Grandfather winding up the clock and
+scraping up the ashes on the hearth to cover the fire so it would last
+till morning and we all understood the signal and they bade us
+good-night. "We won't go home till morning" is a song that will never be
+sung in this house.
+
+_June_ 2.--Abbie Clark wrote such a nice piece in my album to-day I am
+going to write it in my journal. Grandfather says he likes the sentiment
+as well as any in my book. This is it: "It has been said that the
+friendship of some people is like our shadow, keeping close by us while
+the sun shines, deserting us the moment we enter the shade, but think
+not such is the friendship of Abbie S. Clark." Abbie and I took supper
+at Miss Mary Howell's to-night to see Adele Ives. We had a lovely time.
+
+_Tuesday_.--General Tom Thumb was in town to-day and everybody who
+wanted to see him could go to Bemis Hall. Twenty-five cents for old
+people, and 10 cents for children, but we could see him for nothing when
+he drove around town. He had a little carriage and two little bits of
+ponies and a little boy with a high silk hat on, for the driver. He sat
+inside the coach but we could see him looking out. We went to the hall
+in the afternoon and the man who brought him stood by him and looked
+like a giant and told us all about him. Then he asked Tom Thumb to make
+a speech and stood him upon the table. He told all the ladies he would
+give them a kiss if they would come up and buy his picture. Some of them
+did.
+
+_Friday, July._--I have not kept a journal for two weeks because we have
+been away visiting. Anna and I had an invitation to go to Utica to visit
+Rev. and Mrs. Brandigee. He is rector of Grace Episcopal church there
+and his wife used to belong to Father's church in Morristown, N. J. Her
+name was Miss Condict. Rev. Mr. Stowe was going to Hamilton College at
+Clinton, so he said he would take us to Utica. We had a lovely time. The
+corner stone of the church was laid while we were there and Bishop De
+Lancey came and stayed with us at Mr. Brandigee's. He is a very nice man
+and likes children. One morning they had muffins for breakfast and Anna
+asked if they were ragamuffins. Mr. Brandigee said, "Yes, they are made
+of rags and brown paper," but we knew he was just joking. When we came
+away Mrs. Brandigee gave me a prayer book and Anna a vase, but she
+didn't like it and said she should tell Mrs. Brandigee she wanted a
+prayer book too, so I had to change with her. When we came home Mr.
+Brandigee put us in care of the conductor. There was a fine soldier
+looking man in the car with us and we thought it was his wife with him.
+He wore a blue coat and brass buttons, and some one said his name was
+Custer and that he was a West Point cadet and belonged to the regular
+army. I told Anna she had better behave or he would see her, but she
+would go out and stand on the platform until the conductor told her not
+to. I pulled her dress and looked very stern at her and motioned toward
+Mr. Custer, but it did not seem to have any impression on her. I saw Mr.
+Custer smile once because my words had no effect. I was glad when we got
+to Canandaigua. I heard some one say that Dr. Jewett was at the depôt to
+take Mr. Custer and his wife to his house, but I only saw Grandfather
+coming after us. He said, "Well, girls, you have been and you have got
+back," but I could see that he was glad to have us at home again, even
+if we are "troublesome comforts," as he sometimes says.
+
+_July_ 4.--Barnum's circus was in town to-day and if Grandmother had not
+seen the pictures on the hand bills I think she would have let us go.
+She said it was all right to look at the creatures God had made but she
+did not think He ever intended that women should go only half dressed
+and stand up and ride on horses bare back, or jump through hoops in the
+air. So we could not go. We saw the street parade though and heard the
+band play and saw the men and women in a chariot, all dressed so fine,
+and we saw a big elephant and a little one and a camel with an awful
+hump on his back, and we could hear the lion roar in the cage, as they
+went by. It must have been nice to see them close to and probably we
+will some day.
+
+[Illustration: Grandmother's Rocking Chair, "The Grandfather Clock"]
+
+_August_ 8.--Grandfather has given me his whole set of Waverley novels
+and his whole set of Shakespeare's plays, and has ordered Mr. Jahn, the
+cabinetmaker, to make me a black walnut bookcase, with glass doors and
+three deep drawers underneath, with brass handles. He is so good. Anna
+says perhaps he thinks I am going to be married and go to housekeeping
+some day. Well, perhaps he does. Stranger things have happened. "Barkis
+is willin'," and I always like to please Grandfather. I have just read
+David Copperfield and was so interested I could not leave it alone till
+I finished it.
+
+_September_ 1.--Anna and I have been in Litchfield, Conn., at Father's
+school for boys. It is kept in the old Beecher house, where Dr. Lyman
+Beecher lived. We went up into the attic, which is light and airy, where
+they say he used to write his famous sermons. James is one of the
+teachers and he came for us. We went to Farmington and saw all the
+Cowles families, as they are our cousins. Then we drove by the Charter
+Oak and saw all there is left of it. It was blown down last year but the
+stump is fenced around. In Hartford we visited Gallaudet's Institution
+for the deaf and dumb and went to the historical rooms, where we saw
+some of George Washington's clothes and his watch and his penknife, but
+we did not see his little hatchet. We stayed two weeks in New York and
+vicinity before we came home. Uncle Edward took us to Christie's
+Minstrels and the Hippodrome, so we saw all the things we missed seeing
+when the circus was here in town. Grandmother seemed surprised when we
+told her, but she didn't say much because she was so glad to have us at
+home again. Anna said we ought to bring a present to Grandfather and
+Grandmother, for she read one time about some children who went away and
+came back grown up and brought home "busts of the old philosophers for
+the sitting-room," so as we saw some busts of George Washington and
+Benjamin Franklin in plaster of paris we bought them, for they look
+almost like marble and Grandfather and Grandmother like them. Speaking
+of busts reminds me of a conundrum I heard while I was gone. "How do we
+know that Poe's Raven was a dissipated bird? Because he was all night on
+a bust." Grandfather took us down to the bank to see how he had it made
+over while we were gone. We asked him why he had a beehive hanging out
+for a sign and he said, "Bees store their honey in the summer for winter
+use and men ought to store their money against a rainy day." He has a
+swing door to the bank with "Push" on it. He said he saw a man studying
+it one day and finally looking up he spelled p-u-s-h, push (and
+pronounced it like mush). "What does that mean?" Grandfather showed him
+what it meant and he thought it was very convenient. He was about as
+thick-headed as the man who saw some snuffers and asked what they were
+for and when told to snuff the candle with, he immediately snuffed the
+candle with his fingers and put it in the snuffers and said, "Law sakes,
+how handy!" Grandmother really laughed when she read this in the paper.
+
+_September_.--Mrs. Martin, of Albany, is visiting Aunt Ann, and she
+brought Grandmother a fine fish that was caught in the Atlantic Ocean.
+We went over and asked her to come to dinner to-morrow and help eat it
+and she said if it did not rain pitchforks she would come, so I think we
+may expect her. Her granddaughter, Hattie Blanchard, has come here to go
+to the seminary and will live with Aunt Ann. She is a very pretty girl.
+Mary Field came over this morning and we went down street together.
+Grandfather went with us to Mr. Nat Gorham's store, as he is selling off
+at cost, and got Grandmother and me each a new pair of kid gloves. Hers
+are black and mine are green. Hers cost six shillings and mine cost five
+shillings and six pence; very cheap for such nice ones. Grandmother let
+Anna have six little girls here to supper to-night: Louisa Field, Hattie
+Paddock, Helen Coy, Martha Densmore, Emma Wheeler and Alice Jewett. We
+had a splendid supper and then we played cards. I do not mean regular
+cards, mercy no! Grandfather thinks those kind are contagious or
+outrageous or something dreadful and never keeps them in the house.
+Grandmother said they found a pack once, when the hired man's room was
+cleaned, and they went into the fire pretty quick. The kind we played
+was just "Dr. Busby," and another "The Old Soldier and His Dog." There
+are counters with them, and if you don't have the card called for you
+have to pay one into the pool. It is real fun. They all said they had a
+very nice time, indeed, when they bade Grandmother good-night, and said:
+"Mrs. Beals, you must let Carrie and Anna come and see us some time,"
+and she said she would. I think it is nice to have company.
+
+_Christmas_.--Grandfather and Grandmother do not care much about making
+Christmas presents. They say, when they were young no one observed
+Christmas or New Years, but they always kept Thanksgiving day. Our
+cousins, the Fields and Carrs, gave us several presents and Uncle Edward
+sent us a basket full from New York by express. Aunt Ann gave me one of
+the Lucy books and a Franconia story book and to Anna, "The Child's Book
+on Repentance." When Anna saw the title, she whispered to me and said if
+she had done anything she was sorry for she was willing to be forgiven.
+I am afraid she will never read hers but I will lend her mine. Miss Lucy
+Ellen Guernsey, of Rochester, gave me "Christmas Earnings" and wrote in
+it, "Carrie C. Richards with the love of the author." I think that is
+very nice. Anna and I were chattering like two magpies to-day, and a man
+came in to talk to Grandfather on business. He told us in an undertone
+that children should be seen and not heard. After he had gone I saw Anna
+watching him a long time till he was only a speck in the distance and I
+asked her what she was doing. She said she was doing it because it was a
+sign if you watched persons out of sight you would never see them again.
+She does not seem to have a very forgiving spirit, but you can't always
+tell.
+
+Mr. William Wood, the venerable philanthropist of whom Canandaigua has
+been justly proud for many years, is dead. I have preserved this poem,
+written by Mrs. George Willson in his honor:
+
+Mr. Editor,--The following lines were written by a lady of this village,
+and have been heretofore published, but on reading in your last paper
+the interesting extract relating to the late William Wood, Esq., it was
+suggested that they be again published, not only for their merit, but
+also to keep alive the memory of one who has done so much to ornament
+our village.
+
+ When first on this stage of existence we come
+ Blind, deaf, puny, helpless, but not, alas, dumb,
+ What can please us, and soothe us, and make us sleep good?
+ To be rocked in a cradle;--and cradles are wood.
+ When older we grow, and we enter the schools
+ Where masters break rulers o'er boys who break rules,
+ What can curb and restrain and make laws understood
+ But the birch-twig and ferule?--and both are of wood.
+ When old age--second childhood, takes vigor away,
+ And we totter along toward our home in the clay,
+ What can aid us to stand as in manhood we stood
+ But our tried, trusty staff?--and the staff is of wood.
+ And when from this stage of existence we go,
+ And death drops the curtain on all scenes below,
+ In our coffins we rest, while for worms we are food,
+ And our last sleeping place, like our first, is of wood.
+ Then honor to wood! fresh and strong may it grow,
+ 'Though winter has silvered its summit with snow;
+ Embowered in its shade long our village has stood;
+ She'd scarce be Canandaigua if stripped of her Wood.
+
+Stanza added after the death of Mr. Wood
+
+ The sad time is come; she is stript of her Wood,
+ 'Though the trees that he planted still stand where they stood,
+ Still with storms they can wrestle with arms stout and brave;
+ Still they wave o'er our dwellings--they droop o'er his grave!
+ Alas! that the life of the cherished and good
+ Is more frail and more brief than the trees of the wood!
+
+
+
+
+1858
+
+_February_ 24, 1858.--The boarders at the Seminary had some tableaux
+last evening and invited a great many from the village. As we went in
+with the crowd, we heard some one say, "Are they going to have tableaux?
+Well, I thought I smelt them!" They were splendid. Mr. Chubbuck was in
+nearly all of them. The most beautiful one was Abraham offering up
+Isaac. Mr. Chubbuck was Abraham and Sarah Ripley was Isaac. After the
+tableaux they acted a charade. The word was "Masterpiece." It was fine.
+After the audience got half way out of the chapel Mr. Richards announced
+"The Belle of the Evening." The curtain rose and every one rushed back,
+expecting to see a young lady dressed in the height of fashion, when
+immediately the Seminary bell rang! Mr. Blessner's scholars gave all the
+music and he stamped so, beating time, it almost drowned the music. Some
+one suggested a bread and milk poultice for his foot. Anna has been
+taking part in some private theatricals. The play is in contrast to "The
+Spirit of '76" and the idea carried out is that the men should stay at
+home and rock the cradles and the women should take the rostrum.
+Grandmother was rather opposed to the idea, but every one wanted Anna to
+take the part of leading lady, so she consented. She even helped Anna
+make her bloomer suit and sewed on the braid for trimming on the skirt
+herself. She did not know that Anna's opening sentence was, "How are
+you, sir? Cigar, please!" It was acted at Mrs. John Bates' house on
+Gibson Street and was a great success, but when they decided to repeat
+it another evening Grandmother told Anna she must choose between going
+on the stage and living with her Grandmother, so Anna gave it up and
+some one else took her part.
+
+_March_.--There is a great deal said about spirits nowadays and a lot of
+us girls went into one of the recitation rooms after school to-night and
+had a spiritual seance. We sat around Mr. Chubbuck's table and put our
+hands on it and it moved around and stood on two legs and sometimes on
+one. I thought the girls helped it but they said they didn't. We heard
+some loud raps, too, but they sounded very earthly to me. Eliza Burns,
+one of the boarders, told us if we would hold our breath we could pick
+up one of the girls from the floor and raise her up over our heads with
+one finger of each hand, if the girl held her breath, too. We tried it
+with Anna and did it, but we had such hard work to keep from laughing I
+expected we would drop her. There is nothing very spirituelle about any
+of us. I told Grandmother and she said we reminded her of Jemima
+Wilkinson, who told all her followers that the world was to come to an
+end on a certain day and they should all be dressed in white and get up
+on the roofs of the houses and be prepared to ascend and meet the Lord
+in the air. I asked Grandmother what she said when nothing happened and
+she said she told them it was because they did not have faith enough. If
+they had, everything would have happened just as she said. Grandmother
+says that one day at a time has always been enough for her and that
+to-morrow will take care of the things of itself.
+
+_May,_ 1858.--Several of us girls went up into the top of the new Court
+House to-day as far as the workmen would allow us. We got a splendid
+view of the lake and of all the country round. Abbie Clark climbed up on
+a beam and recited part of Alexander Selkirk's soliloquy:
+
+ "I'm monarch of all I survey,
+ My rights there are none to dispute:
+ From the center, all round to the sea,
+ I'm lord of the fowl and brute."
+
+I was standing on a block and she said I looked like "Patience on a
+monument smiling at Grief." I am sure she could not be taken for
+"Grief." She always has some quotation on her tongue's end. We were down
+at Sucker Brook the other day and she picked her way out to a big stone
+in the middle of the stream and, standing on it, said, in the words of
+Rhoderick Dhu,
+
+ "Come one, come all, this rock shall fly
+ From its firm base, as soon as I."
+
+Just then the big stone tipped over and she had to wade ashore. She is
+not at all afraid of climbing and as we left the Court House she said
+she would like to go outside on the cupola and help Justice balance the
+scales.
+
+A funny old man came to our house to-day as he wanted to deposit some
+money and reached the bank after it was closed. We were just sitting
+down to dinner so Grandfather asked him to stay and have "pot luck" with
+us. He said that he was very much "obleeged" and stayed and passed his
+plate a second time for more of our very fine "pot luck." We had boiled
+beef and dumplings and I suppose he thought that was the name of the
+dish. He talked so queer we couldn't help noticing it. He said he
+"heered" so and he was "afeered" and somebody was very "deef" and they
+"hadn't ought to have done it" and "they should have went" and such
+things. Anna and I almost laughed but Grandmother looked at us with her
+eye and forefinger so we sobered down. She told us afterwards that there
+are many good people in the world whose verbs and nouns do not agree,
+and instead of laughing at them we should be sure that we always speak
+correctly ourselves. Very true. Dr. Daggett was at the Seminary one day
+when we had public exercises and he told me afterwards that I said
+"sagac-ious" for "saga-cious" and Aunt Ann told me that I said
+"epi-tome" for "e-pit-o-me." So "people that live in glass houses
+shouldn't throw stones."
+
+_Sunday._--Grandfather read his favorite parable this morning at
+prayers--the one about the wise man who built his house upon a rock and
+the foolish man who built upon the sand. He reads it good, just like a
+minister. He prays good, too, and I know his prayer by heart. He says,
+"Verily Thou art our Father, though Abraham be ignorant of us and Israel
+acknowledge us not," and he always says, "Thine arm is not shortened
+that it cannot save, or Thine ear heavy that it cannot hear." I am glad
+that I can remember it.
+
+_June._--Cyrus W. Field called at our house to-day. He is making a trip
+through the States and stopped here a few hours because Grandmother is
+his aunt. He made her a present of a piece of the Atlantic cable about
+six inches long, which he had mounted for her. It is a very nice
+souvenir. He is a tall, fine looking man and very pleasant.
+
+_Sunday, July_ 4, 1858.--This is Communion Sunday and quite a number
+united with the church on profession of their faith. Mr. Gideon Granger
+was one of them. Grandmother says that she has known him always and his
+father and mother, and she thinks he is like John, the beloved disciple.
+I think that any one who knows him, knows what is meant by a gentle-man.
+I have a picture of Christ in the Temple with the doctors, and His face
+is almost exactly like Mr. Granger's. Some others who joined to-day were
+Miss Belle Paton, Miss Lottie Clark and Clara Willson, Mary Wheeler and
+Sarah Andrews. Dr. Daggett always asks all the communicants to sit in
+the body pews and the noncommunicants in the side pews. We always feel
+like the goats on the left when we leave Grandfather and Grandmother and
+go on the side, but we won't have to always. Abbie Clark, Mary Field and
+I think we will join at the communion in September. Grandmother says she
+hopes we realize what a solemn thing it is. We are fifteen years old so
+I think we ought to. No one who hears Dr. Daggett say in his beautiful
+voice, "I now renounce all ways of sin as what I truly abhor and choose
+the service of God as my greatest privilege," could think it any
+trifling matter. I feel as though I couldn't be bad if I wanted to be,
+and when he blesses them and says, "May the God of the Everlasting
+Covenant keep you firm and holy to the end through Jesus Christ our
+Lord," everything seems complete. He always says at the close, "And when
+they had sung an hymn they went out into the Mount of Olives." Then he
+gives out the hymn, beginning:
+
+ "According to Thy gracious word,
+ In deep humility,
+ This will I do, my dying Lord
+ I will remember Thee."
+
+And the last verse:
+
+ "And when these failing lips grow dumb,
+ And mind and memory flee,
+ When in Thy kingdom Thou shalt come,
+ Jesus remember me."
+
+[Illustration: Hon. Francis Granger, Mr. Gideon Granger]
+
+Deacon Taylor always starts the hymn. Deacon Taylor and Deacon Tyler sit
+on one side of Dr. Daggett and Deacon Clarke and Deacon Castle on the
+other. Grandfather and Grandmother joined the church fifty-one years ago
+and are the oldest living members. She says they have always been glad
+that they took this step when they were young.
+
+_August_ 17.--There was a celebration in town to-day because the Queen's
+message was received on the Atlantic cable. Guns were fired and church
+bells rung and flags were waving everywhere. In the evening there was a
+torchlight procession and the town was all lighted up except Gibson
+Street. Allie Antes died this morning, so the people on that street kept
+their houses as usual. Anna says that probably Allie Antes was better
+prepared to die than any other little girl in town. Atwater hall and the
+academy and the hotel were more brilliantly illuminated than any other
+buildings. Grandfather saw something in a Boston paper that a minister
+said in his sermon about the Atlantic cable and he wants me to write it
+down in my journal. This is it: "The two hemispheres are now
+successfully united by means of the electric wire, but what is it, after
+all, compared with the instantaneous communication between the Throne of
+Divine Grace and the heart of man? Offer up your silent petition. It is
+transmitted through realms of unmeasured space more rapidly than the
+lightning's flash, and the answer reaches the soul e're the prayer has
+died away on the sinner's lips. Yet this telegraph, performing its
+saving functions ever since Christ died for men on Calvary, fills not
+the world with exultation and shouts of gladness, with illuminations and
+bonfires and the booming of cannon. The reason is, one is the telegraph
+of this world and may produce revolutions on earth; the other is the
+sweet communication between Christ and the Christian soul and will
+secure a glorious immortality in Heaven." Grandfather appreciates
+anything like that and I like to please him.
+
+Grandfather says he thinks the 19th Psalm is a prophecy of the electric
+telegraph. "Their line is gone out through all the earth and their words
+to the end of the world." It certainly sounds like it.
+
+_Sunday_.--Rev. Henry Ward Beecher is staying at Judge Taylor's and came
+with them to church to-day. Everybody knew that he was here and thought
+he would preach and the church was packed full. When he came in he went
+right to Judge Taylor's pew and sat with him and did not preach at all,
+but it was something to look at him. Mr. Daggett was away on his
+vacation and Rev. Mr. Jervis of the M. E. church preached. I heard some
+people say they guessed even Mr. Beecher heard some new words to-day,
+for Mr. Jervis is quite a hand to make them up or find very long hard
+ones in the dictionary.
+
+_August_ 30, 1858.--Rev. Mr. Tousley was hurt to-day by the falling of
+his barn which was being moved, and they think his back is broken and if
+he lives he can never sit up again. Only last Sunday he was in Sunday
+School and had us sing in memory of Allie Antes:
+
+ "A mourning class, a vacant seat,
+ Tell us that one we loved to meet
+ Will join our youthful throng no more,
+ 'Till all these changing scenes are o'er."
+
+And now he will never meet with us again and the children will never
+have another minister all their own. He thinks he may be able to write
+letters to the children and perhaps write his own life. We all hope he
+may be able to sit up if he cannot walk.
+
+We went to our old home in Penn Yan visiting last week and stayed at
+Judge Ellsworth's. We called to see the Tunnicliffs and the Olivers,
+Wells, Jones, Shepards, Glovers, Bennetts, Judds and several other
+families. They were glad to see us for the sake of our father and
+mother. Father was their pastor from 1841 to 1847.
+
+Some one told us that when Bob and Henry Antes were small boys they
+thought they would like to try, just for once, to see how it would seem
+to be bad, so in spite of all of Mr. Tousley's sermons they went out
+behind the barn one day and in a whisper Bob said, "I swear," and Henry
+said, "So do I." Then they came into the house looking guilty and quite
+surprised, I suppose, that they were not struck dead just as Ananias and
+Sapphira were for lying.
+
+_September_.--I read in a New York paper to-day that Hon. George
+Peabody, of England, presented Cyrus W. Field with a solid silver tea
+service of twelve pieces, which cost $4,000. The pieces bear likenesses
+of Mr. Peabody and Mr. Field, with the coat of arms of the Field family.
+The epergne is supported by a base representing the genius of America.
+
+We had experiments in the philosophy class to-day and took electric
+shocks. Mr. Chubbuck managed the battery which has two handles attached.
+Two of the girls each held one of these and we all took hold of hands
+making the circuit complete. After a while it jerked us almost to pieces
+and we asked Mr. Chubbuck to turn it off. Dana Luther, one of the
+Academy boys, walked up from the post-office with me this noon. He lives
+in Naples and is Florence Younglove's cousin. We went to a ball game
+down on Pleasant Street after school. I got so far ahead of Anna coming
+home she called me her "distant relative."
+
+
+
+
+1859
+
+_January_, 1859.--Mr. Woodruff came to see Grandfather to ask him if we
+could attend his singing school. He is going to have it one evening each
+week in the chapel of our church. Quite a lot of the boys and girls are
+going, so we were glad when Grandfather gave his consent. Mr. Woodruff
+wants us all to sing by note and teaches "do re me fa sol la si do" from
+the blackboard and beats time with a stick. He lets us have a recess,
+which is more fun than all the rest of it. He says if we practise well
+we can have a concert in Bemis Hall to end up with. What a treat that
+will be!
+
+_February_.--Anna has been teasing me all the morning about a verse
+which John Albert Granger Barker wrote in my album. He has a most
+fascinating lisp when he talks, so she says this is the way the verse
+reads:
+
+ "Beauty of perthon, ith thertainly chawming
+ Beauty of feachure, by no meanth alawming
+ But give me in pwefrence, beauty of mind,
+ Or give me Cawwie, with all thwee combined."
+
+It takes Anna to find "amuthement" in "evewything."
+
+Mary Wheeler came over and pierced my ears to-day, so I can wear my new
+earrings that Uncle Edward sent me. She pinched my ear until it was numb
+and then pulled a needle through, threaded with silk. Anna would not
+stay in the room. She wants hers done but does not dare. It is all the
+fashion for girls to cut off their hair and friz it. Anna and I have cut
+off ours and Bessie Seymour got me to cut off her lovely long hair
+to-day. It won't be very comfortable for us to sleep with curl papers
+all over our heads, but we must do it now. I wanted my new dress waist
+which Miss Rosewarne is making, to hook up in front, but Grandmother
+said I would have to wear it that way all the rest of my life so I had
+better be content to hook it in the back a little longer. She said when
+Aunt Glorianna was married, in 1848, it was the fashion for grown up
+women to have their waists fastened in the back, so the bride had hers
+made that way but she thought it was a very foolish and inconvenient
+fashion. It is nice, though, to dress in style and look like other
+people. I have a Garibaldi waist and a Zouave jacket and a balmoral
+skirt.
+
+_Sunday_.--I asked Grandmother if I could write a letter to Father
+to-day, and she said I could begin it and tell him that I went to church
+and what Mr. Daggett's text was and then finish it to-morrow. I did so,
+but I wish I could do it all after I began. She said a verse from the
+Tract Primer:
+
+ "A Sabbath well spent brings a week of content
+ And strength for the toil of to-morrow,
+ But a Sabbath profaned, whatever be gained,
+ Is a certain forerunner of sorrow."
+
+_Monday_.--We dressed up in new fangled costumes to-day and wore them to
+school. Some of us wore dresses almost up to our knees and some wore
+them trailing on the ground. Some wore their hair twisted in knots and
+some let theirs hang down their backs. I wore my new waterfall for the
+first time and Abbie Clark said I looked like "Hagar in the Wilderness."
+When she came in she looked like a fashion plate, bedecked with bows and
+ribbons and her hair up in a new way. When she came in the door she
+stopped and said solemnly: "If you have tears prepare to shed them now!"
+Laura Chapin would not participate in the fun, for once. She said she
+thought "Beauty unadorned was the dorndest." We did not have our lesson
+in mental philosophy very well so we asked Mr. Richards to explain the
+nature of dreams and their cause and effect. He gave us a very
+interesting talk, which occupied the whole hour. We listened with
+breathless attention, so he must have marked us 100.
+
+There was a lecture at the seminary to-night and Rev. Dr. Hibbard, the
+Methodist minister, who lives next door above the Methodist church, came
+home with us. Grandmother was very much pleased when we told her.
+
+_March_ 1.--Our hired man has started a hot bed and we went down behind
+the barn to see it. Grandfather said he was up at 6 o'clock and walked
+up as far as Mr. Greig's lions and back again for exercise before
+breakfast. He seems to have the bloom of youth on his face as a reward.
+Anna says she saw "Bloom of youth" advertised in the drug store and she
+is going to buy some. I know Grandmother won't let her for it would be
+like "taking coal to Newcastle."
+
+_April._--Anna wanted me to help her write a composition last night, and
+we decided to write on "Old Journals," so we got hers and mine both out
+and made selections and then she copied them. When we were on our way to
+school this morning we met Mr. E. M. Morse and Anna asked him if he did
+not want to read her composition that Carrie wrote for her. He made a
+very long face and pretended to be much shocked, but said he would like
+to read it, so he took it and also her album, which she asked him to
+write in. At night, on his way home, he stopped at our door and left
+them both. When she looked in her album, she found this was what he had
+written:
+
+"Anna, when you have grown old and wear spectacles and a cap, remember
+the boyish young man who saw your fine talents in 1859 and was certain
+you would add culture to nature and become the pride of Canandaigua. Do
+not forget also that no one deserves praise for anything done by others
+and that your progress in wisdom and goodness will be watched by no one
+more anxiously than by your true friend,
+ E. M. Morse."
+
+I think she might as well have told Mr. Morse that the old journals were
+as much hers as mine; but I think she likes to make out she is not as
+good as she is. Sarah Foster helped us to do our arithmetic examples
+to-day. She is splendid in mathematics.
+
+Much to our surprise Bridget Flynn, who has lived with us so long, is
+married. We didn't know she thought of such a thing, but she has gone.
+Anna and I have learned how to make rice and cornstarch puddings. We
+have a new girl in Bridget's place but I don't think she will do.
+Grandmother asked her to-day if she seasoned the gravy and she said,
+either she did or she didn't, she couldn't tell which. Grandfather says
+he thinks she is a little lacking in the "upper story."
+
+_June._--A lot of us went down to Sucker Brook this afternoon. Abbie
+Clark was one and she told us some games to play sitting down on the
+grass. We played "Simon says thumbs up" and then we pulled the leaves
+off from daisies and said,
+
+ "Rich man, poor man, beggar man, thief,
+ Doctor, lawyer, merchant, chief,"
+
+to see which we would marry. The last leaf tells the story. Anna's came
+"rich man" every time and she thinks it is true because Eugene Stone has
+asked to marry her and he is quite well off. She is 13 and he is 17. He
+is going now to his home in St. Paul, Minn., but he is coming back for
+her some day. Tom Eddy is going to be groomsman and Emma Wheeler
+bridesmaid. They have all the arrangements made. She has not shown any
+of Eugene Stone's notes to Grandmother yet for she does not think it is
+worth while. Anna broke the seal on Tom Eddy's page in her mystic book,
+although he wrote on it, "Not to be opened until December 8, 1859." He
+says:
+
+Dear Anna,--
+
+I hope that in a few years I will see you and Stone living on the banks
+of the Mississippi, in a little cottage, as snug as a bug in a rug,
+living in peace, so that I can come and see you and have a good
+time.--Yours,
+ Thos. C. Eddy."
+
+Anna says if she does marry Eugene Stone and he forgets, after two or
+three years to be as polite to her as he is now she shall look up at him
+with her sweetest smile and say, "Miss Anna, won't you have a little
+more sugar in your tea?" When I went to school this morning Juliet
+Ripley asked, "Where do you think Anna Richards is now? Up in a cherry
+tree in Dr. Cheney's garden." Anna loves cherries. We could see her from
+the chapel window.
+
+_June_ 7.--Alice Jewett took Anna all through their new house to-day
+which is being built and then they went over to Mr. Noah T. Clarke's
+partly finished house and went all through that. A dog came out of Cat
+Alley and barked at them and scared Anna awfully. She said she almost
+had a conniption fit but Emma kept hold of her. She is so afraid of
+thunder and lightning and dogs.
+
+Old Friend Burling brought Grandfather a specimen of his handwriting
+to-day to keep. It is beautifully written, like copper plate. This is
+the verse he wrote and Grandfather gave it to me to paste in my book of
+extracts:
+
+ DIVINE LOVE.
+
+ Could we with ink the ocean fill,
+ Was the whole earth of parchment made,
+ Was every single stick a quill,
+ And every man a scribe by trade;
+ To write the love of God above
+ Would drain the ocean dry;
+ Nor could that scroll contain the whole
+ Though stretched from sky to sky.
+
+Transcribed by William S. Burling, Canandaigua, 1859, in the 83rd year
+of his age.
+
+_Sunday, December_ 8, 1859.--Mr. E. M. Morse is our Sunday School
+teacher now and the Sunday School room is so crowded that we go up into
+the church for our class recitation. Abbie Clark, Fannie Gaylord and
+myself are the only scholars, and he calls us the three Christian
+Graces, faith, hope and charity, and the greatest of these is charity. I
+am the tallest, so he says I am charity. We recite in Mr. Gibson's pew,
+because it is farthest away and we do not disturb the other classes. He
+gave us some excellent advice to-day as to what was right and said if we
+ever had any doubts about anything we should never do it and should
+always be perfectly sure we are in the right before we act. He gave us
+two weeks ago a poem to learn by Samuel Taylor Coleridge. It is an
+apostrophe to God and very hard to learn. It is blank verse and has 85
+lines in it. I have it committed at last and we are to recite it in
+concert. The last two lines are, "Tell thou the silent sky and tell the
+stars and tell yon rising sun, Earth with its thousand voices praises
+God." Mr. Morse delivered a lecture in Bemis Hall last Thursday night.
+The subject was, "You and I." It was splendid and he lent me the
+manuscript afterwards to read. Dick Valentine lectured in the hall the
+other night too. His subject was "Prejudice." There was some difference
+in the lectures and the lecturers. The latter was more highly colored.
+
+_Friday._--The older ladies of the town have formed a society for the
+relief of the poor and are going to have a course of lectures in Bemis
+Hall under their auspices to raise funds. The lecturers are to be from
+the village and are to be: Rev. O. E. Daggett, subject, "Ladies and
+Gentlemen"; Dr. Harvey Jewett, "The House We Live In"; Prof. F. E. R.
+Chubbuck, "Progress"; Hon. H. W. Taylor, "The Empty Place"; Prof. E. G.
+Tyler, "Finance"; Mr. N. T. Clark, "Chemistry"; E. M. Morse, "Graybeard
+and His Dogmas." The young ladies have started a society, too, and we
+have great fun and fine suppers. We met at Jennie Howell's to organize.
+We are to meet once in two weeks and are to present each member with an
+album bed quilt with all our names on when they are married. Susie
+Daggett says she is never going to be married, but we must make her a
+quilt just the same. Laura Chapin sang, "Mary Lindsey, Dear," and we got
+to laughing so that Susie Daggett and I lost our equilibrium entirely,
+but I found mine by the time I got home. Yesterday afternoon Grandfather
+asked us if we did not want to go to ride with him in the big two seated
+covered carriage which he does not get out very often. We said yes, and
+he stopped for Miss Hannah Upham and took her with us. She sat on the
+back seat with me and we rode clear to Farmington and kept up a brisk
+conversation all the way. She told us how she became lady principal of
+the Ontario Female Seminary in 1830. She was still telling us about it
+when we got back home.
+
+_December_ 23.--We have had a Christmas tree and many other attractions
+in Seminary chapel. The day scholars and townspeople were permitted to
+participate and we had a post office and received letters from our
+friends. Mr. E. M. Morse wrote me a fictitious one, claiming to be
+written from the north pole ten years hence. I will copy it in my
+journal for I may lose the letter. I had some gifts on the Christmas
+tree and gave some. I presented my teacher, Mr. Chubbuck, with two large
+hemstitched handkerchiefs with his initials embroidered in a corner of
+each. As he is favored with the euphonious name of Frank Emery Robinson
+Chubbuck it was a work of art to make his initials look beautiful. I
+inclosed a stanza in rhyme:
+
+ Amid the changing scenes of life
+ If any storm should rise,
+ May you ever have a handkerchief
+ To wipe your weeping eyes.
+
+Here is Mr. Morse's letter:
+
+ North Pole, 10 _January_ 1869.
+Miss Carrie Richards,
+
+"My Dear Young Friend.--It is very cold here and the pole is covered
+with ice. I climbed it yesterday to take an observation and arrange our
+flag, the Stars and Stripes, which I hoisted immediately on my arrival
+here, ten years ago. I thought I should freeze and the pole was so
+slippery that I was in great danger of coming down faster than was
+comfortable. Although this pole has been used for more than 6,000 years
+it is still as good as new. The works of the Great Architect do not wear
+out. It is now ten years since I have seen you and my other two
+Christian Graces and I have no doubt of your present position among the
+most brilliant, noble and excellent women in all America. I always knew
+and recognized your great abilities. Nature was very generous to you all
+and you were enjoying fine advantages at the time I last knew you. I
+thought your residence with your Grandparents an admirable school for
+you, and you and your sister were most evidently the best joy of their
+old age. You certainly owe much to them. At the time that I left my
+three Christian Graces, Mrs. Grundy was sometimes malicious enough to
+say that they were injuring themselves by flirting. I always told the
+old lady that I had the utmost confidence in the judgment and discretion
+of my pupils and that they would be very careful and prudent in all
+their conduct. I confessed that flirting was wrong and very injurious to
+any one who was guilty of it, but I was very sure that you were not. I
+could not believe that you would disappoint us all and become only
+ordinary women, but that you would become the most exalted characters,
+scorning all things unworthy of ladies and Christians and I was right
+and Mrs. Grundy was wrong. When the ice around the pole thaws out I
+shall make a flying visit to Canandaigua. I send you a tame polar bear
+for a playfellow. This letter will be conveyed to you by Esquimaux
+express.--Most truly yours,
+ E. M. Morse."
+
+I think some one must have shown some verses that we girls wrote, to
+Mrs. Grundy and made her think that our minds were more upon the young
+men than they were upon our studies, but if people knew how much time we
+spent on Paley's "Evidences of Christianity" and Butler's Analogy and
+Kames' Elements of Criticism and Tytler's Ancient History and Olmstead's
+Mathematical Astronomy and our French and Latin and arithmetic and
+algebra and geometry and trigonometry and bookkeeping, they would know
+we had very little time to think of the masculine gender.
+
+
+
+
+1860
+
+_New Year's Day._--We felt quite grown up to-day and not a little scared
+when we saw Mr. Morse and Mr. Wells and Mr. Mason and Mr. Chubbuck all
+coming in together to make a New Year's call. They made a tour of the
+town. We did not feel so flustrated when Will Schley and Horace Finley
+came in later. Mr. Oliver Phelps, Jr., came to call upon Grandmother.
+Grandfather made a few calls, too.
+
+_January_ 5.--Abbie Clark and I went up to see Miss Emma Morse because
+it is her birthday. We call her sweet Miss Emma and we think Mr. Manning
+Wells does, too. We went to William Wirt Howe's lecture in Bemis Hall
+this evening. He is a very smart young man.
+
+Anna wanted to walk down a little ways with the girls after school so
+she crouched down between Helen Coy and Hattie Paddock and walked past
+the house. Grandmother always sits in the front window, so when Anna
+came in she asked her if she had to stay after school and Anna gave her
+an evasive answer. It reminds me of a story I read, of a lady who told
+the servant girl if any one called to give an evasive answer as she did
+not wish to receive calls that day. By and by the door bell rang and the
+servant went to the door. When she came back the lady asked her how she
+dismissed the visitor. She said, "Shure ye towld me to give an evasive
+answer, so when the man asked if the lady of the house was at home I
+said, 'Faith! is your grandmother a monkey!'" We never say anything like
+that to our "dear little lady," but we just change the subject and
+divert the conversation into a more agreeable channel. To-day some one
+came to see Grandmother when we were gone and told her that Anna and
+some others ran away from school. Grandmother told Anna she hoped she
+would never let any one bring her such a report again. Anna said she
+would not, if she could possibly help it! I wonder who it was. Some one
+who believes in the text, "Look not every man on his own things, but
+every man also on the things of others." Grandfather told us to-night
+that we ought to be very careful what we do as we are making history
+every day. Anna says she shall try not to have hers as dry as some that
+she had to learn at school to-day.
+
+_February_ 9.--Dear Miss Mary Howell was married to-day to Mr.
+Worthington, of Cincinnati.
+
+_February_ 28.--Grandfather asked me to read Abraham Lincoln's speech
+aloud which he delivered in Cooper Institute, New York, last evening,
+under the auspices of the Republican Club. He was escorted to the
+platform by David Dudley Field and introduced by William Cullen Bryant.
+The _New York Times_ called him "a noted political exhorter and Prairie
+orator." It was a thrilling talk and must have stirred men's souls.
+
+_April_ 1.--Aunt Ann was over to see us yesterday and she said she made
+a visit the day before out at Mrs. William Gorham's. Mrs. Phelps and
+Miss Eliza Chapin also went and they enjoyed talking over old times when
+they were young. Maggie Gorham is going to be married on the 25th to Mr.
+Benedict of New York. She always said she would not marry a farmer and
+would not live in a cobblestone house and now she is going to do both,
+for Mr. Benedict has bought the farm near theirs and it has a
+cobblestone house. We have always thought her one of the jolliest and
+prettiest of the older set of young ladies.
+
+_June._--James writes that he has seen the Prince of Wales in New York.
+He was up on the roof of the Continental Fire Insurance building, out on
+the cornice, and looked down on the procession. Afterwards there was a
+reception for the Prince at the University Law School and James saw him
+close by. He says he has a very pleasant youthful face. There was a ball
+given for him one evening in the Academy of Music and there were 3,000
+present. The ladies who danced with him will never forget it. They say
+that he enters into every diversion which is offered to him with the
+greatest tact and good nature, and when he visited Mount Vernon he
+showed great reverence for the memory of George Washington. He attended
+a literary entertainment in Boston, where Longfellow, Holmes, Emerson,
+Thoreau, and other Americans of distinction were presented to him. He
+will always be a favorite in America.
+
+_June._--Mrs. Annie Granger asked Anna and me to come over to her house
+and see her baby. We were very eager to go and wanted to hold it and
+carry it around the room. She was willing but asked us if we had any
+pins on us anywhere. She said she had the nurse sew the baby's clothes
+on every morning so that if she cried she would know whether it was
+pains or pins. We said we had no pins on us, so we stayed quite a while
+and held little Miss Hattie to our heart's content. She is named for her
+aunt, Hattie Granger. Anna says she thinks Miss Martha Morse will give
+medals to her and Mary Daggett for being the most meddlesome girls in
+school, judging from the number of times she has spoken to them to-day.
+Anna is getting to be a regular punster, although I told her that
+Blair's Rhetoric says that punning is not the highest kind of wit. Mr.
+Morse met us coming from school in the rain and said it would not hurt
+us as we were neither sugar nor salt. Anna said, "No, but we are
+'lasses." Grandmother has been giving us sulphur and molasses for the
+purification of the blood and we have to take it three mornings and then
+skip three mornings. This morning Anna commenced going through some sort
+of gymnastics and Grandmother asked her what she was doing, and she said
+it was her first morning to skip.
+
+Abbie Clark had a large tea-party this afternoon and evening--Seminary
+girls and a few Academy boys. We had a fine supper and then played
+games. Abbie gave us one which is a test of memory and we tried to learn
+it from her but she was the only one who could complete it. I can write
+it down, but not say it:
+
+A good fat hen.
+
+Two ducks and a good fat hen.
+
+Three plump partridges, two ducks and a good fat hen.
+
+Four squawking wild geese, three plump partridges, etc.
+
+Five hundred Limerick oysters.
+
+Six pairs of Don Alfonso's tweezers.
+
+Seven hundred rank and file Macedonian horsemen drawn up in line of
+battle.
+
+Eight cages of heliogabalus sparrow kites.
+
+Nine sympathetical, epithetical, categorical propositions.
+
+Ten tentapherical tubes.
+
+Eleven flat bottom fly boats sailing between Madagascar and Mount
+Palermo.
+
+Twelve European dancing masters, sent to teach the Egyptian mummies how
+to dance, against Hercules' wedding day.
+
+Abbie says it was easier to learn than the multiplication table. They
+wanted some of us to recite and Abbie Clark gave us Lowell's poem, "John
+P. Robinson, he, says the world'll go right if he only says Gee!" I gave
+another of Lowell's poems, "The Courtin'." Julia Phelps had her guitar
+with her by request and played and sang for us very sweetly. Fred
+Harrington went home with her and Theodore Barnum with me.
+
+_Sunday._--Frankie Richardson asked me to go with her to teach a class
+in the colored Sunday School on Chapel Street this afternoon. I asked
+Grandmother if I could go and she said she never noticed that I was
+particularly interested in the colored race and she said she thought I
+only wanted an excuse to get out for a walk Sunday afternoon. However,
+she said I could go just this once. When we got up as far as the
+Academy, Mr. Noah T. Clarke's brother, who is one of the teachers, came
+out and Frank said he led the singing at the Sunday School and she said
+she would give me an introduction to him, so he walked up with us and
+home again. Grandmother said that when she saw him opening the gate for
+me, she understood my zeal in missionary work. "The dear little lady,"
+as we often call her, has always been noted for her keen discernment and
+wonderful sagacity and loses none of it as she advances in years. Some
+one asked Anna the other day if her Grandmother retained all her
+faculties and Anna said, "Yes, indeed, to an alarming degree."
+Grandmother knows that we think she is a perfect angel even if she does
+seem rather strict sometimes. Whether we are 7 or 17 we are children to
+her just the same, and the Bible says, "Children obey your parents in
+the Lord for this is right." We are glad that we never will seem old to
+her. I had the same company home from church in the evening. His home is
+in Naples.
+
+_Monday._--This morning the cook went to early mass and Anna told
+Grandmother she would bake the pancakes for breakfast if she would let
+her put on gloves. She would not let her, so Hannah baked the cakes. I
+was invited to Mary Paul's to supper to-night and drank the first cup of
+tea I ever drank in my life. I had a very nice time and Johnnie Paul
+came home with me.
+
+Imogen Power and I went down together Friday afternoon to buy me a
+Meteorology. We are studying that and Watts on the Mind, instead of
+Philosophy.
+
+_Tuesday._--I went with Fanny Gaylord to see Mrs. Callister at the hotel
+to-night. She is so interested in all that we tell her, just like "one
+of the girls."
+
+[Illustration: The Old Canandaigua Academy]
+
+I was laughing to-day when I came in from the street and Grandmother
+asked me what amused me so. I told her that I met Mr. and Mrs. Putnam on
+the street and she looked so immense and he so minute I couldn't help
+laughing at the contrast. Grandmother said that size was not everything,
+and then she quoted Cowper's verse:
+
+ "Were I so tall to reach the skies or grasp the ocean in a span,
+ I must be measured by my soul, the mind is the stature of the man."
+
+I don't believe that helps Mr. Putnam out.
+
+_Friday._--We went to Monthly Concert of prayer for Foreign Missions
+this evening. I told Grandmother that I thought it was not very
+interesting. Judge Taylor read the _Missionary Herald_ about the
+Madagascans and the Senegambians and the Terra del Fuegans and then
+Deacon Tyler prayed and they sang "From Greenland's Icy Mountains" and
+took up a collection and went home. She said she was afraid I did not
+listen attentively. I don't think I did strain every nerve. I believe
+Grandmother will give her last cent to Missions if the Boards get into
+worse straits than they are now.
+
+In Latin class to-day Anna translated the phrase Deo Volente "with
+violence," and Mr. Tyler, who always enjoys a joke, laughed so, we
+thought he would fall out of his chair. He evidently thought it was the
+best one he had heard lately.
+
+_November_ 21.--Aunt Ann gave me a sewing bird to screw on to the table
+to hold my work instead of pinning it to my knee. Grandmother tells us
+when we sew or read not to get everything around us that we will want
+for the next two hours because it is not healthy to sit in one position
+so long. She wants us to get up and "stir around." Anna does not need
+this advice as much as I do for she is always on what Miss Achert calls
+the "qui vive." I am trying to make a sofa pillow out of little pieces
+of silk. Aunt Ann taught me how. You have to cut pieces of paper into
+octagonal shape and cover them with silk and then sew them together,
+over and over. They are beautiful, with bright colors, when they are
+done. There was a hop at the hotel last night and some of the girls went
+and had an elegant time. Mr. Hiram Metcalf came here this morning to
+have Grandmother sign some papers. He always looks very dignified, and
+Anna and I call him "the deed man." We tried to hear what he said to
+Grandmother after she signed her name but we only heard something about
+"fear or compulsion" and Grandmother said "yes." It seems very
+mysterious. Grandfather took us down street to-day to see the new Star
+Building. It was the town house and he bought it and got Mr. Warren
+Stoddard of Hopewell to superintend cutting it in two and moving the
+parts separately to Coach Street. When it was completed the shout went
+up from the crowd, "Hurrah for Thomas Beals, the preserver of the old
+Court House." No one but Grandfather thought it could be done.
+
+_December._--I went with the girls to the lake to skate this afternoon.
+Mr. Johnson, the colored barber, is the best skater in town. He can
+skate forwards and backwards and cut all sorts of curlicues, although he
+is such a heavy man. He is going to Liberia and there his skates won't
+do him any good. I wish he would give them to me and also his skill to
+use them. Some one asked me to sit down after I got home and I said I
+preferred to stand, as I had been sitting down all the afternoon! Gus
+Coleman took a load of us sleigh-riding this evening. Of course he had
+Clara Willson sit on the front seat with him and help him drive.
+
+_Thursday._--We had a special meeting of our society this evening at
+Mary Wheeler's and invited the gentlemen and had charades and general
+good time. Mr. Gillette and Horace Finley made a great deal of fun for
+us. We initiated Mr. Gillette into the Dorcas Society, which consists in
+seating the candidate in a chair and propounding some very solemn
+questions and then in token of desire to join the society, you ask him
+to open his mouth very wide for a piece of cake which you swallow,
+yourself, instead! Very disappointing to the new member!
+
+We went to a concert at the Seminary this evening. Miss Mollie Bull sang
+"Coming Through the Rye" and Miss Lizzie Bull sang "Annie Laurie" and
+"Auld Lang Syne." Jennie Lind, herself, could not have done better.
+
+_December_ 15.--Alice Jewett, Emma Wheeler and Anna are in Mrs.
+Worthington's Sunday School class and as they have recently united with
+the church, she thought they should begin practical Christian work by
+distributing tracts among the neglected classes. So this afternoon they
+ran away from school to begin the good work. It was so bright and
+pleasant, they thought a walk to the lake would be enjoyable and they
+could find a welcome in some humble home. The girls wanted Anna to be
+the leader, but she would only promise that if something pious came into
+her mind, she would say it. They knocked at a door and were met by a
+smiling mother of twelve children and asked to come in. They sat down
+feeling somewhat embarrassed, but spying a photograph album on the
+table, they became much interested, while the children explained the
+pictures. Finally Anna felt that it was time to do something, so when no
+one was looking, she slipped under one of the books on the table, three
+tracts entitled "Consolation for the Bereaved," "Systematic Benevolence"
+and "The Social Evils of dancing, card playing and theater-going." Then
+they said goodbye to their new friends and started on. They decided not
+to do any more pastoral work until another day, but enjoyed the outing
+very much.
+
+_Christmas._--We all went to Aunt Mary Carr's to dinner excepting
+Grandmother, and in the evening we went to see some tableaux at Dr.
+Cook's and Dr. Chapin's at the asylum. We were very much pleased with
+the entertainment. Between the acts Mr. del Pratt, one of the patients,
+said every time, "What next!" which made every one laugh.
+
+Grandfather was requested to add his picture to the gallery of portraits
+of eminent men for the Court Room, so he has had it painted. An artist
+by the name of Green, who lives in town, has finished it after numerous
+sittings and brought it up for our approval. We like it but we do not
+think it is as good looking as he is. No one could really satisfy us
+probably, so we may as well try to be suited.
+
+I asked Grandmother if Mr. Clarke could take Sunday night supper with us
+and she said she was afraid he did not know the catechism. I asked him
+Friday night and he said he would learn it on Saturday so that he could
+answer every third question any way. So he did and got along very well.
+I think he deserved a pretty good supper.
+
+
+
+
+1861
+
+_March_ 4, 1861.--President Lincoln was inaugurated to-day.
+
+_March_ 5.--I read the inaugural address aloud to Grandfather this
+evening. He dwelt with such pathos upon the duty that all, both North
+and South, owe to the Union, it does not seem as though there could be
+war!
+
+_April._--We seem to have come to a sad, sad time. The Bible says, "A
+man's worst foes are those of his own household." The whole United
+States has been like one great household for many years. "United we
+stand, divided we fall!" has been our watchword, but some who should
+have been its best friends have proven false and broken the bond. Men
+are taking sides, some for the North, some for the South. Hot words and
+fierce looks have followed, and there has been a storm in the air for a
+long time.
+
+_April_ 15.--The storm has broken upon us. The Confederates fired on
+Fort Sumter, just off the coast of South Carolina, and forced her on
+April 14 to haul down the flag and surrender. President Lincoln has
+issued a call for 75,000 men and many are volunteering to go all around
+us. How strange and awful it seems.
+
+_May,_ 1861.--Many of the young men are going from Canandaigua and all
+the neighboring towns. It seems very patriotic and grand when they are
+singing, "It is sweet, Oh, 'tis sweet, for one's country to die," and we
+hear the martial music and see the flags flying and see the recruiting
+tents on the square and meet men in uniform at every turn and see train
+loads of the boys in blue going to the front, but it will not seem so
+grand if we hear they are dead on the battlefield, far from home. A lot
+of us girls went down to the train and took flowers to the soldiers as
+they were passing through and they cut buttons from their coats and gave
+to us as souvenirs. We have flags on our paper and envelopes, and have
+all our stationery bordered with red, white and blue. We wear little
+flag pins for badges and tie our hair with red, white and blue ribbon
+and have pins and earrings made of the buttons the soldiers gave us. We
+are going to sew for them in our society and get the garments all cut
+from the older ladies' society. They work every day in one of the rooms
+of the court house and cut out garments and make them and scrape lint
+and roll up bandages. They say they will provide us with all the
+garments we will make. We are going to write notes and enclose them in
+the garments to cheer up the soldier boys. It does not seem now as
+though I could give up any one who belonged to me. The girls in our
+society say that if any of the members do send a soldier to the war they
+shall have a flag bed quilt, made by the society, and have the girls'
+names on the stars.
+
+_May_ 20.--I recited "Scott and the Veteran" to-day at school, and Mary
+Field recited, "To Drum Beat and Heart Beat a Soldier Marches By"; Anna
+recited "The Virginia Mother." Every one learns war poems nowadays.
+There was a patriotic rally in Bemis Hall last night and a quartette
+sang, "The Sword of Bunker Hill" and "Dixie" and "John Brown's Body Lies
+a Mouldering in the Grave," and many other patriotic songs. We have one
+West Point cadet, Albert M. Murray, who is in the thick of the fight,
+and Charles S. Coy represents Canandaigua in the navy.
+
+[Illustration: The Ontario Female Seminary]
+
+_June,_ 1861.--At the anniversary exercises, Rev. Samuel M. Hopkins of
+Auburn gave the address. I have graduated from Ontario Female Seminary
+after a five years course and had the honor of receiving a diploma from
+the courtly hands of General John A. Granger. I am going to have it
+framed and handed down to my grandchildren as a memento, not exactly of
+sleepless nights and midnight vigils, but of rising betimes, at what
+Anna calls the crack of dawn. She likes that expression better than
+daybreak. I heard her reciting in the back chamber one morning about 4
+o'clock and listened at the door. She was saying in the most nonchalant
+manner: "Science and literature in England were fast losing all traces
+of originality, invention was discouraged, research unvalued and the
+examination of nature proscribed. It seemed to be generally supposed
+that the treasure accumulated in the preceding ages was quite sufficient
+for all national purposes and that the only duty which authors had to
+perform was to reproduce what had thus been accumulated, adorned with
+all the graces of polished style. Tameness and monotony naturally result
+from a slavish adherence to all arbitrary rules and every branch of
+literature felt this blighting influence. History, perhaps, was in some
+degree an exception, for Hume, Robertson and more especially Gibbon,
+exhibited a spirit of original investigation which found no parallel
+among their contemporaries." I looked in and asked her where her book
+was, and she said she left it down stairs. She has "got it" all right, I
+am sure. We helped decorate the seminary chapel for two days. Our motto
+was, "Still achieving, still pursuing." Miss Guernsey made most of the
+letters and Mr. Chubbuck put them up and he hung all the paintings. It
+was a very warm week. General Granger had to use his palm leaf fan all
+the time, as well as the rest of us. There were six in our class, Mary
+Field, Lucy Petherick, Kate Lilly, Sarah Clay, Abby Scott and myself.
+Abbie Clark would have been in the class, but she went to Pittsfield,
+Mass., instead. General Granger said to each one of us, "It gives me
+great pleasure to present you with this diploma," and when he gave Miss
+Scott hers, as she is from Alabama, he said he wished it might be as a
+flag of truce between the North and the South, and this sentiment was
+loudly cheered. General Granger looked so handsome with his black dress
+suit and ruffled shirt front and all the natural grace which belongs to
+him. The sheepskin has a picture of the Seminary on it and this
+inscription: "The Trustees and Faculty of the Ontario Female Seminary
+hereby certify that __________ has completed the course of study
+prescribed in this Institution, maintained the requisite scholarship and
+commendable deportment and is therefore admitted to the graduating
+honors of this Institution. President of Board, John A. Granger;
+Benjamin F. Richards, Edward G. Tyler, Principals." Mr. Morse wrote
+something for the paper:
+
+"To the Editor of the Repository:
+
+"Dear Sir--June roses, etc., make our loveliest of villages a paradise
+this week. The constellations are all glorious and the stars of earth
+far outshine those of the heavens. The lake shore, 'Lovers' Lane,' 'Glen
+Kitty' and the 'Points' are full of romance and romancers. The yellow
+moon and the blue waters and the dark green shores and the petrified
+Indians, whispering stony words at the foot of Genundewah, and Squaw
+Island sitting on the waves, like an enchanted grove, and 'Whalesback'
+all humped up in the East and 'Devil's Lookout' rising over all, made
+the 'Sleeping Beauty' a silver sea of witchery and love; and in the
+cottages and palaces we ate the ambrosia and drank the nectar of the
+sweet goddesses of this new and golden age.
+
+"I may as well say to you, Mr. Editor, that the Ontario Female Seminary
+closed yesterday and 'Yours truly' was present at the commencement.
+Being a bachelor I shall plead guilty and appeal to the mercy of the
+Court, if indicted for undue prejudice in favor of the charming young
+orators. After the report of the Examining Committee, in which the
+scholarship of the young ladies was not too highly praised, came the
+Latin Salutatory by Miss Clay, a most beautiful and elegant production
+(that sentence, sir, applies to both salutatory and salutatorian). The
+'Shadows We Cast,' by Miss Field, carried us far into the beautiful
+fields of nature and art and we saw the dark, or the brilliant shades,
+which our lives will cast, upon society and history. Then 'Tongues in
+Trees' began to whisper most bewitchingly, and 'Books in the Running
+Brooks' were opened, and 'Sermons in Stones' were preached by Miss
+Richards, and this old bachelor thought if all trees would talk so well,
+and every brook would babble so musically, and each precious stone would
+exhort so brilliantly, as they were made to do by the 'enchantress,'
+angels and dreams would henceforth be of little consequence; and whether
+the orator should be called 'Tree of Beauty,' 'Minnehaha' or the
+'Kohinoor' is a 'vexata questio.'
+
+"In the evening Mr. Hardick, 'our own,' whose hand never touches the
+piano without making delicious music, and Misses Daggett and Wilson,
+also 'our own,' and the musical pupils of the Institution, gave a
+concert. 'The Young Volunteer' was imperatively demanded, and this for
+the third time during the anniversary exercises, and was sung amid
+thunders of applause, 'Star of the South,' Miss Stella Scott, shining
+meanwhile in all her radiant beauty. May her glorious light soon rest on
+a Union that shall never more be broken.--Soberly yours,
+
+ A Very Old Bachelor."
+
+_June,_ 1861.--There was a patriotic rally this afternoon on the campus
+of Canandaigua Academy and we Seminary girls went. They raised a flag on
+the Academy building. General Granger presided, Dr. Coleman led the
+choir and they sang "The Star Spangled Banner." Mr. Noah T. Clarke made
+a stirring speech and Mr. Gideon Granger, James C. Smith and E. M. Morse
+followed. Canandaigua has already raised over $7,000 for the war. Capt.
+Barry drills the Academy boys in military tactics on the campus every
+day. Men are constantly enlisting. Lester P. Thompson, son of "Father
+Thompson," among the others.
+
+A young man asked Anna to take a drive to-day, but Grandmother was not
+willing at first to let her go. She finally gave her consent, after
+Anna's plea that he was so young and his horse was so gentle. Just as
+they were ready to start, I heard Anna run upstairs and I heard him say,
+"What an Anna!" I asked her afterwards what she went for and she said
+she remembered that she had left the soap in the water.
+
+_June._--Dr. Daggett's war sermon from the 146th Psalm was wonderful.
+
+_December_ 1.--Dr. Carr is dead. He had a stroke of paralysis two weeks
+ago and for several days he has been unconscious. The choir of our
+church, of which he was leader for so long, and some of the young people
+came and stood around his bed and sang, "Jesus, Lover of My Soul." They
+did not know whether he was conscious or not, but they thought so
+because the tears ran down his cheeks from his closed eyelids, though he
+could not speak or move. The funeral was from the church and Dr.
+Daggett's text was, "The Beloved Physician."
+
+
+
+
+1862
+
+_January_ 26.--We went to the Baptist Church this evening to hear Rev.
+A. H. Lung preach his last sermon before going into the army.
+
+_February_ 17.--Glorious news from the war to-day. Fort Donelson is
+taken with 1,500 rebels. The right and the North will surely triumph!
+
+_February_ 21.--Our society met at Fanny Palmer's this afternoon. I went
+but did not stay to tea as we were going to Madame Anna Bishop's concert
+in the evening. The concert was very, very good. Her voice has great
+scope and she was dressed in the latest stage costume, but it took so
+much material for her skirt that there was hardly any left for the
+waist.
+
+[Illustration: "Old Friend Burling", Madame Anna Bishop]
+
+_Washington's Birthday._--Patriotic services were held in the
+Congregational Church this morning. Madame Anna Bishop sang, and
+National songs were sung. Hon. James C. Smith read Washington's Farewell
+Address. In the afternoon a party of twenty-two, young and old, took a
+ride in the Seminary boat and went to Mr. Paton's on the lake shore
+road. We carried flags and made it a patriotic occasion. I sat next to
+Spencer F. Lincoln, a young man from Naples who is studying law in Mr.
+Henry Chesebro's office. I never met him before but he told me he had
+made up his mind to go to the war. It is wonderful that young men who
+have brilliant prospects before them at home, will offer themselves upon
+the altar of their country. I have some new patriotic stationery. There
+is a picture of the flag on the envelope and underneath, "If any one
+attempts to haul down the American flag shoot him on the spot.--
+John A. Dix."
+
+_Sunday, February_ 23.--Everybody came out to church this morning,
+expecting to hear Madame Anna Bishop sing. She was not there, and an
+"agent" made a "statement." The audience did not appear particularly
+edified.
+
+_March_ 4.--John B. Gough lectured in Bemis Hall last night and was
+entertained by Governor Clark. I told Grandfather that I had an
+invitation to the lecture and he asked me who from. I told him from Mr.
+Noah T. Clarke's brother. He did not make the least objection and I was
+awfully glad, because he has asked me to the whole course. Wendell
+Phillips and Horace Greeley, E. H. Chapin and John G. Saxe and Bayard
+Taylor are expected. John B. Gough's lecture was fine. He can make an
+audience laugh as much by wagging his coat tails as some men can by
+talking an hour.
+
+_March_ 26.--I have been up at Laura Chapin's from 10 o'clock in the
+morning until 10 at night, finishing Jennie Howell's bed quilt, as she
+is to be married very soon. Almost all of the girls were there. We
+finished it at 8 p. m. and when we took it off the frames we gave three
+cheers. Some of the youth of the village came up to inspect our
+handiwork and see us home. Before we went Julia Phelps sang and played
+on the guitar and Captain Barry also sang and we all sang together, "O!
+Columbia, the gem of the ocean, three cheers for the red, white and
+blue."
+
+_June_ 19.--Our cousin, Ann Eliza Field, was married to-day to George B.
+Bates at her home on Gibson Street. We went and had an elegant time.
+Charlie Wheeler made great fun and threw the final shower of rice as
+they drove away.
+
+_June._--There was great excitement in prayer meeting last night, it
+seemed to Abbie Clark, Mary Field and me on the back seat where we
+always sit. Several people have asked us why we sit away back there by
+old Mrs. Kinney, but we tell them that she sits on the other side of the
+stove from us and we like the seat, because we have occupied it so long.
+I presume we would see less and hear more if we sat in front. To-night
+just after Mr. Walter Hubbell had made one of his most beautiful prayers
+and Mr. Cyrus Dixon was praying, a big June bug came zipping into the
+room and snapped against the wall and the lights and barely escaped
+several bald heads. Anna kept dodging around in a most startling manner
+and I expected every moment to see her walk out and take Emma Wheeler
+with her, for if she is afraid of anything more than dogs it is June
+bugs. At this crisis the bug flew out and a cat stealthily walked in. We
+knew that dear Mrs. Taylor was always unpleasantly affected by the sight
+of cats and we didn't know what would happen if the cat should go near
+her. The cat very innocently ascended the steps to the desk and as Judge
+and Mrs. Taylor always sit on the front seat, she couldn't help
+observing the ambitious animal as it started to assist Dr. Daggett in
+conducting the meeting. The result was that Mrs. Taylor just managed to
+reach the outside door before fainting away. We were glad when the
+benediction was pronounced.
+
+_June._--Anna and I had a serenade last night from the Academy Glee
+Club, I think, as their voices sounded familiar. We were awakened by the
+music, about 11 p. m., quite suddenly and I thought I would step across
+the hall to the front chamber for a match to light the candle. I was
+only half awake, however, and lost my bearings and stepped off the
+stairs and rolled or slid to the bottom. The stairs are winding, so I
+must have performed two or three revolutions before I reached my
+destination. I jumped up and ran back and found Anna sitting up in bed,
+laughing. She asked me where I had been and said if I had only told her
+where I was going she would have gone for me. We decided not to strike a
+light, but just listen to the singing. Anna said she was glad that the
+leading tenor did not know how quickly I "tumbled" to the words of his
+song, "O come my love and be my own, nor longer let me dwell alone," for
+she thought he would be too much flattered. Grandfather came into the
+hall and asked if any bones were broken and if he should send for a
+doctor. We told him we guessed not, we thought we would be all right in
+the morning. He thought it was Anna who fell down stairs, as he is never
+looking for such exploits in me. We girls received some verses from the
+Academy boys, written by Greig Mulligan, under the assumed name of Simon
+Snooks. The subject was, "The Poor Unfortunate Academy Boys." We have
+answered them and now I fear Mrs. Grundy will see them and imagine
+something serious is going on. But she is mistaken and will find, at the
+end of the session, our hearts are still in our own possession.
+
+When we were down at Sucker Brook the other afternoon we were watching
+the water and one of the girls said, "How nice it would be if our lives
+could run along as smoothly as this stream." I said I thought it would
+be too monotonous. Laura Chapin said she supposed I would rather have an
+"eddy" in mine.
+
+We went to the examination at the Academy to-day and to the gymnasium
+exercises afterwards. Mr. Noah T. Clarke's brother leads them and they
+do some great feats with their rings and swings and weights and ladders.
+We girls can do a few in the bowling alley at the Seminary.
+
+_June._--I visited Eureka Lawrence in Syracuse and we attended
+commencement at Hamilton College, Clinton, and saw there, James
+Tunnicliff and Stewart Ellsworth of Penn Yan. I also saw Darius Sackett
+there among the students and also became acquainted with a very
+interesting young man from Syracuse, with the classic name of Horace
+Publius Virgilius Bogue. Both of these young men are studying for the
+ministry. I also saw Henry P. Cook, who used to be one of the Academy
+boys, and Morris Brown, of Penn Yan. They talk of leaving college and
+going to the war and so does Darius Sackett.
+
+_July,_ 1862.--The President has called for 300,000 more brave men to
+fill up the ranks of the fallen. We hear every day of more friends and
+acquaintances who have volunteered to go.
+
+_August_ 20.--The 126th Regiment, just organized, was mustered into
+service at Camp Swift, Geneva. Those that I know who belong to it are
+Colonel E. S. Sherrill, Lieutenant Colonel James M. Bull, Captain
+Charles A. Richardson, Captain Charles M. Wheeler, Captain Ten Eyck
+Munson, Captain Orin G. Herendeen, Surgeon Dr. Charles S. Hoyt, Hospital
+Steward Henry T. Antes, First Lieutenant Charles Gage, Second Lieutenant
+Spencer F. Lincoln, First Sergeant Morris Brown, Corporal Hollister N.
+Grimes, Privates Darius Sackett, Henry Willson, Oliver Castle, William
+Lamport.
+
+Dr. Hoyt wrote home: "God bless the dear ones we leave behind; and while
+you try to perform the duties you owe to each other, we will try to
+perform ours."
+
+We saw by the papers that the volunteers of the regiment before leaving
+camp at Geneva allotted over $15,000 of their monthly pay to their
+families and friends at home. One soldier sent this telegram to his
+wife, as the regiment started for the front: "God bless you. Hail
+Columbia. Kiss the baby. Write soon." A volume in ten words.
+
+_August._--The New York State S. S. convention is convened here and the
+meetings are most interesting. They were held in our church and lasted
+three days. A Mr. Hart, from New York, led the singing and Mr. Ralph
+Wells was Moderator. Mr. Noah T. Clarke was in his element all through
+the meetings. Mr. Pardee gave some fine blackboard exercises. During the
+last afternoon Mr. Tousley was wheeled into the church, in his invalid
+chair, and said a few words, which thrilled every one. So much
+tenderness, mingled with his old time enthusiasm and love for the cause.
+It is the last time probably that his voice will ever be heard in
+public. They closed the grand meeting with the hymn beginning:
+
+ "Blest be the tie that binds
+ Our hearts in Christian love."
+
+In returning thanks to the people of Canandaigua for their generous
+entertainment, Mr. Ralph Wells facetiously said that the cost of the
+convention must mean something to Canandaigua people, for the cook in
+one home was heard to say, "These religiouses do eat awful!"
+
+_September_ 13.--Darius Sackett was wounded by a musket shot in the leg,
+at Maryland Heights, Va., and in consequence is discharged from the
+service.
+
+_September._--Edgar A. Griswold of Naples is recruiting a company here
+for the 148th Regiment, of which he is captain. Hiram P. Brown, Henry S.
+Murray and Charles H. Paddock are officers in the company. Dr. Elnathan
+W. Simmons is surgeon.
+
+_September_ 22.--I read aloud to Grandfather this evening the
+Emancipation Proclamation issued as a war measure by President Lincoln,
+to take effect January 1, liberating over three million slaves. He
+recommends to all thus set free, to labor faithfully for reasonable
+wages and to abstain from all violence, unless in necessary
+self-defense, and he invokes upon this act "the considerate judgment of
+mankind and the gracious favor of Almighty God."
+
+_November_ 21.--This is my twentieth birthday. Anna wanted to write a
+poem for the occasion and this morning she handed me what she called "An
+effort." She said she wrestled with it all night long and could not
+sleep and this was the result:
+
+ "One hundred years from now, Carrie dear,
+ In all probability you'll not be here;
+ But we'll all be in the same boat, too,
+ And there'll be no one left
+ To say boo hoo!"
+
+Grandfather gave me for a present a set of books called "Irving's
+Catechisms on Ancient Greeks and Romans." They are four little books
+bound in leather, which were presented to our mother for a prize. It is
+thus inscribed on the front page, "Miss Elizabeth Beals at a public
+examination of the Female Boarding School in East Bloomfield, October
+15, 1825, was judged to excel the school in Reading. In testimony of
+which she receives this Premium from her affectionate instructress, S.
+Adams."
+
+I cannot imagine Grandmother sending us away to boarding school, but I
+suppose she had so many children then, she could spare one or two as
+well as not. She says they sent Aunt Ann to Miss Willard's school at
+Troy. I received a birthday letter from Mrs. Beaumont to-day. She wants
+to know how everything goes at the Seminary and if Anna still occupies
+the front seat in the school room most of the time. She says she
+supposes she is quite a sedate young lady now but she hopes there is a
+whole lot of the old Anna left. I think there is.
+
+_December._--Hon. William H. Lamport went down to Virginia to see his
+son and found that he had just died in the hospital from measles and
+pneumonia. Their only son, only eighteen years old!
+
+
+
+
+1863
+
+_January._--Grandmother went to Aunt Mary Carr's to tea to-night, very
+much to our surprise, for she seldom goes anywhere. Anna said she was
+going to keep house exactly as Grandmother did, so after supper she took
+a little hot water in a basin on a tray and got the tea-towels and
+washed the silver and best china but she let the ivory handles on the
+knives and forks get wet, so I presume they will all turn black.
+Grandmother never lets her little nice things go out into the kitchen,
+so probably that is the reason that everything is forty years old and
+yet as good as new. She let us have the Young Ladies' Aid Society here
+to supper because I am President. She came into the parlor and looked at
+our basket of work, which the elder ladies cut out for us to make for
+the soldiers. She had the supper table set the whole length of the
+dining room and let us preside at the table. Anna made the girls laugh
+so, they could hardly eat, although they said everything was splendid.
+They said they never ate better biscuit, preserves, or fruit cake and
+the coffee was delicious. After it was over, the "dear little lady" said
+she hoped we had a good time. After the girls were gone Grandmother
+wanted to look over the garments and see how much we had accomplished
+and if we had made them well. Mary Field made a pair of drawers with No.
+90 thread. She said she wanted them to look fine and I am sure they did.
+Most of us wrote notes and put inside the garments for the soldiers in
+the hospitals.
+
+Sarah Gibson Howell has had an answer to her letter. His name is
+Foster--a Major. She expects him to come and see her soon.
+
+All the girls wear newspaper bustles to school now and Anna's rattled
+to-day and Emma Wheeler heard it and said, "What's the news, Anna?" They
+both laughed out loud and found that "the latest news from the front"
+was that Miss Morse kept them both after school and they had to copy
+Dictionary for an hour. War prices are terrible. I paid $3.50 to-day for
+a hoop skirt.
+
+_January_ 13.--P. T. Barnum delivered his lecture on "The Art of Money
+Getting" in Bemis Hall this evening for the benefit of the Ladies' Aid
+Society, which is working for the soldiers. We girls went and enjoyed
+it.
+
+_February._--The members of our society sympathized with General
+McClellan when he was criticised by some and we wrote him the following
+letter:
+
+ "Canandaigua, Feb. 13, 1863.
+
+"Maj. Gen. Geo. McClellan:
+
+"Will you pardon any seeming impropriety in our addressing you, and
+attribute it to the impulsive love and admiration of hearts which see in
+you, the bravest and noblest defender of our Union. We cannot resist the
+impulse to tell you, be our words ever so feeble, how our love and trust
+have followed you from Rich Mountain to Antietam, through all slanderous
+attacks of traitorous politicians and fanatical defamers--how we have
+admired, not less than your calm courage on the battlefield, your lofty
+scorn of those who remained at home in the base endeavor to strip from
+your brow the hard earned laurels placed there by a grateful country: to
+tell further, that in your forced retirement from battlefields of the
+Republic's peril, you have 'but changed your country's arms for
+more,--your country's heart,'--and to assure you that so long as our
+country remains to us a sacred name and our flag a holy emblem, so long
+shall we cherish your memory as the defender and protector of both. We
+are an association whose object it is to aid, in the only way in which
+woman, alas! can aid our brothers in the field. Our sympathies are with
+them in the cause for which they have periled all--our hearts are with
+them in the prayer, that ere long their beloved commander may be
+restored to them, and that once more as of old he may lead them to
+victory in the sacred name of the Union and Constitution.
+
+"With united prayers that the Father of all may have you and yours ever
+in His holy keeping, we remain your devoted partisans."
+
+ Signed by a large number.
+
+The following in reply was addressed to the lady whose name was first
+signed to the above:
+
+ "New York, Feb. 21, 1863.
+
+Madam--I take great pleasure in acknowledging the receipt of the very
+kind letter of the 13th inst., from yourself and your friends. Will you
+do me the favor to say to them how much I thank them for it, and that I
+am at a loss to express my gratitude for the pleasant and cheering terms
+in which it is couched. Such sentiments on the part of those whose
+brothers have served with me in the field are more grateful to me than
+anything else can be. I feel far more than rewarded by them for all I
+have tried to accomplish.--I am, Madam, with the most sincere respect
+and friendship, yours very truly,
+
+ Geo. B. McClellan."
+
+_May._--A number of the teachers and pupils of the Academy have enlisted
+for the war. Among them E. C. Clarke, H. C. Kirk, A. T. Wilder, Norman
+K. Martin, T. C. Parkhurst, Mr. Gates. They have a tent on the square
+and are enlisting men in Canandaigua and vicinity for the 4th N. Y.
+Heavy Artillery. I received a letter from Mr. Noah T. Clarke's mother in
+Naples. She had already sent three sons, Bela, William and Joseph, to
+the war and she is very sad because her youngest has now enlisted. She
+says she feels as did Jacob of old when he said, "I am bereaved of my
+children. Joseph is not and Simeon is not and now you will take Benjamin
+away." I have heard that she is a beautiful singer but she says she
+cannot sing any more until this cruel war is over. I wish that I could
+write something to comfort her but I feel as Mrs. Browning puts it: "If
+you want a song for your Italy free, let none look at me."
+
+Our society met at Fannie Pierce's this afternoon. Her mother is an
+invalid and never gets out at all, but she is very much interested in
+the soldiers and in all young people, and loves to have us come in and
+see her and we love to go. She enters into the plans of all of us young
+girls and has a personal interest in us. We had a very good time
+to-night and Laura Chapin was more full of fun than usual. Once there
+was silence for a minute or two and some one said, "awful pause." Laura
+said, "I guess you would have awful paws if you worked as hard as I do."
+We were talking about how many of us girls would be entitled to flag bed
+quilts, and according to the rules, they said that, up to date, Abbie
+Clark and I were the only ones. The explanation is that Captain George
+N. Williams and Lieutenant E. C. Clarke are enlisted in their country's
+service. Susie Daggett is Secretary and Treasurer of the Society and she
+reported that in one year's time we made in our society 133 pairs of
+drawers, 101 shirts, 4 pairs socks for soldiers, and 54 garments for the
+families of soldiers.
+
+Abbie Clark and I had our ambrotypes taken to-day for two young braves
+who are going to the war. William H. Adams is also commissioned Captain
+and is going to the front.
+
+_July_ 4.--The terrible battle of Gettysburg brings to Canandaigua sad
+news of our soldier boys of the 126th Regiment. Colonel Sherrill was
+instantly killed, also Captains Wheeler and Herendeen, Henry Willson and
+Henry P. Cook. Captain Richardson was wounded.
+
+[Illustration: "Abbie Clark and I had our ambrotypes taken to-day",
+"Mr. Noah T. Clark's Brother and I"]
+
+_July_ 26.--Charlie Wheeler was buried with military honors from the
+Congregational church to-day. Two companies of the 54th New York State
+National Guard attended the funeral, and the church was packed,
+galleries and all. It was the saddest funeral and the only one of a
+soldier that I ever attended. I hope it will be the last. He was killed
+at Gettysburg, July 3, by a sharpshooter's bullet. He was a very bright
+young man, graduate of Yale college and was practising law. He was
+captain of Company K, 126th N. Y. Volunteers. I have copied an extract
+from Mr. Morse's lecture, "You and I": "And who has forgotten that
+gifted youth, who fell on the memorable field of Gettysburg? To win a
+noble name, to save a beloved country, he took his place beneath the
+dear old flag, and while cannon thundered and sabers clashed and the
+stars of the old Union shone above his head he went down in the shock of
+battle and left us desolate, a name to love and a glory to endure. And
+as we solemnly know, as by the old charter of liberty we most sacredly
+swear, he was truly and faithfully and religiously
+
+ Of all our friends the noblest,
+ The choicest and the purest,
+ The nearest and the dearest,
+ In the field at Gettysburg.
+ Of all the heroes bravest,
+ Of soul the brightest, whitest,
+ Of all the warriors greatest,
+ Shot dead at Gettysburg.
+
+ And where the fight was thickest,
+ And where the smoke was blackest,
+ And where the fire was hottest,
+ On the fields of Gettysburg,
+ There flashed his steel the brightest,
+ There blazed his eyes the fiercest,
+ There flowed his blood the reddest
+ On the field of Gettysburg.
+
+ O wailing winds of heaven!
+ O weeping dew of evening!
+ O music of the waters
+ That flow at Gettysburg,
+ Mourn tenderly the hero,
+ The rare and glorious hero,
+ The loved and peerless hero,
+ Who died at Gettysburg.
+
+ His turf shall be the greenest,
+ His roses bloom the sweetest,
+ His willow droop the saddest
+ Of all at Gettysburg.
+ His memory live the freshest,
+ His fame be cherished longest,
+ Of all the holy warriors,
+ Who fell at Gettysburg.
+
+These were patriots, these were our jewels. When shall we see their like
+again? And of every soldier who has fallen in this war his friends may
+write just as lovingly as you and I may do of those to whom I pay my
+feeble tribute."
+
+_August,_ 1863.--The U. S. Sanitary Commission has been organized.
+Canandaigua sent Dr. W. Fitch Cheney to Gettysburg with supplies for the
+sick and wounded and he took seven assistants with him. Home bounty was
+brought to the tents and put into the hands of the wounded soldiers. A
+blessed work.
+
+_August_ 12.--Lucilla Field was married in our church to-day to Rev. S.
+W. Pratt. I always thought she was cut out for a minister's wife. Jennie
+Draper cried herself sick because Lucilla, her Sunday School teacher, is
+going away.
+
+_October_ 8.--News came to-day of the death of Lieutenant Hiram Brown.
+He died of fever at Portsmouth, only little more than a year after he
+went away.
+
+_November_ 1.--The 4th New York Heavy Artillery is stationed at Fort
+Hamilton, N. Y. harbor. Uncle Edward has invited me down to New York to
+spend a month! Very opportune! Grandfather says that I can go and Miss
+Rosewarne is beginning a new dress for me to-day.
+
+_November_ 6.--We were saddened to-day by news of the death of Augustus
+Torrey Wilder in the hospital at Fort Ethan Allen.
+
+_November_ 9.--No. 68 E. 19th Street, New York City. Grandfather and I
+came from Canandaigua yesterday. He is at Gramercy Park Hotel. We were
+met by a military escort of "one" at Albany and consequently came
+through more safely, I suppose. James met us at 42d Street Grand Central
+Station. He lives at Uncle Edward's; attends to all of his legal
+business and is his confidential clerk. I like it very much here. They
+are very stylish and grand but I don't mind that. Aunt Emily is reserved
+and dignified but very kind. People do not pour their tea or coffee into
+their saucers any more to cool it, but drink it from the cup, and you
+must mind and not leave your teaspoon in your cup. I notice everything
+and am very particular. Mr. Morris K. Jesup lives right across the
+street and I see him every day, as he is a friend of Uncle Edward.
+Grandfather has gone back home and left me in charge of friends "a la
+militaire" and others.
+
+_November_ 15.--"We" went out to Fort Hamilton to-day and are going to
+Blackwell's Island to-morrow and to many other places of interest down
+the Bay. Soldiers are everywhere and I feel quite important, walking
+around in company with blue coat and brass buttons--very becoming style
+of dress for men and the military salute at every turn is what one reads
+about.
+
+_Sunday_.--Went to Broadway Tabernacle to church to-day and heard Rev.
+Joseph P. Thompson preach. Abbie Clark is visiting her sister, Mrs. Fred
+Thompson, and sat a few seats ahead of us in church. She turned around
+and saw us. We also saw Henrietta Francis Talcott, who was a "Seminary
+girl." She wants me to come to see her in her New York home.
+
+_November_ 19.--We wish we were at Gettysburg to-day to hear President
+Lincoln's and Edward Everett's addresses at the dedication of the
+National Cemetery. We will read them in to-morrow's papers, but it will
+not be like hearing them.
+
+_Author's Note,_ 1911.--Forty-eight years have elapsed since Lincoln's
+speech was delivered at the dedication of the Soldiers' Cemetery at
+Gettysburg. So eloquent and remarkable was his utterance that I believe
+I am correct in stating that every word spoken has now been translated
+into all known languages and is regarded as one of the World Classics.
+The same may be said of Lincoln's letter to the mother of five sons lost
+in battle. I make no apology for inserting in this place both the speech
+and the letter. Mr. Whitelaw Reid, the American Ambassador to Great
+Britain, in an address on Lincoln delivered at the University of
+Birmingham in December, 1910, remarked in reference to this letter,
+"What classic author in our common English tongue has surpassed that?"
+and next may I ask, "What English or American orator has on a similar
+occasion surpassed this address on the battlefield of Gettysburg?"
+
+"Four score and seven years ago, our fathers brought forth on this
+continent a new nation conceived in liberty and dedicated to the
+proposition that all men are created equal. Now we are engaged in a
+great civil war, testing whether that nation, or any nation so conceived
+and so dedicated, can long endure. We are met on a great battlefield of
+that war. We have come to dedicate a portion of that field as a final
+resting place for those who gave their lives that that nation might
+live. It is altogether fitting and proper that we should do this. But in
+a larger sense we cannot dedicate--we cannot consecrate--we cannot
+hallow this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here
+have consecrated it far above our poor power to add or detract. The
+world will little note, nor long remember, what we say here--but it can
+never forget what they did here. It is for us, the living, rather, to be
+dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here have
+thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to
+the great task remaining before us--that from these honored dead we take
+increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full
+measure of devotion--that we here highly resolve, that these dead shall
+not have died in vain--that this nation under God shall have a new birth
+of freedom--and that government of the people, by the people and for the
+people, shall not perish from the earth."
+
+It was during the dark days of the war that he wrote this simple letter
+of sympathy to a bereaved mother:--
+
+"I have been shown, in the files of the War Department, a statement that
+you are the mother of five sons who have died gloriously on the field of
+battle. I feel how weak and fruitless must be any words of mine which
+should attempt to beguile you from your grief for a loss so overwhelming,
+but I cannot refrain from tendering to you the consolation which may be
+found in the thanks of the Republic they died to save. I pray that our
+Heavenly Father may assuage the anguish of your bereavement, and leave
+you only the cherished memory of the loved and lost, and the solemn
+pride that must be yours, to have laid so costly a sacrifice upon the
+altar of Freedom."
+
+_November_ 21.--Abbie Clark and her cousin Cora came to call and invited
+me and her soldier cousin to come to dinner to-night, at Mrs.
+Thompson's. He will be here this afternoon and I will give him the
+invitation. James is asked for the evening.
+
+_November_ 22.--We had a delightful visit. Mr. Thompson took us up into
+his den and showed us curios from all over the world and as many
+pictures as we would find in an art gallery.
+
+_Friday_.--Last evening Uncle Edward took a party of us, including Abbie
+Clark, to Wallack's Theater to see "Rosedale," which is having a great
+run. I enjoyed it and told James it was the best play I ever "heard." He
+said I must not say that I "heard" a play. I "saw" it. I stand
+corrected.
+
+I told James that I heard of a young girl who went abroad and on her
+return some one asked her if she saw King Lear and she said, no, he was
+sick all the time she was there! I just loved the play last night and
+laughed and cried in turn, it seemed so real. I don't know what
+Grandmother will say, but I wrote her about it and said, "When you are
+with the Romans, you must do as the Romans do." I presume she will say
+"that is not the way you were brought up."
+
+_December_ 7.--The 4th New York Heavy Artillery has orders to move to
+Fort Ethan Allen, near Washington, and I have orders to return to
+Canandaigua. I have enjoyed the five weeks very much and as "the
+soldier" was on parole most of the time I have seen much of interest in
+the city. Uncle Edward says that he has lived here forty years but has
+never visited some of the places that we have seen, so he told me when I
+mentioned climbing to the top of Trinity steeple.
+
+Canandaigua, _December_ 8.--Home again. I had military attendance as far
+as Paterson, N. J., and came the rest of the way with strangers. Not
+caring to talk I liked it just as well. When I said good bye I could not
+help wondering whether it was for years, or forever. This cruel war is
+terrible and precious lives are being sacrificed and hearts broken every
+day. What is to be the result? We can only trust and wait.
+
+_Christmas Eve,_ 1863.--Sarah Gibson Howell was married to Major Foster
+this evening. She invited all the society and many others. It was a
+beautiful wedding and we all enjoyed it. Some time ago I asked her to
+write in my album and she sewed a lock of her black curling hair on the
+page and in the center of it wrote, "Forget not Gippie."
+
+_December_ 31.--Our brother John was married in Boston to-day to Laura
+Arnold, a lovely girl.
+
+
+
+
+1864
+
+_April_ 1.--Grandfather had decided to go to New York to attend the fair
+given by the Sanitary Commission, and he is taking two immense books,
+which are more than one hundred years old, to present to the Commission,
+for the benefit of the war fund.
+
+_April_ 18.--Grandfather returned home to-day, unexpectedly to us. I
+knew he was sick when I met him at the door. He had traveled all night
+alone from New York, although he said that a stranger, a fellow
+passenger, from Ann Arbor, Mich., on the train noticed that he was
+suffering and was very kind to him. He said he fell in his room at
+Gramercy Park Hotel in the night, and his knee was very painful. We sent
+for old Dr. Cheney and he said the hurt was a serious one and needed
+most careful attention. I was invited to a spelling school at Abbie
+Clark's in the evening and Grandmother said that she and Anna would take
+care of Grandfather till I got back, and then I could sit up by him the
+rest of the night. We spelled down and had quite a merry time. Major C.
+S. Aldrich had escaped from prison and was there. He came home with me,
+as my soldier is down in Virginia.
+
+_April_ 19.--Grandfather is much worse. He was delirious all night. We
+have sent for Dr. Rosewarne in counsel and Mrs. Lightfoote has come to
+stay with us all the time and we have sent for Aunt Glorianna.
+
+_April_ 20.--Grandfather dictated a letter to-night to a friend of his
+in New York. After I had finished he asked me if I had mended his
+gloves. I said no, but I would have them ready when he wanted them. Dear
+Grandfather! he looks so sick I fear he will never wear his gloves
+again.
+
+_May_ 16.--I have not written in my diary for a month and it has been
+the saddest month of my life. Dear, dear Grandfather is dead. He was
+buried May 2, just two weeks from the day that he returned from New
+York. We did everything for him that could be done, but at the end of
+the first week the doctors saw that he was beyond all human aid. Uncle
+Thomas told the doctors that they must tell him. He was much surprised
+but received the verdict calmly. He said "he had no notes out and
+perhaps it was the best time to go." He had taught us how to live and he
+seemed determined to show us how a Christian should die. He said he
+wanted "Grandmother and the children to come to him and have all the
+rest remain outside." When we came into the room he said to Grandmother,
+"Do you know what the doctors say?" She bowed her head, and then he
+motioned for her to come on one side and Anna and me on the other and
+kneel by his bedside. He placed a hand upon us and upon her and said to
+her, "All the rest seem very much excited, but you and I must be
+composed." Then he asked us to say the 23d Psalm, "The Lord is my
+Shepherd," and then all of us said the Lord's Prayer together after
+Grandmother had offered a little prayer for grace and strength in this
+trying hour. Then he said, "Grandmother, you must take care of the
+girls, and, girls, you must take care of Grandmother." We felt as though
+our hearts would break and were sure we never could be happy again.
+During the next few days he often spoke of dying and of what we must do
+when he was gone. Once when I was sitting by him he looked up and smiled
+and said, "You will lose all your roses watching over me." A good many
+business men came in to see him to receive his parting blessing. The two
+McKechnie brothers, Alexander and James, came in together on their way
+home from church the Sunday before he died. Dr. Daggett came very often.
+Mr. Alexander Howell and Mrs. Worthington came, too.
+
+He lived until Saturday, the 30th, and in the morning he said, "Open the
+door wide." We did so and he said, "Let the King of Glory enter in."
+Very soon after he said, "I am going home to Paradise," and then sank
+into that sleep which on this earth knows no waking. I sat by the window
+near his bed and watched the rain beat into the grass and saw the
+peonies and crocuses and daffodils beginning to come up out of the
+ground and I thought to myself, I shall never see the flowers come up
+again without thinking of these sad, sad days. He was buried Monday
+afternoon, May 2, from the Congregational church, and Dr. Daggett
+preached a sermon from a favorite text of Grandfather's, "I shall die in
+my nest." James and John came and as we stood with dear Grandmother and
+all the others around his open grave and heard Dr. Daggett say in his
+beautiful sympathetic voice, "Earth to earth, ashes to ashes, dust to
+dust," we felt that we were losing our best friend; but he told us that
+we must live for Grandmother and so we will.
+
+The next Sabbath, Anna and I were called out of church by a messenger,
+who said that Grandmother was taken suddenly ill and was dying. When we
+reached the house attendants were all about her administering
+restoratives, but told us she was rapidly sinking. I asked if I might
+speak to her and was reluctantly permitted, as they thought best not to
+disturb her. I sat down by her and with tearful voice said,
+"Grandmother, don't you know that Grandfather said we were to care for
+you and you were to care for us and if you die we cannot do as
+Grandfather said?" She opened her eyes and looked at me and said
+quietly, "Dry your eyes, child, I shall not die to-day or to-morrow."
+She seems well now.
+
+Inscribed in my diary:
+
+ "They are passing away, they are passing away,
+ Not only the young, but the aged and gray.
+ Their places are vacant, no longer we see
+ The armchair in waiting, as it used to be.
+ The hat and the coat are removed from the nail,
+ Where for years they have hung, every day without fail.
+ The shoes and the slippers are needed no more,
+ Nor kept ready waiting, as they were of yore,
+ The desk which he stood at in manhood's fresh prime,
+ Which now shows the marks of the finger of time,
+ The bright well worn keys, which were childhood's delight
+ Unlocking the treasures kept hidden from sight.
+ These now are mementoes of him who has passed,
+ Who stands there no longer, as we saw him last.
+ Other hands turn the keys, as he did, before,
+ Other eyes will his secrets, if any, explore.
+ The step once elastic, but feeble of late,
+ No longer we watch for through doorway or gate,
+ Though often we turn, half expecting to see,
+ The loved one approaching, but ah! 'tis not he.
+ We miss him at all times, at morn when we meet,
+ For the social repast, there is one vacant seat.
+ At noon, and at night, at the hour of prayer,
+ Our hearts fill with sadness, one voice is not there.
+ Yet not without hope his departure we mourn,
+ In faith and in trust, all our sorrows are borne,
+ Borne upward to Him who in kindness and love
+ Sends earthly afflictions to draw us above.
+ Thus hoping and trusting, rejoicing, we'll go,
+ Both upward and onward through weal and through woe
+ 'Till all of life's changes and conflicts are past
+ Beyond the dark river, to meet him at last."
+
+ In Memoriam
+
+Thomas Beals died in Canandaigua, N. Y., on Saturday, April 30th, 1864,
+in the 81st year of his age. Mr. Beals was born in Boston, Mass.,
+November 13, 1783.
+
+He came to this village in October, 1803, only 14 years after the first
+settlement of the place. He was married in March, 1805, to Abigail
+Field, sister of the first pastor of the Congregational church here. Her
+family, in several of its branches, have since been distinguished in the
+ministry, the legal profession, and in commercial enterprise.
+
+Living to a good old age, and well known as one of our most wealthy and
+respected citizens, Mr. Beals is another added to the many examples of
+successful men who, by energy and industry, have made their own fortune.
+
+On coming to this village, he was teacher in the Academy for a time, and
+afterward entered into mercantile business, in which he had his share of
+vicissitude. When the Ontario Savings Bank was established, 1832, he
+became the Treasurer, and managed it successfully till the institution
+ceased, in 1835, with his withdrawal. In the meantime he conducted,
+also, a banking business of his own, and this was continued until a week
+previous to his death, when he formally withdrew, though for the last
+five years devolving its more active duties upon his son.
+
+As a banker, his sagacity and fidelity won for him the confidence and
+respect of all classes of persons in this community. The business
+portion of our village is very much indebted to his enterprise for the
+eligible structures he built that have more than made good the losses
+sustained by fires. More than fifty years ago he was actively concerned
+in the building of the Congregational church, and also superintended the
+erection of the county jail and almshouse; for many years a trustee of
+Canandaigua Academy, and trustee and treasurer of the Congregational
+church. At the time of his death he and his wife, who survives him, were
+the oldest members of the church, having united with it in 1807, only
+eight years after its organization. Until hindered by the infirmities of
+age, he was a constant attendant of its services and ever devoutly
+maintained the worship of God in his family. No person has been more
+generally known among all classes of our citizens. Whether at home or
+abroad he could not fail to be remarked for his gravity and dignity. His
+character was original, independent, and his manners remarkable for a
+dignified courtesy. Our citizens were familiar with his brief, emphatic
+answers with the wave of his hand. He was fond of books, a great reader,
+collected a valuable number of volumes, and was happy in the use of
+language both in writing and conversation. In many unusual ways he often
+showed his kind consideration for the poor and afflicted, and many
+persons hearing of his death gratefully recollect instances, not known
+to others, of his seasonable kindness to them in trouble. In his
+charities he often studied concealment as carefully as others court
+display. His marked individuality of character and deportment, together
+with his shrewd discernment and active habits, could not fail to leave a
+distinct impression on the minds of all.
+
+For more than sixty years he transacted business in one place here, and
+his long life thus teaches more than one generation the value of
+sobriety, diligence, fidelity and usefulness.
+
+In his last illness he remarked to a friend that he always loved
+Canandaigua; had done several things for its prosperity, and had
+intended to do more. He had known his measure of affliction; only four
+of eleven children survive him, but children and children's children
+ministered to the comfort of his last days. Notwithstanding his years
+and infirmities, he was able to visit New York, returning April 18th
+quite unwell, but not immediately expecting a fatal termination. As the
+final event drew near, he seemed happily prepared to meet it. He
+conversed freely with his friends and neighbors in a softened and
+benignant spirit, at once receiving and imparting benedictions. His end
+seemed to realize his favorite citation from Job: "I shall die in my
+nest."
+
+His funeral was attended on Monday in the Congregational church by a
+large assembly, Dr. Daggett, the pastor, officiating on the
+occasion.--Written by Dr. O. E. Daggett in 1864.
+
+_May._--The 4th New York Heavy Artillery is having hard times in the
+Virginia mud and rain. They are near Culpeper. It is such a change from
+their snug winter quarters at Fort Ethan Allen. There are 2,800 men in
+the Regiment and 1,200 are sick. Dr. Charles S. Hoyt of the 126th, which
+is camping close by, has come to the help of these new recruits so
+kindly as to win every heart, quite in contrast to the heartlessness of
+their own surgeons. They will always love him for this. It is just like
+him.
+
+_June_ 22.--Captain Morris Brown, of Penn Yan, was killed to-day by a
+musket shot in the head, while commanding the regiment before
+Petersburg.
+
+_June_ 23, 1864.--Anna graduated last Thursday, June 16, and was
+valedictorian of her class. There were eleven girls in the class, Ritie
+Tyler, Mary Antes, Jennie Robinson, Hattie Paddock, Lillie Masters,
+Abbie Hills, Miss McNair, Miss Pardee and Miss Palmer, Miss Jasper and
+Anna. The subject of her essay was "The Last Time." I will copy an
+account of the exercises as they appeared in this week's village paper.
+Every one thinks it was written by Mr. E. M. Morse.
+
+A WORD FROM AN OLD MAN
+
+"Mr. Editor:
+
+"Less than a century ago I was traveling through this enchanted region
+and accidentally heard that it was commencement week at the seminary. I
+went. My venerable appearance seemed to command respect and I received
+many attentions. I presented my snowy head and patriarchal beard at the
+doors of the sacred institution and was admitted. I heard all the
+classes, primary, secondary, tertiary, et cetera. All went merry as a
+marriage bell. Thursday was the great day. I made vast preparation. I
+rose early, dressed with much care. I affectionately pressed the hands
+of my two landlords and left. When I arrived at the seminary I saw at a
+glance that it was a place where true merit was appreciated. I was
+invited to a seat among the dignitaries, but declined. I am a modest
+man, I always was. I recognized the benign Principals of the school. You
+can find no better principles in the states than in Ontario Female
+Seminary. After the report of the committee a very lovely young lady
+arose and saluted us in Latin. I looked very wise, I always do. So did
+everybody. We all understood it. As she proceeded, I thought the grand
+old Roman tongue had never sounded so musically and when she pronounced
+the decree, 'Richmond delenda est,' we all hoped it might be prophetic.
+Then followed the essays of the other young ladies and then every one
+waited anxiously for 'The Last Time.' At last it came. The story was
+beautifully told, the adieux were tenderly spoken. We saw the withered
+flowers of early years scattered along the academic ways, and the golden
+fruit of scholarly culture ripening in the gardens of the future.
+Enchanted by the sorrowful eloquence, bewildered by the melancholy
+brilliancy, I sent a rosebud to the charming valedictorian and wandered
+out into the grounds. I went to the concert in the evening and was
+pleased and delighted. So was everybody. I shall return next year unless
+the gout carries me off. I hope I shall hear just such beautiful music,
+see just such beautiful faces and dine at the same excellent hotel.
+
+ Senex."
+
+Anna closed her valedictory with these words:
+
+"May we meet at one gate when all's over;
+ The ways they are many and wide,
+And seldom are two ways the same;
+ Side by side may we stand
+At the same little door when all's done.
+ The ways they are many,
+ The end it is one."
+
+_July_ 10.--We have had word of the death of Spencer F. Lincoln. One
+more brave soldier sacrificed.
+
+_August._--The New York State S. S. Convention was held in Buffalo and
+among others Fanny Gaylord, Mary Field and myself attended. We had a
+fine time and were entertained at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Sexton. Her
+mother is living with her, a dear old lady who was Judge Atwater's
+daughter and used to go to school to Grandfather Beals. We went with
+other delegates on an excursion to Niagara Falls and went into the
+express office at the R. R. station to see Grant Schley, who is express
+agent there. He said it seemed good to see so many home faces.
+
+_September_ 1.--My war letters come from Georgetown Hospital now. Mr.
+Noah T. Clarke is very anxious and sends telegrams to Andrew Chesebro
+every day to go and see his brother.
+
+_September_ 30.--To-day the "Benjamin" of the family reached home under
+the care of Dr. J. Byron Hayes, who was sent to Washington after him. I
+went over to Mr. Noah T. Clarke's to see him and found him just a shadow
+of his former self. However, "hope springs eternal in the human breast"
+and he says he knows he will soon be well again. This is his thirtieth
+birthday and it is glorious that he can spend it at home.
+
+_October_ 1.--Mr. Noah T. Clarke accompanied his brother to-day to the
+old home in Naples and found two other soldier brothers, William and
+Joseph, had just arrived on leave of absence from the army so the
+mother's heart sang "Praise God from whom all blessings flow." The
+fourth brother has also returned to his home in Illinois, disabled.
+
+_November._--They are holding Union Revival Services in town now. One
+evangelist from out of town said he would call personally at the homes
+and ask if all were Christians. Anna told Grandmother if he came here
+she should tell him about her. Grandmother said we must each give an
+account for ourselves. Anna said she should tell him about her little
+Grandmother anyway. We saw him coming up the walk about 11 a.m. and Anna
+went to the door and asked him in. They sat down in the parlor and he
+remarked about the pleasant weather and Canandaigua such a beautiful
+town and the people so cultured. She said yes, she found the town every
+way desirable and the people pleasant, though she had heard it remarked
+that strangers found it hard to get acquainted and that you had to have
+a residence above the R. R. track and give a satisfactory answer as to
+who your Grandfather was, before admittance was granted to the best
+society. He said he had been kindly received everywhere. She said
+"everybody likes ministers." (He was quite handsome and young.) He asked
+her how long she had lived here and she told him nearly all of her brief
+existence! She said if he had asked her how old she was she would have
+told him she was so young that Will Adams last May was appointed her
+guardian. He asked how many there were in the family and she said her
+Grandmother, her sister and herself. He said, "They are Christians, I
+suppose." "Yes," she said, "my sister is a S. S. teacher and my
+Grandmother was born a Christian, about 80 years ago." "Indeed," he
+said. "I would like to see her." Anna said she would have to be excused
+as she seldom saw company. When he arose to go he said, "My dear young
+lady, I trust that you are a Christian." "Mercy yes," she said, "years
+ago." He said he was very glad and hoped she would let her light shine.
+She said that was what she was always doing--that the other night at a
+revival meeting she sang every verse of every hymn and came home feeling
+as though she had herself personally rescued by hand at least fifty
+"from sin and the grave." He smiled approvingly and bade her good bye.
+She told Grandmother she presumed he would say "he had not found so
+great faith, no not in Israel."
+
+We have Teachers' meetings now and Mrs. George Wilson leads and
+instructs us on the Sunday School lesson for the following Sunday. We
+met at Mrs. Worthington's this evening. I think Mrs. Wilson knows
+Barnes' notes, Cruden's Concordance, the Westminster Catechism and the
+Bible from beginning to end.
+
+
+
+
+1865
+
+_March_ 5.--I have just read President Lincoln's second inaugural
+address. It only takes five minutes to read it but, oh, how much it
+contains.
+
+_March_ 20.--Hardly a day passes that we do not hear news of Union
+victories. Every one predicts that the war is nearly at an end.
+
+_March_ 29.--An officer arrived here from the front yesterday and he
+said that, on Saturday morning, shortly after the battle commenced which
+resulted so gloriously for the Union in front of Petersburg, President
+Lincoln, accompanied by General Grant and staff, started for the
+battlefield, and reached there in time to witness the close of the
+contest and the bringing in of the prisoners. His presence was
+immediately recognized and created the most intense enthusiasm. He
+afterwards rode over the battlefield, listened to the report of General
+Parke to General Grant, and added his thanks for the great service
+rendered in checking the onslaught of the rebels and in capturing so
+many of their number. I read this morning the order of Secretary Stanton
+for the flag raising on Fort Sumter. It reads thus: "War department,
+Adjutant General's office, Washington, March 27th, 1865, General Orders
+No. 50. Ordered, first: That at the hour of noon, on the 14th day of
+April, 1865, Brevet Major General Anderson will raise and plant upon the
+ruins of Fort Sumter, in Charleston Harbor, the same U. S. Flag which
+floated over the battlements of this fort during the rebel assault, and
+which was lowered and saluted by him and the small force of his command
+when the works were evacuated on the 14th day of April, 1861. Second,
+That the flag, when raised be saluted by 100 guns from Fort Sumter and
+by a national salute from every fort and rebel battery that fired upon
+Fort Sumter. Third, That suitable ceremonies be had upon the occasion,
+under the direction of Major-General William T. Sherman, whose military
+operations compelled the rebels to evacuate Charleston, or, in his
+absence, under the charge of Major-General Q. A. Gillmore, commanding
+the department. Among the ceremonies will be the delivery of a public
+address by the Rev. Henry Ward Beecher. Fourth, That the naval forces at
+Charleston and their Commander on that station be invited to participate
+in the ceremonies of the occasion. By order of the President of the
+United States. E. M. Stanton, Secretary of War."
+
+_April,_ 1865.--What a month this has been. On the 6th of April Governor
+Fenton issued this proclamation: "Richmond has fallen. The wicked men
+who governed the so-called Confederate States have fled their capital,
+shorn of their power and influence. The rebel armies have been defeated,
+broken and scattered. Victory everywhere attends our banners and our
+armies, and we are rapidly moving to the closing scenes of the war.
+Through the self-sacrifice and heroic devotion of our soldiers, the life
+of the republic has been saved and the American Union preserved. I,
+Reuben E. Fenton, Governor of the State of New York, do designate
+Friday, the 14th of April, the day appointed for the ceremony of raising
+the United States flag on Fort Sumter, as a day of Thanksgiving, prayer
+and praise to Almighty God, for the signal blessings we have received at
+His hands."
+
+_Saturday, April_ 8.--The cannon has fired a salute of thirty-six guns
+to celebrate the fall of Richmond. This evening the streets were
+thronged with men, women and children all acting crazy as if they had
+not the remotest idea where they were or what they were doing. Atwater
+block was beautifully lighted and the band was playing in front of it.
+On the square they fired guns, and bonfires were lighted in the streets.
+Gov. Clark's house was lighted from the very garret and they had a
+transparency in front, with "Richmond" on it, which Fred Thompson made.
+We didn't even light "our other candle," for Grandmother said she
+preferred to keep Saturday night and pity and pray for the poor
+suffering, wounded soldiers, who are so apt to be forgotten in the hour
+of victory.
+
+_Sunday Evening, April_ 9.--There were great crowds at church this
+morning. Dr. Daggett's text was from Prov. 18: 10: "The name of the Lord
+is a strong tower; the righteous runneth into it, and is safe." It was a
+very fine sermon. They sang hymns relating to our country and Dr.
+Daggett's prayers were full of thanksgiving. Mr. Noah T. Clarke had the
+chapel decorated with flags and opened the Sunday School by singing,
+"Marching On," "My Country, 'tis of Thee," "The Star Spangled Banner,"
+"Glory, Hallelujah," etc. Hon. Wm. H. Lamport talked very pleasantly and
+paid a very touching tribute to the memory of the boys, who had gone out
+to defend their country, who would never come "marching home again." He
+lost his only son, 18 years old (in the 126th), about two years ago. I
+sat near Mary and Emma Wheeler and felt so sorry for them. They could
+not sing.
+
+_Monday Morning, April_ 10.--"Whether I am in the body, or out of the
+body, I know not, but one thing I know," Lee has surrendered! and all
+the people seem crazy in consequence. The bells are ringing, boys and
+girls, men and women are running through the streets wild with
+excitement; the flags are all flying, one from the top of our church,
+and such a "hurrah boys" generally, I never dreamed of. We were quietly
+eating our breakfast this morning about 7 o'clock, when our church bell
+commenced to ring, then the Methodist bell, and now all the bells in
+town are ringing. Mr. Noah T. Clarke ran by, all excitement, and I don't
+believe he knows where he is. No school to-day. I saw Capt. Aldrich
+passing, so I rushed to the window and he waved his hat. I raised the
+window and asked him what was the matter? He came to the front door
+where I met him and he almost shook my hand off and said, "The war is
+over. We have Lee's surrender, with his own name signed." I am going
+down town now, to see for myself, what is going on. Later--I have
+returned and I never saw such performances in my life. Every man has a
+bell or a horn, and every girl a flag and a little bell, and every one
+is tied with red, white and blue ribbons. I am going down town again
+now, with my flag in one hand and bell in the other and make all the
+noise I can. Mr. Noah T. Clarke and other leading citizens are riding
+around on a dray cart with great bells in their hands ringing them as
+hard as they can. Dr. Cook beat upon an old gong. The latest musical
+instrument invented is called the "Jerusalem fiddle." Some boys put a
+dry goods box upon a cart, put some rosin on the edge of the box and
+pulled a piece of timber back and forth across it, making most unearthly
+sounds. They drove through all the streets, Ed Lampman riding on the
+horse and driving it.
+
+_Monday evening, April_ 10.--I have been out walking for the last hour
+and a half, looking at the brilliant illuminations, transparencies and
+everything else and I don't believe I was ever so tired in my life. The
+bells have not stopped ringing more than five minutes all day and every
+one is glad to see Canandaigua startled out of its propriety for once.
+Every yard of red, white and blue ribbon in the stores has been sold,
+also every candle and every flag. One society worked hard all the
+afternoon making transparencies and then there were no candles to put in
+to light them, but they will be ready for the next celebration when
+peace is proclaimed. The Court House, Atwater Block, and hotel have
+about two dozen candles in each window throughout, besides flags and
+mottoes of every description. It is certainly the best impromptu display
+ever gotten up in this town. "Victory is Grant-ed," is in large red,
+white and blue letters in front of Atwater Block. The speeches on the
+square this morning were all very good. Dr. Daggett commenced with
+prayer, and such a prayer, I wish all could have heard it. Hon. Francis
+Granger, E. G. Lapham, Judge Smith, Alexander Howell, Noah T. Clarke and
+others made speeches and we sang "Old Hundred" in conclusion, and Rev.
+Dr. Hibbard dismissed us with the benediction. I shook hands with Mr.
+Noah T. Clarke, but he told me to be careful and not hurt him, for he
+blistered his hands to-day ringing that bell. He says he is going to
+keep the bell for his grandchildren. Between the speeches on the square
+this morning a song was called for and Gus Coleman mounted the steps and
+started "John Brown" and all the assembly joined in the chorus, "Glory,
+Hallelujah." This has been a never to be forgotten day.
+
+_April_ 15.--The news came this morning that our dear president, Abraham
+Lincoln, was assassinated yesterday, on the day appointed for
+thanksgiving for Union victories. I have felt sick over it all day and
+so has every one that I have seen. All seem to feel as though they had
+lost a personal friend, and tears flow plenteously. How soon has sorrow
+followed upon the heels of joy! One week ago to-night we were
+celebrating our victories with loud acclamations of mirth and good
+cheer. Now every one is silent and sad and the earth and heavens seem
+clothed in sack-cloth. The bells have been tolling this afternoon. The
+flags are all at half mast, draped with mourning, and on every store and
+dwelling-house some sign of the nation's loss is visible. Just after
+breakfast this morning, I looked out of the window and saw a group of
+men listening to the reading of a morning paper, and I feared from their
+silent, motionless interest that something dreadful had happened, but I
+was not prepared to hear of the cowardly murder of our President. And
+William H. Seward, too, I suppose cannot survive his wounds. Oh, how
+horrible it is! I went down town shortly after I heard the news, and it
+was wonderful to see the effect of the intelligence upon everybody,
+small or great, rich or poor. Every one was talking low, with sad and
+anxious looks. But we know that God still reigns and will do what is
+best for us all. Perhaps we're "putting our trust too much in princes,"
+forgetting the Great Ruler, who alone can create or destroy, and
+therefore He has taken from us the arm of flesh that we may lean more
+confidingly and entirely upon Him. I trust that the men who committed
+these foul deeds will soon be brought to justice.
+
+_Sunday, Easter Day, April_ 16.--I went to church this morning. The
+pulpit and choir-loft were covered with flags festooned with crape.
+Although a very disagreeable day, the house was well filled. The first
+hymn sung was "Oh God our help in ages past, our hope for years to
+come." Dr. Daggett's prayer, I can never forget, he alluded so
+beautifully to the nation's loss, and prayed so fervently that the God
+of our fathers might still be our God, through every calamity or
+affliction, however severe or mysterious. All seemed as deeply affected
+as though each one had been suddenly bereft of his best friend. The hymn
+sung after the prayer, commenced with "Yes, the Redeemer rose." Dr.
+Daggett said that he had intended to preach a sermon upon the
+resurrection. He read the psalm beginning, "Lord, Thou hast been our
+dwelling-place in all generations." His text was "That our faith and
+hope might be in God." He commenced by saying, "I feel as you feel this
+morning: our sad hearts have all throbbed in unison since yesterday
+morning when the telegram announced to us Abraham Lincoln is shot." He
+said the last week would never be forgotten, for never had any of us
+seen one come in with so much joy, that went out with so much sorrow.
+His whole sermon related to the President's life and death, and, in
+conclusion, he exhorted us not to be despondent, for he was confident
+that the ship of state would not go down, though the helmsman had
+suddenly been taken away while the promised land was almost in view. He
+prayed for our new President, that he might be filled with grace and
+power from on High, to perform his high and holy trust. On Thursday we
+are to have a union meeting in our church, but it will not be the day of
+general rejoicing and thanksgiving we expected. All noisy demonstrations
+will be omitted. In Sunday school the desk was draped with mourning, and
+the flag at half-mast was also festooned with crape. Mr. Noah T. Clarke
+opened the exercises with the hymn "He leadeth me," followed by "Though
+the days are dark with sorrow," "We know not what's before us," "My days
+are gliding swiftly by." Then, Mr. Clarke said that we always meant to
+sing "America," after every victory, and last Monday he was wondering if
+we would not have to sing it twice to-day, or add another verse, but our
+feelings have changed since then. Nevertheless he thought we had better
+sing "America," for we certainly ought to love our country more than
+ever, now that another, and such another, martyr, had given up his life
+for it. So we sang it. Then he talked to the children and said that last
+Friday was supposed to be the anniversary of the day upon which our Lord
+was crucified, and though, at the time the dreadful deed was committed,
+every one felt the day to be the darkest one the earth ever knew; yet
+since then, the day has been called "Good Friday," for it was the death
+of Christ which gave life everlasting to all the people. So he thought
+that life would soon come out of darkness, which now overshadows us all,
+and that the death of Abraham Lincoln might yet prove the nation's life
+in God's own most mysterious way.
+
+_Wednesday evening, April_ 19, 1865.--This being the day set for the
+funeral of Abraham Lincoln at Washington, it was decided to hold the
+service to-day, instead of Thursday, as previously announced in the
+Congregational church. All places of business were closed and the bells
+of the village churches tolled from half past ten till eleven o'clock.
+It is the fourth anniversary of the first bloodshed of the war at
+Baltimore. It was said to-day, that while the services were being held
+in the White House and Lincoln's body lay in state under the dome of the
+capitol, that more than twenty-five millions of people all over the
+civilized world were gathered in their churches weeping over the death
+of the martyred President. We met at our church at half after ten
+o'clock this morning. The bells tolled until eleven o'clock, when the
+services commenced. The church was beautifully decorated with flags and
+black and white cloth, wreaths, mottoes and flowers, the galleries and
+all. The whole effect was fine. There was a shield beneath the arch of
+the pulpit with this text upon it: "The memory of the just is blessed."
+It was beautiful. Under the choir-loft the picture of Abraham Lincoln
+hung amid the flags and drapery. The motto, beneath the gallery, was
+this text: "Know ye that the Lord He is God." The four pastors of the
+place walked in together and took seats upon the platform, which was
+constructed for the occasion. The choir chanted "Lord, Thou hast been
+our dwelling-place in all generations," and then the Episcopal rector,
+Rev. Mr. Leffingwell, read from the psalter, and Rev. Dr. Daggett
+followed with prayer. Judge Taylor was then called upon for a short
+address, and he spoke well, as he always does. The choir sang "God is
+our refuge and our strength."
+
+_Thursday, April_ 20.--The papers are full of the account of the funeral
+obsequies of President Lincoln. We take Harper's Weekly and every event
+is pictured so vividly it seems as though we were eye witnesses of it
+all. The picture of "Lincoln at home" is beautiful. What a dear, kind
+man he was. It is a comfort to know that the assassination was not the
+outcome of an organized plot of Southern leaders, but rather a
+conspiracy of a few fanatics, who undertook in this way to avenge the
+defeat of their cause. It is rumored that one of the conspirators has
+been located.
+
+_April_ 24.--Fannie Gaylord and Kate Lapham have returned from their
+eastern trip and told us of attending the President's funeral in Albany,
+and I had a letter from Bessie Seymour, who is in New York, saying that
+she walked in the procession until half past two in the morning, in
+order to see his face. They say that they never saw him in life, but in
+death he looked just as all the pictures represent him. We all wear
+Lincoln badges now, with pin attached. They are pictures of Lincoln upon
+a tiny flag, bordered with crape. Susie Daggett has just made herself a
+flag, six feet by four. It was a lot of work. Mrs. Noah T. Clarke gave
+one to her husband upon his birthday, April 8. I think everybody ought
+to own a flag.
+
+_April_ 26.--Now we have the news that J. Wilkes Booth, who shot the
+President and who has been concealing himself in Virginia, has been
+caught, and refusing to surrender was shot dead. It has taken just
+twelve days to bring him to retribution. I am glad that he is dead if he
+could not be taken alive, but it seems as though shooting was too good
+for him. However, we may as well take this as really God's way, as the
+death of the President, for if he had been taken alive, the country
+would have been so furious to get at him and tear him to pieces the
+turmoil would have been great and desperate. It may be the best way to
+dispose of him. Of course, it is best, or it would not be so. Mr. Morse
+called this evening and he thinks Booth was shot by a lot of cowards.
+The flags have been flying all day, since the news came, but all,
+excepting Albert Granger, seem sorry that he was not disabled instead of
+being shot dead. Albert seems able to look into the "beyond" and also to
+locate departed spirits. His "latest" is that he is so glad that Booth
+got to h--l before Abraham Lincoln got to Springfield.
+
+Mr. Fred Thompson went down to New York last Saturday and while stopping
+a few minutes at St. Johnsville, he heard a man crowing over the death
+of the President. Mr. Thompson marched up to him, collared him and
+landed him nicely in the gutter. The bystanders were delighted and
+carried the champion to a platform and called for a speech, which was
+given. Quite a little episode. Every one who hears the story, says:
+"Three cheers for F. F. Thompson."
+
+The other afternoon at our society Kate Lapham wanted to divert our
+minds from gossip I think, and so started a discussion upon the
+respective characters of Washington and Napoleon. It was just after
+supper and Laura Chapin was about resuming her sewing and she exclaimed,
+"Speaking of Washington, makes me think that I ought to wash my hands,"
+so she left the room for that purpose.
+
+_May_ 7.--Anna and I wore our new poke bonnets to church this morning
+and thought we looked quite "scrumptious," but Grandmother said after we
+got home, if she had realized how unbecoming they were to us and to the
+house of the Lord, she could not have countenanced them enough to have
+sat in the same pew. However, she tried to agree with Dr. Daggett in his
+text, "It is good for us to be here." It was the first time in a month
+that he had not preached about the affairs of the Nation.
+
+In the afternoon the Sacrament was administered and Rev. A. D. Eddy, D.
+D., who was pastor from 1823 to 1835, was present and officiated. Deacon
+Castle and Deacon Hayes passed the communion. Dr. Eddy concluded the
+services with some personal memories. He said that forty-two years ago
+last November, he presided upon a similar occasion for the first time in
+his life and it was in this very church. He is now the only surviving
+male member who was present that day, but there are six women living,
+and Grandmother is one of the six.
+
+The Monthly Concert of Prayer for Missions was held in the chapel in the
+evening. Dr. Daggett told us that the collection taken for missions
+during the past year amounted to $500. He commended us and said it was
+the largest sum raised in one year for this purpose in the twenty years
+of his pastorate. Dr. Eddy then said that in contrast he would tell us
+that the collection for missions the first year he was here, amounted to
+$5, and that he was advised to touch very lightly upon the subject in
+his appeals as it was not a popular theme with the majority of the
+people. One member, he said, annexed three ciphers to his name when
+asked to subscribe to a missionary document which was circulated, and
+another man replied thus to an appeal for aid in evangelizing a portion
+of Asia: "If you want to send a missionary to Jerusalem, Yates county, I
+will contribute, but not a cent to go to the other side of the world."
+
+Rev. C. H. A. Buckley was present also and gave an interesting talk. By
+way of illustration, he said he knew a small boy who had been earning
+twenty-five cents a week for the heathen by giving up eating butter. The
+other day he seemed to think that his generosity, as well as his
+self-denial, had reached the utmost limit and exclaimed as he sat at the
+table, "I think the heathen have had gospel enough, please pass the
+butter."
+
+_May_ 10.--Jeff Davis was captured to-day at Irwinsville, Ga., when he
+was attempting to escape in woman's apparel. Mr. Green drew a picture of
+him, and Mr. Finley made photographs from it. We bought one as a
+souvenir of the war.
+
+The big headlines in the papers this morning say, "The hunt is up. He
+brandisheth a bowie-knife but yieldeth to six solid arguments. At
+Irwinsville, Ga., about daylight on the 10th instant, Col. Prichard,
+commanding the 4th Michigan Cavalry, captured Jeff Davis, family and
+staff. They will be forwarded under strong guard without delay." The
+flags have been flying all day, and every one is about as pleased over
+the manner of his capture as over the fact itself. Lieutenant Hathaway,
+one of the staff, is a friend of Mr. Manning Wells, and he was pretty
+sure he would follow Davis, so we were not surprised to see his name
+among the captured. Mr. Wells says he is as fine a horseman as he ever
+saw.
+
+_Monday evg., May_ 22.--I went to Teachers' meeting at Mrs.
+Worthington's to-night. Mrs. George Willson is the leader and she told
+us at the last meeting to be prepared this evening to give our opinion
+in regard to the repentance of Solomon before he died. We concluded that
+he did repent although the Bible does not absolutely say so. Grandmother
+thinks such questions are unprofitable, as we would better be repenting
+of our sins, instead of hunting up Solomon's at this late day.
+
+_May_ 23.--We arise about 5:30 nowadays and Anna does not like it very
+well. I asked her why she was not as good natured as usual to-day and
+she said it was because she got up "s'urly." She thinks Solomon must
+have been acquainted with Grandmother when he wrote "She ariseth while
+it is yet night and giveth meat to her household and a portion to her
+maidens." Patrick Burns, the "poet," who has also been our man of all
+work the past year, has left us to go into Mr. McKechnie's employ. He
+seemed to feel great regret when he bade us farewell and told us he
+never lived in a better regulated home than ours and he hoped his
+successor would take the same interest in us that he had. Perhaps he
+will give us a recommendation! He left one of his poems as a souvenir.
+It is entitled, "There will soon be an end to the war," written in
+March, hence a prophecy. He said Mr. Morse had read it and pronounced it
+"tip top." It was mostly written in capitals and I asked him if he
+followed any rule in regard to their use. He said "Oh, yes, always begin
+a line with one and then use your own discretion with the rest."
+
+_May_ 25.--I wish that I could have been in Washington this week, to
+have witnessed the grand review of Meade's and Sherman's armies. The
+newspaper accounts are most thrilling. The review commenced on Tuesday
+morning and lasted two days. It took over six hours for Meade's army to
+pass the grand stand, which was erected in front of the President's
+house. It was witnessed by the President, Generals Grant, Meade, and
+Sherman, Secretary Stanton, and many others in high authority. At ten
+o'clock, Wednesday morning, Sherman's army commenced to pass in review.
+His men did not show the signs of hardship and suffering which marked
+the appearance of the Army of the Potomac. The scenes enacted were
+historic and wonderful. Flags were flying everywhere and windows,
+doorsteps and sidewalks were crowded with people, eager to get a view of
+the grand armies. The city was as full of strangers, who had come to see
+the sight, as on Inauguration Day. Very soon, all that are left of the
+companies, who went from here, will be marching home, "with glad and
+gallant tread."
+
+_June_ 3.--I was invited up to Sonnenberg yesterday and Lottie and Abbie
+Clark called for me at 5:30 p.m., with their pony and democrat wagon.
+Jennie Rankine was the only other lady present and, for a wonder, the
+party consisted of six gentlemen and five ladies, which has not often
+been the case during the war. After supper we adjourned to the lawn and
+played croquet, a new game which Mr. Thompson just brought from New
+York. It is something like billiards, only a mallet is used instead of a
+cue to hit the balls. I did not like it very well, because I couldn't
+hit the balls through the wickets as I wanted to. "We" sang all the
+songs, patriotic and sentimental, that we could think of.
+
+Mr. Lyon came to call upon me to-day, before he returned to New York. He
+is a very pleasant young man. I told him that I regretted that I could
+not sing yesterday, when all the others did, and that the reason that I
+made no attempts in that line was due to the fact that one day in
+church, when I thought I was singing a very good alto, my grandfather
+whispered to me, and said: "Daughter, you are off the key," and ever
+since then, I had sung with the spirit and with the understanding, but
+not with my voice. He said perhaps I could get some one to do my singing
+for me, some day. I told him he was very kind to give me so much
+encouragement. Anna went to a Y.M.C.A. meeting last evening at our
+chapel and said, when the hymn "Rescue the perishing," was given out,
+she just "raised her Ebenezer" and sang every verse as hard as she
+could. The meeting was called in behalf of a young man who has been
+around town for the past few days, with only one arm, who wants to be a
+minister and sells sewing silk and needles and writes poetry during
+vacation to help himself along. I have had a cough lately and
+Grandmother decided yesterday to send for the doctor. He placed me in a
+chair and thumped my lungs and back and listened to my breathing while
+Grandmother sat near and watched him in silence, but finally she said,
+"Caroline isn't used to being pounded!" The doctor smiled and said he
+would be very careful, but the treatment was not so severe as it seemed.
+After he was gone, we asked Grandmother if she liked him and she said
+yes, but if she had known of his "new-fangled" notions and that he wore
+a full beard she might not have sent for him! Because Dr. Carr was
+clean-shaven and also Grandfather and Dr. Daggett, and all of the
+Grangers, she thinks that is the only proper way. What a funny little
+lady she is!
+
+_June_ 8.--There have been unusual attractions down town for the past
+two days. About 5 p.m. a man belonging to the
+Ravel troupe walked a rope, stretched across Main street from the third
+story of the Webster House to the chimney of the building opposite. He
+is said to be Blondin's only rival and certainly performed some
+extraordinary feats. He walked across and then returned backwards. Then
+took a wheel-barrow across and returned with it backwards. He went
+across blindfolded with a bag over his head. Then he attached a short
+trapeze to the rope and performed all sorts of gymnastics. There were at
+least 1,000 people in the street and in the windows gazing at him.
+Grandmother says that she thinks all such performances are wicked,
+tempting Providence to win the applause of men. Nothing would induce her
+to look upon such things. She is a born reformer and would abolish all
+such schemes. This morning she wanted us to read the 11th chapter of
+Hebrews to her, about faith, and when we had finished the forty verses,
+Anna asked her what was the difference between her and Moses.
+Grandmother said there were many points of difference. Anna was not
+found in the bulrushes and she was not adopted by a king's daughter.
+Anna said she was thinking how the verse read, "Moses was a proper
+child," and she could not remember having ever done anything strictly
+"proper" in her life. I noticed that Grandmother did not contradict her,
+but only smiled.
+
+_June_ 13.--Van Amburgh's circus was in town to-day and crowds attended
+and many of our most highly respected citizens, but Grandmother had
+other things for us to consider.
+
+_June_ 16.--The census man for this town is Mr. Jeudevine. He called
+here to-day and was very inquisitive, but I think I answered all of his
+questions although I could not tell him the exact amount of my property.
+Grandmother made us laugh to-day when we showed her a picture of the
+Siamese twins, and I said, "Grandmother, if I had been their mother I
+should have cut them apart when they were babies, wouldn't you?" The
+dear little lady looked up so bright and said, "If I had been Mrs. Siam,
+I presume I should have done just as she did." I don't believe that we
+will be as amusing as she is when we are 82 years old.
+
+_Saturday, July_ 8.--What excitement there must have been in Washington
+yesterday over the execution of the conspirators. It seems terrible that
+Mrs. Surratt should have deserved hanging with the others. I saw a
+picture of them all upon a scaffold and her face was screened by an
+umbrella. I read in one paper that the doctor who dressed Booth's broken
+leg was sentenced to the Dry Tortugas. Jefferson Davis, I suppose, is
+glad to have nothing worse served upon him, thus far, than confinement
+in Fortress Monroe. It is wonderful that 800,000 men are returning so
+quietly from the army to civil life that it is scarcely known, save by
+the welcome which they receive in their own homes.
+
+_July_ 16.--Rev. Dr. Buddington, of Brooklyn, preached to-day. His wife
+was Miss Elizabeth Willson, Clara Coleman's sister. My Sunday School
+book is "Mill on the Floss," but Grandmother says it is not Sabbath
+reading, so I am stranded for the present.
+
+_December_ 8.--Yesterday was Thanksgiving day. I do not remember that it
+was ever observed in December before. President Johnson appointed it as
+a day of national thanksgiving for our many blessings as a people, and
+Governor Fenton and several governors of other states have issued
+proclamations in accordance with the President's recommendation. The
+weather was very unpleasant, but we attended the union thanksgiving
+service held in our church. The choir sang America for the opening
+piece. Dr. Daggett read Miriam's song of praise: "The Lord hath
+triumphed gloriously, the horse and his rider hath he thrown into the
+sea." Then he offered one of his most eloquent and fervent prayers, in
+which the returned soldiers, many of whom are in broken health or maimed
+for life, in consequence of their devotion and loyalty to their country,
+were tenderly remembered. His text was from the 126th Psalm, "The Lord
+hath done great things for us, whereof we are glad." It was one of his
+best sermons. He mentioned three things in particular which the Lord has
+done for us, whereof we are glad: First, that the war has closed;
+second, that the Union is preserved; third, for the abolition of
+slavery. After the sermon, a collection was taken for the poor, and Dr.
+A. D. Eddy, who was present, offered prayer. The choir sang an anthem
+which they had especially prepared for the occasion, and then all joined
+in the doxology. Uncle Thomas Beals' family of four united with our
+three at Thanksgiving dinner. Uncle sent to New York for the oysters,
+and a famous big turkey, with all the usual accompaniments, made us a
+fine repast. Anna and Ritie Tyler are reading together Irving's Life of
+Washington, two afternoons each week. I wonder how long they will keep
+it up.
+
+_December_ 11.--I have been down town buying material for garments for
+our Home Missionary family which we are to make in our society. Anna and
+I were cutting them out and basting them ready for sewing, and
+grandmother told us to save all the basting threads when we were through
+with them and tie them and wind them on a spool for use another time.
+Anna, who says she never wants to begin anything that she cannot finish
+in 15 minutes, felt rather tired at the prospect of this unexpected task
+and asked Grandmother how she happened to contract such economical
+ideas. Grandmother told her that if she and Grandfather had been
+wasteful in their younger days, we would not have any silk dresses to
+wear now. Anna said if that was the case she was glad that Grandmother
+saved the basting thread!
+
+
+
+
+1866
+
+_February_ 13.--Our brother James was married to-day to Louise
+Livingston James of New York City.
+
+_February_ 20.--Our society is going to hold a fair for the Freedmen, in
+the Town Hall. Susie Daggett and I have been there all day to see about
+the tables and stoves. We got Mrs. Binks to come and help us.
+
+_February_ 21.--Been at the hall all day, trimming the room. Mr.
+Thompson and Mr. Backus came down and if they had not helped us we would
+not have done much. Mr. Backus put up all the principal drapery and made
+it look beautiful.
+
+_February_ 22.--At the hall all day. The fair opened at 2 p.m. We had
+quite a crowd in the evening and took in over three hundred dollars.
+Charlie Hills and Ellsworth Daggett stayed there all night to take care
+of the hall. We had a fish pond, a grab-bag and a post-office. Anna says
+they had all the smart people in the post-office to write the
+letters,--Mr. Morse, Miss Achert, Albert Granger and herself. Some one
+asked Albert Granger if his law business was good and he said one man
+thronged into his office one day.
+
+_February_ 23.--We took in two hundred dollars to-day at the fair. We
+wound up with an auction. We asked Mrs. George Willson if she could not
+write a poem expressing our thanks to Mr. Backus and she stepped aside
+for about five minutes and handed us the following lines which we sent
+to him. We think it is about the nicest thing in the whole fair.
+
+ "In ancient time the God of Wine
+ They crowned with vintage of the vine,
+ And sung his praise with song and glee
+ And all their best of minstrelsy.
+ The Backus whom we honor now
+ Would scorn to wreathe his generous brow
+ With heathen emblems--better he
+ Will love our gratitude to see
+ Expressed in all the happy faces
+ Assembled in these pleasant places.
+ May joy attend his footsteps here
+ And crown him in a brighter sphere."
+
+_February_ 24.--Susie Daggett and I went to the hall this morning to
+clean up. We sent back the dishes, not one broken, and disposed of
+everything but the tables and stoves, which were to be taken away this
+afternoon. We feel quite satisfied with the receipts so far, but the
+expenses will be considerable.
+
+In _Ontario County Times_ of the following week we find this card of
+thanks:
+
+_February_ 28.--The Fair for the benefit of the Freedmen, held in the
+Town Hall on Thursday and Friday of last week was eminently successful,
+and the young ladies take this method of returning their sincere thanks
+to the people of Canandaigua and vicinity for their generous
+contributions and liberal patronage. It being the first public
+enterprise in which the Society has ventured independently, the young
+ladies were somewhat fearful of the result, but having met with such
+generous responses from every quarter they feel assured that they need
+never again doubt of success in any similar attempt so long as
+Canandaigua contains so many large hearts and corresponding purses. But
+our village cannot have all the praise this time. The Society is
+particularly indebted to Mr. F. F. Thompson and Mr. S. D. Backus of New
+York City, for their very substantial aid, not only in gifts and
+unstinted patronage, but for their invaluable labor in the decoration of
+the hall and conduct of the Fair. But for them most of the manual labor
+would have fallen upon the ladies. The thanks of the Society are
+especially due, also, to those ladies who assisted personally with their
+superior knowledge and older experience. Also to Mr. W. P. Fiske for his
+valuable services as cashier, and to Messrs. Daggett, Chapin and Hills
+for services at the door; and to all the little boys and girls who
+helped in so many ways.
+
+The receipts amounted to about $490, and thanks to our cashier, the
+money is all good, and will soon be on its way carrying substantial
+visions of something to eat and to wear to at least a few of the poor
+Freedmen of the South.
+
+ By order of Society,
+ Carrie C. Richards, Pres't.
+ Emma H. Wheeler, Sec'y.
+
+Mr. Editor--I expected to see an account of the Young Ladies' Fair in
+your last number, but only saw a very handsome acknowledgment by the
+ladies to the citizens. Your "local" must have been absent; and I beg
+the privilege in behalf of myself and many others of doing tardy justice
+to the successful efforts of the Aid Society at their debut February
+22nd.
+
+Gotham furnished an artist and an architect, and the Society did the
+rest. The decorations were in excellent taste, and so were the young
+ladies. The eatables were very toothsome. The skating pond was never in
+better condition. On entering the hall I paused first before the table
+of toys, fancy work and perfumery. Here was the President, and I hope I
+shall be pardoned for saying that no President since the days of
+Washington can compare with the President of this Society. Then I
+visited a candy table, and hesitated a long time before deciding which I
+would rather eat, the delicacies that were sold, or the charming
+creatures who sold them. One delicious morsel, in a pink silk, was so
+tempting that I seriously contemplated eating her with a
+spoon--waterfall and all. [By the way, how do we know that the Romans
+wore waterfalls? Because Marc Antony, in his funeral oration on Mr.
+Cæsar, exclaimed, "O water fall was there, my countrymen!"] At this
+point my attention was attracted by a fish pond. I tried my luck, caught
+a whale, and seeing all my friends beginning to blubber, I determined to
+visit the old woman who lived in a shoe.--She was very glad to see me. I
+bought one of her children, which the Society can redeem for $1,000 in
+smoking caps.
+
+The fried oysters were delicious; a great many of the bivalves got into
+a stew, and I helped several of them out. Delicate ice cream, nicely
+"baked in cowld ovens," was destroyed in immense quantities. I scream
+when I remember the plates full I devoured, and the number of bright
+women to whom I paid my devours. Beautiful cigar girls sold fragrant
+Havanas, and bit off the ends at five cents apiece, extra. The fair
+post-mistress and her fair clerks, so fair that they were almost
+fairies, drove a very thriving business.
+
+It was altogether a "great moral show."--Let no man say hereafter that
+the young ladies of Canandaigua are uneducated in all that makes women
+lovely and useful. Anna Dickinson has no mission to this town. The
+members of this Society have won the admiration of all their friends,
+and especially of the most devoted of their servants,
+ Q. E. D.
+
+If I had written that article, I should have given the praise to Susie
+Daggett, for it belongs to her.
+
+_Sunday, June_ 24.--My Sunday School scholars are learning the shorter
+catechism. One recited thirty-five answers to questions to-day, another
+twenty-six, another twenty, the others eleven. Very well indeed. They do
+not see why it is called the "shorter" Catechism! They all had their
+ambrotypes taken with me yesterday at Finley's--Mary Hoyt, Fannie and
+Ella Lyon, Ella Wood, Ella Van Tyne, Mary Vanderbrook, Jennie Whitlaw
+and Katie Neu. They are all going to dress in white and sit on the front
+seat in church at my wedding. Grandmother had Mrs. Gooding make
+individual fruit cakes for each of them and also some for each member of
+our sewing society.
+
+_Thursday, June_ 21.--We went to a lawn fete at Mrs. F. F. Thompson's
+this afternoon. It was a beautiful sight. The flowers, the grounds, the
+young people and the music all combined to make the occasion perfect.
+
+_Note:_ Canandaigua is the summer home of Mrs. Thompson, who has
+previously given the village a children's playground, a swimming school,
+a hospital and a home for the aged, and this year (1911) has presented a
+park as a beauty spot at foot of Canandaigua Lake.
+
+_June_ 28.--Dear Abbie Clark and Captain Williams were married in the
+Congregational church this evening. The church was trimmed beautifully
+and Abbie looked sweet. We attended the reception afterwards at her
+house. "May calm and sunshine hallow their clasped hands."
+
+_July_ 15.--The girls of the Society have sent me my flag bed quilt,
+which they have just finished. It was hard work quilting such hot days
+but it is done beautifully. Bessie Seymour wrote the names on the stars.
+In the center they used six stars for "Three rousing cheers for the
+Union." The names on the others are Sarah McCabe, Mary Paul, Fannie
+Paul, Fannie Palmer, Nettie Palmer, Susie Daggett, Fannie Pierce, Sarah
+Andrews, Lottie Clark, Abbie Williams, Carrie Lamport, Isadore Blodgett,
+Nannie Corson, Laura Chapin, Mary F. Fiske, Lucilla F. Pratt, Jennie H.
+Hazard, Sarah H. Foster, Mary Jewett, Mary C. Stevens, Etta Smith,
+Cornelia Richards, Ella Hildreth, Emma Wheeler, Mary Wheeler, Mrs.
+Pierce, Alice Jewett, Bessie Seymour, Clara Coleman, Julia Phelps. It
+kept the girls busy to get Abbie Clark's quilt and mine finished within
+one month. They hope that the rest of the girls will postpone their
+nuptials till there is a change in the weather. Mercury stands 90
+degrees in the shade.
+
+_July_ 19, 1866.--Our wedding day. We saw the dear little Grandmother,
+God bless her, watching us from the window as we drove away.
+
+Alexandria Bay, _July_ 26.--Anna writes me that Charlie Wells said he
+had always wanted a set of Clark's Commentaries, but I had carried off
+the entire Ed.
+
+_July_ 28.--As we were changing boats at Burlington, Vt, for Saratoga,
+to our surprise, we met Captain and Abbie Williams, but could only stop
+a moment.
+
+Saratoga, 29_th._--We heard Rev. Theodore Cuyler preach to-day from the
+text, "Demas hath forsaken me, having loved this present world." He
+leads devotional exercises every morning in the parlors of the Columbian
+Hotel. I spoke to him this morning and he said my father was one of his
+best and earliest friends.
+
+Canandaigua, _September_ 1.--A party of us went down to the Canandaigua
+hotel this morning to see President Johnson, General Grant and Admiral
+Farragut and other dignitaries. The train stopped about half an hour and
+they all gave brief speeches.
+
+_September_ 2.--Rev. Darius Sackett preached for Dr. Daggett this
+evening.
+
+
+
+
+1867
+
+_July_ 27.--Col. James M. Bull was buried from the home of Mr. Alexander
+Howell to-day, as none of his family reside here now.
+
+_November_ 13.--Our brother John and wife and baby Pearl have gone to
+London, England, to live.
+
+_December_ 28.--A large party of Canandaiguans went over to Rochester
+last evening to hear Charles Dickens' lecture, and enjoyed it more than
+I can possibly express. He was quite hoarse and had small bills
+distributed through the Opera House with the announcement:
+
+ MR. CHARLES DICKENS
+
+ Begs indulgence for a Severe Cold, but hopes its effects
+ may not be very perceptible after a few minutes' Reading.
+
+ Friday, December 27th, 1867.
+
+We brought these notices home with us for souvenirs. He looks exactly
+like his pictures. It was worth a great deal just to look upon the man
+who wrote Little Dorrit, David Copperfield and all the other books,
+which have delighted us so much. We hope that he will live to write a
+great many more. He spoke very appreciatively of his enthusiastic
+reception in this country and almost apologized for some of the opinions
+that he had expressed in his "American Notes," which he published, after
+his first visit here, twenty-five years ago. He evidently thinks that
+the United States of America are quite worth while.
+
+
+
+
+1871
+
+_August_ 6.--Under the auspices of the Y.M.C.A., Hon. George H. Stuart,
+President of the U. S. Christian Commission, spoke in an open air
+meeting on the square this afternoon and in our church this evening. The
+house was packed and such eloquence I never heard from mortal lips. He
+ought to be called the Whitefield of America. He told of the good the
+Christian Commission had done before the war and since. Such war stories
+I never heard. They took up a collection which must have amounted to
+hundreds of dollars.
+
+
+
+
+1872
+
+_Naples, June._--John has invited Aunt Ann Field, and James, his wife
+and me and Babe Abigail to come to England to make them a visit, and we
+expect to sail on the Baltic July sixth.
+
+_On board S.S. Baltic, July_ 7.--We left New York yesterday under
+favorable circumstances. It was a beautiful summer day, flags were
+flying and everything seemed so joyful we almost forgot we were leaving
+home and native land. There were many passengers, among them being Mr.
+and Mrs. Anthony Drexel and U. S. Grant, Jr., who boarded the steamer
+from a tug boat which came down the bay alongside when we had been out
+half an hour. President Grant was with him and stood on deck, smoking
+the proverbial cigar. We were glad to see him and the passengers gave
+him three cheers and three times three, with the greatest enthusiasm.
+
+_Liverpool, July_ 16.--We arrived here to-day, having been just ten days
+on the voyage. There were many clergymen of note on board, among them,
+Rev. John H. Vincent, D.D., eminent in the Methodist Episcopal Church,
+who is preparing International Sunday School lessons. He sat at our
+table and Philip Phillips also, who is a noted evangelistic singer. They
+held services both Sabbaths, July 7 and 15, in the grand saloon of the
+steamer, and also in the steerage where the text was "And they willingly
+received him into the ship." The immigrants listened eagerly, when the
+minister urged them all to "receive Jesus." We enjoyed several evening
+literary entertainments, when it was too cold or windy to sit on deck.
+
+We had the most luscious strawberries at dinner to-night, that I ever
+ate. So large and red and ripe, with the hulls on and we dipped them in
+powdered sugar as we ate them, a most appetizing way.
+
+_London, July_ 17.--On our way to London to-day I noticed beautiful
+flower beds at every station, making our journey almost a path of roses.
+In the fields, men and women both, were harvesting the hay, making
+picturesque scenes, for the sky was cloudless and I was reminded of the
+old hymn, commencing
+
+ "Sweet fields beyond the swelling flood,
+ Stand dressed in living green."
+
+We performed the journey from Liverpool to London, a distance of 240
+miles, in five hours. John, Laura and little Pearl met us at Euston
+Station, and we were soon whirled away in cabs to 24 Upper Woburn Place,
+Tavistock Square, John's residence. Dinner was soon ready, a most
+bountiful repast. We spent the remainder of the day visiting and
+enjoying ourselves generally. It seemed so good to be at the end of the
+journey, although we had only two days of really unpleasant weather on
+the voyage. John and Laura are so kind and hospitable. They have a
+beautiful home, lovely children and apparently every comfort and luxury
+which this world can afford.
+
+_Sunday, July_ 22.--We went to Spurgeon's Tabernacle this morning to
+listen to this great preacher, with thousands of others. I had never
+looked upon such a sea of faces before, as I beheld from the gallery
+where we sat. The pulpit was underneath one gallery, so there seemed as
+many people over the preacher's head, as there were beneath and around
+him and the singing was as impressive as the sermon. I thought of the
+hymn, "Hark ten thousand harps and voices, Sound the notes of praise
+above." Mr. Spurgeon was so lame from rheumatism that he used two canes
+and placed one knee on a chair beside him, when preaching. His text was
+"And there shall be a new heaven and a new earth." I found that all I
+had heard of his eloquence was true.
+
+_Sunday, July_ 29.--We have spent the entire week sightseeing, taking in
+Hyde Park, Windsor Castle, Westminster Abbey, St. Paul's Cathedral, the
+Tower of London and British Museum. We also went to Madame Tussaud's
+exhibition of wax figures and while I was looking in the catalogue for
+the number of an old gentleman who was sitting down apparently asleep,
+he got up and walked away! We drove to Sydenham ten miles from London,
+to see the Crystal Palace which Abbie called the "Christmas Palace." Mr.
+Alexander Howell and Mr. Henry Chesebro of Canandaigua are here and came
+to see us to-day.
+
+_August_ 13.--Amid the whirl of visiting, shopping and sightseeing in
+this great city, my diary has been well nigh forgotten. The descriptive
+letters to home friends have been numerous and knowing that they would
+be preserved, I thought perhaps they would do as well for future
+reference as a diary kept for the same purpose, but to-day, as St.
+Pancras' bell was tolling and a funeral procession going by, we heard by
+cable of the death of our dear, dear Grandmother, the one who first
+encouraged us to keep a journal of daily deeds, and who was always most
+interested in all that interested us and now I cannot refrain if I
+would, from writing down at this sad hour, of all the grief that is in
+my heart. I sorrow not for her. She has only stepped inside the
+temple-gate where she has long been waiting for the Lord's entrance
+call. I weep for ourselves that we shall see her dear face no more. It
+does not seem possible that we shall never see her again on this earth.
+She took such an interest in our journey and just as we started I put my
+dear little Abigail Beals Clarke in her lap to receive her parting
+blessing. As we left the house she sat at the front window and saw us go
+and smiled her farewell.
+
+_August_ 20.--Anna has written how often Grandmother prayed that "He who
+holds the winds in his fists and the waters in the hollow of his hands,
+would care for us and bring us to our desired haven." She had received
+one letter, telling of our safe arrival and how much we enjoyed going
+about London, when she was suddenly taken ill and Dr. Hayes said she
+could never recover. Anna's letter came, after ten days, telling us all
+the sad news, and how Grandmother looked out of the window the last
+night before she was taken ill, and up at the moon and stars and said
+how beautiful they were. Anna says, "How can I ever write it? Our dear
+little Grandmother died on my bed to-day."
+
+_August_ 30.--John, Laura and their nurse and baby John, Aunt Ann Field
+and I started Tuesday on a trip to Scotland, going first to Glasgow
+where we remained twenty-four hours. We visited the Cathedral and were
+about to go down into the crypt when the guide told us that Gen. Sherman
+of U.S.A. was just coming in. We stopped to look at him and felt like
+telling him that we too were Americans. He was in good health and
+spirits, apparently, and looked every inch a soldier with his cloak
+a-la-militaire around him. We visited the Lochs and spent one night at
+Inversnaid on Loch Lomond and then went on up Loch Katrine to the
+Trossachs. When we took the little steamer, John said, "All aboard for
+Naples," it reminded him so much of Canandaigua Lake. We arrived safely
+in Edinburgh the next day by rail and spent four days in that charming
+city, so beautiful in situation and in every natural advantage. We saw
+the window from whence John Knox addressed the populace and we also
+visited the Castle on the hill. Then we went to Melrose and visited the
+Abbey and also Abbotsford, the residence of Sir Walter Scott. We went
+through the rooms and saw many curios and paintings and also the
+library. Sir Walter's chair at his desk was protected by a rope, but
+Laura, nothing daunted, lifted the baby over it and seated him there for
+a moment saying "I am sure, now, he will be clever." We continued our
+journey that night and arrived in London the next morning.
+
+_Ventnor, Isle of Wight, September_ 9.--Aunt Ann, Laura's sister,
+Florentine Arnold, nurse and two children, Pearl and Abbie, and I are
+here for three weeks on the seashore.
+
+_September_ 16.--We have visited all the neighboring towns, the graves
+of the Dairyman's daughter and little Jane, the young cottager, and the
+scene of Leigh Richmond's life and labors. We have enjoyed bathing in
+the surf, and the children playing in the sands and riding on the
+donkeys.
+
+We have very pleasant rooms, in a house kept by an old couple, Mr. and
+Mrs. Tuddenham, down on the esplanade. They serve excellent meals in a
+most homelike way. We have an abundance of delicious milk and cream
+which they tell me comes from "Cowes"!
+
+_London, September_ 30.--Anna has come to England to live with John for
+the present. She came on the Adriatic, arriving September 24. We are so
+glad to see her once more and will do all in our power to cheer her in
+her loneliness.
+
+_Paris, October_ 18.--John, Laura, Aunt Ann and I, nurse and baby,
+arrived here to-day for a few days' visit. We had rather a stormy
+passage on the Channel. I asked one of the seamen the name of the vessel
+and he answered me "The H'Albert H'Edward, Miss!" This information must
+have given me courage, for I was perfectly sustained till we reached
+Calais, although nearly every one around me succumbed.
+
+_October_ 22.--We have driven through the Bois de Boulogne, visited Père
+la Chaise, the Morgue, the ruins of the Tuileries, which are left just
+as they were since the Commune. We spent half a day at the Louvre
+without seeing half of its wonders. I went alone to a photographer's, Le
+Jeune, to be "taken" and had a funny time. He queried "Parlez-vous
+Français?" I shook my head and asked him "Parlez-vous Anglaise?" at
+which query he shrugged his shoulders and shook his head! I ventured to
+tell him by signs that I would like my picture taken and he held up two
+sizes of pictures and asked me "Le cabinet, le vignette?" I held up my
+fingers, to tell him I would like six of each, whereupon he proceeded to
+make ready and when he had seated me, he made me understand that he
+hoped I would sit perfectly still, which I endeavored to do. After the
+first sitting, he showed displeasure and let me know that I had swayed
+to and fro. Another attempt was more satisfactory and he said "Très
+bien, Madame," and I gave him my address and departed.
+
+_October_ 26.--My photographs have come and all pronounce them indeed
+"très bien." We visited the Tomb of Napoleon to-day.
+
+_October_ 27.--We attended service to-day at the American Chapel and I
+enjoyed it more than I can ever express. After hearing a foreign tongue
+for the past ten days, it seemed like getting home to go into a
+Presbyterian church and hear a sermon from an American pastor. The
+singing in the choir was so homelike, that when they sang "Awake my soul
+to joyful lays and sing thy great Redeemer's praise," it seemed to me
+that I heard a well known tenor voice from across the sea, especially in
+the refrain "His loving kindness, oh how free." The text was "As an
+eagle stirreth up her nest, fluttereth over her young, spreadeth abroad
+her wings, taketh them, beareth them on her wings, so the Lord did lead
+him and there was no strange God with him." Deut. 32: 11. It was a
+wonderful sermon and I shall never forget it. On our way home, we
+noticed the usual traffic going on, building of houses, women were
+standing in their doors knitting and there seemed to be no sign of
+Sunday keeping, outside of the church.
+
+_London, October_ 31.--John and I returned together from Paris and now I
+have only a few days left before sailing for home. There was an
+Englishman here to-day who was bragging about the beer in England being
+so much better than could be made anywhere else. He said, "In America,
+you have the 'ops, I know, but you haven't the Thames water, you know."
+I suppose that would make a vast difference!
+
+_Sunday, November_ 3.--We went to hear Rev. Dr. Joseph Parker preach at
+Exeter Hall. He is a new light, comparatively, and bids fair to rival
+Spurgeon and Newman Hall and all the rest. He is like a lion and again
+like a lamb in the pulpit.
+
+_Liverpool, November_ 6.--I came down to Liverpool to-day with Abbie and
+nurse, to sail on the Baltic, to-morrow. There were two Englishmen in
+our compartment and hearing Abbie sing "I have a Father in the Promised
+Land," they asked her where her Father lived and she said "In America,"
+and told them she was going on the big ship to-morrow to see him. Then
+they turned to me and said they supposed I would be glad to know that
+the latest cable from America was that U. S. Grant was elected for his
+second term as President of the United States. I assured them that I was
+very glad to hear such good news.
+
+_November_ 9.--I did not know any of the passengers when we sailed, but
+soon made pleasant acquaintances. Near me at table are Mr. and Mrs.
+Sykes from New York and in course of conversation I found that she as
+well as myself, was born in Penn Yan, Yates County, New York, and that
+her parents were members of my Father's church, which goes to prove that
+the world is not so very wide after all. Abbie is a great pet among the
+passengers and is being passed around from one to another from morning
+till night. They love to hear her sing and coax her to say "Grace" at
+table. She closes her eyes and folds her hands devoutly and says, "For
+what we are about to receive, may the Lord make us truly thankful." They
+all say "Amen" to this, for they are fearful that they will not perhaps
+be "thankful" when they finish!
+
+_November_ 15.--I have been on deck every day but one, and not missed a
+single meal. There was a terrible storm one night and the next morning I
+told one of the numerous clergymen, that I took great comfort in the
+night, thinking that nothing could happen with so many of the Lord's
+anointed, on board. He said that he wished he had thought of that, for
+he was frightened almost to death! We have sighted eleven steamers and
+on Wednesday we were in sight of the banks of Newfoundland all the
+afternoon, our course being unusually northerly and we encountered no
+fogs, contrary to the expectation of all. Every one pronounces the
+voyage pleasant and speedy for this time of year.
+
+_Naples, N. Y., November_ 20.--We arrived safely in New York on Sunday.
+Abbie spied her father very quickly upon the dock as we slowly came up
+and with glad and happy hearts we returned his "Welcome home." We spent
+two days in New York and arrived home safe and sound this evening.
+
+_November_ 21.--My thirtieth birthday, which we, a reunited family, are
+spending happily together around our own fireside, pleasant memories of
+the past months adding to the joy of the hour.
+
+From the _New York Evangelist_ of August 15, 1872, by Rev. Samuel Pratt,
+D.D.
+
+"Died, at Canandaigua, N. Y., August 8, 1872, Mrs. Abigail Field Beals,
+widow of Thomas Beals, in the 98th year of her age. Mrs. Beals, whose
+maiden name was Field, was born in Madison, Conn., April 7, 1784. She
+was a sister of Rev. David Dudley Field, D.D., of Stockbridge, Mass.,
+and of Rev. Timothy Field, first pastor of the Congregational church of
+Canandaigua. She came to Canandaigua with her brother, Timothy, in 1800.
+In 1805 she was married to Thomas Beals, Esq., with whom she lived
+nearly sixty years, until he fell asleep. They had eleven children, of
+whom only four survive. In 1807 she and her husband united with the
+Congregational church, of which they were ever liberal and faithful
+supporters. Mrs. Beals loved the good old ways and kept her house in the
+simple and substantial style of the past. She herself belonged to an age
+of which she was the last. With great dignity and courtesy of manner
+which repelled too much familiarity, she combined a sweet and winning
+grace, which attracted all to her, so that the youth, while they would
+almost involuntarily 'rise up before her,' yet loved to be in her
+presence and called her blessed. She possessed in a rare degree the
+ornament of a meek and quiet spirit and lived in an atmosphere of love
+and peace. Her home and room were to her children and her children's
+children what Jerusalem was to the saints of old. There they loved to
+resort and the saddest thing in her death is the sundering of that tie
+which bound so many generations together. She never ceased to take a
+deep interest in the prosperity of the beautiful village of which she
+and her husband were the pioneers and for which they did so much and in
+the church of which she was the oldest member. Her mind retained its
+activity to the last and her heart was warm in sympathy with every good
+work. While she was well informed in all current events, she most
+delighted in whatever concerned the Kingdom. Her Bible and religious
+books were her constant companions and her conversation told much of her
+better thoughts, which were in Heaven. Living so that those who knew her
+never saw in her anything but fitness for Heaven, she patiently awaited
+the Master's call and went down to her grave in a full age like a shock
+of corn fully ripe that cometh in its season."
+
+I don't think I shall keep a diary any more, only occasionally jot down
+things of importance. Mr. Noah T. Clarke's brother got possession of my
+little diary in some way one day and when he returned it I found written
+on the fly-leaf this inscription to the diary:
+
+ "You'd scarce expect a volume of my size
+ To hold so much that's beautiful and wise,
+ And though the heartless world might call me cheap
+ Yet from my pages some much joy shall reap.
+ As monstrous oaks from little acorns grow,
+ And kindly shelter all who toil below,
+ So my future greatness and the good I do
+ Shall bless, if not the world, at least a few."
+
+I think I will close my old journal with the mottoes which I find upon
+an old well-worn writing book which Anna used for jotting down her
+youthful deeds. On the cover I find inscribed, "Try to be somebody," and
+on the back of the same book, as if trying to console herself for
+unexpected achievement which she could not prevent, "Some must be
+great!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+1880
+
+_June_ 17.--Our dear Anna was married to-day to Mr. Alonzo A. Cummings
+of Oakland, Cal., and has gone there to live. I am sorry to have her go
+so far away, but love annihilates space. There is no real separation,
+except in alienation of spirit, and that can never come--to us.
+
+THE END
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+BOOKS TO MAKE ELDERS YOUNG AGAIN
+
+By Inez Haynes Gillmore
+
+PHOEBE AND ERNEST
+
+With 30 illustrations by R. F. Schabelitz. $1.35 net.
+
+Parents will recognize themselves in the story, and laugh understandingly
+with, and sometimes at, Mr. and Mrs. Martin and their children, Phoebe
+and Ernest.
+
+"Attracted delighted attention in the course of its serial publication.
+Sentiment and humor are deftly mingled in this clever book."--_New York
+Tribune_.
+
+"We must go back to Louisa Alcott for their equals."--_Boston
+Advertiser_.
+
+"For young and old alike we know of no more refreshing story."--_New
+York Evening Post_.
+
+PHOEBE, ERNEST, AND CUPID
+
+Illustrated by R. F. Schabelitz. $1.35 net.
+
+In this sequel to the popular "Phoebe and Ernest," each of these
+delightful young folk goes to the altar.
+
+"To all jaded readers of problem novels, to all weary wayfarers on the
+rocky literary road of social pessimism and domestic woe, we recommend
+'Phoebe, Ernest, and Cupid' with all our hearts: it is not only
+cheerful, it's true."--_N. Y. Times Review_.
+
+"Wholesome, merry, absolutely true to life."--_The Outlook_.
+
+"All delicious--humorous and true."--_The Continent_.
+
+"Irresistibly fascinating. Mrs. Gillmore knows twice as much about
+college boys as ----, and five times as much about girls."--_Boston
+Globe_.
+
+JANEY
+
+Illustrated by Ada C. Williamson. $1.25 net.
+
+"Being the record of a short interval in the journey thru life and the
+struggle with society of a little girl of nine."
+
+"Our hearts were captive to 'Phoebe and Ernest,' and now accept 'Janey.'
+... She is so engaging.... Told so vivaciously and with such good-natured
+and pungent asides for grown people."--_Outlook_.
+
+"Depicts youthful human nature as one who knows and loves it. Her
+'Phoebe and Ernest' studies are deservedly popular, and now, in 'Janey,'
+this clever writer has accomplished an equally charming portrait."
+--_Chicago Record-Herald_.
+
+HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
+
+PUBLISHERS--NEW YORK
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+THE HOME BOOK OF VERSE
+
+_American and English_ (1580-1912)
+
+Compiled by Burton E. Stevenson. Collects the best short poetry of the
+English language--not only the poetry everybody says is good, but also
+the verses that everybody reads. (3742 pages; India paper, 1 vol., 8vo,
+complete author, title and first line indices, $7.50 net; carriage 40
+cents extra.)
+
+The most comprehensive and representative collection of American and
+English poetry ever published, including 3,120 unabridged poems from
+some 1,100 authors.
+
+It brings together in one volume the best short poetry of the English
+language from the time of Spencer, with especial attention to American
+verse.
+
+The copyright deadline has been passed, and some three hundred recent
+authors are included, very few of whom appear in any other general
+anthology, such as Lionel Johnson, Noyes, Housman, Mrs. Meynell, Yeats,
+Dobson, Lang, Watson, Wilde, Francis Thompson, Gilder, Le Gallienne, Van
+Dyke, Woodberry, Riley, etc., etc.
+
+The poems are arranged by subject, and the classification is unusually
+close and searching. Some of the most comprehensive sections are:
+Children's rhymes (300 pages); love poems (800 pages); nature poetry
+(400 pages); humorous verse (500 pages); patriotic and historical poems
+(600 pages); reflective and descriptive poetry (400 pages). No other
+collection contains so many popular favorites and fugitive verses.
+
+DELIGHTFUL POCKET ANTHOLOGIES
+
+The following books are uniform, with full gilt flexible covers and
+pictured cover linings. 16mo. Each, cloth, $1.50; leather, $2.50.
+
+
+THE GARLAND OF CHILDHOOD
+
+A little book for all lovers of children. Compiled by Percy Withers.
+
+THE VISTA OF ENGLISH VERSE Compiled by Henry S. Pancoast.
+
+From Spencer to Kipling.
+
+LETTERS THAT LIVE Compiled by Laura E. Lockwood and Amy R. Kelly.
+
+Some 150 letters.
+
+POEMS FOR TRAVELLERS (About "The Continent.") Compiled by Miss Mary R.
+J. DuBois.
+
+THE OPEN ROAD
+
+A little book for wayfarers. Compiled by E. V. Lucas.
+
+THE FRIENDLY TOWN
+
+A little book for the urbane, compiled by E. V. Lucas.
+
+THE POETIC OLD-WORLD Compiled by Miss L. H. Humphrey.
+
+Covers Europe, including Spain, Belgium and the British Isles.
+
+THE POETIC NEW-WORLD Compiled by Miss Humphrey.
+
+HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
+
+34 WEST 33rd STREET--NEW YORK
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+NEW BOOKS PRIMARILY FOR WOMEN
+
+A MONTESSORI MOTHER. By Dorothy Canfield Fisher
+
+A thoroughly competent author who has been most closely associated with
+Dr. Montessori tells just what American mothers want to know about this
+new system of child training--the general principles underlying it; a
+plain description of the apparatus, definite directions for its use,
+suggestive hints as to American substitutes and additions, etc., etc.
+(_Helpfully illustrated._ $1.25 _net, by mail_ $1.35.)
+
+MAKING A BUSINESS WOMAN. By Anne Shannon Monroe
+
+A young woman whose business assets are good sense, good health, and the
+ability to use a typewriter goes to Chicago to earn her living. This
+story depicts her experiences vividly and truthfully, tho the characters
+are fictitious. ($1.30 _net, by mail_ $1.40.)
+
+WHY WOMEN ARE SO. By Mary R. Coolidge
+
+Explains and traces the development of the woman of 1800 into the woman
+of to-day. ($1.50 _net, by mail_ $1.62.)
+
+THE SQUIRREL-CAGE. By Dorothy Canfield
+
+A novel recounting the struggle of an American wife and mother to call
+her soul her own.
+
+"One has no hesitation in classing 'The Squirrel-Cage' with the best
+American fiction of this or any other season."--_Chicago Record-Herald._
+(3rd printing. $1.35 _net, by mail_ $1.45.)
+
+HEREDITY IN RELATION TO EUGENICS. By C. B. Davenport
+
+"One of the foremost authorities . . . tells just what scientific
+investigation has established and how far it is possible to control what
+the ancients accepted as inevitable."--_N. Y. Times Review._
+
+(With diagrams. 3_rd printing._ $2.00 _net, by mail_ $2.16.)
+
+THE GLEAM. By Helen R. Albee
+
+A frank spiritual autobiography. ($1.35 _net, by mail_ $1.45.)
+
+HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
+
+34 WEST 33rd STREET--NEW YORK
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+LEADING AMERICANS
+
+Edited by W. P. Trent, and generally confined to those no longer living.
+Large 12mo. With portraits. Each $1.75, by mail $1.90.
+
+R. M. JOHNSTON'S LEADING AMERICAN SOLDIERS
+
+By the Author of "Napoleon," etc.
+
+Washington, Greene, Taylor, Scott, Andrew Jackson, Grant, Sherman,
+Sheridan, McClellan, Meade, Lee, "Stonewall" Jackson, Joseph E.
+Johnston.
+
+"Very interesting . . . much sound originality of treatment, and the
+style is very clear."--_Springfield Republican._
+
+JOHN ERSKINE'S LEADING AMERICAN NOVELISTS
+
+Charles Brockden Brown, Cooper, Simms, Hawthorne, Mrs. Stowe, and Bret
+Harte.
+
+"He makes his study of these novelists all the more striking because
+of their contrasts of style and their varied purpose. . . . Well worth
+any amount of time we may care to spend upon them."--_Boston Transcript._
+
+W. M. PAYNE'S LEADING AMERICAN ESSAYISTS
+
+A General Introduction dealing with essay writing in America, and
+biographies of Irving, Emerson, Thoreau, and George William Curtis.
+
+"It is necessary to know only the name of the author of this work to be
+assured of its literary excellence."--_Literary Digest._
+
+LEADING AMERICAN MEN OF SCIENCE
+
+Edited by President David Starr Jordan.
+
+Count Rumford and Josiah Willard Gibbs, by E. E. Slosson; Alexander
+Wilson and Audubon, by Witmer Stone; Silliman, by Daniel C. Gilman;
+Joseph Henry, by Simon Newcomb; Louis Agassiz and Spencer Fullerton
+Baird, by Charles F. Holder; Jeffries Wyman, by B. G. Wilder; Asa Gray,
+by John M. Coulter; James Dwight Dana, by William North Rice; Marsh, by
+Geo. Bird Grinnell; Edward Drinker Cope, by Marcus Benjamin; Simon
+Newcomb, by Marcus Benjamin; George Brown Goode, by D. S. Jordan; Henry
+Augustus Rowland, by Ira Remsen; William Keith Brooks, by E. A. Andrews.
+
+GEORGE ILES'S LEADING AMERICAN INVENTORS
+
+By the author of "Inventors at Work," etc. Colonel John Stevens
+(screw-propeller, etc.); his son, Robert (T-rail, etc.); Fulton;
+Ericsson; Whitney; Blanchard (lathe); McCormick; Howe; Goodyear; Morse;
+Tilghman (paper from wood and sand blast); Sholes (typewriter); and
+Mergenthaler (linotype).
+
+Other Volumes covering Lawyers, Poets, Statesmen, Editors, Explorers,
+etc., arranged for. Leaflet on application.
+
+HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
+
+34 WEST 33rd STREET--NEW YORK
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+Julien Benda's THE YOKE OF PITY
+
+The author grips and never lets go of the single theme (which presents
+itself more or less acutely to many people)--the duel between a
+passionate devotion to a career and the claims of love, pity, and
+domestic responsibility.
+
+"The novel of the winter in Paris. Certainly the novel of the year--the
+book which everyone reads and discusses."--_The London Times._ $1.00
+net.
+
+Victor L. Whitechurch's A DOWNLAND CORNER
+
+By the author of The Canon in Residence.
+
+"One of those delightful studies in quaintness which we take to heart
+and carry in the pocket."--_New York Times._ $1.20 net.
+
+H. H. Bashford's PITY THE POOR BLIND
+
+The story of a young English couple and an Anglican priest.
+
+"This novel, whose title is purely metaphorical, has an uncommon
+literary quality and interest . . . its appeal, save to those who also
+'having eyes see not,' must be as compelling as its theme is
+original."--_Boston Transcript._ $1.35 net.
+
+John Mätter's THREE FARMS
+
+An "adventure in contentment" in France, Northwestern Canada and
+Indiana.
+
+"A rare combination of philosophy and humor. The most remarkable part of
+this book is the wonderful atmosphere of content which radiates from
+it."--_Boston Transcript._ $1.20 net.
+
+Dorothy Canfield's THE SQUIRREL-CAGE
+
+A very human story of the struggle of an American wife and mother to
+call her soul her own. 4th printing. Illustrated by J. A. Williams.
+
+"One has no hesitation in classing The Squirrel Cage with the best
+American fiction of this or any season."--_Chicago Record-Herald._ $1.35
+net.
+
+HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
+
+34 WEST 33rd STREET--NEW YORK
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+STANDARD CONTEMPORARY NOVELS
+
+WILLIAM DE MORGAN'S JOSEPH VANCE
+
+The story of a great sacrifice and a lifelong love. Over fourteen
+printings. $1.75.
+
+List of Mr. De Morgan's other novels sent on application.
+
+PAUL LEICESTER FORD'S THE HON. PETER STIRLING
+
+This famous novel of New York political life has gone through over fifty
+impressions. $1.50.
+
+ANTHONY HOPE'S PRISONER OF ZENDA
+
+This romance of adventure has passed through over sixty impressions.
+With illustrations by C. D. Gibson. $1.50.
+
+ANTHONY HOPE'S RUPERT OF HENTZAU
+
+This story has been printed over a score of times. With illustrations by
+C. D. Gibson. $1.50.
+
+ANTHONY HOPE'S DOLLY DIALOGUES
+
+Has passed through over eighteen printings. With illustrations by H. C.
+Christy. $1.50.
+
+CHARLES BATTELL LOOMIS'S CHEERFUL AMERICANS
+
+By the author of "Poe's Raven in an Elevator" and "A Holiday Touch."
+With 24 illustrations. Tenth printing. $1.25.
+
+MAY SINCLAIR'S THE DIVINE FIRE
+
+By the author of "The Helpmate," etc. Fifteenth printing. $1.50.
+
+BURTON E. STEVENSON'S MARATHON MYSTERY
+
+This mystery story of a New York apartment house is now in its seventh
+printing, has been republished in England and translated into German and
+Italian. With illustrations in color. $1.50.
+
+E. L. VOYNICH'S THE GADFLY
+
+An intense romance of the Italian uprising against the Austrians.
+Twenty-third edition. $1.25.
+
+DAVID DWIGHT WELLS'S HER LADYSHIP'S ELEPHANT
+
+With cover by Wm. Nicholson. Eighteenth printing. $1.25.
+
+C. N. and A. M. WILLIAMSON'S LIGHTNING CONDUCTOR
+
+Over thirty printings. $1.50.
+
+C. N. and A. M. WILLIAMSON'S THE PRINCESS PASSES
+
+Illustrated by Edward Penfield. Eighth printing. $1.50.
+
+HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
+
+PUBLISHERS--NEW YORK
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Village Life in America 1852-1872, by
+Caroline Cowles Richards
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Village Life in America 1852-1872, by
+Caroline Cowles Richards
+
+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: Village Life in America 1852-1872
+ Including the period of the American Civil War as told in
+ the diary of a school-girl
+
+Author: Caroline Cowles Richards
+
+Release Date: September 18, 2010 [EBook #33756]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK VILLAGE LIFE IN AMERICA 1852-1872 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.fadedpage.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a id='ifpc'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-fpc.jpg' alt='' />
+<p class='c'>Caroline Cowles Richards<br />(From a daguerreotype taken in 1860)</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='d100' />
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;margin-top:2.0em;font-size:2.0em;'>VILLAGE LIFE IN<br />AMERICA</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-size:1.2em;'>1852-1872</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;margin-top:1em;'>INCLUDING THE PERIOD OF THE<br />AMERICAN CIVIL WAR AS TOLD IN<br />THE DIARY OF A SCHOOL-GIRL</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;margin-top:2em;'>By</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-size:1.4em;'>CAROLINE COWLES RICHARDS</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;margin-top:2em;font-size:0.8em;'>WITH AN INTRODUCTION<br />BY</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;'>MARGARET E. SANGSTER</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;margin-top:3em;margin-bottom:2em;'>NEW AND ENLARGED EDITION</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a id='iemb'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-emb.jpg' alt='' />
+<p class='c'></p>
+</div>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;margin-top:2em;'>NEW YORK</p>
+<p style='text-align:center;font-size:1.2em;'>HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY</p>
+<p style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:2em;'>1913</p>
+
+<hr class='d100' />
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-variant:small-caps;margin-top:2em;'>Copyright, 1908,<br />by<br />CAROLINE RICHARDS CLARKE</p>
+<hr class='d10' />
+<p style='text-align:center;font-variant:small-caps;'>Copyright, 1913,<br />by<br />HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;margin-top:3em;margin-bottom:2em;font-size:0.8em;'>THE QUINN &amp; BODEN CO. PRESS<br />RAHWAY, N. J.</p>
+
+<hr class='d100' />
+
+<p style='text-align:center;'>To<br />My dear brothers,<br />JAMES AND JOHN, <br />who, by precept and example,<br />have encouraged me, <br />and to my beloved sister,<br />ANNA,<br />whose faith and affection<br />have been my chief inspiration,<br />this little volume<br />is lovingly inscribed.</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;text-align:left;font-variant:small-caps;margin-bottom:3em;'>Naples, N. Y.</p>
+
+<hr class='d100' />
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-size:1.2em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_v'></a>v</span>CONTENTS</p>
+
+<table summary='toc' style='margin: 0 auto'>
+<tr><td></td><td><span style='font-size:0.8em'>PAGE</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td>Introduction, by Mrs. Margaret E. Sangster</td><td align='right'><a href='#page_ix'>ix</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>The Villages</td><td align='right'><a href='#page_xiii'>xiii</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>The Villagers</td><td align='right'><a href='#page_xiv'>xiv</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>1852.&mdash;Family Notes&mdash;Famous School&mdash;Girls&mdash;Hoop Skirts</td><td align='right'><a href='#page_1'>1</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>1853.&mdash;Runaways&mdash;Bible Study&mdash;Essays&mdash;Catechism</td><td align='right'><a href='#page_10'>10</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>1854.&mdash;Lake Picnic&mdash;Pyramid of Beauty&mdash;Governor Clark</td><td align='right'><a href='#page_20'>20</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>1855.&mdash;Preachers&mdash;James and John&mdash;Votes for Women</td><td align='right'><a href='#page_43'>43</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>1856.&mdash;the Fire&mdash;Sleighing and Prayer&mdash;Father&#8217;s Advice</td><td align='right'><a href='#page_52'>52</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>1857.&mdash;Truants and Pickles&mdash;Candle Stories&mdash;the Snuffers</td><td align='right'><a href='#page_77'>77</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>1858.&mdash;Tableaux and Charades&mdash;Spiritual Seance</td><td align='right'><a href='#page_95'>95</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>1859.&mdash;E. M. Morse&mdash;Letter from the North Pole</td><td align='right'><a href='#page_106'>106</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>1860.&mdash;Gymnastics&mdash;Troublesome Comforts</td><td align='right'><a href='#page_118'>118</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>1861.&mdash;President Lincoln&#8217;s Inauguration&mdash;Civil War&mdash;School Enthusiasm</td><td align='right'><a href='#page_130'>130</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>1862.&mdash;Gough Lectures&mdash;President&#8217;s Call for Three Hundred Thousand Men&mdash;Mission Zeal</td><td align='right'><a href='#page_138'>138</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>1863.&mdash;A Soldier&#8217;s Death&mdash;General M&#8217;Clellan&#8217;s Letter&mdash;President Lincoln&#8217;s Address at Gettysburg</td><td align='right'><a href='#page_148'>148</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>1864.&mdash;Grandfather Beals&#8217; Death&mdash;Anna Graduates</td><td align='right'><a href='#page_162'>162</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>1865.&mdash;President Lincoln&#8217;s Second Inaugural Address&mdash;Fall of Richmond&mdash;Murder of Lincoln</td><td align='right'><a href='#page_176'>176</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>1866.&mdash;Freedman&#8217;s Fair&mdash;General Grant and Admiral Farragut Visit Canandaigua</td><td align='right'><a href='#page_200'>200</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>1867.&mdash;Brother John and Wife Go to London&mdash;Lecture by Charles Dickens</td><td align='right'><a href='#page_208'>208</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>1871.&mdash;Hon. George H. Stuart Speaks in Canandaigua&mdash;A Large Collection</td><td align='right'><a href='#page_210'>210</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>1872.&mdash;Grandmother Beals&#8217; Death&mdash;Biography</td><td align='right'><a href='#page_211'>211</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>1880.&mdash;Anna&#8217;s Marriage</td><td align='right'><a href='#page_225'>225</a></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr class='d100' />
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-size:1.2em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_vii'></a>vii</span>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</p>
+
+<table summary='illustrations' style='margin: 0 auto'>
+<tr><td>Caroline Cowles Richards</td><td align='right'>Frontispiece</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan='2' align='right'><span style='font-size:0.8em;'>FACING PAGE</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td>Grandfather Beals</td><td align='right'><a href='#i008a'>8</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>Grandmother Beals</td><td align='right'><a href='#i008a'>8</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>Mr. Noah T. Clarke</td><td align='right'><a href='#i030a'>30</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>Miss Upham</td><td align='right'><a href='#i030a'>30</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>First Congregational Church</td><td align='right'><a href='#i038'>38</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>Rev. Oliver E. Daggett, D.D.</td><td align='right'><a href='#i054a'>54</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>Judge Henry W. Taylor</td><td align='right'><a href='#i054a'>54</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>Miss Zilpha Clark</td><td align='right'><a href='#i054a'>54</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&#8220;Frankie Richardson&#8221;</td><td align='right'><a href='#i054a'>54</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>Horace Finley</td><td align='right'><a href='#i054a'>54</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>Tom Eddy and Eugene Stone</td><td align='right'><a href='#i066a'>66</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&#8220;Uncle David Dudley Field&#8221;</td><td align='right'><a href='#i066a'>66</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>Grandmother&#8217;s Rocking Chair</td><td align='right'><a href='#i088a'>88</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>The Grandfather Clock</td><td align='right'><a href='#i088a'>88</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>Hon. Francis Granger</td><td align='right'><a href='#i100a'>100</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>Mr. Gideon Granger</td><td align='right'><a href='#i100a'>100</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>The Old Canandaicua Academy</td><td align='right'><a href='#i124'>124</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>The Ontario Female Seminary</td><td align='right'><a href='#i132'>132</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&#8220;Old Friend Burling&#8221;</td><td align='right'><a href='#i138a'>138</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>Madame Anna Bishop</td><td align='right'><a href='#i138a'>138</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&#8220;Abbie Clark and I Had Our Ambrotypes Taken To-day&#8221;</td><td align='right'><a href='#i152a'>152</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&#8220;Mr. Noah T. Clarke&#8217;s Brother and I&#8221;</td><td align='right'><a href='#i152a'>152</a></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr class='d100' />
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-size:1.2em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_viii'></a>viii</span>PUBLISHERS&#8217; NOTE</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>After this book was in type, on March 29, 1913,
+the author, Mrs. Caroline Richards Clarke, died at
+Naples, New York.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<hr class='d100' />
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-size:1.4em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_ix'></a>ix</span>INTRODUCTION</p>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>The</span> Diary of Caroline Cowles Richards fell into
+my hands, so to speak, out of space. I had no
+previous acquaintance with the author, and I sat
+down to read the book one evening in no especial
+mood of anticipation. From the first page to the
+last my attention was riveted. To call it fascinating
+barely expresses the quality of the charm. Caroline
+Richards and her sister Anna, having early lost
+their mother, were sent to the home of her parents
+in Canandaigua, New York, where they were
+brought up in the simplicity and sweetness of a refined
+household, amid Puritan traditions. The children
+were allowed to grow as plants do, absorbing
+vitality from the atmosphere around them. Whatever
+there was of gracious formality in the manners
+of aristocratic people of the period, came to
+them as their birthright, while the spirit of the
+truest democracy pervaded their home. Of this
+Diary it is not too much to say that it is a revelation
+of childhood in ideal conditions.</p>
+
+<p>The Diary begins in 1852, and is continued until
+1872. Those of us who lived in the latter half of
+the nineteenth century recall the swift transitions,
+the rapid march of science and various changes in
+social customs, and as we meet allusions to these
+in the leaves of the girl&#8217;s Diary we live our past
+over again with peculiar pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>Far more has been told us concerning the South
+during the Civil War than concerning the North.
+Fiction has found the North a less romantic field,
+and the South has been chosen as the background of
+many a stirring novel, while only here and there
+has an author been found who has known the deep-hearted
+loyalty of the Northern States and woven
+the story into narrative form. The girl who grew
+up in Canandaigua was intensely patriotic, and from
+day to day vividly chronicled what she saw, felt,
+and heard. Her Diary is a faithful record of impressions
+of that stormy time in which the nation
+underwent a baptism of fire. The realism of her
+paragraphs is unsurpassed.</p>
+
+<p>Beyond the personal claim of the Diary and the
+certainty to give pleasure to a host of readers, the
+author appeals to Americans in general because of
+her family and her friends. Her father and grandfather
+were Presbyterian ministers. Her Grandfather
+Richards was for twenty years President of
+Auburn Theological Seminary. Her brother, John
+Morgan Richards of London, has recently given to
+the world the Life and Letters of his gifted and
+lamented daughter, Pearl Mary-Terèse Craigie,
+known best as John Oliver Hobbes. The famous
+Field brothers and their father, Rev. David Dudley
+Field, and their nephew, Justice David J. Brewer,
+of the United States Supreme Court, were her kinsmen.
+Miss Hannah Upham, a distinguished
+teacher mentioned in the Diary, belongs to the
+group of American women to whom we owe the
+initiative of what we now choose to call the higher
+education of the sex. She, in common with Mary
+Lyon, Emma Willard, and Eliza Bayliss Wheaton,
+gave a forward impulse to the liberal education of
+women, and our privilege is to keep their memory
+green. They are to be remembered by what they
+have done and by the tender reminiscences found
+here and there like pressed flowers in a herbarium,
+in such pages as these.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Richards&#8217; marriage to Mr. Edmund C.
+Clarke occurred in 1866. Mr. Clarke is a veteran
+of the Civil War and a Commander in the Grand
+Army of the Republic. His brother, Noah T.
+Clarke, was the Principal of Canandaigua Academy
+for the long term of forty years. The dignified,
+amusing and remarkable personages who were Mrs.
+Clarke&#8217;s contemporaries, teachers, or friends are
+pictured in her Diary just as they were, so that we
+meet them on the street, in the drawing-room, in
+church, at prayer-meeting, anywhere and everywhere,
+and grasp their hands as if we, too, were
+in their presence.</p>
+
+<p>Wherever this little book shall go it will carry
+good cheer. Fun and humor sparkle through the
+story of this childhood and girlhood so that the
+reader will be cheated of ennui, and the sallies of
+the little sister will provoke mirth and laughter to
+brighten dull days. I have read thousands of books.
+I have never read one which has given me more
+delight than this.</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:right;'><span class='sc'>Margaret E. Sangster.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></p>
+<p class='single'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<span class='sc'>Glen Ridge, New Jersey,</span></p>
+<p class='single'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>June,</i> 1911.</p>
+
+<hr class='d100' />
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-size:1.2em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xiii'></a>xiii</span>THE VILLAGES</p>
+
+<p style='margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em;'>CANANDAIGUA, NEW YORK.&mdash;A beautiful village,
+the county seat of Ontario County, situated at the
+foot of Canandaigua Lake, which is called &#8220;the
+gem of the inland lakes&#8221; of Western New York,
+about 325 miles from New York city.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em;'>NAPLES, NEW YORK.&mdash;A small village at the head
+of Canandaigua Lake, famous for its vine-clad
+hills and unrivaled scenery.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em;'>GENEVA, NEW YORK.&mdash;A beautiful town about 16
+miles from Canandaigua.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em;'>EAST BLOOMFIELD, NEW YORK.&mdash;An ideal
+farming region and suburban village about 8 miles
+from Canandaigua.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em;'>PENN YAN, NEW YORK.&mdash;The county seat of
+Yates County, a grape center upon beautiful Lake
+Keuka.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em;'>ROCHESTER, NEW YORK.&mdash;A nourishing manufacturing city, growing
+rapidly, less than 30 miles from Canandaigua, and 120 miles from
+Niagara Falls.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em;'>AUBURN, NEW YORK.&mdash;Noted for its Theological
+Seminary, nearly one hundred years old, and for
+being the home of William H. Seward and other
+American Statesmen.</p>
+
+<hr class='d100' />
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-size:1.2em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xiv'></a>xiv</span>THE VILLAGERS</p>
+
+<table summary='adults' style='font-size: 0.9em; margin:0 auto;'>
+<tr><td class='c1'><span class='sc'>Mr. and Mrs. THOMAS BEALS,&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></td><td class='c2'>Grandfather and Grandmother</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>&nbsp;</td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'><span class='sc'>CAROLINE and ANNA</span></td><td class='c2'>Grandchildren of Mr. and</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'><span class='sc'>JAMES and JOHN RICHARDS</span></td><td class='c2'>&nbsp;&nbsp;Mrs. Beals</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'><span class='sc'>&#8220;AUNT ANN&#8221;</span></td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'><span class='sc'>&#8220;AUNT MARY&#8221; CARR</span></td><td class='c2'>Sons and daughters of</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'><span class='sc'>&#8220;AUNT GLORIANNA&#8221;</span></td><td class='c2'>&nbsp;&nbsp;Mr. and Mrs. Beals</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'><span class='sc'>&#8220;UNCLE HENRY&#8221;</span></td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'><span class='sc'>&#8220;UNCLE THOMAS&#8221;</span></td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td></td></tr><tr><td class='c1'><span class='sc'>Rev. O. E. DAGGETT, D.D.</span></td><td class='c2'>Pastor of Canandaigua</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'></td><td class='c2'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Congregational Church</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td></td></tr><tr><td class='c1'><span class='sc'>NOAH T. CLARKE</span></td><td class='c2'>Principal Canandaigua</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'></td><td class='c2'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Academy for Boys</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td></td></tr><tr><td class='c1'><span class='sc'>Hon. FRANCIS GRANGER</span></td><td class='c2'>Postmaster-General, U.S.A.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td></td></tr><tr><td class='c1'><span class='sc'>General JOHN A. GRANGER</span></td><td class='c2'>Of New York State Militia</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td></td></tr><tr><td class='c1'><span class='sc'>GIDEON GRANGER</span></td><td class='c2'>Son of Hon. Francis</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td></td></tr><tr><td class='c1'><span class='sc'>ALBERT GRANGER</span></td><td class='c2'>Son of General Granger</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td></td></tr><tr><td class='c1'><span class='sc'>JOHN GREIG</span></td><td class='c2'>Wealthy Scotsman long time</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'></td><td class='c2'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;resident of Canandaigua</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td></td></tr><tr><td class='c1'><span class='sc'>MYRON H. CLARK</span></td><td class='c2'>Governor, State of New York</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td></td></tr><tr><td class='c1'><span class='sc'>JUDGE H. W. TAYLOR</span></td><td class='c2'>Prominent lawyer and jurist</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td></td></tr><tr><td class='c1'><span class='sc'>E. M. MORSE</span></td><td class='c2'>A leading lawyer in Canandaigua</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td></td></tr><tr><td class='c1'><span class='sc'>Miss ZILPHA CLARKE</span></td><td class='c2'>School teacher of note</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td></td></tr><tr><td class='c1'><span class='sc'>Miss CAROLINE CHESEBRO</span></td><td class='c2'>Well-known writers</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'><span class='sc'>Mrs. GEORGE WILLSON</span></td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td></td></tr><tr><td class='c1'><span class='sc'>Miss HANNAH UPHAM</span></td><td class='c2'>Eminent instructress and</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'></td><td class='c2'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;lady principal of Ontario</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'></td><td class='c2'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Female Seminary</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td></td></tr><tr><td class='c1'><span class='sc'>Mr. FRED THOMPSON</span></td><td class='c2'>Prominent resident, married</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'></td><td class='c2'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Miss Mary Clark, daughter</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'></td><td class='c2'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of Governor Myron H.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'></td><td class='c2'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Clark.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr class='d100' />
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-style:italic;margin-top:2em;font-size:1.2em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_xv'></a>xv</span>School Boys</p>
+
+<table summary='boys' style='font-size: 0.9em; margin:0 auto;'>
+<tr><td class='c1'>WILLIAM T. SCHLEY </td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>HORACE M. FINLEY </td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>ALBERT MURRAY </td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>S. GURNEY LAPHAM </td><td class='c2'>Residing with parents in</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>CHARLES COY </td><td class='c2'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Canandaigua</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>ELLSWORTH DAGGETT </td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>CHARLIE PADDOCK </td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>MERRITT C. WILLCOX </td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>&nbsp; </td><td></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>WILLIAM H. ADAMS </td><td class='c2'>Law Students</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>GEORGE N. WILLIAMS </td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>&nbsp; </td><td></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>WILLIS P. FISKE </td><td class='c2'>Teachers in Academy</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>EDMUND C. CLARKE </td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-style:italic;margin-top:2em;font-size:1.2em;'>School Girls</p>
+
+<table summary='girls' style='font-size: 0.9em; margin:0 auto;'>
+<tr><td class='c1'>LOUISA FIELD </td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>MARY WHEELER </td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>EMMA WHEELER </td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>LAURA CHAPIN </td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>JULIA PHELPS </td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>MARY PAUL </td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>BESSIE SEYMOUR </td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>LUCILLA FIELD </td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>MARY FIELD </td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>ABBIE CLARK </td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>SUSIE DAGGETT </td><td class='c2'>Residing with parents in</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>FRANKIE RICHARDSON </td><td class='c2'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Canandaigua</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>FANNY GAYLORD </td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>MARY COY </td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>HELEN COY </td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>HATTIE PADDOCK </td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>SARAH ANTES </td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>LOTTIE LAPHAM </td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>CLARA WILSON </td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>FANNIE PALMER </td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='c1'>RITIE TYLER </td><td class='c2'></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr class='d100' />
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-size:1.2em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_1'></a>1</span>VILLAGE LIFE IN AMERICA</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+<a id='c1852'></a>
+<p class='cln0'>1852</p>
+</div>
+
+<p style='text-align:right;'><span class='sc'>Canandaigua, </span> N. Y.</p>
+
+<p><i>November</i> 21, 1852.&mdash;I am ten years old to-day,
+and I think I will write a journal and tell who I
+am and what I am doing. I have lived with my
+Grandfather and Grandmother Beals ever since I
+was seven years old, and Anna, too, since she was
+four. Our brothers, James and John, came too,
+but they are at East Bloomfield at Mr. Stephen
+Clark&#8217;s Academy. Miss Laura Clark of Naples is
+their teacher.</p>
+
+<p>Anna and I go to school at District No. 11. Mr.
+James C. Cross is our teacher, and some of the
+scholars say he is cross by name and cross by nature,
+but I like him. He gave me a book by the name
+of &#8220;Noble Deeds of American Women,&#8221; for reward
+of merit, in my reading class. To-day, a nice old
+gentleman, by the name of Mr. William Wood,
+visited our school. He is Mrs. Nat Gorham&#8217;s uncle,
+and Wood Street is named for him. He had a
+beautiful pear in his hand and said he would give
+it to the boy or girl who could spell &#8220;virgaloo,&#8221;
+for that was the name of the pear. I spelt it that
+way, but it was not right. A little boy, named
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_2'></a>2</span>William Schley, spelt it right and he got the pear.
+I wish I had, but I can&#8217;t even remember now how
+he spelt it. If the pear was as hard as the name I
+don&#8217;t believe any one would want it, but I don&#8217;t see
+how they happened to give such a hard name to
+such a nice pear. Grandfather says perhaps Mr.
+Wood will bring in a Seckle pear some day, so I
+had better be ready for him.</p>
+
+<p>Grandmother told us such a nice story to-day I
+am going to write it down in my journal. I think
+I shall write a book some day. Miss Caroline
+Chesebro did, and I don&#8217;t see why I can&#8217;t. If I do,
+I shall put this story in it. It is a true story and
+better than any I found in three story books
+Grandmother gave us to read this week, &#8220;Peep of
+Day,&#8221; &#8220;Line Upon Line,&#8221; and &#8220;Precept Upon Precept,&#8221;
+but this story was better than them all. One
+night Grandfather was locking the front door at
+nine o&#8217;clock and he heard a queer sound, like a baby
+crying. So he unlocked the door and found a
+bandbox on the stoop, and the cry seemed to come
+from inside of it. So he took it up and brought it
+into the dining-room and called the two girls, who
+had just gone upstairs to bed. They came right
+down and opened the box, and there was a poor
+little girl baby, crying as hard as could be. They
+took it out and rocked it and sung to it and got
+some milk and fed it and then sat up all night
+with it, by the fire. There was a paper pinned on
+the baby&#8217;s dress with her name on it, &#8220;Lily T.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_3'></a>3</span>LaMott,&#8221; and a piece of poetry called &#8220;Pity the
+Poor Orphan.&#8221; The next morning, Grandfather
+went to the overseer of the poor and he said it
+should be taken to the county house, so our hired
+man got the horse and buggy, and one of the girls
+carried the baby and they took it away. There was
+a piece in the paper about it, and Grandmother
+pasted it into her &#8220;Jay&#8217;s Morning and Evening
+Exercises,&#8221; and showed it to us. It said, &#8220;A Deposit
+After Banking Hours.&#8221; &#8220;Two suspicious
+looking females were seen about town in the afternoon,
+one of them carrying an infant. They took
+a train early in the morning without the child.
+They probably secreted themselves in Mr. Beals&#8217;
+yard and if he had not taken the box in they would
+have carried it somewhere else.&#8221; When Grandfather
+told the clerks in the bank about it next
+morning, Mr. Bunnell, who lives over by Mr. Daggett&#8217;s,
+on the park, said, if it had been left at some
+people&#8217;s houses it would not have been sent away.
+Grandmother says they heard that the baby was
+adopted afterwards by some nice people in Geneva.
+People must think this is a nice place for children,
+for they had eleven of their own before we came.
+Mrs. McCoe was here to call this afternoon and she
+looked at us and said: &#8220;It must be a great responsibility,
+Mrs. Beals.&#8221; Grandmother said she
+thought &#8220;her strength would be equal to her day.&#8221;
+That is one of her favorite verses. She said Mrs.
+McCoe never had any children of her own and perhaps
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_4'></a>4</span>that is the reason she looks so sad at us. Perhaps
+some one will leave a bandbox and a baby at
+her door some dark night.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Saturday.</i>&mdash;Our brother John drove over from
+East Bloomfield to-day to see us and brought Julia
+Smedley with him, who is just my age. John lives
+at Mr. Ferdinand Beebe&#8217;s and goes to school and
+Julia is Mr. Beebe&#8217;s niece. They make quantities
+of maple sugar out there and they brought us a
+dozen little cakes. They were splendid. I offered
+John one and he said he would rather throw it over
+the fence than to eat it. I can&#8217;t understand that.
+Anna had the faceache to-day and I told her that
+I would be the doctor and make her a ginger poultice.
+I thought I did it exactly right but when I
+put it on her face she shivered and said: &#8220;Carrie,
+you make lovely poultices only they are so cold.&#8221;
+I suppose I ought to have warmed it.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Tuesday.</i>&mdash;Grandfather took us to ride this afternoon
+and let us ask Bessie Seymour to go with us.
+We rode on the plank road to Chapinville and had
+to pay 2 cents at the toll gate, both ways. We met
+a good many people and Grandfather bowed to them
+and said, &#8220;How do you do, neighbor?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>We asked him what their names were and he said
+he did not know. We went to see Mr. Munson,
+who runs the mill at Chapinville. He took us
+through the mill and let us get weighed and took
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_5'></a>5</span>us over to his house and out into the barn-yard to
+see the pigs and chickens and we also saw a colt
+which was one day old. Anna just wrote in her
+journal that &#8220;it was a very amusing site.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday.</i>&mdash;Rev. Mr. Kendall, of East Bloomfield,
+preached to-day. His text was from Job 26, 14:
+&#8220;Lo these are parts of his ways, but how little a
+portion is heard of him.&#8221; I could not make out
+what he meant. He is James&#8217; and John&#8217;s minister.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Wednesday.</i>&mdash;Captain Menteith was at our house
+to dinner to-day and he tried to make Anna and me
+laugh by snapping his snuff-box under the table.
+He is a very jolly man, I think.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Thursday.</i>&mdash;Father and Uncle Edward Richards
+came to see us yesterday and took us down to Mr.
+Corson&#8217;s store and told us we could have anything
+we wanted. So we asked for several kinds of
+candy, stick candy and lemon drops and bulls&#8217; eyes,
+and then they got us two rubber balls and two jumping
+ropes with handles and two hoops and sticks to
+roll them with and two red carnelian rings and two
+bracelets. We enjoyed getting them very much,
+and expect to have lots of fun. They went out to
+East Bloomfield to see James and John, and father
+is going to take them to New Orleans. We hate
+to have them go.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_6'></a>6</span><i>Friday.</i>&mdash;We asked Grandmother if we could
+have some hoop skirts like the seminary girls and
+she said no, we were not old enough. When we
+were downtown Anna bought a reed for 10 cents
+and ran it into the hem of her underskirt and says
+she is going to wear it to school to-morrow. I
+think Grandmother will laugh out loud for once,
+when she sees it, but I don&#8217;t think Anna will wear
+it to school or anywhere else. She wouldn&#8217;t want
+to if she knew how terrible it looked.</p>
+
+<p>I threaded a dozen needles on a spool of thread
+for Grandmother, before I went to school, so that
+she could slip them along and use them as she needed
+them. She says it is a great help.</p>
+
+<p>Grandmother says I will have a great deal to
+answer for, because Anna looks up to me so and
+tries to do everything that I do and thinks whatever
+I say is &#8220;gospel truth.&#8221; The other day the girls
+at school were disputing with her about something
+and she said, &#8220;It is so, if it ain&#8217;t so, for Calline
+said so.&#8221; I shall have to &#8220;toe the mark,&#8221; as Grandfather
+says, if she keeps watch of me all the time
+and walks in my footsteps.</p>
+
+<p>We asked Grandmother this evening if we could
+sit out in the kitchen with Bridget and Hannah and
+the hired man, Thomas Holleran. She said we
+could take turns and each stay ten minutes by the
+clock. It gave us a little change. I read once that
+&#8220;variety is the spice of life.&#8221; They sit around the
+table and each one has a candle, and Thomas reads
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_7'></a>7</span>aloud to the girls while they sew. He and Bridget
+are Catholics, but Hannah is a member of our
+Church. The girls have lived here always, I think,
+but I don&#8217;t know for sure, as I have not lived here
+always myself, but we have to get a new hired man
+sometimes. Grandmother says if you are as good
+to your girls as you are to yourself they will stay a
+long time. I am sure that is Grandmother&#8217;s rule.
+Mrs. McCarty, who lives on Brook Street (some
+people call it Cat Alley but Grandmother says that is
+not proper), washes for us Mondays, and Grandmother
+always has a lunch for her at eleven o&#8217;clock
+and goes out herself to see that she sits down and
+eats it. Mrs. McCarty told us Monday that Mrs.
+Brockle&#8217;s niece was dead, who lives next door to her.
+Grandmother sent us over with some things for their
+comfort and told us to say that we were sorry they
+were in trouble. We went and when we came back
+Anna told Grandmother that I said, &#8220;Never mind,
+Mrs. Brockle, some day we will all be dead.&#8221; I am
+sure that I said something better than that.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Wednesday</i>.&mdash;Mr. Cross had us speak pieces to-day.
+He calls our names, and we walk on to the
+platform and toe the mark and make a bow and
+say what we have got to say. He did not know
+what our pieces were going to be and some of them
+said the same ones. Two boys spoke: &#8220;The boy
+stood on the burning deck, whence all but him had
+fled.&#8221; William Schley was one, and he spoke his
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_8'></a>8</span>the best. When he said, &#8220;The flames that lit the
+battle wreck shone round him o&#8217;er the dead,&#8221; we
+could almost see the fire, and when he said, &#8220;My
+father, must I stay?&#8221; we felt like telling him, no,
+he needn&#8217;t. He is going to make a good speaker.
+Mr. Cross said so. Albert Murray spoke &#8220;Excelsior,&#8221;
+and Horace Finley spoke nice, too. My
+piece was, &#8220;Why, Phoebe, are you come so soon?
+Where are your berries, child?&#8221; Emma Van Arsdale
+spoke the same one. We find them all in our
+reader. Sometime I am going to speak, &#8220;How does
+the water come down at Ladore?&#8221; Splashing and
+flashing and dashing and clashing and all that&mdash;it
+rhymes, so it is easy to remember.</p>
+
+<p>We played snap the whip at recess to-day
+and I was on the end and was snapped off against
+the fence. It hurt me so, that Anna cried. It is
+not a very good game for girls, especially for the
+one on the end.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<table summary='figure' style='margin:0 auto'><tr>
+<td valign='bottom' style='padding-right:20px;'><a id='i008a'></a><img src='images/illus-008a.jpg' alt='' /><p class='c'>Grandfather Beals</p></td>
+<td valign='bottom'><a id='i008b'></a><img src='images/illus-008b.jpg' alt='' /><p class='c'>Grandmother Beals</p></td>
+</tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_9'></a>9</span><i>Tuesday.</i>&mdash;I could not keep a journal for two
+weeks, because Grandfather and Grandmother have
+been very sick and we were afraid something dreadful
+was going to happen. We are so glad that they
+are well again. Grandmother was sick upstairs and
+Grandfather in the bedroom downstairs, and we
+carried messages back and forth for them. Dr.
+Carr and Aunt Mary came over twice every day
+and said they had the influenza and the inflammation
+of the lungs. It was lonesome for us to sit
+down to the table and just have Hannah wait on us.
+We did not have any blessing because there was no
+one to ask it. Anna said she could, but I was afraid
+she would not say it right, so I told her she needn&#8217;t.
+We had such lumps in our throats we could not eat
+much and we cried ourselves to sleep two or three
+nights. Aunt Ann Field took us home with her one
+afternoon to stay all night. We liked the idea and
+Mary and Louisa and Anna and I planned what we
+would play in the evening, but just as it was dark our
+hired man, Patrick McCarty, drove over after us.
+He said Grandfather and Grandmother could not get
+to sleep till they saw the children and bid them good-night.
+So we rode home with him. We never
+stayed anywhere away from home all night that we
+can remember. When Grandmother came downstairs
+the first time she was too weak to walk, so
+she sat on each step till she got down. When
+Grandfather saw her, he smiled and said to us:
+&#8220;When she will, she will, you may depend on&#8217;t;
+and when she won&#8217;t she won&#8217;t, and that&#8217;s the
+end on&#8217;t.&#8221; But we knew all the time that he was
+very glad to see her.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+<a id='c1853'></a>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_10'></a>10</span>
+<p class='cln0'>1853</p>
+</div>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday, March 20.</i>&mdash;It snowed so, that we could
+not go to church to-day and it was the longest day
+I ever spent. The only excitement was seeing the
+snowplow drawn by two horses, go up on this
+side of the street and down on the other. Grandfather
+put on his long cloak with a cape, which he
+wears in real cold weather, and went. We wanted
+to pull some long stockings over our shoes and go
+too but Grandmother did not think it was best.
+She gave us the &#8220;Dairyman&#8217;s Daughter&#8221; and
+&#8220;Jane the Young Cottager,&#8221; by Leigh Richmond, to
+read. I don&#8217;t see how they happened to be so awfully
+good. Anna says they died of &#8220;early piety,&#8221;
+but she did not say it very loud. Grandmother said
+she would give me 10 cents if I would learn the
+verses in the New England Primer that John Rogers
+left for his wife and nine small children and one
+at the breast, when he was burned at the stake, at
+Smithfield, England, in 1555. One verse is, &#8220;I
+leave you here a little book for you to look upon that
+you may see your father&#8217;s face when he is dead and
+gone.&#8221; It is a very long piece but I got it. Grandmother
+says &#8220;the blood of the martyrs is the seed
+of the church.&#8221; Anna learned</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;In Adam&#8217;s fall we sinned all.</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_11'></a>11</span>My Book and heart shall never part.</p>
+<p>The Cat doth play and after slay.</p>
+<p>The Dog doth bite a thief at night.&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p>When she came to the end of it and said,</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;Zaccheus he, did climb a tree, his Lord to see.&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p>she said she heard some one say, &#8220;The tree broke
+down and let him fall and he did not see his Lord
+at all.&#8221; Grandmother said it was very wicked indeed
+and she hoped Anna would try and forget it.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>April 1.</i>&mdash;Grandmother sent me up into the little
+chamber to-day to straighten things and get the
+room ready to be cleaned. I found a little book
+called &#8220;Child&#8217;s Pilgrim Progress, Illustrated,&#8221; that
+I had never seen before. I got as far as Giant
+Despair when Anna came up and said Grandmother
+sent her to see what I was doing, and she went
+back and told her that I was sitting on the floor in
+the midst of books and papers and was so absorbed
+in &#8220;Pilgrim&#8217;s Progress&#8221; that I had made none myself.
+It must be a good book for Grandmother did
+not say a word. Father sent us &#8220;Gulliver&#8217;s Travels&#8221;
+and there is a gilt picture on the green cover,
+of a giant with legs astride and little Lilliputians
+standing underneath, who do not come up to his
+knees. Grandmother did not like the picture, so
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_12'></a>12</span>she pasted a piece of pink calico over it, so we could
+only see the giant from his waist up. I love the
+story of Cinderella and the poem, &#8220;&#8217;Twas the night
+before Christmas,&#8221; and I am sorry that there are
+no fairies and no Santa Claus.</p>
+
+<p>We go to school to Miss Zilpha Clark in her own
+house on Gibson Street. Other girls who go are
+Laura Chapin, Julia Phelps, Mary Paul, Bessie Seymour,
+Lucilla and Mary Field, Louisa Benjamin,
+Nannie Corson, Kittie Marshall, Abbie Clark and
+several other girls. I like Abbie Clark the best of
+all the girls in school excepting of course my sister
+Anna.</p>
+
+<p>Before I go to school every morning I read three
+chapters in the Bible. I read three every day and
+five on Sunday and that takes me through the Bible
+in a year. Those I read this morning were the first,
+second and third chapters of Job. The first was
+about Eliphaz reproveth Job; second, Benefit of
+God&#8217;s correction; third, Job justifieth his complaint.
+I then learned a text to say at school. I went to
+school at quarter to nine and recited my text and
+we had prayers and then proceeded with the business
+of the day. Just before school was out, we recited
+in &#8220;Science of Things Familiar,&#8221; and in Dictionary,
+and then we had calisthenics.</p>
+
+<p>We go through a great many figures and sing &#8220;A
+Life on the Ocean Wave,&#8221; &#8220;What Fairy-like Music
+Steals Over the Sea,&#8221; &#8220;Lightly Row, Lightly Row,
+O&#8217;er the Glassy Waves We Go,&#8221; and &#8220;O Come,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_13'></a>13</span>Come Away,&#8221; and other songs. Mrs. Judge Taylor
+wrote one song on purpose for us.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>May 1.</i>&mdash;I arose this morning about the usual
+time and read my three chapters in the Bible and
+had time for a walk in the garden before breakfast.
+The polyanthuses are just beginning to blossom and
+they border all the walk up and down the garden.
+I went to school at quarter of nine, but did not get
+along very well because we played too much. We
+had two new scholars to-day, Miss Archibald and
+Miss Andrews, the former about seventeen and the
+latter about fifteen. In the afternoon old Mrs. Kinney
+made us a visit, but she did not stay very long.
+In dictionary class I got up sixth, although I had
+not studied my lesson very much.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>July.</i>&mdash;Hiram Goodrich, who lives at Mr. Myron
+H. Clark&#8217;s, and George and Wirt Wheeler ran away
+on Sunday to seek their fortunes. When they did
+not come back every one was frightened and started
+out to find them. They set out right after Sunday
+School, taking their pennies which had been given
+them for the contribution, and were gone several
+days. They were finally found at Palmyra. When
+asked why they had run away, one replied that he
+thought it was about time they saw something of
+the world. We heard that Mr. Clark had a few
+moments&#8217; private conversation with Hiram in the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_14'></a>14</span>barn and Mr. Wheeler the same with his boys and
+we do not think they will go traveling on their own
+hook again right off. Miss Upham lives right
+across the street from them and she was telling little
+Morris Bates that he must fight the good fight of
+faith and he asked her if that was the fight that
+Wirt Wheeler fit. She probably had to make her
+instructions plainer after that.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>July.</i>&mdash;Every Saturday our cousins, Lucilla and
+Mary and Louisa Field, take turns coming to Grandmother&#8217;s
+to dinner. It was Mary&#8217;s turn to-day, but
+she was sick and couldn&#8217;t come, so Grandmother
+told us that we could dress up and make some calls
+for her. We were very glad. She told us to go
+to Mrs. Gooding&#8217;s first, so we did and she was glad
+to see us and gave us some cake she had just made.
+Then we went on to Mr. Greig&#8217;s. We walked up
+the high steps to the front door and rang the bell
+and Mr. Alexander came. We asked if Mrs. Greig
+and Miss Chapin were at home and he said yes, and
+asked us into the parlor. We looked at the paintings
+on the wall and looked at ourselves in the long
+looking-glass, while we were waiting. Mrs. Irving
+came in first. She was very nice and said I looked
+like her niece, Julie Jeffrey. I hope I do, for I
+would like to look like her. Mrs. Greig and Miss
+Chapin came in and were very glad to see us, and
+took us out into the greenhouse and showed us all
+the beautiful plants. When we said we would have
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_15'></a>15</span>to go they said goodbye and sent love to Grandmother
+and told us to call again. I never knew
+Anna to act as polite as she did to-day. Then we
+went to see Mrs. Judge Phelps and Miss Eliza
+Chapin, and they were very nice and gave us some
+flowers from their garden. Then we went on to
+Miss Caroline Jackson&#8217;s, to see Mrs. Holmes.
+Sometimes she is my Sunday School teacher, and
+she says she and our mother used to be great friends
+at the seminary. She said she was glad we came
+up and she hoped we would be as good as our mother
+was. That is what nearly every one says. On our
+way back, we called on Mrs. Dana at the Academy,
+as she is a friend of Grandmother. She is Mrs.
+Noah T. Clarke&#8217;s mother. After that, we went
+home and told Grandmother we had a very pleasant
+time calling on our friends and they all asked us to
+come again.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday, August 15.</i>&mdash;To-day the Sacrament of
+the Lord&#8217;s Supper was held in our church, and Mr.
+Daggett baptized several little babies. They looked
+so cunning when he took them in his arms and not
+one of them cried. I told Grandmother when we
+got home that I remembered when Grandfather
+Richards baptized me in Auburn, and when he gave
+me back to mother he said, &#8220;Blessed little lambkin,
+you&#8217;ll never know your grandpa.&#8221; She said I was
+mistaken about remembering it, for he died before
+I was a year old, but I had heard it told so many
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_16'></a>16</span>times I thought I remembered it. Probably that
+is the way it was but I know it happened.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>November 22.</i>&mdash;I wrote a composition to-day,
+and the subject was, &#8220;Which of the Seasons Is the
+Pleasantest?&#8221; Anna asked Grandmother what she
+should write about, and Grandmother said she
+thought &#8220;A Contented Mind&#8221; would be a very good
+subject, but Anna said she never had one and didn&#8217;t
+know what it meant, so she didn&#8217;t try to write any
+at all.</p>
+
+<p>A squaw walked right into our kitchen to-day with
+a blanket over her head and had beaded purses to
+sell.</p>
+
+<p>This is my composition which I wrote: &#8220;Which
+of the seasons is the pleasantest? Grim winter with
+its cold snows and whistling winds, or pleasant
+spring with its green grass and budding trees, or
+warm summer with its ripening fruit and beautiful
+flowers, or delightful autumn with its golden fruit
+and splendid sunsets? I think that I like all the
+seasons very well. In winter comes the blazing fire
+and Christmas treat. Then we can have sleigh-rides
+and play in the snow and generally get pretty
+cold noses and toses. In spring we have a great
+deal of rain and very often snow and therefore we
+do not enjoy that season as much as we would if it
+was dry weather, but we should remember that
+April showers bring May flowers. In summer we
+can hear the birds warbling their sweet notes in the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_17'></a>17</span>trees and we have a great many strawberries, currants,
+gooseberries and cherries, which I like very
+much, indeed, and I think summer is a very pleasant
+season. In autumn we have some of our choicest
+fruits, such as peaches, pears, apples, grapes and
+plums and plenty of flowers in the former part, but
+in the latter, about in November, the wind begins
+to blow and the leaves to fall and the flowers to
+wither and die. Then cold winter with its sleigh-rides
+comes round again.&#8221; After I had written
+this I went to bed. Anna tied her shoe strings in
+hard knots so she could sit up later.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>November 23.</i>&mdash;We read our compositions to-day
+and Miss Clark said mine was very good. One of
+the girls had a Prophecy for a composition and told
+what we were all going to be when we grew up.
+She said Anna Richards was going to be a missionary
+and Anna cried right out loud. I tried to comfort
+her and told her it might never happen, so she
+stopped crying.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>November 24.</i>&mdash;Three ladies visited our school
+to-day, Miss Phelps, Miss Daniels and Mrs. Clark.
+We had calisthenics and they liked them.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday.</i>&mdash;Mr. Tousley preached to-day. Mr.
+Lamb is Superintendent of the Sunday School.
+Mr. Chipman used to be. Miss Mollie Bull played
+the melodeon. Mr. Fairchild is my teacher when he
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_18'></a>18</span>is there. He was not there to-day and Miss Mary
+Howell taught our class. I wish I could be as good
+and pretty as she is. We go to church morning
+and afternoon and to Sunday School, and learn
+seven verses every week and recite catechism and
+hymns to Grandmother in the evening. Grandmother
+knows all the questions by heart, so she lets
+the book lie in her lap and she asks them with her
+eyes shut. She likes to hear us sing:</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;&#8217;Tis religion that can give</p>
+<p>Sweetest pleasure while we live,</p>
+<p>&#8217;Tis religion can supply</p>
+<p>Solid comfort when we die.&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>December 1.</i>&mdash;Grandfather asked me to read
+President Pierce&#8217;s message aloud to him this evening.
+I thought it was very long and dry, but he
+said it was interesting and that I read it very well.
+I am glad he liked it. Part of it was about the
+Missouri Compromise and I didn&#8217;t even know what
+it meant.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>December 8.</i>&mdash;We are taking dictation lessons at
+school now. Miss Clark reads to us from the &#8220;Life
+of Queen Elizabeth&#8221; and we write it down in a
+book and keep it. She corrects it for us. I always
+spell &#8220;until&#8221; with two l&#8217;s and she has to mark it
+every time. I hope I will learn how to spell it
+after a while.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_19'></a>19</span><i>Saturday, December 9.</i>&mdash;We took our music lessons
+to-day. Miss Hattie Heard is our teacher and
+she says we are getting along well. Anna practiced
+her lesson over sixty-five times this morning
+before breakfast and can play &#8220;Mary to the
+Saviour&#8217;s Tomb&#8221; as fast as a waltz.</p>
+
+<p>We chose sides and spelled down at school to-day.
+Julia Phelps and I stood up the last and both went
+down on the same word&mdash;eulogism. I don&#8217;t see
+the use of that &#8220;e.&#8221; Miss Clark gave us twenty
+words which we had to bring into some stories
+which we wrote. It was real fun to hear them.
+Every one was different.</p>
+
+<p>This evening as we sat before the fire place with
+Grandmother, she taught us how to play &#8220;Cat&#8217;s
+Cradle,&#8221; with a string on our fingers.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>December 25.</i>&mdash;Uncle Edward Richards sent us
+a basket of lovely things from New York for
+Christmas. Books and dresses for Anna and me,
+a kaleidoscope, large cornucopias of candy, and
+games, one of them being battledore and shuttlecock.
+Grandmother says we will have to wait until spring
+to play it, as it takes so much room. I wish all the
+little girls in the world had an Uncle Edward.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+<a id='c1854'></a>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_20'></a>20</span>
+<p class='cln0'>1854</p>
+</div>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>January 1, 1854.</i>&mdash;About fifty little boys and
+girls at intervals knocked at the front door to-day,
+to wish us Happy New Year. We had pennies and
+cakes and apples ready for them. The pennies,
+especially, seemed to attract them and we noticed the
+same ones several times. Aunt Mary Carr made
+lovely New Year cakes with a pretty flower stamped
+on before they were baked.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>February</i> 4, 1854.&mdash;We heard to-day of the
+death of our little half-sister, Julia Dey Richards, in
+Penn Yan, yesterday, and I felt so sorry I couldn&#8217;t
+sleep last night so I made up some verses about her
+and this morning wrote them down and gave them to
+Grandfather. He liked them so well he wanted me
+to show them to Miss Clark and ask her to revise
+them. I did and she said she would hand them to
+her sister Mary to correct. When she handed them
+back they were very much nicer than they were at
+first and Grandfather had me copy them and he
+pasted them into one of his Bibles to keep.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Saturday.</i>&mdash;Anna and I went to call on Miss Upham
+to-day. She is a real old lady and lives with
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_21'></a>21</span>her niece, Mrs. John Bates, on Gibson Street. Our
+mother used to go to school to her at the Seminary.
+Miss Upham said to Anna, &#8220;Your mother was a
+lovely woman. You are not at all like her, dear.&#8221;
+I told Anna she meant in looks I was sure, but Anna
+was afraid she didn&#8217;t.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday.</i>&mdash;Mr. Daggett&#8217;s text this morning was
+the 22nd chapter of Revelation, 16th verse, &#8220;I am
+the root and offspring of David and the bright and
+morning star.&#8221; Mrs. Judge Taylor taught our Sunday
+School class to-day and she said we ought not
+to read our S. S. books on Sunday. I always do.
+Mine to-day was entitled, &#8220;Cheap Repository Tracts
+by Hannah More,&#8221; and it did not seem unreligious
+at all.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Tuesday.</i>&mdash;A gentleman visited our school to-day
+whom we had never seen. Miss Clark introduced
+him to us. When he came in, Miss Clark said,
+&#8220;Young ladies,&#8221; and we all stood up and bowed
+and said his name in concert. Grandfather says he
+would rather have us go to school to Miss Clark
+than any one else because she teaches us manners as
+well as books. We girls think that he is a very particular
+friend of Miss Clark. He is very nice looking,
+but we don&#8217;t know where he lives. Laura
+Chapin says he is an architect. I looked it up in
+the dictionary and it says one who plans or designs.
+I hope he does not plan to get married to Miss Clark
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_22'></a>22</span>and take her away and break up the school, but I
+presume he does, for that is usually the way.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Monday.</i>&mdash;There was a minister preached in our
+church last night and some people say he is the
+greatest minister in the world. I think his name
+was Mr. Finney. Grandmother said I could go
+with our girl, Hannah White. We sat under the
+gallery, in Miss Antoinette Pierson&#8217;s pew. There
+was a great crowd and he preached good. Grandmother
+says that our mother was a Christian when
+she was ten years old and joined the church and she
+showed us some sermons that mother used to write
+down when she was seventeen years old, after she
+came home from church, and she has kept them all
+these years. I think children in old times were not
+as bad as they are now.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Tuesday.</i>&mdash;Mrs. Judge Taylor sent for me to
+come over to see her to-day. I didn&#8217;t know what
+she wanted, but when I got there she said she wanted
+to talk and pray with me on the subject of religion.
+She took me into one of the wings. I never had
+been in there before and was frightened at first, but
+it was nice after I got used to it. After she prayed,
+she asked me to, but I couldn&#8217;t think of anything
+but &#8220;Now I lay me down to sleep,&#8221; and I was afraid
+she would not like that, so I didn&#8217;t say anything.
+When I got home and told Anna, she said, &#8220;Caroline,
+I presume probably Mrs. Taylor wants you to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_23'></a>23</span>be a Missionary, but I shan&#8217;t let you go.&#8221; I told her
+she needn&#8217;t worry for I would have to stay at home
+and look after her. After school to-night I went
+out into Abbie Clark&#8217;s garden with her and she
+taught me how to play &#8220;mumble te peg.&#8221; It is fun,
+but rather dangerous. I am afraid Grandmother
+won&#8217;t give me a knife to play with. Abbie Clark
+has beautiful pansies in her garden and gave me
+some roots.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>April 1.</i>&mdash;This is April Fool&#8217;s Day. It is not a
+very pleasant day, but I am not very pleasant either.
+I spent half an hour this morning very pleasantly
+writing a letter to my Father but just as I had finished
+it, Grandmother told me something to write
+which I did not wish to and I spoke quite disrespectfully,
+but I am real sorry and I won&#8217;t do so
+any more.</p>
+
+<p>Lucilla and Louisa Field were over to our house
+to dinner to-day. We had a very good dinner indeed.
+In the afternoon, Grandmother told me that
+I might go over to Aunt Ann&#8217;s on condition that I
+would not stay, but I stayed too long and got my
+indian rubbers real muddy and Grandmother did
+not like it. I then ate my supper and went to bed
+at ten minutes to eight o&#8217;clock.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Monday, April 3.</i>&mdash;I got up this morning at quarter
+before six o&#8217;clock. I then read my three chapters
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_24'></a>24</span>in the Bible, and soon after ate my breakfast,
+which consisted of ham and eggs and buckwheat
+cakes. I then took a morning walk in the garden
+and rolled my hoop. I went to school at quarter
+before 9 o&#8217;clock. Miss Clark has us recite a verse
+of scripture in response to roll call and my text for
+the morning was the 8th verse of the 6th chapter of
+Matthew, &#8220;Be ye not therefore like unto them; for
+your Father knoweth what things ye have need of
+before ye ask him.&#8221; We then had prayers. I then
+began to write my composition and we had recess
+soon after. In the afternoon I recited grammar,
+wrote my dictation lesson and Dictionary lesson. I
+was up third in my Dictionary class but missed two
+words, and instead of being third in the class, I was
+fifth. After supper I read my Sunday School book,
+&#8220;A Shepherd&#8217;s Call to the Lambs of his Flock.&#8221; I
+went to bed as usual at ten minutes to 8 o&#8217;clock.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>April</i> 4.&mdash;We went into our new schoolroom to-day
+at Miss Clark&#8217;s school. It is a very nice room
+and much larger than the one we occupied before.
+Anna and I were sewing on our dolls&#8217; clothes this
+afternoon and we talked so much that finally Grandmother
+said, &#8220;the one that speaks first is the worst;
+and the one that speaks last is the best.&#8221; We kept
+still for quite a while, which gave Grandmother a
+rest, but was very hard for us, especially Anna.
+Pretty soon Grandmother forgot and asked us a
+question, so we had the joke on her. Afterwards
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_25'></a>25</span>Anna told me she would rather &#8220;be the worst,&#8221; than
+to keep still so long again.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Wednesday.</i>&mdash;Grandmother sent Anna and me up
+to Butcher Street after school to-day to invite Chloe
+to come to dinner. I never saw so many black people
+as there are up there. We saw old Lloyd and
+black Jonathan and Dick Valentine and Jerusha and
+Chloe and Nackie. Nackie was pounding up stones
+into sand, to sell, to scour with. Grandmother
+often buys it of her. I think Chloe was surprised,
+but she said she would be ready, to-morrow, at
+eleven o&#8217;clock, when the carriage came for her. I
+should hate to be as fat as Chloe. I think she
+weighs 300. She is going to sit in Grandfather&#8217;s
+big arm chair, Grandmother says.</p>
+
+<p>We told her we should think she would rather
+invite white ladies, but she said Chloe was a poor
+old slave and as Grandfather had gone to Saratoga
+she thought it was a good time to have her. She
+said God made of one blood all the people on the
+face of the earth, so we knew she would do it and
+we didn&#8217;t say any more. When we talk too much,
+Grandfather always says N. C. (nuff ced). She
+sent a carriage for Chloe and she came and had a
+nice dinner, not in the kitchen either. Grandmother
+asked her if there was any one else she would like
+to see before she went home and she said, &#8220;Yes,
+Miss Rebekah Gorham,&#8221; so she told the coachman
+to take her down there and wait for her to make a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_26'></a>26</span>call and then take her home and he did. Chloe said
+she had a very nice time, so probably Grandmother
+was all right as she generally is, but I could not be
+as good as she is, if I should try one hundred
+years.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>June.</i>&mdash;Our cousin, George Bates, of Honolulu,
+came to see us to-day. He has one brother, Dudley,
+but he didn&#8217;t come. George has just graduated
+from college and is going to Japan to be a doctor.
+He wrote such a nice piece in my album I must
+copy it, &#8220;If I were a poet I would celebrate your
+virtues in rhyme, if I were forty years old, I would
+write a homily on good behavior; being neither, I
+will quote two familiar lines which if taken as
+a rule of action will make you a good and happy
+woman:</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;Honor and shame from no condition rise,</p>
+<p>Act well your part, there all the honor lies.&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p>I think he is a very smart young man and will
+make a good doctor to the heathen.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Saturday.</i>&mdash;Grandfather took us down street to
+be measured for some new patten leather shoes at
+Mr. Ambler&#8217;s. They are going to be very nice ones
+for best. We got our new summer hats from Mrs.
+Freshour&#8217;s millinery and we wore them over to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_27'></a>27</span>show to Aunt Ann and she said they were the very
+handsomest bonnets she had seen this year.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Tuesday.</i>&mdash;When we were on our way to school
+this morning we met a lot of people and girls and
+boys going to a picnic up the lake. They asked us
+to go, too, but we said we were afraid we could not.
+Mr. Alex. Howell said, &#8220;Tell your Grandfather I
+will bring you back safe and sound unless the boat
+goes to the bottom with all of us.&#8221; So we went
+home and told Grandfather and much to our surprise
+he said we could go. We had never been on
+a boat or on the lake before. We went up to the
+head on the steamer &#8220;<i>Joseph Wood</i>&#8221; and got off at
+Maxwell&#8217;s Point. They had a picnic dinner and
+lots of good things to eat. Then we all went into
+the glen and climbed up through it. Mr. Alex.
+Howell and Mrs. Wheeler got to the top first and
+everybody gave three cheers. We had a lovely time
+riding back on the boat and told Grandmother we
+had the very best time we ever had in our whole
+lives.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>May 26.</i>&mdash;There was an eclipse of the sun to-day
+and we were very much excited looking at it. General
+Granger came over and gave us some pieces of
+smoked glass. Miss Clark wanted us to write compositions
+about it so Anna wrote, &#8220;About eleven
+o&#8217;clock we went out to see if it had come yet, but
+it hadn&#8217;t come yet, so we waited awhile and then
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_28'></a>28</span>looked again and it had come, and there was a piece
+of it cut out of it.&#8221; Miss Clark said it was a very
+good description and she knew Anna wrote it all
+herself.</p>
+
+<p>I handed in a composition, too, about the eclipse,
+but I don&#8217;t think Miss Clark liked it as well as she
+did Anna&#8217;s, because it had something in it about
+&#8220;the beggarly elements of the world.&#8221; She asked
+me where I got it and I told her that it was in a
+nice story book that Grandmother gave me to read
+entitled &#8220;Elizabeth Thornton or the Flower and
+Fruit of Female Piety, and other sketches,&#8221; by Samuel
+Irenaeus Prime. This was one of the other
+sketches: It commenced by telling how the moon
+came between the sun and the earth, and then went
+on about the beggarly elements. Miss Clark
+asked me if I knew what they meant and I told her
+no, but I thought they sounded good. She just
+smiled and never scolded me at all. I suppose next
+time I must make it all up myself.</p>
+
+<p>There is a Mr. Packer in town, who teaches all
+the children to sing. He had a concert in Bemis
+Hall last night and he put Anna on the top row of
+the pyramid of beauty and about one hundred children
+in rows below. She ought to have worn a
+white dress as the others did but Grandmother said
+her new pink barège would do. I curled her hair
+all around in about thirty curls and she looked very
+nice. She waved the flag in the shape of the letter
+S and sang &#8220;The Star Spangled Banner,&#8221; and all
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_29'></a>29</span>the others joined in the chorus. It was perfectly
+grand.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Monday.</i>&mdash;When we were on our way to school
+this morning we saw General Granger coming, and
+Anna had on such a homely sunbonnet she took it
+off and hid it behind her till he had gone by. When
+we told Grandmother she said, &#8220;Pride goeth before
+destruction and a haughty spirit before a fall.&#8221; I
+never heard of any one who knew so many Bible
+verses as Grandmother. Anna thought she would
+be sorry for her and get her a new sunbonnet, but
+she didn&#8217;t.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday.</i>&mdash;We have Sunday School at nine o&#8217;clock
+in the morning now. Grandfather loves to watch
+us when we walk off together down the street, so
+he walks back and forth on the front walk till we
+come out, and gives us our money for the contribution.
+This morning we had on our new white
+dresses that Miss Rosewarne made and new summer
+hats and new patten leather shoes and our mitts.
+When he had looked us all over he said, with a
+smile, &#8220;The Bible says, let your garments be always
+white.&#8221; After we had gone on a little ways, Anna
+said: &#8220;If Grandmother had thought of that verse
+I wouldn&#8217;t have had to wear my pink barège dress
+to the concert.&#8221; I told her she need not feel bad
+about that now, for she sang as well as any of them
+and looked just as good. She always believes everything
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_30'></a>30</span>I say, although she does not always do what
+I tell her to. Mr. Noah T. Clarke told us in Sunday
+School last Sunday that if we wanted to take
+shares in the missionary ship, <i>Morning Star,</i> we
+could buy them at 10 cents apiece, and Grandmother
+gave us $1 to-day so we could have ten shares. We
+got the certificate with a picture of the ship on it,
+and we are going to keep it always. Anna says if
+we pay the money, we don&#8217;t have to go.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday.</i>&mdash;I almost forgot that it was Sunday
+this morning and talked and laughed just as I do
+week days. Grandmother told me to write down
+this verse before I went to church so I would remember
+it: &#8220;Keep thy foot when thou goest to
+the house of God, and be more ready to hear than
+to offer the sacrifice of fools.&#8221; I will remember it
+now, sure. My feet are all right any way with my
+new patten leather shoes on but I shall have to look
+out for my head. Mr. Thomas Howell read a sermon
+to-day as Mr. Daggett is out of town. Grandmother
+always comes upstairs to get the candle and
+tuck us in before she goes to bed herself, and some
+nights we are sound asleep and do not hear her, but
+last night we only pretended to be asleep. She
+kneeled down by the bed and prayed aloud for us,
+that we might be good children and that she might
+have strength given to her from on high to guide us
+in the straight and narrow path which leads to life
+eternal. Those were her very words. After she
+had gone downstairs we sat up in bed and talked
+about it and promised each other to be good, and
+crossed our hearts and &#8220;hoped to die&#8221; if we broke
+our promise. Then Anna was afraid we would die,
+but I told her I didn&#8217;t believe we would be as
+good as that, so we kissed each other and went to
+sleep.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<table summary='figure' style='margin:0 auto'><tr>
+<td valign='bottom' style='padding-right:20px;'><a id='i030a'></a><img src='images/illus-030a.jpg' alt='' /><p class='c'>Mr. Noah T. Clarke</p></td>
+<td valign='bottom'><a id='i030b'></a><img src='images/illus-030b.jpg' alt='' /><p class='c'>Miss Upham</p></td>
+</tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_31'></a>31</span><i>Monday.</i>&mdash;&#8220;Old Alice&#8221; was at our house to-day
+and Grandmother gave her some flowers. She hid
+them in her apron for she said if she should meet
+any little children and they should ask for them she
+would have to let them go. Mrs. Gooding was at
+our house to-day and made a carpet. We went
+over to Aunt Mary Carr&#8217;s this evening to see the
+gas and the new chandeliers. They are brontz.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Tuesday.</i>&mdash;My three chapters that I read this
+morning were about Josiah&#8217;s zeal and reformation;
+2nd, Jerusalem taken by Nebuchadnezzar; 3rd, Jerusalem
+besieged and taken. The reason that we
+always read the Bible the first thing in the morning
+is because it says in the Bible, &#8220;Seek first the
+kingdom of God and His righteousness and all these
+things shall be added unto you.&#8221; Grandmother
+says she hopes we will treasure up all these things
+in our hearts and practice them in our lives. I hope
+so, too. This morning Anna got very mad at one
+of the girls and Grandmother told her she ought to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_32'></a>32</span>return good for evil and heap coals of fire on her
+head. Anna said she wished she could and burn
+her all up, but I don&#8217;t think she meant it.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Wednesday.</i>&mdash;I got up this morning at twenty
+minutes after five. I always brush my teeth every
+morning, but I forget to put it down here. I read
+my three chapters in Job and played in the garden
+and had time to read Grandmother a piece in the
+paper about some poor children in New York.
+Anna and I went over to Aunt Ann&#8217;s before school
+and she gave us each two sticks of candy apiece.
+Part of it came from New York and part from
+Williamstown, Mass., where Henry goes to college.
+Ann Eliza is going down street with us this afternoon
+to buy us some new summer bonnets. They
+are to be trimmed with blue and white and are to
+come to five dollars. We are going to Mr. Stannard&#8217;s
+store also, to buy us some stockings. I ought
+to buy me a new thimble and scissors for I carried
+my sewing to school to-day and they were inside of
+it very carelessly and dropped out and got lost.
+I ought to buy them with my own money, but I
+haven&#8217;t got any, for I gave all I had (two shillings)
+to Anna to buy Louisa Field a cornelian ring.
+Perhaps Father will send me some money soon, but
+I hate to ask him for fear he will rob himself. I
+don&#8217;t like to tell Grandfather how very careless I
+was, though I know he would say, &#8220;Accidents will
+happen.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_33'></a>33</span><i>Thursday.</i>&mdash;I was up early this morning because
+a dressmaker, Miss Willson, is coming to make me a
+new calico dress. It is white with pink spots in it
+and Grandfather bought it in New York. It is
+very nice indeed and I think Grandfather was very
+kind to get it for me. I had to stay at home from
+school to be fitted. I helped sew and run my dress
+skirt around the bottom and whipped it on the top.
+I went to school in the afternoon, but did not have
+my lessons very well. Miss Clark excused me because
+I was not there in the morning. Some girls
+got up on our fence to-day and walked clear across
+it, the whole length. It is iron and very high and
+has a stone foundation. Grandmother asked them
+to get down, but I think they thought it was more
+fun to walk up there than it was on the ground.
+The name of the little girl that got up first was
+Mary Lapham. She is Lottie Lapham&#8217;s cousin.
+I made the pocket for my dress after I got home
+from school and then Grandfather said he would
+take us out to ride, so he took us way up to Thaddeus
+Chapin&#8217;s on the hill. Julia Phelps was there,
+playing with Laura Chapin, for she is her cousin.
+Henry and Ann Eliza Field came over to call this
+evening. Henry has come home from Williams
+College on his vacation and he is a very pleasant
+young man, indeed. I am reading a continued story
+in <i>Harper&#8217;s Magazine</i>. It is called Little Dorritt, by
+Charles Dickens, and is very interesting.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_34'></a>34</span><i>Friday, May.</i>&mdash;Miss Clark told us we could have
+a picnic down to Sucker Brook this afternoon and
+she told us to bring our rubbers and lunches by two
+o&#8217;clock; but Grandmother was not willing to let us
+go; not that she wished to deprive us of any pleasure
+for she said instead we could wear our new black
+silk basks and go with her to Preparatory lecture,
+so we did, but when we got there we found that
+Mr. Daggett was out of town so there was no meeting.
+Then she told us we could keep dressed up and
+go over to Aunt Mary Carr&#8217;s and take her some
+apples, and afterwards Grandfather took us to ride
+to see old Mrs. Sanborn and old Mr. and Mrs. Atwater.
+He is ninety years old and blind and deaf,
+so we had quite a good time after all.</p>
+
+<p>Rev. Mr. Dickey, of Rochester, agent for the
+Seaman&#8217;s Friend Society, preached this morning
+about the poor little canal boy. His text was from
+the 107th Psalm, 23rd verse, &#8220;They that go down
+into the sea in ships.&#8221; He has the queerest voice
+and stops off between his words. When we got
+home Anna said she would show us how he preached
+and she described what he said about a sailor in
+time of war. She said, &#8220;A ball came&mdash;and struck
+him there&mdash;another ball came&mdash;and struck him
+there&mdash;he raised his faithful sword&mdash;and went on&mdash;to
+victory&mdash;or death.&#8221; I expected Grandfather
+would reprove her, but he just smiled a queer sort
+of smile and Grandmother put her handkerchief up
+to her face, as she always does when she is amused
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_35'></a>35</span>about anything. I never heard her laugh out loud,
+but I suppose she likes funny things as well as anybody.
+She did just the same, this morning, when
+Grandfather asked Anna where the sun rose, and
+she said &#8220;over by Gen. Granger&#8217;s house and sets
+behind the Methodist church.&#8221; She said she saw
+it herself and should never forget it when any one
+asked her which was east or west. I think she
+makes up more things than any one I know of.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday.</i>&mdash;Rev. M. L. R. P. Thompson preached
+to-day. He used to be the minister of our church
+before Mr. Daggett came. Some people call him
+Rev. &#8220;Alphabet&#8221; Thompson, because he has so
+many letters in his name. He preached a very good
+sermon from the text, &#8220;Dearly beloved, as much as
+lieth in you, live peaceably with all men.&#8221; I like to
+hear him preach, but not as well as I do Mr. Daggett.
+I suppose I am more used to him.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Thursday.</i>&mdash;Edward Everett, of Boston, lectured
+in our church this evening. They had a platform
+built even with the tops of the pews, so he did not
+have to go up into the pulpit. Crowds and crowds
+came to hear him from all over everywhere.
+Grandmother let me go. They say he is the most
+eloquent speaker in the U. S., but I have heard
+Mr. Daggett when I thought he was just as
+good.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_36'></a>36</span><i>Sunday.</i>&mdash;We went to church to-day and heard
+Rev. Mr. Stowe preach. His text was, &#8220;The poor
+ye have with you always and whensoever ye will ye
+may do them good.&#8221; I never knew any one who
+liked to go to church as much as Grandmother does.
+She says she &#8220;would rather be a doorkeeper in the
+house of our God, than to dwell in the tents of wickedness.&#8221;
+They don&#8217;t have women doorkeepers, and
+I know she would not dwell a minute in a tent. Mr.
+Coburn is the doorkeeper in our church and he rings
+the bell every day at nine in the morning and at
+twelve and at nine in the evening, so Grandfather
+knows when it is time to cover up the fire in the
+fireplace and go to bed. I think if the President
+should come to call he would have to go home at
+nine o&#8217;clock. Grandfather&#8217;s motto is:</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;Early to bed and early to rise</p>
+<p>Makes a man healthy, wealthy and wise.&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Tuesday.</i>&mdash;Mrs. Greig and Miss Chapin called to
+see us to-day. Grandmother says that we can return
+the calls as she does not visit any more. We
+would like to, for we always enjoy dressing up and
+making calls. Anna and I received two black veils
+in a letter to-day from Aunt Caroline Dey. Just
+exactly what we had wanted for a long while.
+Uncle Edward sent us five dollars and Grandmother
+said we could buy just what we wanted, so we went
+down street to look at black silk mantillas. We
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_37'></a>37</span>went to Moore&#8217;s store and to Richardson&#8217;s and
+to Collier&#8217;s, but they asked ten, fifteen or twenty dollars
+for them, so Anna said she resolved from now,
+henceforth and forever not to spend her money for
+black silk mantillas.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday.</i>&mdash;Rev. Mr. Tousley preached to-day to
+the children and told us how many steps it took to
+be bad. I think he said lying was first, then disobedience
+to parents, breaking the Sabbath, swearing,
+stealing, drunkenness. I don&#8217;t remember just
+the order they came. It was very interesting, for
+he told lots of stories and we sang a great many
+times. I should think Eddy Tousley would be an
+awful good boy with his father in the house with
+him all the while, but probably he has to be away
+part of the time preaching to other children.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday.</i>&mdash;Uncle David Dudley Field and his
+daughter, Mrs. Brewer, of Stockbridge, Mass., are
+visiting us. Mrs. Brewer has a son, David Josiah,
+who is in Yale College. After he graduates he is
+going to be a lawyer and study in his Uncle David
+Dudley Field&#8217;s office in New York. He was born
+in Smyrna, Asia Minor, where his father and
+mother were missionaries to the Greeks, in 1837.
+Our Uncle David preached for Mr. Daggett this
+afternoon. He is a very old man and left his sermon
+at home and I had to go back after it. His
+brother, Timothy, was the first minister in our
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_38'></a>38</span>church, about fifty years ago. Grandmother says
+she came all the way from Connecticut with him
+on horseback on a pillion behind him. Rather a
+long ride, I should say. I heard her and Uncle
+David talking about their childhood and how they
+lived in Guilford, Conn., in a house that was built
+upon a rock. That was some time in the last century
+like the house that it tells about in the Bible
+that was built on a rock.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday, August 10, 1854.</i>&mdash;Rev. Mr. Daggett&#8217;s
+text this morning was, &#8220;Remember the Sabbath
+day to keep it holy.&#8221; Grandmother said she
+thought the sermon did not do us much good for
+she had to tell us several times this afternoon to
+stop laughing. Grandmother said we ought to be
+good Sundays if we want to go to heaven, for there
+it is one eternal Sabbath. Anna said she didn&#8217;t
+want to be an angel just yet and I don&#8217;t think there
+is the least danger of it, as far as I can judge.
+Grandmother said there was another verse, &#8220;If we
+do not have any pleasure on the Sabbath, or think
+any thoughts, we shall ride on the high places of
+the earth,&#8221; and Anna said she liked that better, for
+she would rather ride than do anything else, so we
+both promised to be good. Grandfather told us
+they used to be more strict about Sunday than they
+are now. Then he told us a story, how he had to
+go to Geneva one Saturday morning in the stage
+and expected to come back in the evening, but there
+was an accident, so the stage did not come till Sunday
+morning. Church had begun and he told the
+stage driver to leave him right there, so he went
+in late and the stage drove on. The next day he
+heard that he was to come before the minister, Rev.
+Mr. Johns, and the deacons and explain why he
+had broken the fourth commandment. When he
+got into the meeting Mr. Johns asked him what he
+had to say, and he explained about the accident and
+asked them to read a verse from the 8th chapter
+of John, before they made up their minds what
+to do to him. The verse was, &#8220;Let him that is
+without sin among you cast the first stone.&#8221; Grandfather
+said they all smiled, and the minister said
+the meeting was out. Grandfather says that shows
+it is better to know plenty of Bible verses, for some
+time they may do you a great deal of good. We
+then recited the catechism and went to bed.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a id='i038'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-038.jpg' alt='' />
+<p class='c'>First Congregational Church</p>
+</div>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_39'></a>39</span><i>August 21.</i>&mdash;Anna says that Alice Jewett feels
+very proud because she has a little baby brother.
+They have named him John Harvey Jewett after
+his father, and Alice says when he is bigger she will
+let Anna help her take him out to ride in his baby-carriage.
+I suppose they will throw away their
+dolls now.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Tuesday, September</i> 1.&mdash;I am sewing a sheet over
+and over for Grandmother and she puts a pin in to
+show me my stint, before I can go out to play.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_40'></a>40</span>I am always glad when I get to it. I am making
+a sampler, too, and have all the capital letters worked
+and now will make the small ones. It is done in
+cross stitch on canvas with different color silks. I
+am going to work my name, too. I am also knitting
+a tippet on some wooden needles that Henry Carr
+made for me. Grandmother has raveled it out
+several times because I dropped stitches. It is
+rather tedious, but she says, &#8220;If at first you don&#8217;t
+succeed, try, try again.&#8221; Some military soldiers
+went by the house to-day and played some beautiful
+music. Grandfather has a teter and swing for us
+in the back yard and we enjoy them usually, but
+to-night Anna slid off the teter board when she was
+on the ground and I was in the air and I came down
+sooner than I expected. There was a hand organ
+and monkey going by and she was in a hurry to get
+to the street to see it. She got there a good while
+before I did. The other day we were swinging
+and Grandmother called us in to dinner, but Anna
+said we could not go until we &#8220;let the old cat die.&#8221;
+Grandmother said it was more important that we
+should come when we are called.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>October.</i>&mdash;Grandmother&#8217;s name is Abigail, but she
+was always called &#8220;Nabby&#8221; at home. Some of
+the girls call me &#8220;Carrie,&#8221; but Grandmother prefers
+&#8220;Caroline.&#8221; She told us to-day, how when she
+was a little girl, down in Connecticut in 1794, she
+was on her way to school one morning and she saw
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_41'></a>41</span>an Indian coming and was so afraid, but did not
+dare run for fear he would chase her. So she
+thought of the word sago, which means &#8220;good
+morning,&#8221; and when she got up close to him she
+dropped a curtesy and said &#8220;Sago,&#8221; and he just
+went right along and never touched her at all. She
+says she hopes we will always be polite to every
+one, even to strangers.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>November.</i>&mdash;Abbie Clark&#8217;s father has been elected
+Governor and she is going to Albany to live, for a
+while. We all congratulated her when she came to
+school this morning, but I am sorry she is going
+away. We will write to each other every week.
+She wrote a prophecy and told the girls what they
+were going to be and said I should be mistress of
+the White House. I think it will happen, about the
+same time that Anna goes to be a missionary.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>December.</i>&mdash;There was a moonlight sleigh-ride of
+boys and girls last night, but Grandfather did not
+want us to go, but to-night he said he was going to
+take us to one himself. So after supper he told
+Mr. Piser to harness the horse to the cutter and
+bring it around to the front gate. Mr. Piser takes
+care of our horse and the Methodist Church. He
+lives in the basement. Grandfather sometimes calls
+him Shakespeare to us, but I don&#8217;t know why. He
+doesn&#8217;t look as though he wrote poetry. Grandfather
+said he was going to take us out to Mr.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_42'></a>42</span>Waterman Powers&#8217; in Farmington and he did.
+They were quite surprised to see us, but very glad
+and gave us apples and doughnuts and other good
+things. We saw Anne and Imogene and Morey
+and one little girl named Zimmie. They wanted us
+to stay all night, but Grandmother was expecting
+us. We got home safe about ten o&#8217;clock and had
+a very nice time. We never sat up so late before.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+<a id='c1855'></a>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_43'></a>43</span>
+<p class='cln0'>1855</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>Wednesday, January</i> 9.&mdash;I came downstairs this
+morning at ten minutes after seven, almost frozen.
+I never spent such a cold night before in all my life.
+It is almost impossible to get warm even in the
+dining-room. The thermometer is 10° below zero.
+The schoolroom was so cold that I had to keep my
+cloak on. I spoke a piece this afternoon. It was
+&#8220;The Old Arm Chair,&#8221; by Eliza Cook. It begins,
+&#8220;I love it, I love it, and who shall dare to chide
+me for loving that old arm chair?&#8221; I love it because
+it makes me think of Grandmother. After
+school to-night Anna and I went downtown to buy
+a writing book, but we were so cold we thought we
+would never get back. Anna said she knew her
+toes were frozen. We got as far as Mr. Taylor&#8217;s
+gate and she said she could not get any farther; but
+I pulled her along, for I could not bear to have her
+perish in sight of home. We went to bed about
+eight o&#8217;clock and slept very nicely indeed, for
+Grandmother put a good many blankets on and we
+were warm.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>January</i> 23.&mdash;This evening after reading one of
+Dickens&#8217; stories I knit awhile on my mittens. I
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_44'></a>44</span>have not had nice ones in a good while. Grandmother
+cut out the ones that I am wearing of white
+flannel, bound round the wrist with blue merino.
+They are not beautiful to be sure, but warm and
+will answer all purposes until I get some that are
+better. When I came home from school to-day
+Mrs. Taylor was here. She noticed how tall I was
+growing and said she hoped that I was as good as
+I was tall. A very good wish, I am sure.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday, January</i> 29.&mdash;Mr. Daggett preached this
+morning from the text, Deut. 8: 2: &#8220;And thou
+shalt remember all the way which the Lord thy God
+led thee.&#8221; It is ten years to-day since Mr. Daggett
+came to our church, and he told how many deaths
+there had been, and how many baptisms, and how
+many members had been added to the church. It
+was a very interesting sermon, and everybody hoped
+Mr. Daggett would stay here ten years more, or
+twenty, or thirty, or always. He is the only minister
+that I ever had, and I don&#8217;t ever want any other.
+We never could have any one with such a voice as
+Mr. Daggett&#8217;s, or such beautiful eyes. Then he has
+such good sermons, and always selects the hymns
+we like best, and reads them in such a way. This
+morning they sang: &#8220;Thus far the Lord has led
+me on, thus far His power prolongs my days.&#8221;
+After he has been away on a vacation he always
+has for the first hymn, and we always turn to it
+before he gives it out:</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;Upward I lift mine eyes,</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_45'></a>45</span>From God is all my aid;</p>
+<p>The God that built the skies,</p>
+<p>And earth and nature made.</p>
+<hr class='poetry' />
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> &#8220;God is the tower</p>
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> To which I fly</p>
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> His grace is nigh</p>
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> In every hour.&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p>He always prays for the oil of joy for mourning
+and the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>January,</i> 1855.&mdash;Johnny Lyon is dead. Georgia
+Wilkinson cried awfully in school because she said
+she was engaged to him.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>April.</i>&mdash;Grandmother received a letter from Connecticut
+to-day telling of the death of her only sister.
+She was knitting before she got it and she laid it
+down a few moments and looked quite sad and said,
+&#8220;So sister Anna is dead.&#8221; Then after a little she
+went on with her work. Anna watched her and
+when we were alone she said to me, &#8220;Caroline, some
+day when you are about ninety you may be eating
+an apple or reading or doing something and you will
+get a letter telling of my decease and after you have
+read it you will go on as usual and just say, &#8216;So sister
+Anna is dead.&#8217;&#8221; I told her that I knew if I lived
+to be a hundred and heard that she was dead I
+should cry my eyes out, if I had any.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_46'></a>46</span><i>May.</i>&mdash;Father has sent us a box of fruit from
+New Orleans. Prunes, figs, dates and oranges, and
+one or two pomegranates. We never saw any of
+the latter before. They are full of cells with jelly
+in, very nice. He also sent some seeds of sensitive
+plant, which we have sown in our garden.</p>
+
+<p>This evening I wrote a letter to John and a little
+&#8220;poetry&#8221; to Father, but it did not amount to much.
+I am going to write some a great deal better some
+day. Grandfather had some letters to write this
+morning, and got up before three o&#8217;clock to write
+them! He slept about three-quarters of an hour to-night
+in his chair.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday.</i>&mdash;There was a stranger preached for Dr.
+Daggett this morning and his text was, &#8220;Man looketh
+upon the outward appearance but the Lord looketh
+on the heart.&#8221; When we got home Anna said
+the minister looked as though he had been sick from
+birth and his forehead stretched from his nose to
+the back of his neck, he was so bald. Grandmother
+told her she ought to have been more interested in
+his words than in his looks, and that she must have
+very good eyes if she could see all that from our
+pew, which is the furthest from the pulpit of any
+in church, except Mr. Gibson&#8217;s, which is just the
+same. Anna said she couldn&#8217;t help seeing it unless
+she shut her eyes, and then every one would think
+she had gone to sleep. We can see the Academy
+boys from our pew, too.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_47'></a>47</span>Mr. Lathrop, of the seminary, is superintendent
+of the Sunday School now and he had a present to-day
+from Miss Betsey Chapin, and several visitors
+came in to see it presented: Dr. Daggett, Mr. and
+Mrs. Alex. Howell, Mr. Tousley, Mr. Stowe, Mr.
+and Mrs. Gideon Granger and several others. The
+present was a certificate of life membership to something;
+I did not hear what. It was just a large piece
+of parchment, but they said it cost $25. Miss Lizzie
+Bull is my Sunday School teacher now. She asked
+us last Sunday to look up a place in the Bible where
+the trees held a consultation together, to see which
+one should reign over them. I did not remember
+any such thing, but I looked it up in the concordance
+and found it in Judges 9: 8. I found the meaning
+of it in Scott&#8217;s Commentary and wrote it down and
+she was very much pleased, and told us next Sunday
+to find out all about Absalom.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>July.</i>&mdash;Our sensitive plant is growing nicely and
+it is quite a curiosity. It has fern-like leaves and
+when we touch them, they close, but soon come out
+again. Anna and I keep them performing.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>September</i> 1.&mdash;Anna and I go to the seminary
+now. Mr. Richards and Mr. Tyler are the principals.
+Anna fell down and sprained her ankle to-day
+at the seminary, and had to be carried into Mrs.
+Richards&#8217; library. She was sliding down the bannisters
+with little Annie Richards. I wonder what
+she will do next. She has good luck in the gymnasium
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_48'></a>48</span>and can beat Emma Wheeler and Jennie
+Ruckle swinging on the pole and climbing the rope
+ladder, although they and Sarah Antes are about as
+spry as squirrels and they are all good at ten pins.
+Susie Daggett and Lucilla Field have gone to Farmington,
+Conn., to school.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Monday.</i>&mdash;I received a letter from my brother
+John in New Orleans, and his ambrotype. He has
+grown amazingly. He also sent me a N. O. paper
+and it gave an account of the public exercises in the
+school, and said John spoke a piece called &#8220;The
+Baron&#8217;s Last Banquet,&#8221; and had great applause and
+it said he was &#8220;a chip off the old block.&#8221; He is a
+very nice boy, I know that. James is sixteen years
+old now and is in Princeton College. He is studying
+German and says he thinks he will go to Germany
+some day and finish his education, but I guess in
+that respect he will be very much disappointed.
+Germany is a great ways off and none of our relations
+that I ever heard of have ever been there and
+it is not at all likely that any of them ever will.
+Grandfather says, though, it is better to aim too high
+than not high enough. James is a great boy to
+study. They had their pictures taken together once
+and John was holding some flowers and James a
+book and I guess he has held on to it ever since.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday.</i>&mdash;Polly Peck looked so funny on the
+front seat of the gallery. She had on one of Mrs.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_49'></a>49</span>Greig&#8217;s bonnets and her lace collar and cape and
+mitts. She used to be a milliner so she knows how
+to get herself up in style. The ministers have appointed
+a day of fasting and prayer and Anna asked
+Grandmother if it meant to eat as fast as you can.
+Grandmother was very much surprised.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>November</i> 25.&mdash;I helped Grandmother get ready
+for Thanksgiving Day by stoning some raisins and
+pounding some cloves and cinnamon in the mortar
+pestle pounder. It is quite a job. I have been
+writing with a quill pen but I don&#8217;t like it because it
+squeaks so. Grandfather made us some to-day and
+also bought us some wafers to seal our letters with,
+and some sealing wax and a stamp with &#8220;R&#8221; on it.
+He always uses the seal on his watch fob with &#8220;B.&#8221;
+He got some sand, too. Our inkstand is double and
+has one bottle for ink and the other for sand to dry
+the writing.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>December</i> 20, 1855.&mdash;Susan B. Anthony is in
+town and spoke in Bemis Hall this afternoon. She
+made a special request that all the seminary girls
+should come to hear her as well as all the women and
+girls in town. She had a large audience and she
+talked very plainly about our rights and how we
+ought to stand up for them, and said the world
+would never go right until the women had just as
+much right to vote and rule as the men. She asked
+us all to come up and sign our names who would
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_50'></a>50</span>promise to do all in our power to bring about that
+glad day when equal rights should be the law of
+the land. A whole lot of us went up and signed the
+paper. When I told Grandmother about it she said
+she guessed Susan B. Anthony had forgotten that
+St. Paul said the women should keep silence. I told
+her, no, she didn&#8217;t for she spoke particularly about
+St. Paul and said if he had lived in these times,
+instead of 1800 years ago, he would have been as
+anxious to have the women at the head of the government
+as she was. I could not make Grandmother
+agree with her at all and she said we might
+better all of us stayed at home. We went to prayer
+meeting this evening and a woman got up and
+talked. Her name was Mrs. Sands. We hurried
+home and told Grandmother and she said she probably
+meant all right and she hoped we did not laugh.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Monday.</i>&mdash;I told Grandfather if he would bring
+me some sheets of foolscap paper I would begin to
+write a book. So he put a pin on his sleeve to remind
+him of it and to-night he brought me a whole
+lot of it. I shall begin it to-morrow. This evening
+I helped Anna do her Arithmetic examples, and read
+her Sunday School book. The name of it is
+&#8220;Watch and Pray.&#8221; My book is the second volume
+of &#8220;Stories on the Shorter Catechism.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Tuesday.</i>&mdash;I decided to copy a lot of choice stories
+and have them printed and say they were &#8220;compiled
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_51'></a>51</span>by Caroline Cowles Richards,&#8221; it is so much easier
+than making them up. I spent three hours to-day
+copying one and am so tired I think I shall give it up.
+When I told Grandmother she looked disappointed
+and said my ambition was like &#8220;the morning cloud
+and the early dew,&#8221; for it soon vanished away. Anna
+said it might spring up again and bear fruit a hundredfold.
+Grandfather wants us to amount to
+something and he buys us good books whenever he
+has a chance. He bought me Miss Caroline Chesebro&#8217;s
+book, &#8220;The Children of Light,&#8221; and Alice and
+Phoebe Cary&#8217;s <i>Poems</i>. He is always reading Channing&#8217;s
+memoirs and sermons and Grandmother
+keeps &#8220;Lady Huntington and Her Friends,&#8221; next to
+&#8220;Jay&#8217;s Morning and Evening Exercises&#8221; and her
+Testament. Anna told Grandmother that she saw
+Mrs. George Willson looking very steadily at us in
+prayer meeting the other night and she thought
+she might be planning to &#8220;write us up.&#8221; Grandmother
+said she did not think Mrs. Willson was so
+short of material as that would imply, and she
+feared she had some other reason for looking at us.
+I think dear Grandmother has a little grain of sarcasm
+in her nature, but she only uses it on extra
+occasions. Anna said, &#8220;Oh, no; she wrote the lives
+of the three Mrs. Judsons and I thought she might
+like for a change to write the biographies of the
+&#8216;two Miss Richards.&#8217;&#8221; Anna has what might be
+called a vivid imagination.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+<a id='c1856'></a>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_52'></a>52</span>
+<p class='cln0'>1856</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>January</i> 23.&mdash;This is the third morning that I
+have come down stairs at exactly twenty minutes
+to seven. I went to school all day. Mary Paul and
+Fannie Palmer read &#8220;<i>The Snow Bird</i>&#8221; to-day.
+There were some funny things in it. One was:
+&#8220;Why is a lady&#8217;s hair like the latest news? Because
+in the morning we always find it in the papers.&#8221;
+Another was: &#8220;One rod makes an acher,
+as the boy said when the schoolmaster flogged him.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>This is Allie Field&#8217;s birthday. He got a pair of
+slippers from Mary with the soles all on; a pair of
+mittens from Miss Eliza Chapin, and Miss Rebecca
+Gorham is going to give him a pair of stockings
+when she gets them done.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>January</i> 30.&mdash;I came home from school at eleven
+o&#8217;clock this morning and learned a piece to speak
+this afternoon, but when I got up to school I forgot
+it, so I thought of another one. Mr. Richards said
+that he must give me the praise of being the best
+speaker that spoke in the afternoon. Ahem!</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>February</i> 6.&mdash;We were awakened very early this
+morning by the cry of fire and the ringing of bells
+and could see the sky red with flames and knew it
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_53'></a>53</span>was the stores and we thought they were all burning
+up. Pretty soon we heard our big brass door
+knocker being pounded fast and Grandfather said,
+&#8220;Who&#8217;s there?&#8221; &#8220;Melville Arnold for the bank
+keys,&#8221; we heard. Grandfather handed them out
+and dressed as fast as he could and went down,
+while Anna and I just lay there and watched the
+flames and shook. He was gone two or three hours
+and when he came back he said that Mr. Palmer&#8217;s
+hat store, Mr. Underhill&#8217;s book store, Mr. Shafer&#8217;s
+tailor shop, Mrs. Smith&#8217;s millinery, Pratt &amp; Smith&#8217;s
+drug store, Mr. Mitchell&#8217;s dry goods store, two
+printing offices and a saloon were burned. It was
+a very handsome block. The bank escaped fire, but
+the wall of the next building fell on it and crushed
+it. After school to-night Grandmother let us go
+down to see how the fire looked. It looked very
+sad indeed. Judge Taylor offered Grandfather one
+of the wings of his house for the bank for the present
+but he has secured a place in Mr. Buhre&#8217;s store
+in the Franklin Block.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Thursday, February</i> 7.&mdash;Dr. and Aunt Mary Carr
+and Uncle Field and Aunt Ann were over at our
+house to dinner to-day and we had a fine fish dinner,
+not one of Gabriel&#8217;s (the man who blows such a
+blast through the street, they call him Gabriel), but
+one that Mr. Francis Granger sent to us. It was
+elegant. Such a large one it covered a big platter.
+This evening General Granger came in and brought
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_54'></a>54</span>a gentleman with him whose name was Mr. Skinner.
+They asked Grandfather, as one of the trustees of
+the church, if he had any objection to a deaf and
+dumb exhibition there to-morrow night. He had
+no objection, so they will have it and we will go.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Friday</i>.&mdash;We went and liked it very much. The
+man with them could talk and he interpreted it.
+There were two deaf and dumb women and three
+children. They performed very prettily, but the
+smartest boy did the most. He acted out David killing
+Goliath and the story of the boy stealing apples
+and how the old man tried to get him down by
+throwing grass at him, but finding that would not
+do, he threw stones which brought the boy down
+pretty quick. Then he acted a boy going fishing
+and a man being shaved in a barber shop and several
+other things. I laughed out loud in school to-day
+and made some pictures on my slate and showed
+them to Clara Willson and made her laugh, and
+then we both had to stay after school. Anna was at
+Aunt Ann&#8217;s to supper to-night to meet a little girl
+named Helen Bristol, of Rochester. Ritie Tyler
+was there, too, and they had a lovely time.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<table summary='figure' style='margin:0 auto'>
+<tr>
+<td valign='bottom' style='padding-right:20px;'><a id='i054a'></a><img src='images/illus-054a.jpg' alt='' /><p class='c'>Judge Henry W. Taylor</p></td>
+<td valign='bottom'><a id='i054b'></a><img src='images/illus-054b.jpg' alt='' /><p class='c'>Miss Zilpha Clark</p></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan='2' align='center' valign='bottom'><a id='i054c'></a><img src='images/illus-054c.jpg' alt='' /><p class='c'>Rev. Oliver E. Daggett, D.D.</p></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td valign='bottom' style='padding-right:20px;'><a id='i054d'></a><img src='images/illus-054d.jpg' alt='' /><p class='c'>&#8220;Frankie Richardson&#8221;</p></td>
+<td valign='bottom'><a id='i054e'></a><img src='images/illus-054e.jpg' alt='' /><p class='c'>Horace Finley</p></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_55'></a>55</span><i>February</i> 8.&mdash;I have not written in my journal
+for several days, because I never like to write things
+down if they don&#8217;t go right. Anna and I were
+invited to go on a sleigh-ride, Tuesday night, and
+Grandfather said he did not want us to go. We
+asked him if we could spend the evening with
+Frankie Richardson and he said yes, so we went
+down there and when the load stopped for her, we
+went too, but we did not enjoy ourselves at all and
+did not join in the singing. I had no idea that
+sleigh-rides could make any one feel so bad. It was
+not very cold, but I just shivered all the time.
+When the nine o&#8217;clock bell rang we were up by the
+&#8220;Northern Retreat,&#8221; and I was so glad when we got
+near home so we could get out. Grandfather and
+Grandmother asked us if we had a nice time, but
+we got to bed as quick as we could. The next day
+Grandfather went into Mr. Richardson&#8217;s store and
+told him he was glad he did not let Frankie go on
+the sleigh-ride, and Mr. Richardson said he did let
+her go and we went too. We knew how it was
+when we got home from school, because they acted
+so sober, and, after a while, Grandmother talked
+with us about it. We told her we were sorry and
+we did not have a bit good time and would never
+do it again. When she prayed with us the next
+morning, as she always does before we go to school,
+she said, &#8220;Prepare us, Lord, for what thou art preparing
+for us,&#8221; and it seemed as though she was
+discouraged, but she said she forgave us. I know
+one thing, we will never run away to any more
+sleigh-rides.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>February</i> 20.&mdash;Mr. Worden, Mrs. Henry Chesebro&#8217;s
+father, was buried to-day, and Aunt Ann let
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_56'></a>56</span>Allie stay with us while she went to the funeral. I
+am going to Fannie Gaylord&#8217;s party to-morrow
+night.</p>
+
+<p>I went to school this afternoon and kept the rules,
+so to-night I had the satisfaction of saying &#8220;perfect&#8221;
+when called upon, and if I did not like to
+keep the rules, it is some pleasure to say that.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>February</i> 21.&mdash;We had a very nice time at Fannie
+Gaylord&#8217;s party and a splendid supper. Lucilla
+Field laughed herself almost to pieces when she
+found on going home that she had worn her leggins
+all the evening. We had a pleasant walk home but
+did not stay till it was out. Some one asked me if
+I danced every set and I told them no, I set every
+dance. I told Grandmother and she was very
+much pleased. Some one told us that Grandfather
+and Grandmother first met at a ball in the early
+settlement of Canandaigua. I asked her if it was
+so and she said she never had danced since she became
+a professing Christian and that was more than
+fifty years ago.</p>
+
+<p>Grandfather heard to-day of the death of his sister,
+Lydia, who was Mrs. Lyman Beecher. She
+was Rev. Dr. Lyman Beecher&#8217;s third wife. Grandmother
+says that they visited her once and she was
+quite nervous thinking about having such a great
+man as Dr. Lyman Beecher for her guest, as he was
+considered one of the greatest men of his day, but
+she said she soon got over this feeling, for he was
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_57'></a>57</span>so genial and pleasant and she noticed particularly
+how he ran up and down stairs like a boy. I think
+that is very apt to be the way for &#8220;men are only
+boys grown tall.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>There was a Know Nothing convention in town
+to-day. They don&#8217;t want any one but Americans to
+hold office, but I guess they will find that foreigners
+will get in. Our hired man is an Irishman and I
+think he would just as soon be &#8220;Prisidint&#8221; as not.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>February</i> 22.&mdash;This is such a beautiful day, the
+girls wanted a holiday, but Mr. Richards would not
+grant it. We told him it was Washington&#8217;s birthday
+and we felt very patriotic, but he was inexorable.
+We had a musical review and literary exercises
+instead in the afternoon and I put on my blue
+merino dress and my other shoes. Anna dressed
+up, too, and I curled her hair. The Primary scholars
+sit upstairs this term and do not have to pay
+any more. Anna and Emma Wheeler like it very
+much, but they do not sit together. We are seated
+alphabetically, and I sit with Mary Reznor and Anna
+with Mittie Smith. They thought she would behave
+better, I suppose, if they put her with one of the
+older girls, but I do not know as it will have the
+&#8220;desired effect,&#8221; as Grandmother says. Miss Mary
+Howell and Miss Carrie Hart and Miss Lizzie and
+Miss Mollie Bull were visitors this afternoon. Gertrude
+Monier played and sang. Mrs. Anderson is
+the singing teacher. Marion Maddox and Pussie
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_58'></a>58</span>Harris and Mary Daniels played on the piano. Mr.
+Hardick is the teacher, and he played too. You
+would think he was trying to pound the piano all
+to pieces but he is a good player. We have two
+papers kept up at school, <i>The Snow Bird</i> and <i>The
+Waif</i>&mdash;one for the younger and the other for the
+older girls. Miss Jones, the composition teacher,
+corrects them both. Kate Buell and Anna Maria
+Chapin read <i>The Waif</i> to-day and Gusta Buell and
+I read <i>The Snow Bird</i>. She has beautiful curls and
+has two nice brothers also, Albert and Arthur, and
+the girls all like them. They have not lived in town
+very long.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>February</i> 25.&mdash;I guess I won&#8217;t fill up my journal
+any more by saying I arose this morning at the usual
+time, for I don&#8217;t think it is a matter of life or death
+whether I get up at the usual time or a few minutes
+later and when I am older and read over the account
+of the manner in which I occupied my time in my
+younger days I don&#8217;t think it will add particularly
+to the interest to know whether I used to get up
+at 7 or at a quarter before. I think Miss Sprague,
+our schoolroom teacher, would have been glad if
+none of us had got up at all this morning for we
+acted so in school. She does not want any noise
+during the three minute recess, but there has been a
+good deal all day. In singing class they disturbed
+Mr. Kimball by blowing through combs. We took
+off our round combs and put paper over them and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_59'></a>59</span>then blew&mdash;Mary Wheeler and Lottie Lapham and
+Anna sat nearest me and we all tried to do it, but
+Lottie was the only one who could make it go. He
+thought we all did, so he made us come up and sit
+by him. I did not want to a bit. He told Miss
+Sprague of us and she told the whole school if there
+was as much noise another day she would keep
+every one of us an hour after half-past 4. As soon
+as she said this they all began to groan. She said
+&#8220;Silence.&#8221; I only made the least speck of a noise
+that no one heard.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>February</i> 26.&mdash;To-night, after singing class, Mr.
+Richards asked all who blew through combs to rise.
+I did not, because I could not make it go, but when
+he said all who groaned could rise, I did, and some
+others, but not half who did it. He kept us very
+late and we all had to sign an apology to Miss
+Sprague.</p>
+
+<p>Grandfather made me a present of a beautiful
+blue stone to-day called Malachite. Anna said she
+always thought Malachite was one of the prophets.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>March</i> 3, 1856.&mdash;Elizabeth Spencer sits with me
+in school now. She is full of fun but always manages
+to look very sober when Miss Chesebro looks
+up to see who is making the noise over our way.
+I never seem to have that knack. Anna had to stay
+after school last night and she wrote in her journal
+that the reason was because &#8220;nature will out&#8221; and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_60'></a>60</span>because &#8220;she whispered and didn&#8217;t have her lessons,
+etc., etc., etc.&#8221; Mr. Richards has allowed us to
+bring our sewing to school but now he says we cannot
+any more. I am sorry for I have some embroidery
+and I could get one pantalette done in a
+week, but now it will take me longer. Grandmother
+has offered me one dollar if I will stitch a linen
+shirt bosom and wrist bands for Grandfather and
+make the sleeves. I have commenced but, Oh my!
+it is an undertaking. I have to pull the threads out
+and then take up two threads and leave three. It is
+very particular work and Anna says the stitches
+must not be visible to the naked eye. I have to fell
+the sleeves with the tiniest seams and stroke all the
+gathers and put a stitch on each gather. Minnie
+Bellows is the best one in school with her needle and
+is a dabster at patching. She cut a piece right out
+of her new calico dress and matched a new piece in
+and none of us could tell where it was. I am sure
+it would not be safe for me to try that. Grandmother
+let me ask three of the girls to dinner Saturday,
+Abbie Clark, Mary Wheeler and Mary Field.
+We had a big roast turkey and everything else to
+match. Good enough for Queen Victoria. That
+reminds me of a conundrum we had in <i>The Snow
+Bird:</i> What does Queen Victoria take her pills in?
+In cider. (Inside her.)</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>March</i> 7.&mdash;The reports were read at school to-day
+and mine was, Attendance 10, Deportment 8, Scholarship
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_61'></a>61</span>7½, and Anna&#8217;s 10, 10 and 7. I think they
+got it turned around, for Anna has not behaved anything
+uncommon lately.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>March</i> 10.&mdash;My teacher Miss Sprague kept me
+after school to-night for whispering, and after all
+the others were gone she came to my seat and put
+her arm around me and kissed me and said she loved
+me very much and hoped I would not whisper in
+school any more. This made me feel very sorry
+and I told her I would try my best, but it seemed
+as though it whispered itself sometimes. I think
+she is just as nice as she can be and I shall tell the
+other girls so. Her home is in Glens Falls.</p>
+
+<p>Anna jumped the rope two hundred times to-day
+without stopping, and I told her that I read of a girl
+who did that and then fell right down stone dead.
+I don&#8217;t believe Anna will do it again. If she does
+I shall tell Grandmother.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>April</i> 5.&mdash;I walked down town with Grandfather
+this morning and it is such a beautiful day I felt
+glad that I was alive. The air was full of tiny little
+flies, buzzing around and going in circles and semicircles
+as though they were practising calisthenics or
+dancing a quadrille. I think they were glad they
+were alive, too. I stepped on a big bug crawling on
+the walk and Grandfather said I ought to have
+brushed it aside instead of killing it. I asked him
+why and he said, &#8220;Shakespeare says, &#8216;The beetle
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_62'></a>62</span>that we tread upon feels a pang as great as when a
+giant dies.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A man came to our door the other day and asked
+if &#8220;Deacon&#8221; Beals was at home. I asked Grandmother
+afterwards if Grandfather was a Deacon
+and she said no and never had been, that people gave
+him the name when he was a young man because
+he was so staid and sober in his appearance. Some
+one told me once that I would not know my Grandfather
+if I should meet him outside the Corporation.
+I asked why and he said because he was so genial
+and told such good stories. I told him that was just
+the way he always is at home. I do not know any
+one who appreciates real wit more than he does.
+He is quite strong in his likes and dislikes, however.
+I have heard him say,</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;I do not like you, Dr. Fell,</p>
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> The reason why, I cannot tell;</p>
+<p>But this one thing I know full well,</p>
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> I do not like you, Dr. Fell.&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p>Bessie Seymour wore a beautiful gold chain to
+school this morning and I told Grandmother that I
+wanted one just like it. She said that outward
+adornments were not of as much value as inward
+graces and the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit,
+in the sight of the Lord, was of great price. I know
+it is very becoming to Grandmother and she wears
+it all the time but I wish I had a gold chain just
+the same.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_63'></a>63</span>Aunt Ann received a letter to-day from Lucilla,
+who is at Miss Porter&#8217;s school at Farmington, Connecticut.
+She feels as if she were a Christian and
+that she has experienced religion.</p>
+
+<p>Grandfather noticed how bright and smart Bentley
+Murray was, on the street, and what a business
+way he had, so he applied for a place for him as page
+in the Legislature at Albany and got it. He is
+always noticing young people and says, &#8220;As the
+twig is bent, the tree is inclined.&#8221; He says we may
+be teachers yet if we are studious now. Anna says,
+&#8220;Excuse me, please.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Grandmother knows the Bible from Genesis to
+Revelation excepting the &#8220;begats&#8221; and the hard
+names, but Anna told her a new verse this morning,
+&#8220;At Parbar westward, four at the causeway and
+two at Parbar.&#8221; Grandmother put her spectacles
+up on her forehead and just looked at Anna as
+though she had been talking in Chinese. She finally
+said, &#8220;Anna, I do not think that is in the Bible.&#8221;
+She said, &#8220;Yes, it is; I found it in 1 Chron. 26: 18.&#8221;
+Grandmother found it and then she said Anna had
+better spend her time looking up more helpful texts.
+Anna then asked her if she knew who was the shortest
+man mentioned in the Bible and Grandmother
+said &#8220;Zaccheus.&#8221; Anna said that she just read in
+the newspaper, that one said &#8220;Nehimiah was&#8221; and
+another said &#8220;Bildad the Shuhite&#8221; and another said
+&#8220;Tohi.&#8221; Grandmother said it was very wicked to
+pervert the Scripture so, and she did not approve of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_64'></a>64</span>it at all. I don&#8217;t think Anna will give Grandmother
+any more Bible conundrums.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>April</i> 12.&mdash;We went down town this morning and
+bought us some shaker bonnets to wear to school.
+They cost $1 apiece and we got some green silk for
+capes to put on them. We fixed them ourselves
+and wore them to school and some of the girls liked
+them and some did not, but it makes no difference
+to me what they like, for I shall wear mine till it
+is worn out. Grandmother says that if we try to
+please everybody we please nobody. The girls are
+all having mystic books at school now and they are
+very interesting to have. They are blank books and
+we ask the girls and boys to write in them and then
+they fold the page twice over and seal it with wafers
+or wax and then write on it what day it is to be
+opened. Some of them say, &#8220;Not to be opened for
+a year,&#8221; and that is a long time to wait. If we cannot
+wait we can open them and seal them up again.
+I think Anna did look to see what Eugene Stone
+wrote in hers, for it does not look as smooth as it
+did at first. We have autograph albums too and
+Horace Finley gave us lots of small photographs.
+We paste them in the books and then ask the people
+to write their names. We have got Miss Upham&#8217;s
+picture and Dr. and Mrs. Daggett, General
+Granger&#8217;s and Hon. Francis Granger&#8217;s and Mrs.
+Adele Granger Thayer and Friend Burling, Dr.
+Jewett, Dr. Cheney, Deacon Andrews and Dr. Carr,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_65'></a>65</span>and Johnnie Thompson&#8217;s, Mr. Noah T. Clarke, Mr.
+E. M. Morse, Mrs. George Willson, Theodore Barnum,
+Jim Paton&#8217;s and Will Schley, Merritt Wilcox,
+Tom Raines, Ed. Williams, Gus Coleman&#8217;s, W. P.
+Fisk and lots of the girls&#8217; pictures besides. Eugene
+Stone and Tom Eddy had their ambrotypes taken
+together, in a handsome case, and gave it to Anna.
+We are going to keep them always.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>April</i>.&mdash;The Siamese twins are in town and a lot
+of the girls went to see them in Bemis Hall this
+afternoon. It costs 10 cents. Grandmother let us
+go. Their names are Eng and Chang and they are
+not very handsome. They are two men joined together.
+I hope they like each other but I don&#8217;t envy
+them any way. If one wanted to go somewhere and
+the other one didn&#8217;t I don&#8217;t see how they would manage
+it. One would have to give up, that&#8217;s certain.
+Perhaps they are both Christians.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>April</i> 30.&mdash;Rev. Henry M. Field, editor of the
+<i>New York Evangelist,</i> and his little French wife are
+here visiting. She is a wonderful woman. She has
+written a book and paints beautiful pictures and was
+teacher of art in Cooper Institute, New York. He
+is Grandmother&#8217;s nephew and he brought her a picture
+of himself and his five brothers, taken for
+Grandmother, because she is the only aunt they have
+in the world. The rest are all dead. The men in
+the picture are Jonathan and Matthew and David
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_66'></a>66</span>Dudley and Stephen J. and Cyrus W. and Henry M.
+They are all very nice looking and Grandmother
+thinks a great deal of the picture.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>May</i> 15.&mdash;Miss Anna Gaylord is one of my teachers
+at the seminary and when I told her that I wrote
+a journal every day she wanted me to bring her my
+last book and let her read it. I did so and she said
+she enjoyed it very much and she hoped I would
+keep them for they would be interesting for me to
+read when I am old. I think I shall do so. She has
+a very particular friend, Rev. Mr. Beaumont, who is
+one of the teachers at the Academy. I think they
+are going to be married some day. I guess I will
+show her this page of my journal, too. Grandmother
+let me make a pie in a saucer to-day and it
+was very good.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>May</i>.&mdash;We were invited to Bessie Seymour&#8217;s
+party last night and Grandmother said we could go.
+The girls all told us at school that they were going
+to wear low neck and short sleeves. We have caps
+on the sleeves of our best dresses and we tried to get
+the sleeves out, so we could go bare arms, but we
+couldn&#8217;t get them out. We had a very nice time,
+though, at the party. Some of the Academy boys
+were there and they asked us to dance but of course
+we couldn&#8217;t do that. We promenaded around the
+rooms and went out to supper with them. Eugene
+Stone and Tom Eddy asked to go home with us but
+Grandmother sent our two girls for us, Bridget
+Flynn and Hannah White, so they couldn&#8217;t. We
+were quite disappointed, but perhaps she won&#8217;t send
+for us next time.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<table summary='figure' style='margin:0 auto'><tr>
+<td valign='bottom' style='padding-right:20px;'><a id='i066a'></a><img src='images/illus-066a.jpg' alt='' /><p class='c'>Tom Eddy and Eugene Stone</p></td>
+<td valign='bottom'><a id='i066b'></a><img src='images/illus-066b.jpg' alt='' /><p class='c'>&#8220;Uncle David Dudley Field&#8221;</p></td>
+</tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_67'></a>67</span><i>May.</i>&mdash;Grandmother is teaching me how to knit
+some mittens now, but if I ever finish them it will
+be through much tribulation, the way they have to
+be raveled out and commenced over again. I think
+I shall know how to knit when I get through, if I
+never know how to do anything else. Perhaps I
+shall know how to write, too, for I write all of
+Grandmother&#8217;s letters for her, because it tires her to
+write too much. I have sorted my letters to-day
+and tied them in packages and found I had between
+500 and 600. I have had about two letters a week
+for the past five years and have kept them all.
+Father almost always tells me in his letters to read
+my Bible and say my prayers and obey Grandmother
+and stand up straight and turn out my toes and
+brush my teeth and be good to my little sister. I
+have been practising all these so long I can say, as
+the young man did in the Bible when Jesus told him
+what to do to be saved, &#8220;all these have I kept from
+my youth up.&#8221; But then, I lack quite a number of
+things after all. I am not always strictly obedient.
+For instance, I know Grandmother never likes to
+have us read the secular part of the <i>New York Observer</i>
+on Sunday, so she puts it in the top drawer
+of the sideboard until Monday, but I couldn&#8217;t find
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_68'></a>68</span>anything interesting to read the other Sunday so I
+took it out and read it and put it back. The jokes
+and stories in it did not seem as amusing as usual
+so I think I will not do it again.</p>
+
+<p>Grandfather&#8217;s favorite paper is the <i>Boston Christian
+Register.</i> He could not have one of them torn
+up any more than a leaf of the Bible. He has barrels
+of them stored away in the garret.</p>
+
+<p>I asked Grandmother to-day to write a verse for
+me to keep always and she wrote a good one: &#8220;To
+be happy and live long the three grand essentials are:
+Be busy, love somebody and have high aims.&#8221; I
+think, from all I have noticed about her, that she
+has had this for her motto all her life and I don&#8217;t
+think Anna and I can do very much better than to
+try and follow it too. Grandfather tells us sometimes,
+when she is not in the room, that the best
+thing we can do is to be just as near like Grandmother
+as we can possibly be.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Saturday, May</i> 30.&mdash;Louisa Field came over to
+dinner to-day and brought Allie with her. We had
+roast chickens for dinner and lots of other nice
+things. Grandmother taught us how to string lilac
+blossoms for necklaces and also how to make curls
+of dandelion stems. She always has some things in
+the parlor cupboard which she brings out on extra
+occasions, so she got them out to-day. They are
+some Chinamen which Uncle Thomas brought home
+when he sailed around the world. They are
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_69'></a>69</span>wooden images standing in boxes, packing tea with
+their feet.</p>
+
+<p>Last week Jennie Howell invited us to go up to
+Black Point Cabin with her and to-day with a lot of
+grown-up people we went and enjoyed it. There
+was a little colored girl there who waits on the table
+and can row the boats too. She is Polly Carroll&#8217;s
+granddaughter, Mary Jane. She sang for us,</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;Nellie Ely shuts her eye when she goes to sleep,</p>
+<p>When she opens them again her eyes begin to peep;</p>
+<p>Hi Nellie, Ho Nellie, listen love to me,</p>
+<p>I&#8217;ll sing for you, I&#8217;ll play for you,</p>
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> A dulcet melody.&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p>She is just as cute as she can be. She said Mrs.
+Henry Chesebro taught her to read.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday, June</i> 1.&mdash;Rev. Dr. Shaw, of Rochester,
+preached for Dr. Daggett to-day and his text was:
+&#8220;Whosoever drinketh of this water shall thirst
+again, but whosoever drinketh of the water that I
+shall give him shall never thirst.&#8221; He said by this
+water he meant the pleasures of this life, wealth and
+fame and honor, of which the more we have the
+more we want and are never satisfied, but if we
+drink of the water that Christ can give us we will
+have happiness here and forever. It was a very
+good sermon and I love to hear him preach.
+Grandmother never likes to start for church until
+after all the Seminary girls and Academy boys have
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_70'></a>70</span>gone by, but this morning we got to the gate just
+as the boys came along. When Grandmother saw
+five or six hats come off and knew they were bowing
+to us, she asked us how we got acquainted with
+them. We told her that almost all the girls knew
+the Academy boys and I am sure that is true.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Tuesday, June</i> 8.&mdash;We are cleaning house now
+and Grandmother asked Anna and me to take out a
+few tacks in the dining-room carpet. We did not
+like it so very well but we liked eating dinner in
+the parlor, as the table had to be set in there. Anna
+told us that when she got married we could come to
+visit her any time in the year as she was never going
+to clean house. We went down street on an errand
+to-night and hurried right back, as Grandmother
+said she should look at the clock and see how long
+we were gone. Emma Wheeler went with us.
+Anna says she and Emma are as &#8220;thick as hasty
+pudding.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>June.</i>&mdash;Rev. Frederick Starr, of Penn Yan, had
+an exhibition in Bemis Hall to-day of a tabernacle
+just like the children of Israel carried with them to
+the Promised Land. We went to see it. He made
+it himself and said he took all the directions from
+the Bible and knew where to put the curtains and
+the poles and everything. It was interesting but we
+thought it would be queer not to have any church
+to go to but one like that, that you could take down
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_71'></a>71</span>and put up and carry around with you wherever you
+went.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>June.</i>&mdash;Rev. Mr. Kendall is not going to preach
+in East Bloomfield any more. The paper says he
+is going to New York to live and be Secretary of
+the A.B.C.F.M. I asked Grandmother what that
+meant, and she said he would have to write down
+what the missionaries do. I guess that will keep
+him busy. Grandfather&#8217;s nephew, a Mr. Adams of
+Boston and his wife, visited us about two weeks ago.
+He is the head of the firm Adams&#8217; Express Co.
+Anna asked them if they ever heard the conundrum
+&#8220;What was Eve made for?&#8221; and they said no, so
+she told them the answer, &#8220;for Adam&#8217;s express company.&#8221;
+They thought it was quite good. When
+they reached home, they sent us each a reticule, with
+scissors, thimble, stiletto, needle-case and tiny penknife
+and some stamped embroidery. They must
+be very rich.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Saturday Night, July.</i>&mdash;Grandfather was asking
+us to-night how many things we could remember,
+and I told him I could remember when Zachary Taylor
+died, and our church was draped in black, and
+Mr. Daggett preached a funeral sermon about him,
+and I could remember when Daniel Webster died,
+and there was service held in the church and his last
+words, &#8220;I still live,&#8221; were put up over the pulpit.
+He said he could remember when George Washington
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_72'></a>72</span>died and when Benjamin Franklin died. He
+was seven years old then and he was seventeen when
+Washington died. Of course his memory goes farther
+back than mine, but he said I did very well,
+considering.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>July.</i>&mdash;I have not written in my journal for several
+days because we have been out of town.
+Grandfather had to go to Victor on business and
+took Anna and me with him. Anna says she loves
+to ride on the cars as it is fun to watch the trees
+and fences run so. We took dinner at Dr. Ball&#8217;s
+and came home on the evening train. Then Judge
+Ellsworth came over from Penn Yan to see Grandfather
+on business and asked if he could take us
+home with him and he said yes, so we went and had
+a splendid time and stayed two days. Stewart was
+at home and took us all around driving and took us
+to the graveyard to see our mother&#8217;s grave. I
+copied this verse from the gravestone:</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;Of gentle seeming was her form</p>
+<p>And the soft beaming of her radiant eye</p>
+<p>Was sunlight to the beauty of her face.</p>
+<p>Peace, sacred peace, was written on her brow</p>
+<p>And flowed in the low music of her voice</p>
+<p>Which came unto the list&#8217;ner like the tones of soothing Autumn winds.</p>
+<p>Her hands were full of consolations which she scattered free to all&mdash;the poor, the sick, the sorrowful.&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_73'></a>73</span>I think she must have been exactly like Grandmother
+only she was 32 and Grandmother is 72.</p>
+
+<p>Stewart went to prayer meeting because it was
+Wednesday night, and when he came home his
+mother asked him if he took part in the meeting.
+He said he did and she asked him what he said.
+He said he told the story of Ethan Allen, the infidel,
+who was dying, and his daughter asked him whose
+religion she should live by, his or her mother&#8217;s, and
+he said, &#8220;Your mother&#8217;s, my daughter, your mother&#8217;s.&#8221;
+This pleased Mrs. Ellsworth very much.
+Stewart is a great boy and you never can tell
+whether he is in earnest or not. It was very warm
+while we were gone and when we got home Anna
+told Grandmother she was going to put on her
+barège dress and take a rocking-chair and a glass of
+ice water and a palm leaf fan and go down cellar
+and sit, but Grandmother told her if she would just
+sit still and take a book and get her mind on something
+else besides the weather, she would be cool
+enough. Grandmother always looks as cool as a
+cucumber even when the thermometer is 90 in the
+shade.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday, August.</i>&mdash;Rev. Anson D. Eddy preached
+this morning. His text was from the sixth chapter
+of John, 44th verse. &#8220;No man can come to me,
+except the Father which hath sent me, draw him.&#8221;
+He is Tom Eddy&#8217;s father, and very good-looking
+and smart too. He used to be one of the ministers
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_74'></a>74</span>of our church before Mr. Daggett came. He wrote
+a book in our Sunday School library, about Old
+Black Jacob, and Grandmother loves to read it.
+We had a nice dinner to-day, green peas, lemonade
+and gooseberry pie. We had cold roast lamb too,
+because Grandmother never has any meat cooked on
+Sunday.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday.</i>&mdash;Mr. Noah T. Clarke is superintendent
+of our Sunday School now, and this morning he
+asked, &#8220;What is prayer?&#8221; No one answered, so I
+stood up and gave the definition from the catechism.
+He seemed pleased and so was Grandmother when
+I told her. Anna said she supposes she was glad
+that &#8220;her labor was not in vain in the Lord.&#8221; I
+think she is trying to see if she can say Bible verses,
+like grown-up people do.</p>
+
+<p>Grandfather said that I did better than the little
+boy he read about who, when a visitor asked the
+Sunday School children what was the ostensible
+object of Sabbath School instruction, waited till the
+question was repeated three times and then stood up
+and said, &#8220;Yes, sir.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Wednesday.</i>&mdash;We could not go to prayer meeting
+to-night because it rained, so Grandmother said we
+could go into the kitchen and stand by the window
+and hear the Methodists. We could hear every
+word that old Father Thompson said, and every
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_75'></a>75</span>hymn they sung, but Mr. Jervis used such big words
+we could not understand him at all.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday.</i>&mdash;Grandmother says she loves to look at
+the beautiful white heads of Mr. Francis Granger
+and General Granger as they sit in their pews in
+church. She says that is what it means in the
+twelfth chapter of Ecclesiastes where it says, &#8220;And
+the almond tree shall flourish.&#8221; I don&#8217;t know exactly
+why it means them, but I suppose she does.
+We have got a beautiful almond tree in our front
+yard covered with flowers, but the blossoms are pink.
+Probably they had white ones in Jerusalem, where
+Solomon lived.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Monday.</i>&mdash;Mr. Alex. Jeffrey has come from
+Lexington, Ky., and brought Mrs. Ross and his
+three daughters, Julia, Shaddie and Bessie Jeffrey.
+Mrs. Ross knows Grandmother and came to call
+and brought the girls. They are very pretty and
+General Granger&#8217;s granddaughters. I think they
+are going to stay all summer.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Thanksgiving Day.</i>&mdash;We all went to church and
+Dr. Daggett&#8217;s text was: &#8220;He hath not dealt so
+with any nation.&#8221; Aunt Glorianna and her children
+were here and Uncle Field and all their family and
+Dr. Carr and all his family. There were about sixteen
+of us in all and we children had a table in the
+corner all by ourselves. We had roast turkey and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_76'></a>76</span>everything else we could think of. After dinner
+we went into the parlor and Aunt Glorianna played
+on the piano and sang, &#8220;Flow gently, sweet Afton,
+among thy green braes,&#8221; and &#8220;Poor Bessie was a
+sailor&#8217;s wife.&#8221; These are Grandfather&#8217;s favorites.
+Dr. Carr sang &#8220;I&#8217;m sitting on the stile, Mary, where
+we sat side by side.&#8221; He is a beautiful singer. It
+seemed just like Sunday, for Grandmother never
+likes to have us work or play on Thanksgiving Day,
+but we had a very good time, indeed, and were sorry
+when they all went home.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Saturday, December</i> 20.&mdash;Lillie Reeve and her
+brother, Charlie, have come from Texas to live.
+He goes to the Academy and she boards with Miss
+Antoinette Pierson. Miss Pierson invited me up to
+spend the afternoon and take tea with her and I
+went and had a very nice time. She told me about
+their camp life in Texas and how her mother died,
+and her little baby sister, Minnie, lives with her
+Grandmother Sheppard in Dansville. She is a very
+nice girl and I like her very much, indeed.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+<a id='c1857'></a>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_77'></a>77</span>
+<p class='cln0'>1857</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>January</i> 8.&mdash;Anna and Alice Jewett caught a ride
+down to the lake this afternoon on a bob-sleigh, and
+then caught a ride back on a load of frozen pigs.
+In jumping off, Anna tore her flannel petticoat from
+the band down. I did not enjoy the situation as
+much as Anna, because I had to sit up after she
+had gone to bed, and darn it by candle light, because
+she was afraid Grandmother might see the rent and
+inquire into it, and that would put an end to bobsled
+exploits.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>March</i> 6.&mdash;Anna and her set will have to square
+accounts with Mr. Richards to-morrow, for nine of
+them ran away from school this afternoon, Alice
+Jewett, Louisa Field, Sarah Antes, Hattie Paddock,
+Helen Coy, Jennie Ruckel, Frankie Younglove,
+Emma Wheeler and Anna. They went out to Mr.
+Sackett&#8217;s, where they are making maple sugar. Mr.
+and Mrs. Sackett were at home and two Miss Sacketts
+and Darius, and they asked them in and gave
+them all the sugar they wanted, and Anna said
+pickles, too, and bread and butter, and the more
+pickles they ate the more sugar they could eat. I
+guess they will think of pickles when Mr. Richards
+asks them where they were. I think Ellie Daggett
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_78'></a>78</span>and Charlie Paddock went, too, and some of the
+Academy boys.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>March 7.</i>&mdash;They all had to stay after school to-night
+for an hour and copy Dictionary. Anna
+seems reconciled, for she just wrote in her journal:
+&#8220;It was a very good plan to keep us because no one
+ever ought to stay out of school except on account
+of sickness, and if they once get a thing fixed in
+their minds it will stay there, and when they grow
+up it will do them a great deal of good.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>April.</i>&mdash;Grandfather gave us 10 cents each this
+morning for learning the 46th Psalm and has promised
+us $1 each for reading the Bible through in a
+year. We were going to any way. Some of the
+girls say they should think we would be afraid of
+Grandfather, he is so sober, but we are not the least
+bit. He let us count $1,000 to-night which a Mr.
+Taylor, a cattle buyer, brought to him in the evening
+after banking hours. Anybody must be very rich
+who has all that money of their own.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Friday.</i>&mdash;Our old horse is dead and we will have
+to buy another. He was very steady and faithful.
+One day Grandfather left him at the front gate and
+he started along and turned the corner all right,
+down the Methodist lane and went way down to our
+barn doors and stood there until Mr. Piser came
+and took him into the barn. People said they set
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_79'></a>79</span>their clocks by him because it was always quarter
+past 12 when he was driven down to the bank after
+Grandfather and quarter of 1 when he came back.
+I don&#8217;t think the clocks would ever be too fast if
+they were set by him. We asked Grandfather what
+he died of and he said he had run his race but I
+think he meant he had walked it, for I never saw
+him go off a jog in my life. Anna used to say he
+was taking a nap when we were out driving with
+Grandfather. I have written some lines in his memory
+and if I knew where he was buried, I would
+print it on his head board.</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>Old Dobbin&#8217;s dead, that good old horse,</p>
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> We ne&#8217;er shall see him more,</p>
+<p>He always used to lag behind</p>
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> But now he&#8217;s gone before.</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p>It is a parody on old Grimes is dead, which is in
+our reader, only that is a very long poem. I am
+not going to show mine to Grandfather till he gets
+over feeling bad about the horse.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday.</i>&mdash;Grandmother gave Anna, Doddridge&#8217;s
+&#8220;Rise and Progress of Religion in the Soul&#8221; to
+read to-day. Anna says she thinks she will have
+to rise and progress a good deal before she will be
+able to appreciate it. Baxter&#8217;s &#8220;Saints Rest&#8221;
+would probably suit her better.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_80'></a>80</span><i>Sunday, April</i> 5.&mdash;An agent for the American
+Board of Foreign Missions preached this morning
+in our church from Romans 10: 15: &#8220;How shall
+they hear without a preacher and how shall they
+preach except they be sent.&#8221; An agent from every
+society presents the cause, whatever it is, once a
+year and some people think the anniversary comes
+around very often. I always think of Mrs. George
+Wilson&#8217;s poem on &#8220;A apele for air, pewer air, certin
+proper for the pews, which, she sez, is scarce as
+piety, or bank bills when ajents beg for mischuns,
+wich sum say is purty often, (taint nothin&#8217; to me,
+wat I give aint nothin&#8217; to nobody).&#8221; I think that
+is about the best poem of its kind I ever read.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Lizzie Bull told us in Sunday School to-day
+that she cannot be our Sunday School teacher any
+more, as she and her sister Mary are going to join
+the Episcopal Church. We hate to have her go,
+but what can&#8217;t be cured must be endured. Part of
+our class are going into Miss Mary Howell&#8217;s class
+and part into Miss Annie Pierce&#8217;s. They are both
+splendid teachers and Miss Lizzie Bull is another.
+We had preaching in our church this afternoon, too.
+Rev. Samuel Hanson Cox, of Le Roy Female Seminary,
+preached. He is a great man, very large, long
+white hair combed back. I think if a person once
+saw him they would never forget him. He preached
+about Melchisidek, who had neither &#8220;beginning of
+days or end of life.&#8221; Some people thought that
+was like his sermon, for it was more than one hour
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_81'></a>81</span>long. Dr. Cox and Mrs. Taylor came to call and
+asked Grandfather to let me go to Le Roy Female
+Seminary, but Grandfather likes Ontario Female
+Seminary better than any other in the world. We
+wanted Grandmother to have her picture taken, but
+she did not feel able to go to Mr. Finley&#8217;s, so he
+came up Tuesday and took it in our dining-room.
+She had her best cap on and her black silk dress and
+sat in her high back rocking chair in her usual corner
+near the window. He brought one up to show
+us and we like it so much. Anna looked at it and
+kissed it and said, &#8220;Grandmother, I think you are
+perfectly beautiful.&#8221; She smiled and very modestly
+put her handkerchief up to her face and said, &#8220;You
+foolish child,&#8221; but I am sure she was pleased, for
+how could she help it? A man came up to the open
+window one day where she was sitting, with something
+to sell, and while she was talking to him he
+said, &#8220;You must have been handsome, lady, when
+you were young.&#8221; Grandmother said it was because
+he wanted to sell his wares, but we thought
+he knew it was so. We told her she couldn&#8217;t get
+around it that way and we asked Grandfather and
+he said it was true. Our Sunday School class went
+to Mr. Finley&#8217;s to-day and had a group ambrotype
+taken for our teacher, Miss Annie Pierce; Susie
+Daggett, Clara Willson, Sarah Whitney, Mary Field
+and myself. Mary Wheeler ought to have been in
+it, too, but we couldn&#8217;t get her to come. We had
+very good success.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_82'></a>82</span><i>Thursday</i>.&mdash;We gave the ambrotype to Miss
+Pierce and she liked it very much and so does her
+mother and Fannie. Her mother is lame and cannot
+go anywhere so we often go to see her and she
+is always glad to see us and so pleasant.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>May</i> 9.&mdash;Miss Lizzie Bull came for me to go botanising
+with her this morning and we were gone
+from 9 till 12, and went clear up to the orphan asylum.
+I am afraid I am not a born botanist, for all
+the time she was analysing the flowers and telling
+me about the corona and the corolla and the calyx
+and the stamens and petals and pistils, I was thinking
+what beautiful hands she had and how dainty
+they looked, pulling the blossoms all to pieces. I
+am afraid I am commonplace, like the man we read
+of in English literature, who said &#8220;a primrose by
+the river brim, a yellow primrose, was to him, and
+it was nothing more.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. William Wood came to call this afternoon
+and gave us some morning-glory seeds to sow and
+told us to write down in our journals that he did so.
+So here it is. What a funny old man he is. Anna
+and Emma Wheeler went to Hiram Tousley&#8217;s
+funeral to-day. She has just written in her journal
+that Hiram&#8217;s corpse was very perfect of him and
+that Fannie looked very pretty in black. She also
+added that after the funeral Grandfather took Aunt
+Ann and Lucilla out to ride to Mr. Howe&#8217;s and just
+as they got there it sprinkled. She says she don&#8217;t
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_83'></a>83</span>know &#8220;weather&#8221; they got wet or not. She went
+to a picnic at Sucker Brook yesterday afternoon,
+and this is the way she described it in her journal.
+&#8220;Miss Hurlburt told us all to wear rubbers and
+shawls and bring some cake and we would have a
+picnic. We had a very warm time. It was very
+warm indeed and I was most roasted and we were
+all very thirsty indeed. We had in all the party
+about 40 of us. It was very pleasant and I enjoyed
+myself exceedingly. We had boiled eggs, pickles,
+Dutch cheese and sage cheese and loaf cake and
+raisin cake, pound cake, dried beef and capers, jam
+and tea cakes and gingerbread, and we tried to catch
+some fish but we couldn&#8217;t, and in all we had a very
+nice time. I forgot to say that I picked some flowers
+for my teacher. I went to bed tired out and
+worn out.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Her next entry was the following day when she
+and the other scholars dressed up to &#8220;speak pieces.&#8221;
+She says, &#8220;After dinner I went and put on my rope
+petticoat and lace one over it and my barège de laine
+dress and all my rings and white bask and breastpin
+and worked handkerchief and spoke my piece. It
+was, &#8216;When I look up to yonder sky.&#8217; It is very
+pretty indeed and most all the girls said I looked
+nice and said it nice. They were all dressed up,
+too.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Thursday</i>.&mdash;I asked Grandfather why we do not
+have gas in the house like almost every one else
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_84'></a>84</span>and he said because it was bad for the eyes and he
+liked candles and sperm oil better. We have the
+funniest little sperm oil lamp with a shade on to read
+by evenings and the fire on the hearth gives Grandfather
+and Grandmother all the light they want, for
+she knits in her corner and we read aloud to them
+if they want us to. I think if Grandfather is proud
+of anything besides being a Bostonian, it is that
+everything in the house is forty years old. The
+shovel and tongs and andirons and fender and the
+haircloth sofa and the haircloth rocking chair and
+the flag bottomed chairs painted dark green and the
+two old arm-chairs which belong to them and no one
+else ever thinks of touching. There is a wooden partition
+between the dining-room and parlor and they
+say it can slide right up out of sight on pulleys, so
+that it would be all one room. We have often said
+that we wished we could see it go up but they say
+it has never been up since the day our mother was
+married and as she is dead I suppose it would make
+them feel bad, so we probably will always have it
+down. There are no curtains or even shades at the
+windows, because Grandfather says, &#8220;light is sweet
+and a pleasant thing it is to behold the sun.&#8221; The
+piano is in the parlor and it is the same one that our
+mother had when she was a little girl but we like it
+all the better for that. There are four large oil
+paintings on the parlor wall, De Witt Clinton, Rev.
+Mr. Dwight, Uncle Henry Channing Beals and Aunt
+Lucilla Bates, and no matter where we sit in the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_85'></a>85</span>room they are watching and their eyes seem to move
+whenever we do. There is quite a handsome lamp
+on a mahogany center table, but I never saw it
+lighted. We have four sperm candles in four silver
+candlesticks and when we have company we light
+them. Johnnie Thompson, son of the minister,
+Rev. M. L. R. P., has come to the academy to school
+and he is very full of fun and got acquainted with
+all the girls very quick. He told us this afternoon
+to have &#8220;the other candle lit&#8221; for he was coming
+down to see us this evening. Will Schley heard him
+say it and he said he was coming too. His mother
+says she always knows when he has been at our
+house, because she finds sperm on his clothes and has
+to take brown paper and a hot flatiron to get it out,
+but still I do not think that Mrs. Schley cares, for
+she is a very nice lady and she and I are great
+friends. I presume she would just as soon he
+would spend part of his time with us as to be with
+Horace Finley all the time. Those boys are just
+like twins. We never see one without being sure
+that the other is not far away.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Later</i>.&mdash;The boys came and we had a very
+pleasant evening but when the 9 o&#8217;clock bell rang we
+heard Grandfather winding up the clock and scraping
+up the ashes on the hearth to cover the fire so it
+would last till morning and we all understood the
+signal and they bade us good-night. &#8220;We won&#8217;t
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_86'></a>86</span>go home till morning&#8221; is a song that will never be
+sung in this house.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>June</i> 2.&mdash;Abbie Clark wrote such a nice piece in
+my album to-day I am going to write it in my journal.
+Grandfather says he likes the sentiment as
+well as any in my book. This is it: &#8220;It has been
+said that the friendship of some people is like our
+shadow, keeping close by us while the sun shines,
+deserting us the moment we enter the shade, but
+think not such is the friendship of Abbie S. Clark.&#8221;
+Abbie and I took supper at Miss Mary Howell&#8217;s to-night
+to see Adele Ives. We had a lovely time.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Tuesday</i>.&mdash;General Tom Thumb was in town to-day
+and everybody who wanted to see him could go
+to Bemis Hall. Twenty-five cents for old people,
+and 10 cents for children, but we could see him for
+nothing when he drove around town. He had a
+little carriage and two little bits of ponies and a little
+boy with a high silk hat on, for the driver. He sat
+inside the coach but we could see him looking out.
+We went to the hall in the afternoon and the man
+who brought him stood by him and looked like a
+giant and told us all about him. Then he asked
+Tom Thumb to make a speech and stood him upon
+the table. He told all the ladies he would give
+them a kiss if they would come up and buy his picture.
+Some of them did.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_87'></a>87</span><i>Friday, July.</i>&mdash;I have not kept a journal for two
+weeks because we have been away visiting. Anna
+and I had an invitation to go to Utica to visit Rev.
+and Mrs. Brandigee. He is rector of Grace Episcopal
+church there and his wife used to belong to
+Father&#8217;s church in Morristown, N. J. Her name
+was Miss Condict. Rev. Mr. Stowe was going to
+Hamilton College at Clinton, so he said he would
+take us to Utica. We had a lovely time. The corner
+stone of the church was laid while we were there
+and Bishop De Lancey came and stayed with us at
+Mr. Brandigee&#8217;s. He is a very nice man and likes
+children. One morning they had muffins for breakfast
+and Anna asked if they were ragamuffins. Mr.
+Brandigee said, &#8220;Yes, they are made of rags and
+brown paper,&#8221; but we knew he was just joking.
+When we came away Mrs. Brandigee gave me a
+prayer book and Anna a vase, but she didn&#8217;t like it
+and said she should tell Mrs. Brandigee she wanted
+a prayer book too, so I had to change with her.
+When we came home Mr. Brandigee put us in care
+of the conductor. There was a fine soldier looking
+man in the car with us and we thought it was his
+wife with him. He wore a blue coat and brass buttons,
+and some one said his name was Custer and
+that he was a West Point cadet and belonged to the
+regular army. I told Anna she had better behave
+or he would see her, but she would go out and
+stand on the platform until the conductor told her
+not to. I pulled her dress and looked very stern at
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_88'></a>88</span>her and motioned toward Mr. Custer, but it did not
+seem to have any impression on her. I saw Mr.
+Custer smile once because my words had no effect.
+I was glad when we got to Canandaigua. I heard
+some one say that Dr. Jewett was at the depôt to
+take Mr. Custer and his wife to his house, but I only
+saw Grandfather coming after us. He said, &#8220;Well,
+girls, you have been and you have got back,&#8221; but I
+could see that he was glad to have us at home again,
+even if we are &#8220;troublesome comforts,&#8221; as he sometimes
+says.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>July</i> 4.&mdash;Barnum&#8217;s circus was in town to-day and
+if Grandmother had not seen the pictures on the
+hand bills I think she would have let us go. She
+said it was all right to look at the creatures God had
+made but she did not think He ever intended that
+women should go only half dressed and stand up and
+ride on horses bare back, or jump through hoops in
+the air. So we could not go. We saw the street
+parade though and heard the band play and saw the
+men and women in a chariot, all dressed so fine, and
+we saw a big elephant and a little one and a camel
+with an awful hump on his back, and we could hear
+the lion roar in the cage, as they went by. It must
+have been nice to see them close to and probably we
+will some day.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<table summary='figure' style='margin:0 auto'><tr>
+<td valign='bottom' style='padding-right:20px;'><a id='i088a'></a><img src='images/illus-088a.jpg' alt='' /><p class='c'>Grandmother&#8217;s Rocking Chair</p></td>
+<td valign='bottom'><a id='i088b'></a><img src='images/illus-088b.jpg' alt='' /><p class='c'>&#8220;The Grandfather Clock&#8221;</p></td>
+</tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_89'></a>89</span><i>August</i> 8.&mdash;Grandfather has given me his whole
+set of Waverley novels and his whole set of Shakespeare&#8217;s
+plays, and has ordered Mr. Jahn, the cabinetmaker,
+to make me a black walnut bookcase, with
+glass doors and three deep drawers underneath,
+with brass handles. He is so good. Anna says
+perhaps he thinks I am going to be married and go
+to housekeeping some day. Well, perhaps he does.
+Stranger things have happened. &#8220;Barkis is willin&#8217;,&#8221;
+and I always like to please Grandfather. I
+have just read David Copperfield and was so interested
+I could not leave it alone till I finished it.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>September</i> 1.&mdash;Anna and I have been in Litchfield,
+Conn., at Father&#8217;s school for boys. It is kept
+in the old Beecher house, where Dr. Lyman Beecher
+lived. We went up into the attic, which is light and
+airy, where they say he used to write his famous sermons.
+James is one of the teachers and he came
+for us. We went to Farmington and saw all the
+Cowles families, as they are our cousins. Then we
+drove by the Charter Oak and saw all there is left
+of it. It was blown down last year but the stump
+is fenced around. In Hartford we visited Gallaudet&#8217;s
+Institution for the deaf and dumb and went to
+the historical rooms, where we saw some of George
+Washington&#8217;s clothes and his watch and his penknife,
+but we did not see his little hatchet. We
+stayed two weeks in New York and vicinity before
+we came home. Uncle Edward took us to Christie&#8217;s
+Minstrels and the Hippodrome, so we saw all the
+things we missed seeing when the circus was here in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_90'></a>90</span>town. Grandmother seemed surprised when we
+told her, but she didn&#8217;t say much because she was so
+glad to have us at home again. Anna said we ought
+to bring a present to Grandfather and Grandmother,
+for she read one time about some children who went
+away and came back grown up and brought home
+&#8220;busts of the old philosophers for the sitting-room,&#8221;
+so as we saw some busts of George Washington and
+Benjamin Franklin in plaster of paris we bought
+them, for they look almost like marble and Grandfather
+and Grandmother like them. Speaking of
+busts reminds me of a conundrum I heard while I
+was gone. &#8220;How do we know that Poe&#8217;s Raven
+was a dissipated bird? Because he was all night on
+a bust.&#8221; Grandfather took us down to the bank to
+see how he had it made over while we were gone.
+We asked him why he had a beehive hanging out for
+a sign and he said, &#8220;Bees store their honey in the
+summer for winter use and men ought to store their
+money against a rainy day.&#8221; He has a swing door
+to the bank with &#8220;Push&#8221; on it. He said he saw a
+man studying it one day and finally looking up he
+spelled p-u-s-h, push (and pronounced it like mush).
+&#8220;What does that mean?&#8221; Grandfather showed
+him what it meant and he thought it was very convenient.
+He was about as thick-headed as the man
+who saw some snuffers and asked what they were
+for and when told to snuff the candle with, he immediately
+snuffed the candle with his fingers and put it
+in the snuffers and said, &#8220;Law sakes, how handy!&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_91'></a>91</span>Grandmother really laughed when she read this in
+the paper.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>September</i>.&mdash;Mrs. Martin, of Albany, is visiting
+Aunt Ann, and she brought Grandmother a fine fish
+that was caught in the Atlantic Ocean. We went
+over and asked her to come to dinner to-morrow and
+help eat it and she said if it did not rain pitchforks
+she would come, so I think we may expect her. Her
+granddaughter, Hattie Blanchard, has come here to
+go to the seminary and will live with Aunt Ann.
+She is a very pretty girl. Mary Field came over
+this morning and we went down street together.
+Grandfather went with us to Mr. Nat Gorham&#8217;s
+store, as he is selling off at cost, and got Grandmother
+and me each a new pair of kid gloves. Hers
+are black and mine are green. Hers cost six shillings
+and mine cost five shillings and six pence; very
+cheap for such nice ones. Grandmother let Anna
+have six little girls here to supper to-night: Louisa
+Field, Hattie Paddock, Helen Coy, Martha Densmore,
+Emma Wheeler and Alice Jewett. We had a
+splendid supper and then we played cards. I do not
+mean regular cards, mercy no! Grandfather thinks
+those kind are contagious or outrageous or something
+dreadful and never keeps them in the house.
+Grandmother said they found a pack once, when the
+hired man&#8217;s room was cleaned, and they went into
+the fire pretty quick. The kind we played was
+just &#8220;Dr. Busby,&#8221; and another &#8220;The Old Soldier
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_92'></a>92</span>and His Dog.&#8221; There are counters with them, and
+if you don&#8217;t have the card called for you have to
+pay one into the pool. It is real fun. They all said
+they had a very nice time, indeed, when they bade
+Grandmother good-night, and said: &#8220;Mrs. Beals,
+you must let Carrie and Anna come and see us some
+time,&#8221; and she said she would. I think it is nice to
+have company.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Christmas</i>.&mdash;Grandfather and Grandmother do
+not care much about making Christmas presents.
+They say, when they were young no one observed
+Christmas or New Years, but they always kept
+Thanksgiving day. Our cousins, the Fields and
+Carrs, gave us several presents and Uncle Edward
+sent us a basket full from New York by express.
+Aunt Ann gave me one of the Lucy books and a
+Franconia story book and to Anna, &#8220;The Child&#8217;s
+Book on Repentance.&#8221; When Anna saw the title,
+she whispered to me and said if she had done anything
+she was sorry for she was willing to be forgiven.
+I am afraid she will never read hers but I
+will lend her mine. Miss Lucy Ellen Guernsey, of
+Rochester, gave me &#8220;Christmas Earnings&#8221; and
+wrote in it, &#8220;Carrie C. Richards with the love of
+the author.&#8221; I think that is very nice. Anna and
+I were chattering like two magpies to-day, and a
+man came in to talk to Grandfather on business.
+He told us in an undertone that children should be
+seen and not heard. After he had gone I saw Anna
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_93'></a>93</span>watching him a long time till he was only a speck in
+the distance and I asked her what she was doing.
+She said she was doing it because it was a sign if
+you watched persons out of sight you would never
+see them again. She does not seem to have a very
+forgiving spirit, but you can&#8217;t always tell.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. William Wood, the venerable philanthropist
+of whom Canandaigua has been justly proud for
+many years, is dead. I have preserved this poem,
+written by Mrs. George Willson in his honor:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>&#8220;<span class='sc'>Mr. Editor</span>&mdash;The following lines were written by
+a lady of this village, and have been heretofore published,
+but on reading in your last paper the interesting
+extract relating to the late William Wood, Esq.,
+it was suggested that they be again published, not
+only for their merit, but also to keep alive the memory
+of one who has done so much to ornament our village.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>When first on this stage of existence we come</p>
+<p>Blind, deaf, puny, helpless, but not, alas, dumb,</p>
+<p>What can please us, and soothe us, and make us sleep good?</p>
+<p>To be rocked in a cradle;&mdash;and cradles are wood.</p>
+<hr class='poetry' />
+<p>When older we grow, and we enter the schools</p>
+<p>Where masters break rulers o&#8217;er boys who break rules,</p>
+<p>What can curb and restrain and make laws understood</p>
+<p>But the birch-twig and ferule?&mdash;and both are of wood.</p>
+<hr class='poetry' />
+<p>When old age&mdash;second childhood, takes vigor away,</p>
+<p>And we totter along toward our home in the clay,</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_94'></a>94</span>What can aid us to stand as in manhood we stood</p>
+<p>But our tried, trusty staff?&mdash;and the staff is of wood.</p>
+<hr class='poetry' />
+<p>And when from this stage of existence we go,</p>
+<p>And death drops the curtain on all scenes below,</p>
+<p>In our coffins we rest, while for worms we are food,</p>
+<p>And our last sleeping place, like our first, is of wood.</p>
+<hr class='poetry' />
+<p>Then honor to wood! fresh and strong may it grow,</p>
+<p>&#8217;Though winter has silvered its summit with snow;</p>
+<p>Embowered in its shade long our village has stood;</p>
+<p>She&#8217;d scarce be Canandaigua if stripped of her Wood.</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p style='text-align:center'><i>Stanza added after the death of Mr. Wood</i></p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>The sad time is come; she is stript of her Wood,</p>
+<p>&#8217;Though the trees that he planted still stand where they stood,</p>
+<p>Still with storms they can wrestle with arms stout and brave;</p>
+<p>Still they wave o&#8217;er our dwellings&mdash;they droop o&#8217;er his grave!</p>
+<p>Alas! that the life of the cherished and good</p>
+<p>Is more frail and more brief than the trees of the wood!</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+<a id='c1858'></a>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_95'></a>95</span>
+<p class='cln0'>1858</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>February</i> 24, 1858.&mdash;The boarders at the Seminary
+had some tableaux last evening and invited a
+great many from the village. As we went in with
+the crowd, we heard some one say, &#8220;Are they going
+to have tableaux? Well, I thought I smelt them!&#8221;
+They were splendid. Mr. Chubbuck was in nearly
+all of them. The most beautiful one was Abraham
+offering up Isaac. Mr. Chubbuck was Abraham
+and Sarah Ripley was Isaac. After the tableaux
+they acted a charade. The word was &#8220;Masterpiece.&#8221;
+It was fine. After the audience got half
+way out of the chapel Mr. Richards announced
+&#8220;The Belle of the Evening.&#8221; The curtain rose and
+every one rushed back, expecting to see a young lady
+dressed in the height of fashion, when immediately
+the Seminary bell rang! Mr. Blessner&#8217;s scholars
+gave all the music and he stamped so, beating time,
+it almost drowned the music. Some one suggested
+a bread and milk poultice for his foot. Anna has
+been taking part in some private theatricals. The
+play is in contrast to &#8220;The Spirit of &#8217;76&#8221; and the
+idea carried out is that the men should stay at home
+and rock the cradles and the women should take the
+rostrum. Grandmother was rather opposed to the
+idea, but every one wanted Anna to take the part of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_96'></a>96</span>leading lady, so she consented. She even helped
+Anna make her bloomer suit and sewed on the braid
+for trimming on the skirt herself. She did not
+know that Anna&#8217;s opening sentence was, &#8220;How are
+you, sir? Cigar, please!&#8221; It was acted at Mrs.
+John Bates&#8217; house on Gibson Street and was a great
+success, but when they decided to repeat it another
+evening Grandmother told Anna she must choose between
+going on the stage and living with her Grandmother,
+so Anna gave it up and some one else took
+her part.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>March</i>.&mdash;There is a great deal said about spirits
+nowadays and a lot of us girls went into one of the
+recitation rooms after school to-night and had a
+spiritual seance. We sat around Mr. Chubbuck&#8217;s
+table and put our hands on it and it moved around
+and stood on two legs and sometimes on one. I
+thought the girls helped it but they said they didn&#8217;t.
+We heard some loud raps, too, but they sounded
+very earthly to me. Eliza Burns, one of the boarders,
+told us if we would hold our breath we could
+pick up one of the girls from the floor and raise her
+up over our heads with one finger of each hand, if
+the girl held her breath, too. We tried it with
+Anna and did it, but we had such hard work to keep
+from laughing I expected we would drop her.
+There is nothing very spirituelle about any of us.
+I told Grandmother and she said we reminded her of
+Jemima Wilkinson, who told all her followers that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_97'></a>97</span>the world was to come to an end on a certain day
+and they should all be dressed in white and get up
+on the roofs of the houses and be prepared to ascend
+and meet the Lord in the air. I asked Grandmother
+what she said when nothing happened and she said
+she told them it was because they did not have faith
+enough. If they had, everything would have happened
+just as she said. Grandmother says that one
+day at a time has always been enough for her and
+that to-morrow will take care of the things of itself.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>May,</i> 1858.&mdash;Several of us girls went up into the
+top of the new Court House to-day as far as the
+workmen would allow us. We got a splendid view
+of the lake and of all the country round. Abbie
+Clark climbed up on a beam and recited part of
+Alexander Selkirk&#8217;s soliloquy:</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m monarch of all I survey,</p>
+<p>My rights there are none to dispute:</p>
+<p>From the center, all round to the sea,</p>
+<p>I&#8217;m lord of the fowl and brute.&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p>I was standing on a block and she said I looked
+like &#8220;Patience on a monument smiling at Grief.&#8221; I
+am sure she could not be taken for &#8220;Grief.&#8221; She
+always has some quotation on her tongue&#8217;s end.
+We were down at Sucker Brook the other day and
+she picked her way out to a big stone in the middle
+of the stream and, standing on it, said, in the words
+of Rhoderick Dhu,</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;Come one, come all, this rock shall fly</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_98'></a>98</span>From its firm base, as soon as I.&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p>Just then the big stone tipped over and she had
+to wade ashore. She is not at all afraid of climbing
+and as we left the Court House she said she would
+like to go outside on the cupola and help Justice balance
+the scales.</p>
+
+<p>A funny old man came to our house to-day as he
+wanted to deposit some money and reached the bank
+after it was closed. We were just sitting down to
+dinner so Grandfather asked him to stay and have
+&#8220;pot luck&#8221; with us. He said that he was very
+much &#8220;obleeged&#8221; and stayed and passed his plate
+a second time for more of our very fine &#8220;pot luck.&#8221;
+We had boiled beef and dumplings and I suppose he
+thought that was the name of the dish. He talked
+so queer we couldn&#8217;t help noticing it. He said he
+&#8220;heered&#8221; so and he was &#8220;afeered&#8221; and somebody
+was very &#8220;deef&#8221; and they &#8220;hadn&#8217;t ought to have
+done it&#8221; and &#8220;they should have went&#8221; and such
+things. Anna and I almost laughed but Grandmother
+looked at us with her eye and forefinger so
+we sobered down. She told us afterwards that
+there are many good people in the world whose
+verbs and nouns do not agree, and instead of laughing
+at them we should be sure that we always speak
+correctly ourselves. Very true. Dr. Daggett was
+at the Seminary one day when we had public exercises
+and he told me afterwards that I said
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_99'></a>99</span>&#8220;sagac-ious&#8221; for &#8220;saga-cious&#8221; and Aunt Ann told
+me that I said &#8220;epi-tome&#8221; for &#8220;e-pit-o-me.&#8221; So
+&#8220;people that live in glass houses shouldn&#8217;t throw
+stones.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday.</i>&mdash;Grandfather read his favorite parable
+this morning at prayers&mdash;the one about the wise man
+who built his house upon a rock and the foolish man
+who built upon the sand. He reads it good, just
+like a minister. He prays good, too, and I know
+his prayer by heart. He says, &#8220;Verily Thou art
+our Father, though Abraham be ignorant of us and
+Israel acknowledge us not,&#8221; and he always says,
+&#8220;Thine arm is not shortened that it cannot save,
+or Thine ear heavy that it cannot hear.&#8221; I am glad
+that I can remember it.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>June.</i>&mdash;Cyrus W. Field called at our house to-day.
+He is making a trip through the States and
+stopped here a few hours because Grandmother is
+his aunt. He made her a present of a piece of the
+Atlantic cable about six inches long, which he had
+mounted for her. It is a very nice souvenir. He
+is a tall, fine looking man and very pleasant.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday, July</i> 4, 1858.&mdash;This is Communion Sunday
+and quite a number united with the church
+on profession of their faith. Mr. Gideon Granger
+was one of them. Grandmother says that she has
+known him always and his father and mother, and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_100'></a>100</span>she thinks he is like John, the beloved disciple. I
+think that any one who knows him, knows what is
+meant by a gentle-man. I have a picture of Christ
+in the Temple with the doctors, and His face is
+almost exactly like Mr. Granger&#8217;s. Some others
+who joined to-day were Miss Belle Paton, Miss Lottie
+Clark and Clara Willson, Mary Wheeler and
+Sarah Andrews. Dr. Daggett always asks all the
+communicants to sit in the body pews and the noncommunicants
+in the side pews. We always feel
+like the goats on the left when we leave Grandfather
+and Grandmother and go on the side, but we won&#8217;t
+have to always. Abbie Clark, Mary Field and I
+think we will join at the communion in September.
+Grandmother says she hopes we realize what a solemn
+thing it is. We are fifteen years old so I think
+we ought to. No one who hears Dr. Daggett say
+in his beautiful voice, &#8220;I now renounce all ways of
+sin as what I truly abhor and choose the service of
+God as my greatest privilege,&#8221; could think it any
+trifling matter. I feel as though I couldn&#8217;t be bad
+if I wanted to be, and when he blesses them and
+says, &#8220;May the God of the Everlasting Covenant
+keep you firm and holy to the end through Jesus
+Christ our Lord,&#8221; everything seems complete. He
+always says at the close, &#8220;And when they had sung
+an hymn they went out into the Mount of Olives.&#8221;
+Then he gives out the hymn, beginning:</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;According to Thy gracious word,</p>
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> In deep humility,</p>
+<p>This will I do, my dying Lord</p>
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> I will remember Thee.&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p>And the last verse:</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;And when these failing lips grow dumb,</p>
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> And mind and memory flee,</p>
+<p>When in Thy kingdom Thou shalt come,</p>
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> Jesus remember me.&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<table summary='figure' style='margin:0 auto'><tr>
+<td valign='bottom' style='padding-right:20px;'><a id='i100a'></a><img src='images/illus-100a.jpg' alt='' /><p class='c'>Hon. Francis Granger</p></td>
+<td valign='bottom'><a id='i100b'></a><img src='images/illus-100b.jpg' alt='' /><p class='c'>Mr. Gideon Granger</p></td>
+</tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_101'></a>101</span>Deacon Taylor always starts the hymn. Deacon
+Taylor and Deacon Tyler sit on one side of Dr.
+Daggett and Deacon Clarke and Deacon Castle on
+the other. Grandfather and Grandmother joined
+the church fifty-one years ago and are the oldest
+living members. She says they have always been
+glad that they took this step when they were young.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>August</i> 17.&mdash;There was a celebration in town
+to-day because the Queen&#8217;s message was received on
+the Atlantic cable. Guns were fired and church
+bells rung and flags were waving everywhere. In
+the evening there was a torchlight procession and the
+town was all lighted up except Gibson Street. Allie
+Antes died this morning, so the people on that street
+kept their houses as usual. Anna says that probably
+Allie Antes was better prepared to die than any
+other little girl in town. Atwater hall and the
+academy and the hotel were more brilliantly illuminated
+than any other buildings. Grandfather saw
+something in a Boston paper that a minister said
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_102'></a>102</span>in his sermon about the Atlantic cable and he
+wants me to write it down in my journal. This is
+it: &#8220;The two hemispheres are now successfully
+united by means of the electric wire, but what is it,
+after all, compared with the instantaneous communication
+between the Throne of Divine Grace and the
+heart of man? Offer up your silent petition. It is
+transmitted through realms of unmeasured space
+more rapidly than the lightning&#8217;s flash, and the
+answer reaches the soul e&#8217;re the prayer has died
+away on the sinner&#8217;s lips. Yet this telegraph, performing
+its saving functions ever since Christ died
+for men on Calvary, fills not the world with exultation
+and shouts of gladness, with illuminations and
+bonfires and the booming of cannon. The reason
+is, one is the telegraph of this world and may produce
+revolutions on earth; the other is the sweet
+communication between Christ and the Christian
+soul and will secure a glorious immortality in
+Heaven.&#8221; Grandfather appreciates anything like
+that and I like to please him.</p>
+
+<p>Grandfather says he thinks the 19th Psalm is a
+prophecy of the electric telegraph. &#8220;Their line
+is gone out through all the earth and their words to
+the end of the world.&#8221; It certainly sounds like it.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday</i>.&mdash;Rev. Henry Ward Beecher is staying
+at Judge Taylor&#8217;s and came with them to church
+to-day. Everybody knew that he was here and
+thought he would preach and the church was packed
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_103'></a>103</span>full. When he came in he went right to Judge
+Taylor&#8217;s pew and sat with him and did not preach
+at all, but it was something to look at him. Mr.
+Daggett was away on his vacation and Rev. Mr.
+Jervis of the M. E. church preached. I heard some
+people say they guessed even Mr. Beecher heard
+some new words to-day, for Mr. Jervis is quite a
+hand to make them up or find very long hard ones
+in the dictionary.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>August</i> 30, 1858.&mdash;Rev. Mr. Tousley was hurt
+to-day by the falling of his barn which was being
+moved, and they think his back is broken and if he
+lives he can never sit up again. Only last Sunday
+he was in Sunday School and had us sing in memory
+of Allie Antes:</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;A mourning class, a vacant seat,</p>
+<p>Tell us that one we loved to meet</p>
+<p>Will join our youthful throng no more,</p>
+<p>&#8217;Till all these changing scenes are o&#8217;er.&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p>And now he will never meet with us again and the
+children will never have another minister all their
+own. He thinks he may be able to write letters to
+the children and perhaps write his own life. We all
+hope he may be able to sit up if he cannot walk.</p>
+
+<p>We went to our old home in Penn Yan visiting
+last week and stayed at Judge Ellsworth&#8217;s. We
+called to see the Tunnicliffs and the Olivers, Wells,
+Jones, Shepards, Glovers, Bennetts, Judds and several
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_104'></a>104</span>other families. They were glad to see us for
+the sake of our father and mother. Father was
+their pastor from 1841 to 1847.</p>
+
+<p>Some one told us that when Bob and Henry
+Antes were small boys they thought they would like
+to try, just for once, to see how it would seem to
+be bad, so in spite of all of Mr. Tousley&#8217;s sermons
+they went out behind the barn one day and in a
+whisper Bob said, &#8220;I swear,&#8221; and Henry said, &#8220;So
+do I.&#8221; Then they came into the house looking
+guilty and quite surprised, I suppose, that they
+were not struck dead just as Ananias and Sapphira
+were for lying.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>September</i>.&mdash;I read in a New York paper to-day
+that Hon. George Peabody, of England, presented
+Cyrus W. Field with a solid silver tea service of
+twelve pieces, which cost $4,000. The pieces bear
+likenesses of Mr. Peabody and Mr. Field, with the
+coat of arms of the Field family. The epergne is
+supported by a base representing the genius of
+America.</p>
+
+<p>We had experiments in the philosophy class to-day
+and took electric shocks. Mr. Chubbuck managed
+the battery which has two handles attached.
+Two of the girls each held one of these and we all
+took hold of hands making the circuit complete.
+After a while it jerked us almost to pieces and we
+asked Mr. Chubbuck to turn it off. Dana Luther,
+one of the Academy boys, walked up from the post-office
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_105'></a>105</span>with me this noon. He lives in Naples and
+is Florence Younglove&#8217;s cousin. We went to a
+ball game down on Pleasant Street after school. I
+got so far ahead of Anna coming home she called
+me her &#8220;distant relative.&#8221;</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+<a id='c1859'></a>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_106'></a>106</span>
+<p class='cln0'>1859</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>January</i>, 1859.&mdash;Mr. Woodruff came to see
+Grandfather to ask him if we could attend his singing
+school. He is going to have it one evening each
+week in the chapel of our church. Quite a lot of
+the boys and girls are going, so we were glad when
+Grandfather gave his consent. Mr. Woodruff
+wants us all to sing by note and teaches &#8220;do re me
+fa sol la si do&#8221; from the blackboard and beats time
+with a stick. He lets us have a recess, which is
+more fun than all the rest of it. He says if we
+practise well we can have a concert in Bemis Hall
+to end up with. What a treat that will be!</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>February</i>.&mdash;Anna has been teasing me all the
+morning about a verse which John Albert Granger
+Barker wrote in my album. He has a most fascinating
+lisp when he talks, so she says this is the
+way the verse reads:</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;Beauty of perthon, ith thertainly chawming</p>
+<p>Beauty of feachure, by no meanth alawming</p>
+<p>But give me in pwefrence, beauty of mind,</p>
+<p>Or give me Cawwie, with all thwee combined.&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p>It takes Anna to find &#8220;amuthement&#8221; in &#8220;evewything.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_107'></a>107</span>Mary Wheeler came over and pierced my ears
+to-day, so I can wear my new earrings that Uncle
+Edward sent me. She pinched my ear until it was
+numb and then pulled a needle through, threaded
+with silk. Anna would not stay in the room. She
+wants hers done but does not dare. It is all the
+fashion for girls to cut off their hair and friz it.
+Anna and I have cut off ours and Bessie Seymour
+got me to cut off her lovely long hair to-day. It
+won&#8217;t be very comfortable for us to sleep with curl
+papers all over our heads, but we must do it now.
+I wanted my new dress waist which Miss Rosewarne
+is making, to hook up in front, but Grandmother
+said I would have to wear it that way all the rest
+of my life so I had better be content to hook it in
+the back a little longer. She said when Aunt Glorianna
+was married, in 1848, it was the fashion for
+grown up women to have their waists fastened in
+the back, so the bride had hers made that way but
+she thought it was a very foolish and inconvenient
+fashion. It is nice, though, to dress in style and
+look like other people. I have a Garibaldi waist and
+a Zouave jacket and a balmoral skirt.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday</i>.&mdash;I asked Grandmother if I could write
+a letter to Father to-day, and she said I could begin
+it and tell him that I went to church and what Mr.
+Daggett&#8217;s text was and then finish it to-morrow. I
+did so, but I wish I could do it all after I began.
+She said a verse from the Tract Primer:</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;A Sabbath well spent brings a week of content</p>
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> And strength for the toil of to-morrow,</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_108'></a>108</span>But a Sabbath profaned, whatever be gained,</p>
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> Is a certain forerunner of sorrow.&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Monday</i>.&mdash;We dressed up in new fangled costumes
+to-day and wore them to school. Some of us
+wore dresses almost up to our knees and some wore
+them trailing on the ground. Some wore their hair
+twisted in knots and some let theirs hang down
+their backs. I wore my new waterfall for the first
+time and Abbie Clark said I looked like &#8220;Hagar in
+the Wilderness.&#8221; When she came in she looked
+like a fashion plate, bedecked with bows and ribbons
+and her hair up in a new way. When she came
+in the door she stopped and said solemnly: &#8220;If
+you have tears prepare to shed them now!&#8221; Laura
+Chapin would not participate in the fun, for once.
+She said she thought &#8220;Beauty unadorned was the
+dorndest.&#8221; We did not have our lesson in mental
+philosophy very well so we asked Mr. Richards to
+explain the nature of dreams and their cause and
+effect. He gave us a very interesting talk, which
+occupied the whole hour. We listened with breathless
+attention, so he must have marked us 100.</p>
+
+<p>There was a lecture at the seminary to-night and
+Rev. Dr. Hibbard, the Methodist minister, who lives
+next door above the Methodist church, came home
+with us. Grandmother was very much pleased
+when we told her.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_109'></a>109</span><i>March</i> 1.&mdash;Our hired man has started a hot bed
+and we went down behind the barn to see it.
+Grandfather said he was up at 6 o&#8217;clock and walked
+up as far as Mr. Greig&#8217;s lions and back again for
+exercise before breakfast. He seems to have the
+bloom of youth on his face as a reward. Anna says
+she saw &#8220;Bloom of youth&#8221; advertised in the drug
+store and she is going to buy some. I know Grandmother
+won&#8217;t let her for it would be like &#8220;taking
+coal to Newcastle.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>April.</i>&mdash;Anna wanted me to help her write a composition
+last night, and we decided to write on &#8220;Old
+Journals,&#8221; so we got hers and mine both out and
+made selections and then she copied them. When
+we were on our way to school this morning we met
+Mr. E. M. Morse and Anna asked him if he did not
+want to read her composition that Carrie wrote for
+her. He made a very long face and pretended to
+be much shocked, but said he would like to read
+it, so he took it and also her album, which she asked
+him to write in. At night, on his way home, he
+stopped at our door and left them both. When she
+looked in her album, she found this was what he
+had written:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>&#8220;Anna, when you have grown old and wear spectacles
+and a cap, remember the boyish young man who
+saw your fine talents in 1859 and was certain you
+would add culture to nature and become the pride of
+Canandaigua. Do not forget also that no one deserves
+praise for anything done by others and that your
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_110'></a>110</span>progress in wisdom and goodness will be watched by
+no one more anxiously than by your true friend,</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:right'><span class='sc'>E. M. Morse</span>.&#8221;</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>I think she might as well have told Mr. Morse
+that the old journals were as much hers as mine;
+but I think she likes to make out she is not as good
+as she is. Sarah Foster helped us to do our arithmetic
+examples to-day. She is splendid in mathematics.</p>
+
+<p>Much to our surprise Bridget Flynn, who has
+lived with us so long, is married. We didn&#8217;t know
+she thought of such a thing, but she has gone.
+Anna and I have learned how to make rice and cornstarch
+puddings. We have a new girl in Bridget&#8217;s
+place but I don&#8217;t think she will do. Grandmother
+asked her to-day if she seasoned the gravy and she
+said, either she did or she didn&#8217;t, she couldn&#8217;t tell
+which. Grandfather says he thinks she is a little
+lacking in the &#8220;upper story.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>June.</i>&mdash;A lot of us went down to Sucker Brook
+this afternoon. Abbie Clark was one and she told
+us some games to play sitting down on the grass.
+We played &#8220;Simon says thumbs up&#8221; and then we
+pulled the leaves off from daisies and said,</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;Rich man, poor man, beggar man, thief,</p>
+<p>Doctor, lawyer, merchant, chief,&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p>to see which we would marry. The last leaf tells
+the story. Anna&#8217;s came &#8220;rich man&#8221; every time
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_111'></a>111</span>and she thinks it is true because Eugene Stone has
+asked to marry her and he is quite well off. She is
+13 and he is 17. He is going now to his home in
+St. Paul, Minn., but he is coming back for her some
+day. Tom Eddy is going to be groomsman and
+Emma Wheeler bridesmaid. They have all the arrangements
+made. She has not shown any of Eugene
+Stone&#8217;s notes to Grandmother yet for she does
+not think it is worth while. Anna broke the seal
+on Tom Eddy&#8217;s page in her mystic book, although
+he wrote on it, &#8220;Not to be opened until December
+8, 1859.&#8221; He says:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>&#8220;<span class='sc'>Dear Anna</span>,&mdash;I hope that in a few years I will
+see you and Stone living on the banks of the
+Mississippi, in a little cottage, as snug as a bug in a
+rug, living in peace, so that I can come and see you
+and have a good time.&mdash;Yours,</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:right'><span class='sc'>Thos. C. Eddy</span>.&#8221;</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Anna says if she does marry Eugene Stone and
+he forgets, after two or three years to be as polite
+to her as he is now she shall look up at him with her
+sweetest smile and say, &#8220;Miss Anna, won&#8217;t you
+have a little more sugar in your tea?&#8221; When I
+went to school this morning Juliet Ripley asked,
+&#8220;Where do you think Anna Richards is now? Up
+in a cherry tree in Dr. Cheney&#8217;s garden.&#8221; Anna
+loves cherries. We could see her from the chapel
+window.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_112'></a>112</span><i>June</i> 7.&mdash;Alice Jewett took Anna all through
+their new house to-day which is being built and
+then they went over to Mr. Noah T. Clarke&#8217;s partly
+finished house and went all through that. A dog
+came out of Cat Alley and barked at them and
+scared Anna awfully. She said she almost had a
+conniption fit but Emma kept hold of her. She is
+so afraid of thunder and lightning and dogs.</p>
+
+<p>Old Friend Burling brought Grandfather a specimen
+of his handwriting to-day to keep. It is beautifully
+written, like copper plate. This is the verse
+he wrote and Grandfather gave it to me to paste in
+my book of extracts:</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p style='text-align:center;'>DIVINE LOVE.</p>
+<hr class='poetry' />
+<p>Could we with ink the ocean fill,</p>
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> Was the whole earth of parchment made,</p>
+<p>Was every single stick a quill,</p>
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> And every man a scribe by trade;</p>
+<p>To write the love of God above</p>
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> Would drain the ocean dry;</p>
+<p>Nor could that scroll contain the whole</p>
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> Though stretched from sky to sky.</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p>Transcribed by William S. Burling, Canandaigua,
+1859, in the 83rd year of his age.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday, December</i> 8, 1859.&mdash;Mr. E. M. Morse is
+our Sunday School teacher now and the Sunday
+School room is so crowded that we go up into the
+church for our class recitation. Abbie Clark, Fannie
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_113'></a>113</span>Gaylord and myself are the only scholars, and
+he calls us the three Christian Graces, faith, hope and
+charity, and the greatest of these is charity. I am
+the tallest, so he says I am charity. We recite in
+Mr. Gibson&#8217;s pew, because it is farthest away and
+we do not disturb the other classes. He gave us
+some excellent advice to-day as to what was right
+and said if we ever had any doubts about anything
+we should never do it and should always be perfectly
+sure we are in the right before we act. He gave us
+two weeks ago a poem to learn by Samuel Taylor
+Coleridge. It is an apostrophe to God and very
+hard to learn. It is blank verse and has 85 lines
+in it. I have it committed at last and we are to
+recite it in concert. The last two lines are, &#8220;Tell
+thou the silent sky and tell the stars and tell yon
+rising sun, Earth with its thousand voices praises
+God.&#8221; Mr. Morse delivered a lecture in Bemis Hall
+last Thursday night. The subject was, &#8220;You and I.&#8221;
+It was splendid and he lent me the manuscript
+afterwards to read. Dick Valentine lectured in the
+hall the other night too. His subject was &#8220;Prejudice.&#8221;
+There was some difference in the lectures
+and the lecturers. The latter was more highly colored.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Friday.</i>&mdash;The older ladies of the town have
+formed a society for the relief of the poor and are
+going to have a course of lectures in Bemis Hall
+under their auspices to raise funds. The lecturers
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_114'></a>114</span>are to be from the village and are to be: Rev. O.
+E. Daggett, subject, &#8220;Ladies and Gentlemen&#8221;; Dr.
+Harvey Jewett, &#8220;The House We Live In&#8221;; Prof.
+F. E. R. Chubbuck, &#8220;Progress&#8221;; Hon. H. W. Taylor,
+&#8220;The Empty Place&#8221;; Prof. E. G. Tyler,
+&#8220;Finance&#8221;; Mr. N. T. Clark, &#8220;Chemistry&#8221;; E. M.
+Morse, &#8220;Graybeard and His Dogmas.&#8221; The young
+ladies have started a society, too, and we have great
+fun and fine suppers. We met at Jennie Howell&#8217;s
+to organize. We are to meet once in two weeks and
+are to present each member with an album bed quilt
+with all our names on when they are married.
+Susie Daggett says she is never going to be married,
+but we must make her a quilt just the same. Laura
+Chapin sang, &#8220;Mary Lindsey, Dear,&#8221; and we got
+to laughing so that Susie Daggett and I lost our
+equilibrium entirely, but I found mine by the time
+I got home. Yesterday afternoon Grandfather
+asked us if we did not want to go to ride with him
+in the big two seated covered carriage which he does
+not get out very often. We said yes, and he stopped
+for Miss Hannah Upham and took her with us.
+She sat on the back seat with me and we rode clear
+to Farmington and kept up a brisk conversation all
+the way. She told us how she became lady principal
+of the Ontario Female Seminary in 1830. She
+was still telling us about it when we got back home.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>December</i> 23.&mdash;We have had a Christmas tree
+and many other attractions in Seminary chapel.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_115'></a>115</span>The day scholars and townspeople were permitted to
+participate and we had a post office and received letters
+from our friends. Mr. E. M. Morse wrote me
+a fictitious one, claiming to be written from the
+north pole ten years hence. I will copy it in my
+journal for I may lose the letter. I had some gifts
+on the Christmas tree and gave some. I presented
+my teacher, Mr. Chubbuck, with two large hemstitched
+handkerchiefs with his initials embroidered
+in a corner of each. As he is favored with the
+euphonious name of Frank Emery Robinson Chubbuck
+it was a work of art to make his initials look
+beautiful. I inclosed a stanza in rhyme:</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>Amid the changing scenes of life</p>
+<p style='margin-left:1ex'> If any storm should rise,</p>
+<p>May you ever have a handkerchief</p>
+<p style='margin-left:1ex'> To wipe your weeping eyes.</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p>Here is Mr. Morse&#8217;s letter:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p style='text-align:right;'>&#8220;<span class='sc'>North Pole</span>, 10 <i>January</i> 1869.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;<span class='sc'>Miss Carrie Richards</span>,</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;<span class='sc'>My Dear Young Friend</span>.&mdash;It is very cold here
+and the pole is covered with ice. I climbed it yesterday
+to take an observation and arrange our flag, the
+Stars and Stripes, which I hoisted immediately on my
+arrival here, ten years ago. I thought I should freeze
+and the pole was so slippery that I was in great
+danger of coming down faster than was comfortable.
+Although this pole has been used for more than 6,000
+years it is still as good as new. The works of the
+Great Architect do not wear out. It is now ten years
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_116'></a>116</span>since I have seen you and my other two Christian
+Graces and I have no doubt of your present position
+among the most brilliant, noble and excellent women
+in all America. I always knew and recognized your
+great abilities. Nature was very generous to you all
+and you were enjoying fine advantages at the time
+I last knew you. I thought your residence with your
+Grandparents an admirable school for you, and you
+and your sister were most evidently the best joy of
+their old age. You certainly owe much to them. At
+the time that I left my three Christian Graces, Mrs.
+Grundy was sometimes malicious enough to say that
+they were injuring themselves by flirting. I always
+told the old lady that I had the utmost confidence in
+the judgment and discretion of my pupils and that
+they would be very careful and prudent in all their
+conduct. I confessed that flirting was wrong and
+very injurious to any one who was guilty of it, but
+I was very sure that you were not. I could not believe
+that you would disappoint us all and become only
+ordinary women, but that you would become the most
+exalted characters, scorning all things unworthy of
+ladies and Christians and I was right and Mrs. Grundy
+was wrong. When the ice around the pole thaws out
+I shall make a flying visit to Canandaigua. I send
+you a tame polar bear for a playfellow. This letter
+will be conveyed to you by Esquimaux express.&mdash;Most
+truly yours,</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:right;'><span class='sc'>E. M. Morse</span>.&#8221;</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>I think some one must have shown some verses
+that we girls wrote, to Mrs. Grundy and made her
+think that our minds were more upon the young
+men than they were upon our studies, but if people
+knew how much time we spent on Paley&#8217;s &#8220;Evidences
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_117'></a>117</span>of Christianity&#8221; and Butler&#8217;s Analogy and
+Kames&#8217; Elements of Criticism and Tytler&#8217;s Ancient
+History and Olmstead&#8217;s Mathematical Astronomy
+and our French and Latin and arithmetic and algebra
+and geometry and trigonometry and bookkeeping,
+they would know we had very little time to
+think of the masculine gender.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+<a id='c1860'></a>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_118'></a>118</span>
+<p class='cln0'>1860</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>New Year&#8217;s Day.</i>&mdash;We felt quite grown up to-day
+and not a little scared when we saw Mr. Morse and
+Mr. Wells and Mr. Mason and Mr. Chubbuck all
+coming in together to make a New Year&#8217;s call.
+They made a tour of the town. We did not feel
+so flustrated when Will Schley and Horace Finley
+came in later. Mr. Oliver Phelps, Jr., came to call
+upon Grandmother. Grandfather made a few calls,
+too.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>January</i> 5.&mdash;Abbie Clark and I went up to see
+Miss Emma Morse because it is her birthday. We
+call her sweet Miss Emma and we think Mr. Manning
+Wells does, too. We went to William Wirt
+Howe&#8217;s lecture in Bemis Hall this evening. He is
+a very smart young man.</p>
+
+<p>Anna wanted to walk down a little ways with the
+girls after school so she crouched down between
+Helen Coy and Hattie Paddock and walked past the
+house. Grandmother always sits in the front window,
+so when Anna came in she asked her if she
+had to stay after school and Anna gave her an
+evasive answer. It reminds me of a story I read,
+of a lady who told the servant girl if any one called
+to give an evasive answer as she did not wish to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_119'></a>119</span>receive calls that day. By and by the door bell
+rang and the servant went to the door. When she
+came back the lady asked her how she dismissed the
+visitor. She said, &#8220;Shure ye towld me to give an
+evasive answer, so when the man asked if the lady
+of the house was at home I said, &#8216;Faith! is your
+grandmother a monkey!&#8217;&#8221; We never say anything
+like that to our &#8220;dear little lady,&#8221; but we just change
+the subject and divert the conversation into a more
+agreeable channel. To-day some one came to see
+Grandmother when we were gone and told her that
+Anna and some others ran away from school.
+Grandmother told Anna she hoped she would never
+let any one bring her such a report again. Anna
+said she would not, if she could possibly help it!
+I wonder who it was. Some one who believes in
+the text, &#8220;Look not every man on his own things,
+but every man also on the things of others.&#8221;
+Grandfather told us to-night that we ought to be
+very careful what we do as we are making history
+every day. Anna says she shall try not to have hers
+as dry as some that she had to learn at school to-day.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>February</i> 9.&mdash;Dear Miss Mary Howell was married
+to-day to Mr. Worthington, of Cincinnati.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>February</i> 28.&mdash;Grandfather asked me to read
+Abraham Lincoln&#8217;s speech aloud which he delivered
+in Cooper Institute, New York, last evening, under
+the auspices of the Republican Club. He was
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_120'></a>120</span>escorted to the platform by David Dudley Field and
+introduced by William Cullen Bryant. The <i>New
+York Times</i> called him &#8220;a noted political exhorter
+and Prairie orator.&#8221; It was a thrilling talk and
+must have stirred men&#8217;s souls.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>April</i> 1.&mdash;Aunt Ann was over to see us yesterday
+and she said she made a visit the day before out at
+Mrs. William Gorham&#8217;s. Mrs. Phelps and Miss
+Eliza Chapin also went and they enjoyed talking
+over old times when they were young. Maggie
+Gorham is going to be married on the 25th to Mr.
+Benedict of New York. She always said she would
+not marry a farmer and would not live in a cobblestone
+house and now she is going to do both, for
+Mr. Benedict has bought the farm near theirs and
+it has a cobblestone house. We have always
+thought her one of the jolliest and prettiest of the
+older set of young ladies.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>June.</i>&mdash;James writes that he has seen the Prince
+of Wales in New York. He was up on the roof of
+the Continental Fire Insurance building, out on the
+cornice, and looked down on the procession. Afterwards
+there was a reception for the Prince at the
+University Law School and James saw him close by.
+He says he has a very pleasant youthful face.
+There was a ball given for him one evening in the
+Academy of Music and there were 3,000 present.
+The ladies who danced with him will never forget
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_121'></a>121</span>it. They say that he enters into every diversion
+which is offered to him with the greatest tact and
+good nature, and when he visited Mount Vernon he
+showed great reverence for the memory of George
+Washington. He attended a literary entertainment
+in Boston, where Longfellow, Holmes, Emerson,
+Thoreau, and other Americans of distinction were
+presented to him. He will always be a favorite in
+America.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>June.</i>&mdash;Mrs. Annie Granger asked Anna and me
+to come over to her house and see her baby. We
+were very eager to go and wanted to hold it and
+carry it around the room. She was willing but
+asked us if we had any pins on us anywhere. She
+said she had the nurse sew the baby&#8217;s clothes on
+every morning so that if she cried she would know
+whether it was pains or pins. We said we had no
+pins on us, so we stayed quite a while and held little
+Miss Hattie to our heart&#8217;s content. She is named
+for her aunt, Hattie Granger. Anna says she thinks
+Miss Martha Morse will give medals to her and
+Mary Daggett for being the most meddlesome girls
+in school, judging from the number of times she
+has spoken to them to-day. Anna is getting to be a
+regular punster, although I told her that Blair&#8217;s
+Rhetoric says that punning is not the highest kind
+of wit. Mr. Morse met us coming from school in
+the rain and said it would not hurt us as we were
+neither sugar nor salt. Anna said, &#8220;No, but we
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_122'></a>122</span>are &#8217;lasses.&#8221; Grandmother has been giving us sulphur
+and molasses for the purification of the blood
+and we have to take it three mornings and then skip
+three mornings. This morning Anna commenced
+going through some sort of gymnastics and Grandmother
+asked her what she was doing, and she said
+it was her first morning to skip.</p>
+
+<p>Abbie Clark had a large tea-party this afternoon
+and evening&mdash;Seminary girls and a few Academy
+boys. We had a fine supper and then played games.
+Abbie gave us one which is a test of memory and we
+tried to learn it from her but she was the only one
+who could complete it. I can write it down, but
+not say it:</p>
+
+<p>A good fat hen.</p>
+
+<p>Two ducks and a good fat hen.</p>
+
+<p>Three plump partridges, two ducks and a good
+fat hen.</p>
+
+<p>Four squawking wild geese, three plump partridges,
+etc.</p>
+
+<p>Five hundred Limerick oysters.</p>
+
+<p>Six pairs of Don Alfonso&#8217;s tweezers.</p>
+
+<p>Seven hundred rank and file Macedonian horsemen
+drawn up in line of battle.</p>
+
+<p>Eight cages of heliogabalus sparrow kites.</p>
+
+<p>Nine sympathetical, epithetical, categorical propositions.</p>
+
+<p>Ten tentapherical tubes.</p>
+
+<p>Eleven flat bottom fly boats sailing between Madagascar
+and Mount Palermo.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_123'></a>123</span>Twelve European dancing masters, sent to teach
+the Egyptian mummies how to dance, against Hercules&#8217;
+wedding day.</p>
+
+<p>Abbie says it was easier to learn than the multiplication
+table. They wanted some of us to recite
+and Abbie Clark gave us Lowell&#8217;s poem, &#8220;John P.
+Robinson, he, says the world&#8217;ll go right if he only
+says Gee!&#8221; I gave another of Lowell&#8217;s poems,
+&#8220;The Courtin&#8217;.&#8221; Julia Phelps had her guitar with
+her by request and played and sang for us very
+sweetly. Fred Harrington went home with her and
+Theodore Barnum with me.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday.</i>&mdash;Frankie Richardson asked me to go
+with her to teach a class in the colored Sunday
+School on Chapel Street this afternoon. I asked
+Grandmother if I could go and she said she never
+noticed that I was particularly interested in the colored
+race and she said she thought I only wanted an
+excuse to get out for a walk Sunday afternoon.
+However, she said I could go just this once. When
+we got up as far as the Academy, Mr. Noah T.
+Clarke&#8217;s brother, who is one of the teachers, came
+out and Frank said he led the singing at the Sunday
+School and she said she would give me an introduction
+to him, so he walked up with us and home
+again. Grandmother said that when she saw him
+opening the gate for me, she understood my zeal in
+missionary work. &#8220;The dear little lady,&#8221; as we
+often call her, has always been noted for her keen
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_124'></a>124</span>discernment and wonderful sagacity and loses none
+of it as she advances in years. Some one asked
+Anna the other day if her Grandmother retained
+all her faculties and Anna said, &#8220;Yes, indeed, to an
+alarming degree.&#8221; Grandmother knows that we
+think she is a perfect angel even if she does seem
+rather strict sometimes. Whether we are 7 or
+17 we are children to her just the same, and the
+Bible says, &#8220;Children obey your parents in the
+Lord for this is right.&#8221; We are glad that we never
+will seem old to her. I had the same company home
+from church in the evening. His home is in
+Naples.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Monday.</i>&mdash;This morning the cook went to early
+mass and Anna told Grandmother she would bake
+the pancakes for breakfast if she would let her put
+on gloves. She would not let her, so Hannah baked
+the cakes. I was invited to Mary Paul&#8217;s to supper
+to-night and drank the first cup of tea I ever drank
+in my life. I had a very nice time and Johnnie Paul
+came home with me.</p>
+
+<p>Imogen Power and I went down together Friday
+afternoon to buy me a Meteorology. We are studying
+that and Watts on the Mind, instead of
+Philosophy.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Tuesday.</i>&mdash;I went with Fanny Gaylord to see
+Mrs. Callister at the hotel to-night. She is so interested
+in all that we tell her, just like &#8220;one of the
+girls.&#8221;</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a id='i124'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-124.jpg' alt='' />
+<p class='c'>The Old Canandaigua Academy</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_125'></a>125</span>I was laughing to-day when I came in from the
+street and Grandmother asked me what amused me
+so. I told her that I met Mr. and Mrs. Putnam
+on the street and she looked so immense and he so
+minute I couldn&#8217;t help laughing at the contrast.
+Grandmother said that size was not everything, and
+then she quoted Cowper&#8217;s verse:</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;Were I so tall to reach the skies or grasp the ocean in a span,</p>
+<p>I must be measured by my soul, the mind is the stature of the man.&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p>I don&#8217;t believe that helps Mr. Putnam out.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Friday.</i>&mdash;We went to Monthly Concert of prayer
+for Foreign Missions this evening. I told Grandmother
+that I thought it was not very interesting.
+Judge Taylor read the <i>Missionary Herald</i> about the
+Madagascans and the Senegambians and the Terra
+del Fuegans and then Deacon Tyler prayed and they
+sang &#8220;From Greenland&#8217;s Icy Mountains&#8221; and took
+up a collection and went home. She said she was
+afraid I did not listen attentively. I don&#8217;t think
+I did strain every nerve. I believe Grandmother
+will give her last cent to Missions if the Boards get
+into worse straits than they are now.</p>
+
+<p>In Latin class to-day Anna translated the phrase
+Deo Volente &#8220;with violence,&#8221; and Mr. Tyler, who
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_126'></a>126</span>always enjoys a joke, laughed so, we thought he
+would fall out of his chair. He evidently thought
+it was the best one he had heard lately.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>November</i> 21.&mdash;Aunt Ann gave me a sewing bird
+to screw on to the table to hold my work instead of
+pinning it to my knee. Grandmother tells us when
+we sew or read not to get everything around us that
+we will want for the next two hours because it is
+not healthy to sit in one position so long. She
+wants us to get up and &#8220;stir around.&#8221; Anna does
+not need this advice as much as I do for she is
+always on what Miss Achert calls the &#8220;qui vive.&#8221; I
+am trying to make a sofa pillow out of little pieces
+of silk. Aunt Ann taught me how. You have
+to cut pieces of paper into octagonal shape and
+cover them with silk and then sew them together,
+over and over. They are beautiful, with bright
+colors, when they are done. There was a hop at
+the hotel last night and some of the girls went and
+had an elegant time. Mr. Hiram Metcalf came here
+this morning to have Grandmother sign some papers.
+He always looks very dignified, and Anna and I call
+him &#8220;the deed man.&#8221; We tried to hear what he
+said to Grandmother after she signed her name
+but we only heard something about &#8220;fear or compulsion&#8221;
+and Grandmother said &#8220;yes.&#8221; It seems
+very mysterious. Grandfather took us down street
+to-day to see the new Star Building. It was the
+town house and he bought it and got Mr. Warren
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_127'></a>127</span>Stoddard of Hopewell to superintend cutting it in
+two and moving the parts separately to Coach
+Street. When it was completed the shout went up
+from the crowd, &#8220;Hurrah for Thomas Beals, the
+preserver of the old Court House.&#8221; No one but
+Grandfather thought it could be done.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>December.</i>&mdash;I went with the girls to the lake to
+skate this afternoon. Mr. Johnson, the colored
+barber, is the best skater in town. He can skate
+forwards and backwards and cut all sorts of curlicues,
+although he is such a heavy man. He is going
+to Liberia and there his skates won&#8217;t do him any
+good. I wish he would give them to me and also
+his skill to use them. Some one asked me to sit
+down after I got home and I said I preferred to
+stand, as I had been sitting down all the afternoon!
+Gus Coleman took a load of us sleigh-riding this
+evening. Of course he had Clara Willson sit on the
+front seat with him and help him drive.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Thursday.</i>&mdash;We had a special meeting of our
+society this evening at Mary Wheeler&#8217;s and invited
+the gentlemen and had charades and general good
+time. Mr. Gillette and Horace Finley made a great
+deal of fun for us. We initiated Mr. Gillette into
+the Dorcas Society, which consists in seating the
+candidate in a chair and propounding some very
+solemn questions and then in token of desire to join
+the society, you ask him to open his mouth very wide
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_128'></a>128</span>for a piece of cake which you swallow, yourself,
+instead! Very disappointing to the new member!</p>
+
+<p>We went to a concert at the Seminary this evening.
+Miss Mollie Bull sang &#8220;Coming Through the
+Rye&#8221; and Miss Lizzie Bull sang &#8220;Annie Laurie&#8221;
+and &#8220;Auld Lang Syne.&#8221; Jennie Lind, herself,
+could not have done better.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>December</i> 15.&mdash;Alice Jewett, Emma Wheeler and
+Anna are in Mrs. Worthington&#8217;s Sunday School
+class and as they have recently united with the
+church, she thought they should begin practical
+Christian work by distributing tracts among the
+neglected classes. So this afternoon they ran away
+from school to begin the good work. It was so
+bright and pleasant, they thought a walk to the lake
+would be enjoyable and they could find a welcome in
+some humble home. The girls wanted Anna to be
+the leader, but she would only promise that if something
+pious came into her mind, she would say it.
+They knocked at a door and were met by a smiling
+mother of twelve children and asked to come in.
+They sat down feeling somewhat embarrassed, but
+spying a photograph album on the table, they became
+much interested, while the children explained
+the pictures. Finally Anna felt that it was time
+to do something, so when no one was looking, she
+slipped under one of the books on the table, three
+tracts entitled &#8220;Consolation for the Bereaved,&#8221;
+&#8220;Systematic Benevolence&#8221; and &#8220;The Social Evils
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_129'></a>129</span>of dancing, card playing and theater-going.&#8221; Then
+they said goodbye to their new friends and started
+on. They decided not to do any more pastoral
+work until another day, but enjoyed the outing very
+much.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Christmas.</i>&mdash;We all went to Aunt Mary Carr&#8217;s
+to dinner excepting Grandmother, and in the evening
+we went to see some tableaux at Dr. Cook&#8217;s and Dr.
+Chapin&#8217;s at the asylum. We were very much
+pleased with the entertainment. Between the acts
+Mr. del Pratt, one of the patients, said every time,
+&#8220;What next!&#8221; which made every one laugh.</p>
+
+<p>Grandfather was requested to add his picture to
+the gallery of portraits of eminent men for the
+Court Room, so he has had it painted. An artist
+by the name of Green, who lives in town, has finished
+it after numerous sittings and brought it up
+for our approval. We like it but we do not think
+it is as good looking as he is. No one could really
+satisfy us probably, so we may as well try to be
+suited.</p>
+
+<p>I asked Grandmother if Mr. Clarke could take
+Sunday night supper with us and she said she was
+afraid he did not know the catechism. I asked him
+Friday night and he said he would learn it on Saturday
+so that he could answer every third question any
+way. So he did and got along very well. I think
+he deserved a pretty good supper.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+<a id='c1861'></a>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_130'></a>130</span>
+<p class='cln0'>1861</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>March</i> 4, 1861.&mdash;President Lincoln was inaugurated
+to-day.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>March</i> 5.&mdash;I read the inaugural address aloud to
+Grandfather this evening. He dwelt with such
+pathos upon the duty that all, both North and South,
+owe to the Union, it does not seem as though there
+could be war!</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>April.</i>&mdash;We seem to have come to a sad, sad time.
+The Bible says, &#8220;A man&#8217;s worst foes are those of
+his own household.&#8221; The whole United States has
+been like one great household for many years.
+&#8220;United we stand, divided we fall!&#8221; has been our
+watchword, but some who should have been its best
+friends have proven false and broken the bond.
+Men are taking sides, some for the North, some for
+the South. Hot words and fierce looks have followed,
+and there has been a storm in the air for a
+long time.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>April</i> 15.&mdash;The storm has broken upon us. The
+Confederates fired on Fort Sumter, just off the
+coast of South Carolina, and forced her on April
+14 to haul down the flag and surrender. President
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_131'></a>131</span>Lincoln has issued a call for 75,000 men and many
+are volunteering to go all around us. How strange
+and awful it seems.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>May,</i> 1861.&mdash;Many of the young men are going
+from Canandaigua and all the neighboring towns.
+It seems very patriotic and grand when they are
+singing, &#8220;It is sweet, Oh, &#8217;tis sweet, for one&#8217;s country
+to die,&#8221; and we hear the martial music and see
+the flags flying and see the recruiting tents on the
+square and meet men in uniform at every turn and
+see train loads of the boys in blue going to the front,
+but it will not seem so grand if we hear they are dead
+on the battlefield, far from home. A lot of us girls
+went down to the train and took flowers to the soldiers
+as they were passing through and they cut
+buttons from their coats and gave to us as souvenirs.
+We have flags on our paper and envelopes, and have
+all our stationery bordered with red, white and blue.
+We wear little flag pins for badges and tie our hair
+with red, white and blue ribbon and have pins and
+earrings made of the buttons the soldiers gave us.
+We are going to sew for them in our society and
+get the garments all cut from the older ladies&#8217;
+society. They work every day in one of the rooms
+of the court house and cut out garments and make
+them and scrape lint and roll up bandages. They
+say they will provide us with all the garments we
+will make. We are going to write notes and enclose
+them in the garments to cheer up the soldier boys.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_132'></a>132</span>It does not seem now as though I could give up any
+one who belonged to me. The girls in our society
+say that if any of the members do send a soldier to
+the war they shall have a flag bed quilt, made by the
+society, and have the girls&#8217; names on the stars.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>May</i> 20.&mdash;I recited &#8220;Scott and the Veteran&#8221; to-day
+at school, and Mary Field recited, &#8220;To Drum
+Beat and Heart Beat a Soldier Marches By&#8221;; Anna
+recited &#8220;The Virginia Mother.&#8221; Every one learns
+war poems nowadays. There was a patriotic
+rally in Bemis Hall last night and a quartette sang,
+&#8220;The Sword of Bunker Hill&#8221; and &#8220;Dixie&#8221; and
+&#8220;John Brown&#8217;s Body Lies a Mouldering in the
+Grave,&#8221; and many other patriotic songs. We have
+one West Point cadet, Albert M. Murray, who is
+in the thick of the fight, and Charles S. Coy represents
+Canandaigua in the navy.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a id='i132'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-132.jpg' alt='' />
+<p class='c'>The Ontario Female Seminary</p>
+</div>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_133'></a>133</span><i>June,</i> 1861.&mdash;At the anniversary exercises, Rev.
+Samuel M. Hopkins of Auburn gave the address. I
+have graduated from Ontario Female Seminary
+after a five years course and had the honor of receiving
+a diploma from the courtly hands of General
+John A. Granger. I am going to have it
+framed and handed down to my grandchildren as a
+memento, not exactly of sleepless nights and midnight
+vigils, but of rising betimes, at what Anna
+calls the crack of dawn. She likes that expression
+better than daybreak. I heard her reciting in the
+back chamber one morning about 4 o&#8217;clock and listened
+at the door. She was saying in the most
+nonchalant manner: &#8220;Science and literature in
+England were fast losing all traces of originality,
+invention was discouraged, research unvalued and
+the examination of nature proscribed. It seemed to
+be generally supposed that the treasure accumulated
+in the preceding ages was quite sufficient for all
+national purposes and that the only duty which
+authors had to perform was to reproduce what had
+thus been accumulated, adorned with all the graces
+of polished style. Tameness and monotony naturally
+result from a slavish adherence to all arbitrary
+rules and every branch of literature felt this
+blighting influence. History, perhaps, was in some
+degree an exception, for Hume, Robertson and more
+especially Gibbon, exhibited a spirit of original investigation
+which found no parallel among their
+contemporaries.&#8221; I looked in and asked her where
+her book was, and she said she left it down stairs.
+She has &#8220;got it&#8221; all right, I am sure. We helped
+decorate the seminary chapel for two days. Our
+motto was, &#8220;Still achieving, still pursuing.&#8221; Miss
+Guernsey made most of the letters and Mr. Chubbuck
+put them up and he hung all the paintings. It
+was a very warm week. General Granger had to
+use his palm leaf fan all the time, as well as the
+rest of us. There were six in our class, Mary Field,
+Lucy Petherick, Kate Lilly, Sarah Clay, Abby Scott
+and myself. Abbie Clark would have been in the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_134'></a>134</span>class, but she went to Pittsfield, Mass., instead.
+General Granger said to each one of us, &#8220;It gives me
+great pleasure to present you with this diploma,&#8221;
+and when he gave Miss Scott hers, as she is from
+Alabama, he said he wished it might be as a flag of
+truce between the North and the South, and this
+sentiment was loudly cheered. General Granger
+looked so handsome with his black dress suit and
+ruffled shirt front and all the natural grace which
+belongs to him. The sheepskin has a picture of the
+Seminary on it and this inscription: &#8220;The Trustees
+and Faculty of the Ontario Female Seminary
+hereby certify that <span style='white-space: nowrap'>&#8211;&#8211;&#8211;</span><span style='white-space: nowrap'>&#8211;&#8211;&#8211;</span> has completed the
+course of study prescribed in this Institution, maintained
+the requisite scholarship and commendable
+deportment and is therefore admitted to the graduating
+honors of this Institution. President of
+Board, John A. Granger; Benjamin F. Richards,
+Edward G. Tyler, Principals.&#8221; Mr. Morse wrote
+something for the paper:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>&#8220;To the Editor of the Repository:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;<span class='sc'>Dear Sir</span>&mdash;June roses, etc., make our loveliest of
+villages a paradise this week. The constellations are
+all glorious and the stars of earth far outshine those
+of the heavens. The lake shore, &#8216;Lovers&#8217; Lane,&#8217;
+&#8216;Glen Kitty&#8217; and the &#8216;Points&#8217; are full of romance and
+romancers. The yellow moon and the blue waters
+and the dark green shores and the petrified Indians,
+whispering stony words at the foot of Genundewah,
+and Squaw Island sitting on the waves, like an enchanted
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_135'></a>135</span>grove, and &#8216;Whalesback&#8217; all humped up in
+the East and &#8216;Devil&#8217;s Lookout&#8217; rising over all, made
+the &#8216;Sleeping Beauty&#8217; a silver sea of witchery and
+love; and in the cottages and palaces we ate the
+ambrosia and drank the nectar of the sweet goddesses
+of this new and golden age.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I may as well say to you, Mr. Editor, that the
+Ontario Female Seminary closed yesterday and
+&#8216;Yours truly&#8217; was present at the commencement. Being
+a bachelor I shall plead guilty and appeal to the
+mercy of the Court, if indicted for undue prejudice
+in favor of the charming young orators. After the
+report of the Examining Committee, in which the
+scholarship of the young ladies was not too highly
+praised, came the Latin Salutatory by Miss Clay, a
+most beautiful and elegant production (that sentence,
+sir, applies to both salutatory and salutatorian). The
+&#8216;Shadows We Cast,&#8217; by Miss Field, carried us far into
+the beautiful fields of nature and art and we saw
+the dark, or the brilliant shades, which our lives will
+cast, upon society and history. Then &#8216;Tongues in
+Trees&#8217; began to whisper most bewitchingly, and
+&#8216;Books in the Running Brooks&#8217; were opened, and
+&#8216;Sermons in Stones&#8217; were preached by Miss Richards,
+and this old bachelor thought if all trees would talk
+so well, and every brook would babble so musically,
+and each precious stone would exhort so brilliantly,
+as they were made to do by the &#8216;enchantress,&#8217; angels
+and dreams would henceforth be of little consequence;
+and whether the orator should be called &#8216;Tree of
+Beauty,&#8217; &#8216;Minnehaha&#8217; or the &#8216;Kohinoor&#8217; is a &#8216;vexata
+questio.&#8217;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;In the evening Mr. Hardick, &#8216;our own,&#8217; whose
+hand never touches the piano without making
+delicious music, and Misses Daggett and Wilson, also
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_136'></a>136</span>&#8216;our own,&#8217; and the musical pupils of the Institution,
+gave a concert. &#8216;The Young Volunteer&#8217; was imperatively
+demanded, and this for the third time during the
+anniversary exercises, and was sung amid thunders
+of applause, &#8216;Star of the South,&#8217; Miss Stella Scott,
+shining meanwhile in all her radiant beauty. May her
+glorious light soon rest on a Union that shall never
+more be broken.&mdash;Soberly yours,</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:right;'><span class='sc'>A Very Old Bachelor.</span>&#8221;</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>June,</i> 1861.&mdash;There was a patriotic rally this
+afternoon on the campus of Canandaigua Academy
+and we Seminary girls went. They raised a flag
+on the Academy building. General Granger presided,
+Dr. Coleman led the choir and they sang
+&#8220;The Star Spangled Banner.&#8221; Mr. Noah T.
+Clarke made a stirring speech and Mr. Gideon
+Granger, James C. Smith and E. M. Morse followed.
+Canandaigua has already raised over
+$7,000 for the war. Capt. Barry drills the Academy
+boys in military tactics on the campus every
+day. Men are constantly enlisting. Lester P.
+Thompson, son of &#8220;Father Thompson,&#8221; among the
+others.</p>
+
+<p>A young man asked Anna to take a drive to-day,
+but Grandmother was not willing at first to let her
+go. She finally gave her consent, after Anna&#8217;s plea
+that he was so young and his horse was so gentle.
+Just as they were ready to start, I heard Anna run
+upstairs and I heard him say, &#8220;What an Anna!&#8221;
+I asked her afterwards what she went for and she
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_137'></a>137</span>said she remembered that she had left the soap in
+the water.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>June.</i>&mdash;Dr. Daggett&#8217;s war sermon from the 146th
+Psalm was wonderful.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>December</i> 1.&mdash;Dr. Carr is dead. He had a stroke
+of paralysis two weeks ago and for several days he
+has been unconscious. The choir of our church,
+of which he was leader for so long, and some of the
+young people came and stood around his bed and
+sang, &#8220;Jesus, Lover of My Soul.&#8221; They did not
+know whether he was conscious or not, but they
+thought so because the tears ran down his cheeks
+from his closed eyelids, though he could not speak
+or move. The funeral was from the church and
+Dr. Daggett&#8217;s text was, &#8220;The Beloved Physician.&#8221;</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+<a id='c1862'></a>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_138'></a>138</span>
+<p class='cln0'>1862</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>January</i> 26.&mdash;We went to the Baptist Church this
+evening to hear Rev. A. H. Lung preach his last
+sermon before going into the army.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>February</i> 17.&mdash;Glorious news from the war to-day.
+Fort Donelson is taken with 1,500 rebels.
+The right and the North will surely triumph!</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>February</i> 21.&mdash;Our society met at Fanny Palmer&#8217;s
+this afternoon. I went but did not stay to tea as
+we were going to Madame Anna Bishop&#8217;s concert
+in the evening. The concert was very, very good.
+Her voice has great scope and she was dressed in
+the latest stage costume, but it took so much material
+for her skirt that there was hardly any left for
+the waist.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<table summary='figure' style='margin:0 auto'><tr>
+<td valign='bottom' style='padding-right:20px;'><a id='i138a'></a><img src='images/illus-138a.jpg' alt='' /><p class='c'>&#8220;Old Friend Burling&#8221;</p></td>
+<td valign='bottom'><a id='i138b'></a><img src='images/illus-138b.jpg' alt='' /><p class='c'>Madame Anna Bishop</p></td>
+</tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_139'></a>139</span><i>Washington&#8217;s Birthday.</i>&mdash;Patriotic services were
+held in the Congregational Church this morning.
+Madame Anna Bishop sang, and National songs
+were sung. Hon. James C. Smith read Washington&#8217;s
+Farewell Address. In the afternoon a party
+of twenty-two, young and old, took a ride in the
+Seminary boat and went to Mr. Paton&#8217;s on the lake
+shore road. We carried flags and made it a patriotic occasion. I sat next to Spencer F. Lincoln,
+a young man from Naples who is studying law in
+Mr. Henry Chesebro&#8217;s office. I never met him before
+but he told me he had made up his mind to
+go to the war. It is wonderful that young men
+who have brilliant prospects before them at home,
+will offer themselves upon the altar of their country.
+I have some new patriotic stationery. There
+is a picture of the flag on the envelope and underneath,
+&#8220;If any one attempts to haul down the
+American flag shoot him on the spot.&mdash;<span class='sc'>John A.
+Dix.</span>&#8221;</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday, February</i> 23.&mdash;Everybody came out to
+church this morning, expecting to hear Madame
+Anna Bishop sing. She was not there, and an
+&#8220;agent&#8221; made a &#8220;statement.&#8221; The audience did
+not appear particularly edified.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>March</i> 4.&mdash;John B. Gough lectured in Bemis Hall
+last night and was entertained by Governor Clark.
+I told Grandfather that I had an invitation to the
+lecture and he asked me who from. I told him
+from Mr. Noah T. Clarke&#8217;s brother. He did not
+make the least objection and I was awfully glad,
+because he has asked me to the whole course. Wendell
+Phillips and Horace Greeley, E. H. Chapin and
+John G. Saxe and Bayard Taylor are expected.
+John B. Gough&#8217;s lecture was fine. He can make
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_140'></a>140</span>an audience laugh as much by wagging his coat tails
+as some men can by talking an hour.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>March</i> 26.&mdash;I have been up at Laura Chapin&#8217;s
+from 10 o&#8217;clock in the morning until 10 at night, finishing
+Jennie Howell&#8217;s bed quilt, as she is to be
+married very soon. Almost all of the girls were
+there. We finished it at 8 p. m. and when we took
+it off the frames we gave three cheers. Some of
+the youth of the village came up to inspect our handiwork
+and see us home. Before we went Julia
+Phelps sang and played on the guitar and Captain
+Barry also sang and we all sang together, &#8220;O! Columbia,
+the gem of the ocean, three cheers for the
+red, white and blue.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>June</i> 19.&mdash;Our cousin, Ann Eliza Field, was married
+to-day to George B. Bates at her home on Gibson
+Street. We went and had an elegant time.
+Charlie Wheeler made great fun and threw the final
+shower of rice as they drove away.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>June.</i>&mdash;There was great excitement in prayer
+meeting last night, it seemed to Abbie Clark, Mary
+Field and me on the back seat where we always sit.
+Several people have asked us why we sit away back
+there by old Mrs. Kinney, but we tell them that she
+sits on the other side of the stove from us and we
+like the seat, because we have occupied it so long.
+I presume we would see less and hear more if we
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_141'></a>141</span>sat in front. To-night just after Mr. Walter Hubbell
+had made one of his most beautiful prayers and
+Mr. Cyrus Dixon was praying, a big June bug came
+zipping into the room and snapped against the wall
+and the lights and barely escaped several bald heads.
+Anna kept dodging around in a most startling manner
+and I expected every moment to see her walk
+out and take Emma Wheeler with her, for if she
+is afraid of anything more than dogs it is June bugs.
+At this crisis the bug flew out and a cat stealthily
+walked in. We knew that dear Mrs. Taylor was
+always unpleasantly affected by the sight of cats
+and we didn&#8217;t know what would happen if the cat
+should go near her. The cat very innocently
+ascended the steps to the desk and as Judge and Mrs.
+Taylor always sit on the front seat, she couldn&#8217;t
+help observing the ambitious animal as it started to
+assist Dr. Daggett in conducting the meeting. The
+result was that Mrs. Taylor just managed to reach
+the outside door before fainting away. We were
+glad when the benediction was pronounced.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>June.</i>&mdash;Anna and I had a serenade last night from
+the Academy Glee Club, I think, as their voices
+sounded familiar. We were awakened by the
+music, about 11 p. m., quite suddenly and I thought
+I would step across the hall to the front chamber for
+a match to light the candle. I was only half awake,
+however, and lost my bearings and stepped off the
+stairs and rolled or slid to the bottom. The stairs
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_142'></a>142</span>are winding, so I must have performed two or three
+revolutions before I reached my destination. I
+jumped up and ran back and found Anna sitting up
+in bed, laughing. She asked me where I had been
+and said if I had only told her where I was going
+she would have gone for me. We decided not to
+strike a light, but just listen to the singing. Anna
+said she was glad that the leading tenor did not
+know how quickly I &#8220;tumbled&#8221; to the words of
+his song, &#8220;O come my love and be my own, nor
+longer let me dwell alone,&#8221; for she thought he would
+be too much flattered. Grandfather came into the
+hall and asked if any bones were broken and if he
+should send for a doctor. We told him we guessed
+not, we thought we would be all right in the morning.
+He thought it was Anna who fell down stairs,
+as he is never looking for such exploits in me. We
+girls received some verses from the Academy boys,
+written by Greig Mulligan, under the assumed name
+of Simon Snooks. The subject was, &#8220;The Poor
+Unfortunate Academy Boys.&#8221; We have answered
+them and now I fear Mrs. Grundy will see them
+and imagine something serious is going on. But
+she is mistaken and will find, at the end of the session,
+our hearts are still in our own possession.</p>
+
+<p>When we were down at Sucker Brook the other
+afternoon we were watching the water and one of
+the girls said, &#8220;How nice it would be if our lives
+could run along as smoothly as this stream.&#8221; I said
+I thought it would be too monotonous. Laura
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_143'></a>143</span>Chapin said she supposed I would rather have an
+&#8220;eddy&#8221; in mine.</p>
+
+<p>We went to the examination at the Academy to-day
+and to the gymnasium exercises afterwards.
+Mr. Noah T. Clarke&#8217;s brother leads them and they
+do some great feats with their rings and swings and
+weights and ladders. We girls can do a few in
+the bowling alley at the Seminary.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>June.</i>&mdash;I visited Eureka Lawrence in Syracuse
+and we attended commencement at Hamilton College,
+Clinton, and saw there, James Tunnicliff and
+Stewart Ellsworth of Penn Yan. I also saw Darius
+Sackett there among the students and also became
+acquainted with a very interesting young man from
+Syracuse, with the classic name of Horace Publius
+Virgilius Bogue. Both of these young men are
+studying for the ministry. I also saw Henry P.
+Cook, who used to be one of the Academy boys, and
+Morris Brown, of Penn Yan. They talk of leaving
+college and going to the war and so does Darius
+Sackett.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>July,</i> 1862.&mdash;The President has called for 300,000
+more brave men to fill up the ranks of the fallen.
+We hear every day of more friends and acquaintances
+who have volunteered to go.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>August</i> 20.&mdash;The 126th Regiment, just organized,
+was mustered into service at Camp Swift, Geneva.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_144'></a>144</span>Those that I know who belong to it are Colonel
+E. S. Sherrill, Lieutenant Colonel James M. Bull,
+Captain Charles A. Richardson, Captain Charles M.
+Wheeler, Captain Ten Eyck Munson, Captain Orin
+G. Herendeen, Surgeon Dr. Charles S. Hoyt, Hospital
+Steward Henry T. Antes, First Lieutenant
+Charles Gage, Second Lieutenant Spencer F. Lincoln,
+First Sergeant Morris Brown, Corporal Hollister
+N. Grimes, Privates Darius Sackett, Henry
+Willson, Oliver Castle, William Lamport.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Hoyt wrote home: &#8220;God bless the dear
+ones we leave behind; and while you try to perform
+the duties you owe to each other, we will try to
+perform ours.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>We saw by the papers that the volunteers of the
+regiment before leaving camp at Geneva allotted
+over $15,000 of their monthly pay to their families
+and friends at home. One soldier sent this telegram
+to his wife, as the regiment started for the front:
+&#8220;God bless you. Hail Columbia. Kiss the baby.
+Write soon.&#8221; A volume in ten words.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>August.</i>&mdash;The New York State S. S. convention
+is convened here and the meetings are most interesting.
+They were held in our church and lasted three
+days. A Mr. Hart, from New York, led the singing
+and Mr. Ralph Wells was Moderator. Mr.
+Noah T. Clarke was in his element all through the
+meetings. Mr. Pardee gave some fine blackboard
+exercises. During the last afternoon Mr. Tousley
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_145'></a>145</span>was wheeled into the church, in his invalid chair,
+and said a few words, which thrilled every one.
+So much tenderness, mingled with his old time enthusiasm
+and love for the cause. It is the last time
+probably that his voice will ever be heard in public.
+They closed the grand meeting with the hymn beginning:</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;Blest be the tie that binds</p>
+<p>Our hearts in Christian love.&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p>In returning thanks to the people of Canandaigua
+for their generous entertainment, Mr. Ralph Wells
+facetiously said that the cost of the convention must
+mean something to Canandaigua people, for the
+cook in one home was heard to say, &#8220;These religiouses
+do eat awful!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>September</i> 13.&mdash;Darius Sackett was wounded by
+a musket shot in the leg, at Maryland Heights, Va.,
+and in consequence is discharged from the service.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>September.</i>&mdash;Edgar A. Griswold of Naples is recruiting
+a company here for the 148th Regiment, of
+which he is captain. Hiram P. Brown, Henry S.
+Murray and Charles H. Paddock are officers in the
+company. Dr. Elnathan W. Simmons is surgeon.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>September</i> 22.&mdash;I read aloud to Grandfather this
+evening the Emancipation Proclamation issued as
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_146'></a>146</span>a war measure by President Lincoln, to take effect
+January 1, liberating over three million slaves. He
+recommends to all thus set free, to labor faithfully
+for reasonable wages and to abstain from all violence,
+unless in necessary self-defense, and he invokes
+upon this act &#8220;the considerate judgment of
+mankind and the gracious favor of Almighty God.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>November</i> 21.&mdash;This is my twentieth birthday.
+Anna wanted to write a poem for the occasion and
+this morning she handed me what she called &#8220;An
+effort.&#8221; She said she wrestled with it all night long
+and could not sleep and this was the result:</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;One hundred years from now, Carrie dear,</p>
+<p>In all probability you&#8217;ll not be here;</p>
+<p>But we&#8217;ll all be in the same boat, too,</p>
+<p>And there&#8217;ll be no one left</p>
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> To say boo hoo!&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p>Grandfather gave me for a present a set of books
+called &#8220;Irving&#8217;s Catechisms on Ancient Greeks and
+Romans.&#8221; They are four little books bound in
+leather, which were presented to our mother for a
+prize. It is thus inscribed on the front page, &#8220;Miss
+Elizabeth Beals at a public examination of the Female
+Boarding School in East Bloomfield, October
+15, 1825, was judged to excel the school in Reading.
+In testimony of which she receives this Premium
+from her affectionate instructress, S. Adams.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>I cannot imagine Grandmother sending us away
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_147'></a>147</span>to boarding school, but I suppose she had so many
+children then, she could spare one or two as well as
+not. She says they sent Aunt Ann to Miss Willard&#8217;s
+school at Troy. I received a birthday letter
+from Mrs. Beaumont to-day. She wants to know
+how everything goes at the Seminary and if Anna
+still occupies the front seat in the school room most
+of the time. She says she supposes she is quite a
+sedate young lady now but she hopes there is a whole
+lot of the old Anna left. I think there is.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>December.</i>&mdash;Hon. William H. Lamport went
+down to Virginia to see his son and found that he
+had just died in the hospital from measles and pneumonia.
+Their only son, only eighteen years old!</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+<a id='c1863'></a>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_148'></a>148</span>
+<p class='cln0'>1863</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>January.</i>&mdash;Grandmother went to Aunt Mary
+Carr&#8217;s to tea to-night, very much to our surprise,
+for she seldom goes anywhere. Anna said she was
+going to keep house exactly as Grandmother did,
+so after supper she took a little hot water in a basin
+on a tray and got the tea-towels and washed the
+silver and best china but she let the ivory handles
+on the knives and forks get wet, so I presume they
+will all turn black. Grandmother never lets her
+little nice things go out into the kitchen, so probably
+that is the reason that everything is forty years old
+and yet as good as new. She let us have the Young
+Ladies&#8217; Aid Society here to supper because I am
+President. She came into the parlor and looked
+at our basket of work, which the elder ladies cut out
+for us to make for the soldiers. She had the supper
+table set the whole length of the dining room and
+let us preside at the table. Anna made the girls
+laugh so, they could hardly eat, although they said
+everything was splendid. They said they never ate
+better biscuit, preserves, or fruit cake and the coffee
+was delicious. After it was over, the &#8220;dear little
+lady&#8221; said she hoped we had a good time. After
+the girls were gone Grandmother wanted to look
+over the garments and see how much we had accomplished
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_149'></a>149</span>and if we had made them well. Mary Field
+made a pair of drawers with No. 90 thread. She
+said she wanted them to look fine and I am sure
+they did. Most of us wrote notes and put inside
+the garments for the soldiers in the hospitals.</p>
+
+<p>Sarah Gibson Howell has had an answer to her
+letter. His name is Foster&mdash;a Major. She expects
+him to come and see her soon.</p>
+
+<p>All the girls wear newspaper bustles to school
+now and Anna&#8217;s rattled to-day and Emma Wheeler
+heard it and said, &#8220;What&#8217;s the news, Anna?&#8221;
+They both laughed out loud and found that &#8220;the
+latest news from the front&#8221; was that Miss Morse
+kept them both after school and they had to copy
+Dictionary for an hour. War prices are terrible.
+I paid $3.50 to-day for a hoop skirt.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>January</i> 13.&mdash;P. T. Barnum delivered his lecture
+on &#8220;The Art of Money Getting&#8221; in Bemis Hall this
+evening for the benefit of the Ladies&#8217; Aid Society,
+which is working for the soldiers. We girls went
+and enjoyed it.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>February.</i>&mdash;The members of our society sympathized
+with General McClellan when he was criticised
+by some and we wrote him the following letter:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p style='text-align:right;'>&#8220;<span class='sc'>Canandaigua</span>, <i>Feb.</i> 13, 1863.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;<span class='sc'>Maj. Gen. Geo. McClellan</span>:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Will you pardon any seeming impropriety in our
+addressing you, and attribute it to the impulsive love
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_150'></a>150</span>and admiration of hearts which see in you, the bravest
+and noblest defender of our Union. We cannot resist
+the impulse to tell you, be our words ever so feeble,
+how our love and trust have followed you from Rich
+Mountain to Antietam, through all slanderous attacks
+of traitorous politicians and fanatical defamers&mdash;how
+we have admired, not less than your calm courage on
+the battlefield, your lofty scorn of those who remained
+at home in the base endeavor to strip from your brow
+the hard earned laurels placed there by a grateful
+country: to tell further, that in your forced retirement
+from battlefields of the Republic&#8217;s peril, you have &#8216;but
+changed your country&#8217;s arms for more,&mdash;your country&#8217;s
+heart,&#8217;&mdash;and to assure you that so long as our
+country remains to us a sacred name and our flag
+a holy emblem, so long shall we cherish your memory
+as the defender and protector of both. We are an
+association whose object it is to aid, in the only way
+in which woman, alas! can aid our brothers in the
+field. Our sympathies are with them in the cause
+for which they have periled all&mdash;our hearts are
+with them in the prayer, that ere long their beloved
+commander may be restored to them, and that once
+more as of old he may lead them to victory in the
+sacred name of the Union and Constitution.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;With united prayers that the Father of all may
+have you and yours ever in His holy keeping, we
+remain your devoted partisans.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Signed by a large number.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The following in reply was addressed to the lady
+whose name was first signed to the above:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p style='text-align:right;'>&#8220;<span class='sc'>New York</span>, <i>Feb.</i> 21, 1863.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;<span class='sc'>Madam</span>&mdash;I take great pleasure in acknowledging
+the receipt of the very kind letter of the 13th inst.,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_151'></a>151</span>from yourself and your friends. Will you do me the
+favor to say to them how much I thank them for it,
+and that I am at a loss to express my gratitude for
+the pleasant and cheering terms in which it is couched.
+Such sentiments on the part of those whose brothers
+have served with me in the field are more grateful
+to me than anything else can be. I feel far more than
+rewarded by them for all I have tried to accomplish.&mdash;I am, Madam, with the most sincere respect and
+friendship, yours very truly,</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:right;'><span class='sc'>Geo. B. McClellan.</span>&#8221;</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>May.</i>&mdash;A number of the teachers and pupils of the
+Academy have enlisted for the war. Among them
+E. C. Clarke, H. C. Kirk, A. T. Wilder, Norman K.
+Martin, T. C. Parkhurst, Mr. Gates. They have a
+tent on the square and are enlisting men in Canandaigua
+and vicinity for the 4th N. Y. Heavy Artillery.
+I received a letter from Mr. Noah T.
+Clarke&#8217;s mother in Naples. She had already sent
+three sons, Bela, William and Joseph, to the war and
+she is very sad because her youngest has now enlisted.
+She says she feels as did Jacob of old when
+he said, &#8220;I am bereaved of my children. Joseph
+is not and Simeon is not and now you will take
+Benjamin away.&#8221; I have heard that she is a beautiful
+singer but she says she cannot sing any more
+until this cruel war is over. I wish that I could
+write something to comfort her but I feel as Mrs.
+Browning puts it: &#8220;If you want a song for your
+Italy free, let none look at me.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_152'></a>152</span>Our society met at Fannie Pierce&#8217;s this afternoon.
+Her mother is an invalid and never gets out at all,
+but she is very much interested in the soldiers and
+in all young people, and loves to have us come in
+and see her and we love to go. She enters into the
+plans of all of us young girls and has a personal
+interest in us. We had a very good time to-night
+and Laura Chapin was more full of fun than usual.
+Once there was silence for a minute or two and
+some one said, &#8220;awful pause.&#8221; Laura said, &#8220;I
+guess you would have awful paws if you worked as
+hard as I do.&#8221; We were talking about how many
+of us girls would be entitled to flag bed quilts, and
+according to the rules, they said that, up to date,
+Abbie Clark and I were the only ones. The explanation
+is that Captain George N. Williams and
+Lieutenant E. C. Clarke are enlisted in their country&#8217;s
+service. Susie Daggett is Secretary and
+Treasurer of the Society and she reported that in
+one year&#8217;s time we made in our society 133 pairs of
+drawers, 101 shirts, 4 pairs socks for soldiers, and
+54 garments for the families of soldiers.</p>
+
+<p>Abbie Clark and I had our ambrotypes taken to-day
+for two young braves who are going to the war.
+William H. Adams is also commissioned Captain
+and is going to the front.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>July</i> 4.&mdash;The terrible battle of Gettysburg brings
+to Canandaigua sad news of our soldier boys of the
+126th Regiment. Colonel Sherrill was instantly
+killed, also Captains Wheeler and Herendeen,
+Henry Willson and Henry P. Cook. Captain Richardson
+was wounded.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<table summary='figure' style='margin:0 auto'>
+<tr>
+<td valign='bottom' style='padding-right:20px;'><a id='i152a'></a><img src='images/illus-152a.jpg' alt='' /><p class='c'>&#8220;Abbie Clark</p></td>
+<td valign='bottom'><a id='i152b'></a><img src='images/illus-152b.jpg' alt='' /><p class='c'>and I</p></td>
+</tr>
+<tr><td align="center" colspan='2'><p style='text-align:center'>had our ambrotypes taken to-day.&#8221;</p></td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan='2' align='center' valign='bottom' style='padding-top:20px;'><a id='i152c'></a><img src='images/illus-152c.jpg' alt='' /><p class='c'>&#8220;Mr. Noah T. Clark&#8217;s<br />Brother and I&#8221;</p></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_153'></a>153</span><i>July</i> 26.&mdash;Charlie Wheeler was buried with military
+honors from the Congregational church to-day.
+Two companies of the 54th New York State National
+Guard attended the funeral, and the church
+was packed, galleries and all. It was the saddest
+funeral and the only one of a soldier that I ever
+attended. I hope it will be the last. He was killed
+at Gettysburg, July 3, by a sharpshooter&#8217;s bullet.
+He was a very bright young man, graduate of Yale
+college and was practising law. He was captain of
+Company K, 126th N. Y. Volunteers. I have
+copied an extract from Mr. Morse&#8217;s lecture, &#8220;You
+and I&#8221;: &#8220;And who has forgotten that gifted
+youth, who fell on the memorable field of Gettysburg?
+To win a noble name, to save a beloved
+country, he took his place beneath the dear old flag,
+and while cannon thundered and sabers clashed and
+the stars of the old Union shone above his head he
+went down in the shock of battle and left us desolate,
+a name to love and a glory to endure. And as
+we solemnly know, as by the old charter of liberty
+we most sacredly swear, he was truly and faithfully
+and religiously</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>Of all our friends the noblest,</p>
+<p>The choicest and the purest,</p>
+<p>The nearest and the dearest,</p>
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> In the field at Gettysburg.</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_154'></a>154</span>Of all the heroes bravest,</p>
+<p>Of soul the brightest, whitest,</p>
+<p>Of all the warriors greatest,</p>
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> Shot dead at Gettysburg.</p>
+<hr class='poetry' />
+<p>And where the fight was thickest,</p>
+<p>And where the smoke was blackest,</p>
+<p>And where the fire was hottest,</p>
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> On the fields of Gettysburg,</p>
+<p>There flashed his steel the brightest,</p>
+<p>There blazed his eyes the fiercest,</p>
+<p>There flowed his blood the reddest</p>
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> On the field of Gettysburg.</p>
+<hr class='poetry' />
+<p>O wailing winds of heaven!</p>
+<p>O weeping dew of evening!</p>
+<p>O music of the waters</p>
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> That flow at Gettysburg,</p>
+<p>Mourn tenderly the hero,</p>
+<p>The rare and glorious hero,</p>
+<p>The loved and peerless hero,</p>
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> Who died at Gettysburg.</p>
+<hr class='poetry' />
+<p>His turf shall be the greenest,</p>
+<p>His roses bloom the sweetest,</p>
+<p>His willow droop the saddest</p>
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> Of all at Gettysburg.</p>
+<p>His memory live the freshest,</p>
+<p>His fame be cherished longest,</p>
+<p>Of all the holy warriors,</p>
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> Who fell at Gettysburg.</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p>These were patriots, these were our jewels.
+When shall we see their like again? And of every
+soldier who has fallen in this war his friends may
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_155'></a>155</span>write just as lovingly as you and I may do of those
+to whom I pay my feeble tribute.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>August,</i> 1863.&mdash;The U. S. Sanitary Commission
+has been organized. Canandaigua sent Dr. W. Fitch
+Cheney to Gettysburg with supplies for the sick and
+wounded and he took seven assistants with him.
+Home bounty was brought to the tents and put into
+the hands of the wounded soldiers. A blessed work.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>August</i> 12.&mdash;Lucilla Field was married in our
+church to-day to Rev. S. W. Pratt. I always
+thought she was cut out for a minister&#8217;s wife.
+Jennie Draper cried herself sick because Lucilla,
+her Sunday School teacher, is going away.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>October</i> 8.&mdash;News came to-day of the death of
+Lieutenant Hiram Brown. He died of fever at
+Portsmouth, only little more than a year after he
+went away.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>November</i> 1.&mdash;The 4th New York Heavy Artillery
+is stationed at Fort Hamilton, N. Y. harbor.
+Uncle Edward has invited me down to New York
+to spend a month! Very opportune! Grandfather
+says that I can go and Miss Rosewarne is beginning
+a new dress for me to-day.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>November</i> 6.&mdash;We were saddened to-day by news
+of the death of Augustus Torrey Wilder in the hospital
+at Fort Ethan Allen.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_156'></a>156</span><i>November</i> 9.&mdash;No. 68 E. 19th Street, New York
+City. Grandfather and I came from Canandaigua
+yesterday. He is at Gramercy Park Hotel. We
+were met by a military escort of &#8220;one&#8221; at Albany
+and consequently came through more safely, I suppose.
+James met us at 42d Street Grand Central
+Station. He lives at Uncle Edward&#8217;s; attends to
+all of his legal business and is his confidential clerk.
+I like it very much here. They are very stylish and
+grand but I don&#8217;t mind that. Aunt Emily is reserved
+and dignified but very kind. People do not
+pour their tea or coffee into their saucers any more
+to cool it, but drink it from the cup, and you must
+mind and not leave your teaspoon in your cup. I
+notice everything and am very particular. Mr.
+Morris K. Jesup lives right across the street and I
+see him every day, as he is a friend of Uncle Edward.
+Grandfather has gone back home and left
+me in charge of friends &#8220;a la militaire&#8221; and others.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>November</i> 15.&mdash;&#8220;We&#8221; went out to Fort Hamilton
+to-day and are going to Blackwell&#8217;s Island to-morrow
+and to many other places of interest down
+the Bay. Soldiers are everywhere and I feel quite
+important, walking around in company with blue
+coat and brass buttons&mdash;very becoming style of
+dress for men and the military salute at every turn
+is what one reads about.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday</i>.&mdash;Went to Broadway Tabernacle to
+church to-day and heard Rev. Joseph P. Thompson
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_157'></a>157</span>preach. Abbie Clark is visiting her sister, Mrs.
+Fred Thompson, and sat a few seats ahead of us in
+church. She turned around and saw us. We also
+saw Henrietta Francis Talcott, who was a &#8220;Seminary
+girl.&#8221; She wants me to come to see her in
+her New York home.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>November</i> 19.&mdash;We wish we were at Gettysburg
+to-day to hear President Lincoln&#8217;s and Edward Everett&#8217;s
+addresses at the dedication of the National
+Cemetery. We will read them in to-morrow&#8217;s papers,
+but it will not be like hearing them.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Author&#8217;s Note,</i> 1911.&mdash;Forty-eight years have
+elapsed since Lincoln&#8217;s speech was delivered at the
+dedication of the Soldiers&#8217; Cemetery at Gettysburg.
+So eloquent and remarkable was his utterance that I
+believe I am correct in stating that every word
+spoken has now been translated into all known languages
+and is regarded as one of the World Classics.
+The same may be said of Lincoln&#8217;s letter to the
+mother of five sons lost in battle. I make no apology
+for inserting in this place both the speech and the
+letter. Mr. Whitelaw Reid, the American Ambassador
+to Great Britain, in an address on Lincoln delivered
+at the University of Birmingham in December,
+1910, remarked in reference to this letter,
+&#8220;What classic author in our common English
+tongue has surpassed that?&#8221; and next may I ask,
+&#8220;What English or American orator has on a similar
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_158'></a>158</span>occasion surpassed this address on the battlefield of
+Gettysburg?&#8221;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>&#8220;Four score and seven years ago, our fathers
+brought forth on this continent a new nation conceived
+in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that
+all men are created equal. Now we are engaged in
+a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or any
+nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure.
+We are met on a great battlefield of that war. We
+have come to dedicate a portion of that field as a
+final resting place for those who gave their lives that
+that nation might live. It is altogether fitting and
+proper that we should do this. But in a larger sense
+we cannot dedicate&mdash;we cannot consecrate&mdash;we cannot
+hallow this ground. The brave men, living and dead,
+who struggled here have consecrated it far above our
+poor power to add or detract. The world will little
+note, nor long remember, what we say here&mdash;but it
+can never forget what they did here. It is for us,
+the living, rather, to be dedicated here to the unfinished
+work which they who fought here have thus
+far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here
+dedicated to the great task remaining before us&mdash;that
+from these honored dead we take increased devotion
+to that cause for which they gave the last full measure
+of devotion&mdash;that we here highly resolve, that these
+dead shall not have died in vain&mdash;that this nation
+under God shall have a new birth of freedom&mdash;and
+that government of the people, by the people and for
+the people, shall not perish from the earth.&#8221;</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>It was during the dark days of the war that he
+wrote this simple letter of sympathy to a bereaved
+mother:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>&#8220;I have been shown, in the files of the War
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_159'></a>159</span>Department, a statement that you are the mother of
+five sons who have died gloriously on the field of
+battle. I feel how weak and fruitless must be any
+words of mine which should attempt to beguile you
+from your grief for a loss so overwhelming, but I
+cannot refrain from tendering to you the consolation
+which may be found in the thanks of the Republic
+they died to save. I pray that our Heavenly Father
+may assuage the anguish of your bereavement, and
+leave you only the cherished memory of the loved and
+lost, and the solemn pride that must be yours, to have
+laid so costly a sacrifice upon the altar of Freedom.&#8221;</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>November</i> 21.&mdash;Abbie Clark and her cousin Cora
+came to call and invited me and her soldier cousin
+to come to dinner to-night, at Mrs. Thompson&#8217;s.
+He will be here this afternoon and I will give him
+the invitation. James is asked for the evening.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>November</i> 22.&mdash;We had a delightful visit. Mr.
+Thompson took us up into his den and showed us
+curios from all over the world and as many pictures
+as we would find in an art gallery.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Friday</i>.&mdash;Last evening Uncle Edward took a
+party of us, including Abbie Clark, to Wallack&#8217;s
+Theater to see &#8220;Rosedale,&#8221; which is having a great
+run. I enjoyed it and told James it was the best
+play I ever &#8220;heard.&#8221; He said I must not say that
+I &#8220;heard&#8221; a play. I &#8220;saw&#8221; it. I stand corrected.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_160'></a>160</span>I told James that I heard of a young girl who
+went abroad and on her return some one asked her
+if she saw King Lear and she said, no, he was sick
+all the time she was there! I just loved the play
+last night and laughed and cried in turn, it seemed
+so real. I don&#8217;t know what Grandmother will say,
+but I wrote her about it and said, &#8220;When you are
+with the Romans, you must do as the Romans do.&#8221;
+I presume she will say &#8220;that is not the way you were
+brought up.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>December</i> 7.&mdash;The 4th New York Heavy Artillery
+has orders to move to Fort Ethan Allen, near
+Washington, and I have orders to return to Canandaigua.
+I have enjoyed the five weeks very much
+and as &#8220;the soldier&#8221; was on parole most of the time
+I have seen much of interest in the city. Uncle
+Edward says that he has lived here forty years but
+has never visited some of the places that we have
+seen, so he told me when I mentioned climbing to
+the top of Trinity steeple.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='sc'>Canandaigua</span>, <i>December</i> 8.&mdash;Home again. I
+had military attendance as far as Paterson, N. J.,
+and came the rest of the way with strangers. Not
+caring to talk I liked it just as well. When I said
+good bye I could not help wondering whether it
+was for years, or forever. This cruel war is terrible
+and precious lives are being sacrificed and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_161'></a>161</span>hearts broken every day. What is to be the result?
+We can only trust and wait.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Christmas Eve,</i> 1863.&mdash;Sarah Gibson Howell was
+married to Major Foster this evening. She invited
+all the society and many others. It was a beautiful
+wedding and we all enjoyed it. Some time ago I
+asked her to write in my album and she sewed a
+lock of her black curling hair on the page and in the
+center of it wrote, &#8220;Forget not Gippie.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>December</i> 31.&mdash;Our brother John was married in
+Boston to-day to Laura Arnold, a lovely girl.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+<a id='c1864'></a>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_162'></a>162</span>
+<p class='cln0'>1864</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>April</i> 1.&mdash;Grandfather had decided to go to New
+York to attend the fair given by the Sanitary Commission,
+and he is taking two immense books, which
+are more than one hundred years old, to present to
+the Commission, for the benefit of the war fund.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>April</i> 18.&mdash;Grandfather returned home to-day,
+unexpectedly to us. I knew he was sick when I
+met him at the door. He had traveled all night
+alone from New York, although he said that a
+stranger, a fellow passenger, from Ann Arbor,
+Mich., on the train noticed that he was suffering and
+was very kind to him. He said he fell in his room
+at Gramercy Park Hotel in the night, and his knee
+was very painful. We sent for old Dr. Cheney and
+he said the hurt was a serious one and needed most
+careful attention. I was invited to a spelling school
+at Abbie Clark&#8217;s in the evening and Grandmother
+said that she and Anna would take care of Grandfather
+till I got back, and then I could sit up by
+him the rest of the night. We spelled down and
+had quite a merry time. Major C. S. Aldrich had
+escaped from prison and was there. He came home
+with me, as my soldier is down in Virginia.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_163'></a>163</span><i>April</i> 19.&mdash;Grandfather is much worse. He was
+delirious all night. We have sent for Dr. Rosewarne
+in counsel and Mrs. Lightfoote has come to
+stay with us all the time and we have sent for Aunt
+Glorianna.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>April</i> 20.&mdash;Grandfather dictated a letter to-night
+to a friend of his in New York. After I had finished
+he asked me if I had mended his gloves. I
+said no, but I would have them ready when he
+wanted them. Dear Grandfather! he looks so sick
+I fear he will never wear his gloves again.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>May</i> 16.&mdash;I have not written in my diary for a
+month and it has been the saddest month of my life.
+Dear, dear Grandfather is dead. He was buried
+May 2, just two weeks from the day that he returned
+from New York. We did everything for him that
+could be done, but at the end of the first week the
+doctors saw that he was beyond all human aid.
+Uncle Thomas told the doctors that they must tell
+him. He was much surprised but received the verdict
+calmly. He said &#8220;he had no notes out and
+perhaps it was the best time to go.&#8221; He had taught
+us how to live and he seemed determined to show
+us how a Christian should die. He said he wanted
+&#8220;Grandmother and the children to come to him and
+have all the rest remain outside.&#8221; When we came
+into the room he said to Grandmother, &#8220;Do you
+know what the doctors say?&#8221; She bowed her head,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_164'></a>164</span>and then he motioned for her to come on one side
+and Anna and me on the other and kneel by his bedside.
+He placed a hand upon us and upon her and
+said to her, &#8220;All the rest seem very much excited,
+but you and I must be composed.&#8221; Then he asked
+us to say the 23d Psalm, &#8220;The Lord is my Shepherd,&#8221;
+and then all of us said the Lord&#8217;s Prayer
+together after Grandmother had offered a little
+prayer for grace and strength in this trying hour.
+Then he said, &#8220;Grandmother, you must take care of
+the girls, and, girls, you must take care of Grandmother.&#8221;
+We felt as though our hearts would
+break and were sure we never could be happy again.
+During the next few days he often spoke of dying
+and of what we must do when he was gone. Once
+when I was sitting by him he looked up and smiled
+and said, &#8220;You will lose all your roses watching
+over me.&#8221; A good many business men came in to
+see him to receive his parting blessing. The two
+McKechnie brothers, Alexander and James, came in
+together on their way home from church the Sunday
+before he died. Dr. Daggett came very often. Mr.
+Alexander Howell and Mrs. Worthington came, too.</p>
+
+<p>He lived until Saturday, the 30th, and in the
+morning he said, &#8220;Open the door wide.&#8221; We did
+so and he said, &#8220;Let the King of Glory enter in.&#8221;
+Very soon after he said, &#8220;I am going home to
+Paradise,&#8221; and then sank into that sleep which on
+this earth knows no waking. I sat by the window
+near his bed and watched the rain beat into the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_165'></a>165</span>grass and saw the peonies and crocuses and daffodils
+beginning to come up out of the ground and I
+thought to myself, I shall never see the flowers come
+up again without thinking of these sad, sad days.
+He was buried Monday afternoon, May 2, from the
+Congregational church, and Dr. Daggett preached
+a sermon from a favorite text of Grandfather&#8217;s, &#8220;I
+shall die in my nest.&#8221; James and John came and
+as we stood with dear Grandmother and all the
+others around his open grave and heard Dr. Daggett
+say in his beautiful sympathetic voice, &#8220;Earth to
+earth, ashes to ashes, dust to dust,&#8221; we felt that
+we were losing our best friend; but he told us
+that we must live for Grandmother and so we
+will.</p>
+
+<p>The next Sabbath, Anna and I were called out of
+church by a messenger, who said that Grandmother
+was taken suddenly ill and was dying. When we
+reached the house attendants were all about her
+administering restoratives, but told us she was rapidly
+sinking. I asked if I might speak to her and
+was reluctantly permitted, as they thought best not
+to disturb her. I sat down by her and with tearful
+voice said, &#8220;Grandmother, don&#8217;t you know that
+Grandfather said we were to care for you and you
+were to care for us and if you die we cannot do as
+Grandfather said?&#8221; She opened her eyes and
+looked at me and said quietly, &#8220;Dry your eyes, child,
+I shall not die to-day or to-morrow.&#8221; She seems
+well now.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_166'></a>166</span>Inscribed in my diary:</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;They are passing away, they are passing away,</p>
+<p>Not only the young, but the aged and gray.</p>
+<p>Their places are vacant, no longer we see</p>
+<p>The armchair in waiting, as it used to be.</p>
+<p>The hat and the coat are removed from the nail,</p>
+<p>Where for years they have hung, every day without fail.</p>
+<p>The shoes and the slippers are needed no more,</p>
+<p>Nor kept ready waiting, as they were of yore,</p>
+<p>The desk which he stood at in manhood&#8217;s fresh prime,</p>
+<p>Which now shows the marks of the finger of time,</p>
+<p>The bright well worn keys, which were childhood&#8217;s delight</p>
+<p>Unlocking the treasures kept hidden from sight.</p>
+<p>These now are mementoes of him who has passed,</p>
+<p>Who stands there no longer, as we saw him last.</p>
+<p>Other hands turn the keys, as he did, before,</p>
+<p>Other eyes will his secrets, if any, explore.</p>
+<p>The step once elastic, but feeble of late,</p>
+<p>No longer we watch for through doorway or gate,</p>
+<p>Though often we turn, half expecting to see,</p>
+<p>The loved one approaching, but ah! &#8217;tis not he.</p>
+<p>We miss him at all times, at morn when we meet,</p>
+<p>For the social repast, there is one vacant seat.</p>
+<p>At noon, and at night, at the hour of prayer,</p>
+<p>Our hearts fill with sadness, one voice is not there.</p>
+<p>Yet not without hope his departure we mourn,</p>
+<p>In faith and in trust, all our sorrows are borne,</p>
+<p>Borne upward to Him who in kindness and love</p>
+<p>Sends earthly afflictions to draw us above.</p>
+<p>Thus hoping and trusting, rejoicing, we&#8217;ll go,</p>
+<p>Both upward and onward through weal and through woe</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_167'></a>167</span>&#8217;Till all of life&#8217;s changes and conflicts are past</p>
+<p>Beyond the dark river, to meet him at last.&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;margin-top:1em;'><span class='b'>In Memoriam</span></p>
+
+<p>Thomas Beals died in Canandaigua, N. Y., on
+Saturday, April 30th, 1864, in the 81st year of his
+age. Mr. Beals was born in Boston, Mass., November
+13, 1783.</p>
+
+<p>He came to this village in October, 1803, only
+14 years after the first settlement of the place. He
+was married in March, 1805, to Abigail Field, sister
+of the first pastor of the Congregational church
+here. Her family, in several of its branches, have
+since been distinguished in the ministry, the legal
+profession, and in commercial enterprise.</p>
+
+<p>Living to a good old age, and well known as one
+of our most wealthy and respected citizens, Mr.
+Beals is another added to the many examples of successful
+men who, by energy and industry, have made
+their own fortune.</p>
+
+<p>On coming to this village, he was teacher in the
+Academy for a time, and afterward entered into
+mercantile business, in which he had his share of
+vicissitude. When the Ontario Savings Bank was
+established, 1832, he became the Treasurer, and
+managed it successfully till the institution ceased, in
+1835, with his withdrawal. In the meantime he
+conducted, also, a banking business of his own, and
+this was continued until a week previous to his
+death, when he formally withdrew, though for the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_168'></a>168</span>last five years devolving its more active duties upon
+his son.</p>
+
+<p>As a banker, his sagacity and fidelity won for
+him the confidence and respect of all classes of persons
+in this community. The business portion of
+our village is very much indebted to his enterprise
+for the eligible structures he built that have more
+than made good the losses sustained by fires. More
+than fifty years ago he was actively concerned in the
+building of the Congregational church, and also
+superintended the erection of the county jail and
+almshouse; for many years a trustee of Canandaigua
+Academy, and trustee and treasurer of the
+Congregational church. At the time of his death
+he and his wife, who survives him, were the oldest
+members of the church, having united with it in
+1807, only eight years after its organization. Until
+hindered by the infirmities of age, he was a constant
+attendant of its services and ever devoutly maintained
+the worship of God in his family. No person
+has been more generally known among all classes
+of our citizens. Whether at home or abroad he
+could not fail to be remarked for his gravity and
+dignity. His character was original, independent,
+and his manners remarkable for a dignified courtesy.
+Our citizens were familiar with his brief, emphatic
+answers with the wave of his hand. He was fond
+of books, a great reader, collected a valuable number
+of volumes, and was happy in the use of language
+both in writing and conversation. In many unusual
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_169'></a>169</span>ways he often showed his kind consideration for the
+poor and afflicted, and many persons hearing of his
+death gratefully recollect instances, not known to
+others, of his seasonable kindness to them in trouble.
+In his charities he often studied concealment
+as carefully as others court display. His marked
+individuality of character and deportment, together
+with his shrewd discernment and active habits,
+could not fail to leave a distinct impression on the
+minds of all.</p>
+
+<p>For more than sixty years he transacted business
+in one place here, and his long life thus teaches more
+than one generation the value of sobriety, diligence,
+fidelity and usefulness.</p>
+
+<p>In his last illness he remarked to a friend that he
+always loved Canandaigua; had done several things
+for its prosperity, and had intended to do more.
+He had known his measure of affliction; only four
+of eleven children survive him, but children and children&#8217;s
+children ministered to the comfort of his last
+days. Notwithstanding his years and infirmities,
+he was able to visit New York, returning April 18th
+quite unwell, but not immediately expecting a fatal
+termination. As the final event drew near, he
+seemed happily prepared to meet it. He conversed
+freely with his friends and neighbors in a softened
+and benignant spirit, at once receiving and imparting
+benedictions. His end seemed to realize his
+favorite citation from Job: &#8220;I shall die in my
+nest.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_170'></a>170</span>His funeral was attended on Monday in the Congregational
+church by a large assembly, Dr. Daggett,
+the pastor, officiating on the occasion.&mdash;Written
+by Dr. O. E. Daggett in 1864.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>May.</i>&mdash;The 4th New York Heavy Artillery is
+having hard times in the Virginia mud and rain.
+They are near Culpeper. It is such a change from
+their snug winter quarters at Fort Ethan Allen.
+There are 2,800 men in the Regiment and 1,200 are
+sick. Dr. Charles S. Hoyt of the 126th, which is
+camping close by, has come to the help of these new
+recruits so kindly as to win every heart, quite in
+contrast to the heartlessness of their own surgeons.
+They will always love him for this. It is just like
+him.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>June</i> 22.&mdash;Captain Morris Brown, of Penn Yan,
+was killed to-day by a musket shot in the head,
+while commanding the regiment before Petersburg.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>June</i> 23, 1864.&mdash;Anna graduated last Thursday,
+June 16, and was valedictorian of her class. There
+were eleven girls in the class, Ritie Tyler, Mary
+Antes, Jennie Robinson, Hattie Paddock, Lillie
+Masters, Abbie Hills, Miss McNair, Miss Pardee
+and Miss Palmer, Miss Jasper and Anna. The subject
+of her essay was &#8220;The Last Time.&#8221; I will
+copy an account of the exercises as they appeared
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_171'></a>171</span>in this week&#8217;s village paper. Every one thinks it
+was written by Mr. E. M. Morse.</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;margin-top:1em;'>A WORD FROM AN OLD MAN</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>&#8220;<span class='sc'>Mr. Editor</span>:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Less than a century ago I was traveling through
+this enchanted region and accidentally heard that it
+was commencement week at the seminary. I went.
+My venerable appearance seemed to command respect
+and I received many attentions. I presented my snowy
+head and patriarchal beard at the doors of the sacred
+institution and was admitted. I heard all the classes,
+primary, secondary, tertiary, et cetera. All went
+merry as a marriage bell. Thursday was the great
+day. I made vast preparation. I rose early, dressed
+with much care. I affectionately pressed the hands
+of my two landlords and left. When I arrived at
+the seminary I saw at a glance that it was a place
+where true merit was appreciated. I was invited to
+a seat among the dignitaries, but declined. I am a
+modest man, I always was. I recognized the benign
+Principals of the school. You can find no better principles
+in the states than in Ontario Female Seminary.
+After the report of the committee a very lovely young
+lady arose and saluted us in Latin. I looked very
+wise, I always do. So did everybody. We all understood
+it. As she proceeded, I thought the grand old
+Roman tongue had never sounded so musically and
+when she pronounced the decree, &#8216;Richmond delenda
+est,&#8217; we all hoped it might be prophetic. Then followed
+the essays of the other young ladies and then
+every one waited anxiously for &#8216;The Last Time.&#8217;
+At last it came. The story was beautifully told, the
+adieux were tenderly spoken. We saw the withered
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_172'></a>172</span>flowers of early years scattered along the academic
+ways, and the golden fruit of scholarly culture ripening
+in the gardens of the future. Enchanted by the
+sorrowful eloquence, bewildered by the melancholy
+brilliancy, I sent a rosebud to the charming valedictorian
+and wandered out into the grounds. I went
+to the concert in the evening and was pleased and
+delighted. So was everybody. I shall return next
+year unless the gout carries me off. I hope I shall
+hear just such beautiful music, see just such beautiful
+faces and dine at the same excellent hotel.</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:right;'><span class='sc'>Senex.</span>&#8221;</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Anna closed her valedictory with these words:</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;May we meet at one gate when all&#8217;s over;</p>
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> The ways they are many and wide,</p>
+<p>And seldom are two ways the same;</p>
+<p style='margin-left:2ex'> Side by side may we stand</p>
+<p>At the same little door when all&#8217;s done.</p>
+<p style='margin-left:4ex'> The ways they are many,</p>
+<p style='margin-left:4ex'> The end it is one.&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>July</i> 10.&mdash;We have had word of the death of
+Spencer F. Lincoln. One more brave soldier sacrificed.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>August.</i>&mdash;The New York State S. S. Convention
+was held in Buffalo and among others Fanny Gaylord,
+Mary Field and myself attended. We had a
+fine time and were entertained at the home of Mr.
+and Mrs. Sexton. Her mother is living with her,
+a dear old lady who was Judge Atwater&#8217;s daughter
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_173'></a>173</span>and used to go to school to Grandfather Beals. We
+went with other delegates on an excursion to
+Niagara Falls and went into the express office at the
+R. R. station to see Grant Schley, who is express
+agent there. He said it seemed good to see so many
+home faces.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>September</i> 1.&mdash;My war letters come from Georgetown
+Hospital now. Mr. Noah T. Clarke is very
+anxious and sends telegrams to Andrew Chesebro
+every day to go and see his brother.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>September</i> 30.&mdash;To-day the &#8220;Benjamin&#8221; of the
+family reached home under the care of Dr. J. Byron
+Hayes, who was sent to Washington after him. I
+went over to Mr. Noah T. Clarke&#8217;s to see him and
+found him just a shadow of his former self. However,
+&#8220;hope springs eternal in the human breast&#8221;
+and he says he knows he will soon be well again.
+This is his thirtieth birthday and it is glorious that
+he can spend it at home.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>October</i> 1.&mdash;Mr. Noah T. Clarke accompanied
+his brother to-day to the old home in Naples and
+found two other soldier brothers, William and Joseph,
+had just arrived on leave of absence from the
+army so the mother&#8217;s heart sang &#8220;Praise God from
+whom all blessings flow.&#8221; The fourth brother has
+also returned to his home in Illinois, disabled.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_174'></a>174</span><i>November.</i>&mdash;They are holding Union Revival
+Services in town now. One evangelist from out of
+town said he would call personally at the homes and
+ask if all were Christians. Anna told Grandmother
+if he came here she should tell him about her.
+Grandmother said we must each give an account
+for ourselves. Anna said she should tell him about
+her little Grandmother anyway. We saw him coming
+up the walk about 11 <span class='sc'>a.m.</span> and Anna went to
+the door and asked him in. They sat down in the
+parlor and he remarked about the pleasant weather
+and Canandaigua such a beautiful town and the people
+so cultured. She said yes, she found the town
+every way desirable and the people pleasant, though
+she had heard it remarked that strangers found it
+hard to get acquainted and that you had to have
+a residence above the R. R. track and give a satisfactory
+answer as to who your Grandfather was,
+before admittance was granted to the best society.
+He said he had been kindly received everywhere.
+She said &#8220;everybody likes ministers.&#8221; (He was
+quite handsome and young.) He asked her how
+long she had lived here and she told him nearly all
+of her brief existence! She said if he had asked
+her how old she was she would have told him she
+was so young that Will Adams last May was appointed
+her guardian. He asked how many there
+were in the family and she said her Grandmother,
+her sister and herself. He said, &#8220;They are Christians,
+I suppose.&#8221; &#8220;Yes,&#8221; she said, &#8220;my sister is a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_175'></a>175</span>S. S. teacher and my Grandmother was born a
+Christian, about 80 years ago.&#8221; &#8220;Indeed,&#8221; he said.
+&#8220;I would like to see her.&#8221; Anna said she would
+have to be excused as she seldom saw company.
+When he arose to go he said, &#8220;My dear young lady,
+I trust that you are a Christian.&#8221; &#8220;Mercy yes,&#8221;
+she said, &#8220;years ago.&#8221; He said he was very glad
+and hoped she would let her light shine. She said
+that was what she was always doing&mdash;that the other
+night at a revival meeting she sang every verse of
+every hymn and came home feeling as though she
+had herself personally rescued by hand at least fifty
+&#8220;from sin and the grave.&#8221; He smiled approvingly
+and bade her good bye. She told Grandmother she
+presumed he would say &#8220;he had not found so great
+faith, no not in Israel.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>We have Teachers&#8217; meetings now and Mrs.
+George Wilson leads and instructs us on the Sunday
+School lesson for the following Sunday. We met
+at Mrs. Worthington&#8217;s this evening. I think Mrs.
+Wilson knows Barnes&#8217; notes, Cruden&#8217;s Concordance,
+the Westminster Catechism and the Bible from beginning
+to end.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+<a id='c1865'></a>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_176'></a>176</span>
+<p class='cln0'>1865</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>March</i> 5.&mdash;I have just read President Lincoln&#8217;s
+second inaugural address. It only takes five minutes
+to read it but, oh, how much it contains.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>March</i> 20.&mdash;Hardly a day passes that we do not
+hear news of Union victories. Every one predicts
+that the war is nearly at an end.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>March</i> 29.&mdash;An officer arrived here from the
+front yesterday and he said that, on Saturday morning,
+shortly after the battle commenced which resulted
+so gloriously for the Union in front of Petersburg,
+President Lincoln, accompanied by General
+Grant and staff, started for the battlefield, and
+reached there in time to witness the close of the
+contest and the bringing in of the prisoners. His
+presence was immediately recognized and created
+the most intense enthusiasm. He afterwards rode
+over the battlefield, listened to the report of General
+Parke to General Grant, and added his thanks for
+the great service rendered in checking the onslaught
+of the rebels and in capturing so many of their number.
+I read this morning the order of Secretary
+Stanton for the flag raising on Fort Sumter. It
+reads thus: &#8220;War department, Adjutant General&#8217;s
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_177'></a>177</span>office, Washington, March 27th, 1865, General Orders
+No. 50. Ordered, first: That at the hour of
+noon, on the 14th day of April, 1865, Brevet Major
+General Anderson will raise and plant upon the
+ruins of Fort Sumter, in Charleston Harbor, the
+same U. S. Flag which floated over the battlements
+of this fort during the rebel assault, and which was
+lowered and saluted by him and the small force of
+his command when the works were evacuated on the
+14th day of April, 1861. Second, That the flag,
+when raised be saluted by 100 guns from Fort Sumter
+and by a national salute from every fort and
+rebel battery that fired upon Fort Sumter. Third,
+That suitable ceremonies be had upon the occasion,
+under the direction of Major-General William T.
+Sherman, whose military operations compelled the
+rebels to evacuate Charleston, or, in his absence,
+under the charge of Major-General Q. A. Gillmore,
+commanding the department. Among the ceremonies
+will be the delivery of a public address by the
+Rev. Henry Ward Beecher. Fourth, That the naval
+forces at Charleston and their Commander on that
+station be invited to participate in the ceremonies
+of the occasion. By order of the President of the
+United States. E. M. Stanton, Secretary of
+War.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>April,</i> 1865.&mdash;What a month this has been. On
+the 6th of April Governor Fenton issued this proclamation:
+&#8220;Richmond has fallen. The wicked men
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_178'></a>178</span>who governed the so-called Confederate States have
+fled their capital, shorn of their power and influence.
+The rebel armies have been defeated, broken and
+scattered. Victory everywhere attends our banners
+and our armies, and we are rapidly moving to
+the closing scenes of the war. Through the self-sacrifice
+and heroic devotion of our soldiers, the
+life of the republic has been saved and the American
+Union preserved. I, Reuben E. Fenton, Governor
+of the State of New York, do designate Friday, the
+14th of April, the day appointed for the ceremony
+of raising the United States flag on Fort
+Sumter, as a day of Thanksgiving, prayer and praise
+to Almighty God, for the signal blessings we have
+received at His hands.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Saturday, April</i> 8.&mdash;The cannon has fired a salute
+of thirty-six guns to celebrate the fall of Richmond.
+This evening the streets were thronged with men,
+women and children all acting crazy as if they had
+not the remotest idea where they were or what they
+were doing. Atwater block was beautifully lighted
+and the band was playing in front of it. On the
+square they fired guns, and bonfires were lighted in
+the streets. Gov. Clark&#8217;s house was lighted from
+the very garret and they had a transparency in front,
+with &#8220;Richmond&#8221; on it, which Fred Thompson
+made. We didn&#8217;t even light &#8220;our other candle,&#8221;
+for Grandmother said she preferred to keep Saturday
+night and pity and pray for the poor suffering,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_179'></a>179</span>wounded soldiers, who are so apt to be forgotten in
+the hour of victory.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday Evening, April</i> 9.&mdash;There were great
+crowds at church this morning. Dr. Daggett&#8217;s text
+was from Prov. 18: 10: &#8220;The name of the Lord
+is a strong tower; the righteous runneth into it,
+and is safe.&#8221; It was a very fine sermon. They
+sang hymns relating to our country and Dr. Daggett&#8217;s
+prayers were full of thanksgiving. Mr. Noah
+T. Clarke had the chapel decorated with flags and
+opened the Sunday School by singing, &#8220;Marching
+On,&#8221; &#8220;My Country, &#8217;tis of Thee,&#8221; &#8220;The Star
+Spangled Banner,&#8221; &#8220;Glory, Hallelujah,&#8221; etc. Hon.
+Wm. H. Lamport talked very pleasantly and paid a
+very touching tribute to the memory of the boys,
+who had gone out to defend their country, who
+would never come &#8220;marching home again.&#8221; He
+lost his only son, 18 years old (in the 126th), about
+two years ago. I sat near Mary and Emma
+Wheeler and felt so sorry for them. They could
+not sing.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Monday Morning, April</i> 10.&mdash;&#8220;Whether I am in
+the body, or out of the body, I know not, but one
+thing I know,&#8221; Lee has surrendered! and all the
+people seem crazy in consequence. The bells are
+ringing, boys and girls, men and women are running
+through the streets wild with excitement; the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_180'></a>180</span>flags are all flying, one from the top of our church,
+and such a &#8220;hurrah boys&#8221; generally, I never
+dreamed of. We were quietly eating our breakfast
+this morning about 7 o&#8217;clock, when our church bell
+commenced to ring, then the Methodist bell, and now
+all the bells in town are ringing. Mr. Noah T.
+Clarke ran by, all excitement, and I don&#8217;t believe
+he knows where he is. No school to-day. I saw
+Capt. Aldrich passing, so I rushed to the window
+and he waved his hat. I raised the window
+and asked him what was the matter? He came to
+the front door where I met him and he almost shook
+my hand off and said, &#8220;The war is over. We have
+Lee&#8217;s surrender, with his own name signed.&#8221; I am
+going down town now, to see for myself, what is
+going on. Later&mdash;I have returned and I never saw
+such performances in my life. Every man has a
+bell or a horn, and every girl a flag and a little bell,
+and every one is tied with red, white and blue ribbons.
+I am going down town again now, with my
+flag in one hand and bell in the other and make all
+the noise I can. Mr. Noah T. Clarke and other
+leading citizens are riding around on a dray cart
+with great bells in their hands ringing them as hard
+as they can. Dr. Cook beat upon an old gong.
+The latest musical instrument invented is called the
+&#8220;Jerusalem fiddle.&#8221; Some boys put a dry goods
+box upon a cart, put some rosin on the edge of the
+box and pulled a piece of timber back and forth
+across it, making most unearthly sounds. They
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_181'></a>181</span>drove through all the streets, Ed Lampman riding
+on the horse and driving it.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Monday evening, April</i> 10.&mdash;I have been out
+walking for the last hour and a half, looking at the
+brilliant illuminations, transparencies and everything
+else and I don&#8217;t believe I was ever so tired in
+my life. The bells have not stopped ringing more
+than five minutes all day and every one is glad to
+see Canandaigua startled out of its propriety for
+once. Every yard of red, white and blue ribbon in
+the stores has been sold, also every candle and every
+flag. One society worked hard all the afternoon
+making transparencies and then there were no candles
+to put in to light them, but they will be ready
+for the next celebration when peace is proclaimed.
+The Court House, Atwater Block, and hotel have
+about two dozen candles in each window throughout,
+besides flags and mottoes of every description. It
+is certainly the best impromptu display ever gotten
+up in this town. &#8220;Victory is Grant-ed,&#8221; is in large
+red, white and blue letters in front of Atwater
+Block. The speeches on the square this morning
+were all very good. Dr. Daggett commenced with
+prayer, and such a prayer, I wish all could have
+heard it. Hon. Francis Granger, E. G. Lapham,
+Judge Smith, Alexander Howell, Noah T. Clarke
+and others made speeches and we sang &#8220;Old Hundred&#8221;
+in conclusion, and Rev. Dr. Hibbard dismissed
+us with the benediction. I shook hands with
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_182'></a>182</span>Mr. Noah T. Clarke, but he told me to be careful and
+not hurt him, for he blistered his hands to-day ringing
+that bell. He says he is going to keep the bell
+for his grandchildren. Between the speeches on the
+square this morning a song was called for and Gus
+Coleman mounted the steps and started &#8220;John
+Brown&#8221; and all the assembly joined in the chorus,
+&#8220;Glory, Hallelujah.&#8221; This has been a never to be
+forgotten day.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>April</i> 15.&mdash;The news came this morning that our
+dear president, Abraham Lincoln, was assassinated
+yesterday, on the day appointed for thanksgiving
+for Union victories. I have felt sick over it all day
+and so has every one that I have seen. All seem
+to feel as though they had lost a personal friend,
+and tears flow plenteously. How soon has sorrow
+followed upon the heels of joy! One week ago to-night
+we were celebrating our victories with loud
+acclamations of mirth and good cheer. Now every
+one is silent and sad and the earth and heavens seem
+clothed in sack-cloth. The bells have been tolling
+this afternoon. The flags are all at half mast,
+draped with mourning, and on every store and
+dwelling-house some sign of the nation&#8217;s loss is
+visible. Just after breakfast this morning, I looked
+out of the window and saw a group of men listening
+to the reading of a morning paper, and I feared
+from their silent, motionless interest that something
+dreadful had happened, but I was not prepared to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_183'></a>183</span>hear of the cowardly murder of our President.
+And William H. Seward, too, I suppose cannot survive
+his wounds. Oh, how horrible it is! I went
+down town shortly after I heard the news, and it
+was wonderful to see the effect of the intelligence
+upon everybody, small or great, rich or poor.
+Every one was talking low, with sad and anxious
+looks. But we know that God still reigns and will
+do what is best for us all. Perhaps we&#8217;re &#8220;putting
+our trust too much in princes,&#8221; forgetting the Great
+Ruler, who alone can create or destroy, and therefore
+He has taken from us the arm of flesh that
+we may lean more confidingly and entirely upon
+Him. I trust that the men who committed
+these foul deeds will soon be brought to justice.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday, Easter Day, April</i> 16.&mdash;I went to church
+this morning. The pulpit and choir-loft were covered
+with flags festooned with crape. Although a
+very disagreeable day, the house was well filled.
+The first hymn sung was &#8220;Oh God our help in ages
+past, our hope for years to come.&#8221; Dr. Daggett&#8217;s
+prayer, I can never forget, he alluded so beautifully
+to the nation&#8217;s loss, and prayed so fervently that the
+God of our fathers might still be our God, through
+every calamity or affliction, however severe or mysterious.
+All seemed as deeply affected as though
+each one had been suddenly bereft of his best
+friend. The hymn sung after the prayer, commenced
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_184'></a>184</span>with &#8220;Yes, the Redeemer rose.&#8221; Dr. Daggett
+said that he had intended to preach a sermon
+upon the resurrection. He read the psalm beginning,
+&#8220;Lord, Thou hast been our dwelling-place in
+all generations.&#8221; His text was &#8220;That our faith
+and hope might be in God.&#8221; He commenced by
+saying, &#8220;I feel as you feel this morning: our sad
+hearts have all throbbed in unison since yesterday
+morning when the telegram announced to us Abraham
+Lincoln is shot.&#8221; He said the last week would
+never be forgotten, for never had any of us seen
+one come in with so much joy, that went out with
+so much sorrow. His whole sermon related to the
+President&#8217;s life and death, and, in conclusion, he
+exhorted us not to be despondent, for he was confident
+that the ship of state would not go down,
+though the helmsman had suddenly been taken away
+while the promised land was almost in view. He
+prayed for our new President, that he might be filled
+with grace and power from on High, to perform
+his high and holy trust. On Thursday we are to
+have a union meeting in our church, but it will not
+be the day of general rejoicing and thanksgiving we
+expected. All noisy demonstrations will be omitted.
+In Sunday school the desk was draped with mourning,
+and the flag at half-mast was also festooned
+with crape. Mr. Noah T. Clarke opened the exercises
+with the hymn &#8220;He leadeth me,&#8221; followed by
+&#8220;Though the days are dark with sorrow,&#8221; &#8220;We
+know not what&#8217;s before us,&#8221; &#8220;My days are gliding
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_185'></a>185</span>swiftly by.&#8221; Then, Mr. Clarke said that we always
+meant to sing &#8220;America,&#8221; after every victory, and
+last Monday he was wondering if we would not
+have to sing it twice to-day, or add another verse,
+but our feelings have changed since then. Nevertheless
+he thought we had better sing &#8220;America,&#8221;
+for we certainly ought to love our country more
+than ever, now that another, and such another, martyr,
+had given up his life for it. So we sang it.
+Then he talked to the children and said that last
+Friday was supposed to be the anniversary of the
+day upon which our Lord was crucified, and though,
+at the time the dreadful deed was committed, every
+one felt the day to be the darkest one the earth
+ever knew; yet since then, the day has been called
+&#8220;Good Friday,&#8221; for it was the death of Christ
+which gave life everlasting to all the people. So he
+thought that life would soon come out of darkness,
+which now overshadows us all, and that the
+death of Abraham Lincoln might yet prove
+the nation&#8217;s life in God&#8217;s own most mysterious
+way.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Wednesday evening, April</i> 19, 1865.&mdash;This being
+the day set for the funeral of Abraham Lincoln at
+Washington, it was decided to hold the service to-day,
+instead of Thursday, as previously announced
+in the Congregational church. All places of business
+were closed and the bells of the village churches
+tolled from half past ten till eleven o&#8217;clock. It is
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_186'></a>186</span>the fourth anniversary of the first bloodshed of the
+war at Baltimore. It was said to-day, that while
+the services were being held in the White House
+and Lincoln&#8217;s body lay in state under the dome
+of the capitol, that more than twenty-five millions
+of people all over the civilized world were gathered
+in their churches weeping over the death of the martyred
+President. We met at our church at half
+after ten o&#8217;clock this morning. The bells tolled
+until eleven o&#8217;clock, when the services commenced.
+The church was beautifully decorated with flags
+and black and white cloth, wreaths, mottoes and
+flowers, the galleries and all. The whole effect
+was fine. There was a shield beneath the arch
+of the pulpit with this text upon it: &#8220;The memory
+of the just is blessed.&#8221; It was beautiful.
+Under the choir-loft the picture of Abraham
+Lincoln hung amid the flags and drapery. The
+motto, beneath the gallery, was this text: &#8220;Know
+ye that the Lord He is God.&#8221; The four pastors
+of the place walked in together and took seats upon
+the platform, which was constructed for the occasion.
+The choir chanted &#8220;Lord, Thou hast been
+our dwelling-place in all generations,&#8221; and then the
+Episcopal rector, Rev. Mr. Leffingwell, read from
+the psalter, and Rev. Dr. Daggett followed with
+prayer. Judge Taylor was then called upon for
+a short address, and he spoke well, as he always
+does. The choir sang &#8220;God is our refuge and our
+strength.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_187'></a>187</span><i>Thursday, April</i> 20.&mdash;The papers are full of the
+account of the funeral obsequies of President Lincoln.
+We take Harper&#8217;s Weekly and every event
+is pictured so vividly it seems as though we were eye
+witnesses of it all. The picture of &#8220;Lincoln at
+home&#8221; is beautiful. What a dear, kind man he
+was. It is a comfort to know that the assassination
+was not the outcome of an organized plot of
+Southern leaders, but rather a conspiracy of a few
+fanatics, who undertook in this way to avenge the
+defeat of their cause. It is rumored that one of
+the conspirators has been located.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>April</i> 24.&mdash;Fannie Gaylord and Kate Lapham
+have returned from their eastern trip and told us
+of attending the President&#8217;s funeral in Albany, and
+I had a letter from Bessie Seymour, who is in New
+York, saying that she walked in the procession until
+half past two in the morning, in order to see his
+face. They say that they never saw him in life, but
+in death he looked just as all the pictures represent
+him. We all wear Lincoln badges now, with pin
+attached. They are pictures of Lincoln upon a tiny
+flag, bordered with crape. Susie Daggett has just
+made herself a flag, six feet by four. It was a lot
+of work. Mrs. Noah T. Clarke gave one to her
+husband upon his birthday, April 8. I think everybody
+ought to own a flag.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>April</i> 26.&mdash;Now we have the news that J. Wilkes
+Booth, who shot the President and who has been
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_188'></a>188</span>concealing himself in Virginia, has been caught, and
+refusing to surrender was shot dead. It has taken
+just twelve days to bring him to retribution. I am
+glad that he is dead if he could not be taken alive,
+but it seems as though shooting was too good for
+him. However, we may as well take this as really
+God&#8217;s way, as the death of the President, for if
+he had been taken alive, the country would have
+been so furious to get at him and tear him to pieces
+the turmoil would have been great and desperate.
+It may be the best way to dispose of him. Of
+course, it is best, or it would not be so. Mr. Morse
+called this evening and he thinks Booth was shot by
+a lot of cowards. The flags have been flying all
+day, since the news came, but all, excepting Albert
+Granger, seem sorry that he was not disabled instead
+of being shot dead. Albert seems able to look into
+the &#8220;beyond&#8221; and also to locate departed spirits.
+His &#8220;latest&#8221; is that he is so glad that Booth got
+to h&mdash;l before Abraham Lincoln got to Springfield.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Fred Thompson went down to New York
+last Saturday and while stopping a few minutes at
+St. Johnsville, he heard a man crowing over the
+death of the President. Mr. Thompson marched up
+to him, collared him and landed him nicely in the
+gutter. The bystanders were delighted and carried
+the champion to a platform and called for a speech,
+which was given. Quite a little episode. Every
+one who hears the story, says: &#8220;Three cheers for
+F. F. Thompson.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_189'></a>189</span>The other afternoon at our society Kate Lapham
+wanted to divert our minds from gossip I think,
+and so started a discussion upon the respective characters
+of Washington and Napoleon. It was just
+after supper and Laura Chapin was about resuming
+her sewing and she exclaimed, &#8220;Speaking of Washington,
+makes me think that I ought to wash
+my hands,&#8221; so she left the room for that purpose.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>May</i> 7.&mdash;Anna and I wore our new poke bonnets
+to church this morning and thought we looked quite
+&#8220;scrumptious,&#8221; but Grandmother said after we got
+home, if she had realized how unbecoming they
+were to us and to the house of the Lord, she could
+not have countenanced them enough to have sat in
+the same pew. However, she tried to agree with
+Dr. Daggett in his text, &#8220;It is good for us to be
+here.&#8221; It was the first time in a month that he
+had not preached about the affairs of the Nation.</p>
+
+<p>In the afternoon the Sacrament was administered
+and Rev. A. D. Eddy, D. D., who was pastor from
+1823 to 1835, was present and officiated. Deacon
+Castle and Deacon Hayes passed the communion.
+Dr. Eddy concluded the services with some personal
+memories. He said that forty-two years ago last
+November, he presided upon a similar occasion for
+the first time in his life and it was in this very
+church. He is now the only surviving male member
+who was present that day, but there are six
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_190'></a>190</span>women living, and Grandmother is one of the
+six.</p>
+
+<p>The Monthly Concert of Prayer for Missions was
+held in the chapel in the evening. Dr. Daggett told
+us that the collection taken for missions during the
+past year amounted to $500. He commended us
+and said it was the largest sum raised in one year
+for this purpose in the twenty years of his pastorate.
+Dr. Eddy then said that in contrast he would tell
+us that the collection for missions the first year he
+was here, amounted to $5, and that he was advised
+to touch very lightly upon the subject in his appeals
+as it was not a popular theme with the majority of
+the people. One member, he said, annexed three
+ciphers to his name when asked to subscribe to a
+missionary document which was circulated, and another
+man replied thus to an appeal for aid in evangelizing
+a portion of Asia: &#8220;If you want to send
+a missionary to Jerusalem, Yates county, I will
+contribute, but not a cent to go to the other side
+of the world.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Rev. C. H. A. Buckley was present also and gave
+an interesting talk. By way of illustration, he said
+he knew a small boy who had been earning twenty-five
+cents a week for the heathen by giving up eating
+butter. The other day he seemed to think that his
+generosity, as well as his self-denial, had reached
+the utmost limit and exclaimed as he sat at the table,
+&#8220;I think the heathen have had gospel enough, please
+pass the butter.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_191'></a>191</span><i>May</i> 10.&mdash;Jeff Davis was captured to-day at
+Irwinsville, Ga., when he was attempting to escape
+in woman&#8217;s apparel. Mr. Green drew a picture
+of him, and Mr. Finley made photographs
+from it. We bought one as a souvenir of the
+war.</p>
+
+<p>The big headlines in the papers this morning say,
+&#8220;The hunt is up. He brandisheth a bowie-knife
+but yieldeth to six solid arguments. At Irwinsville,
+Ga., about daylight on the 10th instant, Col. Prichard,
+commanding the 4th Michigan Cavalry, captured
+Jeff Davis, family and staff. They will be
+forwarded under strong guard without delay.&#8221;
+The flags have been flying all day, and every one
+is about as pleased over the manner of his capture
+as over the fact itself. Lieutenant Hathaway, one
+of the staff, is a friend of Mr. Manning Wells, and
+he was pretty sure he would follow Davis, so we
+were not surprised to see his name among the captured.
+Mr. Wells says he is as fine a horseman as
+he ever saw.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Monday evg., May</i> 22.&mdash;I went to Teachers&#8217;
+meeting at Mrs. Worthington&#8217;s to-night. Mrs.
+George Willson is the leader and she told us at the
+last meeting to be prepared this evening to give our
+opinion in regard to the repentance of Solomon before
+he died. We concluded that he did repent
+although the Bible does not absolutely say so.
+Grandmother thinks such questions are unprofitable,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_192'></a>192</span>as we would better be repenting of our sins, instead
+of hunting up Solomon&#8217;s at this late day.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>May</i> 23.&mdash;We arise about 5:30 nowadays and
+Anna does not like it very well. I asked her why
+she was not as good natured as usual to-day and
+she said it was because she got up &#8220;s&#8217;urly.&#8221; She
+thinks Solomon must have been acquainted with
+Grandmother when he wrote &#8220;She ariseth while it
+is yet night and giveth meat to her household and
+a portion to her maidens.&#8221; Patrick Burns, the
+&#8220;poet,&#8221; who has also been our man of all work
+the past year, has left us to go into Mr. McKechnie&#8217;s
+employ. He seemed to feel great regret when he
+bade us farewell and told us he never lived in a better
+regulated home than ours and he hoped his successor
+would take the same interest in us that he
+had. Perhaps he will give us a recommendation!
+He left one of his poems as a souvenir. It is entitled,
+&#8220;There will soon be an end to the war,&#8221; written
+in March, hence a prophecy. He said Mr.
+Morse had read it and pronounced it &#8220;tip top.&#8221; It
+was mostly written in capitals and I asked him
+if he followed any rule in regard to their use.
+He said &#8220;Oh, yes, always begin a line with one and
+then use your own discretion with the rest.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>May</i> 25.&mdash;I wish that I could have been in Washington
+this week, to have witnessed the grand review
+of Meade&#8217;s and Sherman&#8217;s armies. The newspaper
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_193'></a>193</span>accounts are most thrilling. The review commenced
+on Tuesday morning and lasted two days.
+It took over six hours for Meade&#8217;s army to pass the
+grand stand, which was erected in front of the
+President&#8217;s house. It was witnessed by the President,
+Generals Grant, Meade, and Sherman, Secretary
+Stanton, and many others in high authority.
+At ten o&#8217;clock, Wednesday morning, Sherman&#8217;s
+army commenced to pass in review. His men did
+not show the signs of hardship and suffering which
+marked the appearance of the Army of the Potomac.
+The scenes enacted were historic and wonderful.
+Flags were flying everywhere and windows,
+doorsteps and sidewalks were crowded with
+people, eager to get a view of the grand armies.
+The city was as full of strangers, who had come
+to see the sight, as on Inauguration Day. Very
+soon, all that are left of the companies, who went
+from here, will be marching home, &#8220;with glad and
+gallant tread.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>June</i> 3.&mdash;I was invited up to Sonnenberg yesterday
+and Lottie and Abbie Clark called for me at
+5:30 <span class='sc'>p.m.</span>, with their pony and democrat wagon.
+Jennie Rankine was the only other lady present and,
+for a wonder, the party consisted of six gentlemen
+and five ladies, which has not often been the case
+during the war. After supper we adjourned to the
+lawn and played croquet, a new game which Mr.
+Thompson just brought from New York. It is
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_194'></a>194</span>something like billiards, only a mallet is used instead
+of a cue to hit the balls. I did not like it very
+well, because I couldn&#8217;t hit the balls through the
+wickets as I wanted to. &#8220;We&#8221; sang all the songs,
+patriotic and sentimental, that we could think of.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Lyon came to call upon me to-day, before he
+returned to New York. He is a very pleasant
+young man. I told him that I regretted that I could
+not sing yesterday, when all the others did, and
+that the reason that I made no attempts in that line
+was due to the fact that one day in church, when
+I thought I was singing a very good alto, my grandfather
+whispered to me, and said: &#8220;Daughter,
+you are off the key,&#8221; and ever since then, I had sung
+with the spirit and with the understanding, but not
+with my voice. He said perhaps I could get some
+one to do my singing for me, some day. I told him
+he was very kind to give me so much encouragement.
+Anna went to a Y.M.C.A. meeting last evening at
+our chapel and said, when the hymn &#8220;Rescue the
+perishing,&#8221; was given out, she just &#8220;raised her
+Ebenezer&#8221; and sang every verse as hard as she
+could. The meeting was called in behalf of a
+young man who has been around town for the past
+few days, with only one arm, who wants to be a minister
+and sells sewing silk and needles and writes
+poetry during vacation to help himself along. I have
+had a cough lately and Grandmother decided yesterday
+to send for the doctor. He placed me in a chair
+and thumped my lungs and back and listened to my
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_195'></a>195</span>breathing while Grandmother sat near and watched
+him in silence, but finally she said, &#8220;Caroline isn&#8217;t
+used to being pounded!&#8221; The doctor smiled and
+said he would be very careful, but the treatment was
+not so severe as it seemed. After he was gone, we
+asked Grandmother if she liked him and she said
+yes, but if she had known of his &#8220;new-fangled&#8221;
+notions and that he wore a full beard she might
+not have sent for him! Because Dr. Carr was
+clean-shaven and also Grandfather and Dr. Daggett,
+and all of the Grangers, she thinks that is the
+only proper way. What a funny little lady she is!</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>June</i> 8.&mdash;There have been unusual attractions
+down town for the past two days. About 5 <span class='sc'>p.m.</span>
+a man belonging to the Ravel troupe walked a rope,
+stretched across Main street from the third story
+of the Webster House to the chimney of the building
+opposite. He is said to be Blondin&#8217;s only rival
+and certainly performed some extraordinary feats.
+He walked across and then returned backwards.
+Then took a wheel-barrow across and returned with
+it backwards. He went across blindfolded with a
+bag over his head. Then he attached a short
+trapeze to the rope and performed all sorts of gymnastics.
+There were at least 1,000 people in the
+street and in the windows gazing at him. Grandmother
+says that she thinks all such performances
+are wicked, tempting Providence to win the applause
+of men. Nothing would induce her to look upon
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_196'></a>196</span>such things. She is a born reformer and would
+abolish all such schemes. This morning she wanted
+us to read the 11th chapter of Hebrews to her, about
+faith, and when we had finished the forty verses,
+Anna asked her what was the difference between
+her and Moses. Grandmother said there were many
+points of difference. Anna was not found in the
+bulrushes and she was not adopted by a king&#8217;s
+daughter. Anna said she was thinking how the
+verse read, &#8220;Moses was a proper child,&#8221; and she
+could not remember having ever done anything
+strictly &#8220;proper&#8221; in her life. I noticed that Grandmother
+did not contradict her, but only smiled.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>June</i> 13.&mdash;Van Amburgh&#8217;s circus was in town
+to-day and crowds attended and many of our most
+highly respected citizens, but Grandmother had
+other things for us to consider.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>June</i> 16.&mdash;The census man for this town is Mr.
+Jeudevine. He called here to-day and was very inquisitive,
+but I think I answered all of his questions
+although I could not tell him the exact amount
+of my property. Grandmother made us laugh to-day
+when we showed her a picture of the Siamese
+twins, and I said, &#8220;Grandmother, if I had been
+their mother I should have cut them apart when they
+were babies, wouldn&#8217;t you?&#8221; The dear little lady
+looked up so bright and said, &#8220;If I had been Mrs.
+Siam, I presume I should have done just as she did.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_197'></a>197</span>I don&#8217;t believe that we will be as amusing as she
+is when we are 82 years old.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Saturday, July</i> 8.&mdash;What excitement there must
+have been in Washington yesterday over the execution
+of the conspirators. It seems terrible that Mrs.
+Surratt should have deserved hanging with the
+others. I saw a picture of them all upon a scaffold
+and her face was screened by an umbrella. I read
+in one paper that the doctor who dressed Booth&#8217;s
+broken leg was sentenced to the Dry Tortugas.
+Jefferson Davis, I suppose, is glad to have nothing
+worse served upon him, thus far, than confinement
+in Fortress Monroe. It is wonderful that 800,000
+men are returning so quietly from the army to civil
+life that it is scarcely known, save by the welcome
+which they receive in their own homes.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>July</i> 16.&mdash;Rev. Dr. Buddington, of Brooklyn,
+preached to-day. His wife was Miss Elizabeth
+Willson, Clara Coleman&#8217;s sister. My Sunday
+School book is &#8220;Mill on the Floss,&#8221; but Grandmother
+says it is not Sabbath reading, so I am
+stranded for the present.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>December</i> 8.&mdash;Yesterday was Thanksgiving day.
+I do not remember that it was ever observed in
+December before. President Johnson appointed it
+as a day of national thanksgiving for our many
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_198'></a>198</span>blessings as a people, and Governor Fenton and
+several governors of other states have issued proclamations
+in accordance with the President&#8217;s recommendation.
+The weather was very unpleasant, but
+we attended the union thanksgiving service held in
+our church. The choir sang America for the opening
+piece. Dr. Daggett read Miriam&#8217;s song of
+praise: &#8220;The Lord hath triumphed gloriously, the
+horse and his rider hath he thrown into the sea.&#8221;
+Then he offered one of his most eloquent and fervent
+prayers, in which the returned soldiers, many
+of whom are in broken health or maimed for life,
+in consequence of their devotion and loyalty to their
+country, were tenderly remembered. His text was
+from the 126th Psalm, &#8220;The Lord hath done great
+things for us, whereof we are glad.&#8221; It was one of
+his best sermons. He mentioned three things in
+particular which the Lord has done for us,
+whereof we are glad: First, that the war has
+closed; second, that the Union is preserved; third,
+for the abolition of slavery. After the sermon, a
+collection was taken for the poor, and Dr. A. D.
+Eddy, who was present, offered prayer. The choir
+sang an anthem which they had especially prepared
+for the occasion, and then all joined in the doxology.
+Uncle Thomas Beals&#8217; family of four united with our
+three at Thanksgiving dinner. Uncle sent to New
+York for the oysters, and a famous big turkey,
+with all the usual accompaniments, made us a fine
+repast. Anna and Ritie Tyler are reading together
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_199'></a>199</span>Irving&#8217;s Life of Washington, two afternoons each
+week. I wonder how long they will keep it up.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>December</i> 11.&mdash;I have been down town buying
+material for garments for our Home Missionary
+family which we are to make in our society. Anna
+and I were cutting them out and basting them ready
+for sewing, and grandmother told us to save all the
+basting threads when we were through with them
+and tie them and wind them on a spool for use another
+time. Anna, who says she never wants to begin
+anything that she cannot finish in 15 minutes,
+felt rather tired at the prospect of this unexpected
+task and asked Grandmother how she happened to
+contract such economical ideas. Grandmother told
+her that if she and Grandfather had been wasteful
+in their younger days, we would not have any silk
+dresses to wear now. Anna said if that was the
+case she was glad that Grandmother saved the basting
+thread!</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+<a id='c1866'></a>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_200'></a>200</span>
+<p class='cln0'>1866</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>February</i> 13.&mdash;Our brother James was married
+to-day to Louise Livingston James of New York
+City.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>February</i> 20.&mdash;Our society is going to hold a fair
+for the Freedmen, in the Town Hall. Susie Daggett
+and I have been there all day to see about the
+tables and stoves. We got Mrs. Binks to come
+and help us.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>February</i> 21.&mdash;Been at the hall all day, trimming
+the room. Mr. Thompson and Mr. Backus came
+down and if they had not helped us we would not
+have done much. Mr. Backus put up all the principal
+drapery and made it look beautiful.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>February</i> 22.&mdash;At the hall all day. The fair
+opened at 2 <span class='sc'>p.m.</span> We had quite a crowd in the
+evening and took in over three hundred dollars.
+Charlie Hills and Ellsworth Daggett stayed there
+all night to take care of the hall. We had a fish
+pond, a grab-bag and a post-office. Anna says they
+had all the smart people in the post-office to write
+the letters,&mdash;Mr. Morse, Miss Achert, Albert
+Granger and herself. Some one asked Albert
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_201'></a>201</span>Granger if his law business was good and he said
+one man thronged into his office one day.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>February</i> 23.&mdash;We took in two hundred dollars
+to-day at the fair. We wound up with an auction.
+We asked Mrs. George Willson if she could not write
+a poem expressing our thanks to Mr. Backus and
+she stepped aside for about five minutes and handed
+us the following lines which we sent to him. We
+think it is about the nicest thing in the whole fair.</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;In ancient time the God of Wine</p>
+<p>They crowned with vintage of the vine,</p>
+<p>And sung his praise with song and glee</p>
+<p>And all their best of minstrelsy.</p>
+<p>The Backus whom we honor now</p>
+<p>Would scorn to wreathe his generous brow</p>
+<p>With heathen emblems&mdash;better he</p>
+<p>Will love our gratitude to see</p>
+<p>Expressed in all the happy faces</p>
+<p>Assembled in these pleasant places.</p>
+<p>May joy attend his footsteps here</p>
+<p>And crown him in a brighter sphere.&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>February</i> 24.&mdash;Susie Daggett and I went to the
+hall this morning to clean up. We sent back the
+dishes, not one broken, and disposed of everything
+but the tables and stoves, which were to be taken
+away this afternoon. We feel quite satisfied with
+the receipts so far, but the expenses will be considerable.</p>
+
+<p>In <i>Ontario County Times</i> of the following week
+we find this card of thanks:</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_202'></a>202</span><i>February</i> 28.&mdash;The Fair for the benefit of the
+Freedmen, held in the Town Hall on Thursday and
+Friday of last week was eminently successful, and
+the young ladies take this method of returning their
+sincere thanks to the people of Canandaigua and
+vicinity for their generous contributions and liberal
+patronage. It being the first public enterprise in
+which the Society has ventured independently, the
+young ladies were somewhat fearful of the result,
+but having met with such generous responses from
+every quarter they feel assured that they need never
+again doubt of success in any similar attempt so
+long as Canandaigua contains so many large hearts
+and corresponding purses. But our village cannot
+have all the praise this time. The Society is particularly
+indebted to Mr. F. F. Thompson and Mr.
+S. D. Backus of New York City, for their very substantial
+aid, not only in gifts and unstinted patronage,
+but for their invaluable labor in the decoration
+of the hall and conduct of the Fair. But for them
+most of the manual labor would have fallen upon
+the ladies. The thanks of the Society are especially
+due, also, to those ladies who assisted personally
+with their superior knowledge and older
+experience. Also to Mr. W. P. Fiske for his valuable
+services as cashier, and to Messrs. Daggett,
+Chapin and Hills for services at the door; and to all
+the little boys and girls who helped in so many ways.</p>
+
+<p>The receipts amounted to about $490, and thanks
+to our cashier, the money is all good, and will soon
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_203'></a>203</span>be on its way carrying substantial visions of something
+to eat and to wear to at least a few of the poor
+Freedmen of the South.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<table summary='blockquote' style='margin:0 0 0 auto'>
+<tr><td>By order of Society,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<span class='sc'>Carrie C. Richards,</span> <i>Pres&#8217;t.</i><br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<span class='sc'>Emma H. Wheeler,</span> <i>Sec&#8217;y.</i>
+</td></tr></table>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>Mr. Editor</span>&mdash;I expected to see an account of the
+Young Ladies&#8217; Fair in your last number, but only
+saw a very handsome acknowledgment by the ladies
+to the citizens. Your &#8220;local&#8221; must have been absent;
+and I beg the privilege in behalf of myself and many
+others of doing tardy justice to the successful efforts
+of the Aid Society at their debut February 22nd.</p>
+
+<p>Gotham furnished an artist and an architect, and
+the Society did the rest. The decorations were in
+excellent taste, and so were the young ladies. The
+eatables were very toothsome. The skating pond was
+never in better condition. On entering the hall I
+paused first before the table of toys, fancy work and
+perfumery. Here was the President, and I hope I
+shall be pardoned for saying that no President since
+the days of Washington can compare with the President
+of this Society. Then I visited a candy table,
+and hesitated a long time before deciding which I
+would rather eat, the delicacies that were sold, or the
+charming creatures who sold them. One delicious
+morsel, in a pink silk, was so tempting that I seriously
+contemplated eating her with a spoon&mdash;waterfall and
+all. [By the way, how do we know that the Romans
+wore waterfalls? Because Marc Antony, in his
+funeral oration on Mr. C&aelig;sar, exclaimed, &#8220;O water
+fall was there, my countrymen!&#8221;] At this point my
+attention was attracted by a fish pond. I tried my luck,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_204'></a>204</span>caught a whale, and seeing all my friends beginning
+to blubber, I determined to visit the old woman who
+lived in a shoe.&mdash;She was very glad to see me. I
+bought one of her children, which the Society can
+redeem for $1,000 in smoking caps.</p>
+
+<p>The fried oysters were delicious; a great many
+of the bivalves got into a stew, and I helped several
+of them out. Delicate ice cream, nicely &#8220;baked in
+cowld ovens,&#8221; was destroyed in immense quantities.
+I scream when I remember the plates full I devoured,
+and the number of bright women to whom I paid my
+devours. Beautiful cigar girls sold fragrant Havanas,
+and bit off the ends at five cents apiece, extra. The
+fair post-mistress and her fair clerks, so fair that they
+were almost fairies, drove a very thriving business.</p>
+
+<p>It was altogether a &#8220;great moral show.&#8221;&mdash;Let no
+man say hereafter that the young ladies of Canandaigua
+are uneducated in all that makes women lovely
+and useful. Anna Dickinson has no mission to this
+town. The members of this Society have won the admiration
+of all their friends, and especially of the most
+devoted of their servants,</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:right;'>Q. E. D.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>If I had written that article, I should have given
+the praise to Susie Daggett, for it belongs to her.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday, June</i> 24.&mdash;My Sunday School scholars
+are learning the shorter catechism. One recited
+thirty-five answers to questions to-day, another
+twenty-six, another twenty, the others eleven.
+Very well indeed. They do not see why it is called
+the &#8220;shorter&#8221; Catechism! They all had their ambrotypes
+taken with me yesterday at Finley&#8217;s&mdash;Mary
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_205'></a>205</span>Hoyt, Fannie and Ella Lyon, Ella Wood, Ella Van
+Tyne, Mary Vanderbrook, Jennie Whitlaw and
+Katie Neu. They are all going to dress in white
+and sit on the front seat in church at my wedding.
+Grandmother had Mrs. Gooding make individual
+fruit cakes for each of them and also some for each
+member of our sewing society.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Thursday, June</i> 21.&mdash;We went to a lawn fete at
+Mrs. F. F. Thompson&#8217;s this afternoon. It was a
+beautiful sight. The flowers, the grounds, the
+young people and the music all combined to make
+the occasion perfect.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Note:</i> Canandaigua is the summer home of Mrs.
+Thompson, who has previously given the village a
+children&#8217;s playground, a swimming school, a hospital
+and a home for the aged, and this year (1911) has presented
+a park as a beauty spot at foot of Canandaigua
+Lake.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>June</i> 28.&mdash;Dear Abbie Clark and Captain Williams
+were married in the Congregational church
+this evening. The church was trimmed beautifully
+and Abbie looked sweet. We attended the reception
+afterwards at her house. &#8220;May calm and sunshine
+hallow their clasped hands.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>July</i> 15.&mdash;The girls of the Society have sent me
+my flag bed quilt, which they have just finished. It
+was hard work quilting such hot days but it is done
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_206'></a>206</span>beautifully. Bessie Seymour wrote the names on
+the stars. In the center they used six stars for
+&#8220;Three rousing cheers for the Union.&#8221; The names
+on the others are Sarah McCabe, Mary Paul, Fannie
+Paul, Fannie Palmer, Nettie Palmer, Susie Daggett,
+Fannie Pierce, Sarah Andrews, Lottie Clark, Abbie
+Williams, Carrie Lamport, Isadore Blodgett, Nannie
+Corson, Laura Chapin, Mary F. Fiske, Lucilla F.
+Pratt, Jennie H. Hazard, Sarah H. Foster, Mary
+Jewett, Mary C. Stevens, Etta Smith, Cornelia
+Richards, Ella Hildreth, Emma Wheeler, Mary
+Wheeler, Mrs. Pierce, Alice Jewett, Bessie Seymour,
+Clara Coleman, Julia Phelps. It kept the girls
+busy to get Abbie Clark&#8217;s quilt and mine finished
+within one month. They hope that the rest of the
+girls will postpone their nuptials till there is a
+change in the weather. Mercury stands 90 degrees
+in the shade.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>July</i> 19, 1866.&mdash;Our wedding day. We saw the
+dear little Grandmother, God bless her, watching us
+from the window as we drove away.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='sc'>Alexandria Bay,</span> <i>July</i> 26.&mdash;Anna writes me that
+Charlie Wells said he had always wanted a set of
+Clark&#8217;s Commentaries, but I had carried off the
+entire Ed.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>July</i> 28.&mdash;As we were changing boats at Burlington,
+Vt, for Saratoga, to our surprise, we met Captain
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_207'></a>207</span>and Abbie Williams, but could only stop a moment.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='sc'>Saratoga,</span> 29<i>th.</i>&mdash;We heard Rev. Theodore Cuyler
+preach to-day from the text, &#8220;Demas hath forsaken
+me, having loved this present world.&#8221; He
+leads devotional exercises every morning in the
+parlors of the Columbian Hotel. I spoke to him
+this morning and he said my father was one of his
+best and earliest friends.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='sc'>Canandaigua,</span> <i>September</i> 1.&mdash;A party of us
+went down to the Canandaigua hotel this morning
+to see President Johnson, General Grant and Admiral
+Farragut and other dignitaries. The train
+stopped about half an hour and they all gave brief
+speeches.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>September</i> 2.&mdash;Rev. Darius Sackett preached for
+Dr. Daggett this evening.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+<a id='c1867'></a>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_208'></a>208</span>
+<p class='cln0'>1867</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>July</i> 27.&mdash;Col. James M. Bull was buried from
+the home of Mr. Alexander Howell to-day, as none
+of his family reside here now.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>November</i> 13.&mdash;Our brother John and wife and
+baby Pearl have gone to London, England, to live.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>December</i> 28.&mdash;A large party of Canandaiguans
+went over to Rochester last evening to hear Charles
+Dickens&#8217; lecture, and enjoyed it more than I can
+possibly express. He was quite hoarse and had
+small bills distributed through the Opera House
+with the announcement:</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;margin-top:2em;'>MR. CHARLES DICKENS</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Begs indulgence for a Severe Cold, but hopes its
+effects may not be very perceptible after a few minutes&#8217;
+Reading.</p>
+
+<p>Friday, December 27th, 1867.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>We brought these notices home with us for souvenirs.
+He looks exactly like his pictures. It was
+worth a great deal just to look upon the man who
+wrote Little Dorrit, David Copperfield and all the
+other books, which have delighted us so much. We
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_209'></a>209</span>hope that he will live to write a great many more.
+He spoke very appreciatively of his enthusiastic reception
+in this country and almost apologized for
+some of the opinions that he had expressed in his
+&#8220;American Notes,&#8221; which he published, after his
+first visit here, twenty-five years ago. He evidently
+thinks that the United States of America are quite
+worth while.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+<a id='c1871'></a>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_210'></a>210</span>
+<p class='cln0'>1871</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>August</i> 6.&mdash;Under the auspices of the Y.M.C.A.,
+Hon. George H. Stuart, President of the U. S.
+Christian Commission, spoke in an open air meeting
+on the square this afternoon and in our
+church this evening. The house was packed and
+such eloquence I never heard from mortal lips. He
+ought to be called the Whitefield of America. He
+told of the good the Christian Commission had done
+before the war and since. Such war stories I never
+heard. They took up a collection which must have
+amounted to hundreds of dollars.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+<a id='c1872'></a>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_211'></a>211</span>
+<p class='cln0'>1872</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>Naples, June.</i>&mdash;John has invited Aunt Ann Field,
+and James, his wife and me and Babe Abigail to
+come to England to make them a visit, and we
+expect to sail on the Baltic July sixth.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>On board S.S. Baltic, July</i> 7.&mdash;We left New
+York yesterday under favorable circumstances. It
+was a beautiful summer day, flags were flying and
+everything seemed so joyful we almost forgot we
+were leaving home and native land. There were
+many passengers, among them being Mr. and Mrs.
+Anthony Drexel and U. S. Grant, Jr., who boarded
+the steamer from a tug boat which came down the
+bay alongside when we had been out half an hour.
+President Grant was with him and stood on deck,
+smoking the proverbial cigar. We were glad to
+see him and the passengers gave him three cheers
+and three times three, with the greatest enthusiasm.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Liverpool, July</i> 16.&mdash;We arrived here to-day,
+having been just ten days on the voyage. There
+were many clergymen of note on board, among
+them, Rev. John H. Vincent, D.D., eminent in the
+Methodist Episcopal Church, who is preparing International
+Sunday School lessons. He sat at our
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_212'></a>212</span>table and Philip Phillips also, who is a noted evangelistic
+singer. They held services both Sabbaths,
+July 7 and 15, in the grand saloon of the steamer,
+and also in the steerage where the text was &#8220;And
+they willingly received him into the ship.&#8221; The
+immigrants listened eagerly, when the minister
+urged them all to &#8220;receive Jesus.&#8221; We enjoyed
+several evening literary entertainments, when it was
+too cold or windy to sit on deck.</p>
+
+<p>We had the most luscious strawberries at dinner
+to-night, that I ever ate. So large and red and ripe,
+with the hulls on and we dipped them in powdered
+sugar as we ate them, a most appetizing way.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>London, July</i> 17.&mdash;On our way to London to-day
+I noticed beautiful flower beds at every station, making
+our journey almost a path of roses. In the
+fields, men and women both, were harvesting the
+hay, making picturesque scenes, for the sky was
+cloudless and I was reminded of the old hymn,
+commencing</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;Sweet fields beyond the swelling flood,</p>
+<p>Stand dressed in living green.&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p>We performed the journey from Liverpool to
+London, a distance of 240 miles, in five hours.
+John, Laura and little Pearl met us at Euston Station,
+and we were soon whirled away in cabs to
+24 Upper Woburn Place, Tavistock Square, John&#8217;s
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_213'></a>213</span>residence. Dinner was soon ready, a most bountiful
+repast. We spent the remainder of the day
+visiting and enjoying ourselves generally. It
+seemed so good to be at the end of the journey,
+although we had only two days of really unpleasant
+weather on the voyage. John and Laura are so
+kind and hospitable. They have a beautiful home,
+lovely children and apparently every comfort and
+luxury which this world can afford.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday, July</i> 22.&mdash;We went to Spurgeon&#8217;s Tabernacle
+this morning to listen to this great preacher,
+with thousands of others. I had never looked upon
+such a sea of faces before, as I beheld from the gallery
+where we sat. The pulpit was underneath one
+gallery, so there seemed as many people over the
+preacher&#8217;s head, as there were beneath and around
+him and the singing was as impressive as the sermon.
+I thought of the hymn, &#8220;Hark ten thousand
+harps and voices, Sound the notes of praise above.&#8221;
+Mr. Spurgeon was so lame from rheumatism that
+he used two canes and placed one knee on a chair
+beside him, when preaching. His text was &#8220;And
+there shall be a new heaven and a new earth.&#8221; I
+found that all I had heard of his eloquence was true.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday, July</i> 29.&mdash;We have spent the entire week
+sightseeing, taking in Hyde Park, Windsor Castle,
+Westminster Abbey, St. Paul&#8217;s Cathedral, the
+Tower of London and British Museum. We also
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_214'></a>214</span>went to Madame Tussaud&#8217;s exhibition of wax figures
+and while I was looking in the catalogue for
+the number of an old gentleman who was sitting
+down apparently asleep, he got up and walked away!
+We drove to Sydenham ten miles from London, to
+see the Crystal Palace which Abbie called the
+&#8220;Christmas Palace.&#8221; Mr. Alexander Howell and
+Mr. Henry Chesebro of Canandaigua are here and
+came to see us to-day.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>August</i> 13.&mdash;Amid the whirl of visiting, shopping
+and sightseeing in this great city, my diary has been
+well nigh forgotten. The descriptive letters to
+home friends have been numerous and knowing that
+they would be preserved, I thought perhaps they
+would do as well for future reference as a diary
+kept for the same purpose, but to-day, as St.
+Pancras&#8217; bell was tolling and a funeral procession
+going by, we heard by cable of the death of our
+dear, dear Grandmother, the one who first encouraged
+us to keep a journal of daily deeds, and who
+was always most interested in all that interested us
+and now I cannot refrain if I would, from writing
+down at this sad hour, of all the grief that is in my
+heart. I sorrow not for her. She has only stepped
+inside the temple-gate where she has long been waiting
+for the Lord&#8217;s entrance call. I weep for ourselves
+that we shall see her dear face no more. It
+does not seem possible that we shall never see her
+again on this earth. She took such an interest in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_215'></a>215</span>our journey and just as we started I put my dear
+little Abigail Beals Clarke in her lap to receive her
+parting blessing. As we left the house she sat at
+the front window and saw us go and smiled her
+farewell.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>August</i> 20.&mdash;Anna has written how often Grandmother
+prayed that &#8220;He who holds the winds in his
+fists and the waters in the hollow of his hands,
+would care for us and bring us to our desired
+haven.&#8221; She had received one letter, telling of our
+safe arrival and how much we enjoyed going about
+London, when she was suddenly taken ill and Dr.
+Hayes said she could never recover. Anna&#8217;s letter
+came, after ten days, telling us all the sad news, and
+how Grandmother looked out of the window the
+last night before she was taken ill, and up at the
+moon and stars and said how beautiful they were.
+Anna says, &#8220;How can I ever write it? Our dear
+little Grandmother died on my bed to-day.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>August</i> 30.&mdash;John, Laura and their nurse and
+baby John, Aunt Ann Field and I started Tuesday
+on a trip to Scotland, going first to Glasgow where
+we remained twenty-four hours. We visited the
+Cathedral and were about to go down into the crypt
+when the guide told us that Gen. Sherman of U.S.A.
+was just coming in. We stopped to look at him
+and felt like telling him that we too were Americans.
+He was in good health and spirits, apparently, and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_216'></a>216</span>looked every inch a soldier with his cloak a-la-militaire
+around him. We visited the Lochs and spent
+one night at Inversnaid on Loch Lomond and then
+went on up Loch Katrine to the Trossachs. When
+we took the little steamer, John said, &#8220;All aboard
+for Naples,&#8221; it reminded him so much of Canandaigua
+Lake. We arrived safely in Edinburgh the
+next day by rail and spent four days in that charming
+city, so beautiful in situation and in every
+natural advantage. We saw the window from
+whence John Knox addressed the populace and we
+also visited the Castle on the hill. Then we went
+to Melrose and visited the Abbey and also Abbotsford,
+the residence of Sir Walter Scott. We went
+through the rooms and saw many curios and paintings
+and also the library. Sir Walter&#8217;s chair at
+his desk was protected by a rope, but Laura, nothing
+daunted, lifted the baby over it and seated him there
+for a moment saying &#8220;I am sure, now, he will be
+clever.&#8221; We continued our journey that night and
+arrived in London the next morning.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Ventnor, Isle of Wight, September</i> 9.&mdash;Aunt
+Ann, Laura&#8217;s sister, Florentine Arnold, nurse and
+two children, Pearl and Abbie, and I are here for
+three weeks on the seashore.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>September</i> 16.&mdash;We have visited all the neighboring
+towns, the graves of the Dairyman&#8217;s daughter
+and little Jane, the young cottager, and the scene
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_217'></a>217</span>of Leigh Richmond&#8217;s life and labors. We have enjoyed
+bathing in the surf, and the children playing
+in the sands and riding on the donkeys.</p>
+
+<p>We have very pleasant rooms, in a house kept by
+an old couple, Mr. and Mrs. Tuddenham, down on
+the esplanade. They serve excellent meals in a most
+homelike way. We have an abundance of delicious
+milk and cream which they tell me comes from
+&#8220;Cowes&#8221;!</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>London, September</i> 30.&mdash;Anna has come to England
+to live with John for the present. She came
+on the Adriatic, arriving September 24. We are so
+glad to see her once more and will do all in our
+power to cheer her in her loneliness.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Paris, October</i> 18.&mdash;John, Laura, Aunt Ann and
+I, nurse and baby, arrived here to-day for a few
+days&#8217; visit. We had rather a stormy passage on
+the Channel. I asked one of the seamen the name
+of the vessel and he answered me &#8220;The H&#8217;Albert
+H&#8217;Edward, Miss!&#8221; This information must have
+given me courage, for I was perfectly sustained till
+we reached Calais, although nearly every one around
+me succumbed.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>October</i> 22.&mdash;We have driven through the Bois
+de Boulogne, visited Père la Chaise, the Morgue, the
+ruins of the Tuileries, which are left just as they
+were since the Commune. We spent half a day at
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_218'></a>218</span>the Louvre without seeing half of its wonders. I
+went alone to a photographer&#8217;s, Le Jeune, to be
+&#8220;taken&#8221; and had a funny time. He queried
+&#8220;Parlez-vous Français?&#8221; I shook my head and
+asked him &#8220;Parlez-vous Anglaise?&#8221; at which
+query he shrugged his shoulders and shook his head!
+I ventured to tell him by signs that I would like my
+picture taken and he held up two sizes of pictures
+and asked me &#8220;Le cabinet, le vignette?&#8221; I held
+up my fingers, to tell him I would like six of each,
+whereupon he proceeded to make ready and when
+he had seated me, he made me understand that he
+hoped I would sit perfectly still, which I endeavored
+to do. After the first sitting, he showed displeasure
+and let me know that I had swayed to and fro. Another
+attempt was more satisfactory and he said
+&#8220;Très bien, Madame,&#8221; and I gave him my address
+and departed.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>October</i> 26.&mdash;My photographs have come and all
+pronounce them indeed &#8220;très bien.&#8221; We visited the
+Tomb of Napoleon to-day.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>October</i> 27.&mdash;We attended service to-day at the
+American Chapel and I enjoyed it more than I
+can ever express. After hearing a foreign tongue
+for the past ten days, it seemed like getting home to
+go into a Presbyterian church and hear a sermon
+from an American pastor. The singing in the
+choir was so homelike, that when they sang &#8220;Awake
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_219'></a>219</span>my soul to joyful lays and sing thy great Redeemer&#8217;s
+praise,&#8221; it seemed to me that I heard a well
+known tenor voice from across the sea, especially
+in the refrain &#8220;His loving kindness, oh how free.&#8221;
+The text was &#8220;As an eagle stirreth up her nest, fluttereth
+over her young, spreadeth abroad her wings,
+taketh them, beareth them on her wings, so the
+Lord did lead him and there was no strange God
+with him.&#8221; Deut. 32: 11. It was a wonderful
+sermon and I shall never forget it. On our way
+home, we noticed the usual traffic going on, building
+of houses, women were standing in their doors
+knitting and there seemed to be no sign of Sunday
+keeping, outside of the church.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>London, October</i> 31.&mdash;John and I returned together
+from Paris and now I have only a few days
+left before sailing for home. There was an Englishman
+here to-day who was bragging about the
+beer in England being so much better than could be
+made anywhere else. He said, &#8220;In America, you
+have the &#8217;ops, I know, but you haven&#8217;t the Thames
+water, you know.&#8221; I suppose that would make a
+vast difference!</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Sunday, November</i> 3.&mdash;We went to hear Rev. Dr.
+Joseph Parker preach at Exeter Hall. He is a new
+light, comparatively, and bids fair to rival Spurgeon
+and Newman Hall and all the rest. He is
+like a lion and again like a lamb in the pulpit.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_220'></a>220</span><i>Liverpool, November</i> 6.&mdash;I came down to Liverpool
+to-day with Abbie and nurse, to sail on the
+Baltic, to-morrow. There were two Englishmen
+in our compartment and hearing Abbie sing &#8220;I have
+a Father in the Promised Land,&#8221; they asked her
+where her Father lived and she said &#8220;In America,&#8221;
+and told them she was going on the big ship to-morrow
+to see him. Then they turned to me and
+said they supposed I would be glad to know that the
+latest cable from America was that U. S. Grant
+was elected for his second term as President of the
+United States. I assured them that I was very glad
+to hear such good news.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>November</i> 9.&mdash;I did not know any of the passengers
+when we sailed, but soon made pleasant acquaintances.
+Near me at table are Mr. and Mrs.
+Sykes from New York and in course of conversation
+I found that she as well as myself, was born
+in Penn Yan, Yates County, New York, and that
+her parents were members of my Father&#8217;s church,
+which goes to prove that the world is not so very
+wide after all. Abbie is a great pet among the passengers
+and is being passed around from one to
+another from morning till night. They love to
+hear her sing and coax her to say &#8220;Grace&#8221; at table.
+She closes her eyes and folds her hands devoutly
+and says, &#8220;For what we are about to receive, may
+the Lord make us truly thankful.&#8221; They all
+say &#8220;Amen&#8221; to this, for they are fearful that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_221'></a>221</span>they will not perhaps be &#8220;thankful&#8221; when they
+finish!</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>November</i> 15.&mdash;I have been on deck every day
+but one, and not missed a single meal. There was a
+terrible storm one night and the next morning I told
+one of the numerous clergymen, that I took great
+comfort in the night, thinking that nothing could
+happen with so many of the Lord&#8217;s anointed, on
+board. He said that he wished he had thought of
+that, for he was frightened almost to death! We
+have sighted eleven steamers and on Wednesday we
+were in sight of the banks of Newfoundland all the
+afternoon, our course being unusually northerly and
+we encountered no fogs, contrary to the expectation
+of all. Every one pronounces the voyage pleasant
+and speedy for this time of year.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>Naples, N. Y., November</i> 20.&mdash;We arrived safely
+in New York on Sunday. Abbie spied her father
+very quickly upon the dock as we slowly came up
+and with glad and happy hearts we returned his
+&#8220;Welcome home.&#8221; We spent two days in New
+York and arrived home safe and sound this
+evening.</p>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'><i>November</i> 21.&mdash;My thirtieth birthday, which we,
+a reunited family, are spending happily together
+around our own fireside, pleasant memories of the
+past months adding to the joy of the hour.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_222'></a>222</span>From the <i>New York Evangelist</i> of August 15,
+1872, by Rev. Samuel Pratt, D.D.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>&#8220;Died, at Canandaigua, N. Y., August 8, 1872,
+Mrs. Abigail Field Beals, widow of Thomas Beals,
+in the 98th year of her age. Mrs. Beals, whose
+maiden name was Field, was born in Madison,
+Conn., April 7, 1784. She was a sister of Rev.
+David Dudley Field, D.D., of Stockbridge, Mass.,
+and of Rev. Timothy Field, first pastor of the Congregational
+church of Canandaigua. She came to
+Canandaigua with her brother, Timothy, in 1800.
+In 1805 she was married to Thomas Beals, Esq.,
+with whom she lived nearly sixty years, until he
+fell asleep. They had eleven children, of whom
+only four survive. In 1807 she and her husband
+united with the Congregational church, of which
+they were ever liberal and faithful supporters. Mrs.
+Beals loved the good old ways and kept her house
+in the simple and substantial style of the past. She
+herself belonged to an age of which she was the
+last. With great dignity and courtesy of manner
+which repelled too much familiarity, she combined
+a sweet and winning grace, which attracted all to
+her, so that the youth, while they would almost
+involuntarily &#8216;rise up before her,&#8217; yet loved to be in
+her presence and called her blessed. She possessed
+in a rare degree the ornament of a meek and quiet
+spirit and lived in an atmosphere of love and peace.
+Her home and room were to her children and her
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_223'></a>223</span>children&#8217;s children what Jerusalem was to the saints
+of old. There they loved to resort and the saddest
+thing in her death is the sundering of that tie which
+bound so many generations together. She never
+ceased to take a deep interest in the prosperity of
+the beautiful village of which she and her husband
+were the pioneers and for which they did so much
+and in the church of which she was the oldest member.
+Her mind retained its activity to the last and
+her heart was warm in sympathy with every good
+work. While she was well informed in all current
+events, she most delighted in whatever concerned
+the Kingdom. Her Bible and religious books were
+her constant companions and her conversation told
+much of her better thoughts, which were in Heaven.
+Living so that those who knew her never saw in
+her anything but fitness for Heaven, she patiently
+awaited the Master&#8217;s call and went down to her
+grave in a full age like a shock of corn fully ripe that
+cometh in its season.&#8221;</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p style='margin-top:1.4em;'>I don&#8217;t think I shall keep a diary any more, only
+occasionally jot down things of importance. Mr.
+Noah T. Clarke&#8217;s brother got possession of my little
+diary in some way one day and when he returned it
+I found written on the fly-leaf this inscription to
+the diary:</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<table summary='poetry' class='left2'><tr><td>
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;d scarce expect a volume of my size</p>
+<p>To hold so much that&#8217;s beautiful and wise,</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_224'></a>224</span>And though the heartless world might call me cheap</p>
+<p>Yet from my pages some much joy shall reap.</p>
+<p>As monstrous oaks from little acorns grow,</p>
+<p>And kindly shelter all who toil below,</p>
+<p>So my future greatness and the good I do</p>
+<p>Shall bless, if not the world, at least a few.&#8221;</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p>I think I will close my old journal with the mottoes
+which I find upon an old well-worn writing
+book which Anna used for jotting down her youthful
+deeds. On the cover I find inscribed, &#8220;Try to
+be somebody,&#8221; and on the back of the same book, as
+if trying to console herself for unexpected achievement
+which she could not prevent, &#8220;Some must be
+great!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-size:2em;'>
+&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&middot;</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+<a id='c1880'></a>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_225'></a>225</span>
+<p class='cln0'>1880</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>June</i> 17.&mdash;Our dear Anna was married to-day to
+Mr. Alonzo A. Cummings of Oakland, Cal., and has
+gone there to live. I am sorry to have her go so far
+away, but love annihilates space. There is no real
+separation, except in alienation of spirit, and that
+can never come&mdash;to us.</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;margin-top:1em;margin-bottom:2em;'>THE END</p>
+
+<hr class='d100' />
+
+<p style='text-align:center;margin-top:1em;font-size:1.4em;'>BOOKS TO MAKE ELDERS YOUNG AGAIN</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-variant:small-caps;margin-bottom:2em;'>By Inez Haynes Gillmore</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;'>PHOEBE AND ERNEST</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;'>With 30 illustrations by R. F. Schabelitz. $1.35 net.</p>
+
+<p>Parents will recognize themselves in the story, and laugh
+understandingly with, and sometimes at, Mr. and Mrs. Martin
+and their children, Phoebe and Ernest.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Attracted delighted attention in the course of its serial publication.
+Sentiment and humor are deftly mingled in this clever book.&#8221;&mdash;<i>New York Tribune</i>.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We must go back to Louisa Alcott for their equals.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Boston Advertiser</i>.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;For young and old alike we know of no more refreshing story.&#8221;&mdash;<i>New York Evening Post</i>.</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;margin-top:1em;'>PHOEBE, ERNEST, AND CUPID</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;'>Illustrated by R. F. Schabelitz. $1.35 net.</p>
+
+<p>In this sequel to the popular &#8220;Phoebe and Ernest,&#8221; each
+of these delightful young folk goes to the altar.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;To all jaded readers of problem novels, to all weary wayfarers on the
+rocky literary road of social pessimism and domestic woe, we recommend
+&#8216;Phoebe, Ernest, and Cupid&#8217; with all our hearts: it is not only cheerful, it&#8217;s
+true.&#8221;&mdash;<i>N. Y. Times Review</i>.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wholesome, merry, absolutely true to life.&#8221;&mdash;<i>The Outlook</i>.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;All delicious&mdash;humorous and true.&#8221;&mdash;<i>The Continent</i>.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Irresistibly fascinating. Mrs. Gillmore knows twice as much about
+college boys as <span style='white-space: nowrap'>&#8211;&#8211;</span>, and five times as much about girls.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Boston Globe</i>.</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;margin-top:1em;'>JANEY</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;'>Illustrated by Ada C. Williamson. $1.25 net.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Being the record of a short interval in the journey thru
+life and the struggle with society of a little girl of nine.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Our hearts were captive to &#8216;Phoebe and Ernest,&#8217; and now accept
+&#8216;Janey.&#8217; ... She is so engaging.... Told so vivaciously and
+with such good-natured and pungent asides for grown people.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Outlook</i>.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Depicts youthful human nature as one who knows and loves it.
+Her &#8216;Phoebe and Ernest&#8217; studies are deservedly popular, and now, in
+&#8216;Janey,&#8217; this clever writer has accomplished an equally charming
+portrait.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Chicago Record-Herald</i>.</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;margin-top:1em;font-size:1.2em;letter-spacing:0.2em;'>HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY</p>
+<p style='text-align:center;'>PUBLISHERS&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;NEW YORK</p>
+
+<hr class='d100' />
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;margin-top:1em;font-size:1.2em;'>THE HOME BOOK OF VERSE</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;'><i>American and English</i> (1580-1912)</p>
+
+<p style='margin-left:1em; text-indent:-1em;'>Compiled by Burton E. Stevenson. Collects the best short
+poetry of the English language&mdash;not only the poetry everybody
+says is good, but also the verses that everybody
+reads. (3742 pages; India paper, 1 vol., 8vo, complete author,
+title and first line indices, $7.50 net; carriage 40 cents
+extra.)</p>
+
+<p>The most comprehensive and representative collection of
+American and English poetry ever published, including
+3,120 unabridged poems from some 1,100 authors.</p>
+
+<p>It brings together in one volume the best short poetry
+of the English language from the time of Spencer, with
+especial attention to American verse.</p>
+
+<p>The copyright deadline has been passed, and some three
+hundred recent authors are included, very few of whom
+appear in any other general anthology, such as Lionel
+Johnson, Noyes, Housman, Mrs. Meynell, Yeats, Dobson,
+Lang, Watson, Wilde, Francis Thompson, Gilder, Le
+Gallienne, Van Dyke, Woodberry, Riley, etc., etc.</p>
+
+<p>The poems are arranged by subject, and the classification
+is unusually close and searching. Some of the most
+comprehensive sections are: Children&#8217;s rhymes (300
+pages); love poems (800 pages); nature poetry (400
+pages); humorous verse (500 pages); patriotic and historical
+poems (600 pages); reflective and descriptive poetry
+(400 pages). No other collection contains so many popular
+favorites and fugitive verses.</p>
+
+<hr class='hbv' />
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;'>DELIGHTFUL POCKET ANTHOLOGIES</p>
+
+<table summary='adpage1' style='font-size:smaller;margin:0 auto;'>
+
+<tr><td colspan='3'><p style='margin-bottom:10px;'>The following books are uniform, with full gilt flexible covers and<br />
+pictured cover linings. 16mo. Each, cloth, $1.50; leather, $2.50.</p></td></tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td valign='top'>THE GARLAND OF CHILDHOOD&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<br />
+A little book for all lovers of<br />
+children. Compiled by Percy<br />
+Withers.<br />
+<br />
+THE VISTA OF ENGLISH VERSE<br />
+Compiled by Henry S. Pancoast.<br />
+From Spencer to Kipling.<br />
+<br />
+LETTERS THAT LIVE<br />
+Compiled by Laura E. Lockwood<br />
+and Amy R. Kelly. Some<br />
+150 letters.<br />
+<br />
+POEMS FOR TRAVELLERS<br />
+(About &#8220;The Continent.&#8221;)<br />
+Compiled by Miss Mary R. J.<br />
+DuBois.<br />
+</td>
+
+<td style='border-left:1px solid black'>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
+
+<td valign='top'>THE OPEN ROAD<br />
+A little book for wayfarers.<br />
+Compiled by E. V. Lucas.<br />
+<br />
+THE FRIENDLY TOWN<br />
+A little book for the urbane,<br />
+compiled by E. V. Lucas.<br />
+<br />
+THE POETIC OLD-WORLD<br />
+Compiled by Miss L. H.<br />
+Humphrey. Covers Europe, including<br />
+Spain, Belgium and the<br />
+British Isles.<br />
+<br />
+THE POETIC NEW-WORLD<br />
+Compiled by Miss Humphrey.<br />
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;margin-top:1em;font-size:1.2em;letter-spacing:0.2em;'>HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY</p>
+<p style='text-align:center;'>34 WEST 33rd STREET&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;NEW YORK</p>
+
+<hr class='d100' />
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;margin-top:1em;font-size:1.2em;'>NEW BOOKS PRIMARILY FOR WOMEN</p>
+
+<hr class='nbpfw' />
+
+<table summary='book' style='width:100%;font-weight:bold;'><tr><td>A MONTESSORI MOTHER.</td><td style='text-align:right'>By Dorothy Canfield Fisher</td></tr></table>
+
+<p>A thoroughly competent author who has been most closely
+associated with Dr. Montessori tells just what American mothers
+want to know about this new system of child training&mdash;the
+general principles underlying it; a plain description of the
+apparatus, definite directions for its use, suggestive hints as
+to American substitutes and additions, etc., etc. (<i>Helpfully illustrated.</i> $1.25 <i>net, by mail</i> $1.35.)</p>
+
+<table summary='book' style='width:100%;font-weight:bold;'><tr><td>MAKING A BUSINESS WOMAN.</td><td style='text-align:right'>By Anne Shannon Monroe</td></tr></table>
+
+<p>A young woman whose business assets are good sense,
+good health, and the ability to use a typewriter goes to
+Chicago to earn her living. This story depicts her experiences
+vividly and truthfully, tho the characters are fictitious.
+($1.30 <i>net, by mail</i> $1.40.)</p>
+
+<table summary='book' style='width:100%;font-weight:bold;'><tr><td>WHY WOMEN ARE SO.</td><td style='text-align:right'> By Mary R. Coolidge</td></tr></table>
+
+<p>Explains and traces the development of the woman of 1800
+into the woman of to-day. ($1.50 <i>net, by mail</i> $1.62.)</p>
+
+<table summary='book' style='width:100%;font-weight:bold;'><tr><td>THE SQUIRREL-CAGE.</td><td style='text-align:right'>By Dorothy Canfield</td></tr></table>
+
+<p>A novel recounting the struggle of an American wife and
+mother to call her soul her own.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;One has no hesitation in classing &#8216;The Squirrel-Cage&#8217; with the best
+American fiction of this or any other season.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Chicago Record-Herald.</i>
+(3rd printing. $1.35 <i>net, by mail</i> $1.45.)</p>
+
+<table summary='book' style='width:100%;font-weight:bold;'><tr><td>HEREDITY IN RELATION TO EUGENICS.</td><td style='text-align:right'>By C. B. Davenport</td></tr></table>
+
+<p>&#8220;One of the foremost authorities . . . tells just what scientific
+investigation has established and how far it is possible to control what
+the ancients accepted as inevitable.&#8221;&mdash;<i>N. Y. Times Review.</i></p>
+
+<p>(With diagrams. 3<i>rd printing.</i> $2.00 <i>net, by mail</i> $2.16.)</p>
+
+<table summary='book' style='width:100%;font-weight:bold;'><tr><td>THE GLEAM.</td><td style='text-align:right'>By Helen R. Albee</td></tr></table>
+
+<p>A frank spiritual autobiography. ($1.35 <i>net, by mail</i> $1.45.)</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;margin-top:1em;font-size:1.2em;letter-spacing:0.2em;'>HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY</p>
+<p style='text-align:center;'>34 WEST 33rd STREET&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;NEW YORK</p>
+
+<hr class='d100' />
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;margin-top:1em;font-size:1.2em;'>LEADING AMERICANS</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;'>Edited by W. P. Trent, and generally confined to those no<br />longer living. Large 12mo. With portraits.<br />Each $1.75, by mail $1.90.</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;'>R. M. JOHNSTON&#8217;S LEADING AMERICAN SOLDIERS</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;'>By the Author of &#8220;Napoleon,&#8221; etc.</p>
+
+<p>Washington, Greene, Taylor, Scott, Andrew Jackson, Grant,
+Sherman, Sheridan, McClellan, Meade, Lee, &#8220;Stonewall&#8221;
+Jackson, Joseph E. Johnston.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Very interesting . . . much sound originality of treatment, and the
+style is very clear.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Springfield Republican.</i></p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;'>JOHN ERSKINE&#8217;S LEADING AMERICAN NOVELISTS</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;'>Charles Brockden Brown, Cooper, Simms, Hawthorne, Mrs. Stowe, and Bret Harte.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He makes his study of these novelists all the more striking because
+of their contrasts of style and their varied purpose. . . . Well worth
+any amount of time we may care to spend upon them.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Boston Transcript.</i></p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;'>W. M. PAYNE&#8217;S LEADING AMERICAN ESSAYISTS</p>
+
+<p>A General Introduction dealing with essay writing in America,
+and biographies of Irving, Emerson, Thoreau, and George
+William Curtis.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It is necessary to know only the name of the author of this work
+to be assured of its literary excellence.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Literary Digest.</i></p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;'>LEADING AMERICAN MEN OF SCIENCE</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;'>Edited by President David Starr Jordan.</p>
+
+<p>Count Rumford and Josiah Willard Gibbs, by E. E. Slosson;
+Alexander Wilson and Audubon, by Witmer Stone; Silliman, by
+Daniel C. Gilman; Joseph Henry, by Simon Newcomb; Louis Agassiz
+and Spencer Fullerton Baird, by Charles F. Holder; Jeffries Wyman,
+by B. G. Wilder; Asa Gray, by John M. Coulter; James Dwight Dana,
+by William North Rice; Marsh, by Geo. Bird Grinnell; Edward
+Drinker Cope, by Marcus Benjamin; Simon Newcomb, by Marcus
+Benjamin; George Brown Goode, by D. S. Jordan; Henry Augustus
+Rowland, by Ira Remsen; William Keith Brooks, by E. A. Andrews.</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;'>GEORGE ILES&#8217;S LEADING AMERICAN INVENTORS</p>
+
+<p>By the author of &#8220;Inventors at Work,&#8221; etc. Colonel John Stevens
+(screw-propeller, etc.); his son, Robert (T-rail, etc.); Fulton; Ericsson;
+Whitney; Blanchard (lathe); McCormick; Howe; Goodyear;
+Morse; Tilghman (paper from wood and sand blast); Sholes (typewriter);
+and Mergenthaler (linotype).</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;'><span class='sc'>Other Volumes</span> covering <span class='sc'>Lawyers, Poets, Statesmen, Editors, Explorers,</span> etc., arranged for. Leaflet on application.</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;margin-top:1em;font-size:1.2em;letter-spacing:0.2em;'>HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY</p>
+<p style='text-align:center;'>34 WEST 33rd STREET&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;NEW YORK</p>
+
+<hr class='d100' />
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;'>Julien Benda&#8217;s THE YOKE OF PITY</p>
+
+<p>The author grips and never lets go of the single theme
+(which presents itself more or less acutely to many people)&mdash;the
+duel between a passionate devotion to a career and the
+claims of love, pity, and domestic responsibility.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The novel of the winter in Paris. Certainly the novel of the year&mdash;the
+book which everyone reads and discusses.&#8221;&mdash;<i>The London Times.</i>
+$1.00 net.</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;'>Victor L. Whitechurch&#8217;s A DOWNLAND CORNER</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;'>By the author of The Canon in Residence.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;One of those delightful studies in quaintness which we take to heart
+and carry in the pocket.&#8221;&mdash;<i>New York Times.</i> $1.20 net.</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;'>H. H. Bashford&#8217;s PITY THE POOR BLIND</p>
+
+<p>The story of a young English couple and an Anglican priest.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;This novel, whose title is purely metaphorical, has an uncommon
+literary quality and interest . . . its appeal, save to those who also
+&#8216;having eyes see not,&#8217; must be as compelling as its theme is original.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Boston Transcript.</i> $1.35 net.</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;'>John Mätter&#8217;s THREE FARMS</p>
+
+<p>An &#8220;adventure in contentment&#8221; in France, Northwestern
+Canada and Indiana.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;A rare combination of philosophy and humor. The most remarkable
+part of this book is the wonderful atmosphere of content which radiates
+from it.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Boston Transcript.</i> $1.20 net.</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;'>Dorothy Canfield&#8217;s THE SQUIRREL-CAGE</p>
+
+<p>A very human story of the struggle of an American wife
+and mother to call her soul her own. 4th printing. Illustrated
+by J. A. Williams.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;One has no hesitation in classing The Squirrel Cage with the best
+American fiction of this or any season.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Chicago Record-Herald.</i> $1.35
+net.</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;margin-top:1em;font-size:1.2em;letter-spacing:0.2em;'>HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY</p>
+<p style='text-align:center;'>34 WEST 33rd STREET&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;NEW YORK</p>
+
+<hr class='d100' />
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;margin-top:1em;margin-bottom:1em;font-size:1.2em;'>STANDARD CONTEMPORARY NOVELS</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;'>WILLIAM DE MORGAN&#8217;S JOSEPH VANCE</p>
+
+<p>The story of a great sacrifice and a lifelong love. Over
+fourteen printings. $1.75.</p>
+
+<p>&#8258; List of Mr. De Morgan&#8217;s other novels sent on application.</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;'>PAUL LEICESTER FORD&#8217;S THE HON. PETER STIRLING</p>
+
+<p>This famous novel of New York political life has gone
+through over fifty impressions. $1.50.</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;'>ANTHONY HOPE&#8217;S PRISONER OF ZENDA</p>
+
+<p>This romance of adventure has passed through over sixty
+impressions. With illustrations by C. D. Gibson. $1.50.</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;'>ANTHONY HOPE&#8217;S RUPERT OF HENTZAU</p>
+
+<p>This story has been printed over a score of times. With
+illustrations by C. D. Gibson. $1.50.</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;'>ANTHONY HOPE&#8217;S DOLLY DIALOGUES</p>
+
+<p>Has passed through over eighteen printings. With illustrations
+by H. C. Christy. $1.50.</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;'>CHARLES BATTELL LOOMIS&#8217;S CHEERFUL AMERICANS</p>
+
+<p>By the author of &#8220;Poe&#8217;s Raven in an Elevator&#8221; and &#8220;A
+Holiday Touch.&#8221; With 24 illustrations. Tenth printing. $1.25.</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;'>MAY SINCLAIR&#8217;S THE DIVINE FIRE</p>
+
+<p>By the author of &#8220;The Helpmate,&#8221; etc. Fifteenth printing.
+$1.50.</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;'>BURTON E. STEVENSON&#8217;S MARATHON MYSTERY</p>
+
+<p>This mystery story of a New York apartment house is
+now in its seventh printing, has been republished in England
+and translated into German and Italian. With illustrations
+in color. $1.50.</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;'>E. L. VOYNICH&#8217;S THE GADFLY</p>
+
+<p>An intense romance of the Italian uprising against the
+Austrians. Twenty-third edition. $1.25.</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;'>DAVID DWIGHT WELLS&#8217;S HER LADYSHIP&#8217;S ELEPHANT</p>
+
+<p>With cover by Wm. Nicholson. Eighteenth printing. $1.25.</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;'>C. N. and A. M. WILLIAMSON&#8217;S LIGHTNING CONDUCTOR</p>
+
+<p>Over thirty printings. $1.50.</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;font-weight:bold;'>C. N. and A. M. WILLIAMSON&#8217;S THE PRINCESS PASSES</p>
+
+<p>Illustrated by Edward Penfield. Eighth printing. $1.50.</p>
+
+<p style='text-align:center;margin-top:1em;font-size:1.2em;letter-spacing:0.2em;'>HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY</p>
+<p style='text-align:center;'>PUBLISHERS&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;NEW YORK</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Village Life in America 1852-1872, by
+Caroline Cowles Richards
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+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Village Life in America 1852-1872, by
+Caroline Cowles Richards
+
+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: Village Life in America 1852-1872
+ Including the period of the American Civil War as told in
+ the diary of a school-girl
+
+Author: Caroline Cowles Richards
+
+Release Date: September 18, 2010 [EBook #33756]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK VILLAGE LIFE IN AMERICA 1852-1872 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.fadedpage.net
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Caroline Cowles Richards (From a daguerreotype taken
+in 1860)]
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+VILLAGE LIFE IN AMERICA
+
+1852-1872
+
+INCLUDING THE PERIOD OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR
+
+AS TOLD IN THE DIARY OF A SCHOOL-GIRL
+
+By
+
+CAROLINE COWLES RICHARDS
+
+WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY
+
+MARGARET E. SANGSTER
+
+NEW AND ENLARGED EDITION
+
+NEW YORK
+
+HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
+
+1913
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+Copyright, 1908, by CAROLINE RICHARDS CLARKE
+
+Copyright, 1913, by HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
+
+THE QUINN & BODEN CO. PRESS
+
+RAHWAY, N. J.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+To My dear brothers, JAMES AND JOHN, who, by precept and example, have
+encouraged me, and to my beloved sister, ANNA, whose faith and affection
+have been my chief inspiration, this little volume is lovingly
+inscribed.
+
+Naples, N. Y.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ PAGE
+ Introduction, by Mrs. Margaret E. Sangster ix
+ The Villages xiii
+ The Villagers xiv
+ 1852.--Family Notes--Famous School--Girls--Hoop Skirts 1
+ 1853.--Runaways--Bible Study--Essays--Catechism 10
+ 1854.--Lake Picnic--Pyramid of Beauty--Governor Clark 20
+ 1855.--Preachers--James and John--Votes for Women 43
+ 1856.--the Fire--Sleighing and Prayer--Father's Advice 52
+ 1857.--Truants and Pickles--Candle Stories--the Snuffers 77
+ 1858.--Tableaux and Charades--Spiritual Seance 95
+ 1859.--E. M. Morse--Letter from the North Pole 106
+ 1860.--Gymnastics--Troublesome Comforts 118
+ 1861.--President Lincoln's Inauguration--Civil War--School
+ Enthusiasm 130
+ 1862.--Gough Lectures--President's Call for Three Hundred
+ Thousand Men--Mission Zeal 138
+ 1863.--A Soldier's Death--General M'Clellan's Letter--President
+ Lincoln's Address at Gettysburg 148
+ 1864.--Grandfather Beals' Death--Anna Graduates 162
+ 1865.--President Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address--Fall of
+ Richmond--Murder of Lincoln 176
+ 1866.--Freedman's Fair--General Grant and Admiral Farragut
+ Visit Canandaigua 200
+ 1867.--Brother John and Wife Go to London--Lecture by
+ Charles Dickens 208
+ 1871.--Hon. George H. Stuart Speaks in Canandaigua--A Large
+ Collection 210
+ 1872.--Grandmother Beals' Death--Biography 211
+ 1880.--Anna's Marriage 225
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+ Caroline Cowles Richards Frontispiece
+ FACING PAGE
+ Grandfather Beals 8
+ Grandmother Beals 8
+ Mr. Noah T. Clarke 30
+ Miss Upham 30
+ First Congregational Church 38
+ Rev. Oliver E. Daggett, D.D. 54
+ Judge Henry W. Taylor 54
+ Miss Zilpha Clark 54
+ "Frankie Richardson" 54
+ Horace Finley 54
+ Tom Eddy and Eugene Stone 66
+ "Uncle David Dudley Field" 66
+ Grandmother's Rocking Chair 88
+ The Grandfather Clock 88
+ Hon. Francis Granger 100
+ Mr. Gideon Granger 100
+ The Old Canandaicua Academy 124
+ The Ontario Female Seminary 132
+ "Old Friend Burling" 138
+ Madame Anna Bishop 138
+ "Abbie Clark and I Had Our Ambrotypes Taken To-day" 152
+ "Mr. Noah T. Clarke's Brother and I" 152
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+PUBLISHERS' NOTE
+
+After this book was in type, on March 29, 1913, the author, Mrs.
+Caroline Richards Clarke, died at Naples, New York.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+The Diary of Caroline Cowles Richards fell into my hands, so to speak,
+out of space. I had no previous acquaintance with the author, and I sat
+down to read the book one evening in no especial mood of anticipation.
+From the first page to the last my attention was riveted. To call it
+fascinating barely expresses the quality of the charm. Caroline Richards
+and her sister Anna, having early lost their mother, were sent to the
+home of her parents in Canandaigua, New York, where they were brought up
+in the simplicity and sweetness of a refined household, amid Puritan
+traditions. The children were allowed to grow as plants do, absorbing
+vitality from the atmosphere around them. Whatever there was of gracious
+formality in the manners of aristocratic people of the period, came to
+them as their birthright, while the spirit of the truest democracy
+pervaded their home. Of this Diary it is not too much to say that it is
+a revelation of childhood in ideal conditions.
+
+The Diary begins in 1852, and is continued until 1872. Those of us who
+lived in the latter half of the nineteenth century recall the swift
+transitions, the rapid march of science and various changes in social
+customs, and as we meet allusions to these in the leaves of the girl's
+Diary we live our past over again with peculiar pleasure.
+
+Far more has been told us concerning the South during the Civil War than
+concerning the North. Fiction has found the North a less romantic field,
+and the South has been chosen as the background of many a stirring
+novel, while only here and there has an author been found who has known
+the deep-hearted loyalty of the Northern States and woven the story into
+narrative form. The girl who grew up in Canandaigua was intensely
+patriotic, and from day to day vividly chronicled what she saw, felt,
+and heard. Her Diary is a faithful record of impressions of that stormy
+time in which the nation underwent a baptism of fire. The realism of her
+paragraphs is unsurpassed.
+
+Beyond the personal claim of the Diary and the certainty to give
+pleasure to a host of readers, the author appeals to Americans in
+general because of her family and her friends. Her father and
+grandfather were Presbyterian ministers. Her Grandfather Richards was
+for twenty years President of Auburn Theological Seminary. Her brother,
+John Morgan Richards of London, has recently given to the world the Life
+and Letters of his gifted and lamented daughter, Pearl Mary-Terese
+Craigie, known best as John Oliver Hobbes. The famous Field brothers and
+their father, Rev. David Dudley Field, and their nephew, Justice David
+J. Brewer, of the United States Supreme Court, were her kinsmen. Miss
+Hannah Upham, a distinguished teacher mentioned in the Diary, belongs to
+the group of American women to whom we owe the initiative of what we now
+choose to call the higher education of the sex. She, in common with Mary
+Lyon, Emma Willard, and Eliza Bayliss Wheaton, gave a forward impulse to
+the liberal education of women, and our privilege is to keep their
+memory green. They are to be remembered by what they have done and by
+the tender reminiscences found here and there like pressed flowers in a
+herbarium, in such pages as these.
+
+Miss Richards' marriage to Mr. Edmund C. Clarke occurred in 1866. Mr.
+Clarke is a veteran of the Civil War and a Commander in the Grand Army
+of the Republic. His brother, Noah T. Clarke, was the Principal of
+Canandaigua Academy for the long term of forty years. The dignified,
+amusing and remarkable personages who were Mrs. Clarke's contemporaries,
+teachers, or friends are pictured in her Diary just as they were, so
+that we meet them on the street, in the drawing-room, in church, at
+prayer-meeting, anywhere and everywhere, and grasp their hands as if we,
+too, were in their presence.
+
+Wherever this little book shall go it will carry good cheer. Fun and
+humor sparkle through the story of this childhood and girlhood so that
+the reader will be cheated of ennui, and the sallies of the little
+sister will provoke mirth and laughter to brighten dull days. I have
+read thousands of books. I have never read one which has given me more
+delight than this.
+
+ Margaret E. Sangster.
+
+Glen Ridge, New Jersey,
+June, 1911.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+THE VILLAGES
+
+CANANDAIGUA, NEW YORK.--A beautiful village, the county seat of Ontario
+County, situated at the foot of Canandaigua Lake, which is called "the
+gem of the inland lakes" of Western New York, about 325 miles from New
+York city.
+
+NAPLES, NEW YORK.--A small village at the head of Canandaigua Lake,
+famous for its vine-clad hills and unrivaled scenery.
+
+GENEVA, NEW YORK.--A beautiful town about 16 miles from Canandaigua.
+
+EAST BLOOMFIELD, NEW YORK.--An ideal farming region and suburban village
+about 8 miles from Canandaigua.
+
+PENN YAN, NEW YORK.--The county seat of Yates County, a grape center
+upon beautiful Lake Keuka.
+
+ROCHESTER, NEW YORK.--A nourishing manufacturing city, growing rapidly,
+less than 30 miles from Canandaigua, and 120 miles from Niagara Falls.
+
+AUBURN, NEW YORK.--Noted for its Theological Seminary, nearly one
+hundred years old, and for being the home of William H. Seward and other
+American Statesmen.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+THE VILLAGERS
+
+ Mr. and Mrs. THOMAS BEALS, Grandfather and Grandmother
+
+ CAROLINE and ANNA Grandchildren of Mr. and
+ JAMES and JOHN RICHARDS Mrs. Beals
+
+ "AUNT ANN"
+ "AUNT MARY" CARR Sons and daughters of
+ "AUNT GLORIANNA" Mr. and Mrs. Beals
+ "UNCLE HENRY"
+ "UNCLE THOMAS"
+
+ Rev. O. E. DAGGETT, D.D. Pastor of Canandaigua Congregational
+ Church
+
+ NOAH T. CLARKE Principal Canandaigua Academy for Boys
+
+ Hon. FRANCIS GRANGER Postmaster-General, U.S.A.
+
+ General JOHN A. GRANGER Of New York State Militia
+
+ GIDEON GRANGER Son of Hon. Francis
+
+ ALBERT GRANGER Son of General Granger
+
+ JOHN GREIG Wealthy Scotsman long time resident
+ of Canandaigua
+
+ MYRON H. CLARK Governor, State of New York
+
+ JUDGE H. W. TAYLOR Prominent lawyer and jurist
+
+ E. M. MORSE A leading lawyer in Canandaigua
+
+ Miss ZILPHA CLARKE School teacher of note
+
+ Miss CAROLINE CHESEBRO Well-known writers
+ Mrs. GEORGE WILLSON
+
+ Miss HANNAH UPHAM Eminent instructress and lady principal
+ of Ontario Female Seminary
+
+ Mr. FRED THOMPSON Prominent resident, married Miss
+ Mary Clark, daughter of Governor
+ Myron H. Clark.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+School Boys
+
+ WILLIAM T. SCHLEY
+ HORACE M. FINLEY
+ ALBERT MURRAY
+ S. GURNEY LAPHAM Residing with parents in
+ CHARLES COY Canandaigua
+ ELLSWORTH DAGGETT
+ CHARLIE PADDOCK
+ MERRITT C. WILLCOX
+
+ WILLIAM H. ADAMS Law Students
+ GEORGE N. WILLIAMS
+
+ WILLIS P. FISKE Teachers in Academy
+ EDMUND C. CLARKE
+
+School Girls
+
+ LOUISA FIELD
+ MARY WHEELER
+ EMMA WHEELER
+ LAURA CHAPIN
+ JULIA PHELPS
+ MARY PAUL
+ BESSIE SEYMOUR
+ LUCILLA FIELD
+ MARY FIELD
+ ABBIE CLARK
+ SUSIE DAGGETT Residing with parents in
+ FRANKIE RICHARDSON Canandaigua
+ FANNY GAYLORD
+ MARY COY
+ HELEN COY
+ HATTIE PADDOCK
+ SARAH ANTES
+ LOTTIE LAPHAM
+ CLARA WILSON
+ FANNIE PALMER
+ RITIE TYLER
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+VILLAGE LIFE IN AMERICA
+
+
+
+
+1852
+ Canandaigua, N. Y.
+
+_November_ 21, 1852.--I am ten years old to-day, and I think I will
+write a journal and tell who I am and what I am doing. I have lived with
+my Grandfather and Grandmother Beals ever since I was seven years old,
+and Anna, too, since she was four. Our brothers, James and John, came
+too, but they are at East Bloomfield at Mr. Stephen Clark's Academy.
+Miss Laura Clark of Naples is their teacher.
+
+Anna and I go to school at District No. 11. Mr. James C. Cross is our
+teacher, and some of the scholars say he is cross by name and cross by
+nature, but I like him. He gave me a book by the name of "Noble Deeds of
+American Women," for reward of merit, in my reading class. To-day, a
+nice old gentleman, by the name of Mr. William Wood, visited our school.
+He is Mrs. Nat Gorham's uncle, and Wood Street is named for him. He had
+a beautiful pear in his hand and said he would give it to the boy or
+girl who could spell "virgaloo," for that was the name of the pear. I
+spelt it that way, but it was not right. A little boy, named William
+Schley, spelt it right and he got the pear. I wish I had, but I can't
+even remember now how he spelt it. If the pear was as hard as the name I
+don't believe any one would want it, but I don't see how they happened
+to give such a hard name to such a nice pear. Grandfather says perhaps
+Mr. Wood will bring in a Seckle pear some day, so I had better be ready
+for him.
+
+Grandmother told us such a nice story to-day I am going to write it down
+in my journal. I think I shall write a book some day. Miss Caroline
+Chesebro did, and I don't see why I can't. If I do, I shall put this
+story in it. It is a true story and better than any I found in three
+story books Grandmother gave us to read this week, "Peep of Day," "Line
+Upon Line," and "Precept Upon Precept," but this story was better than
+them all. One night Grandfather was locking the front door at nine
+o'clock and he heard a queer sound, like a baby crying. So he unlocked
+the door and found a bandbox on the stoop, and the cry seemed to come
+from inside of it. So he took it up and brought it into the dining-room
+and called the two girls, who had just gone upstairs to bed. They came
+right down and opened the box, and there was a poor little girl baby,
+crying as hard as could be. They took it out and rocked it and sung to
+it and got some milk and fed it and then sat up all night with it, by
+the fire. There was a paper pinned on the baby's dress with her name on
+it, "Lily T. LaMott," and a piece of poetry called "Pity the Poor
+Orphan." The next morning, Grandfather went to the overseer of the poor
+and he said it should be taken to the county house, so our hired man got
+the horse and buggy, and one of the girls carried the baby and they took
+it away. There was a piece in the paper about it, and Grandmother pasted
+it into her "Jay's Morning and Evening Exercises," and showed it to us.
+It said, "A Deposit After Banking Hours." "Two suspicious looking
+females were seen about town in the afternoon, one of them carrying an
+infant. They took a train early in the morning without the child. They
+probably secreted themselves in Mr. Beals' yard and if he had not taken
+the box in they would have carried it somewhere else." When Grandfather
+told the clerks in the bank about it next morning, Mr. Bunnell, who
+lives over by Mr. Daggett's, on the park, said, if it had been left at
+some people's houses it would not have been sent away. Grandmother says
+they heard that the baby was adopted afterwards by some nice people in
+Geneva. People must think this is a nice place for children, for they
+had eleven of their own before we came. Mrs. McCoe was here to call this
+afternoon and she looked at us and said: "It must be a great
+responsibility, Mrs. Beals." Grandmother said she thought "her strength
+would be equal to her day." That is one of her favorite verses. She said
+Mrs. McCoe never had any children of her own and perhaps that is the
+reason she looks so sad at us. Perhaps some one will leave a bandbox and
+a baby at her door some dark night.
+
+_Saturday._--Our brother John drove over from East Bloomfield to-day to
+see us and brought Julia Smedley with him, who is just my age. John
+lives at Mr. Ferdinand Beebe's and goes to school and Julia is Mr.
+Beebe's niece. They make quantities of maple sugar out there and they
+brought us a dozen little cakes. They were splendid. I offered John one
+and he said he would rather throw it over the fence than to eat it. I
+can't understand that. Anna had the faceache to-day and I told her that
+I would be the doctor and make her a ginger poultice. I thought I did it
+exactly right but when I put it on her face she shivered and said:
+"Carrie, you make lovely poultices only they are so cold." I suppose I
+ought to have warmed it.
+
+_Tuesday._--Grandfather took us to ride this afternoon and let us ask
+Bessie Seymour to go with us. We rode on the plank road to Chapinville
+and had to pay 2 cents at the toll gate, both ways. We met a good many
+people and Grandfather bowed to them and said, "How do you do,
+neighbor?"
+
+We asked him what their names were and he said he did not know. We went
+to see Mr. Munson, who runs the mill at Chapinville. He took us through
+the mill and let us get weighed and took us over to his house and out
+into the barn-yard to see the pigs and chickens and we also saw a colt
+which was one day old. Anna just wrote in her journal that "it was a
+very amusing site."
+
+_Sunday._--Rev. Mr. Kendall, of East Bloomfield, preached to-day. His
+text was from Job 26, 14: "Lo these are parts of his ways, but how
+little a portion is heard of him." I could not make out what he meant.
+He is James' and John's minister.
+
+_Wednesday._--Captain Menteith was at our house to dinner to-day and he
+tried to make Anna and me laugh by snapping his snuff-box under the
+table. He is a very jolly man, I think.
+
+_Thursday._--Father and Uncle Edward Richards came to see us yesterday
+and took us down to Mr. Corson's store and told us we could have
+anything we wanted. So we asked for several kinds of candy, stick candy
+and lemon drops and bulls' eyes, and then they got us two rubber balls
+and two jumping ropes with handles and two hoops and sticks to roll them
+with and two red carnelian rings and two bracelets. We enjoyed getting
+them very much, and expect to have lots of fun. They went out to East
+Bloomfield to see James and John, and father is going to take them to
+New Orleans. We hate to have them go.
+
+_Friday._--We asked Grandmother if we could have some hoop skirts like
+the seminary girls and she said no, we were not old enough. When we were
+downtown Anna bought a reed for 10 cents and ran it into the hem of her
+underskirt and says she is going to wear it to school to-morrow. I think
+Grandmother will laugh out loud for once, when she sees it, but I don't
+think Anna will wear it to school or anywhere else. She wouldn't want to
+if she knew how terrible it looked.
+
+I threaded a dozen needles on a spool of thread for Grandmother, before
+I went to school, so that she could slip them along and use them as she
+needed them. She says it is a great help.
+
+Grandmother says I will have a great deal to answer for, because Anna
+looks up to me so and tries to do everything that I do and thinks
+whatever I say is "gospel truth." The other day the girls at school were
+disputing with her about something and she said, "It is so, if it ain't
+so, for Calline said so." I shall have to "toe the mark," as Grandfather
+says, if she keeps watch of me all the time and walks in my footsteps.
+
+We asked Grandmother this evening if we could sit out in the kitchen
+with Bridget and Hannah and the hired man, Thomas Holleran. She said we
+could take turns and each stay ten minutes by the clock. It gave us a
+little change. I read once that "variety is the spice of life." They sit
+around the table and each one has a candle, and Thomas reads aloud to
+the girls while they sew. He and Bridget are Catholics, but Hannah is a
+member of our Church. The girls have lived here always, I think, but I
+don't know for sure, as I have not lived here always myself, but we have
+to get a new hired man sometimes. Grandmother says if you are as good to
+your girls as you are to yourself they will stay a long time. I am sure
+that is Grandmother's rule. Mrs. McCarty, who lives on Brook Street
+(some people call it Cat Alley but Grandmother says that is not proper),
+washes for us Mondays, and Grandmother always has a lunch for her at
+eleven o'clock and goes out herself to see that she sits down and eats
+it. Mrs. McCarty told us Monday that Mrs. Brockle's niece was dead, who
+lives next door to her. Grandmother sent us over with some things for
+their comfort and told us to say that we were sorry they were in
+trouble. We went and when we came back Anna told Grandmother that I
+said, "Never mind, Mrs. Brockle, some day we will all be dead." I am
+sure that I said something better than that.
+
+_Wednesday_.--Mr. Cross had us speak pieces to-day. He calls our names,
+and we walk on to the platform and toe the mark and make a bow and say
+what we have got to say. He did not know what our pieces were going to
+be and some of them said the same ones. Two boys spoke: "The boy stood
+on the burning deck, whence all but him had fled." William Schley was
+one, and he spoke his the best. When he said, "The flames that lit the
+battle wreck shone round him o'er the dead," we could almost see the
+fire, and when he said, "My father, must I stay?" we felt like telling
+him, no, he needn't. He is going to make a good speaker. Mr. Cross said
+so. Albert Murray spoke "Excelsior," and Horace Finley spoke nice, too.
+My piece was, "Why, Phoebe, are you come so soon? Where are your
+berries, child?" Emma Van Arsdale spoke the same one. We find them all
+in our reader. Sometime I am going to speak, "How does the water come
+down at Ladore?" Splashing and flashing and dashing and clashing and all
+that--it rhymes, so it is easy to remember.
+
+We played snap the whip at recess to-day and I was on the end and was
+snapped off against the fence. It hurt me so, that Anna cried. It is not
+a very good game for girls, especially for the one on the end.
+
+[Illustration: Grandfather Beals, Grandmother Beals]
+
+_Tuesday._--I could not keep a journal for two weeks, because
+Grandfather and Grandmother have been very sick and we were afraid
+something dreadful was going to happen. We are so glad that they are
+well again. Grandmother was sick upstairs and Grandfather in the bedroom
+downstairs, and we carried messages back and forth for them. Dr. Carr
+and Aunt Mary came over twice every day and said they had the influenza
+and the inflammation of the lungs. It was lonesome for us to sit down to
+the table and just have Hannah wait on us. We did not have any blessing
+because there was no one to ask it. Anna said she could, but I was
+afraid she would not say it right, so I told her she needn't. We had
+such lumps in our throats we could not eat much and we cried ourselves
+to sleep two or three nights. Aunt Ann Field took us home with her one
+afternoon to stay all night. We liked the idea and Mary and Louisa and
+Anna and I planned what we would play in the evening, but just as it was
+dark our hired man, Patrick McCarty, drove over after us. He said
+Grandfather and Grandmother could not get to sleep till they saw the
+children and bid them good-night. So we rode home with him. We never
+stayed anywhere away from home all night that we can remember. When
+Grandmother came downstairs the first time she was too weak to walk, so
+she sat on each step till she got down. When Grandfather saw her, he
+smiled and said to us: "When she will, she will, you may depend on't;
+and when she won't she won't, and that's the end on't." But we knew all
+the time that he was very glad to see her.
+
+
+
+
+1853
+
+
+_Sunday, March 20._--It snowed so, that we could not go to church to-day
+and it was the longest day I ever spent. The only excitement was seeing
+the snowplow drawn by two horses, go up on this side of the street and
+down on the other. Grandfather put on his long cloak with a cape, which
+he wears in real cold weather, and went. We wanted to pull some long
+stockings over our shoes and go too but Grandmother did not think it was
+best. She gave us the "Dairyman's Daughter" and "Jane the Young
+Cottager," by Leigh Richmond, to read. I don't see how they happened to
+be so awfully good. Anna says they died of "early piety," but she did
+not say it very loud. Grandmother said she would give me 10 cents if I
+would learn the verses in the New England Primer that John Rogers left
+for his wife and nine small children and one at the breast, when he was
+burned at the stake, at Smithfield, England, in 1555. One verse is, "I
+leave you here a little book for you to look upon that you may see your
+father's face when he is dead and gone." It is a very long piece but I
+got it. Grandmother says "the blood of the martyrs is the seed of the
+church." Anna learned
+
+ "In Adam's fall we sinned all.
+ My Book and heart shall never part.
+ The Cat doth play and after slay.
+ The Dog doth bite a thief at night."
+
+When she came to the end of it and said,
+
+ "Zaccheus he, did climb a tree, his Lord to see."
+
+she said she heard some one say, "The tree broke down and let him fall
+and he did not see his Lord at all." Grandmother said it was very wicked
+indeed and she hoped Anna would try and forget it.
+
+_April 1._--Grandmother sent me up into the little chamber to-day to
+straighten things and get the room ready to be cleaned. I found a little
+book called "Child's Pilgrim Progress, Illustrated," that I had never
+seen before. I got as far as Giant Despair when Anna came up and said
+Grandmother sent her to see what I was doing, and she went back and told
+her that I was sitting on the floor in the midst of books and papers and
+was so absorbed in "Pilgrim's Progress" that I had made none myself. It
+must be a good book for Grandmother did not say a word. Father sent us
+"Gulliver's Travels" and there is a gilt picture on the green cover, of
+a giant with legs astride and little Lilliputians standing underneath,
+who do not come up to his knees. Grandmother did not like the picture,
+so she pasted a piece of pink calico over it, so we could only see the
+giant from his waist up. I love the story of Cinderella and the poem,
+"'Twas the night before Christmas," and I am sorry that there are no
+fairies and no Santa Claus.
+
+We go to school to Miss Zilpha Clark in her own house on Gibson Street.
+Other girls who go are Laura Chapin, Julia Phelps, Mary Paul, Bessie
+Seymour, Lucilla and Mary Field, Louisa Benjamin, Nannie Corson, Kittie
+Marshall, Abbie Clark and several other girls. I like Abbie Clark the
+best of all the girls in school excepting of course my sister Anna.
+
+Before I go to school every morning I read three chapters in the Bible.
+I read three every day and five on Sunday and that takes me through the
+Bible in a year. Those I read this morning were the first, second and
+third chapters of Job. The first was about Eliphaz reproveth Job;
+second, Benefit of God's correction; third, Job justifieth his
+complaint. I then learned a text to say at school. I went to school at
+quarter to nine and recited my text and we had prayers and then
+proceeded with the business of the day. Just before school was out, we
+recited in "Science of Things Familiar," and in Dictionary, and then we
+had calisthenics.
+
+We go through a great many figures and sing "A Life on the Ocean Wave,"
+"What Fairy-like Music Steals Over the Sea," "Lightly Row, Lightly Row,
+O'er the Glassy Waves We Go," and "O Come, Come Away," and other songs.
+Mrs. Judge Taylor wrote one song on purpose for us.
+
+_May 1._--I arose this morning about the usual time and read my three
+chapters in the Bible and had time for a walk in the garden before
+breakfast. The polyanthuses are just beginning to blossom and they
+border all the walk up and down the garden. I went to school at quarter
+of nine, but did not get along very well because we played too much. We
+had two new scholars to-day, Miss Archibald and Miss Andrews, the former
+about seventeen and the latter about fifteen. In the afternoon old Mrs.
+Kinney made us a visit, but she did not stay very long. In dictionary
+class I got up sixth, although I had not studied my lesson very much.
+
+_July._--Hiram Goodrich, who lives at Mr. Myron H. Clark's, and George
+and Wirt Wheeler ran away on Sunday to seek their fortunes. When they
+did not come back every one was frightened and started out to find them.
+They set out right after Sunday School, taking their pennies which had
+been given them for the contribution, and were gone several days. They
+were finally found at Palmyra. When asked why they had run away, one
+replied that he thought it was about time they saw something of the
+world. We heard that Mr. Clark had a few moments' private conversation
+with Hiram in the barn and Mr. Wheeler the same with his boys and we do
+not think they will go traveling on their own hook again right off. Miss
+Upham lives right across the street from them and she was telling little
+Morris Bates that he must fight the good fight of faith and he asked her
+if that was the fight that Wirt Wheeler fit. She probably had to make
+her instructions plainer after that.
+
+_July._--Every Saturday our cousins, Lucilla and Mary and Louisa Field,
+take turns coming to Grandmother's to dinner. It was Mary's turn to-day,
+but she was sick and couldn't come, so Grandmother told us that we could
+dress up and make some calls for her. We were very glad. She told us to
+go to Mrs. Gooding's first, so we did and she was glad to see us and
+gave us some cake she had just made. Then we went on to Mr. Greig's. We
+walked up the high steps to the front door and rang the bell and Mr.
+Alexander came. We asked if Mrs. Greig and Miss Chapin were at home and
+he said yes, and asked us into the parlor. We looked at the paintings on
+the wall and looked at ourselves in the long looking-glass, while we
+were waiting. Mrs. Irving came in first. She was very nice and said I
+looked like her niece, Julie Jeffrey. I hope I do, for I would like to
+look like her. Mrs. Greig and Miss Chapin came in and were very glad to
+see us, and took us out into the greenhouse and showed us all the
+beautiful plants. When we said we would have to go they said goodbye and
+sent love to Grandmother and told us to call again. I never knew Anna to
+act as polite as she did to-day. Then we went to see Mrs. Judge Phelps
+and Miss Eliza Chapin, and they were very nice and gave us some flowers
+from their garden. Then we went on to Miss Caroline Jackson's, to see
+Mrs. Holmes. Sometimes she is my Sunday School teacher, and she says she
+and our mother used to be great friends at the seminary. She said she
+was glad we came up and she hoped we would be as good as our mother was.
+That is what nearly every one says. On our way back, we called on Mrs.
+Dana at the Academy, as she is a friend of Grandmother. She is Mrs. Noah
+T. Clarke's mother. After that, we went home and told Grandmother we had
+a very pleasant time calling on our friends and they all asked us to
+come again.
+
+_Sunday, August 15._--To-day the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper was held
+in our church, and Mr. Daggett baptized several little babies. They
+looked so cunning when he took them in his arms and not one of them
+cried. I told Grandmother when we got home that I remembered when
+Grandfather Richards baptized me in Auburn, and when he gave me back to
+mother he said, "Blessed little lambkin, you'll never know your
+grandpa." She said I was mistaken about remembering it, for he died
+before I was a year old, but I had heard it told so many times I thought
+I remembered it. Probably that is the way it was but I know it happened.
+
+_November 22._--I wrote a composition to-day, and the subject was,
+"Which of the Seasons Is the Pleasantest?" Anna asked Grandmother what
+she should write about, and Grandmother said she thought "A Contented
+Mind" would be a very good subject, but Anna said she never had one and
+didn't know what it meant, so she didn't try to write any at all.
+
+A squaw walked right into our kitchen to-day with a blanket over her
+head and had beaded purses to sell.
+
+This is my composition which I wrote: "Which of the seasons is the
+pleasantest? Grim winter with its cold snows and whistling winds, or
+pleasant spring with its green grass and budding trees, or warm summer
+with its ripening fruit and beautiful flowers, or delightful autumn with
+its golden fruit and splendid sunsets? I think that I like all the
+seasons very well. In winter comes the blazing fire and Christmas treat.
+Then we can have sleigh-rides and play in the snow and generally get
+pretty cold noses and toses. In spring we have a great deal of rain and
+very often snow and therefore we do not enjoy that season as much as we
+would if it was dry weather, but we should remember that April showers
+bring May flowers. In summer we can hear the birds warbling their sweet
+notes in the trees and we have a great many strawberries, currants,
+gooseberries and cherries, which I like very much, indeed, and I think
+summer is a very pleasant season. In autumn we have some of our choicest
+fruits, such as peaches, pears, apples, grapes and plums and plenty of
+flowers in the former part, but in the latter, about in November, the
+wind begins to blow and the leaves to fall and the flowers to wither and
+die. Then cold winter with its sleigh-rides comes round again." After I
+had written this I went to bed. Anna tied her shoe strings in hard knots
+so she could sit up later.
+
+_November 23._--We read our compositions to-day and Miss Clark said mine
+was very good. One of the girls had a Prophecy for a composition and
+told what we were all going to be when we grew up. She said Anna
+Richards was going to be a missionary and Anna cried right out loud. I
+tried to comfort her and told her it might never happen, so she stopped
+crying.
+
+_November 24._--Three ladies visited our school to-day, Miss Phelps,
+Miss Daniels and Mrs. Clark. We had calisthenics and they liked them.
+
+_Sunday._--Mr. Tousley preached to-day. Mr. Lamb is Superintendent of
+the Sunday School. Mr. Chipman used to be. Miss Mollie Bull played the
+melodeon. Mr. Fairchild is my teacher when he is there. He was not there
+to-day and Miss Mary Howell taught our class. I wish I could be as good
+and pretty as she is. We go to church morning and afternoon and to
+Sunday School, and learn seven verses every week and recite catechism
+and hymns to Grandmother in the evening. Grandmother knows all the
+questions by heart, so she lets the book lie in her lap and she asks
+them with her eyes shut. She likes to hear us sing:
+
+ "'Tis religion that can give
+ Sweetest pleasure while we live,
+ 'Tis religion can supply
+ Solid comfort when we die."
+
+_December 1._--Grandfather asked me to read President Pierce's message
+aloud to him this evening. I thought it was very long and dry, but he
+said it was interesting and that I read it very well. I am glad he liked
+it. Part of it was about the Missouri Compromise and I didn't even know
+what it meant.
+
+_December 8._--We are taking dictation lessons at school now. Miss Clark
+reads to us from the "Life of Queen Elizabeth" and we write it down in a
+book and keep it. She corrects it for us. I always spell "until" with
+two l's and she has to mark it every time. I hope I will learn how to
+spell it after a while.
+
+_Saturday, December 9._--We took our music lessons to-day. Miss Hattie
+Heard is our teacher and she says we are getting along well. Anna
+practiced her lesson over sixty-five times this morning before breakfast
+and can play "Mary to the Saviour's Tomb" as fast as a waltz.
+
+We chose sides and spelled down at school to-day. Julia Phelps and I
+stood up the last and both went down on the same word--eulogism. I don't
+see the use of that "e." Miss Clark gave us twenty words which we had to
+bring into some stories which we wrote. It was real fun to hear them.
+Every one was different.
+
+This evening as we sat before the fire place with Grandmother, she
+taught us how to play "Cat's Cradle," with a string on our fingers.
+
+_December 25._--Uncle Edward Richards sent us a basket of lovely things
+from New York for Christmas. Books and dresses for Anna and me, a
+kaleidoscope, large cornucopias of candy, and games, one of them being
+battledore and shuttlecock. Grandmother says we will have to wait until
+spring to play it, as it takes so much room. I wish all the little girls
+in the world had an Uncle Edward.
+
+
+
+
+1854
+
+
+_January 1, 1854._--About fifty little boys and girls at intervals
+knocked at the front door to-day, to wish us Happy New Year. We had
+pennies and cakes and apples ready for them. The pennies, especially,
+seemed to attract them and we noticed the same ones several times. Aunt
+Mary Carr made lovely New Year cakes with a pretty flower stamped on
+before they were baked.
+
+_February_ 4, 1854.--We heard to-day of the death of our little
+half-sister, Julia Dey Richards, in Penn Yan, yesterday, and I felt so
+sorry I couldn't sleep last night so I made up some verses about her and
+this morning wrote them down and gave them to Grandfather. He liked them
+so well he wanted me to show them to Miss Clark and ask her to revise
+them. I did and she said she would hand them to her sister Mary to
+correct. When she handed them back they were very much nicer than they
+were at first and Grandfather had me copy them and he pasted them into
+one of his Bibles to keep.
+
+_Saturday._--Anna and I went to call on Miss Upham to-day. She is a real
+old lady and lives with her niece, Mrs. John Bates, on Gibson Street.
+Our mother used to go to school to her at the Seminary. Miss Upham said
+to Anna, "Your mother was a lovely woman. You are not at all like her,
+dear." I told Anna she meant in looks I was sure, but Anna was afraid
+she didn't.
+
+_Sunday._--Mr. Daggett's text this morning was the 22nd chapter of
+Revelation, 16th verse, "I am the root and offspring of David and the
+bright and morning star." Mrs. Judge Taylor taught our Sunday School
+class to-day and she said we ought not to read our S. S. books on
+Sunday. I always do. Mine to-day was entitled, "Cheap Repository Tracts
+by Hannah More," and it did not seem unreligious at all.
+
+_Tuesday._--A gentleman visited our school to-day whom we had never
+seen. Miss Clark introduced him to us. When he came in, Miss Clark said,
+"Young ladies," and we all stood up and bowed and said his name in
+concert. Grandfather says he would rather have us go to school to Miss
+Clark than any one else because she teaches us manners as well as books.
+We girls think that he is a very particular friend of Miss Clark. He is
+very nice looking, but we don't know where he lives. Laura Chapin says
+he is an architect. I looked it up in the dictionary and it says one who
+plans or designs. I hope he does not plan to get married to Miss Clark
+and take her away and break up the school, but I presume he does, for
+that is usually the way.
+
+_Monday._--There was a minister preached in our church last night and
+some people say he is the greatest minister in the world. I think his
+name was Mr. Finney. Grandmother said I could go with our girl, Hannah
+White. We sat under the gallery, in Miss Antoinette Pierson's pew. There
+was a great crowd and he preached good. Grandmother says that our mother
+was a Christian when she was ten years old and joined the church and she
+showed us some sermons that mother used to write down when she was
+seventeen years old, after she came home from church, and she has kept
+them all these years. I think children in old times were not as bad as
+they are now.
+
+_Tuesday._--Mrs. Judge Taylor sent for me to come over to see her
+to-day. I didn't know what she wanted, but when I got there she said she
+wanted to talk and pray with me on the subject of religion. She took me
+into one of the wings. I never had been in there before and was
+frightened at first, but it was nice after I got used to it. After she
+prayed, she asked me to, but I couldn't think of anything but "Now I lay
+me down to sleep," and I was afraid she would not like that, so I didn't
+say anything. When I got home and told Anna, she said, "Caroline, I
+presume probably Mrs. Taylor wants you to be a Missionary, but I shan't
+let you go." I told her she needn't worry for I would have to stay at
+home and look after her. After school to-night I went out into Abbie
+Clark's garden with her and she taught me how to play "mumble te peg."
+It is fun, but rather dangerous. I am afraid Grandmother won't give me a
+knife to play with. Abbie Clark has beautiful pansies in her garden and
+gave me some roots.
+
+_April 1._--This is April Fool's Day. It is not a very pleasant day, but
+I am not very pleasant either. I spent half an hour this morning very
+pleasantly writing a letter to my Father but just as I had finished it,
+Grandmother told me something to write which I did not wish to and I
+spoke quite disrespectfully, but I am real sorry and I won't do so any
+more.
+
+Lucilla and Louisa Field were over to our house to dinner to-day. We had
+a very good dinner indeed. In the afternoon, Grandmother told me that I
+might go over to Aunt Ann's on condition that I would not stay, but I
+stayed too long and got my indian rubbers real muddy and Grandmother did
+not like it. I then ate my supper and went to bed at ten minutes to
+eight o'clock.
+
+_Monday, April 3._--I got up this morning at quarter before six o'clock.
+I then read my three chapters in the Bible, and soon after ate my
+breakfast, which consisted of ham and eggs and buckwheat cakes. I then
+took a morning walk in the garden and rolled my hoop. I went to school
+at quarter before 9 o'clock. Miss Clark has us recite a verse of
+scripture in response to roll call and my text for the morning was the
+8th verse of the 6th chapter of Matthew, "Be ye not therefore like unto
+them; for your Father knoweth what things ye have need of before ye ask
+him." We then had prayers. I then began to write my composition and we
+had recess soon after. In the afternoon I recited grammar, wrote my
+dictation lesson and Dictionary lesson. I was up third in my Dictionary
+class but missed two words, and instead of being third in the class, I
+was fifth. After supper I read my Sunday School book, "A Shepherd's Call
+to the Lambs of his Flock." I went to bed as usual at ten minutes to 8
+o'clock.
+
+_April_ 4.--We went into our new schoolroom to-day at Miss Clark's
+school. It is a very nice room and much larger than the one we occupied
+before. Anna and I were sewing on our dolls' clothes this afternoon and
+we talked so much that finally Grandmother said, "the one that speaks
+first is the worst; and the one that speaks last is the best." We kept
+still for quite a while, which gave Grandmother a rest, but was very
+hard for us, especially Anna. Pretty soon Grandmother forgot and asked
+us a question, so we had the joke on her. Afterwards Anna told me she
+would rather "be the worst," than to keep still so long again.
+
+_Wednesday._--Grandmother sent Anna and me up to Butcher Street after
+school to-day to invite Chloe to come to dinner. I never saw so many
+black people as there are up there. We saw old Lloyd and black Jonathan
+and Dick Valentine and Jerusha and Chloe and Nackie. Nackie was pounding
+up stones into sand, to sell, to scour with. Grandmother often buys it
+of her. I think Chloe was surprised, but she said she would be ready,
+to-morrow, at eleven o'clock, when the carriage came for her. I should
+hate to be as fat as Chloe. I think she weighs 300. She is going to sit
+in Grandfather's big arm chair, Grandmother says.
+
+We told her we should think she would rather invite white ladies, but
+she said Chloe was a poor old slave and as Grandfather had gone to
+Saratoga she thought it was a good time to have her. She said God made
+of one blood all the people on the face of the earth, so we knew she
+would do it and we didn't say any more. When we talk too much,
+Grandfather always says N. C. (nuff ced). She sent a carriage for Chloe
+and she came and had a nice dinner, not in the kitchen either.
+Grandmother asked her if there was any one else she would like to see
+before she went home and she said, "Yes, Miss Rebekah Gorham," so she
+told the coachman to take her down there and wait for her to make a call
+and then take her home and he did. Chloe said she had a very nice time,
+so probably Grandmother was all right as she generally is, but I could
+not be as good as she is, if I should try one hundred years.
+
+_June._--Our cousin, George Bates, of Honolulu, came to see us to-day.
+He has one brother, Dudley, but he didn't come. George has just
+graduated from college and is going to Japan to be a doctor. He wrote
+such a nice piece in my album I must copy it, "If I were a poet I would
+celebrate your virtues in rhyme, if I were forty years old, I would
+write a homily on good behavior; being neither, I will quote two
+familiar lines which if taken as a rule of action will make you a good
+and happy woman:
+
+ "Honor and shame from no condition rise,
+ Act well your part, there all the honor lies."
+
+I think he is a very smart young man and will make a good doctor to the
+heathen.
+
+_Saturday._--Grandfather took us down street to be measured for some new
+patten leather shoes at Mr. Ambler's. They are going to be very nice
+ones for best. We got our new summer hats from Mrs. Freshour's millinery
+and we wore them over to show to Aunt Ann and she said they were the
+very handsomest bonnets she had seen this year.
+
+_Tuesday._--When we were on our way to school this morning we met a lot
+of people and girls and boys going to a picnic up the lake. They asked
+us to go, too, but we said we were afraid we could not. Mr. Alex. Howell
+said, "Tell your Grandfather I will bring you back safe and sound unless
+the boat goes to the bottom with all of us." So we went home and told
+Grandfather and much to our surprise he said we could go. We had never
+been on a boat or on the lake before. We went up to the head on the
+steamer "_Joseph Wood_" and got off at Maxwell's Point. They had a
+picnic dinner and lots of good things to eat. Then we all went into the
+glen and climbed up through it. Mr. Alex. Howell and Mrs. Wheeler got to
+the top first and everybody gave three cheers. We had a lovely time
+riding back on the boat and told Grandmother we had the very best time
+we ever had in our whole lives.
+
+_May 26._--There was an eclipse of the sun to-day and we were very much
+excited looking at it. General Granger came over and gave us some pieces
+of smoked glass. Miss Clark wanted us to write compositions about it so
+Anna wrote, "About eleven o'clock we went out to see if it had come yet,
+but it hadn't come yet, so we waited awhile and then looked again and it
+had come, and there was a piece of it cut out of it." Miss Clark said it
+was a very good description and she knew Anna wrote it all herself.
+
+I handed in a composition, too, about the eclipse, but I don't think
+Miss Clark liked it as well as she did Anna's, because it had something
+in it about "the beggarly elements of the world." She asked me where I
+got it and I told her that it was in a nice story book that Grandmother
+gave me to read entitled "Elizabeth Thornton or the Flower and Fruit of
+Female Piety, and other sketches," by Samuel Irenaeus Prime. This was
+one of the other sketches: It commenced by telling how the moon came
+between the sun and the earth, and then went on about the beggarly
+elements. Miss Clark asked me if I knew what they meant and I told her
+no, but I thought they sounded good. She just smiled and never scolded
+me at all. I suppose next time I must make it all up myself.
+
+There is a Mr. Packer in town, who teaches all the children to sing. He
+had a concert in Bemis Hall last night and he put Anna on the top row of
+the pyramid of beauty and about one hundred children in rows below. She
+ought to have worn a white dress as the others did but Grandmother said
+her new pink barege would do. I curled her hair all around in about
+thirty curls and she looked very nice. She waved the flag in the shape
+of the letter S and sang "The Star Spangled Banner," and all the others
+joined in the chorus. It was perfectly grand.
+
+_Monday._--When we were on our way to school this morning we saw General
+Granger coming, and Anna had on such a homely sunbonnet she took it off
+and hid it behind her till he had gone by. When we told Grandmother she
+said, "Pride goeth before destruction and a haughty spirit before a
+fall." I never heard of any one who knew so many Bible verses as
+Grandmother. Anna thought she would be sorry for her and get her a new
+sunbonnet, but she didn't.
+
+_Sunday._--We have Sunday School at nine o'clock in the morning now.
+Grandfather loves to watch us when we walk off together down the street,
+so he walks back and forth on the front walk till we come out, and gives
+us our money for the contribution. This morning we had on our new white
+dresses that Miss Rosewarne made and new summer hats and new patten
+leather shoes and our mitts. When he had looked us all over he said,
+with a smile, "The Bible says, let your garments be always white." After
+we had gone on a little ways, Anna said: "If Grandmother had thought of
+that verse I wouldn't have had to wear my pink barege dress to the
+concert." I told her she need not feel bad about that now, for she sang
+as well as any of them and looked just as good. She always believes
+everything I say, although she does not always do what I tell her to.
+Mr. Noah T. Clarke told us in Sunday School last Sunday that if we
+wanted to take shares in the missionary ship, _Morning Star,_ we could
+buy them at 10 cents apiece, and Grandmother gave us $1 to-day so we
+could have ten shares. We got the certificate with a picture of the ship
+on it, and we are going to keep it always. Anna says if we pay the
+money, we don't have to go.
+
+_Sunday._--I almost forgot that it was Sunday this morning and talked
+and laughed just as I do week days. Grandmother told me to write down
+this verse before I went to church so I would remember it: "Keep thy
+foot when thou goest to the house of God, and be more ready to hear than
+to offer the sacrifice of fools." I will remember it now, sure. My feet
+are all right any way with my new patten leather shoes on but I shall
+have to look out for my head. Mr. Thomas Howell read a sermon to-day as
+Mr. Daggett is out of town. Grandmother always comes upstairs to get the
+candle and tuck us in before she goes to bed herself, and some nights we
+are sound asleep and do not hear her, but last night we only pretended
+to be asleep. She kneeled down by the bed and prayed aloud for us, that
+we might be good children and that she might have strength given to her
+from on high to guide us in the straight and narrow path which leads to
+life eternal. Those were her very words. After she had gone downstairs
+we sat up in bed and talked about it and promised each other to be good,
+and crossed our hearts and "hoped to die" if we broke our promise. Then
+Anna was afraid we would die, but I told her I didn't believe we would
+be as good as that, so we kissed each other and went to sleep.
+
+[Illustration: Mr. Noah T. Clarke, Miss Upham]
+
+_Monday._--"Old Alice" was at our house to-day and Grandmother gave her
+some flowers. She hid them in her apron for she said if she should meet
+any little children and they should ask for them she would have to let
+them go. Mrs. Gooding was at our house to-day and made a carpet. We went
+over to Aunt Mary Carr's this evening to see the gas and the new
+chandeliers. They are brontz.
+
+_Tuesday._--My three chapters that I read this morning were about
+Josiah's zeal and reformation; 2nd, Jerusalem taken by Nebuchadnezzar;
+3rd, Jerusalem besieged and taken. The reason that we always read the
+Bible the first thing in the morning is because it says in the Bible,
+"Seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness and all these
+things shall be added unto you." Grandmother says she hopes we will
+treasure up all these things in our hearts and practice them in our
+lives. I hope so, too. This morning Anna got very mad at one of the
+girls and Grandmother told her she ought to return good for evil and
+heap coals of fire on her head. Anna said she wished she could and burn
+her all up, but I don't think she meant it.
+
+_Wednesday._--I got up this morning at twenty minutes after five. I
+always brush my teeth every morning, but I forget to put it down here. I
+read my three chapters in Job and played in the garden and had time to
+read Grandmother a piece in the paper about some poor children in New
+York. Anna and I went over to Aunt Ann's before school and she gave us
+each two sticks of candy apiece. Part of it came from New York and part
+from Williamstown, Mass., where Henry goes to college. Ann Eliza is
+going down street with us this afternoon to buy us some new summer
+bonnets. They are to be trimmed with blue and white and are to come to
+five dollars. We are going to Mr. Stannard's store also, to buy us some
+stockings. I ought to buy me a new thimble and scissors for I carried my
+sewing to school to-day and they were inside of it very carelessly and
+dropped out and got lost. I ought to buy them with my own money, but I
+haven't got any, for I gave all I had (two shillings) to Anna to buy
+Louisa Field a cornelian ring. Perhaps Father will send me some money
+soon, but I hate to ask him for fear he will rob himself. I don't like
+to tell Grandfather how very careless I was, though I know he would say,
+"Accidents will happen."
+
+_Thursday._--I was up early this morning because a dressmaker, Miss
+Willson, is coming to make me a new calico dress. It is white with pink
+spots in it and Grandfather bought it in New York. It is very nice
+indeed and I think Grandfather was very kind to get it for me. I had to
+stay at home from school to be fitted. I helped sew and run my dress
+skirt around the bottom and whipped it on the top. I went to school in
+the afternoon, but did not have my lessons very well. Miss Clark excused
+me because I was not there in the morning. Some girls got up on our
+fence to-day and walked clear across it, the whole length. It is iron
+and very high and has a stone foundation. Grandmother asked them to get
+down, but I think they thought it was more fun to walk up there than it
+was on the ground. The name of the little girl that got up first was
+Mary Lapham. She is Lottie Lapham's cousin. I made the pocket for my
+dress after I got home from school and then Grandfather said he would
+take us out to ride, so he took us way up to Thaddeus Chapin's on the
+hill. Julia Phelps was there, playing with Laura Chapin, for she is her
+cousin. Henry and Ann Eliza Field came over to call this evening. Henry
+has come home from Williams College on his vacation and he is a very
+pleasant young man, indeed. I am reading a continued story in _Harper's
+Magazine_. It is called Little Dorritt, by Charles Dickens, and is very
+interesting.
+
+_Friday, May._--Miss Clark told us we could have a picnic down to Sucker
+Brook this afternoon and she told us to bring our rubbers and lunches by
+two o'clock; but Grandmother was not willing to let us go; not that she
+wished to deprive us of any pleasure for she said instead we could wear
+our new black silk basks and go with her to Preparatory lecture, so we
+did, but when we got there we found that Mr. Daggett was out of town so
+there was no meeting. Then she told us we could keep dressed up and go
+over to Aunt Mary Carr's and take her some apples, and afterwards
+Grandfather took us to ride to see old Mrs. Sanborn and old Mr. and Mrs.
+Atwater. He is ninety years old and blind and deaf, so we had quite a
+good time after all.
+
+Rev. Mr. Dickey, of Rochester, agent for the Seaman's Friend Society,
+preached this morning about the poor little canal boy. His text was from
+the 107th Psalm, 23rd verse, "They that go down into the sea in ships."
+He has the queerest voice and stops off between his words. When we got
+home Anna said she would show us how he preached and she described what
+he said about a sailor in time of war. She said, "A ball came--and
+struck him there--another ball came--and struck him there--he raised his
+faithful sword--and went on--to victory--or death." I expected
+Grandfather would reprove her, but he just smiled a queer sort of smile
+and Grandmother put her handkerchief up to her face, as she always does
+when she is amused about anything. I never heard her laugh out loud, but
+I suppose she likes funny things as well as anybody. She did just the
+same, this morning, when Grandfather asked Anna where the sun rose, and
+she said "over by Gen. Granger's house and sets behind the Methodist
+church." She said she saw it herself and should never forget it when any
+one asked her which was east or west. I think she makes up more things
+than any one I know of.
+
+_Sunday._--Rev. M. L. R. P. Thompson preached to-day. He used to be the
+minister of our church before Mr. Daggett came. Some people call him
+Rev. "Alphabet" Thompson, because he has so many letters in his name. He
+preached a very good sermon from the text, "Dearly beloved, as much as
+lieth in you, live peaceably with all men." I like to hear him preach,
+but not as well as I do Mr. Daggett. I suppose I am more used to him.
+
+_Thursday._--Edward Everett, of Boston, lectured in our church this
+evening. They had a platform built even with the tops of the pews, so he
+did not have to go up into the pulpit. Crowds and crowds came to hear
+him from all over everywhere. Grandmother let me go. They say he is the
+most eloquent speaker in the U. S., but I have heard Mr. Daggett when I
+thought he was just as good.
+
+_Sunday._--We went to church to-day and heard Rev. Mr. Stowe preach. His
+text was, "The poor ye have with you always and whensoever ye will ye
+may do them good." I never knew any one who liked to go to church as
+much as Grandmother does. She says she "would rather be a doorkeeper in
+the house of our God, than to dwell in the tents of wickedness." They
+don't have women doorkeepers, and I know she would not dwell a minute in
+a tent. Mr. Coburn is the doorkeeper in our church and he rings the bell
+every day at nine in the morning and at twelve and at nine in the
+evening, so Grandfather knows when it is time to cover up the fire in
+the fireplace and go to bed. I think if the President should come to
+call he would have to go home at nine o'clock. Grandfather's motto is:
+
+ "Early to bed and early to rise
+ Makes a man healthy, wealthy and wise."
+
+_Tuesday._--Mrs. Greig and Miss Chapin called to see us to-day.
+Grandmother says that we can return the calls as she does not visit any
+more. We would like to, for we always enjoy dressing up and making
+calls. Anna and I received two black veils in a letter to-day from Aunt
+Caroline Dey. Just exactly what we had wanted for a long while. Uncle
+Edward sent us five dollars and Grandmother said we could buy just what
+we wanted, so we went down street to look at black silk mantillas. We
+went to Moore's store and to Richardson's and to Collier's, but they
+asked ten, fifteen or twenty dollars for them, so Anna said she resolved
+from now, henceforth and forever not to spend her money for black silk
+mantillas.
+
+_Sunday._--Rev. Mr. Tousley preached to-day to the children and told us
+how many steps it took to be bad. I think he said lying was first, then
+disobedience to parents, breaking the Sabbath, swearing, stealing,
+drunkenness. I don't remember just the order they came. It was very
+interesting, for he told lots of stories and we sang a great many times.
+I should think Eddy Tousley would be an awful good boy with his father
+in the house with him all the while, but probably he has to be away part
+of the time preaching to other children.
+
+_Sunday._--Uncle David Dudley Field and his daughter, Mrs. Brewer, of
+Stockbridge, Mass., are visiting us. Mrs. Brewer has a son, David
+Josiah, who is in Yale College. After he graduates he is going to be a
+lawyer and study in his Uncle David Dudley Field's office in New York.
+He was born in Smyrna, Asia Minor, where his father and mother were
+missionaries to the Greeks, in 1837. Our Uncle David preached for Mr.
+Daggett this afternoon. He is a very old man and left his sermon at home
+and I had to go back after it. His brother, Timothy, was the first
+minister in our church, about fifty years ago. Grandmother says she
+came all the way from Connecticut with him on horseback on a pillion
+behind him. Rather a long ride, I should say. I heard her and Uncle
+David talking about their childhood and how they lived in Guilford,
+Conn., in a house that was built upon a rock. That was some time in the
+last century like the house that it tells about in the Bible that was
+built on a rock.
+
+_Sunday, August 10, 1854._--Rev. Mr. Daggett's text this morning was,
+"Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy." Grandmother said she thought
+the sermon did not do us much good for she had to tell us several times
+this afternoon to stop laughing. Grandmother said we ought to be good
+Sundays if we want to go to heaven, for there it is one eternal Sabbath.
+Anna said she didn't want to be an angel just yet and I don't think
+there is the least danger of it, as far as I can judge. Grandmother said
+there was another verse, "If we do not have any pleasure on the Sabbath,
+or think any thoughts, we shall ride on the high places of the earth,"
+and Anna said she liked that better, for she would rather ride than do
+anything else, so we both promised to be good. Grandfather told us they
+used to be more strict about Sunday than they are now. Then he told us a
+story, how he had to go to Geneva one Saturday morning in the stage and
+expected to come back in the evening, but there was an accident, so the
+stage did not come till Sunday morning. Church had begun and he told the
+stage driver to leave him right there, so he went in late and the stage
+drove on. The next day he heard that he was to come before the minister,
+Rev. Mr. Johns, and the deacons and explain why he had broken the fourth
+commandment. When he got into the meeting Mr. Johns asked him what he
+had to say, and he explained about the accident and asked them to read a
+verse from the 8th chapter of John, before they made up their minds what
+to do to him. The verse was, "Let him that is without sin among you cast
+the first stone." Grandfather said they all smiled, and the minister
+said the meeting was out. Grandfather says that shows it is better to
+know plenty of Bible verses, for some time they may do you a great deal
+of good. We then recited the catechism and went to bed.
+
+[Illustration: First Congregational Church]
+
+_August 21._--Anna says that Alice Jewett feels very proud because she
+has a little baby brother. They have named him John Harvey Jewett after
+his father, and Alice says when he is bigger she will let Anna help her
+take him out to ride in his baby-carriage. I suppose they will throw
+away their dolls now.
+
+_Tuesday, September_ 1.--I am sewing a sheet over and over for
+Grandmother and she puts a pin in to show me my stint, before I can go
+out to play. I am always glad when I get to it. I am making a sampler,
+too, and have all the capital letters worked and now will make the small
+ones. It is done in cross stitch on canvas with different color silks. I
+am going to work my name, too. I am also knitting a tippet on some
+wooden needles that Henry Carr made for me. Grandmother has raveled it
+out several times because I dropped stitches. It is rather tedious, but
+she says, "If at first you don't succeed, try, try again." Some military
+soldiers went by the house to-day and played some beautiful music.
+Grandfather has a teter and swing for us in the back yard and we enjoy
+them usually, but to-night Anna slid off the teter board when she was on
+the ground and I was in the air and I came down sooner than I expected.
+There was a hand organ and monkey going by and she was in a hurry to get
+to the street to see it. She got there a good while before I did. The
+other day we were swinging and Grandmother called us in to dinner, but
+Anna said we could not go until we "let the old cat die." Grandmother
+said it was more important that we should come when we are called.
+
+_October._--Grandmother's name is Abigail, but she was always called
+"Nabby" at home. Some of the girls call me "Carrie," but Grandmother
+prefers "Caroline." She told us to-day, how when she was a little girl,
+down in Connecticut in 1794, she was on her way to school one morning
+and she saw an Indian coming and was so afraid, but did not dare run for
+fear he would chase her. So she thought of the word sago, which means
+"good morning," and when she got up close to him she dropped a curtesy
+and said "Sago," and he just went right along and never touched her at
+all. She says she hopes we will always be polite to every one, even to
+strangers.
+
+_November._--Abbie Clark's father has been elected Governor and she is
+going to Albany to live, for a while. We all congratulated her when she
+came to school this morning, but I am sorry she is going away. We will
+write to each other every week. She wrote a prophecy and told the girls
+what they were going to be and said I should be mistress of the White
+House. I think it will happen, about the same time that Anna goes to be
+a missionary.
+
+_December._--There was a moonlight sleigh-ride of boys and girls last
+night, but Grandfather did not want us to go, but to-night he said he
+was going to take us to one himself. So after supper he told Mr. Piser
+to harness the horse to the cutter and bring it around to the front
+gate. Mr. Piser takes care of our horse and the Methodist Church. He
+lives in the basement. Grandfather sometimes calls him Shakespeare to
+us, but I don't know why. He doesn't look as though he wrote poetry.
+Grandfather said he was going to take us out to Mr. Waterman Powers' in
+Farmington and he did. They were quite surprised to see us, but very
+glad and gave us apples and doughnuts and other good things. We saw Anne
+and Imogene and Morey and one little girl named Zimmie. They wanted us
+to stay all night, but Grandmother was expecting us. We got home safe
+about ten o'clock and had a very nice time. We never sat up so late
+before.
+
+
+
+
+1855
+
+
+_Wednesday, January_ 9.--I came downstairs this morning at ten minutes
+after seven, almost frozen. I never spent such a cold night before in
+all my life. It is almost impossible to get warm even in the
+dining-room. The thermometer is 10 deg. below zero. The schoolroom was so
+cold that I had to keep my cloak on. I spoke a piece this afternoon. It
+was "The Old Arm Chair," by Eliza Cook. It begins, "I love it, I love
+it, and who shall dare to chide me for loving that old arm chair?" I
+love it because it makes me think of Grandmother. After school to-night
+Anna and I went downtown to buy a writing book, but we were so cold we
+thought we would never get back. Anna said she knew her toes were
+frozen. We got as far as Mr. Taylor's gate and she said she could not
+get any farther; but I pulled her along, for I could not bear to have
+her perish in sight of home. We went to bed about eight o'clock and
+slept very nicely indeed, for Grandmother put a good many blankets on
+and we were warm.
+
+_January_ 23.--This evening after reading one of Dickens' stories I
+knit awhile on my mittens. I have not had nice ones in a good while.
+Grandmother cut out the ones that I am wearing of white flannel, bound
+round the wrist with blue merino. They are not beautiful to be sure, but
+warm and will answer all purposes until I get some that are better. When
+I came home from school to-day Mrs. Taylor was here. She noticed how
+tall I was growing and said she hoped that I was as good as I was tall.
+A very good wish, I am sure.
+
+_Sunday, January_ 29.--Mr. Daggett preached this morning from the text,
+Deut. 8: 2: "And thou shalt remember all the way which the Lord thy God
+led thee." It is ten years to-day since Mr. Daggett came to our church,
+and he told how many deaths there had been, and how many baptisms, and
+how many members had been added to the church. It was a very interesting
+sermon, and everybody hoped Mr. Daggett would stay here ten years more,
+or twenty, or thirty, or always. He is the only minister that I ever
+had, and I don't ever want any other. We never could have any one with
+such a voice as Mr. Daggett's, or such beautiful eyes. Then he has such
+good sermons, and always selects the hymns we like best, and reads them
+in such a way. This morning they sang: "Thus far the Lord has led me on,
+thus far His power prolongs my days." After he has been away on a
+vacation he always has for the first hymn, and we always turn to it
+before he gives it out:
+
+ "Upward I lift mine eyes,
+ From God is all my aid;
+ The God that built the skies,
+ And earth and nature made.
+
+ "God is the tower
+ To which I fly
+ His grace is nigh
+ In every hour."
+
+He always prays for the oil of joy for mourning and the garment of
+praise for the spirit of heaviness.
+
+_January,_ 1855.--Johnny Lyon is dead. Georgia Wilkinson cried awfully
+in school because she said she was engaged to him.
+
+_April._--Grandmother received a letter from Connecticut to-day telling
+of the death of her only sister. She was knitting before she got it and
+she laid it down a few moments and looked quite sad and said, "So sister
+Anna is dead." Then after a little she went on with her work. Anna
+watched her and when we were alone she said to me, "Caroline, some day
+when you are about ninety you may be eating an apple or reading or doing
+something and you will get a letter telling of my decease and after you
+have read it you will go on as usual and just say, 'So sister Anna is
+dead.'" I told her that I knew if I lived to be a hundred and heard that
+she was dead I should cry my eyes out, if I had any.
+
+_May._--Father has sent us a box of fruit from New Orleans. Prunes,
+figs, dates and oranges, and one or two pomegranates. We never saw any
+of the latter before. They are full of cells with jelly in, very nice.
+He also sent some seeds of sensitive plant, which we have sown in our
+garden.
+
+This evening I wrote a letter to John and a little "poetry" to Father,
+but it did not amount to much. I am going to write some a great deal
+better some day. Grandfather had some letters to write this morning, and
+got up before three o'clock to write them! He slept about three-quarters
+of an hour to-night in his chair.
+
+_Sunday._--There was a stranger preached for Dr. Daggett this morning
+and his text was, "Man looketh upon the outward appearance but the Lord
+looketh on the heart." When we got home Anna said the minister looked as
+though he had been sick from birth and his forehead stretched from his
+nose to the back of his neck, he was so bald. Grandmother told her she
+ought to have been more interested in his words than in his looks, and
+that she must have very good eyes if she could see all that from our
+pew, which is the furthest from the pulpit of any in church, except Mr.
+Gibson's, which is just the same. Anna said she couldn't help seeing it
+unless she shut her eyes, and then every one would think she had gone to
+sleep. We can see the Academy boys from our pew, too.
+
+Mr. Lathrop, of the seminary, is superintendent of the Sunday School now
+and he had a present to-day from Miss Betsey Chapin, and several
+visitors came in to see it presented: Dr. Daggett, Mr. and Mrs. Alex.
+Howell, Mr. Tousley, Mr. Stowe, Mr. and Mrs. Gideon Granger and several
+others. The present was a certificate of life membership to something; I
+did not hear what. It was just a large piece of parchment, but they said
+it cost $25. Miss Lizzie Bull is my Sunday School teacher now. She asked
+us last Sunday to look up a place in the Bible where the trees held a
+consultation together, to see which one should reign over them. I did
+not remember any such thing, but I looked it up in the concordance and
+found it in Judges 9: 8. I found the meaning of it in Scott's Commentary
+and wrote it down and she was very much pleased, and told us next Sunday
+to find out all about Absalom.
+
+_July._--Our sensitive plant is growing nicely and it is quite a
+curiosity. It has fern-like leaves and when we touch them, they close,
+but soon come out again. Anna and I keep them performing.
+
+_September_ 1.--Anna and I go to the seminary now. Mr. Richards and Mr.
+Tyler are the principals. Anna fell down and sprained her ankle to-day
+at the seminary, and had to be carried into Mrs. Richards' library. She
+was sliding down the bannisters with little Annie Richards. I wonder
+what she will do next. She has good luck in the gymnasium and can beat
+Emma Wheeler and Jennie Ruckle swinging on the pole and climbing the
+rope ladder, although they and Sarah Antes are about as spry as
+squirrels and they are all good at ten pins. Susie Daggett and Lucilla
+Field have gone to Farmington, Conn., to school.
+
+_Monday._--I received a letter from my brother John in New Orleans, and
+his ambrotype. He has grown amazingly. He also sent me a N. O. paper and
+it gave an account of the public exercises in the school, and said John
+spoke a piece called "The Baron's Last Banquet," and had great applause
+and it said he was "a chip off the old block." He is a very nice boy, I
+know that. James is sixteen years old now and is in Princeton College.
+He is studying German and says he thinks he will go to Germany some day
+and finish his education, but I guess in that respect he will be very
+much disappointed. Germany is a great ways off and none of our relations
+that I ever heard of have ever been there and it is not at all likely
+that any of them ever will. Grandfather says, though, it is better to
+aim too high than not high enough. James is a great boy to study. They
+had their pictures taken together once and John was holding some flowers
+and James a book and I guess he has held on to it ever since.
+
+_Sunday._--Polly Peck looked so funny on the front seat of the gallery.
+She had on one of Mrs. Greig's bonnets and her lace collar and cape and
+mitts. She used to be a milliner so she knows how to get herself up in
+style. The ministers have appointed a day of fasting and prayer and Anna
+asked Grandmother if it meant to eat as fast as you can. Grandmother was
+very much surprised.
+
+_November_ 25.--I helped Grandmother get ready for Thanksgiving Day by
+stoning some raisins and pounding some cloves and cinnamon in the mortar
+pestle pounder. It is quite a job. I have been writing with a quill pen
+but I don't like it because it squeaks so. Grandfather made us some
+to-day and also bought us some wafers to seal our letters with, and some
+sealing wax and a stamp with "R" on it. He always uses the seal on his
+watch fob with "B." He got some sand, too. Our inkstand is double and
+has one bottle for ink and the other for sand to dry the writing.
+
+_December_ 20, 1855.--Susan B. Anthony is in town and spoke in Bemis
+Hall this afternoon. She made a special request that all the seminary
+girls should come to hear her as well as all the women and girls in
+town. She had a large audience and she talked very plainly about our
+rights and how we ought to stand up for them, and said the world would
+never go right until the women had just as much right to vote and rule
+as the men. She asked us all to come up and sign our names who would
+promise to do all in our power to bring about that glad day when equal
+rights should be the law of the land. A whole lot of us went up and
+signed the paper. When I told Grandmother about it she said she guessed
+Susan B. Anthony had forgotten that St. Paul said the women should keep
+silence. I told her, no, she didn't for she spoke particularly about St.
+Paul and said if he had lived in these times, instead of 1800 years ago,
+he would have been as anxious to have the women at the head of the
+government as she was. I could not make Grandmother agree with her at
+all and she said we might better all of us stayed at home. We went to
+prayer meeting this evening and a woman got up and talked. Her name was
+Mrs. Sands. We hurried home and told Grandmother and she said she
+probably meant all right and she hoped we did not laugh.
+
+_Monday._--I told Grandfather if he would bring me some sheets of
+foolscap paper I would begin to write a book. So he put a pin on his
+sleeve to remind him of it and to-night he brought me a whole lot of it.
+I shall begin it to-morrow. This evening I helped Anna do her Arithmetic
+examples, and read her Sunday School book. The name of it is "Watch and
+Pray." My book is the second volume of "Stories on the Shorter
+Catechism."
+
+_Tuesday._--I decided to copy a lot of choice stories and have them
+printed and say they were "compiled by Caroline Cowles Richards," it is
+so much easier than making them up. I spent three hours to-day copying
+one and am so tired I think I shall give it up. When I told Grandmother
+she looked disappointed and said my ambition was like "the morning cloud
+and the early dew," for it soon vanished away. Anna said it might spring
+up again and bear fruit a hundredfold. Grandfather wants us to amount to
+something and he buys us good books whenever he has a chance. He bought
+me Miss Caroline Chesebro's book, "The Children of Light," and Alice and
+Phoebe Cary's _Poems_. He is always reading Channing's memoirs and
+sermons and Grandmother keeps "Lady Huntington and Her Friends," next to
+"Jay's Morning and Evening Exercises" and her Testament. Anna told
+Grandmother that she saw Mrs. George Willson looking very steadily at us
+in prayer meeting the other night and she thought she might be planning
+to "write us up." Grandmother said she did not think Mrs. Willson was so
+short of material as that would imply, and she feared she had some other
+reason for looking at us. I think dear Grandmother has a little grain of
+sarcasm in her nature, but she only uses it on extra occasions. Anna
+said, "Oh, no; she wrote the lives of the three Mrs. Judsons and I
+thought she might like for a change to write the biographies of the 'two
+Miss Richards.'" Anna has what might be called a vivid imagination.
+
+
+
+
+1856
+
+
+_January_ 23.--This is the third morning that I have come down stairs at
+exactly twenty minutes to seven. I went to school all day. Mary Paul and
+Fannie Palmer read "_The Snow Bird_" to-day. There were some funny
+things in it. One was: "Why is a lady's hair like the latest news?
+Because in the morning we always find it in the papers." Another was:
+"One rod makes an acher, as the boy said when the schoolmaster flogged
+him."
+
+This is Allie Field's birthday. He got a pair of slippers from Mary with
+the soles all on; a pair of mittens from Miss Eliza Chapin, and Miss
+Rebecca Gorham is going to give him a pair of stockings when she gets
+them done.
+
+_January_ 30.--I came home from school at eleven o'clock this morning
+and learned a piece to speak this afternoon, but when I got up to school
+I forgot it, so I thought of another one. Mr. Richards said that he must
+give me the praise of being the best speaker that spoke in the
+afternoon. Ahem!
+
+_February_ 6.--We were awakened very early this morning by the cry of
+fire and the ringing of bells and could see the sky red with flames and
+knew it was the stores and we thought they were all burning up. Pretty
+soon we heard our big brass door knocker being pounded fast and
+Grandfather said, "Who's there?" "Melville Arnold for the bank keys," we
+heard. Grandfather handed them out and dressed as fast as he could and
+went down, while Anna and I just lay there and watched the flames and
+shook. He was gone two or three hours and when he came back he said that
+Mr. Palmer's hat store, Mr. Underhill's book store, Mr. Shafer's tailor
+shop, Mrs. Smith's millinery, Pratt & Smith's drug store, Mr.
+Mitchell's dry goods store, two printing offices and a saloon were
+burned. It was a very handsome block. The bank escaped fire, but the
+wall of the next building fell on it and crushed it. After school
+to-night Grandmother let us go down to see how the fire looked. It
+looked very sad indeed. Judge Taylor offered Grandfather one of the
+wings of his house for the bank for the present but he has secured a
+place in Mr. Buhre's store in the Franklin Block.
+
+_Thursday, February_ 7.--Dr. and Aunt Mary Carr and Uncle Field and Aunt
+Ann were over at our house to dinner to-day and we had a fine fish
+dinner, not one of Gabriel's (the man who blows such a blast through the
+street, they call him Gabriel), but one that Mr. Francis Granger sent to
+us. It was elegant. Such a large one it covered a big platter. This
+evening General Granger came in and brought a gentleman with him whose
+name was Mr. Skinner. They asked Grandfather, as one of the trustees of
+the church, if he had any objection to a deaf and dumb exhibition there
+to-morrow night. He had no objection, so they will have it and we will
+go.
+
+_Friday_.--We went and liked it very much. The man with them could talk
+and he interpreted it. There were two deaf and dumb women and three
+children. They performed very prettily, but the smartest boy did the
+most. He acted out David killing Goliath and the story of the boy
+stealing apples and how the old man tried to get him down by throwing
+grass at him, but finding that would not do, he threw stones which
+brought the boy down pretty quick. Then he acted a boy going fishing and
+a man being shaved in a barber shop and several other things. I laughed
+out loud in school to-day and made some pictures on my slate and showed
+them to Clara Willson and made her laugh, and then we both had to stay
+after school. Anna was at Aunt Ann's to supper to-night to meet a little
+girl named Helen Bristol, of Rochester. Ritie Tyler was there, too, and
+they had a lovely time.
+
+[Illustration: Judge Henry W. Taylor, Miss Zilpha Clark,
+Rev. Oliver E. Daggett, D.D., "Frankie Richardson", Horace Finley]
+
+_February_ 8.--I have not written in my journal for several days,
+because I never like to write things down if they don't go right. Anna
+and I were invited to go on a sleigh-ride, Tuesday night, and
+Grandfather said he did not want us to go. We asked him if we could
+spend the evening with Frankie Richardson and he said yes, so we went
+down there and when the load stopped for her, we went too, but we did
+not enjoy ourselves at all and did not join in the singing. I had no
+idea that sleigh-rides could make any one feel so bad. It was not very
+cold, but I just shivered all the time. When the nine o'clock bell rang
+we were up by the "Northern Retreat," and I was so glad when we got near
+home so we could get out. Grandfather and Grandmother asked us if we had
+a nice time, but we got to bed as quick as we could. The next day
+Grandfather went into Mr. Richardson's store and told him he was glad he
+did not let Frankie go on the sleigh-ride, and Mr. Richardson said he
+did let her go and we went too. We knew how it was when we got home from
+school, because they acted so sober, and, after a while, Grandmother
+talked with us about it. We told her we were sorry and we did not have a
+bit good time and would never do it again. When she prayed with us the
+next morning, as she always does before we go to school, she said,
+"Prepare us, Lord, for what thou art preparing for us," and it seemed as
+though she was discouraged, but she said she forgave us. I know one
+thing, we will never run away to any more sleigh-rides.
+
+_February_ 20.--Mr. Worden, Mrs. Henry Chesebro's father, was buried
+to-day, and Aunt Ann let Allie stay with us while she went to the
+funeral. I am going to Fannie Gaylord's party to-morrow night.
+
+I went to school this afternoon and kept the rules, so to-night I had
+the satisfaction of saying "perfect" when called upon, and if I did not
+like to keep the rules, it is some pleasure to say that.
+
+_February_ 21.--We had a very nice time at Fannie Gaylord's party and a
+splendid supper. Lucilla Field laughed herself almost to pieces when she
+found on going home that she had worn her leggins all the evening. We
+had a pleasant walk home but did not stay till it was out. Some one
+asked me if I danced every set and I told them no, I set every dance. I
+told Grandmother and she was very much pleased. Some one told us that
+Grandfather and Grandmother first met at a ball in the early settlement
+of Canandaigua. I asked her if it was so and she said she never had
+danced since she became a professing Christian and that was more than
+fifty years ago.
+
+Grandfather heard to-day of the death of his sister, Lydia, who was Mrs.
+Lyman Beecher. She was Rev. Dr. Lyman Beecher's third wife. Grandmother
+says that they visited her once and she was quite nervous thinking about
+having such a great man as Dr. Lyman Beecher for her guest, as he was
+considered one of the greatest men of his day, but she said she soon got
+over this feeling, for he was so genial and pleasant and she noticed
+particularly how he ran up and down stairs like a boy. I think that is
+very apt to be the way for "men are only boys grown tall."
+
+There was a Know Nothing convention in town to-day. They don't want any
+one but Americans to hold office, but I guess they will find that
+foreigners will get in. Our hired man is an Irishman and I think he
+would just as soon be "Prisidint" as not.
+
+_February_ 22.--This is such a beautiful day, the girls wanted a
+holiday, but Mr. Richards would not grant it. We told him it was
+Washington's birthday and we felt very patriotic, but he was inexorable.
+We had a musical review and literary exercises instead in the afternoon
+and I put on my blue merino dress and my other shoes. Anna dressed up,
+too, and I curled her hair. The Primary scholars sit upstairs this term
+and do not have to pay any more. Anna and Emma Wheeler like it very
+much, but they do not sit together. We are seated alphabetically, and I
+sit with Mary Reznor and Anna with Mittie Smith. They thought she would
+behave better, I suppose, if they put her with one of the older girls,
+but I do not know as it will have the "desired effect," as Grandmother
+says. Miss Mary Howell and Miss Carrie Hart and Miss Lizzie and Miss
+Mollie Bull were visitors this afternoon. Gertrude Monier played and
+sang. Mrs. Anderson is the singing teacher. Marion Maddox and Pussie
+Harris and Mary Daniels played on the piano. Mr. Hardick is the teacher,
+and he played too. You would think he was trying to pound the piano all
+to pieces but he is a good player. We have two papers kept up at school,
+_The Snow Bird_ and _The Waif_--one for the younger and the other for
+the older girls. Miss Jones, the composition teacher, corrects them
+both. Kate Buell and Anna Maria Chapin read _The Waif_ to-day and Gusta
+Buell and I read _The Snow Bird_. She has beautiful curls and has two
+nice brothers also, Albert and Arthur, and the girls all like them. They
+have not lived in town very long.
+
+_February_ 25.--I guess I won't fill up my journal any more by saying I
+arose this morning at the usual time, for I don't think it is a matter
+of life or death whether I get up at the usual time or a few minutes
+later and when I am older and read over the account of the manner in
+which I occupied my time in my younger days I don't think it will add
+particularly to the interest to know whether I used to get up at 7 or at
+a quarter before. I think Miss Sprague, our schoolroom teacher, would
+have been glad if none of us had got up at all this morning for we acted
+so in school. She does not want any noise during the three minute
+recess, but there has been a good deal all day. In singing class they
+disturbed Mr. Kimball by blowing through combs. We took off our round
+combs and put paper over them and then blew--Mary Wheeler and Lottie
+Lapham and Anna sat nearest me and we all tried to do it, but Lottie was
+the only one who could make it go. He thought we all did, so he made us
+come up and sit by him. I did not want to a bit. He told Miss Sprague of
+us and she told the whole school if there was as much noise another day
+she would keep every one of us an hour after half-past 4. As soon as she
+said this they all began to groan. She said "Silence." I only made the
+least speck of a noise that no one heard.
+
+_February_ 26.--To-night, after singing class, Mr. Richards asked all
+who blew through combs to rise. I did not, because I could not make it
+go, but when he said all who groaned could rise, I did, and some others,
+but not half who did it. He kept us very late and we all had to sign an
+apology to Miss Sprague.
+
+Grandfather made me a present of a beautiful blue stone to-day called
+Malachite. Anna said she always thought Malachite was one of the
+prophets.
+
+_March_ 3, 1856.--Elizabeth Spencer sits with me in school now. She is
+full of fun but always manages to look very sober when Miss Chesebro
+looks up to see who is making the noise over our way. I never seem to
+have that knack. Anna had to stay after school last night and she wrote
+in her journal that the reason was because "nature will out" and because
+"she whispered and didn't have her lessons, etc., etc., etc." Mr.
+Richards has allowed us to bring our sewing to school but now he says we
+cannot any more. I am sorry for I have some embroidery and I could get
+one pantalette done in a week, but now it will take me longer.
+Grandmother has offered me one dollar if I will stitch a linen shirt
+bosom and wrist bands for Grandfather and make the sleeves. I have
+commenced but, Oh my! it is an undertaking. I have to pull the threads
+out and then take up two threads and leave three. It is very particular
+work and Anna says the stitches must not be visible to the naked eye. I
+have to fell the sleeves with the tiniest seams and stroke all the
+gathers and put a stitch on each gather. Minnie Bellows is the best one
+in school with her needle and is a dabster at patching. She cut a piece
+right out of her new calico dress and matched a new piece in and none of
+us could tell where it was. I am sure it would not be safe for me to try
+that. Grandmother let me ask three of the girls to dinner Saturday,
+Abbie Clark, Mary Wheeler and Mary Field. We had a big roast turkey and
+everything else to match. Good enough for Queen Victoria. That reminds
+me of a conundrum we had in _The Snow Bird:_ What does Queen Victoria
+take her pills in? In cider. (Inside her.)
+
+_March_ 7.--The reports were read at school to-day and mine was,
+Attendance 10, Deportment 8, Scholarship 7 1/2, and Anna's 10, 10 and 7.
+I think they got it turned around, for Anna has not behaved anything
+uncommon lately.
+
+_March_ 10.--My teacher Miss Sprague kept me after school to-night for
+whispering, and after all the others were gone she came to my seat and
+put her arm around me and kissed me and said she loved me very much and
+hoped I would not whisper in school any more. This made me feel very
+sorry and I told her I would try my best, but it seemed as though it
+whispered itself sometimes. I think she is just as nice as she can be
+and I shall tell the other girls so. Her home is in Glens Falls.
+
+Anna jumped the rope two hundred times to-day without stopping, and I
+told her that I read of a girl who did that and then fell right down
+stone dead. I don't believe Anna will do it again. If she does I shall
+tell Grandmother.
+
+_April_ 5.--I walked down town with Grandfather this morning and it is
+such a beautiful day I felt glad that I was alive. The air was full of
+tiny little flies, buzzing around and going in circles and semicircles
+as though they were practising calisthenics or dancing a quadrille. I
+think they were glad they were alive, too. I stepped on a big bug
+crawling on the walk and Grandfather said I ought to have brushed it
+aside instead of killing it. I asked him why and he said, "Shakespeare
+says, 'The beetle that we tread upon feels a pang as great as when a
+giant dies.'"
+
+A man came to our door the other day and asked if "Deacon" Beals was at
+home. I asked Grandmother afterwards if Grandfather was a Deacon and she
+said no and never had been, that people gave him the name when he was a
+young man because he was so staid and sober in his appearance. Some one
+told me once that I would not know my Grandfather if I should meet him
+outside the Corporation. I asked why and he said because he was so
+genial and told such good stories. I told him that was just the way he
+always is at home. I do not know any one who appreciates real wit more
+than he does. He is quite strong in his likes and dislikes, however. I
+have heard him say,
+
+ "I do not like you, Dr. Fell,
+ The reason why, I cannot tell;
+ But this one thing I know full well,
+ I do not like you, Dr. Fell."
+
+Bessie Seymour wore a beautiful gold chain to school this morning and I
+told Grandmother that I wanted one just like it. She said that outward
+adornments were not of as much value as inward graces and the ornament
+of a meek and quiet spirit, in the sight of the Lord, was of great
+price. I know it is very becoming to Grandmother and she wears it all
+the time but I wish I had a gold chain just the same.
+
+Aunt Ann received a letter to-day from Lucilla, who is at Miss Porter's
+school at Farmington, Connecticut. She feels as if she were a Christian
+and that she has experienced religion.
+
+Grandfather noticed how bright and smart Bentley Murray was, on the
+street, and what a business way he had, so he applied for a place for
+him as page in the Legislature at Albany and got it. He is always
+noticing young people and says, "As the twig is bent, the tree is
+inclined." He says we may be teachers yet if we are studious now. Anna
+says, "Excuse me, please."
+
+Grandmother knows the Bible from Genesis to Revelation excepting the
+"begats" and the hard names, but Anna told her a new verse this morning,
+"At Parbar westward, four at the causeway and two at Parbar."
+Grandmother put her spectacles up on her forehead and just looked at
+Anna as though she had been talking in Chinese. She finally said, "Anna,
+I do not think that is in the Bible." She said, "Yes, it is; I found it
+in 1 Chron. 26: 18." Grandmother found it and then she said Anna had
+better spend her time looking up more helpful texts. Anna then asked her
+if she knew who was the shortest man mentioned in the Bible and
+Grandmother said "Zaccheus." Anna said that she just read in the
+newspaper, that one said "Nehimiah was" and another said "Bildad the
+Shuhite" and another said "Tohi." Grandmother said it was very wicked to
+pervert the Scripture so, and she did not approve of it at all. I don't
+think Anna will give Grandmother any more Bible conundrums.
+
+_April_ 12.--We went down town this morning and bought us some shaker
+bonnets to wear to school. They cost $1 apiece and we got some green
+silk for capes to put on them. We fixed them ourselves and wore them to
+school and some of the girls liked them and some did not, but it makes
+no difference to me what they like, for I shall wear mine till it is
+worn out. Grandmother says that if we try to please everybody we please
+nobody. The girls are all having mystic books at school now and they are
+very interesting to have. They are blank books and we ask the girls and
+boys to write in them and then they fold the page twice over and seal it
+with wafers or wax and then write on it what day it is to be opened.
+Some of them say, "Not to be opened for a year," and that is a long time
+to wait. If we cannot wait we can open them and seal them up again. I
+think Anna did look to see what Eugene Stone wrote in hers, for it does
+not look as smooth as it did at first. We have autograph albums too and
+Horace Finley gave us lots of small photographs. We paste them in the
+books and then ask the people to write their names. We have got Miss
+Upham's picture and Dr. and Mrs. Daggett, General Granger's and Hon.
+Francis Granger's and Mrs. Adele Granger Thayer and Friend Burling, Dr.
+Jewett, Dr. Cheney, Deacon Andrews and Dr. Carr, and Johnnie Thompson's,
+Mr. Noah T. Clarke, Mr. E. M. Morse, Mrs. George Willson, Theodore
+Barnum, Jim Paton's and Will Schley, Merritt Wilcox, Tom Raines, Ed.
+Williams, Gus Coleman's, W. P. Fisk and lots of the girls' pictures
+besides. Eugene Stone and Tom Eddy had their ambrotypes taken together,
+in a handsome case, and gave it to Anna. We are going to keep them
+always.
+
+_April_.--The Siamese twins are in town and a lot of the girls went to
+see them in Bemis Hall this afternoon. It costs 10 cents. Grandmother
+let us go. Their names are Eng and Chang and they are not very handsome.
+They are two men joined together. I hope they like each other but I
+don't envy them any way. If one wanted to go somewhere and the other one
+didn't I don't see how they would manage it. One would have to give up,
+that's certain. Perhaps they are both Christians.
+
+_April_ 30.--Rev. Henry M. Field, editor of the _New York Evangelist,_
+and his little French wife are here visiting. She is a wonderful woman.
+She has written a book and paints beautiful pictures and was teacher of
+art in Cooper Institute, New York. He is Grandmother's nephew and he
+brought her a picture of himself and his five brothers, taken for
+Grandmother, because she is the only aunt they have in the world. The
+rest are all dead. The men in the picture are Jonathan and Matthew and
+David Dudley and Stephen J. and Cyrus W. and Henry M. They are all very
+nice looking and Grandmother thinks a great deal of the picture.
+
+_May_ 15.--Miss Anna Gaylord is one of my teachers at the seminary and
+when I told her that I wrote a journal every day she wanted me to bring
+her my last book and let her read it. I did so and she said she enjoyed
+it very much and she hoped I would keep them for they would be
+interesting for me to read when I am old. I think I shall do so. She has
+a very particular friend, Rev. Mr. Beaumont, who is one of the teachers
+at the Academy. I think they are going to be married some day. I guess I
+will show her this page of my journal, too. Grandmother let me make a
+pie in a saucer to-day and it was very good.
+
+_May_.--We were invited to Bessie Seymour's party last night and
+Grandmother said we could go. The girls all told us at school that they
+were going to wear low neck and short sleeves. We have caps on the
+sleeves of our best dresses and we tried to get the sleeves out, so we
+could go bare arms, but we couldn't get them out. We had a very nice
+time, though, at the party. Some of the Academy boys were there and they
+asked us to dance but of course we couldn't do that. We promenaded
+around the rooms and went out to supper with them. Eugene Stone and Tom
+Eddy asked to go home with us but Grandmother sent our two girls for us,
+Bridget Flynn and Hannah White, so they couldn't. We were quite
+disappointed, but perhaps she won't send for us next time.
+
+[Illustration: Tom Eddy and Eugene Stone, "Uncle David Dudley Field"]
+
+_May._--Grandmother is teaching me how to knit some mittens now, but if
+I ever finish them it will be through much tribulation, the way they
+have to be raveled out and commenced over again. I think I shall know
+how to knit when I get through, if I never know how to do anything else.
+Perhaps I shall know how to write, too, for I write all of Grandmother's
+letters for her, because it tires her to write too much. I have sorted
+my letters to-day and tied them in packages and found I had between 500
+and 600. I have had about two letters a week for the past five years and
+have kept them all. Father almost always tells me in his letters to read
+my Bible and say my prayers and obey Grandmother and stand up straight
+and turn out my toes and brush my teeth and be good to my little sister.
+I have been practising all these so long I can say, as the young man did
+in the Bible when Jesus told him what to do to be saved, "all these have
+I kept from my youth up." But then, I lack quite a number of things
+after all. I am not always strictly obedient. For instance, I know
+Grandmother never likes to have us read the secular part of the _New
+York Observer_ on Sunday, so she puts it in the top drawer of the
+sideboard until Monday, but I couldn't find anything interesting to read
+the other Sunday so I took it out and read it and put it back. The jokes
+and stories in it did not seem as amusing as usual so I think I will not
+do it again.
+
+Grandfather's favorite paper is the _Boston Christian Register._ He
+could not have one of them torn up any more than a leaf of the Bible. He
+has barrels of them stored away in the garret.
+
+I asked Grandmother to-day to write a verse for me to keep always and
+she wrote a good one: "To be happy and live long the three grand
+essentials are: Be busy, love somebody and have high aims." I think,
+from all I have noticed about her, that she has had this for her motto
+all her life and I don't think Anna and I can do very much better than
+to try and follow it too. Grandfather tells us sometimes, when she is
+not in the room, that the best thing we can do is to be just as near
+like Grandmother as we can possibly be.
+
+_Saturday, May_ 30.--Louisa Field came over to dinner to-day and brought
+Allie with her. We had roast chickens for dinner and lots of other nice
+things. Grandmother taught us how to string lilac blossoms for necklaces
+and also how to make curls of dandelion stems. She always has some
+things in the parlor cupboard which she brings out on extra occasions,
+so she got them out to-day. They are some Chinamen which Uncle Thomas
+brought home when he sailed around the world. They are wooden images
+standing in boxes, packing tea with their feet.
+
+Last week Jennie Howell invited us to go up to Black Point Cabin with
+her and to-day with a lot of grown-up people we went and enjoyed it.
+There was a little colored girl there who waits on the table and can row
+the boats too. She is Polly Carroll's granddaughter, Mary Jane. She sang
+for us,
+
+ "Nellie Ely shuts her eye when she goes to sleep,
+ When she opens them again her eyes begin to peep;
+ Hi Nellie, Ho Nellie, listen love to me,
+ I'll sing for you, I'll play for you,
+ A dulcet melody."
+
+She is just as cute as she can be. She said Mrs. Henry Chesebro taught
+her to read.
+
+_Sunday, June_ 1.--Rev. Dr. Shaw, of Rochester, preached for Dr. Daggett
+to-day and his text was: "Whosoever drinketh of this water shall thirst
+again, but whosoever drinketh of the water that I shall give him shall
+never thirst." He said by this water he meant the pleasures of this
+life, wealth and fame and honor, of which the more we have the more we
+want and are never satisfied, but if we drink of the water that Christ
+can give us we will have happiness here and forever. It was a very good
+sermon and I love to hear him preach. Grandmother never likes to start
+for church until after all the Seminary girls and Academy boys have gone
+by, but this morning we got to the gate just as the boys came along.
+When Grandmother saw five or six hats come off and knew they were bowing
+to us, she asked us how we got acquainted with them. We told her that
+almost all the girls knew the Academy boys and I am sure that is true.
+
+_Tuesday, June_ 8.--We are cleaning house now and Grandmother asked Anna
+and me to take out a few tacks in the dining-room carpet. We did not
+like it so very well but we liked eating dinner in the parlor, as the
+table had to be set in there. Anna told us that when she got married we
+could come to visit her any time in the year as she was never going to
+clean house. We went down street on an errand to-night and hurried right
+back, as Grandmother said she should look at the clock and see how long
+we were gone. Emma Wheeler went with us. Anna says she and Emma are as
+"thick as hasty pudding."
+
+_June._--Rev. Frederick Starr, of Penn Yan, had an exhibition in Bemis
+Hall to-day of a tabernacle just like the children of Israel carried
+with them to the Promised Land. We went to see it. He made it himself
+and said he took all the directions from the Bible and knew where to put
+the curtains and the poles and everything. It was interesting but we
+thought it would be queer not to have any church to go to but one like
+that, that you could take down and put up and carry around with you
+wherever you went.
+
+_June._--Rev. Mr. Kendall is not going to preach in East Bloomfield any
+more. The paper says he is going to New York to live and be Secretary of
+the A.B.C.F.M. I asked Grandmother what that meant, and she said he
+would have to write down what the missionaries do. I guess that will
+keep him busy. Grandfather's nephew, a Mr. Adams of Boston and his wife,
+visited us about two weeks ago. He is the head of the firm Adams'
+Express Co. Anna asked them if they ever heard the conundrum "What was
+Eve made for?" and they said no, so she told them the answer, "for
+Adam's express company." They thought it was quite good. When they
+reached home, they sent us each a reticule, with scissors, thimble,
+stiletto, needle-case and tiny penknife and some stamped embroidery.
+They must be very rich.
+
+_Saturday Night, July._--Grandfather was asking us to-night how many
+things we could remember, and I told him I could remember when Zachary
+Taylor died, and our church was draped in black, and Mr. Daggett
+preached a funeral sermon about him, and I could remember when Daniel
+Webster died, and there was service held in the church and his last
+words, "I still live," were put up over the pulpit. He said he could
+remember when George Washington died and when Benjamin Franklin died. He
+was seven years old then and he was seventeen when Washington died. Of
+course his memory goes farther back than mine, but he said I did very
+well, considering.
+
+_July._--I have not written in my journal for several days because we
+have been out of town. Grandfather had to go to Victor on business and
+took Anna and me with him. Anna says she loves to ride on the cars as it
+is fun to watch the trees and fences run so. We took dinner at Dr.
+Ball's and came home on the evening train. Then Judge Ellsworth came
+over from Penn Yan to see Grandfather on business and asked if he could
+take us home with him and he said yes, so we went and had a splendid
+time and stayed two days. Stewart was at home and took us all around
+driving and took us to the graveyard to see our mother's grave. I copied
+this verse from the gravestone:
+
+ "Of gentle seeming was her form
+ And the soft beaming of her radiant eye
+ Was sunlight to the beauty of her face.
+ Peace, sacred peace, was written on her brow
+ And flowed in the low music of her voice
+ Which came unto the list'ner like the tones of soothing Autumn winds.
+ Her hands were full of consolations which she scattered free to
+ all--the poor, the sick, the sorrowful."
+
+I think she must have been exactly like Grandmother only she was 32 and
+Grandmother is 72.
+
+Stewart went to prayer meeting because it was Wednesday night, and when
+he came home his mother asked him if he took part in the meeting. He
+said he did and she asked him what he said. He said he told the story of
+Ethan Allen, the infidel, who was dying, and his daughter asked him
+whose religion she should live by, his or her mother's, and he said,
+"Your mother's, my daughter, your mother's." This pleased Mrs. Ellsworth
+very much. Stewart is a great boy and you never can tell whether he is
+in earnest or not. It was very warm while we were gone and when we got
+home Anna told Grandmother she was going to put on her barege dress and
+take a rocking-chair and a glass of ice water and a palm leaf fan and go
+down cellar and sit, but Grandmother told her if she would just sit
+still and take a book and get her mind on something else besides the
+weather, she would be cool enough. Grandmother always looks as cool as a
+cucumber even when the thermometer is 90 in the shade.
+
+_Sunday, August._--Rev. Anson D. Eddy preached this morning. His text
+was from the sixth chapter of John, 44th verse. "No man can come to me,
+except the Father which hath sent me, draw him." He is Tom Eddy's
+father, and very good-looking and smart too. He used to be one of the
+ministers of our church before Mr. Daggett came. He wrote a book in our
+Sunday School library, about Old Black Jacob, and Grandmother loves to
+read it. We had a nice dinner to-day, green peas, lemonade and
+gooseberry pie. We had cold roast lamb too, because Grandmother never
+has any meat cooked on Sunday.
+
+_Sunday._--Mr. Noah T. Clarke is superintendent of our Sunday School
+now, and this morning he asked, "What is prayer?" No one answered, so I
+stood up and gave the definition from the catechism. He seemed pleased
+and so was Grandmother when I told her. Anna said she supposes she was
+glad that "her labor was not in vain in the Lord." I think she is trying
+to see if she can say Bible verses, like grown-up people do.
+
+Grandfather said that I did better than the little boy he read about
+who, when a visitor asked the Sunday School children what was the
+ostensible object of Sabbath School instruction, waited till the
+question was repeated three times and then stood up and said, "Yes,
+sir."
+
+_Wednesday._--We could not go to prayer meeting to-night because it
+rained, so Grandmother said we could go into the kitchen and stand by
+the window and hear the Methodists. We could hear every word that old
+Father Thompson said, and every hymn they sung, but Mr. Jervis used such
+big words we could not understand him at all.
+
+_Sunday._--Grandmother says she loves to look at the beautiful white
+heads of Mr. Francis Granger and General Granger as they sit in their
+pews in church. She says that is what it means in the twelfth chapter of
+Ecclesiastes where it says, "And the almond tree shall flourish." I
+don't know exactly why it means them, but I suppose she does. We have
+got a beautiful almond tree in our front yard covered with flowers, but
+the blossoms are pink. Probably they had white ones in Jerusalem, where
+Solomon lived.
+
+_Monday._--Mr. Alex. Jeffrey has come from Lexington, Ky., and brought
+Mrs. Ross and his three daughters, Julia, Shaddie and Bessie Jeffrey.
+Mrs. Ross knows Grandmother and came to call and brought the girls. They
+are very pretty and General Granger's granddaughters. I think they are
+going to stay all summer.
+
+_Thanksgiving Day._--We all went to church and Dr. Daggett's text was:
+"He hath not dealt so with any nation." Aunt Glorianna and her children
+were here and Uncle Field and all their family and Dr. Carr and all his
+family. There were about sixteen of us in all and we children had a
+table in the corner all by ourselves. We had roast turkey and everything
+else we could think of. After dinner we went into the parlor and Aunt
+Glorianna played on the piano and sang, "Flow gently, sweet Afton, among
+thy green braes," and "Poor Bessie was a sailor's wife." These are
+Grandfather's favorites. Dr. Carr sang "I'm sitting on the stile, Mary,
+where we sat side by side." He is a beautiful singer. It seemed just
+like Sunday, for Grandmother never likes to have us work or play on
+Thanksgiving Day, but we had a very good time, indeed, and were sorry
+when they all went home.
+
+_Saturday, December_ 20.--Lillie Reeve and her brother, Charlie, have
+come from Texas to live. He goes to the Academy and she boards with Miss
+Antoinette Pierson. Miss Pierson invited me up to spend the afternoon
+and take tea with her and I went and had a very nice time. She told me
+about their camp life in Texas and how her mother died, and her little
+baby sister, Minnie, lives with her Grandmother Sheppard in Dansville.
+She is a very nice girl and I like her very much, indeed.
+
+
+
+
+1857
+
+_January_ 8.--Anna and Alice Jewett caught a ride down to the lake this
+afternoon on a bob-sleigh, and then caught a ride back on a load of
+frozen pigs. In jumping off, Anna tore her flannel petticoat from the
+band down. I did not enjoy the situation as much as Anna, because I had
+to sit up after she had gone to bed, and darn it by candle light,
+because she was afraid Grandmother might see the rent and inquire into
+it, and that would put an end to bobsled exploits.
+
+_March_ 6.--Anna and her set will have to square accounts with Mr.
+Richards to-morrow, for nine of them ran away from school this
+afternoon, Alice Jewett, Louisa Field, Sarah Antes, Hattie Paddock,
+Helen Coy, Jennie Ruckel, Frankie Younglove, Emma Wheeler and Anna. They
+went out to Mr. Sackett's, where they are making maple sugar. Mr. and
+Mrs. Sackett were at home and two Miss Sacketts and Darius, and they
+asked them in and gave them all the sugar they wanted, and Anna said
+pickles, too, and bread and butter, and the more pickles they ate the
+more sugar they could eat. I guess they will think of pickles when Mr.
+Richards asks them where they were. I think Ellie Daggett and Charlie
+Paddock went, too, and some of the Academy boys.
+
+_March 7._--They all had to stay after school to-night for an hour and
+copy Dictionary. Anna seems reconciled, for she just wrote in her
+journal: "It was a very good plan to keep us because no one ever ought
+to stay out of school except on account of sickness, and if they once
+get a thing fixed in their minds it will stay there, and when they grow
+up it will do them a great deal of good."
+
+_April._--Grandfather gave us 10 cents each this morning for learning
+the 46th Psalm and has promised us $1 each for reading the Bible through
+in a year. We were going to any way. Some of the girls say they should
+think we would be afraid of Grandfather, he is so sober, but we are not
+the least bit. He let us count $1,000 to-night which a Mr. Taylor, a
+cattle buyer, brought to him in the evening after banking hours. Anybody
+must be very rich who has all that money of their own.
+
+_Friday._--Our old horse is dead and we will have to buy another. He was
+very steady and faithful. One day Grandfather left him at the front gate
+and he started along and turned the corner all right, down the Methodist
+lane and went way down to our barn doors and stood there until Mr. Piser
+came and took him into the barn. People said they set their clocks by
+him because it was always quarter past 12 when he was driven down to the
+bank after Grandfather and quarter of 1 when he came back. I don't think
+the clocks would ever be too fast if they were set by him. We asked
+Grandfather what he died of and he said he had run his race but I think
+he meant he had walked it, for I never saw him go off a jog in my life.
+Anna used to say he was taking a nap when we were out driving with
+Grandfather. I have written some lines in his memory and if I knew where
+he was buried, I would print it on his head board.
+
+ Old Dobbin's dead, that good old horse,
+ We ne'er shall see him more,
+ He always used to lag behind
+ But now he's gone before.
+
+It is a parody on old Grimes is dead, which is in our reader, only that
+is a very long poem. I am not going to show mine to Grandfather till he
+gets over feeling bad about the horse.
+
+_Sunday._--Grandmother gave Anna, Doddridge's "Rise and Progress of
+Religion in the Soul" to read to-day. Anna says she thinks she will have
+to rise and progress a good deal before she will be able to appreciate
+it. Baxter's "Saints Rest" would probably suit her better.
+
+_Sunday, April_ 5.--An agent for the American Board of Foreign Missions
+preached this morning in our church from Romans 10: 15: "How shall they
+hear without a preacher and how shall they preach except they be sent."
+An agent from every society presents the cause, whatever it is, once a
+year and some people think the anniversary comes around very often. I
+always think of Mrs. George Wilson's poem on "A apele for air, pewer
+air, certin proper for the pews, which, she sez, is scarce as piety, or
+bank bills when ajents beg for mischuns, wich sum say is purty often,
+(taint nothin' to me, wat I give aint nothin' to nobody)." I think that
+is about the best poem of its kind I ever read.
+
+Miss Lizzie Bull told us in Sunday School to-day that she cannot be our
+Sunday School teacher any more, as she and her sister Mary are going to
+join the Episcopal Church. We hate to have her go, but what can't be
+cured must be endured. Part of our class are going into Miss Mary
+Howell's class and part into Miss Annie Pierce's. They are both splendid
+teachers and Miss Lizzie Bull is another. We had preaching in our church
+this afternoon, too. Rev. Samuel Hanson Cox, of Le Roy Female Seminary,
+preached. He is a great man, very large, long white hair combed back. I
+think if a person once saw him they would never forget him. He preached
+about Melchisidek, who had neither "beginning of days or end of life."
+Some people thought that was like his sermon, for it was more than one
+hour long. Dr. Cox and Mrs. Taylor came to call and asked Grandfather to
+let me go to Le Roy Female Seminary, but Grandfather likes Ontario
+Female Seminary better than any other in the world. We wanted
+Grandmother to have her picture taken, but she did not feel able to go
+to Mr. Finley's, so he came up Tuesday and took it in our dining-room.
+She had her best cap on and her black silk dress and sat in her high
+back rocking chair in her usual corner near the window. He brought one
+up to show us and we like it so much. Anna looked at it and kissed it
+and said, "Grandmother, I think you are perfectly beautiful." She smiled
+and very modestly put her handkerchief up to her face and said, "You
+foolish child," but I am sure she was pleased, for how could she help
+it? A man came up to the open window one day where she was sitting, with
+something to sell, and while she was talking to him he said, "You must
+have been handsome, lady, when you were young." Grandmother said it was
+because he wanted to sell his wares, but we thought he knew it was so.
+We told her she couldn't get around it that way and we asked Grandfather
+and he said it was true. Our Sunday School class went to Mr. Finley's
+to-day and had a group ambrotype taken for our teacher, Miss Annie
+Pierce; Susie Daggett, Clara Willson, Sarah Whitney, Mary Field and
+myself. Mary Wheeler ought to have been in it, too, but we couldn't get
+her to come. We had very good success.
+
+_Thursday_.--We gave the ambrotype to Miss Pierce and she liked it very
+much and so does her mother and Fannie. Her mother is lame and cannot go
+anywhere so we often go to see her and she is always glad to see us and
+so pleasant.
+
+_May_ 9.--Miss Lizzie Bull came for me to go botanising with her this
+morning and we were gone from 9 till 12, and went clear up to the orphan
+asylum. I am afraid I am not a born botanist, for all the time she was
+analysing the flowers and telling me about the corona and the corolla
+and the calyx and the stamens and petals and pistils, I was thinking
+what beautiful hands she had and how dainty they looked, pulling the
+blossoms all to pieces. I am afraid I am commonplace, like the man we
+read of in English literature, who said "a primrose by the river brim, a
+yellow primrose, was to him, and it was nothing more."
+
+Mr. William Wood came to call this afternoon and gave us some
+morning-glory seeds to sow and told us to write down in our journals
+that he did so. So here it is. What a funny old man he is. Anna and Emma
+Wheeler went to Hiram Tousley's funeral to-day. She has just written in
+her journal that Hiram's corpse was very perfect of him and that Fannie
+looked very pretty in black. She also added that after the funeral
+Grandfather took Aunt Ann and Lucilla out to ride to Mr. Howe's and just
+as they got there it sprinkled. She says she don't know "weather" they
+got wet or not. She went to a picnic at Sucker Brook yesterday
+afternoon, and this is the way she described it in her journal. "Miss
+Hurlburt told us all to wear rubbers and shawls and bring some cake and
+we would have a picnic. We had a very warm time. It was very warm indeed
+and I was most roasted and we were all very thirsty indeed. We had in
+all the party about 40 of us. It was very pleasant and I enjoyed myself
+exceedingly. We had boiled eggs, pickles, Dutch cheese and sage cheese
+and loaf cake and raisin cake, pound cake, dried beef and capers, jam
+and tea cakes and gingerbread, and we tried to catch some fish but we
+couldn't, and in all we had a very nice time. I forgot to say that I
+picked some flowers for my teacher. I went to bed tired out and worn
+out."
+
+Her next entry was the following day when she and the other scholars
+dressed up to "speak pieces." She says, "After dinner I went and put on
+my rope petticoat and lace one over it and my barege de laine dress and
+all my rings and white bask and breastpin and worked handkerchief and
+spoke my piece. It was, 'When I look up to yonder sky.' It is very
+pretty indeed and most all the girls said I looked nice and said it
+nice. They were all dressed up, too."
+
+_Thursday_.--I asked Grandfather why we do not have gas in the house
+like almost every one else and he said because it was bad for the eyes
+and he liked candles and sperm oil better. We have the funniest little
+sperm oil lamp with a shade on to read by evenings and the fire on the
+hearth gives Grandfather and Grandmother all the light they want, for
+she knits in her corner and we read aloud to them if they want us to. I
+think if Grandfather is proud of anything besides being a Bostonian, it
+is that everything in the house is forty years old. The shovel and tongs
+and andirons and fender and the haircloth sofa and the haircloth rocking
+chair and the flag bottomed chairs painted dark green and the two old
+arm-chairs which belong to them and no one else ever thinks of touching.
+There is a wooden partition between the dining-room and parlor and they
+say it can slide right up out of sight on pulleys, so that it would be
+all one room. We have often said that we wished we could see it go up
+but they say it has never been up since the day our mother was married
+and as she is dead I suppose it would make them feel bad, so we probably
+will always have it down. There are no curtains or even shades at the
+windows, because Grandfather says, "light is sweet and a pleasant thing
+it is to behold the sun." The piano is in the parlor and it is the same
+one that our mother had when she was a little girl but we like it all
+the better for that. There are four large oil paintings on the parlor
+wall, De Witt Clinton, Rev. Mr. Dwight, Uncle Henry Channing Beals and
+Aunt Lucilla Bates, and no matter where we sit in the room they are
+watching and their eyes seem to move whenever we do. There is quite a
+handsome lamp on a mahogany center table, but I never saw it lighted. We
+have four sperm candles in four silver candlesticks and when we have
+company we light them. Johnnie Thompson, son of the minister, Rev. M. L.
+R. P., has come to the academy to school and he is very full of fun and
+got acquainted with all the girls very quick. He told us this afternoon
+to have "the other candle lit" for he was coming down to see us this
+evening. Will Schley heard him say it and he said he was coming too. His
+mother says she always knows when he has been at our house, because she
+finds sperm on his clothes and has to take brown paper and a hot
+flatiron to get it out, but still I do not think that Mrs. Schley cares,
+for she is a very nice lady and she and I are great friends. I presume
+she would just as soon he would spend part of his time with us as to be
+with Horace Finley all the time. Those boys are just like twins. We
+never see one without being sure that the other is not far away.
+
+_Later_.--The boys came and we had a very pleasant evening but when the
+9 o'clock bell rang we heard Grandfather winding up the clock and
+scraping up the ashes on the hearth to cover the fire so it would last
+till morning and we all understood the signal and they bade us
+good-night. "We won't go home till morning" is a song that will never be
+sung in this house.
+
+_June_ 2.--Abbie Clark wrote such a nice piece in my album to-day I am
+going to write it in my journal. Grandfather says he likes the sentiment
+as well as any in my book. This is it: "It has been said that the
+friendship of some people is like our shadow, keeping close by us while
+the sun shines, deserting us the moment we enter the shade, but think
+not such is the friendship of Abbie S. Clark." Abbie and I took supper
+at Miss Mary Howell's to-night to see Adele Ives. We had a lovely time.
+
+_Tuesday_.--General Tom Thumb was in town to-day and everybody who
+wanted to see him could go to Bemis Hall. Twenty-five cents for old
+people, and 10 cents for children, but we could see him for nothing when
+he drove around town. He had a little carriage and two little bits of
+ponies and a little boy with a high silk hat on, for the driver. He sat
+inside the coach but we could see him looking out. We went to the hall
+in the afternoon and the man who brought him stood by him and looked
+like a giant and told us all about him. Then he asked Tom Thumb to make
+a speech and stood him upon the table. He told all the ladies he would
+give them a kiss if they would come up and buy his picture. Some of them
+did.
+
+_Friday, July._--I have not kept a journal for two weeks because we have
+been away visiting. Anna and I had an invitation to go to Utica to visit
+Rev. and Mrs. Brandigee. He is rector of Grace Episcopal church there
+and his wife used to belong to Father's church in Morristown, N. J. Her
+name was Miss Condict. Rev. Mr. Stowe was going to Hamilton College at
+Clinton, so he said he would take us to Utica. We had a lovely time. The
+corner stone of the church was laid while we were there and Bishop De
+Lancey came and stayed with us at Mr. Brandigee's. He is a very nice man
+and likes children. One morning they had muffins for breakfast and Anna
+asked if they were ragamuffins. Mr. Brandigee said, "Yes, they are made
+of rags and brown paper," but we knew he was just joking. When we came
+away Mrs. Brandigee gave me a prayer book and Anna a vase, but she
+didn't like it and said she should tell Mrs. Brandigee she wanted a
+prayer book too, so I had to change with her. When we came home Mr.
+Brandigee put us in care of the conductor. There was a fine soldier
+looking man in the car with us and we thought it was his wife with him.
+He wore a blue coat and brass buttons, and some one said his name was
+Custer and that he was a West Point cadet and belonged to the regular
+army. I told Anna she had better behave or he would see her, but she
+would go out and stand on the platform until the conductor told her not
+to. I pulled her dress and looked very stern at her and motioned toward
+Mr. Custer, but it did not seem to have any impression on her. I saw Mr.
+Custer smile once because my words had no effect. I was glad when we got
+to Canandaigua. I heard some one say that Dr. Jewett was at the depot to
+take Mr. Custer and his wife to his house, but I only saw Grandfather
+coming after us. He said, "Well, girls, you have been and you have got
+back," but I could see that he was glad to have us at home again, even
+if we are "troublesome comforts," as he sometimes says.
+
+_July_ 4.--Barnum's circus was in town to-day and if Grandmother had not
+seen the pictures on the hand bills I think she would have let us go.
+She said it was all right to look at the creatures God had made but she
+did not think He ever intended that women should go only half dressed
+and stand up and ride on horses bare back, or jump through hoops in the
+air. So we could not go. We saw the street parade though and heard the
+band play and saw the men and women in a chariot, all dressed so fine,
+and we saw a big elephant and a little one and a camel with an awful
+hump on his back, and we could hear the lion roar in the cage, as they
+went by. It must have been nice to see them close to and probably we
+will some day.
+
+[Illustration: Grandmother's Rocking Chair, "The Grandfather Clock"]
+
+_August_ 8.--Grandfather has given me his whole set of Waverley novels
+and his whole set of Shakespeare's plays, and has ordered Mr. Jahn, the
+cabinetmaker, to make me a black walnut bookcase, with glass doors and
+three deep drawers underneath, with brass handles. He is so good. Anna
+says perhaps he thinks I am going to be married and go to housekeeping
+some day. Well, perhaps he does. Stranger things have happened. "Barkis
+is willin'," and I always like to please Grandfather. I have just read
+David Copperfield and was so interested I could not leave it alone till
+I finished it.
+
+_September_ 1.--Anna and I have been in Litchfield, Conn., at Father's
+school for boys. It is kept in the old Beecher house, where Dr. Lyman
+Beecher lived. We went up into the attic, which is light and airy, where
+they say he used to write his famous sermons. James is one of the
+teachers and he came for us. We went to Farmington and saw all the
+Cowles families, as they are our cousins. Then we drove by the Charter
+Oak and saw all there is left of it. It was blown down last year but the
+stump is fenced around. In Hartford we visited Gallaudet's Institution
+for the deaf and dumb and went to the historical rooms, where we saw
+some of George Washington's clothes and his watch and his penknife, but
+we did not see his little hatchet. We stayed two weeks in New York and
+vicinity before we came home. Uncle Edward took us to Christie's
+Minstrels and the Hippodrome, so we saw all the things we missed seeing
+when the circus was here in town. Grandmother seemed surprised when we
+told her, but she didn't say much because she was so glad to have us at
+home again. Anna said we ought to bring a present to Grandfather and
+Grandmother, for she read one time about some children who went away and
+came back grown up and brought home "busts of the old philosophers for
+the sitting-room," so as we saw some busts of George Washington and
+Benjamin Franklin in plaster of paris we bought them, for they look
+almost like marble and Grandfather and Grandmother like them. Speaking
+of busts reminds me of a conundrum I heard while I was gone. "How do we
+know that Poe's Raven was a dissipated bird? Because he was all night on
+a bust." Grandfather took us down to the bank to see how he had it made
+over while we were gone. We asked him why he had a beehive hanging out
+for a sign and he said, "Bees store their honey in the summer for winter
+use and men ought to store their money against a rainy day." He has a
+swing door to the bank with "Push" on it. He said he saw a man studying
+it one day and finally looking up he spelled p-u-s-h, push (and
+pronounced it like mush). "What does that mean?" Grandfather showed him
+what it meant and he thought it was very convenient. He was about as
+thick-headed as the man who saw some snuffers and asked what they were
+for and when told to snuff the candle with, he immediately snuffed the
+candle with his fingers and put it in the snuffers and said, "Law sakes,
+how handy!" Grandmother really laughed when she read this in the paper.
+
+_September_.--Mrs. Martin, of Albany, is visiting Aunt Ann, and she
+brought Grandmother a fine fish that was caught in the Atlantic Ocean.
+We went over and asked her to come to dinner to-morrow and help eat it
+and she said if it did not rain pitchforks she would come, so I think we
+may expect her. Her granddaughter, Hattie Blanchard, has come here to go
+to the seminary and will live with Aunt Ann. She is a very pretty girl.
+Mary Field came over this morning and we went down street together.
+Grandfather went with us to Mr. Nat Gorham's store, as he is selling off
+at cost, and got Grandmother and me each a new pair of kid gloves. Hers
+are black and mine are green. Hers cost six shillings and mine cost five
+shillings and six pence; very cheap for such nice ones. Grandmother let
+Anna have six little girls here to supper to-night: Louisa Field, Hattie
+Paddock, Helen Coy, Martha Densmore, Emma Wheeler and Alice Jewett. We
+had a splendid supper and then we played cards. I do not mean regular
+cards, mercy no! Grandfather thinks those kind are contagious or
+outrageous or something dreadful and never keeps them in the house.
+Grandmother said they found a pack once, when the hired man's room was
+cleaned, and they went into the fire pretty quick. The kind we played
+was just "Dr. Busby," and another "The Old Soldier and His Dog." There
+are counters with them, and if you don't have the card called for you
+have to pay one into the pool. It is real fun. They all said they had a
+very nice time, indeed, when they bade Grandmother good-night, and said:
+"Mrs. Beals, you must let Carrie and Anna come and see us some time,"
+and she said she would. I think it is nice to have company.
+
+_Christmas_.--Grandfather and Grandmother do not care much about making
+Christmas presents. They say, when they were young no one observed
+Christmas or New Years, but they always kept Thanksgiving day. Our
+cousins, the Fields and Carrs, gave us several presents and Uncle Edward
+sent us a basket full from New York by express. Aunt Ann gave me one of
+the Lucy books and a Franconia story book and to Anna, "The Child's Book
+on Repentance." When Anna saw the title, she whispered to me and said if
+she had done anything she was sorry for she was willing to be forgiven.
+I am afraid she will never read hers but I will lend her mine. Miss Lucy
+Ellen Guernsey, of Rochester, gave me "Christmas Earnings" and wrote in
+it, "Carrie C. Richards with the love of the author." I think that is
+very nice. Anna and I were chattering like two magpies to-day, and a man
+came in to talk to Grandfather on business. He told us in an undertone
+that children should be seen and not heard. After he had gone I saw Anna
+watching him a long time till he was only a speck in the distance and I
+asked her what she was doing. She said she was doing it because it was a
+sign if you watched persons out of sight you would never see them again.
+She does not seem to have a very forgiving spirit, but you can't always
+tell.
+
+Mr. William Wood, the venerable philanthropist of whom Canandaigua has
+been justly proud for many years, is dead. I have preserved this poem,
+written by Mrs. George Willson in his honor:
+
+Mr. Editor,--The following lines were written by a lady of this village,
+and have been heretofore published, but on reading in your last paper
+the interesting extract relating to the late William Wood, Esq., it was
+suggested that they be again published, not only for their merit, but
+also to keep alive the memory of one who has done so much to ornament
+our village.
+
+ When first on this stage of existence we come
+ Blind, deaf, puny, helpless, but not, alas, dumb,
+ What can please us, and soothe us, and make us sleep good?
+ To be rocked in a cradle;--and cradles are wood.
+ When older we grow, and we enter the schools
+ Where masters break rulers o'er boys who break rules,
+ What can curb and restrain and make laws understood
+ But the birch-twig and ferule?--and both are of wood.
+ When old age--second childhood, takes vigor away,
+ And we totter along toward our home in the clay,
+ What can aid us to stand as in manhood we stood
+ But our tried, trusty staff?--and the staff is of wood.
+ And when from this stage of existence we go,
+ And death drops the curtain on all scenes below,
+ In our coffins we rest, while for worms we are food,
+ And our last sleeping place, like our first, is of wood.
+ Then honor to wood! fresh and strong may it grow,
+ 'Though winter has silvered its summit with snow;
+ Embowered in its shade long our village has stood;
+ She'd scarce be Canandaigua if stripped of her Wood.
+
+Stanza added after the death of Mr. Wood
+
+ The sad time is come; she is stript of her Wood,
+ 'Though the trees that he planted still stand where they stood,
+ Still with storms they can wrestle with arms stout and brave;
+ Still they wave o'er our dwellings--they droop o'er his grave!
+ Alas! that the life of the cherished and good
+ Is more frail and more brief than the trees of the wood!
+
+
+
+
+1858
+
+_February_ 24, 1858.--The boarders at the Seminary had some tableaux
+last evening and invited a great many from the village. As we went in
+with the crowd, we heard some one say, "Are they going to have tableaux?
+Well, I thought I smelt them!" They were splendid. Mr. Chubbuck was in
+nearly all of them. The most beautiful one was Abraham offering up
+Isaac. Mr. Chubbuck was Abraham and Sarah Ripley was Isaac. After the
+tableaux they acted a charade. The word was "Masterpiece." It was fine.
+After the audience got half way out of the chapel Mr. Richards announced
+"The Belle of the Evening." The curtain rose and every one rushed back,
+expecting to see a young lady dressed in the height of fashion, when
+immediately the Seminary bell rang! Mr. Blessner's scholars gave all the
+music and he stamped so, beating time, it almost drowned the music. Some
+one suggested a bread and milk poultice for his foot. Anna has been
+taking part in some private theatricals. The play is in contrast to "The
+Spirit of '76" and the idea carried out is that the men should stay at
+home and rock the cradles and the women should take the rostrum.
+Grandmother was rather opposed to the idea, but every one wanted Anna to
+take the part of leading lady, so she consented. She even helped Anna
+make her bloomer suit and sewed on the braid for trimming on the skirt
+herself. She did not know that Anna's opening sentence was, "How are
+you, sir? Cigar, please!" It was acted at Mrs. John Bates' house on
+Gibson Street and was a great success, but when they decided to repeat
+it another evening Grandmother told Anna she must choose between going
+on the stage and living with her Grandmother, so Anna gave it up and
+some one else took her part.
+
+_March_.--There is a great deal said about spirits nowadays and a lot of
+us girls went into one of the recitation rooms after school to-night and
+had a spiritual seance. We sat around Mr. Chubbuck's table and put our
+hands on it and it moved around and stood on two legs and sometimes on
+one. I thought the girls helped it but they said they didn't. We heard
+some loud raps, too, but they sounded very earthly to me. Eliza Burns,
+one of the boarders, told us if we would hold our breath we could pick
+up one of the girls from the floor and raise her up over our heads with
+one finger of each hand, if the girl held her breath, too. We tried it
+with Anna and did it, but we had such hard work to keep from laughing I
+expected we would drop her. There is nothing very spirituelle about any
+of us. I told Grandmother and she said we reminded her of Jemima
+Wilkinson, who told all her followers that the world was to come to an
+end on a certain day and they should all be dressed in white and get up
+on the roofs of the houses and be prepared to ascend and meet the Lord
+in the air. I asked Grandmother what she said when nothing happened and
+she said she told them it was because they did not have faith enough. If
+they had, everything would have happened just as she said. Grandmother
+says that one day at a time has always been enough for her and that
+to-morrow will take care of the things of itself.
+
+_May,_ 1858.--Several of us girls went up into the top of the new Court
+House to-day as far as the workmen would allow us. We got a splendid
+view of the lake and of all the country round. Abbie Clark climbed up on
+a beam and recited part of Alexander Selkirk's soliloquy:
+
+ "I'm monarch of all I survey,
+ My rights there are none to dispute:
+ From the center, all round to the sea,
+ I'm lord of the fowl and brute."
+
+I was standing on a block and she said I looked like "Patience on a
+monument smiling at Grief." I am sure she could not be taken for
+"Grief." She always has some quotation on her tongue's end. We were down
+at Sucker Brook the other day and she picked her way out to a big stone
+in the middle of the stream and, standing on it, said, in the words of
+Rhoderick Dhu,
+
+ "Come one, come all, this rock shall fly
+ From its firm base, as soon as I."
+
+Just then the big stone tipped over and she had to wade ashore. She is
+not at all afraid of climbing and as we left the Court House she said
+she would like to go outside on the cupola and help Justice balance the
+scales.
+
+A funny old man came to our house to-day as he wanted to deposit some
+money and reached the bank after it was closed. We were just sitting
+down to dinner so Grandfather asked him to stay and have "pot luck" with
+us. He said that he was very much "obleeged" and stayed and passed his
+plate a second time for more of our very fine "pot luck." We had boiled
+beef and dumplings and I suppose he thought that was the name of the
+dish. He talked so queer we couldn't help noticing it. He said he
+"heered" so and he was "afeered" and somebody was very "deef" and they
+"hadn't ought to have done it" and "they should have went" and such
+things. Anna and I almost laughed but Grandmother looked at us with her
+eye and forefinger so we sobered down. She told us afterwards that there
+are many good people in the world whose verbs and nouns do not agree,
+and instead of laughing at them we should be sure that we always speak
+correctly ourselves. Very true. Dr. Daggett was at the Seminary one day
+when we had public exercises and he told me afterwards that I said
+"sagac-ious" for "saga-cious" and Aunt Ann told me that I said
+"epi-tome" for "e-pit-o-me." So "people that live in glass houses
+shouldn't throw stones."
+
+_Sunday._--Grandfather read his favorite parable this morning at
+prayers--the one about the wise man who built his house upon a rock and
+the foolish man who built upon the sand. He reads it good, just like a
+minister. He prays good, too, and I know his prayer by heart. He says,
+"Verily Thou art our Father, though Abraham be ignorant of us and Israel
+acknowledge us not," and he always says, "Thine arm is not shortened
+that it cannot save, or Thine ear heavy that it cannot hear." I am glad
+that I can remember it.
+
+_June._--Cyrus W. Field called at our house to-day. He is making a trip
+through the States and stopped here a few hours because Grandmother is
+his aunt. He made her a present of a piece of the Atlantic cable about
+six inches long, which he had mounted for her. It is a very nice
+souvenir. He is a tall, fine looking man and very pleasant.
+
+_Sunday, July_ 4, 1858.--This is Communion Sunday and quite a number
+united with the church on profession of their faith. Mr. Gideon Granger
+was one of them. Grandmother says that she has known him always and his
+father and mother, and she thinks he is like John, the beloved disciple.
+I think that any one who knows him, knows what is meant by a gentle-man.
+I have a picture of Christ in the Temple with the doctors, and His face
+is almost exactly like Mr. Granger's. Some others who joined to-day were
+Miss Belle Paton, Miss Lottie Clark and Clara Willson, Mary Wheeler and
+Sarah Andrews. Dr. Daggett always asks all the communicants to sit in
+the body pews and the noncommunicants in the side pews. We always feel
+like the goats on the left when we leave Grandfather and Grandmother and
+go on the side, but we won't have to always. Abbie Clark, Mary Field and
+I think we will join at the communion in September. Grandmother says she
+hopes we realize what a solemn thing it is. We are fifteen years old so
+I think we ought to. No one who hears Dr. Daggett say in his beautiful
+voice, "I now renounce all ways of sin as what I truly abhor and choose
+the service of God as my greatest privilege," could think it any
+trifling matter. I feel as though I couldn't be bad if I wanted to be,
+and when he blesses them and says, "May the God of the Everlasting
+Covenant keep you firm and holy to the end through Jesus Christ our
+Lord," everything seems complete. He always says at the close, "And when
+they had sung an hymn they went out into the Mount of Olives." Then he
+gives out the hymn, beginning:
+
+ "According to Thy gracious word,
+ In deep humility,
+ This will I do, my dying Lord
+ I will remember Thee."
+
+And the last verse:
+
+ "And when these failing lips grow dumb,
+ And mind and memory flee,
+ When in Thy kingdom Thou shalt come,
+ Jesus remember me."
+
+[Illustration: Hon. Francis Granger, Mr. Gideon Granger]
+
+Deacon Taylor always starts the hymn. Deacon Taylor and Deacon Tyler sit
+on one side of Dr. Daggett and Deacon Clarke and Deacon Castle on the
+other. Grandfather and Grandmother joined the church fifty-one years ago
+and are the oldest living members. She says they have always been glad
+that they took this step when they were young.
+
+_August_ 17.--There was a celebration in town to-day because the Queen's
+message was received on the Atlantic cable. Guns were fired and church
+bells rung and flags were waving everywhere. In the evening there was a
+torchlight procession and the town was all lighted up except Gibson
+Street. Allie Antes died this morning, so the people on that street kept
+their houses as usual. Anna says that probably Allie Antes was better
+prepared to die than any other little girl in town. Atwater hall and the
+academy and the hotel were more brilliantly illuminated than any other
+buildings. Grandfather saw something in a Boston paper that a minister
+said in his sermon about the Atlantic cable and he wants me to write it
+down in my journal. This is it: "The two hemispheres are now
+successfully united by means of the electric wire, but what is it, after
+all, compared with the instantaneous communication between the Throne of
+Divine Grace and the heart of man? Offer up your silent petition. It is
+transmitted through realms of unmeasured space more rapidly than the
+lightning's flash, and the answer reaches the soul e're the prayer has
+died away on the sinner's lips. Yet this telegraph, performing its
+saving functions ever since Christ died for men on Calvary, fills not
+the world with exultation and shouts of gladness, with illuminations and
+bonfires and the booming of cannon. The reason is, one is the telegraph
+of this world and may produce revolutions on earth; the other is the
+sweet communication between Christ and the Christian soul and will
+secure a glorious immortality in Heaven." Grandfather appreciates
+anything like that and I like to please him.
+
+Grandfather says he thinks the 19th Psalm is a prophecy of the electric
+telegraph. "Their line is gone out through all the earth and their words
+to the end of the world." It certainly sounds like it.
+
+_Sunday_.--Rev. Henry Ward Beecher is staying at Judge Taylor's and came
+with them to church to-day. Everybody knew that he was here and thought
+he would preach and the church was packed full. When he came in he went
+right to Judge Taylor's pew and sat with him and did not preach at all,
+but it was something to look at him. Mr. Daggett was away on his
+vacation and Rev. Mr. Jervis of the M. E. church preached. I heard some
+people say they guessed even Mr. Beecher heard some new words to-day,
+for Mr. Jervis is quite a hand to make them up or find very long hard
+ones in the dictionary.
+
+_August_ 30, 1858.--Rev. Mr. Tousley was hurt to-day by the falling of
+his barn which was being moved, and they think his back is broken and if
+he lives he can never sit up again. Only last Sunday he was in Sunday
+School and had us sing in memory of Allie Antes:
+
+ "A mourning class, a vacant seat,
+ Tell us that one we loved to meet
+ Will join our youthful throng no more,
+ 'Till all these changing scenes are o'er."
+
+And now he will never meet with us again and the children will never
+have another minister all their own. He thinks he may be able to write
+letters to the children and perhaps write his own life. We all hope he
+may be able to sit up if he cannot walk.
+
+We went to our old home in Penn Yan visiting last week and stayed at
+Judge Ellsworth's. We called to see the Tunnicliffs and the Olivers,
+Wells, Jones, Shepards, Glovers, Bennetts, Judds and several other
+families. They were glad to see us for the sake of our father and
+mother. Father was their pastor from 1841 to 1847.
+
+Some one told us that when Bob and Henry Antes were small boys they
+thought they would like to try, just for once, to see how it would seem
+to be bad, so in spite of all of Mr. Tousley's sermons they went out
+behind the barn one day and in a whisper Bob said, "I swear," and Henry
+said, "So do I." Then they came into the house looking guilty and quite
+surprised, I suppose, that they were not struck dead just as Ananias and
+Sapphira were for lying.
+
+_September_.--I read in a New York paper to-day that Hon. George
+Peabody, of England, presented Cyrus W. Field with a solid silver tea
+service of twelve pieces, which cost $4,000. The pieces bear likenesses
+of Mr. Peabody and Mr. Field, with the coat of arms of the Field family.
+The epergne is supported by a base representing the genius of America.
+
+We had experiments in the philosophy class to-day and took electric
+shocks. Mr. Chubbuck managed the battery which has two handles attached.
+Two of the girls each held one of these and we all took hold of hands
+making the circuit complete. After a while it jerked us almost to pieces
+and we asked Mr. Chubbuck to turn it off. Dana Luther, one of the
+Academy boys, walked up from the post-office with me this noon. He lives
+in Naples and is Florence Younglove's cousin. We went to a ball game
+down on Pleasant Street after school. I got so far ahead of Anna coming
+home she called me her "distant relative."
+
+
+
+
+1859
+
+_January_, 1859.--Mr. Woodruff came to see Grandfather to ask him if we
+could attend his singing school. He is going to have it one evening each
+week in the chapel of our church. Quite a lot of the boys and girls are
+going, so we were glad when Grandfather gave his consent. Mr. Woodruff
+wants us all to sing by note and teaches "do re me fa sol la si do" from
+the blackboard and beats time with a stick. He lets us have a recess,
+which is more fun than all the rest of it. He says if we practise well
+we can have a concert in Bemis Hall to end up with. What a treat that
+will be!
+
+_February_.--Anna has been teasing me all the morning about a verse
+which John Albert Granger Barker wrote in my album. He has a most
+fascinating lisp when he talks, so she says this is the way the verse
+reads:
+
+ "Beauty of perthon, ith thertainly chawming
+ Beauty of feachure, by no meanth alawming
+ But give me in pwefrence, beauty of mind,
+ Or give me Cawwie, with all thwee combined."
+
+It takes Anna to find "amuthement" in "evewything."
+
+Mary Wheeler came over and pierced my ears to-day, so I can wear my new
+earrings that Uncle Edward sent me. She pinched my ear until it was numb
+and then pulled a needle through, threaded with silk. Anna would not
+stay in the room. She wants hers done but does not dare. It is all the
+fashion for girls to cut off their hair and friz it. Anna and I have cut
+off ours and Bessie Seymour got me to cut off her lovely long hair
+to-day. It won't be very comfortable for us to sleep with curl papers
+all over our heads, but we must do it now. I wanted my new dress waist
+which Miss Rosewarne is making, to hook up in front, but Grandmother
+said I would have to wear it that way all the rest of my life so I had
+better be content to hook it in the back a little longer. She said when
+Aunt Glorianna was married, in 1848, it was the fashion for grown up
+women to have their waists fastened in the back, so the bride had hers
+made that way but she thought it was a very foolish and inconvenient
+fashion. It is nice, though, to dress in style and look like other
+people. I have a Garibaldi waist and a Zouave jacket and a balmoral
+skirt.
+
+_Sunday_.--I asked Grandmother if I could write a letter to Father
+to-day, and she said I could begin it and tell him that I went to church
+and what Mr. Daggett's text was and then finish it to-morrow. I did so,
+but I wish I could do it all after I began. She said a verse from the
+Tract Primer:
+
+ "A Sabbath well spent brings a week of content
+ And strength for the toil of to-morrow,
+ But a Sabbath profaned, whatever be gained,
+ Is a certain forerunner of sorrow."
+
+_Monday_.--We dressed up in new fangled costumes to-day and wore them to
+school. Some of us wore dresses almost up to our knees and some wore
+them trailing on the ground. Some wore their hair twisted in knots and
+some let theirs hang down their backs. I wore my new waterfall for the
+first time and Abbie Clark said I looked like "Hagar in the Wilderness."
+When she came in she looked like a fashion plate, bedecked with bows and
+ribbons and her hair up in a new way. When she came in the door she
+stopped and said solemnly: "If you have tears prepare to shed them now!"
+Laura Chapin would not participate in the fun, for once. She said she
+thought "Beauty unadorned was the dorndest." We did not have our lesson
+in mental philosophy very well so we asked Mr. Richards to explain the
+nature of dreams and their cause and effect. He gave us a very
+interesting talk, which occupied the whole hour. We listened with
+breathless attention, so he must have marked us 100.
+
+There was a lecture at the seminary to-night and Rev. Dr. Hibbard, the
+Methodist minister, who lives next door above the Methodist church, came
+home with us. Grandmother was very much pleased when we told her.
+
+_March_ 1.--Our hired man has started a hot bed and we went down behind
+the barn to see it. Grandfather said he was up at 6 o'clock and walked
+up as far as Mr. Greig's lions and back again for exercise before
+breakfast. He seems to have the bloom of youth on his face as a reward.
+Anna says she saw "Bloom of youth" advertised in the drug store and she
+is going to buy some. I know Grandmother won't let her for it would be
+like "taking coal to Newcastle."
+
+_April._--Anna wanted me to help her write a composition last night, and
+we decided to write on "Old Journals," so we got hers and mine both out
+and made selections and then she copied them. When we were on our way to
+school this morning we met Mr. E. M. Morse and Anna asked him if he did
+not want to read her composition that Carrie wrote for her. He made a
+very long face and pretended to be much shocked, but said he would like
+to read it, so he took it and also her album, which she asked him to
+write in. At night, on his way home, he stopped at our door and left
+them both. When she looked in her album, she found this was what he had
+written:
+
+"Anna, when you have grown old and wear spectacles and a cap, remember
+the boyish young man who saw your fine talents in 1859 and was certain
+you would add culture to nature and become the pride of Canandaigua. Do
+not forget also that no one deserves praise for anything done by others
+and that your progress in wisdom and goodness will be watched by no one
+more anxiously than by your true friend,
+ E. M. Morse."
+
+I think she might as well have told Mr. Morse that the old journals were
+as much hers as mine; but I think she likes to make out she is not as
+good as she is. Sarah Foster helped us to do our arithmetic examples
+to-day. She is splendid in mathematics.
+
+Much to our surprise Bridget Flynn, who has lived with us so long, is
+married. We didn't know she thought of such a thing, but she has gone.
+Anna and I have learned how to make rice and cornstarch puddings. We
+have a new girl in Bridget's place but I don't think she will do.
+Grandmother asked her to-day if she seasoned the gravy and she said,
+either she did or she didn't, she couldn't tell which. Grandfather says
+he thinks she is a little lacking in the "upper story."
+
+_June._--A lot of us went down to Sucker Brook this afternoon. Abbie
+Clark was one and she told us some games to play sitting down on the
+grass. We played "Simon says thumbs up" and then we pulled the leaves
+off from daisies and said,
+
+ "Rich man, poor man, beggar man, thief,
+ Doctor, lawyer, merchant, chief,"
+
+to see which we would marry. The last leaf tells the story. Anna's came
+"rich man" every time and she thinks it is true because Eugene Stone has
+asked to marry her and he is quite well off. She is 13 and he is 17. He
+is going now to his home in St. Paul, Minn., but he is coming back for
+her some day. Tom Eddy is going to be groomsman and Emma Wheeler
+bridesmaid. They have all the arrangements made. She has not shown any
+of Eugene Stone's notes to Grandmother yet for she does not think it is
+worth while. Anna broke the seal on Tom Eddy's page in her mystic book,
+although he wrote on it, "Not to be opened until December 8, 1859." He
+says:
+
+Dear Anna,--
+
+I hope that in a few years I will see you and Stone living on the banks
+of the Mississippi, in a little cottage, as snug as a bug in a rug,
+living in peace, so that I can come and see you and have a good
+time.--Yours,
+ Thos. C. Eddy."
+
+Anna says if she does marry Eugene Stone and he forgets, after two or
+three years to be as polite to her as he is now she shall look up at him
+with her sweetest smile and say, "Miss Anna, won't you have a little
+more sugar in your tea?" When I went to school this morning Juliet
+Ripley asked, "Where do you think Anna Richards is now? Up in a cherry
+tree in Dr. Cheney's garden." Anna loves cherries. We could see her from
+the chapel window.
+
+_June_ 7.--Alice Jewett took Anna all through their new house to-day
+which is being built and then they went over to Mr. Noah T. Clarke's
+partly finished house and went all through that. A dog came out of Cat
+Alley and barked at them and scared Anna awfully. She said she almost
+had a conniption fit but Emma kept hold of her. She is so afraid of
+thunder and lightning and dogs.
+
+Old Friend Burling brought Grandfather a specimen of his handwriting
+to-day to keep. It is beautifully written, like copper plate. This is
+the verse he wrote and Grandfather gave it to me to paste in my book of
+extracts:
+
+ DIVINE LOVE.
+
+ Could we with ink the ocean fill,
+ Was the whole earth of parchment made,
+ Was every single stick a quill,
+ And every man a scribe by trade;
+ To write the love of God above
+ Would drain the ocean dry;
+ Nor could that scroll contain the whole
+ Though stretched from sky to sky.
+
+Transcribed by William S. Burling, Canandaigua, 1859, in the 83rd year
+of his age.
+
+_Sunday, December_ 8, 1859.--Mr. E. M. Morse is our Sunday School
+teacher now and the Sunday School room is so crowded that we go up into
+the church for our class recitation. Abbie Clark, Fannie Gaylord and
+myself are the only scholars, and he calls us the three Christian
+Graces, faith, hope and charity, and the greatest of these is charity. I
+am the tallest, so he says I am charity. We recite in Mr. Gibson's pew,
+because it is farthest away and we do not disturb the other classes. He
+gave us some excellent advice to-day as to what was right and said if we
+ever had any doubts about anything we should never do it and should
+always be perfectly sure we are in the right before we act. He gave us
+two weeks ago a poem to learn by Samuel Taylor Coleridge. It is an
+apostrophe to God and very hard to learn. It is blank verse and has 85
+lines in it. I have it committed at last and we are to recite it in
+concert. The last two lines are, "Tell thou the silent sky and tell the
+stars and tell yon rising sun, Earth with its thousand voices praises
+God." Mr. Morse delivered a lecture in Bemis Hall last Thursday night.
+The subject was, "You and I." It was splendid and he lent me the
+manuscript afterwards to read. Dick Valentine lectured in the hall the
+other night too. His subject was "Prejudice." There was some difference
+in the lectures and the lecturers. The latter was more highly colored.
+
+_Friday._--The older ladies of the town have formed a society for the
+relief of the poor and are going to have a course of lectures in Bemis
+Hall under their auspices to raise funds. The lecturers are to be from
+the village and are to be: Rev. O. E. Daggett, subject, "Ladies and
+Gentlemen"; Dr. Harvey Jewett, "The House We Live In"; Prof. F. E. R.
+Chubbuck, "Progress"; Hon. H. W. Taylor, "The Empty Place"; Prof. E. G.
+Tyler, "Finance"; Mr. N. T. Clark, "Chemistry"; E. M. Morse, "Graybeard
+and His Dogmas." The young ladies have started a society, too, and we
+have great fun and fine suppers. We met at Jennie Howell's to organize.
+We are to meet once in two weeks and are to present each member with an
+album bed quilt with all our names on when they are married. Susie
+Daggett says she is never going to be married, but we must make her a
+quilt just the same. Laura Chapin sang, "Mary Lindsey, Dear," and we got
+to laughing so that Susie Daggett and I lost our equilibrium entirely,
+but I found mine by the time I got home. Yesterday afternoon Grandfather
+asked us if we did not want to go to ride with him in the big two seated
+covered carriage which he does not get out very often. We said yes, and
+he stopped for Miss Hannah Upham and took her with us. She sat on the
+back seat with me and we rode clear to Farmington and kept up a brisk
+conversation all the way. She told us how she became lady principal of
+the Ontario Female Seminary in 1830. She was still telling us about it
+when we got back home.
+
+_December_ 23.--We have had a Christmas tree and many other attractions
+in Seminary chapel. The day scholars and townspeople were permitted to
+participate and we had a post office and received letters from our
+friends. Mr. E. M. Morse wrote me a fictitious one, claiming to be
+written from the north pole ten years hence. I will copy it in my
+journal for I may lose the letter. I had some gifts on the Christmas
+tree and gave some. I presented my teacher, Mr. Chubbuck, with two large
+hemstitched handkerchiefs with his initials embroidered in a corner of
+each. As he is favored with the euphonious name of Frank Emery Robinson
+Chubbuck it was a work of art to make his initials look beautiful. I
+inclosed a stanza in rhyme:
+
+ Amid the changing scenes of life
+ If any storm should rise,
+ May you ever have a handkerchief
+ To wipe your weeping eyes.
+
+Here is Mr. Morse's letter:
+
+ North Pole, 10 _January_ 1869.
+Miss Carrie Richards,
+
+"My Dear Young Friend.--It is very cold here and the pole is covered
+with ice. I climbed it yesterday to take an observation and arrange our
+flag, the Stars and Stripes, which I hoisted immediately on my arrival
+here, ten years ago. I thought I should freeze and the pole was so
+slippery that I was in great danger of coming down faster than was
+comfortable. Although this pole has been used for more than 6,000 years
+it is still as good as new. The works of the Great Architect do not wear
+out. It is now ten years since I have seen you and my other two
+Christian Graces and I have no doubt of your present position among the
+most brilliant, noble and excellent women in all America. I always knew
+and recognized your great abilities. Nature was very generous to you all
+and you were enjoying fine advantages at the time I last knew you. I
+thought your residence with your Grandparents an admirable school for
+you, and you and your sister were most evidently the best joy of their
+old age. You certainly owe much to them. At the time that I left my
+three Christian Graces, Mrs. Grundy was sometimes malicious enough to
+say that they were injuring themselves by flirting. I always told the
+old lady that I had the utmost confidence in the judgment and discretion
+of my pupils and that they would be very careful and prudent in all
+their conduct. I confessed that flirting was wrong and very injurious to
+any one who was guilty of it, but I was very sure that you were not. I
+could not believe that you would disappoint us all and become only
+ordinary women, but that you would become the most exalted characters,
+scorning all things unworthy of ladies and Christians and I was right
+and Mrs. Grundy was wrong. When the ice around the pole thaws out I
+shall make a flying visit to Canandaigua. I send you a tame polar bear
+for a playfellow. This letter will be conveyed to you by Esquimaux
+express.--Most truly yours,
+ E. M. Morse."
+
+I think some one must have shown some verses that we girls wrote, to
+Mrs. Grundy and made her think that our minds were more upon the young
+men than they were upon our studies, but if people knew how much time we
+spent on Paley's "Evidences of Christianity" and Butler's Analogy and
+Kames' Elements of Criticism and Tytler's Ancient History and Olmstead's
+Mathematical Astronomy and our French and Latin and arithmetic and
+algebra and geometry and trigonometry and bookkeeping, they would know
+we had very little time to think of the masculine gender.
+
+
+
+
+1860
+
+_New Year's Day._--We felt quite grown up to-day and not a little scared
+when we saw Mr. Morse and Mr. Wells and Mr. Mason and Mr. Chubbuck all
+coming in together to make a New Year's call. They made a tour of the
+town. We did not feel so flustrated when Will Schley and Horace Finley
+came in later. Mr. Oliver Phelps, Jr., came to call upon Grandmother.
+Grandfather made a few calls, too.
+
+_January_ 5.--Abbie Clark and I went up to see Miss Emma Morse because
+it is her birthday. We call her sweet Miss Emma and we think Mr. Manning
+Wells does, too. We went to William Wirt Howe's lecture in Bemis Hall
+this evening. He is a very smart young man.
+
+Anna wanted to walk down a little ways with the girls after school so
+she crouched down between Helen Coy and Hattie Paddock and walked past
+the house. Grandmother always sits in the front window, so when Anna
+came in she asked her if she had to stay after school and Anna gave her
+an evasive answer. It reminds me of a story I read, of a lady who told
+the servant girl if any one called to give an evasive answer as she did
+not wish to receive calls that day. By and by the door bell rang and the
+servant went to the door. When she came back the lady asked her how she
+dismissed the visitor. She said, "Shure ye towld me to give an evasive
+answer, so when the man asked if the lady of the house was at home I
+said, 'Faith! is your grandmother a monkey!'" We never say anything like
+that to our "dear little lady," but we just change the subject and
+divert the conversation into a more agreeable channel. To-day some one
+came to see Grandmother when we were gone and told her that Anna and
+some others ran away from school. Grandmother told Anna she hoped she
+would never let any one bring her such a report again. Anna said she
+would not, if she could possibly help it! I wonder who it was. Some one
+who believes in the text, "Look not every man on his own things, but
+every man also on the things of others." Grandfather told us to-night
+that we ought to be very careful what we do as we are making history
+every day. Anna says she shall try not to have hers as dry as some that
+she had to learn at school to-day.
+
+_February_ 9.--Dear Miss Mary Howell was married to-day to Mr.
+Worthington, of Cincinnati.
+
+_February_ 28.--Grandfather asked me to read Abraham Lincoln's speech
+aloud which he delivered in Cooper Institute, New York, last evening,
+under the auspices of the Republican Club. He was escorted to the
+platform by David Dudley Field and introduced by William Cullen Bryant.
+The _New York Times_ called him "a noted political exhorter and Prairie
+orator." It was a thrilling talk and must have stirred men's souls.
+
+_April_ 1.--Aunt Ann was over to see us yesterday and she said she made
+a visit the day before out at Mrs. William Gorham's. Mrs. Phelps and
+Miss Eliza Chapin also went and they enjoyed talking over old times when
+they were young. Maggie Gorham is going to be married on the 25th to Mr.
+Benedict of New York. She always said she would not marry a farmer and
+would not live in a cobblestone house and now she is going to do both,
+for Mr. Benedict has bought the farm near theirs and it has a
+cobblestone house. We have always thought her one of the jolliest and
+prettiest of the older set of young ladies.
+
+_June._--James writes that he has seen the Prince of Wales in New York.
+He was up on the roof of the Continental Fire Insurance building, out on
+the cornice, and looked down on the procession. Afterwards there was a
+reception for the Prince at the University Law School and James saw him
+close by. He says he has a very pleasant youthful face. There was a ball
+given for him one evening in the Academy of Music and there were 3,000
+present. The ladies who danced with him will never forget it. They say
+that he enters into every diversion which is offered to him with the
+greatest tact and good nature, and when he visited Mount Vernon he
+showed great reverence for the memory of George Washington. He attended
+a literary entertainment in Boston, where Longfellow, Holmes, Emerson,
+Thoreau, and other Americans of distinction were presented to him. He
+will always be a favorite in America.
+
+_June._--Mrs. Annie Granger asked Anna and me to come over to her house
+and see her baby. We were very eager to go and wanted to hold it and
+carry it around the room. She was willing but asked us if we had any
+pins on us anywhere. She said she had the nurse sew the baby's clothes
+on every morning so that if she cried she would know whether it was
+pains or pins. We said we had no pins on us, so we stayed quite a while
+and held little Miss Hattie to our heart's content. She is named for her
+aunt, Hattie Granger. Anna says she thinks Miss Martha Morse will give
+medals to her and Mary Daggett for being the most meddlesome girls in
+school, judging from the number of times she has spoken to them to-day.
+Anna is getting to be a regular punster, although I told her that
+Blair's Rhetoric says that punning is not the highest kind of wit. Mr.
+Morse met us coming from school in the rain and said it would not hurt
+us as we were neither sugar nor salt. Anna said, "No, but we are
+'lasses." Grandmother has been giving us sulphur and molasses for the
+purification of the blood and we have to take it three mornings and then
+skip three mornings. This morning Anna commenced going through some sort
+of gymnastics and Grandmother asked her what she was doing, and she said
+it was her first morning to skip.
+
+Abbie Clark had a large tea-party this afternoon and evening--Seminary
+girls and a few Academy boys. We had a fine supper and then played
+games. Abbie gave us one which is a test of memory and we tried to learn
+it from her but she was the only one who could complete it. I can write
+it down, but not say it:
+
+A good fat hen.
+
+Two ducks and a good fat hen.
+
+Three plump partridges, two ducks and a good fat hen.
+
+Four squawking wild geese, three plump partridges, etc.
+
+Five hundred Limerick oysters.
+
+Six pairs of Don Alfonso's tweezers.
+
+Seven hundred rank and file Macedonian horsemen drawn up in line of
+battle.
+
+Eight cages of heliogabalus sparrow kites.
+
+Nine sympathetical, epithetical, categorical propositions.
+
+Ten tentapherical tubes.
+
+Eleven flat bottom fly boats sailing between Madagascar and Mount
+Palermo.
+
+Twelve European dancing masters, sent to teach the Egyptian mummies how
+to dance, against Hercules' wedding day.
+
+Abbie says it was easier to learn than the multiplication table. They
+wanted some of us to recite and Abbie Clark gave us Lowell's poem, "John
+P. Robinson, he, says the world'll go right if he only says Gee!" I gave
+another of Lowell's poems, "The Courtin'." Julia Phelps had her guitar
+with her by request and played and sang for us very sweetly. Fred
+Harrington went home with her and Theodore Barnum with me.
+
+_Sunday._--Frankie Richardson asked me to go with her to teach a class
+in the colored Sunday School on Chapel Street this afternoon. I asked
+Grandmother if I could go and she said she never noticed that I was
+particularly interested in the colored race and she said she thought I
+only wanted an excuse to get out for a walk Sunday afternoon. However,
+she said I could go just this once. When we got up as far as the
+Academy, Mr. Noah T. Clarke's brother, who is one of the teachers, came
+out and Frank said he led the singing at the Sunday School and she said
+she would give me an introduction to him, so he walked up with us and
+home again. Grandmother said that when she saw him opening the gate for
+me, she understood my zeal in missionary work. "The dear little lady,"
+as we often call her, has always been noted for her keen discernment and
+wonderful sagacity and loses none of it as she advances in years. Some
+one asked Anna the other day if her Grandmother retained all her
+faculties and Anna said, "Yes, indeed, to an alarming degree."
+Grandmother knows that we think she is a perfect angel even if she does
+seem rather strict sometimes. Whether we are 7 or 17 we are children to
+her just the same, and the Bible says, "Children obey your parents in
+the Lord for this is right." We are glad that we never will seem old to
+her. I had the same company home from church in the evening. His home is
+in Naples.
+
+_Monday._--This morning the cook went to early mass and Anna told
+Grandmother she would bake the pancakes for breakfast if she would let
+her put on gloves. She would not let her, so Hannah baked the cakes. I
+was invited to Mary Paul's to supper to-night and drank the first cup of
+tea I ever drank in my life. I had a very nice time and Johnnie Paul
+came home with me.
+
+Imogen Power and I went down together Friday afternoon to buy me a
+Meteorology. We are studying that and Watts on the Mind, instead of
+Philosophy.
+
+_Tuesday._--I went with Fanny Gaylord to see Mrs. Callister at the hotel
+to-night. She is so interested in all that we tell her, just like "one
+of the girls."
+
+[Illustration: The Old Canandaigua Academy]
+
+I was laughing to-day when I came in from the street and Grandmother
+asked me what amused me so. I told her that I met Mr. and Mrs. Putnam on
+the street and she looked so immense and he so minute I couldn't help
+laughing at the contrast. Grandmother said that size was not everything,
+and then she quoted Cowper's verse:
+
+ "Were I so tall to reach the skies or grasp the ocean in a span,
+ I must be measured by my soul, the mind is the stature of the man."
+
+I don't believe that helps Mr. Putnam out.
+
+_Friday._--We went to Monthly Concert of prayer for Foreign Missions
+this evening. I told Grandmother that I thought it was not very
+interesting. Judge Taylor read the _Missionary Herald_ about the
+Madagascans and the Senegambians and the Terra del Fuegans and then
+Deacon Tyler prayed and they sang "From Greenland's Icy Mountains" and
+took up a collection and went home. She said she was afraid I did not
+listen attentively. I don't think I did strain every nerve. I believe
+Grandmother will give her last cent to Missions if the Boards get into
+worse straits than they are now.
+
+In Latin class to-day Anna translated the phrase Deo Volente "with
+violence," and Mr. Tyler, who always enjoys a joke, laughed so, we
+thought he would fall out of his chair. He evidently thought it was the
+best one he had heard lately.
+
+_November_ 21.--Aunt Ann gave me a sewing bird to screw on to the table
+to hold my work instead of pinning it to my knee. Grandmother tells us
+when we sew or read not to get everything around us that we will want
+for the next two hours because it is not healthy to sit in one position
+so long. She wants us to get up and "stir around." Anna does not need
+this advice as much as I do for she is always on what Miss Achert calls
+the "qui vive." I am trying to make a sofa pillow out of little pieces
+of silk. Aunt Ann taught me how. You have to cut pieces of paper into
+octagonal shape and cover them with silk and then sew them together,
+over and over. They are beautiful, with bright colors, when they are
+done. There was a hop at the hotel last night and some of the girls went
+and had an elegant time. Mr. Hiram Metcalf came here this morning to
+have Grandmother sign some papers. He always looks very dignified, and
+Anna and I call him "the deed man." We tried to hear what he said to
+Grandmother after she signed her name but we only heard something about
+"fear or compulsion" and Grandmother said "yes." It seems very
+mysterious. Grandfather took us down street to-day to see the new Star
+Building. It was the town house and he bought it and got Mr. Warren
+Stoddard of Hopewell to superintend cutting it in two and moving the
+parts separately to Coach Street. When it was completed the shout went
+up from the crowd, "Hurrah for Thomas Beals, the preserver of the old
+Court House." No one but Grandfather thought it could be done.
+
+_December._--I went with the girls to the lake to skate this afternoon.
+Mr. Johnson, the colored barber, is the best skater in town. He can
+skate forwards and backwards and cut all sorts of curlicues, although he
+is such a heavy man. He is going to Liberia and there his skates won't
+do him any good. I wish he would give them to me and also his skill to
+use them. Some one asked me to sit down after I got home and I said I
+preferred to stand, as I had been sitting down all the afternoon! Gus
+Coleman took a load of us sleigh-riding this evening. Of course he had
+Clara Willson sit on the front seat with him and help him drive.
+
+_Thursday._--We had a special meeting of our society this evening at
+Mary Wheeler's and invited the gentlemen and had charades and general
+good time. Mr. Gillette and Horace Finley made a great deal of fun for
+us. We initiated Mr. Gillette into the Dorcas Society, which consists in
+seating the candidate in a chair and propounding some very solemn
+questions and then in token of desire to join the society, you ask him
+to open his mouth very wide for a piece of cake which you swallow,
+yourself, instead! Very disappointing to the new member!
+
+We went to a concert at the Seminary this evening. Miss Mollie Bull sang
+"Coming Through the Rye" and Miss Lizzie Bull sang "Annie Laurie" and
+"Auld Lang Syne." Jennie Lind, herself, could not have done better.
+
+_December_ 15.--Alice Jewett, Emma Wheeler and Anna are in Mrs.
+Worthington's Sunday School class and as they have recently united with
+the church, she thought they should begin practical Christian work by
+distributing tracts among the neglected classes. So this afternoon they
+ran away from school to begin the good work. It was so bright and
+pleasant, they thought a walk to the lake would be enjoyable and they
+could find a welcome in some humble home. The girls wanted Anna to be
+the leader, but she would only promise that if something pious came into
+her mind, she would say it. They knocked at a door and were met by a
+smiling mother of twelve children and asked to come in. They sat down
+feeling somewhat embarrassed, but spying a photograph album on the
+table, they became much interested, while the children explained the
+pictures. Finally Anna felt that it was time to do something, so when no
+one was looking, she slipped under one of the books on the table, three
+tracts entitled "Consolation for the Bereaved," "Systematic Benevolence"
+and "The Social Evils of dancing, card playing and theater-going." Then
+they said goodbye to their new friends and started on. They decided not
+to do any more pastoral work until another day, but enjoyed the outing
+very much.
+
+_Christmas._--We all went to Aunt Mary Carr's to dinner excepting
+Grandmother, and in the evening we went to see some tableaux at Dr.
+Cook's and Dr. Chapin's at the asylum. We were very much pleased with
+the entertainment. Between the acts Mr. del Pratt, one of the patients,
+said every time, "What next!" which made every one laugh.
+
+Grandfather was requested to add his picture to the gallery of portraits
+of eminent men for the Court Room, so he has had it painted. An artist
+by the name of Green, who lives in town, has finished it after numerous
+sittings and brought it up for our approval. We like it but we do not
+think it is as good looking as he is. No one could really satisfy us
+probably, so we may as well try to be suited.
+
+I asked Grandmother if Mr. Clarke could take Sunday night supper with us
+and she said she was afraid he did not know the catechism. I asked him
+Friday night and he said he would learn it on Saturday so that he could
+answer every third question any way. So he did and got along very well.
+I think he deserved a pretty good supper.
+
+
+
+
+1861
+
+_March_ 4, 1861.--President Lincoln was inaugurated to-day.
+
+_March_ 5.--I read the inaugural address aloud to Grandfather this
+evening. He dwelt with such pathos upon the duty that all, both North
+and South, owe to the Union, it does not seem as though there could be
+war!
+
+_April._--We seem to have come to a sad, sad time. The Bible says, "A
+man's worst foes are those of his own household." The whole United
+States has been like one great household for many years. "United we
+stand, divided we fall!" has been our watchword, but some who should
+have been its best friends have proven false and broken the bond. Men
+are taking sides, some for the North, some for the South. Hot words and
+fierce looks have followed, and there has been a storm in the air for a
+long time.
+
+_April_ 15.--The storm has broken upon us. The Confederates fired on
+Fort Sumter, just off the coast of South Carolina, and forced her on
+April 14 to haul down the flag and surrender. President Lincoln has
+issued a call for 75,000 men and many are volunteering to go all around
+us. How strange and awful it seems.
+
+_May,_ 1861.--Many of the young men are going from Canandaigua and all
+the neighboring towns. It seems very patriotic and grand when they are
+singing, "It is sweet, Oh, 'tis sweet, for one's country to die," and we
+hear the martial music and see the flags flying and see the recruiting
+tents on the square and meet men in uniform at every turn and see train
+loads of the boys in blue going to the front, but it will not seem so
+grand if we hear they are dead on the battlefield, far from home. A lot
+of us girls went down to the train and took flowers to the soldiers as
+they were passing through and they cut buttons from their coats and gave
+to us as souvenirs. We have flags on our paper and envelopes, and have
+all our stationery bordered with red, white and blue. We wear little
+flag pins for badges and tie our hair with red, white and blue ribbon
+and have pins and earrings made of the buttons the soldiers gave us. We
+are going to sew for them in our society and get the garments all cut
+from the older ladies' society. They work every day in one of the rooms
+of the court house and cut out garments and make them and scrape lint
+and roll up bandages. They say they will provide us with all the
+garments we will make. We are going to write notes and enclose them in
+the garments to cheer up the soldier boys. It does not seem now as
+though I could give up any one who belonged to me. The girls in our
+society say that if any of the members do send a soldier to the war they
+shall have a flag bed quilt, made by the society, and have the girls'
+names on the stars.
+
+_May_ 20.--I recited "Scott and the Veteran" to-day at school, and Mary
+Field recited, "To Drum Beat and Heart Beat a Soldier Marches By"; Anna
+recited "The Virginia Mother." Every one learns war poems nowadays.
+There was a patriotic rally in Bemis Hall last night and a quartette
+sang, "The Sword of Bunker Hill" and "Dixie" and "John Brown's Body Lies
+a Mouldering in the Grave," and many other patriotic songs. We have one
+West Point cadet, Albert M. Murray, who is in the thick of the fight,
+and Charles S. Coy represents Canandaigua in the navy.
+
+[Illustration: The Ontario Female Seminary]
+
+_June,_ 1861.--At the anniversary exercises, Rev. Samuel M. Hopkins of
+Auburn gave the address. I have graduated from Ontario Female Seminary
+after a five years course and had the honor of receiving a diploma from
+the courtly hands of General John A. Granger. I am going to have it
+framed and handed down to my grandchildren as a memento, not exactly of
+sleepless nights and midnight vigils, but of rising betimes, at what
+Anna calls the crack of dawn. She likes that expression better than
+daybreak. I heard her reciting in the back chamber one morning about 4
+o'clock and listened at the door. She was saying in the most nonchalant
+manner: "Science and literature in England were fast losing all traces
+of originality, invention was discouraged, research unvalued and the
+examination of nature proscribed. It seemed to be generally supposed
+that the treasure accumulated in the preceding ages was quite sufficient
+for all national purposes and that the only duty which authors had to
+perform was to reproduce what had thus been accumulated, adorned with
+all the graces of polished style. Tameness and monotony naturally result
+from a slavish adherence to all arbitrary rules and every branch of
+literature felt this blighting influence. History, perhaps, was in some
+degree an exception, for Hume, Robertson and more especially Gibbon,
+exhibited a spirit of original investigation which found no parallel
+among their contemporaries." I looked in and asked her where her book
+was, and she said she left it down stairs. She has "got it" all right, I
+am sure. We helped decorate the seminary chapel for two days. Our motto
+was, "Still achieving, still pursuing." Miss Guernsey made most of the
+letters and Mr. Chubbuck put them up and he hung all the paintings. It
+was a very warm week. General Granger had to use his palm leaf fan all
+the time, as well as the rest of us. There were six in our class, Mary
+Field, Lucy Petherick, Kate Lilly, Sarah Clay, Abby Scott and myself.
+Abbie Clark would have been in the class, but she went to Pittsfield,
+Mass., instead. General Granger said to each one of us, "It gives me
+great pleasure to present you with this diploma," and when he gave Miss
+Scott hers, as she is from Alabama, he said he wished it might be as a
+flag of truce between the North and the South, and this sentiment was
+loudly cheered. General Granger looked so handsome with his black dress
+suit and ruffled shirt front and all the natural grace which belongs to
+him. The sheepskin has a picture of the Seminary on it and this
+inscription: "The Trustees and Faculty of the Ontario Female Seminary
+hereby certify that __________ has completed the course of study
+prescribed in this Institution, maintained the requisite scholarship and
+commendable deportment and is therefore admitted to the graduating
+honors of this Institution. President of Board, John A. Granger;
+Benjamin F. Richards, Edward G. Tyler, Principals." Mr. Morse wrote
+something for the paper:
+
+"To the Editor of the Repository:
+
+"Dear Sir--June roses, etc., make our loveliest of villages a paradise
+this week. The constellations are all glorious and the stars of earth
+far outshine those of the heavens. The lake shore, 'Lovers' Lane,' 'Glen
+Kitty' and the 'Points' are full of romance and romancers. The yellow
+moon and the blue waters and the dark green shores and the petrified
+Indians, whispering stony words at the foot of Genundewah, and Squaw
+Island sitting on the waves, like an enchanted grove, and 'Whalesback'
+all humped up in the East and 'Devil's Lookout' rising over all, made
+the 'Sleeping Beauty' a silver sea of witchery and love; and in the
+cottages and palaces we ate the ambrosia and drank the nectar of the
+sweet goddesses of this new and golden age.
+
+"I may as well say to you, Mr. Editor, that the Ontario Female Seminary
+closed yesterday and 'Yours truly' was present at the commencement.
+Being a bachelor I shall plead guilty and appeal to the mercy of the
+Court, if indicted for undue prejudice in favor of the charming young
+orators. After the report of the Examining Committee, in which the
+scholarship of the young ladies was not too highly praised, came the
+Latin Salutatory by Miss Clay, a most beautiful and elegant production
+(that sentence, sir, applies to both salutatory and salutatorian). The
+'Shadows We Cast,' by Miss Field, carried us far into the beautiful
+fields of nature and art and we saw the dark, or the brilliant shades,
+which our lives will cast, upon society and history. Then 'Tongues in
+Trees' began to whisper most bewitchingly, and 'Books in the Running
+Brooks' were opened, and 'Sermons in Stones' were preached by Miss
+Richards, and this old bachelor thought if all trees would talk so well,
+and every brook would babble so musically, and each precious stone would
+exhort so brilliantly, as they were made to do by the 'enchantress,'
+angels and dreams would henceforth be of little consequence; and whether
+the orator should be called 'Tree of Beauty,' 'Minnehaha' or the
+'Kohinoor' is a 'vexata questio.'
+
+"In the evening Mr. Hardick, 'our own,' whose hand never touches the
+piano without making delicious music, and Misses Daggett and Wilson,
+also 'our own,' and the musical pupils of the Institution, gave a
+concert. 'The Young Volunteer' was imperatively demanded, and this for
+the third time during the anniversary exercises, and was sung amid
+thunders of applause, 'Star of the South,' Miss Stella Scott, shining
+meanwhile in all her radiant beauty. May her glorious light soon rest on
+a Union that shall never more be broken.--Soberly yours,
+
+ A Very Old Bachelor."
+
+_June,_ 1861.--There was a patriotic rally this afternoon on the campus
+of Canandaigua Academy and we Seminary girls went. They raised a flag on
+the Academy building. General Granger presided, Dr. Coleman led the
+choir and they sang "The Star Spangled Banner." Mr. Noah T. Clarke made
+a stirring speech and Mr. Gideon Granger, James C. Smith and E. M. Morse
+followed. Canandaigua has already raised over $7,000 for the war. Capt.
+Barry drills the Academy boys in military tactics on the campus every
+day. Men are constantly enlisting. Lester P. Thompson, son of "Father
+Thompson," among the others.
+
+A young man asked Anna to take a drive to-day, but Grandmother was not
+willing at first to let her go. She finally gave her consent, after
+Anna's plea that he was so young and his horse was so gentle. Just as
+they were ready to start, I heard Anna run upstairs and I heard him say,
+"What an Anna!" I asked her afterwards what she went for and she said
+she remembered that she had left the soap in the water.
+
+_June._--Dr. Daggett's war sermon from the 146th Psalm was wonderful.
+
+_December_ 1.--Dr. Carr is dead. He had a stroke of paralysis two weeks
+ago and for several days he has been unconscious. The choir of our
+church, of which he was leader for so long, and some of the young people
+came and stood around his bed and sang, "Jesus, Lover of My Soul." They
+did not know whether he was conscious or not, but they thought so
+because the tears ran down his cheeks from his closed eyelids, though he
+could not speak or move. The funeral was from the church and Dr.
+Daggett's text was, "The Beloved Physician."
+
+
+
+
+1862
+
+_January_ 26.--We went to the Baptist Church this evening to hear Rev.
+A. H. Lung preach his last sermon before going into the army.
+
+_February_ 17.--Glorious news from the war to-day. Fort Donelson is
+taken with 1,500 rebels. The right and the North will surely triumph!
+
+_February_ 21.--Our society met at Fanny Palmer's this afternoon. I went
+but did not stay to tea as we were going to Madame Anna Bishop's concert
+in the evening. The concert was very, very good. Her voice has great
+scope and she was dressed in the latest stage costume, but it took so
+much material for her skirt that there was hardly any left for the
+waist.
+
+[Illustration: "Old Friend Burling", Madame Anna Bishop]
+
+_Washington's Birthday._--Patriotic services were held in the
+Congregational Church this morning. Madame Anna Bishop sang, and
+National songs were sung. Hon. James C. Smith read Washington's Farewell
+Address. In the afternoon a party of twenty-two, young and old, took a
+ride in the Seminary boat and went to Mr. Paton's on the lake shore
+road. We carried flags and made it a patriotic occasion. I sat next to
+Spencer F. Lincoln, a young man from Naples who is studying law in Mr.
+Henry Chesebro's office. I never met him before but he told me he had
+made up his mind to go to the war. It is wonderful that young men who
+have brilliant prospects before them at home, will offer themselves upon
+the altar of their country. I have some new patriotic stationery. There
+is a picture of the flag on the envelope and underneath, "If any one
+attempts to haul down the American flag shoot him on the spot.--
+John A. Dix."
+
+_Sunday, February_ 23.--Everybody came out to church this morning,
+expecting to hear Madame Anna Bishop sing. She was not there, and an
+"agent" made a "statement." The audience did not appear particularly
+edified.
+
+_March_ 4.--John B. Gough lectured in Bemis Hall last night and was
+entertained by Governor Clark. I told Grandfather that I had an
+invitation to the lecture and he asked me who from. I told him from Mr.
+Noah T. Clarke's brother. He did not make the least objection and I was
+awfully glad, because he has asked me to the whole course. Wendell
+Phillips and Horace Greeley, E. H. Chapin and John G. Saxe and Bayard
+Taylor are expected. John B. Gough's lecture was fine. He can make an
+audience laugh as much by wagging his coat tails as some men can by
+talking an hour.
+
+_March_ 26.--I have been up at Laura Chapin's from 10 o'clock in the
+morning until 10 at night, finishing Jennie Howell's bed quilt, as she
+is to be married very soon. Almost all of the girls were there. We
+finished it at 8 p. m. and when we took it off the frames we gave three
+cheers. Some of the youth of the village came up to inspect our
+handiwork and see us home. Before we went Julia Phelps sang and played
+on the guitar and Captain Barry also sang and we all sang together, "O!
+Columbia, the gem of the ocean, three cheers for the red, white and
+blue."
+
+_June_ 19.--Our cousin, Ann Eliza Field, was married to-day to George B.
+Bates at her home on Gibson Street. We went and had an elegant time.
+Charlie Wheeler made great fun and threw the final shower of rice as
+they drove away.
+
+_June._--There was great excitement in prayer meeting last night, it
+seemed to Abbie Clark, Mary Field and me on the back seat where we
+always sit. Several people have asked us why we sit away back there by
+old Mrs. Kinney, but we tell them that she sits on the other side of the
+stove from us and we like the seat, because we have occupied it so long.
+I presume we would see less and hear more if we sat in front. To-night
+just after Mr. Walter Hubbell had made one of his most beautiful prayers
+and Mr. Cyrus Dixon was praying, a big June bug came zipping into the
+room and snapped against the wall and the lights and barely escaped
+several bald heads. Anna kept dodging around in a most startling manner
+and I expected every moment to see her walk out and take Emma Wheeler
+with her, for if she is afraid of anything more than dogs it is June
+bugs. At this crisis the bug flew out and a cat stealthily walked in. We
+knew that dear Mrs. Taylor was always unpleasantly affected by the sight
+of cats and we didn't know what would happen if the cat should go near
+her. The cat very innocently ascended the steps to the desk and as Judge
+and Mrs. Taylor always sit on the front seat, she couldn't help
+observing the ambitious animal as it started to assist Dr. Daggett in
+conducting the meeting. The result was that Mrs. Taylor just managed to
+reach the outside door before fainting away. We were glad when the
+benediction was pronounced.
+
+_June._--Anna and I had a serenade last night from the Academy Glee
+Club, I think, as their voices sounded familiar. We were awakened by the
+music, about 11 p. m., quite suddenly and I thought I would step across
+the hall to the front chamber for a match to light the candle. I was
+only half awake, however, and lost my bearings and stepped off the
+stairs and rolled or slid to the bottom. The stairs are winding, so I
+must have performed two or three revolutions before I reached my
+destination. I jumped up and ran back and found Anna sitting up in bed,
+laughing. She asked me where I had been and said if I had only told her
+where I was going she would have gone for me. We decided not to strike a
+light, but just listen to the singing. Anna said she was glad that the
+leading tenor did not know how quickly I "tumbled" to the words of his
+song, "O come my love and be my own, nor longer let me dwell alone," for
+she thought he would be too much flattered. Grandfather came into the
+hall and asked if any bones were broken and if he should send for a
+doctor. We told him we guessed not, we thought we would be all right in
+the morning. He thought it was Anna who fell down stairs, as he is never
+looking for such exploits in me. We girls received some verses from the
+Academy boys, written by Greig Mulligan, under the assumed name of Simon
+Snooks. The subject was, "The Poor Unfortunate Academy Boys." We have
+answered them and now I fear Mrs. Grundy will see them and imagine
+something serious is going on. But she is mistaken and will find, at the
+end of the session, our hearts are still in our own possession.
+
+When we were down at Sucker Brook the other afternoon we were watching
+the water and one of the girls said, "How nice it would be if our lives
+could run along as smoothly as this stream." I said I thought it would
+be too monotonous. Laura Chapin said she supposed I would rather have an
+"eddy" in mine.
+
+We went to the examination at the Academy to-day and to the gymnasium
+exercises afterwards. Mr. Noah T. Clarke's brother leads them and they
+do some great feats with their rings and swings and weights and ladders.
+We girls can do a few in the bowling alley at the Seminary.
+
+_June._--I visited Eureka Lawrence in Syracuse and we attended
+commencement at Hamilton College, Clinton, and saw there, James
+Tunnicliff and Stewart Ellsworth of Penn Yan. I also saw Darius Sackett
+there among the students and also became acquainted with a very
+interesting young man from Syracuse, with the classic name of Horace
+Publius Virgilius Bogue. Both of these young men are studying for the
+ministry. I also saw Henry P. Cook, who used to be one of the Academy
+boys, and Morris Brown, of Penn Yan. They talk of leaving college and
+going to the war and so does Darius Sackett.
+
+_July,_ 1862.--The President has called for 300,000 more brave men to
+fill up the ranks of the fallen. We hear every day of more friends and
+acquaintances who have volunteered to go.
+
+_August_ 20.--The 126th Regiment, just organized, was mustered into
+service at Camp Swift, Geneva. Those that I know who belong to it are
+Colonel E. S. Sherrill, Lieutenant Colonel James M. Bull, Captain
+Charles A. Richardson, Captain Charles M. Wheeler, Captain Ten Eyck
+Munson, Captain Orin G. Herendeen, Surgeon Dr. Charles S. Hoyt, Hospital
+Steward Henry T. Antes, First Lieutenant Charles Gage, Second Lieutenant
+Spencer F. Lincoln, First Sergeant Morris Brown, Corporal Hollister N.
+Grimes, Privates Darius Sackett, Henry Willson, Oliver Castle, William
+Lamport.
+
+Dr. Hoyt wrote home: "God bless the dear ones we leave behind; and while
+you try to perform the duties you owe to each other, we will try to
+perform ours."
+
+We saw by the papers that the volunteers of the regiment before leaving
+camp at Geneva allotted over $15,000 of their monthly pay to their
+families and friends at home. One soldier sent this telegram to his
+wife, as the regiment started for the front: "God bless you. Hail
+Columbia. Kiss the baby. Write soon." A volume in ten words.
+
+_August._--The New York State S. S. convention is convened here and the
+meetings are most interesting. They were held in our church and lasted
+three days. A Mr. Hart, from New York, led the singing and Mr. Ralph
+Wells was Moderator. Mr. Noah T. Clarke was in his element all through
+the meetings. Mr. Pardee gave some fine blackboard exercises. During the
+last afternoon Mr. Tousley was wheeled into the church, in his invalid
+chair, and said a few words, which thrilled every one. So much
+tenderness, mingled with his old time enthusiasm and love for the cause.
+It is the last time probably that his voice will ever be heard in
+public. They closed the grand meeting with the hymn beginning:
+
+ "Blest be the tie that binds
+ Our hearts in Christian love."
+
+In returning thanks to the people of Canandaigua for their generous
+entertainment, Mr. Ralph Wells facetiously said that the cost of the
+convention must mean something to Canandaigua people, for the cook in
+one home was heard to say, "These religiouses do eat awful!"
+
+_September_ 13.--Darius Sackett was wounded by a musket shot in the leg,
+at Maryland Heights, Va., and in consequence is discharged from the
+service.
+
+_September._--Edgar A. Griswold of Naples is recruiting a company here
+for the 148th Regiment, of which he is captain. Hiram P. Brown, Henry S.
+Murray and Charles H. Paddock are officers in the company. Dr. Elnathan
+W. Simmons is surgeon.
+
+_September_ 22.--I read aloud to Grandfather this evening the
+Emancipation Proclamation issued as a war measure by President Lincoln,
+to take effect January 1, liberating over three million slaves. He
+recommends to all thus set free, to labor faithfully for reasonable
+wages and to abstain from all violence, unless in necessary
+self-defense, and he invokes upon this act "the considerate judgment of
+mankind and the gracious favor of Almighty God."
+
+_November_ 21.--This is my twentieth birthday. Anna wanted to write a
+poem for the occasion and this morning she handed me what she called "An
+effort." She said she wrestled with it all night long and could not
+sleep and this was the result:
+
+ "One hundred years from now, Carrie dear,
+ In all probability you'll not be here;
+ But we'll all be in the same boat, too,
+ And there'll be no one left
+ To say boo hoo!"
+
+Grandfather gave me for a present a set of books called "Irving's
+Catechisms on Ancient Greeks and Romans." They are four little books
+bound in leather, which were presented to our mother for a prize. It is
+thus inscribed on the front page, "Miss Elizabeth Beals at a public
+examination of the Female Boarding School in East Bloomfield, October
+15, 1825, was judged to excel the school in Reading. In testimony of
+which she receives this Premium from her affectionate instructress, S.
+Adams."
+
+I cannot imagine Grandmother sending us away to boarding school, but I
+suppose she had so many children then, she could spare one or two as
+well as not. She says they sent Aunt Ann to Miss Willard's school at
+Troy. I received a birthday letter from Mrs. Beaumont to-day. She wants
+to know how everything goes at the Seminary and if Anna still occupies
+the front seat in the school room most of the time. She says she
+supposes she is quite a sedate young lady now but she hopes there is a
+whole lot of the old Anna left. I think there is.
+
+_December._--Hon. William H. Lamport went down to Virginia to see his
+son and found that he had just died in the hospital from measles and
+pneumonia. Their only son, only eighteen years old!
+
+
+
+
+1863
+
+_January._--Grandmother went to Aunt Mary Carr's to tea to-night, very
+much to our surprise, for she seldom goes anywhere. Anna said she was
+going to keep house exactly as Grandmother did, so after supper she took
+a little hot water in a basin on a tray and got the tea-towels and
+washed the silver and best china but she let the ivory handles on the
+knives and forks get wet, so I presume they will all turn black.
+Grandmother never lets her little nice things go out into the kitchen,
+so probably that is the reason that everything is forty years old and
+yet as good as new. She let us have the Young Ladies' Aid Society here
+to supper because I am President. She came into the parlor and looked at
+our basket of work, which the elder ladies cut out for us to make for
+the soldiers. She had the supper table set the whole length of the
+dining room and let us preside at the table. Anna made the girls laugh
+so, they could hardly eat, although they said everything was splendid.
+They said they never ate better biscuit, preserves, or fruit cake and
+the coffee was delicious. After it was over, the "dear little lady" said
+she hoped we had a good time. After the girls were gone Grandmother
+wanted to look over the garments and see how much we had accomplished
+and if we had made them well. Mary Field made a pair of drawers with No.
+90 thread. She said she wanted them to look fine and I am sure they did.
+Most of us wrote notes and put inside the garments for the soldiers in
+the hospitals.
+
+Sarah Gibson Howell has had an answer to her letter. His name is
+Foster--a Major. She expects him to come and see her soon.
+
+All the girls wear newspaper bustles to school now and Anna's rattled
+to-day and Emma Wheeler heard it and said, "What's the news, Anna?" They
+both laughed out loud and found that "the latest news from the front"
+was that Miss Morse kept them both after school and they had to copy
+Dictionary for an hour. War prices are terrible. I paid $3.50 to-day for
+a hoop skirt.
+
+_January_ 13.--P. T. Barnum delivered his lecture on "The Art of Money
+Getting" in Bemis Hall this evening for the benefit of the Ladies' Aid
+Society, which is working for the soldiers. We girls went and enjoyed
+it.
+
+_February._--The members of our society sympathized with General
+McClellan when he was criticised by some and we wrote him the following
+letter:
+
+ "Canandaigua, Feb. 13, 1863.
+
+"Maj. Gen. Geo. McClellan:
+
+"Will you pardon any seeming impropriety in our addressing you, and
+attribute it to the impulsive love and admiration of hearts which see in
+you, the bravest and noblest defender of our Union. We cannot resist the
+impulse to tell you, be our words ever so feeble, how our love and trust
+have followed you from Rich Mountain to Antietam, through all slanderous
+attacks of traitorous politicians and fanatical defamers--how we have
+admired, not less than your calm courage on the battlefield, your lofty
+scorn of those who remained at home in the base endeavor to strip from
+your brow the hard earned laurels placed there by a grateful country: to
+tell further, that in your forced retirement from battlefields of the
+Republic's peril, you have 'but changed your country's arms for
+more,--your country's heart,'--and to assure you that so long as our
+country remains to us a sacred name and our flag a holy emblem, so long
+shall we cherish your memory as the defender and protector of both. We
+are an association whose object it is to aid, in the only way in which
+woman, alas! can aid our brothers in the field. Our sympathies are with
+them in the cause for which they have periled all--our hearts are with
+them in the prayer, that ere long their beloved commander may be
+restored to them, and that once more as of old he may lead them to
+victory in the sacred name of the Union and Constitution.
+
+"With united prayers that the Father of all may have you and yours ever
+in His holy keeping, we remain your devoted partisans."
+
+ Signed by a large number.
+
+The following in reply was addressed to the lady whose name was first
+signed to the above:
+
+ "New York, Feb. 21, 1863.
+
+Madam--I take great pleasure in acknowledging the receipt of the very
+kind letter of the 13th inst., from yourself and your friends. Will you
+do me the favor to say to them how much I thank them for it, and that I
+am at a loss to express my gratitude for the pleasant and cheering terms
+in which it is couched. Such sentiments on the part of those whose
+brothers have served with me in the field are more grateful to me than
+anything else can be. I feel far more than rewarded by them for all I
+have tried to accomplish.--I am, Madam, with the most sincere respect
+and friendship, yours very truly,
+
+ Geo. B. McClellan."
+
+_May._--A number of the teachers and pupils of the Academy have enlisted
+for the war. Among them E. C. Clarke, H. C. Kirk, A. T. Wilder, Norman
+K. Martin, T. C. Parkhurst, Mr. Gates. They have a tent on the square
+and are enlisting men in Canandaigua and vicinity for the 4th N. Y.
+Heavy Artillery. I received a letter from Mr. Noah T. Clarke's mother in
+Naples. She had already sent three sons, Bela, William and Joseph, to
+the war and she is very sad because her youngest has now enlisted. She
+says she feels as did Jacob of old when he said, "I am bereaved of my
+children. Joseph is not and Simeon is not and now you will take Benjamin
+away." I have heard that she is a beautiful singer but she says she
+cannot sing any more until this cruel war is over. I wish that I could
+write something to comfort her but I feel as Mrs. Browning puts it: "If
+you want a song for your Italy free, let none look at me."
+
+Our society met at Fannie Pierce's this afternoon. Her mother is an
+invalid and never gets out at all, but she is very much interested in
+the soldiers and in all young people, and loves to have us come in and
+see her and we love to go. She enters into the plans of all of us young
+girls and has a personal interest in us. We had a very good time
+to-night and Laura Chapin was more full of fun than usual. Once there
+was silence for a minute or two and some one said, "awful pause." Laura
+said, "I guess you would have awful paws if you worked as hard as I do."
+We were talking about how many of us girls would be entitled to flag bed
+quilts, and according to the rules, they said that, up to date, Abbie
+Clark and I were the only ones. The explanation is that Captain George
+N. Williams and Lieutenant E. C. Clarke are enlisted in their country's
+service. Susie Daggett is Secretary and Treasurer of the Society and she
+reported that in one year's time we made in our society 133 pairs of
+drawers, 101 shirts, 4 pairs socks for soldiers, and 54 garments for the
+families of soldiers.
+
+Abbie Clark and I had our ambrotypes taken to-day for two young braves
+who are going to the war. William H. Adams is also commissioned Captain
+and is going to the front.
+
+_July_ 4.--The terrible battle of Gettysburg brings to Canandaigua sad
+news of our soldier boys of the 126th Regiment. Colonel Sherrill was
+instantly killed, also Captains Wheeler and Herendeen, Henry Willson and
+Henry P. Cook. Captain Richardson was wounded.
+
+[Illustration: "Abbie Clark and I had our ambrotypes taken to-day",
+"Mr. Noah T. Clark's Brother and I"]
+
+_July_ 26.--Charlie Wheeler was buried with military honors from the
+Congregational church to-day. Two companies of the 54th New York State
+National Guard attended the funeral, and the church was packed,
+galleries and all. It was the saddest funeral and the only one of a
+soldier that I ever attended. I hope it will be the last. He was killed
+at Gettysburg, July 3, by a sharpshooter's bullet. He was a very bright
+young man, graduate of Yale college and was practising law. He was
+captain of Company K, 126th N. Y. Volunteers. I have copied an extract
+from Mr. Morse's lecture, "You and I": "And who has forgotten that
+gifted youth, who fell on the memorable field of Gettysburg? To win a
+noble name, to save a beloved country, he took his place beneath the
+dear old flag, and while cannon thundered and sabers clashed and the
+stars of the old Union shone above his head he went down in the shock of
+battle and left us desolate, a name to love and a glory to endure. And
+as we solemnly know, as by the old charter of liberty we most sacredly
+swear, he was truly and faithfully and religiously
+
+ Of all our friends the noblest,
+ The choicest and the purest,
+ The nearest and the dearest,
+ In the field at Gettysburg.
+ Of all the heroes bravest,
+ Of soul the brightest, whitest,
+ Of all the warriors greatest,
+ Shot dead at Gettysburg.
+
+ And where the fight was thickest,
+ And where the smoke was blackest,
+ And where the fire was hottest,
+ On the fields of Gettysburg,
+ There flashed his steel the brightest,
+ There blazed his eyes the fiercest,
+ There flowed his blood the reddest
+ On the field of Gettysburg.
+
+ O wailing winds of heaven!
+ O weeping dew of evening!
+ O music of the waters
+ That flow at Gettysburg,
+ Mourn tenderly the hero,
+ The rare and glorious hero,
+ The loved and peerless hero,
+ Who died at Gettysburg.
+
+ His turf shall be the greenest,
+ His roses bloom the sweetest,
+ His willow droop the saddest
+ Of all at Gettysburg.
+ His memory live the freshest,
+ His fame be cherished longest,
+ Of all the holy warriors,
+ Who fell at Gettysburg.
+
+These were patriots, these were our jewels. When shall we see their like
+again? And of every soldier who has fallen in this war his friends may
+write just as lovingly as you and I may do of those to whom I pay my
+feeble tribute."
+
+_August,_ 1863.--The U. S. Sanitary Commission has been organized.
+Canandaigua sent Dr. W. Fitch Cheney to Gettysburg with supplies for the
+sick and wounded and he took seven assistants with him. Home bounty was
+brought to the tents and put into the hands of the wounded soldiers. A
+blessed work.
+
+_August_ 12.--Lucilla Field was married in our church to-day to Rev. S.
+W. Pratt. I always thought she was cut out for a minister's wife. Jennie
+Draper cried herself sick because Lucilla, her Sunday School teacher, is
+going away.
+
+_October_ 8.--News came to-day of the death of Lieutenant Hiram Brown.
+He died of fever at Portsmouth, only little more than a year after he
+went away.
+
+_November_ 1.--The 4th New York Heavy Artillery is stationed at Fort
+Hamilton, N. Y. harbor. Uncle Edward has invited me down to New York to
+spend a month! Very opportune! Grandfather says that I can go and Miss
+Rosewarne is beginning a new dress for me to-day.
+
+_November_ 6.--We were saddened to-day by news of the death of Augustus
+Torrey Wilder in the hospital at Fort Ethan Allen.
+
+_November_ 9.--No. 68 E. 19th Street, New York City. Grandfather and I
+came from Canandaigua yesterday. He is at Gramercy Park Hotel. We were
+met by a military escort of "one" at Albany and consequently came
+through more safely, I suppose. James met us at 42d Street Grand Central
+Station. He lives at Uncle Edward's; attends to all of his legal
+business and is his confidential clerk. I like it very much here. They
+are very stylish and grand but I don't mind that. Aunt Emily is reserved
+and dignified but very kind. People do not pour their tea or coffee into
+their saucers any more to cool it, but drink it from the cup, and you
+must mind and not leave your teaspoon in your cup. I notice everything
+and am very particular. Mr. Morris K. Jesup lives right across the
+street and I see him every day, as he is a friend of Uncle Edward.
+Grandfather has gone back home and left me in charge of friends "a la
+militaire" and others.
+
+_November_ 15.--"We" went out to Fort Hamilton to-day and are going to
+Blackwell's Island to-morrow and to many other places of interest down
+the Bay. Soldiers are everywhere and I feel quite important, walking
+around in company with blue coat and brass buttons--very becoming style
+of dress for men and the military salute at every turn is what one reads
+about.
+
+_Sunday_.--Went to Broadway Tabernacle to church to-day and heard Rev.
+Joseph P. Thompson preach. Abbie Clark is visiting her sister, Mrs. Fred
+Thompson, and sat a few seats ahead of us in church. She turned around
+and saw us. We also saw Henrietta Francis Talcott, who was a "Seminary
+girl." She wants me to come to see her in her New York home.
+
+_November_ 19.--We wish we were at Gettysburg to-day to hear President
+Lincoln's and Edward Everett's addresses at the dedication of the
+National Cemetery. We will read them in to-morrow's papers, but it will
+not be like hearing them.
+
+_Author's Note,_ 1911.--Forty-eight years have elapsed since Lincoln's
+speech was delivered at the dedication of the Soldiers' Cemetery at
+Gettysburg. So eloquent and remarkable was his utterance that I believe
+I am correct in stating that every word spoken has now been translated
+into all known languages and is regarded as one of the World Classics.
+The same may be said of Lincoln's letter to the mother of five sons lost
+in battle. I make no apology for inserting in this place both the speech
+and the letter. Mr. Whitelaw Reid, the American Ambassador to Great
+Britain, in an address on Lincoln delivered at the University of
+Birmingham in December, 1910, remarked in reference to this letter,
+"What classic author in our common English tongue has surpassed that?"
+and next may I ask, "What English or American orator has on a similar
+occasion surpassed this address on the battlefield of Gettysburg?"
+
+"Four score and seven years ago, our fathers brought forth on this
+continent a new nation conceived in liberty and dedicated to the
+proposition that all men are created equal. Now we are engaged in a
+great civil war, testing whether that nation, or any nation so conceived
+and so dedicated, can long endure. We are met on a great battlefield of
+that war. We have come to dedicate a portion of that field as a final
+resting place for those who gave their lives that that nation might
+live. It is altogether fitting and proper that we should do this. But in
+a larger sense we cannot dedicate--we cannot consecrate--we cannot
+hallow this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here
+have consecrated it far above our poor power to add or detract. The
+world will little note, nor long remember, what we say here--but it can
+never forget what they did here. It is for us, the living, rather, to be
+dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here have
+thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to
+the great task remaining before us--that from these honored dead we take
+increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full
+measure of devotion--that we here highly resolve, that these dead shall
+not have died in vain--that this nation under God shall have a new birth
+of freedom--and that government of the people, by the people and for the
+people, shall not perish from the earth."
+
+It was during the dark days of the war that he wrote this simple letter
+of sympathy to a bereaved mother:--
+
+"I have been shown, in the files of the War Department, a statement that
+you are the mother of five sons who have died gloriously on the field of
+battle. I feel how weak and fruitless must be any words of mine which
+should attempt to beguile you from your grief for a loss so overwhelming,
+but I cannot refrain from tendering to you the consolation which may be
+found in the thanks of the Republic they died to save. I pray that our
+Heavenly Father may assuage the anguish of your bereavement, and leave
+you only the cherished memory of the loved and lost, and the solemn
+pride that must be yours, to have laid so costly a sacrifice upon the
+altar of Freedom."
+
+_November_ 21.--Abbie Clark and her cousin Cora came to call and invited
+me and her soldier cousin to come to dinner to-night, at Mrs.
+Thompson's. He will be here this afternoon and I will give him the
+invitation. James is asked for the evening.
+
+_November_ 22.--We had a delightful visit. Mr. Thompson took us up into
+his den and showed us curios from all over the world and as many
+pictures as we would find in an art gallery.
+
+_Friday_.--Last evening Uncle Edward took a party of us, including Abbie
+Clark, to Wallack's Theater to see "Rosedale," which is having a great
+run. I enjoyed it and told James it was the best play I ever "heard." He
+said I must not say that I "heard" a play. I "saw" it. I stand
+corrected.
+
+I told James that I heard of a young girl who went abroad and on her
+return some one asked her if she saw King Lear and she said, no, he was
+sick all the time she was there! I just loved the play last night and
+laughed and cried in turn, it seemed so real. I don't know what
+Grandmother will say, but I wrote her about it and said, "When you are
+with the Romans, you must do as the Romans do." I presume she will say
+"that is not the way you were brought up."
+
+_December_ 7.--The 4th New York Heavy Artillery has orders to move to
+Fort Ethan Allen, near Washington, and I have orders to return to
+Canandaigua. I have enjoyed the five weeks very much and as "the
+soldier" was on parole most of the time I have seen much of interest in
+the city. Uncle Edward says that he has lived here forty years but has
+never visited some of the places that we have seen, so he told me when I
+mentioned climbing to the top of Trinity steeple.
+
+Canandaigua, _December_ 8.--Home again. I had military attendance as far
+as Paterson, N. J., and came the rest of the way with strangers. Not
+caring to talk I liked it just as well. When I said good bye I could not
+help wondering whether it was for years, or forever. This cruel war is
+terrible and precious lives are being sacrificed and hearts broken every
+day. What is to be the result? We can only trust and wait.
+
+_Christmas Eve,_ 1863.--Sarah Gibson Howell was married to Major Foster
+this evening. She invited all the society and many others. It was a
+beautiful wedding and we all enjoyed it. Some time ago I asked her to
+write in my album and she sewed a lock of her black curling hair on the
+page and in the center of it wrote, "Forget not Gippie."
+
+_December_ 31.--Our brother John was married in Boston to-day to Laura
+Arnold, a lovely girl.
+
+
+
+
+1864
+
+_April_ 1.--Grandfather had decided to go to New York to attend the fair
+given by the Sanitary Commission, and he is taking two immense books,
+which are more than one hundred years old, to present to the Commission,
+for the benefit of the war fund.
+
+_April_ 18.--Grandfather returned home to-day, unexpectedly to us. I
+knew he was sick when I met him at the door. He had traveled all night
+alone from New York, although he said that a stranger, a fellow
+passenger, from Ann Arbor, Mich., on the train noticed that he was
+suffering and was very kind to him. He said he fell in his room at
+Gramercy Park Hotel in the night, and his knee was very painful. We sent
+for old Dr. Cheney and he said the hurt was a serious one and needed
+most careful attention. I was invited to a spelling school at Abbie
+Clark's in the evening and Grandmother said that she and Anna would take
+care of Grandfather till I got back, and then I could sit up by him the
+rest of the night. We spelled down and had quite a merry time. Major C.
+S. Aldrich had escaped from prison and was there. He came home with me,
+as my soldier is down in Virginia.
+
+_April_ 19.--Grandfather is much worse. He was delirious all night. We
+have sent for Dr. Rosewarne in counsel and Mrs. Lightfoote has come to
+stay with us all the time and we have sent for Aunt Glorianna.
+
+_April_ 20.--Grandfather dictated a letter to-night to a friend of his
+in New York. After I had finished he asked me if I had mended his
+gloves. I said no, but I would have them ready when he wanted them. Dear
+Grandfather! he looks so sick I fear he will never wear his gloves
+again.
+
+_May_ 16.--I have not written in my diary for a month and it has been
+the saddest month of my life. Dear, dear Grandfather is dead. He was
+buried May 2, just two weeks from the day that he returned from New
+York. We did everything for him that could be done, but at the end of
+the first week the doctors saw that he was beyond all human aid. Uncle
+Thomas told the doctors that they must tell him. He was much surprised
+but received the verdict calmly. He said "he had no notes out and
+perhaps it was the best time to go." He had taught us how to live and he
+seemed determined to show us how a Christian should die. He said he
+wanted "Grandmother and the children to come to him and have all the
+rest remain outside." When we came into the room he said to Grandmother,
+"Do you know what the doctors say?" She bowed her head, and then he
+motioned for her to come on one side and Anna and me on the other and
+kneel by his bedside. He placed a hand upon us and upon her and said to
+her, "All the rest seem very much excited, but you and I must be
+composed." Then he asked us to say the 23d Psalm, "The Lord is my
+Shepherd," and then all of us said the Lord's Prayer together after
+Grandmother had offered a little prayer for grace and strength in this
+trying hour. Then he said, "Grandmother, you must take care of the
+girls, and, girls, you must take care of Grandmother." We felt as though
+our hearts would break and were sure we never could be happy again.
+During the next few days he often spoke of dying and of what we must do
+when he was gone. Once when I was sitting by him he looked up and smiled
+and said, "You will lose all your roses watching over me." A good many
+business men came in to see him to receive his parting blessing. The two
+McKechnie brothers, Alexander and James, came in together on their way
+home from church the Sunday before he died. Dr. Daggett came very often.
+Mr. Alexander Howell and Mrs. Worthington came, too.
+
+He lived until Saturday, the 30th, and in the morning he said, "Open the
+door wide." We did so and he said, "Let the King of Glory enter in."
+Very soon after he said, "I am going home to Paradise," and then sank
+into that sleep which on this earth knows no waking. I sat by the window
+near his bed and watched the rain beat into the grass and saw the
+peonies and crocuses and daffodils beginning to come up out of the
+ground and I thought to myself, I shall never see the flowers come up
+again without thinking of these sad, sad days. He was buried Monday
+afternoon, May 2, from the Congregational church, and Dr. Daggett
+preached a sermon from a favorite text of Grandfather's, "I shall die in
+my nest." James and John came and as we stood with dear Grandmother and
+all the others around his open grave and heard Dr. Daggett say in his
+beautiful sympathetic voice, "Earth to earth, ashes to ashes, dust to
+dust," we felt that we were losing our best friend; but he told us that
+we must live for Grandmother and so we will.
+
+The next Sabbath, Anna and I were called out of church by a messenger,
+who said that Grandmother was taken suddenly ill and was dying. When we
+reached the house attendants were all about her administering
+restoratives, but told us she was rapidly sinking. I asked if I might
+speak to her and was reluctantly permitted, as they thought best not to
+disturb her. I sat down by her and with tearful voice said,
+"Grandmother, don't you know that Grandfather said we were to care for
+you and you were to care for us and if you die we cannot do as
+Grandfather said?" She opened her eyes and looked at me and said
+quietly, "Dry your eyes, child, I shall not die to-day or to-morrow."
+She seems well now.
+
+Inscribed in my diary:
+
+ "They are passing away, they are passing away,
+ Not only the young, but the aged and gray.
+ Their places are vacant, no longer we see
+ The armchair in waiting, as it used to be.
+ The hat and the coat are removed from the nail,
+ Where for years they have hung, every day without fail.
+ The shoes and the slippers are needed no more,
+ Nor kept ready waiting, as they were of yore,
+ The desk which he stood at in manhood's fresh prime,
+ Which now shows the marks of the finger of time,
+ The bright well worn keys, which were childhood's delight
+ Unlocking the treasures kept hidden from sight.
+ These now are mementoes of him who has passed,
+ Who stands there no longer, as we saw him last.
+ Other hands turn the keys, as he did, before,
+ Other eyes will his secrets, if any, explore.
+ The step once elastic, but feeble of late,
+ No longer we watch for through doorway or gate,
+ Though often we turn, half expecting to see,
+ The loved one approaching, but ah! 'tis not he.
+ We miss him at all times, at morn when we meet,
+ For the social repast, there is one vacant seat.
+ At noon, and at night, at the hour of prayer,
+ Our hearts fill with sadness, one voice is not there.
+ Yet not without hope his departure we mourn,
+ In faith and in trust, all our sorrows are borne,
+ Borne upward to Him who in kindness and love
+ Sends earthly afflictions to draw us above.
+ Thus hoping and trusting, rejoicing, we'll go,
+ Both upward and onward through weal and through woe
+ 'Till all of life's changes and conflicts are past
+ Beyond the dark river, to meet him at last."
+
+ In Memoriam
+
+Thomas Beals died in Canandaigua, N. Y., on Saturday, April 30th, 1864,
+in the 81st year of his age. Mr. Beals was born in Boston, Mass.,
+November 13, 1783.
+
+He came to this village in October, 1803, only 14 years after the first
+settlement of the place. He was married in March, 1805, to Abigail
+Field, sister of the first pastor of the Congregational church here. Her
+family, in several of its branches, have since been distinguished in the
+ministry, the legal profession, and in commercial enterprise.
+
+Living to a good old age, and well known as one of our most wealthy and
+respected citizens, Mr. Beals is another added to the many examples of
+successful men who, by energy and industry, have made their own fortune.
+
+On coming to this village, he was teacher in the Academy for a time, and
+afterward entered into mercantile business, in which he had his share of
+vicissitude. When the Ontario Savings Bank was established, 1832, he
+became the Treasurer, and managed it successfully till the institution
+ceased, in 1835, with his withdrawal. In the meantime he conducted,
+also, a banking business of his own, and this was continued until a week
+previous to his death, when he formally withdrew, though for the last
+five years devolving its more active duties upon his son.
+
+As a banker, his sagacity and fidelity won for him the confidence and
+respect of all classes of persons in this community. The business
+portion of our village is very much indebted to his enterprise for the
+eligible structures he built that have more than made good the losses
+sustained by fires. More than fifty years ago he was actively concerned
+in the building of the Congregational church, and also superintended the
+erection of the county jail and almshouse; for many years a trustee of
+Canandaigua Academy, and trustee and treasurer of the Congregational
+church. At the time of his death he and his wife, who survives him, were
+the oldest members of the church, having united with it in 1807, only
+eight years after its organization. Until hindered by the infirmities of
+age, he was a constant attendant of its services and ever devoutly
+maintained the worship of God in his family. No person has been more
+generally known among all classes of our citizens. Whether at home or
+abroad he could not fail to be remarked for his gravity and dignity. His
+character was original, independent, and his manners remarkable for a
+dignified courtesy. Our citizens were familiar with his brief, emphatic
+answers with the wave of his hand. He was fond of books, a great reader,
+collected a valuable number of volumes, and was happy in the use of
+language both in writing and conversation. In many unusual ways he often
+showed his kind consideration for the poor and afflicted, and many
+persons hearing of his death gratefully recollect instances, not known
+to others, of his seasonable kindness to them in trouble. In his
+charities he often studied concealment as carefully as others court
+display. His marked individuality of character and deportment, together
+with his shrewd discernment and active habits, could not fail to leave a
+distinct impression on the minds of all.
+
+For more than sixty years he transacted business in one place here, and
+his long life thus teaches more than one generation the value of
+sobriety, diligence, fidelity and usefulness.
+
+In his last illness he remarked to a friend that he always loved
+Canandaigua; had done several things for its prosperity, and had
+intended to do more. He had known his measure of affliction; only four
+of eleven children survive him, but children and children's children
+ministered to the comfort of his last days. Notwithstanding his years
+and infirmities, he was able to visit New York, returning April 18th
+quite unwell, but not immediately expecting a fatal termination. As the
+final event drew near, he seemed happily prepared to meet it. He
+conversed freely with his friends and neighbors in a softened and
+benignant spirit, at once receiving and imparting benedictions. His end
+seemed to realize his favorite citation from Job: "I shall die in my
+nest."
+
+His funeral was attended on Monday in the Congregational church by a
+large assembly, Dr. Daggett, the pastor, officiating on the
+occasion.--Written by Dr. O. E. Daggett in 1864.
+
+_May._--The 4th New York Heavy Artillery is having hard times in the
+Virginia mud and rain. They are near Culpeper. It is such a change from
+their snug winter quarters at Fort Ethan Allen. There are 2,800 men in
+the Regiment and 1,200 are sick. Dr. Charles S. Hoyt of the 126th, which
+is camping close by, has come to the help of these new recruits so
+kindly as to win every heart, quite in contrast to the heartlessness of
+their own surgeons. They will always love him for this. It is just like
+him.
+
+_June_ 22.--Captain Morris Brown, of Penn Yan, was killed to-day by a
+musket shot in the head, while commanding the regiment before
+Petersburg.
+
+_June_ 23, 1864.--Anna graduated last Thursday, June 16, and was
+valedictorian of her class. There were eleven girls in the class, Ritie
+Tyler, Mary Antes, Jennie Robinson, Hattie Paddock, Lillie Masters,
+Abbie Hills, Miss McNair, Miss Pardee and Miss Palmer, Miss Jasper and
+Anna. The subject of her essay was "The Last Time." I will copy an
+account of the exercises as they appeared in this week's village paper.
+Every one thinks it was written by Mr. E. M. Morse.
+
+A WORD FROM AN OLD MAN
+
+"Mr. Editor:
+
+"Less than a century ago I was traveling through this enchanted region
+and accidentally heard that it was commencement week at the seminary. I
+went. My venerable appearance seemed to command respect and I received
+many attentions. I presented my snowy head and patriarchal beard at the
+doors of the sacred institution and was admitted. I heard all the
+classes, primary, secondary, tertiary, et cetera. All went merry as a
+marriage bell. Thursday was the great day. I made vast preparation. I
+rose early, dressed with much care. I affectionately pressed the hands
+of my two landlords and left. When I arrived at the seminary I saw at a
+glance that it was a place where true merit was appreciated. I was
+invited to a seat among the dignitaries, but declined. I am a modest
+man, I always was. I recognized the benign Principals of the school. You
+can find no better principles in the states than in Ontario Female
+Seminary. After the report of the committee a very lovely young lady
+arose and saluted us in Latin. I looked very wise, I always do. So did
+everybody. We all understood it. As she proceeded, I thought the grand
+old Roman tongue had never sounded so musically and when she pronounced
+the decree, 'Richmond delenda est,' we all hoped it might be prophetic.
+Then followed the essays of the other young ladies and then every one
+waited anxiously for 'The Last Time.' At last it came. The story was
+beautifully told, the adieux were tenderly spoken. We saw the withered
+flowers of early years scattered along the academic ways, and the golden
+fruit of scholarly culture ripening in the gardens of the future.
+Enchanted by the sorrowful eloquence, bewildered by the melancholy
+brilliancy, I sent a rosebud to the charming valedictorian and wandered
+out into the grounds. I went to the concert in the evening and was
+pleased and delighted. So was everybody. I shall return next year unless
+the gout carries me off. I hope I shall hear just such beautiful music,
+see just such beautiful faces and dine at the same excellent hotel.
+
+ Senex."
+
+Anna closed her valedictory with these words:
+
+"May we meet at one gate when all's over;
+ The ways they are many and wide,
+And seldom are two ways the same;
+ Side by side may we stand
+At the same little door when all's done.
+ The ways they are many,
+ The end it is one."
+
+_July_ 10.--We have had word of the death of Spencer F. Lincoln. One
+more brave soldier sacrificed.
+
+_August._--The New York State S. S. Convention was held in Buffalo and
+among others Fanny Gaylord, Mary Field and myself attended. We had a
+fine time and were entertained at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Sexton. Her
+mother is living with her, a dear old lady who was Judge Atwater's
+daughter and used to go to school to Grandfather Beals. We went with
+other delegates on an excursion to Niagara Falls and went into the
+express office at the R. R. station to see Grant Schley, who is express
+agent there. He said it seemed good to see so many home faces.
+
+_September_ 1.--My war letters come from Georgetown Hospital now. Mr.
+Noah T. Clarke is very anxious and sends telegrams to Andrew Chesebro
+every day to go and see his brother.
+
+_September_ 30.--To-day the "Benjamin" of the family reached home under
+the care of Dr. J. Byron Hayes, who was sent to Washington after him. I
+went over to Mr. Noah T. Clarke's to see him and found him just a shadow
+of his former self. However, "hope springs eternal in the human breast"
+and he says he knows he will soon be well again. This is his thirtieth
+birthday and it is glorious that he can spend it at home.
+
+_October_ 1.--Mr. Noah T. Clarke accompanied his brother to-day to the
+old home in Naples and found two other soldier brothers, William and
+Joseph, had just arrived on leave of absence from the army so the
+mother's heart sang "Praise God from whom all blessings flow." The
+fourth brother has also returned to his home in Illinois, disabled.
+
+_November._--They are holding Union Revival Services in town now. One
+evangelist from out of town said he would call personally at the homes
+and ask if all were Christians. Anna told Grandmother if he came here
+she should tell him about her. Grandmother said we must each give an
+account for ourselves. Anna said she should tell him about her little
+Grandmother anyway. We saw him coming up the walk about 11 a.m. and Anna
+went to the door and asked him in. They sat down in the parlor and he
+remarked about the pleasant weather and Canandaigua such a beautiful
+town and the people so cultured. She said yes, she found the town every
+way desirable and the people pleasant, though she had heard it remarked
+that strangers found it hard to get acquainted and that you had to have
+a residence above the R. R. track and give a satisfactory answer as to
+who your Grandfather was, before admittance was granted to the best
+society. He said he had been kindly received everywhere. She said
+"everybody likes ministers." (He was quite handsome and young.) He asked
+her how long she had lived here and she told him nearly all of her brief
+existence! She said if he had asked her how old she was she would have
+told him she was so young that Will Adams last May was appointed her
+guardian. He asked how many there were in the family and she said her
+Grandmother, her sister and herself. He said, "They are Christians, I
+suppose." "Yes," she said, "my sister is a S. S. teacher and my
+Grandmother was born a Christian, about 80 years ago." "Indeed," he
+said. "I would like to see her." Anna said she would have to be excused
+as she seldom saw company. When he arose to go he said, "My dear young
+lady, I trust that you are a Christian." "Mercy yes," she said, "years
+ago." He said he was very glad and hoped she would let her light shine.
+She said that was what she was always doing--that the other night at a
+revival meeting she sang every verse of every hymn and came home feeling
+as though she had herself personally rescued by hand at least fifty
+"from sin and the grave." He smiled approvingly and bade her good bye.
+She told Grandmother she presumed he would say "he had not found so
+great faith, no not in Israel."
+
+We have Teachers' meetings now and Mrs. George Wilson leads and
+instructs us on the Sunday School lesson for the following Sunday. We
+met at Mrs. Worthington's this evening. I think Mrs. Wilson knows
+Barnes' notes, Cruden's Concordance, the Westminster Catechism and the
+Bible from beginning to end.
+
+
+
+
+1865
+
+_March_ 5.--I have just read President Lincoln's second inaugural
+address. It only takes five minutes to read it but, oh, how much it
+contains.
+
+_March_ 20.--Hardly a day passes that we do not hear news of Union
+victories. Every one predicts that the war is nearly at an end.
+
+_March_ 29.--An officer arrived here from the front yesterday and he
+said that, on Saturday morning, shortly after the battle commenced which
+resulted so gloriously for the Union in front of Petersburg, President
+Lincoln, accompanied by General Grant and staff, started for the
+battlefield, and reached there in time to witness the close of the
+contest and the bringing in of the prisoners. His presence was
+immediately recognized and created the most intense enthusiasm. He
+afterwards rode over the battlefield, listened to the report of General
+Parke to General Grant, and added his thanks for the great service
+rendered in checking the onslaught of the rebels and in capturing so
+many of their number. I read this morning the order of Secretary Stanton
+for the flag raising on Fort Sumter. It reads thus: "War department,
+Adjutant General's office, Washington, March 27th, 1865, General Orders
+No. 50. Ordered, first: That at the hour of noon, on the 14th day of
+April, 1865, Brevet Major General Anderson will raise and plant upon the
+ruins of Fort Sumter, in Charleston Harbor, the same U. S. Flag which
+floated over the battlements of this fort during the rebel assault, and
+which was lowered and saluted by him and the small force of his command
+when the works were evacuated on the 14th day of April, 1861. Second,
+That the flag, when raised be saluted by 100 guns from Fort Sumter and
+by a national salute from every fort and rebel battery that fired upon
+Fort Sumter. Third, That suitable ceremonies be had upon the occasion,
+under the direction of Major-General William T. Sherman, whose military
+operations compelled the rebels to evacuate Charleston, or, in his
+absence, under the charge of Major-General Q. A. Gillmore, commanding
+the department. Among the ceremonies will be the delivery of a public
+address by the Rev. Henry Ward Beecher. Fourth, That the naval forces at
+Charleston and their Commander on that station be invited to participate
+in the ceremonies of the occasion. By order of the President of the
+United States. E. M. Stanton, Secretary of War."
+
+_April,_ 1865.--What a month this has been. On the 6th of April Governor
+Fenton issued this proclamation: "Richmond has fallen. The wicked men
+who governed the so-called Confederate States have fled their capital,
+shorn of their power and influence. The rebel armies have been defeated,
+broken and scattered. Victory everywhere attends our banners and our
+armies, and we are rapidly moving to the closing scenes of the war.
+Through the self-sacrifice and heroic devotion of our soldiers, the life
+of the republic has been saved and the American Union preserved. I,
+Reuben E. Fenton, Governor of the State of New York, do designate
+Friday, the 14th of April, the day appointed for the ceremony of raising
+the United States flag on Fort Sumter, as a day of Thanksgiving, prayer
+and praise to Almighty God, for the signal blessings we have received at
+His hands."
+
+_Saturday, April_ 8.--The cannon has fired a salute of thirty-six guns
+to celebrate the fall of Richmond. This evening the streets were
+thronged with men, women and children all acting crazy as if they had
+not the remotest idea where they were or what they were doing. Atwater
+block was beautifully lighted and the band was playing in front of it.
+On the square they fired guns, and bonfires were lighted in the streets.
+Gov. Clark's house was lighted from the very garret and they had a
+transparency in front, with "Richmond" on it, which Fred Thompson made.
+We didn't even light "our other candle," for Grandmother said she
+preferred to keep Saturday night and pity and pray for the poor
+suffering, wounded soldiers, who are so apt to be forgotten in the hour
+of victory.
+
+_Sunday Evening, April_ 9.--There were great crowds at church this
+morning. Dr. Daggett's text was from Prov. 18: 10: "The name of the Lord
+is a strong tower; the righteous runneth into it, and is safe." It was a
+very fine sermon. They sang hymns relating to our country and Dr.
+Daggett's prayers were full of thanksgiving. Mr. Noah T. Clarke had the
+chapel decorated with flags and opened the Sunday School by singing,
+"Marching On," "My Country, 'tis of Thee," "The Star Spangled Banner,"
+"Glory, Hallelujah," etc. Hon. Wm. H. Lamport talked very pleasantly and
+paid a very touching tribute to the memory of the boys, who had gone out
+to defend their country, who would never come "marching home again." He
+lost his only son, 18 years old (in the 126th), about two years ago. I
+sat near Mary and Emma Wheeler and felt so sorry for them. They could
+not sing.
+
+_Monday Morning, April_ 10.--"Whether I am in the body, or out of the
+body, I know not, but one thing I know," Lee has surrendered! and all
+the people seem crazy in consequence. The bells are ringing, boys and
+girls, men and women are running through the streets wild with
+excitement; the flags are all flying, one from the top of our church,
+and such a "hurrah boys" generally, I never dreamed of. We were quietly
+eating our breakfast this morning about 7 o'clock, when our church bell
+commenced to ring, then the Methodist bell, and now all the bells in
+town are ringing. Mr. Noah T. Clarke ran by, all excitement, and I don't
+believe he knows where he is. No school to-day. I saw Capt. Aldrich
+passing, so I rushed to the window and he waved his hat. I raised the
+window and asked him what was the matter? He came to the front door
+where I met him and he almost shook my hand off and said, "The war is
+over. We have Lee's surrender, with his own name signed." I am going
+down town now, to see for myself, what is going on. Later--I have
+returned and I never saw such performances in my life. Every man has a
+bell or a horn, and every girl a flag and a little bell, and every one
+is tied with red, white and blue ribbons. I am going down town again
+now, with my flag in one hand and bell in the other and make all the
+noise I can. Mr. Noah T. Clarke and other leading citizens are riding
+around on a dray cart with great bells in their hands ringing them as
+hard as they can. Dr. Cook beat upon an old gong. The latest musical
+instrument invented is called the "Jerusalem fiddle." Some boys put a
+dry goods box upon a cart, put some rosin on the edge of the box and
+pulled a piece of timber back and forth across it, making most unearthly
+sounds. They drove through all the streets, Ed Lampman riding on the
+horse and driving it.
+
+_Monday evening, April_ 10.--I have been out walking for the last hour
+and a half, looking at the brilliant illuminations, transparencies and
+everything else and I don't believe I was ever so tired in my life. The
+bells have not stopped ringing more than five minutes all day and every
+one is glad to see Canandaigua startled out of its propriety for once.
+Every yard of red, white and blue ribbon in the stores has been sold,
+also every candle and every flag. One society worked hard all the
+afternoon making transparencies and then there were no candles to put in
+to light them, but they will be ready for the next celebration when
+peace is proclaimed. The Court House, Atwater Block, and hotel have
+about two dozen candles in each window throughout, besides flags and
+mottoes of every description. It is certainly the best impromptu display
+ever gotten up in this town. "Victory is Grant-ed," is in large red,
+white and blue letters in front of Atwater Block. The speeches on the
+square this morning were all very good. Dr. Daggett commenced with
+prayer, and such a prayer, I wish all could have heard it. Hon. Francis
+Granger, E. G. Lapham, Judge Smith, Alexander Howell, Noah T. Clarke and
+others made speeches and we sang "Old Hundred" in conclusion, and Rev.
+Dr. Hibbard dismissed us with the benediction. I shook hands with Mr.
+Noah T. Clarke, but he told me to be careful and not hurt him, for he
+blistered his hands to-day ringing that bell. He says he is going to
+keep the bell for his grandchildren. Between the speeches on the square
+this morning a song was called for and Gus Coleman mounted the steps and
+started "John Brown" and all the assembly joined in the chorus, "Glory,
+Hallelujah." This has been a never to be forgotten day.
+
+_April_ 15.--The news came this morning that our dear president, Abraham
+Lincoln, was assassinated yesterday, on the day appointed for
+thanksgiving for Union victories. I have felt sick over it all day and
+so has every one that I have seen. All seem to feel as though they had
+lost a personal friend, and tears flow plenteously. How soon has sorrow
+followed upon the heels of joy! One week ago to-night we were
+celebrating our victories with loud acclamations of mirth and good
+cheer. Now every one is silent and sad and the earth and heavens seem
+clothed in sack-cloth. The bells have been tolling this afternoon. The
+flags are all at half mast, draped with mourning, and on every store and
+dwelling-house some sign of the nation's loss is visible. Just after
+breakfast this morning, I looked out of the window and saw a group of
+men listening to the reading of a morning paper, and I feared from their
+silent, motionless interest that something dreadful had happened, but I
+was not prepared to hear of the cowardly murder of our President. And
+William H. Seward, too, I suppose cannot survive his wounds. Oh, how
+horrible it is! I went down town shortly after I heard the news, and it
+was wonderful to see the effect of the intelligence upon everybody,
+small or great, rich or poor. Every one was talking low, with sad and
+anxious looks. But we know that God still reigns and will do what is
+best for us all. Perhaps we're "putting our trust too much in princes,"
+forgetting the Great Ruler, who alone can create or destroy, and
+therefore He has taken from us the arm of flesh that we may lean more
+confidingly and entirely upon Him. I trust that the men who committed
+these foul deeds will soon be brought to justice.
+
+_Sunday, Easter Day, April_ 16.--I went to church this morning. The
+pulpit and choir-loft were covered with flags festooned with crape.
+Although a very disagreeable day, the house was well filled. The first
+hymn sung was "Oh God our help in ages past, our hope for years to
+come." Dr. Daggett's prayer, I can never forget, he alluded so
+beautifully to the nation's loss, and prayed so fervently that the God
+of our fathers might still be our God, through every calamity or
+affliction, however severe or mysterious. All seemed as deeply affected
+as though each one had been suddenly bereft of his best friend. The hymn
+sung after the prayer, commenced with "Yes, the Redeemer rose." Dr.
+Daggett said that he had intended to preach a sermon upon the
+resurrection. He read the psalm beginning, "Lord, Thou hast been our
+dwelling-place in all generations." His text was "That our faith and
+hope might be in God." He commenced by saying, "I feel as you feel this
+morning: our sad hearts have all throbbed in unison since yesterday
+morning when the telegram announced to us Abraham Lincoln is shot." He
+said the last week would never be forgotten, for never had any of us
+seen one come in with so much joy, that went out with so much sorrow.
+His whole sermon related to the President's life and death, and, in
+conclusion, he exhorted us not to be despondent, for he was confident
+that the ship of state would not go down, though the helmsman had
+suddenly been taken away while the promised land was almost in view. He
+prayed for our new President, that he might be filled with grace and
+power from on High, to perform his high and holy trust. On Thursday we
+are to have a union meeting in our church, but it will not be the day of
+general rejoicing and thanksgiving we expected. All noisy demonstrations
+will be omitted. In Sunday school the desk was draped with mourning, and
+the flag at half-mast was also festooned with crape. Mr. Noah T. Clarke
+opened the exercises with the hymn "He leadeth me," followed by "Though
+the days are dark with sorrow," "We know not what's before us," "My days
+are gliding swiftly by." Then, Mr. Clarke said that we always meant to
+sing "America," after every victory, and last Monday he was wondering if
+we would not have to sing it twice to-day, or add another verse, but our
+feelings have changed since then. Nevertheless he thought we had better
+sing "America," for we certainly ought to love our country more than
+ever, now that another, and such another, martyr, had given up his life
+for it. So we sang it. Then he talked to the children and said that last
+Friday was supposed to be the anniversary of the day upon which our Lord
+was crucified, and though, at the time the dreadful deed was committed,
+every one felt the day to be the darkest one the earth ever knew; yet
+since then, the day has been called "Good Friday," for it was the death
+of Christ which gave life everlasting to all the people. So he thought
+that life would soon come out of darkness, which now overshadows us all,
+and that the death of Abraham Lincoln might yet prove the nation's life
+in God's own most mysterious way.
+
+_Wednesday evening, April_ 19, 1865.--This being the day set for the
+funeral of Abraham Lincoln at Washington, it was decided to hold the
+service to-day, instead of Thursday, as previously announced in the
+Congregational church. All places of business were closed and the bells
+of the village churches tolled from half past ten till eleven o'clock.
+It is the fourth anniversary of the first bloodshed of the war at
+Baltimore. It was said to-day, that while the services were being held
+in the White House and Lincoln's body lay in state under the dome of the
+capitol, that more than twenty-five millions of people all over the
+civilized world were gathered in their churches weeping over the death
+of the martyred President. We met at our church at half after ten
+o'clock this morning. The bells tolled until eleven o'clock, when the
+services commenced. The church was beautifully decorated with flags and
+black and white cloth, wreaths, mottoes and flowers, the galleries and
+all. The whole effect was fine. There was a shield beneath the arch of
+the pulpit with this text upon it: "The memory of the just is blessed."
+It was beautiful. Under the choir-loft the picture of Abraham Lincoln
+hung amid the flags and drapery. The motto, beneath the gallery, was
+this text: "Know ye that the Lord He is God." The four pastors of the
+place walked in together and took seats upon the platform, which was
+constructed for the occasion. The choir chanted "Lord, Thou hast been
+our dwelling-place in all generations," and then the Episcopal rector,
+Rev. Mr. Leffingwell, read from the psalter, and Rev. Dr. Daggett
+followed with prayer. Judge Taylor was then called upon for a short
+address, and he spoke well, as he always does. The choir sang "God is
+our refuge and our strength."
+
+_Thursday, April_ 20.--The papers are full of the account of the funeral
+obsequies of President Lincoln. We take Harper's Weekly and every event
+is pictured so vividly it seems as though we were eye witnesses of it
+all. The picture of "Lincoln at home" is beautiful. What a dear, kind
+man he was. It is a comfort to know that the assassination was not the
+outcome of an organized plot of Southern leaders, but rather a
+conspiracy of a few fanatics, who undertook in this way to avenge the
+defeat of their cause. It is rumored that one of the conspirators has
+been located.
+
+_April_ 24.--Fannie Gaylord and Kate Lapham have returned from their
+eastern trip and told us of attending the President's funeral in Albany,
+and I had a letter from Bessie Seymour, who is in New York, saying that
+she walked in the procession until half past two in the morning, in
+order to see his face. They say that they never saw him in life, but in
+death he looked just as all the pictures represent him. We all wear
+Lincoln badges now, with pin attached. They are pictures of Lincoln upon
+a tiny flag, bordered with crape. Susie Daggett has just made herself a
+flag, six feet by four. It was a lot of work. Mrs. Noah T. Clarke gave
+one to her husband upon his birthday, April 8. I think everybody ought
+to own a flag.
+
+_April_ 26.--Now we have the news that J. Wilkes Booth, who shot the
+President and who has been concealing himself in Virginia, has been
+caught, and refusing to surrender was shot dead. It has taken just
+twelve days to bring him to retribution. I am glad that he is dead if he
+could not be taken alive, but it seems as though shooting was too good
+for him. However, we may as well take this as really God's way, as the
+death of the President, for if he had been taken alive, the country
+would have been so furious to get at him and tear him to pieces the
+turmoil would have been great and desperate. It may be the best way to
+dispose of him. Of course, it is best, or it would not be so. Mr. Morse
+called this evening and he thinks Booth was shot by a lot of cowards.
+The flags have been flying all day, since the news came, but all,
+excepting Albert Granger, seem sorry that he was not disabled instead of
+being shot dead. Albert seems able to look into the "beyond" and also to
+locate departed spirits. His "latest" is that he is so glad that Booth
+got to h--l before Abraham Lincoln got to Springfield.
+
+Mr. Fred Thompson went down to New York last Saturday and while stopping
+a few minutes at St. Johnsville, he heard a man crowing over the death
+of the President. Mr. Thompson marched up to him, collared him and
+landed him nicely in the gutter. The bystanders were delighted and
+carried the champion to a platform and called for a speech, which was
+given. Quite a little episode. Every one who hears the story, says:
+"Three cheers for F. F. Thompson."
+
+The other afternoon at our society Kate Lapham wanted to divert our
+minds from gossip I think, and so started a discussion upon the
+respective characters of Washington and Napoleon. It was just after
+supper and Laura Chapin was about resuming her sewing and she exclaimed,
+"Speaking of Washington, makes me think that I ought to wash my hands,"
+so she left the room for that purpose.
+
+_May_ 7.--Anna and I wore our new poke bonnets to church this morning
+and thought we looked quite "scrumptious," but Grandmother said after we
+got home, if she had realized how unbecoming they were to us and to the
+house of the Lord, she could not have countenanced them enough to have
+sat in the same pew. However, she tried to agree with Dr. Daggett in his
+text, "It is good for us to be here." It was the first time in a month
+that he had not preached about the affairs of the Nation.
+
+In the afternoon the Sacrament was administered and Rev. A. D. Eddy, D.
+D., who was pastor from 1823 to 1835, was present and officiated. Deacon
+Castle and Deacon Hayes passed the communion. Dr. Eddy concluded the
+services with some personal memories. He said that forty-two years ago
+last November, he presided upon a similar occasion for the first time in
+his life and it was in this very church. He is now the only surviving
+male member who was present that day, but there are six women living,
+and Grandmother is one of the six.
+
+The Monthly Concert of Prayer for Missions was held in the chapel in the
+evening. Dr. Daggett told us that the collection taken for missions
+during the past year amounted to $500. He commended us and said it was
+the largest sum raised in one year for this purpose in the twenty years
+of his pastorate. Dr. Eddy then said that in contrast he would tell us
+that the collection for missions the first year he was here, amounted to
+$5, and that he was advised to touch very lightly upon the subject in
+his appeals as it was not a popular theme with the majority of the
+people. One member, he said, annexed three ciphers to his name when
+asked to subscribe to a missionary document which was circulated, and
+another man replied thus to an appeal for aid in evangelizing a portion
+of Asia: "If you want to send a missionary to Jerusalem, Yates county, I
+will contribute, but not a cent to go to the other side of the world."
+
+Rev. C. H. A. Buckley was present also and gave an interesting talk. By
+way of illustration, he said he knew a small boy who had been earning
+twenty-five cents a week for the heathen by giving up eating butter. The
+other day he seemed to think that his generosity, as well as his
+self-denial, had reached the utmost limit and exclaimed as he sat at the
+table, "I think the heathen have had gospel enough, please pass the
+butter."
+
+_May_ 10.--Jeff Davis was captured to-day at Irwinsville, Ga., when he
+was attempting to escape in woman's apparel. Mr. Green drew a picture of
+him, and Mr. Finley made photographs from it. We bought one as a
+souvenir of the war.
+
+The big headlines in the papers this morning say, "The hunt is up. He
+brandisheth a bowie-knife but yieldeth to six solid arguments. At
+Irwinsville, Ga., about daylight on the 10th instant, Col. Prichard,
+commanding the 4th Michigan Cavalry, captured Jeff Davis, family and
+staff. They will be forwarded under strong guard without delay." The
+flags have been flying all day, and every one is about as pleased over
+the manner of his capture as over the fact itself. Lieutenant Hathaway,
+one of the staff, is a friend of Mr. Manning Wells, and he was pretty
+sure he would follow Davis, so we were not surprised to see his name
+among the captured. Mr. Wells says he is as fine a horseman as he ever
+saw.
+
+_Monday evg., May_ 22.--I went to Teachers' meeting at Mrs.
+Worthington's to-night. Mrs. George Willson is the leader and she told
+us at the last meeting to be prepared this evening to give our opinion
+in regard to the repentance of Solomon before he died. We concluded that
+he did repent although the Bible does not absolutely say so. Grandmother
+thinks such questions are unprofitable, as we would better be repenting
+of our sins, instead of hunting up Solomon's at this late day.
+
+_May_ 23.--We arise about 5:30 nowadays and Anna does not like it very
+well. I asked her why she was not as good natured as usual to-day and
+she said it was because she got up "s'urly." She thinks Solomon must
+have been acquainted with Grandmother when he wrote "She ariseth while
+it is yet night and giveth meat to her household and a portion to her
+maidens." Patrick Burns, the "poet," who has also been our man of all
+work the past year, has left us to go into Mr. McKechnie's employ. He
+seemed to feel great regret when he bade us farewell and told us he
+never lived in a better regulated home than ours and he hoped his
+successor would take the same interest in us that he had. Perhaps he
+will give us a recommendation! He left one of his poems as a souvenir.
+It is entitled, "There will soon be an end to the war," written in
+March, hence a prophecy. He said Mr. Morse had read it and pronounced it
+"tip top." It was mostly written in capitals and I asked him if he
+followed any rule in regard to their use. He said "Oh, yes, always begin
+a line with one and then use your own discretion with the rest."
+
+_May_ 25.--I wish that I could have been in Washington this week, to
+have witnessed the grand review of Meade's and Sherman's armies. The
+newspaper accounts are most thrilling. The review commenced on Tuesday
+morning and lasted two days. It took over six hours for Meade's army to
+pass the grand stand, which was erected in front of the President's
+house. It was witnessed by the President, Generals Grant, Meade, and
+Sherman, Secretary Stanton, and many others in high authority. At ten
+o'clock, Wednesday morning, Sherman's army commenced to pass in review.
+His men did not show the signs of hardship and suffering which marked
+the appearance of the Army of the Potomac. The scenes enacted were
+historic and wonderful. Flags were flying everywhere and windows,
+doorsteps and sidewalks were crowded with people, eager to get a view of
+the grand armies. The city was as full of strangers, who had come to see
+the sight, as on Inauguration Day. Very soon, all that are left of the
+companies, who went from here, will be marching home, "with glad and
+gallant tread."
+
+_June_ 3.--I was invited up to Sonnenberg yesterday and Lottie and Abbie
+Clark called for me at 5:30 p.m., with their pony and democrat wagon.
+Jennie Rankine was the only other lady present and, for a wonder, the
+party consisted of six gentlemen and five ladies, which has not often
+been the case during the war. After supper we adjourned to the lawn and
+played croquet, a new game which Mr. Thompson just brought from New
+York. It is something like billiards, only a mallet is used instead of a
+cue to hit the balls. I did not like it very well, because I couldn't
+hit the balls through the wickets as I wanted to. "We" sang all the
+songs, patriotic and sentimental, that we could think of.
+
+Mr. Lyon came to call upon me to-day, before he returned to New York. He
+is a very pleasant young man. I told him that I regretted that I could
+not sing yesterday, when all the others did, and that the reason that I
+made no attempts in that line was due to the fact that one day in
+church, when I thought I was singing a very good alto, my grandfather
+whispered to me, and said: "Daughter, you are off the key," and ever
+since then, I had sung with the spirit and with the understanding, but
+not with my voice. He said perhaps I could get some one to do my singing
+for me, some day. I told him he was very kind to give me so much
+encouragement. Anna went to a Y.M.C.A. meeting last evening at our
+chapel and said, when the hymn "Rescue the perishing," was given out,
+she just "raised her Ebenezer" and sang every verse as hard as she
+could. The meeting was called in behalf of a young man who has been
+around town for the past few days, with only one arm, who wants to be a
+minister and sells sewing silk and needles and writes poetry during
+vacation to help himself along. I have had a cough lately and
+Grandmother decided yesterday to send for the doctor. He placed me in a
+chair and thumped my lungs and back and listened to my breathing while
+Grandmother sat near and watched him in silence, but finally she said,
+"Caroline isn't used to being pounded!" The doctor smiled and said he
+would be very careful, but the treatment was not so severe as it seemed.
+After he was gone, we asked Grandmother if she liked him and she said
+yes, but if she had known of his "new-fangled" notions and that he wore
+a full beard she might not have sent for him! Because Dr. Carr was
+clean-shaven and also Grandfather and Dr. Daggett, and all of the
+Grangers, she thinks that is the only proper way. What a funny little
+lady she is!
+
+_June_ 8.--There have been unusual attractions down town for the past
+two days. About 5 p.m. a man belonging to the
+Ravel troupe walked a rope, stretched across Main street from the third
+story of the Webster House to the chimney of the building opposite. He
+is said to be Blondin's only rival and certainly performed some
+extraordinary feats. He walked across and then returned backwards. Then
+took a wheel-barrow across and returned with it backwards. He went
+across blindfolded with a bag over his head. Then he attached a short
+trapeze to the rope and performed all sorts of gymnastics. There were at
+least 1,000 people in the street and in the windows gazing at him.
+Grandmother says that she thinks all such performances are wicked,
+tempting Providence to win the applause of men. Nothing would induce her
+to look upon such things. She is a born reformer and would abolish all
+such schemes. This morning she wanted us to read the 11th chapter of
+Hebrews to her, about faith, and when we had finished the forty verses,
+Anna asked her what was the difference between her and Moses.
+Grandmother said there were many points of difference. Anna was not
+found in the bulrushes and she was not adopted by a king's daughter.
+Anna said she was thinking how the verse read, "Moses was a proper
+child," and she could not remember having ever done anything strictly
+"proper" in her life. I noticed that Grandmother did not contradict her,
+but only smiled.
+
+_June_ 13.--Van Amburgh's circus was in town to-day and crowds attended
+and many of our most highly respected citizens, but Grandmother had
+other things for us to consider.
+
+_June_ 16.--The census man for this town is Mr. Jeudevine. He called
+here to-day and was very inquisitive, but I think I answered all of his
+questions although I could not tell him the exact amount of my property.
+Grandmother made us laugh to-day when we showed her a picture of the
+Siamese twins, and I said, "Grandmother, if I had been their mother I
+should have cut them apart when they were babies, wouldn't you?" The
+dear little lady looked up so bright and said, "If I had been Mrs. Siam,
+I presume I should have done just as she did." I don't believe that we
+will be as amusing as she is when we are 82 years old.
+
+_Saturday, July_ 8.--What excitement there must have been in Washington
+yesterday over the execution of the conspirators. It seems terrible that
+Mrs. Surratt should have deserved hanging with the others. I saw a
+picture of them all upon a scaffold and her face was screened by an
+umbrella. I read in one paper that the doctor who dressed Booth's broken
+leg was sentenced to the Dry Tortugas. Jefferson Davis, I suppose, is
+glad to have nothing worse served upon him, thus far, than confinement
+in Fortress Monroe. It is wonderful that 800,000 men are returning so
+quietly from the army to civil life that it is scarcely known, save by
+the welcome which they receive in their own homes.
+
+_July_ 16.--Rev. Dr. Buddington, of Brooklyn, preached to-day. His wife
+was Miss Elizabeth Willson, Clara Coleman's sister. My Sunday School
+book is "Mill on the Floss," but Grandmother says it is not Sabbath
+reading, so I am stranded for the present.
+
+_December_ 8.--Yesterday was Thanksgiving day. I do not remember that it
+was ever observed in December before. President Johnson appointed it as
+a day of national thanksgiving for our many blessings as a people, and
+Governor Fenton and several governors of other states have issued
+proclamations in accordance with the President's recommendation. The
+weather was very unpleasant, but we attended the union thanksgiving
+service held in our church. The choir sang America for the opening
+piece. Dr. Daggett read Miriam's song of praise: "The Lord hath
+triumphed gloriously, the horse and his rider hath he thrown into the
+sea." Then he offered one of his most eloquent and fervent prayers, in
+which the returned soldiers, many of whom are in broken health or maimed
+for life, in consequence of their devotion and loyalty to their country,
+were tenderly remembered. His text was from the 126th Psalm, "The Lord
+hath done great things for us, whereof we are glad." It was one of his
+best sermons. He mentioned three things in particular which the Lord has
+done for us, whereof we are glad: First, that the war has closed;
+second, that the Union is preserved; third, for the abolition of
+slavery. After the sermon, a collection was taken for the poor, and Dr.
+A. D. Eddy, who was present, offered prayer. The choir sang an anthem
+which they had especially prepared for the occasion, and then all joined
+in the doxology. Uncle Thomas Beals' family of four united with our
+three at Thanksgiving dinner. Uncle sent to New York for the oysters,
+and a famous big turkey, with all the usual accompaniments, made us a
+fine repast. Anna and Ritie Tyler are reading together Irving's Life of
+Washington, two afternoons each week. I wonder how long they will keep
+it up.
+
+_December_ 11.--I have been down town buying material for garments for
+our Home Missionary family which we are to make in our society. Anna and
+I were cutting them out and basting them ready for sewing, and
+grandmother told us to save all the basting threads when we were through
+with them and tie them and wind them on a spool for use another time.
+Anna, who says she never wants to begin anything that she cannot finish
+in 15 minutes, felt rather tired at the prospect of this unexpected task
+and asked Grandmother how she happened to contract such economical
+ideas. Grandmother told her that if she and Grandfather had been
+wasteful in their younger days, we would not have any silk dresses to
+wear now. Anna said if that was the case she was glad that Grandmother
+saved the basting thread!
+
+
+
+
+1866
+
+_February_ 13.--Our brother James was married to-day to Louise
+Livingston James of New York City.
+
+_February_ 20.--Our society is going to hold a fair for the Freedmen, in
+the Town Hall. Susie Daggett and I have been there all day to see about
+the tables and stoves. We got Mrs. Binks to come and help us.
+
+_February_ 21.--Been at the hall all day, trimming the room. Mr.
+Thompson and Mr. Backus came down and if they had not helped us we would
+not have done much. Mr. Backus put up all the principal drapery and made
+it look beautiful.
+
+_February_ 22.--At the hall all day. The fair opened at 2 p.m. We had
+quite a crowd in the evening and took in over three hundred dollars.
+Charlie Hills and Ellsworth Daggett stayed there all night to take care
+of the hall. We had a fish pond, a grab-bag and a post-office. Anna says
+they had all the smart people in the post-office to write the
+letters,--Mr. Morse, Miss Achert, Albert Granger and herself. Some one
+asked Albert Granger if his law business was good and he said one man
+thronged into his office one day.
+
+_February_ 23.--We took in two hundred dollars to-day at the fair. We
+wound up with an auction. We asked Mrs. George Willson if she could not
+write a poem expressing our thanks to Mr. Backus and she stepped aside
+for about five minutes and handed us the following lines which we sent
+to him. We think it is about the nicest thing in the whole fair.
+
+ "In ancient time the God of Wine
+ They crowned with vintage of the vine,
+ And sung his praise with song and glee
+ And all their best of minstrelsy.
+ The Backus whom we honor now
+ Would scorn to wreathe his generous brow
+ With heathen emblems--better he
+ Will love our gratitude to see
+ Expressed in all the happy faces
+ Assembled in these pleasant places.
+ May joy attend his footsteps here
+ And crown him in a brighter sphere."
+
+_February_ 24.--Susie Daggett and I went to the hall this morning to
+clean up. We sent back the dishes, not one broken, and disposed of
+everything but the tables and stoves, which were to be taken away this
+afternoon. We feel quite satisfied with the receipts so far, but the
+expenses will be considerable.
+
+In _Ontario County Times_ of the following week we find this card of
+thanks:
+
+_February_ 28.--The Fair for the benefit of the Freedmen, held in the
+Town Hall on Thursday and Friday of last week was eminently successful,
+and the young ladies take this method of returning their sincere thanks
+to the people of Canandaigua and vicinity for their generous
+contributions and liberal patronage. It being the first public
+enterprise in which the Society has ventured independently, the young
+ladies were somewhat fearful of the result, but having met with such
+generous responses from every quarter they feel assured that they need
+never again doubt of success in any similar attempt so long as
+Canandaigua contains so many large hearts and corresponding purses. But
+our village cannot have all the praise this time. The Society is
+particularly indebted to Mr. F. F. Thompson and Mr. S. D. Backus of New
+York City, for their very substantial aid, not only in gifts and
+unstinted patronage, but for their invaluable labor in the decoration of
+the hall and conduct of the Fair. But for them most of the manual labor
+would have fallen upon the ladies. The thanks of the Society are
+especially due, also, to those ladies who assisted personally with their
+superior knowledge and older experience. Also to Mr. W. P. Fiske for his
+valuable services as cashier, and to Messrs. Daggett, Chapin and Hills
+for services at the door; and to all the little boys and girls who
+helped in so many ways.
+
+The receipts amounted to about $490, and thanks to our cashier, the
+money is all good, and will soon be on its way carrying substantial
+visions of something to eat and to wear to at least a few of the poor
+Freedmen of the South.
+
+ By order of Society,
+ Carrie C. Richards, Pres't.
+ Emma H. Wheeler, Sec'y.
+
+Mr. Editor--I expected to see an account of the Young Ladies' Fair in
+your last number, but only saw a very handsome acknowledgment by the
+ladies to the citizens. Your "local" must have been absent; and I beg
+the privilege in behalf of myself and many others of doing tardy justice
+to the successful efforts of the Aid Society at their debut February
+22nd.
+
+Gotham furnished an artist and an architect, and the Society did the
+rest. The decorations were in excellent taste, and so were the young
+ladies. The eatables were very toothsome. The skating pond was never in
+better condition. On entering the hall I paused first before the table
+of toys, fancy work and perfumery. Here was the President, and I hope I
+shall be pardoned for saying that no President since the days of
+Washington can compare with the President of this Society. Then I
+visited a candy table, and hesitated a long time before deciding which I
+would rather eat, the delicacies that were sold, or the charming
+creatures who sold them. One delicious morsel, in a pink silk, was so
+tempting that I seriously contemplated eating her with a
+spoon--waterfall and all. [By the way, how do we know that the Romans
+wore waterfalls? Because Marc Antony, in his funeral oration on Mr.
+Caesar, exclaimed, "O water fall was there, my countrymen!"] At this
+point my attention was attracted by a fish pond. I tried my luck, caught
+a whale, and seeing all my friends beginning to blubber, I determined to
+visit the old woman who lived in a shoe.--She was very glad to see me. I
+bought one of her children, which the Society can redeem for $1,000 in
+smoking caps.
+
+The fried oysters were delicious; a great many of the bivalves got into
+a stew, and I helped several of them out. Delicate ice cream, nicely
+"baked in cowld ovens," was destroyed in immense quantities. I scream
+when I remember the plates full I devoured, and the number of bright
+women to whom I paid my devours. Beautiful cigar girls sold fragrant
+Havanas, and bit off the ends at five cents apiece, extra. The fair
+post-mistress and her fair clerks, so fair that they were almost
+fairies, drove a very thriving business.
+
+It was altogether a "great moral show."--Let no man say hereafter that
+the young ladies of Canandaigua are uneducated in all that makes women
+lovely and useful. Anna Dickinson has no mission to this town. The
+members of this Society have won the admiration of all their friends,
+and especially of the most devoted of their servants,
+ Q. E. D.
+
+If I had written that article, I should have given the praise to Susie
+Daggett, for it belongs to her.
+
+_Sunday, June_ 24.--My Sunday School scholars are learning the shorter
+catechism. One recited thirty-five answers to questions to-day, another
+twenty-six, another twenty, the others eleven. Very well indeed. They do
+not see why it is called the "shorter" Catechism! They all had their
+ambrotypes taken with me yesterday at Finley's--Mary Hoyt, Fannie and
+Ella Lyon, Ella Wood, Ella Van Tyne, Mary Vanderbrook, Jennie Whitlaw
+and Katie Neu. They are all going to dress in white and sit on the front
+seat in church at my wedding. Grandmother had Mrs. Gooding make
+individual fruit cakes for each of them and also some for each member of
+our sewing society.
+
+_Thursday, June_ 21.--We went to a lawn fete at Mrs. F. F. Thompson's
+this afternoon. It was a beautiful sight. The flowers, the grounds, the
+young people and the music all combined to make the occasion perfect.
+
+_Note:_ Canandaigua is the summer home of Mrs. Thompson, who has
+previously given the village a children's playground, a swimming school,
+a hospital and a home for the aged, and this year (1911) has presented a
+park as a beauty spot at foot of Canandaigua Lake.
+
+_June_ 28.--Dear Abbie Clark and Captain Williams were married in the
+Congregational church this evening. The church was trimmed beautifully
+and Abbie looked sweet. We attended the reception afterwards at her
+house. "May calm and sunshine hallow their clasped hands."
+
+_July_ 15.--The girls of the Society have sent me my flag bed quilt,
+which they have just finished. It was hard work quilting such hot days
+but it is done beautifully. Bessie Seymour wrote the names on the stars.
+In the center they used six stars for "Three rousing cheers for the
+Union." The names on the others are Sarah McCabe, Mary Paul, Fannie
+Paul, Fannie Palmer, Nettie Palmer, Susie Daggett, Fannie Pierce, Sarah
+Andrews, Lottie Clark, Abbie Williams, Carrie Lamport, Isadore Blodgett,
+Nannie Corson, Laura Chapin, Mary F. Fiske, Lucilla F. Pratt, Jennie H.
+Hazard, Sarah H. Foster, Mary Jewett, Mary C. Stevens, Etta Smith,
+Cornelia Richards, Ella Hildreth, Emma Wheeler, Mary Wheeler, Mrs.
+Pierce, Alice Jewett, Bessie Seymour, Clara Coleman, Julia Phelps. It
+kept the girls busy to get Abbie Clark's quilt and mine finished within
+one month. They hope that the rest of the girls will postpone their
+nuptials till there is a change in the weather. Mercury stands 90
+degrees in the shade.
+
+_July_ 19, 1866.--Our wedding day. We saw the dear little Grandmother,
+God bless her, watching us from the window as we drove away.
+
+Alexandria Bay, _July_ 26.--Anna writes me that Charlie Wells said he
+had always wanted a set of Clark's Commentaries, but I had carried off
+the entire Ed.
+
+_July_ 28.--As we were changing boats at Burlington, Vt, for Saratoga,
+to our surprise, we met Captain and Abbie Williams, but could only stop
+a moment.
+
+Saratoga, 29_th._--We heard Rev. Theodore Cuyler preach to-day from the
+text, "Demas hath forsaken me, having loved this present world." He
+leads devotional exercises every morning in the parlors of the Columbian
+Hotel. I spoke to him this morning and he said my father was one of his
+best and earliest friends.
+
+Canandaigua, _September_ 1.--A party of us went down to the Canandaigua
+hotel this morning to see President Johnson, General Grant and Admiral
+Farragut and other dignitaries. The train stopped about half an hour and
+they all gave brief speeches.
+
+_September_ 2.--Rev. Darius Sackett preached for Dr. Daggett this
+evening.
+
+
+
+
+1867
+
+_July_ 27.--Col. James M. Bull was buried from the home of Mr. Alexander
+Howell to-day, as none of his family reside here now.
+
+_November_ 13.--Our brother John and wife and baby Pearl have gone to
+London, England, to live.
+
+_December_ 28.--A large party of Canandaiguans went over to Rochester
+last evening to hear Charles Dickens' lecture, and enjoyed it more than
+I can possibly express. He was quite hoarse and had small bills
+distributed through the Opera House with the announcement:
+
+ MR. CHARLES DICKENS
+
+ Begs indulgence for a Severe Cold, but hopes its effects
+ may not be very perceptible after a few minutes' Reading.
+
+ Friday, December 27th, 1867.
+
+We brought these notices home with us for souvenirs. He looks exactly
+like his pictures. It was worth a great deal just to look upon the man
+who wrote Little Dorrit, David Copperfield and all the other books,
+which have delighted us so much. We hope that he will live to write a
+great many more. He spoke very appreciatively of his enthusiastic
+reception in this country and almost apologized for some of the opinions
+that he had expressed in his "American Notes," which he published, after
+his first visit here, twenty-five years ago. He evidently thinks that
+the United States of America are quite worth while.
+
+
+
+
+1871
+
+_August_ 6.--Under the auspices of the Y.M.C.A., Hon. George H. Stuart,
+President of the U. S. Christian Commission, spoke in an open air
+meeting on the square this afternoon and in our church this evening. The
+house was packed and such eloquence I never heard from mortal lips. He
+ought to be called the Whitefield of America. He told of the good the
+Christian Commission had done before the war and since. Such war stories
+I never heard. They took up a collection which must have amounted to
+hundreds of dollars.
+
+
+
+
+1872
+
+_Naples, June._--John has invited Aunt Ann Field, and James, his wife
+and me and Babe Abigail to come to England to make them a visit, and we
+expect to sail on the Baltic July sixth.
+
+_On board S.S. Baltic, July_ 7.--We left New York yesterday under
+favorable circumstances. It was a beautiful summer day, flags were
+flying and everything seemed so joyful we almost forgot we were leaving
+home and native land. There were many passengers, among them being Mr.
+and Mrs. Anthony Drexel and U. S. Grant, Jr., who boarded the steamer
+from a tug boat which came down the bay alongside when we had been out
+half an hour. President Grant was with him and stood on deck, smoking
+the proverbial cigar. We were glad to see him and the passengers gave
+him three cheers and three times three, with the greatest enthusiasm.
+
+_Liverpool, July_ 16.--We arrived here to-day, having been just ten days
+on the voyage. There were many clergymen of note on board, among them,
+Rev. John H. Vincent, D.D., eminent in the Methodist Episcopal Church,
+who is preparing International Sunday School lessons. He sat at our
+table and Philip Phillips also, who is a noted evangelistic singer. They
+held services both Sabbaths, July 7 and 15, in the grand saloon of the
+steamer, and also in the steerage where the text was "And they willingly
+received him into the ship." The immigrants listened eagerly, when the
+minister urged them all to "receive Jesus." We enjoyed several evening
+literary entertainments, when it was too cold or windy to sit on deck.
+
+We had the most luscious strawberries at dinner to-night, that I ever
+ate. So large and red and ripe, with the hulls on and we dipped them in
+powdered sugar as we ate them, a most appetizing way.
+
+_London, July_ 17.--On our way to London to-day I noticed beautiful
+flower beds at every station, making our journey almost a path of roses.
+In the fields, men and women both, were harvesting the hay, making
+picturesque scenes, for the sky was cloudless and I was reminded of the
+old hymn, commencing
+
+ "Sweet fields beyond the swelling flood,
+ Stand dressed in living green."
+
+We performed the journey from Liverpool to London, a distance of 240
+miles, in five hours. John, Laura and little Pearl met us at Euston
+Station, and we were soon whirled away in cabs to 24 Upper Woburn Place,
+Tavistock Square, John's residence. Dinner was soon ready, a most
+bountiful repast. We spent the remainder of the day visiting and
+enjoying ourselves generally. It seemed so good to be at the end of the
+journey, although we had only two days of really unpleasant weather on
+the voyage. John and Laura are so kind and hospitable. They have a
+beautiful home, lovely children and apparently every comfort and luxury
+which this world can afford.
+
+_Sunday, July_ 22.--We went to Spurgeon's Tabernacle this morning to
+listen to this great preacher, with thousands of others. I had never
+looked upon such a sea of faces before, as I beheld from the gallery
+where we sat. The pulpit was underneath one gallery, so there seemed as
+many people over the preacher's head, as there were beneath and around
+him and the singing was as impressive as the sermon. I thought of the
+hymn, "Hark ten thousand harps and voices, Sound the notes of praise
+above." Mr. Spurgeon was so lame from rheumatism that he used two canes
+and placed one knee on a chair beside him, when preaching. His text was
+"And there shall be a new heaven and a new earth." I found that all I
+had heard of his eloquence was true.
+
+_Sunday, July_ 29.--We have spent the entire week sightseeing, taking in
+Hyde Park, Windsor Castle, Westminster Abbey, St. Paul's Cathedral, the
+Tower of London and British Museum. We also went to Madame Tussaud's
+exhibition of wax figures and while I was looking in the catalogue for
+the number of an old gentleman who was sitting down apparently asleep,
+he got up and walked away! We drove to Sydenham ten miles from London,
+to see the Crystal Palace which Abbie called the "Christmas Palace." Mr.
+Alexander Howell and Mr. Henry Chesebro of Canandaigua are here and came
+to see us to-day.
+
+_August_ 13.--Amid the whirl of visiting, shopping and sightseeing in
+this great city, my diary has been well nigh forgotten. The descriptive
+letters to home friends have been numerous and knowing that they would
+be preserved, I thought perhaps they would do as well for future
+reference as a diary kept for the same purpose, but to-day, as St.
+Pancras' bell was tolling and a funeral procession going by, we heard by
+cable of the death of our dear, dear Grandmother, the one who first
+encouraged us to keep a journal of daily deeds, and who was always most
+interested in all that interested us and now I cannot refrain if I
+would, from writing down at this sad hour, of all the grief that is in
+my heart. I sorrow not for her. She has only stepped inside the
+temple-gate where she has long been waiting for the Lord's entrance
+call. I weep for ourselves that we shall see her dear face no more. It
+does not seem possible that we shall never see her again on this earth.
+She took such an interest in our journey and just as we started I put my
+dear little Abigail Beals Clarke in her lap to receive her parting
+blessing. As we left the house she sat at the front window and saw us go
+and smiled her farewell.
+
+_August_ 20.--Anna has written how often Grandmother prayed that "He who
+holds the winds in his fists and the waters in the hollow of his hands,
+would care for us and bring us to our desired haven." She had received
+one letter, telling of our safe arrival and how much we enjoyed going
+about London, when she was suddenly taken ill and Dr. Hayes said she
+could never recover. Anna's letter came, after ten days, telling us all
+the sad news, and how Grandmother looked out of the window the last
+night before she was taken ill, and up at the moon and stars and said
+how beautiful they were. Anna says, "How can I ever write it? Our dear
+little Grandmother died on my bed to-day."
+
+_August_ 30.--John, Laura and their nurse and baby John, Aunt Ann Field
+and I started Tuesday on a trip to Scotland, going first to Glasgow
+where we remained twenty-four hours. We visited the Cathedral and were
+about to go down into the crypt when the guide told us that Gen. Sherman
+of U.S.A. was just coming in. We stopped to look at him and felt like
+telling him that we too were Americans. He was in good health and
+spirits, apparently, and looked every inch a soldier with his cloak
+a-la-militaire around him. We visited the Lochs and spent one night at
+Inversnaid on Loch Lomond and then went on up Loch Katrine to the
+Trossachs. When we took the little steamer, John said, "All aboard for
+Naples," it reminded him so much of Canandaigua Lake. We arrived safely
+in Edinburgh the next day by rail and spent four days in that charming
+city, so beautiful in situation and in every natural advantage. We saw
+the window from whence John Knox addressed the populace and we also
+visited the Castle on the hill. Then we went to Melrose and visited the
+Abbey and also Abbotsford, the residence of Sir Walter Scott. We went
+through the rooms and saw many curios and paintings and also the
+library. Sir Walter's chair at his desk was protected by a rope, but
+Laura, nothing daunted, lifted the baby over it and seated him there for
+a moment saying "I am sure, now, he will be clever." We continued our
+journey that night and arrived in London the next morning.
+
+_Ventnor, Isle of Wight, September_ 9.--Aunt Ann, Laura's sister,
+Florentine Arnold, nurse and two children, Pearl and Abbie, and I are
+here for three weeks on the seashore.
+
+_September_ 16.--We have visited all the neighboring towns, the graves
+of the Dairyman's daughter and little Jane, the young cottager, and the
+scene of Leigh Richmond's life and labors. We have enjoyed bathing in
+the surf, and the children playing in the sands and riding on the
+donkeys.
+
+We have very pleasant rooms, in a house kept by an old couple, Mr. and
+Mrs. Tuddenham, down on the esplanade. They serve excellent meals in a
+most homelike way. We have an abundance of delicious milk and cream
+which they tell me comes from "Cowes"!
+
+_London, September_ 30.--Anna has come to England to live with John for
+the present. She came on the Adriatic, arriving September 24. We are so
+glad to see her once more and will do all in our power to cheer her in
+her loneliness.
+
+_Paris, October_ 18.--John, Laura, Aunt Ann and I, nurse and baby,
+arrived here to-day for a few days' visit. We had rather a stormy
+passage on the Channel. I asked one of the seamen the name of the vessel
+and he answered me "The H'Albert H'Edward, Miss!" This information must
+have given me courage, for I was perfectly sustained till we reached
+Calais, although nearly every one around me succumbed.
+
+_October_ 22.--We have driven through the Bois de Boulogne, visited Pere
+la Chaise, the Morgue, the ruins of the Tuileries, which are left just
+as they were since the Commune. We spent half a day at the Louvre
+without seeing half of its wonders. I went alone to a photographer's, Le
+Jeune, to be "taken" and had a funny time. He queried "Parlez-vous
+Francais?" I shook my head and asked him "Parlez-vous Anglaise?" at
+which query he shrugged his shoulders and shook his head! I ventured to
+tell him by signs that I would like my picture taken and he held up two
+sizes of pictures and asked me "Le cabinet, le vignette?" I held up my
+fingers, to tell him I would like six of each, whereupon he proceeded to
+make ready and when he had seated me, he made me understand that he
+hoped I would sit perfectly still, which I endeavored to do. After the
+first sitting, he showed displeasure and let me know that I had swayed
+to and fro. Another attempt was more satisfactory and he said "Tres
+bien, Madame," and I gave him my address and departed.
+
+_October_ 26.--My photographs have come and all pronounce them indeed
+"tres bien." We visited the Tomb of Napoleon to-day.
+
+_October_ 27.--We attended service to-day at the American Chapel and I
+enjoyed it more than I can ever express. After hearing a foreign tongue
+for the past ten days, it seemed like getting home to go into a
+Presbyterian church and hear a sermon from an American pastor. The
+singing in the choir was so homelike, that when they sang "Awake my soul
+to joyful lays and sing thy great Redeemer's praise," it seemed to me
+that I heard a well known tenor voice from across the sea, especially in
+the refrain "His loving kindness, oh how free." The text was "As an
+eagle stirreth up her nest, fluttereth over her young, spreadeth abroad
+her wings, taketh them, beareth them on her wings, so the Lord did lead
+him and there was no strange God with him." Deut. 32: 11. It was a
+wonderful sermon and I shall never forget it. On our way home, we
+noticed the usual traffic going on, building of houses, women were
+standing in their doors knitting and there seemed to be no sign of
+Sunday keeping, outside of the church.
+
+_London, October_ 31.--John and I returned together from Paris and now I
+have only a few days left before sailing for home. There was an
+Englishman here to-day who was bragging about the beer in England being
+so much better than could be made anywhere else. He said, "In America,
+you have the 'ops, I know, but you haven't the Thames water, you know."
+I suppose that would make a vast difference!
+
+_Sunday, November_ 3.--We went to hear Rev. Dr. Joseph Parker preach at
+Exeter Hall. He is a new light, comparatively, and bids fair to rival
+Spurgeon and Newman Hall and all the rest. He is like a lion and again
+like a lamb in the pulpit.
+
+_Liverpool, November_ 6.--I came down to Liverpool to-day with Abbie and
+nurse, to sail on the Baltic, to-morrow. There were two Englishmen in
+our compartment and hearing Abbie sing "I have a Father in the Promised
+Land," they asked her where her Father lived and she said "In America,"
+and told them she was going on the big ship to-morrow to see him. Then
+they turned to me and said they supposed I would be glad to know that
+the latest cable from America was that U. S. Grant was elected for his
+second term as President of the United States. I assured them that I was
+very glad to hear such good news.
+
+_November_ 9.--I did not know any of the passengers when we sailed, but
+soon made pleasant acquaintances. Near me at table are Mr. and Mrs.
+Sykes from New York and in course of conversation I found that she as
+well as myself, was born in Penn Yan, Yates County, New York, and that
+her parents were members of my Father's church, which goes to prove that
+the world is not so very wide after all. Abbie is a great pet among the
+passengers and is being passed around from one to another from morning
+till night. They love to hear her sing and coax her to say "Grace" at
+table. She closes her eyes and folds her hands devoutly and says, "For
+what we are about to receive, may the Lord make us truly thankful." They
+all say "Amen" to this, for they are fearful that they will not perhaps
+be "thankful" when they finish!
+
+_November_ 15.--I have been on deck every day but one, and not missed a
+single meal. There was a terrible storm one night and the next morning I
+told one of the numerous clergymen, that I took great comfort in the
+night, thinking that nothing could happen with so many of the Lord's
+anointed, on board. He said that he wished he had thought of that, for
+he was frightened almost to death! We have sighted eleven steamers and
+on Wednesday we were in sight of the banks of Newfoundland all the
+afternoon, our course being unusually northerly and we encountered no
+fogs, contrary to the expectation of all. Every one pronounces the
+voyage pleasant and speedy for this time of year.
+
+_Naples, N. Y., November_ 20.--We arrived safely in New York on Sunday.
+Abbie spied her father very quickly upon the dock as we slowly came up
+and with glad and happy hearts we returned his "Welcome home." We spent
+two days in New York and arrived home safe and sound this evening.
+
+_November_ 21.--My thirtieth birthday, which we, a reunited family, are
+spending happily together around our own fireside, pleasant memories of
+the past months adding to the joy of the hour.
+
+From the _New York Evangelist_ of August 15, 1872, by Rev. Samuel Pratt,
+D.D.
+
+"Died, at Canandaigua, N. Y., August 8, 1872, Mrs. Abigail Field Beals,
+widow of Thomas Beals, in the 98th year of her age. Mrs. Beals, whose
+maiden name was Field, was born in Madison, Conn., April 7, 1784. She
+was a sister of Rev. David Dudley Field, D.D., of Stockbridge, Mass.,
+and of Rev. Timothy Field, first pastor of the Congregational church of
+Canandaigua. She came to Canandaigua with her brother, Timothy, in 1800.
+In 1805 she was married to Thomas Beals, Esq., with whom she lived
+nearly sixty years, until he fell asleep. They had eleven children, of
+whom only four survive. In 1807 she and her husband united with the
+Congregational church, of which they were ever liberal and faithful
+supporters. Mrs. Beals loved the good old ways and kept her house in the
+simple and substantial style of the past. She herself belonged to an age
+of which she was the last. With great dignity and courtesy of manner
+which repelled too much familiarity, she combined a sweet and winning
+grace, which attracted all to her, so that the youth, while they would
+almost involuntarily 'rise up before her,' yet loved to be in her
+presence and called her blessed. She possessed in a rare degree the
+ornament of a meek and quiet spirit and lived in an atmosphere of love
+and peace. Her home and room were to her children and her children's
+children what Jerusalem was to the saints of old. There they loved to
+resort and the saddest thing in her death is the sundering of that tie
+which bound so many generations together. She never ceased to take a
+deep interest in the prosperity of the beautiful village of which she
+and her husband were the pioneers and for which they did so much and in
+the church of which she was the oldest member. Her mind retained its
+activity to the last and her heart was warm in sympathy with every good
+work. While she was well informed in all current events, she most
+delighted in whatever concerned the Kingdom. Her Bible and religious
+books were her constant companions and her conversation told much of her
+better thoughts, which were in Heaven. Living so that those who knew her
+never saw in her anything but fitness for Heaven, she patiently awaited
+the Master's call and went down to her grave in a full age like a shock
+of corn fully ripe that cometh in its season."
+
+I don't think I shall keep a diary any more, only occasionally jot down
+things of importance. Mr. Noah T. Clarke's brother got possession of my
+little diary in some way one day and when he returned it I found written
+on the fly-leaf this inscription to the diary:
+
+ "You'd scarce expect a volume of my size
+ To hold so much that's beautiful and wise,
+ And though the heartless world might call me cheap
+ Yet from my pages some much joy shall reap.
+ As monstrous oaks from little acorns grow,
+ And kindly shelter all who toil below,
+ So my future greatness and the good I do
+ Shall bless, if not the world, at least a few."
+
+I think I will close my old journal with the mottoes which I find upon
+an old well-worn writing book which Anna used for jotting down her
+youthful deeds. On the cover I find inscribed, "Try to be somebody," and
+on the back of the same book, as if trying to console herself for
+unexpected achievement which she could not prevent, "Some must be
+great!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+1880
+
+_June_ 17.--Our dear Anna was married to-day to Mr. Alonzo A. Cummings
+of Oakland, Cal., and has gone there to live. I am sorry to have her go
+so far away, but love annihilates space. There is no real separation,
+except in alienation of spirit, and that can never come--to us.
+
+THE END
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+BOOKS TO MAKE ELDERS YOUNG AGAIN
+
+By Inez Haynes Gillmore
+
+PHOEBE AND ERNEST
+
+With 30 illustrations by R. F. Schabelitz. $1.35 net.
+
+Parents will recognize themselves in the story, and laugh understandingly
+with, and sometimes at, Mr. and Mrs. Martin and their children, Phoebe
+and Ernest.
+
+"Attracted delighted attention in the course of its serial publication.
+Sentiment and humor are deftly mingled in this clever book."--_New York
+Tribune_.
+
+"We must go back to Louisa Alcott for their equals."--_Boston
+Advertiser_.
+
+"For young and old alike we know of no more refreshing story."--_New
+York Evening Post_.
+
+PHOEBE, ERNEST, AND CUPID
+
+Illustrated by R. F. Schabelitz. $1.35 net.
+
+In this sequel to the popular "Phoebe and Ernest," each of these
+delightful young folk goes to the altar.
+
+"To all jaded readers of problem novels, to all weary wayfarers on the
+rocky literary road of social pessimism and domestic woe, we recommend
+'Phoebe, Ernest, and Cupid' with all our hearts: it is not only
+cheerful, it's true."--_N. Y. Times Review_.
+
+"Wholesome, merry, absolutely true to life."--_The Outlook_.
+
+"All delicious--humorous and true."--_The Continent_.
+
+"Irresistibly fascinating. Mrs. Gillmore knows twice as much about
+college boys as ----, and five times as much about girls."--_Boston
+Globe_.
+
+JANEY
+
+Illustrated by Ada C. Williamson. $1.25 net.
+
+"Being the record of a short interval in the journey thru life and the
+struggle with society of a little girl of nine."
+
+"Our hearts were captive to 'Phoebe and Ernest,' and now accept 'Janey.'
+... She is so engaging.... Told so vivaciously and with such good-natured
+and pungent asides for grown people."--_Outlook_.
+
+"Depicts youthful human nature as one who knows and loves it. Her
+'Phoebe and Ernest' studies are deservedly popular, and now, in 'Janey,'
+this clever writer has accomplished an equally charming portrait."
+--_Chicago Record-Herald_.
+
+HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
+
+PUBLISHERS--NEW YORK
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+THE HOME BOOK OF VERSE
+
+_American and English_ (1580-1912)
+
+Compiled by Burton E. Stevenson. Collects the best short poetry of the
+English language--not only the poetry everybody says is good, but also
+the verses that everybody reads. (3742 pages; India paper, 1 vol., 8vo,
+complete author, title and first line indices, $7.50 net; carriage 40
+cents extra.)
+
+The most comprehensive and representative collection of American and
+English poetry ever published, including 3,120 unabridged poems from
+some 1,100 authors.
+
+It brings together in one volume the best short poetry of the English
+language from the time of Spencer, with especial attention to American
+verse.
+
+The copyright deadline has been passed, and some three hundred recent
+authors are included, very few of whom appear in any other general
+anthology, such as Lionel Johnson, Noyes, Housman, Mrs. Meynell, Yeats,
+Dobson, Lang, Watson, Wilde, Francis Thompson, Gilder, Le Gallienne, Van
+Dyke, Woodberry, Riley, etc., etc.
+
+The poems are arranged by subject, and the classification is unusually
+close and searching. Some of the most comprehensive sections are:
+Children's rhymes (300 pages); love poems (800 pages); nature poetry
+(400 pages); humorous verse (500 pages); patriotic and historical poems
+(600 pages); reflective and descriptive poetry (400 pages). No other
+collection contains so many popular favorites and fugitive verses.
+
+DELIGHTFUL POCKET ANTHOLOGIES
+
+The following books are uniform, with full gilt flexible covers and
+pictured cover linings. 16mo. Each, cloth, $1.50; leather, $2.50.
+
+
+THE GARLAND OF CHILDHOOD
+
+A little book for all lovers of children. Compiled by Percy Withers.
+
+THE VISTA OF ENGLISH VERSE Compiled by Henry S. Pancoast.
+
+From Spencer to Kipling.
+
+LETTERS THAT LIVE Compiled by Laura E. Lockwood and Amy R. Kelly.
+
+Some 150 letters.
+
+POEMS FOR TRAVELLERS (About "The Continent.") Compiled by Miss Mary R.
+J. DuBois.
+
+THE OPEN ROAD
+
+A little book for wayfarers. Compiled by E. V. Lucas.
+
+THE FRIENDLY TOWN
+
+A little book for the urbane, compiled by E. V. Lucas.
+
+THE POETIC OLD-WORLD Compiled by Miss L. H. Humphrey.
+
+Covers Europe, including Spain, Belgium and the British Isles.
+
+THE POETIC NEW-WORLD Compiled by Miss Humphrey.
+
+HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
+
+34 WEST 33rd STREET--NEW YORK
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+NEW BOOKS PRIMARILY FOR WOMEN
+
+A MONTESSORI MOTHER. By Dorothy Canfield Fisher
+
+A thoroughly competent author who has been most closely associated with
+Dr. Montessori tells just what American mothers want to know about this
+new system of child training--the general principles underlying it; a
+plain description of the apparatus, definite directions for its use,
+suggestive hints as to American substitutes and additions, etc., etc.
+(_Helpfully illustrated._ $1.25 _net, by mail_ $1.35.)
+
+MAKING A BUSINESS WOMAN. By Anne Shannon Monroe
+
+A young woman whose business assets are good sense, good health, and the
+ability to use a typewriter goes to Chicago to earn her living. This
+story depicts her experiences vividly and truthfully, tho the characters
+are fictitious. ($1.30 _net, by mail_ $1.40.)
+
+WHY WOMEN ARE SO. By Mary R. Coolidge
+
+Explains and traces the development of the woman of 1800 into the woman
+of to-day. ($1.50 _net, by mail_ $1.62.)
+
+THE SQUIRREL-CAGE. By Dorothy Canfield
+
+A novel recounting the struggle of an American wife and mother to call
+her soul her own.
+
+"One has no hesitation in classing 'The Squirrel-Cage' with the best
+American fiction of this or any other season."--_Chicago Record-Herald._
+(3rd printing. $1.35 _net, by mail_ $1.45.)
+
+HEREDITY IN RELATION TO EUGENICS. By C. B. Davenport
+
+"One of the foremost authorities . . . tells just what scientific
+investigation has established and how far it is possible to control what
+the ancients accepted as inevitable."--_N. Y. Times Review._
+
+(With diagrams. 3_rd printing._ $2.00 _net, by mail_ $2.16.)
+
+THE GLEAM. By Helen R. Albee
+
+A frank spiritual autobiography. ($1.35 _net, by mail_ $1.45.)
+
+HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
+
+34 WEST 33rd STREET--NEW YORK
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+LEADING AMERICANS
+
+Edited by W. P. Trent, and generally confined to those no longer living.
+Large 12mo. With portraits. Each $1.75, by mail $1.90.
+
+R. M. JOHNSTON'S LEADING AMERICAN SOLDIERS
+
+By the Author of "Napoleon," etc.
+
+Washington, Greene, Taylor, Scott, Andrew Jackson, Grant, Sherman,
+Sheridan, McClellan, Meade, Lee, "Stonewall" Jackson, Joseph E.
+Johnston.
+
+"Very interesting . . . much sound originality of treatment, and the
+style is very clear."--_Springfield Republican._
+
+JOHN ERSKINE'S LEADING AMERICAN NOVELISTS
+
+Charles Brockden Brown, Cooper, Simms, Hawthorne, Mrs. Stowe, and Bret
+Harte.
+
+"He makes his study of these novelists all the more striking because
+of their contrasts of style and their varied purpose. . . . Well worth
+any amount of time we may care to spend upon them."--_Boston Transcript._
+
+W. M. PAYNE'S LEADING AMERICAN ESSAYISTS
+
+A General Introduction dealing with essay writing in America, and
+biographies of Irving, Emerson, Thoreau, and George William Curtis.
+
+"It is necessary to know only the name of the author of this work to be
+assured of its literary excellence."--_Literary Digest._
+
+LEADING AMERICAN MEN OF SCIENCE
+
+Edited by President David Starr Jordan.
+
+Count Rumford and Josiah Willard Gibbs, by E. E. Slosson; Alexander
+Wilson and Audubon, by Witmer Stone; Silliman, by Daniel C. Gilman;
+Joseph Henry, by Simon Newcomb; Louis Agassiz and Spencer Fullerton
+Baird, by Charles F. Holder; Jeffries Wyman, by B. G. Wilder; Asa Gray,
+by John M. Coulter; James Dwight Dana, by William North Rice; Marsh, by
+Geo. Bird Grinnell; Edward Drinker Cope, by Marcus Benjamin; Simon
+Newcomb, by Marcus Benjamin; George Brown Goode, by D. S. Jordan; Henry
+Augustus Rowland, by Ira Remsen; William Keith Brooks, by E. A. Andrews.
+
+GEORGE ILES'S LEADING AMERICAN INVENTORS
+
+By the author of "Inventors at Work," etc. Colonel John Stevens
+(screw-propeller, etc.); his son, Robert (T-rail, etc.); Fulton;
+Ericsson; Whitney; Blanchard (lathe); McCormick; Howe; Goodyear; Morse;
+Tilghman (paper from wood and sand blast); Sholes (typewriter); and
+Mergenthaler (linotype).
+
+Other Volumes covering Lawyers, Poets, Statesmen, Editors, Explorers,
+etc., arranged for. Leaflet on application.
+
+HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
+
+34 WEST 33rd STREET--NEW YORK
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+Julien Benda's THE YOKE OF PITY
+
+The author grips and never lets go of the single theme (which presents
+itself more or less acutely to many people)--the duel between a
+passionate devotion to a career and the claims of love, pity, and
+domestic responsibility.
+
+"The novel of the winter in Paris. Certainly the novel of the year--the
+book which everyone reads and discusses."--_The London Times._ $1.00
+net.
+
+Victor L. Whitechurch's A DOWNLAND CORNER
+
+By the author of The Canon in Residence.
+
+"One of those delightful studies in quaintness which we take to heart
+and carry in the pocket."--_New York Times._ $1.20 net.
+
+H. H. Bashford's PITY THE POOR BLIND
+
+The story of a young English couple and an Anglican priest.
+
+"This novel, whose title is purely metaphorical, has an uncommon
+literary quality and interest . . . its appeal, save to those who also
+'having eyes see not,' must be as compelling as its theme is
+original."--_Boston Transcript._ $1.35 net.
+
+John Maetter's THREE FARMS
+
+An "adventure in contentment" in France, Northwestern Canada and
+Indiana.
+
+"A rare combination of philosophy and humor. The most remarkable part of
+this book is the wonderful atmosphere of content which radiates from
+it."--_Boston Transcript._ $1.20 net.
+
+Dorothy Canfield's THE SQUIRREL-CAGE
+
+A very human story of the struggle of an American wife and mother to
+call her soul her own. 4th printing. Illustrated by J. A. Williams.
+
+"One has no hesitation in classing The Squirrel Cage with the best
+American fiction of this or any season."--_Chicago Record-Herald._ $1.35
+net.
+
+HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
+
+34 WEST 33rd STREET--NEW YORK
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+STANDARD CONTEMPORARY NOVELS
+
+WILLIAM DE MORGAN'S JOSEPH VANCE
+
+The story of a great sacrifice and a lifelong love. Over fourteen
+printings. $1.75.
+
+List of Mr. De Morgan's other novels sent on application.
+
+PAUL LEICESTER FORD'S THE HON. PETER STIRLING
+
+This famous novel of New York political life has gone through over fifty
+impressions. $1.50.
+
+ANTHONY HOPE'S PRISONER OF ZENDA
+
+This romance of adventure has passed through over sixty impressions.
+With illustrations by C. D. Gibson. $1.50.
+
+ANTHONY HOPE'S RUPERT OF HENTZAU
+
+This story has been printed over a score of times. With illustrations by
+C. D. Gibson. $1.50.
+
+ANTHONY HOPE'S DOLLY DIALOGUES
+
+Has passed through over eighteen printings. With illustrations by H. C.
+Christy. $1.50.
+
+CHARLES BATTELL LOOMIS'S CHEERFUL AMERICANS
+
+By the author of "Poe's Raven in an Elevator" and "A Holiday Touch."
+With 24 illustrations. Tenth printing. $1.25.
+
+MAY SINCLAIR'S THE DIVINE FIRE
+
+By the author of "The Helpmate," etc. Fifteenth printing. $1.50.
+
+BURTON E. STEVENSON'S MARATHON MYSTERY
+
+This mystery story of a New York apartment house is now in its seventh
+printing, has been republished in England and translated into German and
+Italian. With illustrations in color. $1.50.
+
+E. L. VOYNICH'S THE GADFLY
+
+An intense romance of the Italian uprising against the Austrians.
+Twenty-third edition. $1.25.
+
+DAVID DWIGHT WELLS'S HER LADYSHIP'S ELEPHANT
+
+With cover by Wm. Nicholson. Eighteenth printing. $1.25.
+
+C. N. and A. M. WILLIAMSON'S LIGHTNING CONDUCTOR
+
+Over thirty printings. $1.50.
+
+C. N. and A. M. WILLIAMSON'S THE PRINCESS PASSES
+
+Illustrated by Edward Penfield. Eighth printing. $1.50.
+
+HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
+
+PUBLISHERS--NEW YORK
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Village Life in America 1852-1872, by
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