Pencil Sketches: or, Outlines of Character and Manners
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Leslie Eliza. Pencil Sketches: or, Outlines of Character and Manners
MRS. WASHINGTON POTTS
MR. SMITH
UNCLE PHILIP
THE ALBUM
THE SET OF CHINA
LAURA LOVEL
JOHN W. ROBERTSON. A TALE OF A CENT
THE LADIES' BALL
THE RED BOX, OR, SCENES AT THE GENERAL WAYNE. A TALE
THE OFFICERS: A STORY OF THE LAST WAR WITH ENGLAND
PETER JONES. A SKETCH FROM LIFE
THE OLD FARM-HOUSE
THAT GENTLEMAN: OR, PENCILLINGS ON SHIP-BOARD
THE SERENADES
SOCIABLE VISITING
COUNTRY LODGINGS
CONSTANCE ALLERTON; OR, THE MOURNING SUITS
Отрывок из книги
Those of my readers who recollect the story of Mrs. Washington Potts, may not be sorry to learn that in less than two years after the marriage of Bromley Cheston and Albina, Mrs. Marsden was united to a southern planter of great wealth and respectability, with whom she had become acquainted during a summer excursion to Newport. Mrs. Selbourne (that being her new name) was now, as her letters denoted, completely in her element, presiding over a large establishment, mistress of twelve house-servants, and almost continually engaged in doing the honours of a spacious mansion to a round of company, or in complying with similar invitations from the leading people of a populous neighbourhood, or in reciprocating visits with the most fashionable inhabitants of the nearest city. Her only regret was that Mrs. Washington Potts could not "be there to see." But then as a set-off, Mrs. Selbourne rejoiced in the happy reflection, that a distance of several hundred miles placed a great gulf between herself and Aunt Quimby, from whose Vandal incursions she now felt a delightful sense of security. She was not, however, like most of her compatriots, a warm advocate for the universal diffusion of railroads; neither did she assent very cordially to the common remarks about this great invention, annihilating both time and space, and bringing "the north and the south, and the east and the west" into the same neighbourhood.
Bromley Cheston, having succeeded to a handsome inheritance by the demise of an opulent relative, in addition to his house in Philadelphia, purchased as a summer residence that of his mother-in-law on the banks of the Delaware, greatly enlarging and improving it, and adding to its little domain some meadow and woodland; also a beautiful piece of ground which he converted into a green lawn sloping down towards the river, and bounded on one side by a shady road that led to a convenient landing-place.
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Mr. Smith bowed his head in thankfulness.
"One thing I'm sure of," continued Aunt Quimby, "you'll never be the least above your business. And, I dare say, after you get used to our American ways, and a little more acquainted with our people, you'll be able to take courage and hold up your head, and look about quite pert."
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