UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT LOS ANGELES * A '' i y '' > . ' , - lw/ v; /tlA'O^ J . ' . * ' aptrs Parson Potter and his wife were wonderfully pie; tune o' Haddam. PAGE 27. with it, used to sing it to tlit> THR WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS BY FRANCES M. WHITCHEE. "WITH A.N BY ALICE B../NEAL. NEW YORK: PUBLISHED FOR ALBERT MASON, BT A. C. ARMSTRONG & SON, 714 BROADWAY. 1880. Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1855, BY J. C. DERBY, IB the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States fot the Southern District of New York. CONTENTS. L HEZEKIAH BKDOTT 21 n. THE WIDOW ESSAYS POBTBT . 27 III. -WIDOW JENKINS* ANIMOSITY. IV. MB. CKANH WALKS nr 89 V. TUB WIDOW DISCOURSES OF PuMPKnra. 47 VL < THE WIDOW LOSES HKB BEAU 69 VIL CQ MB. CBANE ABOUT TO PROPOSE 70 DJ vm. MB. CRANE WALKS our TO 4C1361 ONTENT8. IX. THB WIDOW "SETS HER CAP"... X- THE WIDOW RESOLVES TO LEAVE WIGGLETOWN 95 XL THE WIDOW TRADES WITH A PEDDLER. 101 XTT. THE WIDOW AND AUNT MAGUIHE DISCOURSE ON VARIOUS TOPICS - 119 XITL THE WIDOW HAVING HEARD THAT ELDER SNIFFLES is SICK, WRITES TO HIM 184 XIV. THE WIDOW RESORTS TO ELDER SNIFFLES FOR RELIGIOUS IN- STRUOTION 141 XV. THB WIDOW CONCLUDES TO PUBLISH 153 XVL THE WIDOW PREPARES TO RECEIVE ELDER SNIFFLES ON THANKSGIVING-DAY- 161 xvn. HE WIDOW RETIRES TO A GROVE IK THE REAR OF ELDER SNIFFLES' HOUSE. . . . . 176 CONTENTS. VU xvm. THB WIDOW WRITES TO HER DAUGHTER, MRS. JUPITER SMITH. . 184 XTX. THE RET. MRS. SNIFFLES ABROAD 191 XX. THE RET. MRS. SNIFFLES AT HOME 204 XXL THE RET. MRS. SNIFFLES EXPRESSES HER SENTIMENTS IN RE- GARD TO THE PARSONAGE . 222 XXTT, AUNT MAGUIRE'S EXPERIENCE -232 xxm. AUNT MAGUIRE'S DESCRIPTION OF THE DONATION PARTY 245 XXIV. A.UNT MAGUIRE TREATS OF THE CONTEMPLATED SEWING SOCIETY AT SCRABBLE Hm, 273 XXV. A UNI- MAGUIRE CONTINUES HER ACCOUNT OP THE SEWING SOCD3TY 293 XXVL AUNT MAGUIRE'S VISIT TO SLABTOWN 318 VlS O NTENTS xx vn. VISIT TO SLABTOWN CONTINUED... xxvm. MRS. MAGTJIRE'S ACCOUNT or DEACON WHIPPLB ............. 345 Mm MUDLAW'S EBOEPE TOE POTATO PUDDING ............... 869 XXX. MOBNING CALLS ; OB ETEBT BODTS PAiTiouLAa FBIBND ...... 383 INTRODUCTORY. THE Bedott Papers now for the first time collected, were first widely introduced to public notice through the columns of " Neal's Saturday Gazette." Its editor Joseph C. Neal, the well known author of the " Charcoal Sketches," was struck by the originality and clear- ness of the first of the series, when submitted among the mass of contributions, which crowd a weekly newspaper. It was scarcely in print before the author's name began to be asked by subscribers, casual readers, and brother editors, some of whom attributed them to Mr. Neal himself. They could scarcely be made to believe that sketches so full of humor, so remarkable for minute observation of human na- ture, were the work of an unpracticed pen. A correspondence arising in this way between the editor and his unknown contributor, Mr. Neal learned that " the Widow Bedott," as she was familiarly called, had not even entered the " holy estate," but was still the center of a hap- pv home circle, in Whitesboro', New York. That she had never before written for publication, and was so sensitively modest, and indeed unaware of her remarkable talent as a humorist, that she was quite willing to cease then an was a dretful mean man, used to git drunk every day of his life and he had an awful high temper used to swear like all possest when he got mad and I 've heard my husband say (and he wa'n't a man that ever said any thing that w^a'n't true) I 've heard him say Bill Jiukins would cheat his own father out of his eye teeth if he had a chance. Where was I? Ol "His widder to console" ther ain't but one more verse, 't ain't a very lengthy poim. When Parson Potter read it, he says to me, says he " What did you stop so soon for?" but Miss Jinkins told tho Crosby's she thought I 'd better a stopt afore I 'd begun she 's a purty critter to talk so, I must say. I 'd like to see some poitry o' hern I guess it would be THE WIDOW ESSAYS POETRY. 31 BStonishin' stuff; and mor 'n all that, she said there wa'n't a word o' truth in the hull on 't said I never cared tuppence for the deacon. What an everlastin' lie I ! Why when he died. I took it so hard I went deranged, and took on so for a spell they was afraid they should have to send me to a Lunattic ArsenaL But that 's a painful subject, I won't dwell on 't. I conclude as follows : / I '11 never change my single lot I think 't would be a sin The inconsolable widder o' Deacon Bedott, Don't intend to get married agin. Excuse my cryin' my feelins always overcomes me so when I say that poitry O-o-o-o-o-o 1 m. nim0siti f~\ YES I remember I promised to tell you the cause o' widder Jinkinses ennimosity to me Molissy, pass the bread well, you see, Deacon Bedott (he wa'n't deacon then though) he come help yerself to butter, dew he come to Wiggletown to teach the deestrict school. He was origginally from the Black River kentry. His father was a forehanded farmer, and he 'd give Hezekier a complete ^ddication he took to larnin' naterally. Is your tea agreeable ? I s'pose ther wa'n't his equil for cypherin' no wher round. Well, Squire Smith he was out in them parts, and he got acquainted with Hezekier, and he see that he was an oncommon capable young man, and so he conduced him to come to Wiggletown and teach school. Kier, pass the cheeze to Miss Piggins. Don't never eat cheese 1 dew tell I well, husband couldent eat cheeze without impunity durin' the last years of his life used to say that It lay like a stun on his stomick ; as sure as he eat a piece o' cheeze for his supper, he 'd '.ay awake groanin' all night, if he dident take some WIDOW JENKINS' ANIMOSITY. 33 kind of an antigote to pervent it. But I was gwine to tell "Well, the day after lie come to our place, Squire Smith's folks had a quiltin' I was there 't wa'n't long afore Sally was married (she 'tis Sam Pendergrasses wife) she was a makin' her quilts though 'twas ginerally thought she was engaged to Mose Hewlet, and as to that matter, it 's my opinion she might better a had him than the one she did have. I never thought Sam Pendergrass was much none o' the Pendergrasses ain't no great shakes, though he 's good enough for Sal Smith. Melissy, why don't you sarve out the sass ? That sass ain't fust-rate you see, while 'twas a dewin' Loviney Skinner, she come in with that are subscription paper, to git up a society for " the univarsal diffusion of elevation among the colored poperlation," and while I was lookin' at it to Bee who 'd signed and how much they gi'n, the sass got overdid. But I was gwiue to tell about that CLniltin'. Ther was a number o' young folks there see there was Prissilly Poole (that 's me), Poll Bing- ham (Bill Jinkinsea widder), Huddy Hewlit (she married Nat Farntash and both on 'em died to the westard a number o' years ago), and Sally Smith (Sam Pendergrasses wife), and the Peabodys (Jeru- ehy married Shadrack Dany but Betsey ain't mar- ried yet, though I s'pose if ever any body tried faithfully to git a husband Bets' Peabody has), and Nab Einksten (she 'tis Major Coon's wife now). 2* 84 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS. though then she wa'n't nothin' but a milliner's ap- printice. I remember, I wondered at the Smiths foi invitin' her, but they never was pertikkeler who they went with, and she always had a wonderful way o' crowdin' in. See you heerd, dident ycu, how 't she said I tried to ketch the Major, but he Icokt ruther higher 'n to marry widder Bedott ? He must a lookt consarn-ed high when he took Nab Hinksten ! She 7 s a purty critter to be a tryin' to disperse my character, I dew say ! I' 11 let her know 't Deacon Bedott's widder ain't agwine to be put down by the like o' her. What was she, pray tell, in her young days ? I make it a pint never to say nothin' against nobody but truth ain't no slander, think it is? and all creation knows she wa'n't nobody. Why her lather was a poor drunken shack away down in Bottletown, and her mother took in washin', and Nab Hinksten herself worked out for a half a dollar a week, till Miss Potter was down there one time a visitin' Parson Potter's re- lations, and she took pity on her and fetched her up to Wiggletown to live with her ; but after a spell she got above dewin' housework and went into Miss Dick- erson's milliner shop, and there she stayed till Zeb Hawkins married her, and after he died o' delirreum trimmins, she sot tew to ketch somebody else, and at last she draw'd in Major Coon he 'd been disappinted ('t ain't for me to say who disappinted him) and so he dident care much who he married and now sho'e WIDOW JENKINS 7 ANIMOSITY. 36 Miss Major Coon ! O, deary me, it 's enough to make a body sick to see the airs she puts on. rDid you see her come nippin' into meetin' last Sahber day with that are great long ostridge feather in her bunnit, and a shawl as big as a bed kiver? But I could put up with hei li she wouldent slander her betters. She and Miss Jinkins is wonderful intimit now, though I remember when Poll Bingham hild her head high enough above Nab Hinksten, at that quiltin' she dident scarcely speak to her. Is your cup out? Take some more bread not no more ? why you don't eat nothing I 'm afeard you won't make out a supper well dew take a piece o' the sweetcake I ain't sure about it bein' good, Melissy made it and she 's apt to git in a leetle tew much molasses but them nutcakes I know is good, for I made 'em myself and I dew think I make nutcakes about as good as any body else. Kier's a wonderful favoryte o' nutcakes, ain't you Kier ? but his father couldent eat 'em at all for a number o' year afore he died they were tew rich for his stomick -jest as sure as he eat a nutcake he used to have a sick spell afterward. But I was a gwinc to tell how Poll Bingham come to take such a spite against me well, the beginnin' on 't commenced at that are quiltin'. In the evenin' you see the young men come. There was Hezekier Bedott Zeb Haw- kins (he 't was Miss Coon's fust husband, he got to be i worthless critter afore he died), and Shubal Green 86 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS (he "was a wonderful good singer, had an amazui 1 powerful voice, used to sing in meetin' and nigh about raise the ruff o' the meetin'-house off), and Zophar Slocum he was studyin' to be a doctor, he was a smart young man but dretful humbly : he used to write the poitry for the "Wiggleton Banner." He got dretfully in love with a young woman once, and she dident recipperate his feelins 't ain't for me to tell who the young woman was. I don't approve o* tellin' such things well, he got into such a takin' on account o' her coldness, that at last he writ her a letter tellin' of her how 't he couldent stan such undifference no longer, and if she continood to use him so, he was determined to commit self-suiside at the end o' tho letter, he put in a varse o' poitry it says 0, 'tis a dretful thing to be In such distress and miseree I I 'm eny most a natteral fool All on account o' Silly Poole I There! I've let on who 'twas hain't I? but be altered his mind about killin' himself, and was married about three months after to Sophier Jones. Take another nut-cake dew. Why, what a small eater you be! I'm afeared the vittals don't -suit you. Well, less see who else was there. O, Tim Crane. He was a wonderful softly feller dident scarsely know enough to go in when it rained, though he was purtj sharp at makin' money. He married Trypheny WIDOW JENKINS' ANIMOSITY. 37 Kenipe, Deacon Kenipe'e sister they went to the westard, and I've heered they'd got to be quite rich. I guess it must be owin' to Miss Crane's scrapin' and savin', for she was the stingiest of all created critters. "What did you say, Kier? Jim Crane comin' back here to live ? Well, 't won't be no great addition to Wiggletown, for they ain't What! Kier Bedott ? Miss Crane dead I Land o' liberty I what an awful thing ! Dear me ! I dew feel amazin' eorry for Mr. Crane ! how onfortinate I to lose his wife ! such a nice woman as she was, tew 1 What did you say, Melissy Bedott ! How 't I jest called Miss Crane a stingy critter ? you must a misunderstood me a purpose ! I said she was an oncommon equinomical woman. I always thought a master sight of Miss Crane, though I must say she wa'n't quite good enough for such a man as Timothy Crane. He 's an amazin 1 fine man. I said he dident know nothing ? Kier Bedott, how you dew misunderstand. I meant that he was a wonderful unoffensive man, well-dis- posed toward every body. Well, I 'm glad Mr. Crane 's a comin' back here ; should think J t would be melancholy to stay there after buryin' his pardner. His poor motherless darters, tew ! I feel for them. It 's a dretful thing for galls to be left without a mother ! Melisay, what b 5 you winkin' to Kier for? Don't you enow it 's very improper to wink ? Kier, did Deacon Kenipe say what comDlaint Miss Crane died of ? The 4C13G1 88 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPEES. eperdemic! how you talk! that's a tumble disease: I remember it prevailed in our place when I was quite young a number o' individuals died on't I don't wonder Mr. Crane wants to git away from the west- ard, it must be very onpleasant to stay to a place where his companion was tore away from him by such an aggravatin' complaint as the eperdemic. Won't you be helped to nothing more ? 0, sure enough I was goin' to tell how Poll Bingham came to be such an inimy o' mine now I should n't wonder if she should set tew and try tew ketch Mr. Crane when he comes back, should you ? I '11 bet forty great apples she '11 dew it, she 's been ravin' distracted to git married ever since she was a widder, but I ruther guess Timo- thy Crane ain't a man to be took in by such a great fat, humbly, slanderin' old butter tub. She 's as gray as a rat, tew, that are hair o' hern 's false. I 'm gray tew. I guess you haint told no news now, Melissy Bedott. I know I'm ruther gray, but it's owin' to sickness and trouble. I had n't a gray hair in my head when yer par died. I ain't as old as widder Ji nkins, by a number o' year. I think 't wo aid be a good idear for some friendly person to warn Mr. Crane aginst Poll Jinkins as soon as he gits here, don't you ? I dew feel for Mr. Crane. Kier, I wish you 'd invite him to step in when you see him, I want to oonvarse vitli him. I feel to sympathize with him in his afflic- tive dispensation, I know what 'tis to lose a pardner. IV r. Cxaiu TTTALK in ! Why Mr. Crane how dew you dew ? I'm despot glad to see you amazin' glad. Kier told me you 'd arriv' several days ago, and I Ve been suspectin' you in every day sence. Take a cheer and set down dew Why Mr. Crane, you hold yer own wonderfully, don't grow old a speck as I see. Think I've altered much? Don't, hay? Well, Mr. Crane, we Ve both on us had trouble enough to make us look old. Excuse my cryin', Mr. Crane. I've ben dretfully exercised ever sence I heerd o' your affliction. O! Mr. Crane! what poor short-sighted critters we be ! can't calkilafe with any degree o' sar- tinty what 's a gwine to happen. Parson Potter used to say 't was well we did n't know the futur, cause 't would have an attendency to onfit us for dewin' our duty ; and so 't would if you and I 'd a knowed when you went away fifteen year ago, what we 'd got to undergo, 't would a nigh about killed us, would n't it ? ! Mr. Crane 1 Mr. Crane I Creation has dealt purty hard with us sence we parted! Then, you had 40 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS. a wife 'an uncommon likely woman she was lew and I was blest with one o' the best o' men for a husband now, I'm a widder, and you're a wid dyiver. But our loss is their gain at least I 'm sartin my loss is Deacon Bedott's gain. O ! Mr. Crane, how that man did suffer for a number o' year afore he died; but he was the resignedest critter I ever did see never grumbled a grain. Parson Potter used to say 't was to eddification to come to see him, and hear him convarse. He felt wonderful bad about your bein' gone to the westard, Mr. Crane. He used to frequent- ly remark, that he'd giv more to see Mr. Crane than ary individdyival he knowed on. He sot a great deal by you and so did I by Miss Crane. "We both on us felt as if we could n't be reconciled to your liyin away off there it seemed as if we could n't have it so no way. It's a dretful pity you went there, Mr. Crane. Mabby if you had n't a went, yer pardner would n't a died but what 's did ,an't be ondid, it 's tdl for the best. I was turribly overcome when I heerd o' her death fainted away, and 't was quite a spell afore I come tew. That 's a bad clymit, Mr. Crane it must be a bad clymit, or the eperdemic, and fever ager would n't prevail so there. A few year afor husband died, Tie had quite a notion to go to the west- ard. He heerd how well you was a dewin' and then there was Samson Bedott, his cousin (ha married Hep- ey Gifford, you know), Tie. went some where to the west- MR. CRANE WALKS IN. 41 ard and after he'd ben there a spell, he writ my hus- band a letter, urgin' of him to come out there, he said to be sure the clymit was ruther tryin' at fast but then after you 'd got used to 't, you 'd be ruggeder 'n ever you was afore and it was such a wonderful kentry for agricultifer to grow said 't wa'n't nigh so mount- anious as the eastard the yomandery didn't have to labor no wher nigh so hard as what they did here just plant your perduce and that was the eend on 't t would take care of itself till 'twas time to git it in. Well, husband was quite fierce to go and if it had n't a ben for me, he would a went, but I would n't hear to 't at all. I says to him, says I, " 'T wont dew for you to go there, no how Samson, himself, owns it 's a tryin' clymit and if it 's tryin' for well hearty folks, how do you 'spose you'd stan' it? you enjoy poor enough health here, and if you was to go there you 'd enjoy woss yet, what's agricultifer compared to health ?" I was a great deal more consarned for hus- band than what I was for myself, Mr. Crane be sure it 's a woman's duty to feel so, but seems to me I felt it oncommonly. And no wonder, for my husband was a treshur. 1 Mr. Crane, when I lost him I lost att. And that's what makes me feel to sympathize with you as I dew, Mr. Crane. Our sittywations are so much alike. I 'spose you Teel as if your loss could n't never be made up to you, don't you ? That 's jest how 1 felt. Now there's Major Coon, and Mr 42 WIDOW BBDOTT PAPERS. Gifford, and Squire Perce, and Cappen Canoot, and old uncle Dawson (he's old but he's quite rich), why, nary one o' them would n't a filled Deacon Bedott'a place to me; 'T ain't for me to say they Ve all wanted me ahem but s'posen they should, you know. Whenever my friends begin to talk to me about changin' my condition, I always tell 'em it 's a resh and so 'tis Mr. Crane it 's a tumble resk to take a second pardner without its an individdyival you know 'd when you was young that makes a difference 't ain't so resky then. But after all, Mr. Crane it 'a a try in' thing to be without a companion ain't it ? And then there 's the responsibilitude and bringing up the children widders complains most o' that. But there 's a wonderful difference in folks about that. Now 't wa'n't no great chore for me to bring up my children. Parson Potter's wife fraquently used to say (she had quite a large family, you know), she used to say to me, "Miss Bedott I'd giv eny, most eny thing if I had such a faculty for managin' children as you Ve got, and for dewin' as well by 'em as what you do." Ther is an amazin' difference in wimmin now ther 's the widder Jinkins she 't was Poll Bing- ham see you knowd Poll Bingham when she was a gal, did n't you ? Very nice gal did you say 1 ! ! Why Mr. Crane, how forgetful your memory is ! But I don't know as she was so much woss than some other gals I Ve knowd. A body can't tell what sort of a MR. CRANE WALKS IN. 43 vroman a gal will make afore she's married they don't always show out, you know. But I make it a pint never to say nothing against nobody and I am sure I don't wish Miss Jinkins no harm for all she 'a did so much to injure me. I was only gwine to speak o' her way o' bringin' up her children. 'Tis astonish- in' how that critter has managed with them young ones ! She 's the miserablest hand I ever did see in all my born days. "Why them little plagues was in the streets from mornin' till night Bill and Sam a swearin' and throwin' stuns and Alviry a racin' and rompin' and botherin' the neighbors. They've got bigger now and ain't quite so troublesome, though they 're bad enough yet but that ain't to be wondered at for Miss Jinkins has so much gaddin' to dew she hain't no time to tend to her family. But if that was all ther was against her 't would n't be so bad. How- ever I don't want to talk about her truth ain't to be spoken at all times you know but I will say I should pity any decent man that got her for a wife '-specially if he had children. Speakin' o' children you must feel Miss Crane's loss dretfully in takin' care o' yourn. It 's an awful task for a man to manage gals, Mr. Crane and you 've got four on 'em Mirandy and Seliny is purty well growd up but then them tew little ones see what 's ther names ? O, yes Liddy and Sary Ann. What purty little critters they be though I noticed them in meetin' a Sabber- 44 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS. day Mr. Crane! when I looked at them poor little darlin's a settin' there all in mournin' and thought about their motherless sittywation I felt as if I should a bust right out a cryin' ! I had to hold my handkerchief afore my face. Mr. Crane ! I dew feel for them children ! It 's so onfortinate to be left without a mother ! jest at their age tew when they have so much vivacitude and animosity, and need a mother's care for to train 'em rightly. O Mr. Crane 1 it 's tumble ! tumble I What would Melissy a did if it had a ben me that died instid of her par ? She wa'n't but ten year old, just about the age o' them little cherubims o' yourn. My husband was an on- common gifted man and a wonderful kind father but he would n't a did by Melissy as I have he would n't a knowed how to expend her mind and de- vilup her understandin' as I have but I Ve got a natteral tack. Melissy 's a credit to me, Mr. Crane tho' it 's me that says so, she 's -6ny most as good a housekeeper as what I be, but 't ain't for me to boast I've been indefategable in train' of her. I 'm sorry she hain't to hum to-night she and Kier 's gone to singin' school. Yes it's an onfortinate thing foi gals to be left without a mother. It was dretful Miss Crane 's bein' took away so sudding tew I feel so distrest about your moloncolly sittywation I can'1 scarcely sleep o' nights. I Ve jest begun a piece o' ooitry describim' you feelins. I '11 read you what I 'vc ME. CRANE WALKS IN. 45 got writ if you 're a mind to hear it, tho' it ain't only jest begun. I call it MB. CRANE'S LAMENTATIONS ON THE DEATH OF HIS COMPANION. Trypheny Crane ! Trypheny Crane ! And shan't we never meet no more ? My buzzom heaves with tumble pain While I thy ontimely loss deplore. I used to fraquently grumble at my fate And be afeerd I was a gwine to suffer sorrer But since you died my trouble is so great I hain't got no occasion for to borrer. The birds is singin' in the trees, The flowers is blowin' on the plain, But they hain't got no power to please Without my dear Trypheny Crane. ^ I can't submit to 't though I must, It is a dretful blow, My heart is ready for to bust I shall give up I know. And though ondoubtedly my loss Is my dear pardner's gain, I can't be reconciled, because I've lost my Trypheny Crane. When I git all writ I'll giv it to you if you want it. I calkilate to have it considerable longer I al- ways aim to have my poims long enough to pay folks for the trouble o' readin of 'em. What ! must you go ? Well dew come in agin come often I've been quite gratified hearin of you talk you 've been away so long. Now dew be neighborly and dew tell Mi 46 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS. randy and Seliny to come and see Melissy and Lid- dy and Sary Ann dew let them come over. I'm very fond o' children very indeed and I feel so much for them are tew dear little motherless critters, Well good night ; Mr. Crane! 0f /~^OOD evenin', Betsy (Mr. Crane's "help.") Is Mr. Crane to hum ? Is he in the kitchen? in the settin' room, hey ? Ain't very well ? why how you talk ! Well, I want to see him a minnit, but I guess I'll jest step in the kitchin fast and dry my feet. I 'd no idee 'twas so sloppy or I 'd a wore my over- shoes seems to me you 're got yer kitchen heated up wonderful hot 0, stewin yer punkin, hey? I 've been makin some pies to-day, tew. You must have a purty hard time here, Betsy. Mr. Crane 's a fine man, a v&ry fine man a very fine man, indeed but 'tain't as if he had a wife now every thing comes on his help, you see the gals is nice gals amazin' nice gals but they hain't no experience never had no care you know and 'tain't natral to s'pose they could take right hold and dew, as soon as ther mar died. But it sems ruther hard to see so much come onto a young gal like you. On your account I wish Mr. Crane had a wife, 't would be so much easier for you that is if Ue got a good experienced woman o' biziness that 48 WIDOW BEDOIT PAPERS. had brung up a family of her own don't you think so ? "Well, my feet's got purty well dry I guess I'll step into the settin' room and see Mr. Crane I've got an arrant tew him. How d' you dew, Mr. Crane ? I'm dretful sorry to hear you ain't well, I wa'n't a comin' in but Betsy said you was undisposed and I was unwillin' to make you egspose yerself by comin' to the door so I thought I 'd jest step in where you was hope I don't intrude I jest run over to fetch that are poitry I've ben writen for you I would a gin it to yer darters they called in for Melissy to go to sing- in' school but I was afeard they'd lose it afore they got hum young gals is kerless, you know. Here 'tis 'tain't so long as I meant to have, arter all only nine and forty varses but I 've had company sister Magwire (she 'twas Melissy Poole, you know my youngest sister, the one my Melissy was named arter) she's ben to see me, and stayed a week, and when a body has company it kind o' flustrates a body's idees, you know. And then, tew, sister Magwire don't take no interest in no such thing. She 's a very clever wo- man, Melissy is, but she ain't a bit like me hain't no genyus^ no more hain't sister Harrinton why they don't nary one on 'em take no more sense o' poitry than that are stove. If I had a let on to sister Mag- wire what I was a writin', she 'd a tried to stop me had to work at it o' nights arter she d went to bed and that 's the reason why I hain't finished it afore. DISCOURSES OP PUMPKINS. 49 Sister Magwire's a smart woman, tew in her way but it 'a a different kind o' smart from mine. I think her bein' married to such a man has exarted an on fav- orable attendency on her. Mr. Magwire 's a stiddy, well-meanin' man and has got along amazin' pros- perous in the world but he has dretful curus notions. Why, when I writ that affectin' allegory to the memo- ry o' my husband, as true as I live, Mr. Crane, broth- er Magwire laffed about it right to my face ! said 'twas enough to make the deacon groan under ground did you ever ! I felt dretful hurt about it, but I never laid it up agin him, 'cause I know'd he dident know no better. But I dew feel wonderful consarned about yer health, Mr. Crane. What seems to be tho matter with you ? Pain in yer chist ! O ! that 's tur- rible! it always scares me to death to hear of any body's havin' a pain in ther chist. "Why that very thing was the beginnin' o' my husband's sickness, that finally terminated in his expiration. It ought to be tended tew right off, Mr. Crane, right off. When husband fust had it, 'twant very bad, and he dident pay no tention to 't next time 'twas rother woss, and I wanted him to send for the doctor, but he wouldeut he was always amazinly opposed to physicianers. Well, the next time he was attacked 'twas dretful bad he had to lay by still all I could dew I couldent conduce him to have a doctor. Well it went on so for three days. I done all I could for him, but it 50 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS. dident do a smite o' good he kept a gittin' woss and woss, and the third day he was so distrest it did seem as if every breath he draw'd would be the death on him. Jest then old mother Pike come in she was quite a doctor, you know and she said he must take skoke berries and rum right off ther wa'n't nothin' like it for pain in the chist she always kep it in the house so she goes right hum and fetches over a bottle on't and gin husband a wine glass full. She said he must begin with a purty stiff dose, 'cause he'd let it run on BO long arterward a gret spunful night and mornin' would be enough. Well, 'tis astonishin' how soon my husband experienced relief. Arter that he always took it as long as he lived, and I dew believe it alleviated his sufferings wonderfully yes I hain't a doubt but what if he'd a took it afore his disorder was seated, that man 'd a been alive and well to this day. But what's did can't be ondid it's no use cryin' for spilt milk. Now, Mr. Crane, I dew beseech you, as a friend, to take skoke berries and rum afore it's tew late. Tem- perance man, hey? So be I tew; and you don't s'pose, dew you, Mr. Crane, that I'd advise you to take any thing that would intosticate you ? I'd die afore I'd dew it. I think tew much of my repertation and yourn tew, to do such a thing. But it is the harmless' est stuff a body can take. You see the skoke berries counterects tke alkyhall in the rum, and annyliates all its intosticatin' qualities. We jest put the rum on DISCOURSES ON PTJMTZINS. 61 to make it keep. You know skoke berries can't be got in the winter time, so if you want to presarve 'em for winters, you 've got to put some sort o' sperits tew 'em so 's they won't spyle. So don't you be none afeard to take it, Mr. Crane. I'll send you some when I go hum I always keeps it on hand and you be faithful and take a great spunful night and mornin' and if you ain't the better for't afore long then I'm out o' my calkilation that's all. You must feel yer loss oncommonly when you ain't well, Mr. Crane. If ever a departed companion 's missed seems to me it must be when the afflicted surviver's sick 'specially if its a widiwer that's lost his wife. How awful lonesome you must be here alone, when the children 's in bed and the gals has gun off as I s'pose they fraquently dew when evenin' comes and I don't blame them for't as I know on its natural for young folks to like to go. How dretful lonesome you must be. Now some men wouldent mind it so much they 'd go abroad and divart their minds but you ain't a man to go to taverns and shops and such like places to begwile the time yur Ve a man that 's above such things, Mr. Crane and that 's what makes it so aggrevative for you to be without a pardner. I went into the kitchen to dry my feet as I came in and O, Mr. Crane 1 I never did experience such moloncolly sensations in my life as I did when I see how things went on there 'twas plain to be seen ther want no 52 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS. head in the kitchenarj department, and when 'taint well managed there I tell you what, Mr. Crane 't wont't be long afore it '11 be out o' kilter every where. Now Betsey Pringle's a clever enough gal fur as I know but she's young and onstiddy, and wants lookin' tew every minit. She lived to Sam Fender- grasses a spell and Miss Pendergrass told me how't Betsey could dew but she wanted somebody to her heels t' overlook her all the time she was such a kerless critter said she couldent git along with her no way. Now if Sam Pendergrasses wife couldent stan' it with Betsey, it's a .mystery to me how tew young gals like yourn is a gwine to git along with her. They hain't never had no care, and 't ain't to be suspect- ed they should know how to manage 't would be cruel to require it on 'em. It needs an experienced woman and one that takes an interest in things, to keep house right. Ther was one thing hurt my feel- ins amazinly when I was in the kitchen Betsey was a stewin' punkins for pies I knowd in a minnit by the smell, that the critter was a burnin on't up. I dident say nothin thought mabby she 'd be put out if I did, cause I ain't mistress here but I couldent ekercely hold in. I '11 be bound, Mr. Crane, you won't have a punkin pie fit t' eat all winter long and it makes me feel bad to think on 't for I make gret ac- count o' punkms in winter time don't you ? Speak- in o' punkins reminds me of a trick Miss Jinking DISCOURSES OP PUMPKINS. 53 sarved me once (she' t was Poll Bingham) I never see a Dunkin without thinkin' on 't and its tew good to keep though I don't want to say nothin' to injure Miss Jinkins. 'T was tew year ago this fall some- how or other our punkins dident dew well that year. Kier said he dident know whether the seed was poor, or what 'twas any how, our punkins dident come to nothin' at all had to make all my punkin pies out o squashes and them ain't no wher nigh as good as pun- kins. Well, one day I see Sam and Bill Jinkins go by with a load o,' punkins so I says to Millissy, says I, "I mean to jest run over and see if Miss Jinkins won't let me have one o' her punkins," the sight on 'em fairly makes my mouth water. So I throws on my shawl and goes over though I very seldom axed any favors o' her notwithstandin' she was etarnally borrerin' o' me why ther want scarcely a day past but what she sent to borrer somethin or other a loaf o' bread or a drawin' o' tea or a little molasses or a .little sugar, or what not and what 's more she wa'nt wonderful partickler about payin' and it's a sollem fact the times that critter has had my bake pans and my flats and my wash board, ain't to be numbered. I make it a pint never to borrer when I can help it. Ther is times to be sure when the best o' housekeep- ers is put to 't and obleged to ax favors o' ther nabors but as for borrerin' every day week in and week out, as the widder Jinkins does ther ain't no need 54 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS on't -but she can't stay to hum long enough to keep things in any kind o' decent order. But I was gwine to tell how she sarved me about the punkin. Well I goes over and I says, says I, " Miss Jinkins, I see you 're a gittin' in yer punkins and I want to know whether or no you can't spare me one ourn's failed, you know." " Well," says she, " we hain't got more 'n enough for our own use but seem' it's pw, I guess I will let you have one." So she went and fetched in one quite a small one 't was. " What 's the price on T t says I (I dident s'pose she 'd tak any thing, for I 'd gin her a mess o' turnips a few days afore but I thought Fd offer to pay). " What 's the price on 't ?" says I. " nothin' at all," says she. " Lawful sakes !" says T, " you don't s'pose I want to leg it, dew you ? I meant to pay the money down." " You 'd look well," says ehe, " a payin' for 't don't you s'pose I can afford to giv away a punkin? purty story if I can't!" " Well," says I, " thank you a thousand times- -you must come in to-morrer arter I git my pies made and help eat some." " Well, mabby I will," says she so I takes my punkin and goes hum mighty pleased. Well, next day Melissy and me we cut up the punkin 'twas dretful small and wonderful thin and when I come to stew it my gracious ! how it did stew away ! The fact is 'twas a miserable poor punkin good punkins don't stew down to nothin' so. Milessy she lookt into the pot and says she to me, says she. DISCOURSES OF PUMPKINS. 56 { Granf 'ther grievous ! why mar I'm afeard this ere punkin's gwine to exasperate intirely, so ther won't be nun left on't." Well sure enough arter 'twas sifted as true as the world, Mr. Crane ther want more'n a pint on't. " Why, mar," Milessy, says she " 't wont make more'n it, it seemed is if there was organs, and fiddles, and drums, and everything else in't did you ever? I wish you 'd a ben here sooner, Mr. Crane, to hear Mr. Yan- derbump's exparigate about them heads he gin a de scription of the people they belonged tew and told how ther characters was accordin' to ther heads That are big head the one that runs up to such a peak on top he says that 's Scott the celebrated au- thor I s'pose it 's the one that writ " Scott's Com- montaries " on the Scripters. He says it 's a wonder- ful intillectible head : no doubt on 't husband sot a e^ret deal by his Commentaries used to borrer 'em o' 64: WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS. parson Potter Mr. Scott must a' ben a smart man to write 'em. That are small curus shaped one on the corner that 's the head of an underwitted critter that died in one o' the poor houses hain't got no intellec- tible organs at all. That are skull that sets behind Mr. Scott that 's Old Gribbs the pyrit, that was exte- cuted a number o' years ago he was a turrible old Tilling. Mr. Vaaderbump said that was old Gibb'a skull positively bony fidy. That is it 's giniwine bones the rest on 'em's made o' plaster. But that are head that sets aside o' the commentater the one that 's got such a langlin' under lip and flat forrid and runs out to such a pint behind that 's old mother O'Killem, the Irish woman that murdered so many folks she was an awful critter. He said 't wa'n't to be disputed thoagh, that she'd done a master sight o' good to menkind he reckoned they ought to raise a moniment tew her 'cause any body that lookt at her head couldent persume no longer to doubt the truth o' phreenyology. He told us to obsarve the shape on 't perticlerly. You see the forrid 's dretful flat well, that shows how 't the intellectible faculties is intirely wantin'. But he dident call it forrid. He called it the hoss fr&ntis. I n'pose that's 'cause its shaped more like a QOSS than a human critter animal propensi- tudes intirely predominates, you know. That 's what makes it stick out so on the back side that's the hosskindia I s'poso hoss frontis and hosshindis, you THE T7IPOW LOSES HER BEAU. C5 know. I felt oncomonly interested when lie was a tellin' about her, 'cause I've read all about her in " Horrid Murders " a book I Ve got it 's the inter- estinest book I Ve read in all my life. It 's enough to make yer hair stand on eend. I've ben over it I guess half a dozen times and it seems interestiner every time. Husband got it of a pedlar the year aforo he died, and he used to take an amazin' deal o' com- fort readin' on 't. Time and agin I Ve knowd that man to lie awake half the night arter he 'd ben readin' in " Horrid Murders." He was narvous, you know I feel wonderfully attached to that book 'cause 't was such a favorite o' husband's. Every thing 't was dear to husband is dear to me Mr. Crane that 's one rea- son why I set store by you he reckoned on you so much. I '11 lend you that book Mr. Crane you 11 be delighted with it. You can jest step in with me when we go hum and I '11 let you take it. You 11 be amazinly pleased with the account o' Miss O'Killem. She murdered five husbands and a number of other in- dividiwals, and it tells all how she killed'each one on 'em. Some she cut ther throats and some she burnt, and some she chopped to pieces. 'tis awful interest- in'. "What did you say,' Mr. Crane ? That gal with such red cheeks settin' right by the table, do you mean 0, that is Kesier Winkle, she always contrives to get a seat where she '11 be seen. She takes quite a notion to Kier but I guess she '11 miss a figger there. Kier 66 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPEKS. Bedolfc ain't a feller to be drawd in by a purty faco he wants something besides that tho' I never thought she was so wonderful handsome, do you her cheeks is red to be sure, but every body can have such a col or if they want you understand, hey 1 tho' tain't for me to say she paints, never standin' there is them that says so. I 'm very glad Kier don't think o' havin' on her I never did like the Winkles. Old Winkle 's a hard old case, and they dew say Kesier 's considerable like him. There 1 I guess Miss Pendergrass has got roasted out she 's a comin' this way with her admyrable boy don't see what she wants to crowd in here for should think she might find a seat somewhere else shouldent you ? (Mr. Crane relinquishes his seat to Mrs. Pendergrass and takes the one she left.) Good evenin', Miss Pendergrass ! found yer sittivation rather warm, hey ? Well / make it a pint never to change my seat in meetins and lecturs and such places, when other folks is obleeged to change theirn t' accommer- date me. I think /can afford to be oncomfortable as well as other folks can< hope Mr. Crane won't ketch his death a cold when he goes out, on account o' bry- lin' and stewin' there by the stove he ain't well at alL O don't git up, Miss Pendergrass dew sit still now you've got here. What a'curus consarn this phreenyology is, ain't it ? What an age of improve- ment we live in ! If any body M a told us onco THE WIDOW LOSES HER BEAU. 67 how't in a few year we'd be able to tell egzackly what folks was by the shape o' ther heads we would- ent a bleeved a word on't would we ? You remem- ber readin' about old mother O'Killem, in that are book I lent you, don't you ? Well, he 's mistaken about one thing relatin' to her. He says she killed the niggar wer.ch by choppin' off her head now t wa'n't so she stomped on her I remember just how 't was, don't you ? Ain't his wife a tumble hum bly woman ? Her head looks jist like a punMn', and tisen looks like a cheese, don't it? You gwine to Lear her lectur to the ladies to-morrer ? Guess /shall if it *s as interestin' a lectur as hisen, it '11 be worth hearin' though I don't think much o' these here wimmin lecturers, no way the best place for wmi- min 's to hum a mindin' taeir own bizness, accordin' to my notions. You remember that one that come round a spell ago, a whalin' away about human rights. I thought she 'd ought to be hoss-whipt and shot up in jail, dident you? Dew, for pity's sake, look at Major Coon's wife a blowin' herself with her pocket- handkercher ! Did you see her when she come in? Dident she cut a spludge, tho' ? I never did see such an affected critter as she is in all my born days. "When you see any body put on such airs as she does, you may be sure they was raised up out o' the dirt. They 're what Kier calls "the mud aristocrasy." She gwine to have a party Thursday evenin' ? How you talk ! 68 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS. how did you hear ? told you herself, hey ? Is she gwine to have married folks and young folks both ? Well, them 's the right kind o' parties enough sight pleasanter 'n where they 're all married folks or all voung folks don't you think so ? Well, I should think she'd have a party hain't never gin a reglar smasher yit and they 're able to dew it. It's pleasant to git a body's friends and nabors together has an attendancy to permote sociabilitude. I always thought Miss Coon was a nice woman. Folks has a p^ood deal to say about her, cause she was a hired gal when ste was young -but I never thought 'twas ary thing against her Miss Jinkins used to run her down dret- fdly afore they got to be so intimit and whenever she used to begin a slanderin' Miss Coon afore me, I always made it a pint to Stan' up for her. I 've some- times thought she was rufher affected hain't you ? but then you know it 's natral for some folks to be affected I hope Mr. Crane's settin' with rao to-night won't make any talk. I shouldent wonder tho' if it should it don't take nothin' to make a story in Wig" gletown but I couldent git up and go off, you know when he come and sot down by me 1 ; wouldent a ben perlite s'pose you 're heerd he 'd called t' our house a number o' times ? Hain't ? well that 's curus it 's all over town. I wish folks wouldent be gitten' up such reports about me. Mr. Crane 's a fine man a very fine man but if folks thinks I've any idee o' THE WIDOW LOSES HER BEAU. 69 changin' my condition at present, they 're mistaken I hain't begun to think about no such thing yit. 1 think it 's a pity if Mr. Crane can't call t' our house once in a while, without the hull naborhood bein'. in a blaze about it I eny most hope he won't see me hum to-night cause that would make folks say 't was a gone case with us sartin sure. I see Kier come in a spell ago hope he Ti go with me though I s'pose he 's come a purpose to go hum with some o' the gals. There ! the lectur's out Seliny, wait a minnit till the crowd gits along I don't want to be squashed to death look; Miss Pendergrass ! dew see the widder Jinking a squeezin' up along side o' Mr. Crane did you ever ! if that ain't rich I I guess if she thinks she 's a gwine to ketch him she 's mistaken. As true as the world she 's look his arm, and he 's a gwine hum with her I "Well I '11 bet forty great apples she axed him tew. [The young ladies have beaux, and Kier very dutifully escorts his mother home,/zwi as she hoped he would] YIL Ilr. Con* afraut t0 f TEST in time, Mr. Crane we Ve jest this minnit sot down to tea draw up a cheer and set by now don't say a word I shan't take no for an answer. Should a had things ruther different to be sure, if I 'd suspected you, Mr. Crane but I won't appollygise appolligies don't never make nothin' no better, you know. Why, Melissy, you hain't half sot the table. Where 's the plum sass ? thought you was a gwine to git some on 't for tea. I don't see no cake nother, what a kerless gal you be ? Dew bring 'eni on quick and Melissy, dear, fetch out one o' them are punkin pies and put it a warmin'. How do you take yer tea, Mr. Crane? clear, hey? how much that makes me think o' husband ! he always drunk hisen clear. Now dew make yerself to hum, Mr. Crane help yerself to things. Do you eat johnny cake ? 'cause if you don't I '11 cut some wheat bread dew hey? we 're all gret hands for injin bread here, 'specially Kier. If I don't make a johnny cake every few days, he says to me, eays he, " Mar, why don't you make some injin bread? MB CBANB ABOvC xO PKOFOSE 71 it seems as if we hadent never had none." Melissy pass the cheeze. Kier, see 't Mr. Crane has butter This ere butter 's a leetle grain frowy. I don't want you to think it 's my make, for J t ain't Sam Fender- grasses wife (she 'twas Sally Smith) she boirered but- ter o' me 'tother day, and this 'ere 's wtat she sent back. I wouldent a had it on if I 'd suspected com- pany. How do you feel to-day, Mr. Crane ? Dident take no cold last night ? well, I 'm glad on 't, I was raly afeared you would, the lectur room was so tum- ble hot I was eny most roasted, and I wa'n't drest wonderful warm nother, had on my green silk man- killer and that ain't very thick. Take a pickle, Mr. Crane I 'm glad you 're a favorite o' pickles. I think pickles is a delightful beveridge don't feel as if I could make out a meal without 'em once in a while I go a .visitin' where they don't have none on the table and when I git hum the fust thing I dew 's to dive for the buttry and git a pickle. But husband couldent eat 'ern they was like pizen tew him. Me- lissy never eats 'em nother she ain't no pickle hand Some gals eats pickles to make 'em grow poor, but Melissy hain't no such foolish notions. I 've bruug her up so she sliouldent have. "Why I 've heerd o' gals drinkin' vinegar to thin 'em off and make ther shin delekit. They say Kesier Winkle why Eaer, what be you pokin* the sass at Mr. Crane for ? Melissy jest helped him. T heered Carline Gallup say how 't 72 V7I1>OW B3DOTT PAPERS. Kesier Winkle why Kier what dew you mean by offerin' ihe cold pork to Mr. Crane ? jest as if he wanted pork for his tea ! you see Kier 's ben over to the Holler to day on bizness with old uncle Dawson, and he some num with quite an appertite says to me. says he " Mar, dew set on some cold pork and taters, for I 'm as hungry as a bear." Lemme fill up yer cup, Mr. Crane. Melissy, bring on that are pie, 1 guess it's warm by this time. There! I don't think any body 'd say that punkin was burnt a stewin'. Take another pickle, Mr. Crane. 0, 1 was a gwine to tell what Carline Gallup said about Kesier Winkle, Carline Gallup was a manty maker what, Kierr rather apt to talk ? well, I know she was but then she used to be sowin' 't old Winkle's about half the time, and she know'd purty well what went on there yes I know sowin' gals is ginerally tattlers. It 's a tumble bad trait in any body 'specially in them they hain't no bizness to go round from house to house a tellin' what guz on among folks that finds 'em ther bread and butter. I never incurridge 'em in it. When I have manty makers to work for me as sure as they undertake to insiniwate any thing aginst any o' my nabors I tell ye, I shet 'em up quicker but I was gwine to tell what Carline Gallup said Carline was a very stiddy gal she was married about a year ago married Jo Bennet Philander Bennet's son you remember Phil Bennet, don't you, Mr ME. CKANE ABOUT TO PROPOSE. 78 Crane ? he 't was killed so sudding over to Gander- field? Though come to think, it must a ben arter you went away from here. He 'd moved over to Ganderfield the spring afore he was killed. Well, one day in hayin'-time he was to work in the hay -field take another piece o' pie, Mr. Crane dew I insist on 't. Well, he was to work in the hay-field, and he fell off the hay -stack. I s'pose 't wouldent a killed him if it hadent a ben for his comin' kersmash onto a jug that was a settin' on the ground aside o' the stack. The spine of his back went right onto the jug and broke it firoke his back, I mean not the jug that wa'n't even cracked curus! wa'n't it? 'Twas quite a comfort to Miss Bennet in her affliction 't was a jug she vallyed one 't was her mother's. His bein' killed so was ^ tumble blow to Miss Bennet, the circum- stances was so aggravatin'. I writ a piece o' poitry on the occasion and sent it tew her ; she said 't was quite oonsolin'. It says: O Ganderfield I Where is thy shield To guard against grim Death f He aims his gun At old and young, And fires away their breath I One summer's day For to 'tend tew his hay, Mr. Bennet went to the medder Fell down from the stack Broke the spine of his back, And left a mournin' widdor 1 4 74 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS. : T was occasioned by his landin' On a jug that was standin' .Alongside o' the stack o' hay Some folks say 'twas what was in it Caused the fall of Mr. Beunet, But ther ain't a word of truth in what they say 'Tuas true, though, and I know'd it, but of course 1 wouldent a had Miss Bennet s'pose I did for ail crea- tion. She sticks to 't to this day 't was molasses and water 't was in the jug. That 's a likely story ! Why ! 't was a common report for better 'n a year afore he was killed, that Phil Bennet was a gittin on- steady, but I never let Miss Bennet know 't I had any such idee. She and me was always quite intimit. She was Lorainy Perce, old Peter Perce's darter ; you know I sot a gret deal by Lorainy. She took it purty hard when her husband was killed; she went into awful deep mournin' mournin' was becomin' tew her, she was a dark complected woman ; and she wa'n't satisfied with wearin' mournin herself, 't wa'n't enough, she even put black caliker bed-kivers onto her- bed. I remember she had a black canton crape gowni all trimmed with crape ; but she dident wear her mourn- in' long, for she got married agin in about three months married a man by the name o' Higgins carpenter and jiner by trade: got acquainted with him over in Yarmount, when she was there a visitin' tew her sister's quite a forehanded man. But I was a sayin' that poitry where had I got tew! 01 I know: MB CRANE ABOUT TO PROPOSE. 75 How folks can slander Such a man as Philander Bennet 's a mystery to me Less see what comes next? a mystery to me a mystary to me Plague on 't ! what 's the reason I can't remember it? Such a man as Philander Bennet 's a mystery to me Well I dew declare ! 'tis curus how that 's slipt out o' my mind ; dew lemme see 'f I can't ketch it How folks can slander Such a man as Philander Bennet 's a mystery to me a mystery to me to me Well I '11 give it up I've forgot itthat's a settled pint. It 's queer, tew it 's the fust time I ever dis- remembered any o' my poitry but it can't be helped mabby it '11 come tew me some time. If it does, 1 11 write it down and show it to you, Mr. Crane I know you 'd be pleased with it. Take another cup o' tea, Mr. Crane. Why ! you don't mean to say you Ve got done supper! ain't you gwine to take nothin' more ? no more o' the pie ? nor the sass ? well, won't you have another pickle? 0, that reminds me I was a gwine to tell what Carline Gallup said about 76 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS Kesier Winkle. Why, Kier seems to me you ain't very perlite to leave the table afore any body else does. O, yes, I remember now, it's singin'-school night I s'pose it 's time you was ofi^ Melissy you want to go tew don't you ? well, I guess Mr. Crane '11 excuse you. We '11 jest see the table back agin the wall I won't dew the dishes jest now. Me and Me- lissy does the work ourselves, Mr. Crane. I hain't kept no gal sence Melissy was big enough t 1 aid and assist me I think help 's more plague than profit. No woman that has grow'd up darters needent keep help if she 's brung up her gals as she 'd ought tew. Melissy, dear, put on yer cloak, it's a purty tejus evenin'. Kier, you tie up yer throat, you know you was complainin' of a soreness in 't to-day and you must be kerful to tie it up when you come hum it 's dangerous t' egspose yerself arter singin' apt to give a body the browncritters and that 's farrible you couldent sing any more if you should git that, you know. You'd oetter call for Mirandy and. Seliny, naient you? Don't be out late. Now, Mr. Crane, draw up to the stove you must be chilly off there. You gwine to the party to Major Coon's day after to-morrow ? S'pose they '11 give out ther invitations to-morrow. Dew go, Mr. Crane, it 'U chirk you up and dew you good to go out into socierty agin. They say it's to be quite numerous. But I guess ther won't be no dancin' nor highty tighty MR CRANE ABOUT TO PROPOSE. 77 dewins. If I thought ther v, ould, I shouldent go my self, for I don't approve on 'era, and couldent counte- nance 'em. What do you think Sam Pendergrasses wife told me ? she said how 't the widder Jinkins (she 't was Poll Bingham) is a havin' a new gownd made a purpose to wear to the party one o' these 'ere flam- bergasted, blazin' plaid consarns with tew awful wide kaiterin flounces round the skirt! Did you ever ! How reedickilous for a woman o' her age, ain't it ? I s'pose she expects t' astonish the natyves, and make her market tew, like enough well, she 's to be pitied. 0, Mr. Crane I I thought I should go off last night when I see that old critter squeeze up and hook onto you. How tumble imperdent wa'n't it ? But seems to me, I shouldent a felt as if I was obleeged to went hum with her ii I 'd a ben in your place, Mr. Crane, She made a purty speech about me to the lectur I'm a'most ashamed to tell you on 't, Mr. Crane but it shows what the critter is Kier said he heered her stretch her neck acrost and whisper to old Green, " Mr. Green, don't you think the Widder Be- dott seems to be wonderfully took up with craniolcgy. She 's the brazin-facedest critter t' ever lived it does leal- all I never did see her equill but IT taken all sorts c' folks to make up the world you know. Wiiai did I understand you to say, Mr. Crane? a few minnits conversation with me? deary me ! Is it any thing pertickeler, Mr. Crane I O, dear suz I how you T8 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPEBS. dew flustrate me ! not that it 's any thing oncommon for the gentlemen to ax to have privite conversations with me you know but then but then bein' you it 's different circumstances alters cases you know what was you a gwine to say, Mr. Crano ? vm. .glr. Crane Malfts tit NO, Mr. Crane, by no manner o' means, 't ain't a minnit tew soon for you to begin to talk about gittin' married agin. I am amazed you should be afeerd I 'd think so. See how long 's Miss Crane ben dead? Six months! land o' Groshen! why I've know'd a number of individdiwals get married in less time than that. There 's Phil Bennett's widder t' I was a talkin' about jest now she 't was Louisy Perce her husband hadent been dead but three months, you know. I don't think it looks well for a woman to be in such a hurry but for a man it 's a different thing circumstances alters cases, you know. And then, sittiwated as you be, Mr. Crane, it 's a tumble thing for your family to be without a head to superin- tend the domestic consarns and tend to the children to say nothin' o' yerself, Mr. Crane. You dew need a companion, and no mistake. Six months I Good grievous! Why Squire Titus dident wait but six weeks arter he buried his fust wife afore he married bis second, I thought ther wa'n't no partickler need 80 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS. o' his hurry in' so, seem' his family was all grow'd up Such a critter as he pickt out, tew ! 't was very on suitable but every man to his taste I hain't no dis- persition to meddle with nobody's consarns. There 's old farmer Dawson, tew his pardner hain't ben dead but ten months. To be sure he ain't married yet but he would a ben long enough ago if somebody I know on 'd gin him any incurridgement. But tain't for me to speak o' that matter. He 's a clever old critter and as rich as a Jew but lawful sakes ! he 's old enough to be my father. And there 's Mr. Smith Jubiter Smith you know him, Mr. Crane his wife (she 't was Aurory Pike) she died last summer, and he 's ben squintin' round among the wimmin ever since, and he may squint 'for all the good it '11 dew him as far as I 'm consarned tho' Mr. Smith's a re- spectable man quite young and hain't no family very well off tew, and quite intellectible but I tell yo what I 'm purty partickler. 0, Mr. Crane ! it 's ten year come Jinniwary since I witnessed the expiration o' my belovid companion ! an oncocimon long tiiao to wait, to be sure but 't ain't easy to find any body to fill the place o' Hezekier Redott. I think you 're the most like husband of ary individdiwal I ever see, Mr. Crane. Six months! murderation ! curua you should be afeard I 'd think 't was tew soon why I Ve know'd " Mr. Crane, " Well widder I Ve been thinking MR. CRANE WALKS OUT. 81 about taking another companion and I thought I 'd ask you " Widow. " 0, Mr. Crane, egscuse my commotion- it 's so onexpected. Jest hand me that are bottle o? camfire oft the mantletry shelf I'm ruther faint- dew put a little mite on my handkercher and hold it to my nuz. There that 11 dew I 'm obleeged tew ye n ow I 'm ruther more composed you may per- ceed, Mr. Crane." Mr. Crane. ""Well widder, I was agoing to ask you whether wnether " Widow. "Continner, Mr. Crane dew I know it 's tumble embarrisin*. I remember when my de- zeased husband made his suppositions to me, he stam- mered and stuttered, and was so awfully flustered it did seem as if he 'd never git it out in the world, and I s'pose it 's ginerally the case, at least it has been with all them that 's made suppositions to me you see they 're ginerally oncerting about what kind of an an- ser they 're agwine to git, and it kind o' makes 'em narvous. But when an individdiwal has reason to s'pose his attachment 's reciperated, I don't see what need there is o' his bein' flustrated tho' I must say it 's quite embarrassin' to me pray continner." Mr. C." Well then, 1 want to know if you 're will- ing I should have MeHssy ?" Wtifow. " The dragon !' Mr G " I hain't said any thing to her about it yet 41* 82 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS. thought the proper way was to get your consent first. I remember when I courted Trypheny we were engaged some time before mother Kenipe knew any thing about it, and when she found it out she was quite put out because I dident go to her first. So when I made up my mind about Melissy, thinks me, I '11 dew it right this time and speak to the old woman first Widow. " Old woman, hey ! that 's a purty name to call me ! amazin' perlite tew ! Want Melissy, hey ! Tribbleation ! gracious sakes alive ! well, I '11 give it up now 1 I always know'd you was a simpleton, Tim Crane, but I must confess I dident think you was quite so big a fool want Melissy, dew ye ? If that don't beat all ! What an everlastin' old calf you must be to s'pose she 'd look at you. Why, you 're old enough to be her father, and more tew Melissy ain't only in her twenty-oneth year What a reedickilous idee for a man o' your age ! as gray as a rat tew 1 I wonder what this world is a comin' tew : 7 t is astonishin' what fools old widdiwers will make o' themselves! Have Helissy! Melissy!" Mr. 0. " Why, widder, you surprise me I 'd no idee of being treated in this way after you 'd ben so polite to me, and made such a fuss over me and the girls." Widow. " Shet yer head, Tiin Crane nun o' yer sa ss to me. There 's yer hat on that are table, and Shet yer head, Tim Crane nun o' yer sass to me. TVwe's yer hat, on that are table, and here's the door, and the sooner you put on one, ami march out o' t'other, the batter Vll be for you. PAQR 83. ME. CRANE WALKS OUT. 83 f iere 's the door and the sooner you put on one and march out o' t' other, the better it '11 be for you. And I advise you afore you try to git married agin, to go out west and see 'f yer wife's cold' and arter ye 're satisfied on that pint, jest put a little lampblack on yer hair 't would add to yer appearance ondoubtediy and be of sarvice tew you when you want to flourish round among the gals and when ye Ve got yer hah 1 fixt, jest splinter the spine o' yer back 't wouldent hurt yer looks a mite you 'd be interely unresistable if you was a leeile grain straiter." Mr. G. "Well, I never!" Widow. "Hold yer tongue you consarned old coot you I tell ye there 's yer hat and there 's the door be off with yerself, quick metre, or I '11 give ye a hyst with the broomstick." Mr. P ." 89 Coon used to be a lured gal in her young days! and now sence she 's got a hyst in the world, shs tries to cut a^pludge and make folks think she s a lady but any body that 's used to good company, can see in a minnit that &he j s no lady. They say the way she performed last night was a caution. She had a gret loi.g octridge feather in her head, and she paraded round like a grannydear bowin' and smilin' and curchyin' with as much dignitude as if she 'd a ben the queen o' Sheby wa'n't it laflable ? If I l d a ben there I know I should a snorted right out in her face. Old Crane was there tew, pokin' round among the gals mip'htv partickler to Kesier "Winkle, they say. Did you ever ' and his wife hain't ben dead but six months I ain't it awful ? Well, I 'm glad I Ve got rid o' the critter at last. He 's ben stickin' round me evei since ht come here and it did seem as if I should go crazy, he 's so terrible disagreeable but I gin him a check on the tow-path 't other day and I rather guess he 11 lemms alone arter this. Kesier Winkle ! ain't it reedickelous ? I don't see what he could fancy about her, do you? ther ain't nothin' of her but her purty face and I never thought that was so awful handsome as some folks does. Her red cheeks is her only beauty, and they dew say them ain't natral. But I don't want to hurt Kesiah Winkle she 's an un- offensive, simple critter I shall pity her if she gits Tim Crane, he 's the meanest of all created critters. 00 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPEKS. 1 knowed him in his young days. I mean when lie was ruther young, and I was very young indeed. I knowed him always till he went to the West and I M as soon think o' havin' the " old boy" as him He don't know nothin' only how to make money yes he does to he knows how to keep it. Of all stingy mortals he 's the stingiest. Husband dispised him used to say, Tim Crane was so tight he fairly begrudged the air he breathed and it 'a a fact. Massy tew me I it does seem onaccountable how any body can be so beset to get married as to take up with him don't it? He's the consarndest old gump tew '1 ever was no intellectibility at all. I always knowed he was a dretful ninny, but I dident think he was so awful silly as he is till 't other night at the Phreeny- ogical lectur. He come and sot down by me ; I was turribly provoked to have him a stickin' round me in public so, but I couldent help it, you know ; I waa purty haughty tew him, I tell ye. Well, if you '11 believe it as true as I set here when the lecterer was tellin' about the organs in folkses heads, old Crane thought he meant them are music organs it ^ a fact ; 1 never was so dizgusted in my life. Well, he ain't worth talkin' about, and I make it a pint never to talk about nobody. I eny most wish you had a ben to that party, Mr. Smith ; it must a ben quite entertairdn' to see the dewins. Thsy say the widder Jinkins made herself perfectly redickious. She was drest THE WIDOW "SETS HER CAP." 91 off Kks a young gal false cm-Is on and artifishel flowors in her cap. I think that 's very improper for a woman o' her age why, I never wear 'em, and I ain't nowhere nigh so old as she is 't is amazin ! and thej say she cut round and hollered and laffed and tried to be wonderful interestin'. They say she 's a try in' to draw in old uncle Dawson; wouldent it be awful if she should coax him up to marry her? but if she should, he 's a bigger fool than I took him for, that 's all what say ? is gwine to marry her ? why Jubiter Smith 1 I don't bleve it if 'twas so Sam Fender- grasses wife would a knowed it she knows every thing that guz on in the place though she and Miss JinHns ain't very friendly ; but I know 't ain't so who told you, Mr. Smith? Miss Jinkins herself 1 1 land o' Nod ! I Next week ! 1 you- don't 1 ! well I '11 give it up now ! The widder Jinkins a gwine to be married to old uncle Dawson I If that ain't the last" thing T ever heerd on ! What is this world a comin' tew ? How redicklous ! well, she 's a mean, good-for- nothin', underhanded critter to go to work a settin' her traps for that poor old man, and, conduce him to make such a flumbergasted fool o' himself in his old age! What a dog's life she '11 lead him tew ! Why she 's the awfullest tempered critter 't ever was made. I 've knowed Poll Bingham from a gal, and I don't bleve Bill Jinkins w^ild a turned out such a misrable shack if he 'd a had decent woman for a wife. Poll 92 WIDOW BEDOfT PAPERS Jinkins and old Dawson ? tribbilation ! ! Why, she 's been ravin' distracted to git married ever since her husband died, and arter all, she couldent git nobody but that poor decripped, superannuated old feller If she wa'n't dretful anxious to git man-id she wouldent take him. Melissy, dear, 30 down suller and git some apples some o' tlie seek-no-furders don't foil down and break yer neck, darlin'. Old Dawson ! why he 's a Univarsaler ! ain't it awful ? I 'd as soon think o' havin' a Hoppintot. If that had a ben the only thing ther was aginst him, / shouldent a had him. I never gin him no incurridgement -just as if I were a g^vine to take up with Tom, Dick, and Harry, arter beia' the wife o' such a man as Deacon Bedott! He's an amazin' ignorant old coot, tew 'tis surprism' how little he knows I Git some knives and plates, now, Melissy help yourself to apples, Mr. Smith. I can tell you a circumstance that actilly took place once that '11 show you what an ignorant old heathen he is. His wife used to belong to Parson Potter's church, and once in a while he used to come to mcetin' with her, and he always used to go to sleep as soon as the sarmon begun, and sleep till meetin' was out well one Sabberday old Dawson was to meetin' and Par son Potter preached some doctrinal pint I don't now remember what was the theme of his subject but any way, arter he 'd gin out his text, says he, "Brothrin the subject under consideration this THE WIDOW "SETS HER CAP." 93 mornin' is one o' the biggest importance, and I Ve gin it my unmitigated attention for a number o' year but I 'm sorry to say, the commontaters don't agree with me." "Well, old Dawson heerd that and then he dropt asleep as usual. The next arternoon Miss Potter had company what 's called a " deacon party," you know that is-^-all the deacons and ther wives. There was Deacon Kenipe and his wife, Deacon Crosby and his wife. Deacon Whipple and his wife, and Deacon Bedott and me. "Well, as we was all a settin' there about the middle o' the arternoon, who should come in but old uncle Dawson, luggin' a mortal gret sass- basket " Well Parson," says he, " you said yesterday in meetin' how 't the common taters dident agree with ye so I Ve fetched you some oncommon ones the very best that ever was growd for I reckoned 't was tew bad you should be obleeged to live on common, poor taiers, while I had such a bundance o' good uns. It 's a kind I fetcht from Connecticut where I used to live nobody round here hain't got nun Eke em. They call em " Harrington blue-skins" yon needent be afeared but what they '11 agree with ye ye might eat em all day, and not feel a grain the woss for 't." Now, Mr. Smith, that 's a fact I was knowin' to 't Parson Potter, he thankt him over and over agin- - ind we all contrived to keep our faces strait till he 'd got out o' the house and then, what a roarin' ther wras 1 Parson Potter told us never to mention it in 94 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS. creation cause the old man meant well but some how or other it got out such things wiU, you know. But, as Deacon Whipple remarked it 's lamentyble that any body in this free and inlightened kintry should be so blind and ignorant. But he 's good enough for widder JinMns any day don't you say so? Well, what is Wiggletown a comin' tew? Poll Jinkins and old uncle Dawson ! it's the laffablest thing I Ve heerd on this many a day I he, he, he 1 I shall go eff 1 1 The last news that I had from Wiggletown, was that Melissa is soon to be married to the worthy Mr. Jupiter Smith; and that Kier is engaged to Selina Crane. It is supposed that the widow never would have given her consent to these matches, had it not been for the interference of Mr. and Mrs. Magwire, who have at last induced her to give up her opposi- tion to the wishes of her children. She, however, con- tinues to growl about it occasionally, and has become perfectly " dizgusted" with Wiggletown and every body in it, declaring, that " it ain't what it used to be all run down not fit for respectable people to live in and she don't mean to have nothin' to dew with no- body in a place where every body 's atryin' to injure her, and put her down and so." r pHB Widow Bedott having resolved to leave Wiggletown, makes her farewell visit to her friend Mrs. Higgins, of Ganderfield. "Did ye know I was gwine to quit Wiggletown? dident hey ? Well I be I lay out to go next week. I am gwine to Scrabble Hill, to sister Magwire's, to spend the winter, at least and if I like it purty well, mabby I shall conclude to make it my native place, and never come back to Wiggletown without 't is jest a visitin'. Its tumble lonesome to be keepin' house all alone as I be now since Kier and Melissy was married and dewin' for themselves. Ary one on 'em would be glad to have me live with 'em but some how I don't like the idee. Melissy's got a nice man for a husband. Jubiter Smith's a very nice man and she 's very pleasantly sitiwated. But J 'd ruther not live with 'em shouldent feel inde- pendent, ye know. And as for livin' to Kier's I guess it '11 be after this, any how, afore I dew that. Seliny's well enough, fur as I know. I hain't nothin' 06 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS. against Seliny only I don't like tbat stock. I was opposed to Kier's marryin' into that family but he was so determined on 't I gm up my opposition and tried to make the best on 't But I can 't be intirely reconciled to 't, dew what I will. It 's werry onpleas- ant to be connected with that tribe any way. Especi- ally the old man I never could bear Tim Crane he's so mortal mean. Dident know it? well, then, you don't know him as well as I dew, "Why. I Ve been acquainted with him ever sence he was quite a young man, and I can testify 't he was always as tight as a drum-head. How else did he make his money, pray ? he never could a did it by his urits, for he hain't none. Yes I always knowd Tim Crane so did my poor husband he used to have dealins with him, and he said, that of all born skin-flints 't ever he had to do with, Tim Crane was the biggest. Yes I always dispised the critter and then to think that any body should say 't I was a tryin' to ketch him ! 't is scan- dicilous! Hain't heerd nobody say so? Well thir is suoh a story all round Wiggletown and I guess I kuow who started it, tew and that was old Daw- son's wife she 't was widder Jinkins she 's always a runnin' me down and she feels oncomrpon ryled up against me now cause she knows the olu man was arter me 'fore he took her. I know she started the Btory, cause Sam Pendegrasses wife told me on *t and she said she heerd it from Minervy Hawlcy arid RESOLVES TC LEAVE W1GGLETOWN. 97 Minervy Hawley heerd it from Major Coon's wife ?md Major Coon's wife and Miss Dawson is wonderful intimit and I s'pose Miss Dawson told Miss Coon. But what she says ain't worth mindin'. 'T is curus 't nobody should pay any attention to 't. Me set my cap for old Crane ! Gracious ! I never could bear the sight of him. I tell you, I was glad enough when he got married to Kesier Winkle though 't was a most reedicilous piece o' business, wa'n't it ? To think o' his marryin' that foolish flirt of a gal ! young enough to be his darter, tew ! But I rejoiced from the bottom o' my heart when it took place for, thinks me, folks 11 etop ther gab about him and me now. You see, he i been stickin' round me ever sence he came back here and ther was considerable talk that him and rne was a gwine to make a match and 't was very dis- tressin' to me to be the subjick of such a report I done all in my power to give him to understand that his attentions was dizagreeable tew me but somehow another he wouldent take the hint. I dident want him to offer himself tew me, you know. I always make it a pint when I see 't an individdiwal's pleased with me and I don't recipperate ther sentiments I say, I always make it a pint to disencourage 'em all I can for it hurts my feelins amazinly to be obleeged to refuse a man ; it 's so mortifyin' tew 'em, ye know, to be told they ain't wanted. I always git rid on 't when I can and I tried tew in this case but the old 5 WIDOW BELOTT PAPERS. coot was so awful numbheaded I couldent beat any thin' into him. He hung on like the toothache till I got out of all patience. At last he come t' our house one evening (Now Miss Higgins, I hope you won't never mention this to nobody. I shouldent a told you on 't I make it a pint never to tell o' such things. Only seein' we was a speakin' o' the story bein' round that I sot my cap for him, I thought I 'd let you know how much foundation thcr was for 't but don't let it git no furder for pity's sake. I don't wish Mr. Crane no harm). But I was a gwine to tell ye He took the opportunity one night when I was alone, to come over t' our house. I ginerally contrived to keep Melissy or Keir in the room when he came there ; and I 'spose he' d noticed it, for he come over a Bingin' school evenin', when he knowd they 'd be gone. I tell ye I was mad when I see the critter come in. I treated him as cool as a cowcumber ; but neverstandin' all that, if you '11 bleve it, he up and popped the ques- tion 1 At first I answered him as civil as I could, and begged to be egscused ; but he wouldent take no foi an answer ; and so I was obleeged to be purty hash with him and told him I dident want nothing to dew with him, and wished he 'd reitterate and leave me alone and never trouble me no more. And will ye bleve it ! the critter continued to hang on till I was uecessiated to order him out o' the house and tell him if ever he darkened my doors agin he 'd ketch it. So BESOLVEB TO LEAVE WIGGLE TOWN. 99 at last I got rid of him and that 's the upshot o' the matter betwixt old C:ane and me. 'Twas about tew months afcre he was married to Kesier Winkle and disappinted me, as they say. Disappinted! it looks like lein' disappinted, don't it? Its awful provokin' to be talked about as I be, ain't it? But I Ve always ben the subjick o slander ever since I lived here, and that 's since I was quite a gal. What a tumble place for teJldn', Wiggletown is, though ! a regular slander mill. It's s great deal woss than it used be and 'twas always bad enough. I'm perfectly dizgusted with the place, especially sence them stories about old Crane and me. It makes me outrageous to be lied about so by such folks" as old Dawson's wife and Miss Major Coon. Miss Coon she don't like me cause I hain't ne^ er knuckled tew her. You know she thinks she 's a gieat character sence she married Major Coon. But I can tell her " I ain't so fond o' pork as to eat hog yokes!" Miss Pendergrass says, I hadent ought to mind none o' the stories folks tells and I don't mean tew. But Lhen it 's made me clear sick and tired o' Wiggletovn. I 'm completely dizgusted with it, and don't mean to live thert nc longer if I can help it I 've ben some time considerin' what 's best to dew, and I 've made up my mind to go to Scrabble Hill to spend the winter with, sister Magwire. I was thoro and stayed a fortnight about two year ago had a very pleasant visit. At nrst I thought quite strong o' visit- 100 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS. in' my brother, Christopher Columbus Poole. away in Varmount never was there but once, and that was fore husband died. But I 've giv 't up on account o' the family bein' Baptists. I can't stan the Baptists no way ; and if I went there I should have to go to the Baptist meetin' and that would be a tumble cross tew me ; so I 've concluded to go to Scrabble Hill for a spell. Sister Magwire 's a fine woman, though sLe ain't very intellectible. I always sot a great deal by her. No doubt she 11 be wonderful glad to have me come. She must be considerable lonesome now. Her only son 's gone off to study doctrin ; and she 's alone quite a good deal Her husband carries on the shoe- makin' bisness quite extensive ; and he 's to his shop the heft o' the time. To speak the truth, I ain't sorry her son 's gone, for he ain't no favoryte o' mine. He 's growed up to be ruther a dizagreeable young man always pokin' fun at every body. He takes after his father in that respect. Brother Magwire 's quite a teaze, though he knows better 'n to hurt r'olk's feelins as Jeff does. I think I shall enjoy myself pretty well at Scrabble Hill. The society is quite refined there, and that suits me, j^ know. I feel out o' place in "Wiggletown ; ther ain't no refinement there at all. What little there used to be 's all run out. The in- habiters now's a perfect set o ? Goffs and Randals. I'm thoroughly dizgusted vritn the hull town and every body in it, exceptin' Kier and Melissy, and Sam RESOLVES TO LEAVE WIGGLE TOWN. 101 Pendergrasses wife. If 5 t wa'n't that Jiey live there, Wiggletown might go to destruction for all I'd care. LETTER FROM JEFFERSON MAGUIRB TO HIS COUSDi,' MRS. JASPER DOOLITTLE. CooimLLB, Oct. 27, 1847. DEAR COUSIN NANCY: What gloomy, miserable weather this is ! But I suppose that your domestic cares and your good hus- band, occupy so much of your attention, that you Ve hardly time to growl about the weather. I assure you I fsel forlorn enough to-day. Probably more so, for having just returned from a visit of a week at father's ; and home is so much pleasanter to me than any other place, that I am always discontented for a wfcUe after coming away. I suppose you would like to know what the good folks at Scrabble Hill are doing ; so I '11 tell you as far as I know. Father and mother get on about after tLe old sort, and there seems to be no great change among the other inhabitants. Sam Baily is paying attention to Katy Carey, and Pardon Hittibone and Maria Louisa "Wilson are to be married next month. Charity Grimes and Sally Hugle are as old and as dis- agreeable as ever, if not a leetk more so, and full as anxious to dispose of themselves as ever. Old Elder 102 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS. Sniffles, the Baptist minister, lost his wife about two months ago, and his personal appearance has greatly improved since that afflictive event (no uncommon thing as respects widowers, I believe). The Footes have eold out, and gone to Wisconsin, and well I believe, you have now all the village news, excepting one piece of information, and that, as it is the most im- portant, I have reserved till the last. A distinguished stranger arrived at Scrabble Hill some two weeks since. Who do you guess it is? Why, no less a personage than the Widow Bedott, interesting relict of Deacon Hezekiah Bedott. She has actually in- flicted herself upon father's folks for the whob winter. What a time they '11 have of it, won't they ? Mother is so well disposed, that she tries to put up with it cheerfully; but nevertheless, it is pretty evident that she looks upon Aunt Bedott as a prodigious boro. She had been there but two or three days when I went home, and she did not appear overjoyed to eee me. For some reason or other she does n't take a particular fancy to me. Mother says it 's because I teaze her sometimes. But there is something so de- cidedly rich about Aunt Silly, that I can not for my life help having a little fun at her expense occasionally. On Sunday morning I said to her, when mother was n't by, "Well, aunty, where do you go to meeting to- day ?" " Where do I go to meetin' !" said she " what % question I why, where should I go but to my owe RESOLVES TO LEAVE WIGGLETOWN. 103 meetin' ?" " Oh," said I, " I thought perhaps you 'd like to hear Elder Sniffles, he 's such an interesting preacher." " What !" said she, " me go to the Baptist meetin' ! I hope you ain't in arnest, Jeff ; why I 'd as soon go to the theatre as go there. I have a sufferin' contempt for the Baptists. They think nobody can't git to heaven -without bein' dipped, dippin 's a savin' audience with them. Why, come to think, I remem- ber that Elder Sniffles. When I was here afore, yer mother and me was into Mr. Hugle's one evenin* they 're Baptists, ain't they ? and Elder Sniffles and his wife come in there to call. If my memory serves me, he 's ruther a tall, scrawny man with eyes that looks like a couple o' peeled onions, and kind o' squintin' tew, and seems to me he hadn't no hair nardly." " O !" said I, " you 'd scarcely know him now, he 's got a wig and wears spectacles, which im- proves his appearance vastly." " Well, I should think it needed improvin'," said she. " By the way, aunty," said I, " did you know that Mrs. Sniffles was dead ?" "You don't say so !" said he. " Yes," said I : "she died only a few weeks ago. I feel sorry for the Elder he must be so lonesome." " So do I," said she with a sigh. " It's a dredful thing to lose a companion, and I s'pose the Baptists feel it as much as any body." " Undoubtedly," said I ; " Elder Sniffles seems deeply afflicted his sermons, they say, have been more interesting than ever, since 104 WIDOW BE&OTT PAPERS. iris loss ; something mournfully solemn about them," so I went on for some time, dilatin' upon the elder's eloquence and talents, and loneliness and all that. I as- sure you I talked pretty fast, for fear mother 'd come in before I could say all I wanted to and I was afraid she 'd throw all the fat in the fire. At length aunt Silly said that I 'd raised her curiosity to such a pitch that she really felt quite a desire to hear the elder preach she had a good notion to go to the Baptist meet- ing for once. Of course I offered my services as es- cort. Shortly after mother came in, and was quite sur- prised when Aunt Bedott announced her intention of going to the Baptist meeting. " What 's your notion ?" said mother. "Oh !" said aunty, "Jeff's excited my curiosity so much about Elder Sniffles, that I feel as if I 'd like to go and hear him preach." Mother looked at me for an explanation so I thought my best course was to own up for I knew that mother would n't ex- pose me, and tell Aunt Bedott that I was hoaxing her, as it would serve to increase her antipathy to me, which mother was anxious to do away. Therefore I remarked that I 'd been telling aunt Silly what an elo- quent man elder Sniffles was. Mother said nothing then, but as soon as we were alone, she took me to task roundly. However I carried the point, and aunty and I went off to Baptist meeting. We had a seat very near the pulpit. As usual, the Elder whaled away through his nose thumped the desk, and went over EESOLVES TO LEAVE WIGGLETOWN. 106 and over again with the same thing using a little dif- ferent words each time, without ever making the most remote approach to any thing like the shadow of an idea. But it would have done you good to see with what devout and earnest attention Aunt Bedott regard- ed him all the time. Once she was deeply a^ected, and sobbed in a manner that attracted universal atten- tion. It was on his making the very original observa- tion that " this was a changing world, and we couldn't calculate with any degree of certainty upon any thing !" When we were going home, Aunt Bedott said " Well, Jefferson you was right elder Sniffles is a very interesting preacher very, indeed. I never was more edified in my life than I Ve been this morn- in'. He ain't so bad lookiri, nother, as I was thinkin' he was : that ere wig makes him look ten year young- er a body never 'd think o' such a thing as its bein' a wig it 's so natral. And them specs, too : they 'ie an improvement on account o' kind o' hidin' the pe- cooliarities of his eyes. I don't know as I should a' took him for the same indiwiddiwal. But then his sannon! Oh, Jefferson, that was what I call a sar- itw< in arncst ! I begin to think 't ain't right to be so prejudiced against other denominations. I should likft to be in'iTOQUsed. to Elder Sniffles, and hear him convarse." Wouldn't it be rich, Nancy, to be an in- visible listener to the conversation? The next day I same away I shall be quite curious to know whether 5* 106 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS Aunt Bedott continues in her liberal frame of mind but I sha'n't dare to ask mother a word about it when I write so I must remain in ignorance until I go home again at Thanksgiving. But I'm writing a tremendousJy long letter, so I '11 just stop where I am. Eemembei me to cousin Jasper, and. believe me youi affectionate cousin. XL toitfc OOD momin' marm ! can I trade any with ye to-day?" " Land o' liberty ! I want to know if that 's you, Jabe Clark?" "'T ain't nobody else but raly you've got the advantage o' me." " Hev hay 1 well I guess it 's the fust time any body got the advantage o' ye do ye remember them shoes ye sold me in Wiggletown ?" " Jingo ! I '11 be darned if 't ain't the Widder Be- dott ! why ye look younger and handsomer 'n ever " " It took them shoes to stir up yer memory I al- ways tho't I M like to hev a recknin' with ye about comin' such a trick on me " "But Widder" " None o' yer buts dident ye tell me they was fustrate leather and worth ten shillin' every cent on 't but seein' 't was me I mout hev 'em for a dol lar, say ! and dident they bust out at the sides and 108 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS. run down at the heels and split on the instep in less than a week's time and dident ye know they would serve me so when ye sold 'em to me<- say ?" " But Widder ye know" " Yes I know I know J i want the fust time you 'd cheated me but I ruther guess 't was the last time and I ain't the only one that 's made vp ther minds not to hev no more deal with ye Sam Pendergrasses wife says 't if ever you darken her doors again you '11 ketch it." " Well, Miss Bedott, to tell ye the plain truth, them shoes hev laid heavy on my conscience for some time back I dew confess with compunction that I had some shortcoming in those days I did use to git the better o' my customers sometimes in a bargin I Ve felt quite exercised about it lately. Ye see, Widder, I warn't actiwated by religious principles then, that was the difficulty." " Do ye mean to insiniwate that ye Ve met with a change?" " I think I may confidentially say I hev." " How long sence ?" " Wai, about a year and a half. I experienced re- ligion over in Yarmount, at one o' brother Armstrong's protracted meetin's. I tell ye, Widder, them special efforts is great things ever sence I come out I Ve felt like a new critter." " Well, I hope you Ve acted like one, and restored TRADES WITH A PEDDLER. 109 four-fold, as scriptex conLmaodfl, to them you 've got the better of. If ye did I guess yer pockets was cleaned out amazin' quick." "I 'm free to say, I Lev made restitution as fur as I was able." " Well, then, ye 'd better hand over that dollar I paid for them shoes or at least six shiilin' on 't, they waVt worth over twenty-five cents at the furdest." "Wai, I '11 tell ye Widder how I gineraUy dew in Buch cases. I make a practice o' lettin' on 'em trade it out (he begins to open his boxes), I ; ve got a lot o' goods that '11 make yer eyes water, I guess. I make it a pint o' carryin' a finer stock than ary other travel- in' merchant in this section." "Ye needent undew 'em I hain't no notion o ? tradinV* " But 't won't cost nothin' to jest look at 'em, ye know there, them pocket handkerchers is superior to any thing ye '11 find this side o' New York." " Wonderful thin though." "Sheer, ye mean, that's what they call sheer, a very desirable quality iL. iinning cambrick. I tell ye Widder there ain't no such handkerchers in Scrabble mil." " I '11 bet a cent they 're half cotton." "Half cotton! jingo! they ain't half cotton I 7 }! stake my repertation on 't T mean my present reper- tation." 110 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS. " What dew ye ax for 'em ?" 11 Wai, them handkerchers had orto fetch twelve Bhillin' apiece. I never sold none for less, but bein' as I dident dew exactly the fair thing about the shoes, if ye '11 take a couple I' 11 strike off tew shillin', and let ye hev 'em for tew dollars and seventy-five cents." " Land o' liberty ! ye scare me, Jabe ! I 'm wantin' some nice handkerchers wonderfully jest now, but dear me ! I 'd go without to the eend o' my days, afore I'd pay such a price for 'em." " Wai' then, say tew dollars fifty cents, I 'm willin' to let 'em go for that considerin' the shoes." "Twenty shillin' I its awful high, I won't give it." " Say eighteen shillin' then, nobody could ax less than that, I 'm sure." " Eighteen shillin' ! it 's tew much I can't afford it." " Tew dollars then take 'em for tew dollars it's the same as givin' on 'em away. I tell ye Widder, ye wouldent git such a chance if 't wa'n't for my feelin's in relation to them shoes. I told ye they was worth twelve shillin' apiece, and now I offer 'em tew ye for tew dollars a pair, one dollar struck off, that's all ye paid for the shoes." " I never gi'n so much for handkerchers in all my born days, can't ye take no less ?" "Not a cent Widder, not a cent." TBADES WITH A PEDDLEE. ill u Well, then, I don't feel as if 1 could afford to take 'em." " And so I s'pose I may as well put 'em up agin wal, I 'm sorry, not that it would be any objict to me to let them go so cheap, only I thought I 'd like to set my mind at rest about the matter o' the shoes. I Ve offered to make it up and you 've refused to have it made up, so the fault is yourn, not mine, my conscience is clear ; if folks will persirt in stannin' in their own light I can't help it, that 's all." (He re- places them in the box.) "Lemme jest look at 'em once more, Jabe these is purty can't take no less than tew dollars?" " Not i red cent less ; and I tell ye agin it 's the same as giyin' on 'em away at that." " Sure they ain't half cotton ?" " Jest as sure as I be that my name 's Jabez Clark." " Well, then, I guess I shall hev to take 'em." "I 'm glad on 't for your sake as I said afore, t' ain't no objict to me. I Ve got a piece o' silk I want to show ye, Miss Bedott, a very desirable article for a weddin 1 dress." "Lawful sakes! I hope ye don't think /want such a thing." "Wai, folks tells singular stories. I heerd somo- Vhing down here." " O shaw 1 't won't dew to believe all ye hear." H2 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS. "I sold Elder Sniffles a black satting stock and a buzzom pin yesterday s'pose he wanted 'em for a particular occasion." " Git out Jabe I what sort of a buzzom pin was it ?" " Wai, 't was a very desirable pin ; topiz sot in gold. I sold it tew him for a' most nothing. I always make it a pint to accommodate the clergy in that way, never charge 'em full price. I always lookt upon the Elder as a very gifted man I staid here over the Sabbath once to hear him preach I tell ye, "Widder, 't was powerful pleadin'. I 'm ruther inclined to the Baptist order myself ben quaverin' on the subjict ever sence I was brought out in fact I 've thought hard o' givin' up the travelin' marcantile business and stuiyin' deol- ogy but, on the hull, I 've about gi'n it up 't would- ent do for me to be confined to preachin' my health requires such amount of exercise. But here 's that silk, did ye ever see the beat on T t ? now that V what I call splendid 4i's ginniwine French they call it 4 grody grody grody' what the dogs them French names is so consarnid hard to remember O, I know now, ' grody .fiewry ;' jest take a realizin' sense o' the colors how elegant them stripes is shaded off, green and yaller and purple, reglar French try- color, as they call it." "It 's slazy though, ther ain't much heft to 't." "Heft! to be sure 'taint heavy, but heavy silks ain't worn no more, ye know ; they 're all out o j fash- TRADES WITH A PEDLEB. 113 ion these ere light French silks is all the go now ye see folks has found out how much more durable they be than the heavy ones them 's so apt to crack why one o' these ere '11 outlast a dozen on 'em. I Ve got jest a pattern on't left had a hull piece sold tew dresses off on 't, one to Judge Hogobome's daughter in Greenbush, and the other to the Keverend Dr. Togo's wife in Albany. Now, Widder, what do ye say to takin' that, 't would make a most hyastical wed- din' dress." " Well, 't ain't for me to say I 'm wantin' such an article but s'posen I was I've got anew one that'll dew. Sister Magwire pickt it out for me. She hain't got much taste about colors but she ? s a good judge of quality." "Got it made up?" 44 No ; but the mant-maker's a comin' to morrer to make it." " Lemme see it, if ye please. I want to compare it with this." (She brings it). " Jingo ! I '11 be darn- ed if 't ain't stun color ! the fag end of all colors I Why, a body 'd think 't was some everlastin' old maid tnstid of a handsome young widder that had chose such a distressid thing for a weddin' dress." " Lawful sakes ! I dident say 't was a weddin' dress *-and I dident say I chose it myself: for, to tell the *ruth, I dident more 'n half like it : but sister Magwire Btuck to 't was more suitable than ary other color 114 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS. and then tew, she thought 't was such an amazin' good piece." " Good piece I Jingo ! what lid ye pay for 't ?" " A dollar a yard. Ther ! s twelve yards on 't got it o' Parker and Pettibone, and they said 't was fust- rate." " Wai, I don't s'pose they meant to cheat ye they got cheated themselves when they bought that silk. 1 al- ways knoVd that Parker and Pettibone wa'rn't no judges o' goods. The fact is, them New York mar- chants put off their old onsailable articles onto 'em, and make 'em think they 're ginteel and desirable, I tell ye, Widder, ye got most consarnedly took in when ye bought that silk. Ye won't wear it three times afore it '11 crack out at the elbows, and fray out round the bottom." 11 Well, I hain't ben suited with it none o' the time shouldent a got it if sister Mag wire hadent a diug- dong'd me into 't. Ther was a blue one tb.er 't I liked a great deal better." " I tell ye, Widder, it raly hurts my feelins to think o' your standin' up along eide of Elder Sniffles with such a consumid lookin 7 thing on." " O shaw ! stop yer hectorin' about the Elder. I ain't obleeged to hev every body that 's after me." " Wai I know that only such chances as Elder Sniffles ain't to be sneezed at, ye know. But speakin' o' that silk if 't wa'n't for standin' in my own light TRADES WITH A PEDDLEB. 115 go coasarnidly, I '11 be darned if I wouldent offer to swop for a small matter o' boot." " Boot ! that ? s wuss than the shoes ! S'pose I 'd go to givin' boot to git rid on 5 t after payin' an awful sight o money for ''t in the fust place ?" " Wai, 't would be rather aggravatin' if you 'd got a full pattern you hain't but twelve yards. Of course ye dident calkilate to hev no trimmin', or ye 'd a got more." " 1 thought I shouldent trim it consider-in' " ' Yes, I understand considerin' 't was for a minis- ter's wife" " G-it out, Jabe I dident say so '' " I tell ye, Widder, you 're tew partickler minister's wives is as dressy as any body. The Eeverend Doc tor Fogo's wife had hern made up with three wide cross- grained pieces round the skirt. Jingo ! they sot it off slick. These ere stripid silks look fust rate with cross- grain trimmin' seems to go windin' round and round, and looks so graceful kinder. I seen lots on 'em in the city. How them city ladies would larf at such a dress as yourn ! But out here in the country folks don't know nothin'." 11 If I 'd a trusted to my own taste, I shouldent a got it. I wish to massy I hadent a ben governed by sister Magvvire." " Jingo ! wouldent it be quite an idee for you to be *he fust in Scrabble Hill to come out in a ' grody flew- 116 WIDOW BETOTT PAPERS; ry.' Them colors would be \v c nderf ul becomin 7 to you. Jest lemme hold it up to ye and you stan' up and look in the glass. Jingo 1 it 's becominer than I thought 't would be. I tell ye Widder, you mist hev that silk, and no mistake." " Dear me I I wish I could afford to swop What 's itwoth?" " Wai, I can't expect to git the full vaUy on 't. I 'D sell it tew ye as low as I feel as if I could it 's a high-priced silk bein' as it 's so fashionable now; but I '11 tell you, Miss Bedott^-though I w^uldent tell every body the fact is, I got that silk at ? bargin, and of course I can afford to let it go for considerable less than I could if I 'd a paid foil price, Ye see the marchant I took it of was on the pint o' failin', and glad to sell out for any money. He dident ax but a dollar a yard. Ther 's fourteen yards left, as you can see by the folds and you maj- hev it for fourteen dol- lars, jest what it cost me. I tell ye, widder, it 's a bargin." " Land o' liberty I fourteen dollars I I can't think on't." "Wai, then, I'll dew still better by ye. T want you should hev this silk so s'pozen I take yourn off yer hands, and you take this, and jest pa 7 me the bal ance. Mabby I could sell that to some distressid o^d quaker woman that wants an every-day frock and what if couldent, I should hev the satisfaction o' Stop a minute, Jake, IM resk it. It's time I was my own mistress any how. I kno sister Maguire'll say it's tew gay for me, and call it flambergasted, but I dont care.- PACK 117. TRADES WITH A PEDDLER. 117 dewin' you a favor any how. What d 'y e sa y to that?" *' Lemme see the balance that would be tew dol- lars. I Ve paid twelve for t' other already. I don't know about spendin so much money don't know what sister Maguire 'd say to 't. She 's gone over to see old aunt Betsy Crocket aunt Betsey 's sick. Sis- ter Maguire hates striped silk, and pedlars tew won'1 never trade with 'em " " Jingo ! come to think on 't, I 'm a tarnal goose to be willin' to stand in my own light jest for the sake of accommodatin' the wimmin folks 't ain't no object to me." (He folds up the sijk.) " Stop a minnit, Jabe. I '11 resk it. It 's time I was my own mistress, any how. I knoAV sister Ma- guire '11 say it 's tew gay for me, and call it flambergas- ted, but I don't care " " Gay ! I wish to massy she could sec a dress that Elder Cole's wife out east has got entirely red the reddest kind o' red tew stripes a.& wide as my hand Thai 's ruther flambergasted for a minister's wife. So ye think ye '11 take it hey ?" 4< Dunno but I will on the hull." *' Wai, I s'pose I 'd orto stan to my offer- >but I tell ye, Widder it 's a bargin." " fourteen yarat, ye say T' v " Fourteen yards plump ye may count the folds at the edge. Ye can hev cross-grain trimmiti' if ye takr 118 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS. a notion. Jingo ! won't it give the Scrabble Hill wim- min fits to see ye with that on ?" " Well, I '11 take it. See, how much do I 3we ye now?" " But can't I sell ye any thin' else?" XIL ffiitoto anfc $tmt Kapitt Sistrorie OB " T SAY, sister Magwire this ere 's a miserable mean kind of a world, for I Ve " " I don't agree with yen, Silly. I think it '? a very good sort of a world if a tody looks at in a right point o' view. Most o' folks in it used me well, and I guess they '11 continner to dew so as long as I use them well. For my part I 'm satisfied with the world gin* erally speakin." " Well, s'pozen ye be, that 's no sign 't every body else had ought to be satisfied with it. You was al- ways a wonderful satisfied critter. You think every body 's dretful nice and dretful clever." "Now sister Bedott you know that ain't so you know ther 's some folks 't I Ve got a tumble meaF opinion of." " I know ther w a few 't ye don't like but I mean as a gineral thing you seem to think the most o' folks is jest about right. For my part, I 'd ruther see things 120 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS. as they actilly be. I shouldent want to be so awful contented." " I should think so for you ain't never contented only when you Ve got some thing to be discontented about." " Well, if that 's the case, I 'd ought to be content- ed the heft o' the time, for my trouble is continniwal." " How you talk, sister Bedott ! I thought you had- ent nothing to complain of now-a-days. I know 't along after your husband died you wus in ruther poor circumstances and used to grumble a good deal but seems to me you 'd ought to be contented and thank- ful now. Yer children's growd up to be blessins tew ye, and now they 're both settled and dewin fast rate. And sence father was took away, and the property was divided, you Ve had enough to keep ye comfort- able, and more tew." "O lawful sakes! I dident mean 't I was poverty struck. Ther 's other kinds o' trouble besides that ain't thar ? If you 'd a ben in Wiggletown durin' the last few years, and seen how every body was a peckin' at me, and a try in' to put me down, you 'd a thought I had somethin 1 to try me. Yon wouldent jaw me for thinkin' the world 's a dretful mean place fall o' dretful queer folks." " dear suz ! Some folks is always a talkin' about other folks' bein' queer, while, like enough, it 's them- selves that 's queer, after all." DISCOURSE ON VARIOUS TOPICS. 121 "I hope ye don't mean to insinniwate 't Pm queer, " O no, Silly. I dident mean to insinniwate that but then ye know almost every body has ther queer streaks." "Yes I know it's a pecooliarity natral to every- body to be queer about some things but then some folks is queerer 'n others." "Jest so, Silly some folks is actilly queer and some folks thinks some other folks queer 'cause they don't happen to think jist as they dew on some pints. We think some indiwiddiwals is queer cause they differ from us, and mabbe they think we Ve queer cause we differ from them. We 'd ought to be earful how we call other folks queer, for the fact is we 're all queer more or less and them that lives in glass houses mustent throw stuns." " I wa'n't a thrdwin' stuns as I know on when I said 't was a queer world for 1 t is specially that part on't called Wiggletown. Scrabble Hill don't seem to be such a sort of a place at all, as fur as I 'm able to judge. I think the inhabbiters is quite intellectible, as a gin- eral thing and oncommon perlite, tew. I m quite pleased with the Scrabble Hill folkL. There's Dr. Lippincott he 's quite a science man, I should think, from the way he talks." " Mabbe he is can't say for I can't understand much o' what he says, he talks so big." L22 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS. " I shouldent wonder if you couldent but that ain't no sign nobody can't. I was quite pleased with him, and his wife, tew they seemed so friendly took sitch an interest in my health, and was so consarned about my cough that night they called on me." <; Yes I guess they Ve got an idee your a rich wid- der, livin' on the interest o' yer money husband says ther ' such a 3tory 'round shouldent wonder if hus- band started it .aimself, jist to see what would be the effect on V " I shouldent n other, he 's so full o' mischief but you don't s'pose that 's what makes the Peabodys, and the Buels, and the Fusticks, and the Hugles so peilite tew me, dew ye ?" "01 ain't no rite to say 'tis I 'm sure I 'm glad they 're so attentive it '11 make yer visit pleasanter." " Jest so seems to me Miss Deacon Fustick 's a singlar woman she seems to be intirely took up with the ' anti-tea-and-cofFee society' talked to me all the time she was here about it said I might depend on 't that all that made me so thin, and have such a cough, was drinkin' tea and coffee. If she runs me so every time I see her I guess I shall keep clear on her for I won't give up my tea and coffee for her nor nobody else." " lawful sakes ! Ye needent be afeard o' that she '11 be on to something new afore long. SLe takes up every thing that comes along, and gits all engaged DISCOURSE ON VARIOUS TOPICS, 123 about it. A spell ago she was wide awake against Sabbath-breaJdn', and dident talk about nothin else then 't was moral reform next come Millerism " " Now that makes me think of old mother Green in Wiggletown. You remember old Jabe Green 'a wife ! she was always jest so carried away with every new thing, ye know. Tew or three years ago, when Millerism was makin' such a noise, ther was a feller along lecturin' about it and a number o' the Wiggle- town folks raly thought ther was something in it. But old Miss Green was clear killed up with it. She give up all bizness, and dident dew nothin' but traipse round from house to house a takin' on about the eend o' the world 't was a comin' afore long. "Well one day she come into Sam Pendergrasses 't was afore old Miss Pendergrass, Sam's mother, died. She was a livin' with 'em and ye know she was a woman that always minded her own bizness. Well she sot ther at her loom a weavin' away she was a great hand to weave, the old lady was. Sam's wife was a settin' there tew 't was Sam's wife told me about it. Well Miss Green she sot dcwn in the rockin' cheer, with her face half a yard long, an she hauled out hei snuff-box (she was an all-to-pieces snuff-taker ye know) and she begun to snuff and rock, and rock and snuflj as hard as ever she j3ould, and every once in a while Bhe l d heave a tumble sythe, Lyme-by sa^s she, ( Miss Pendergrass, do you expect to finish that web ? ? 124 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPEKS. '"Well, I rather guess I shall,' says the old lady, says she, ' if I live.' ' If you live? says Miss Green, ' that 'a the pint for my part I Ve sot my house in order, and I 'm ready to go any minnit, and I wish you could say the same. It 's raly a moloncolly sight to see you BO occupied with the consarns o' this world that 's jest a comin' to and eend. I don't see how you can set there a weavin' a piece o' cloth when the day o' the Lord 's so nigh at hand,' and she took a normous pinch o' snuff, and gi'n a dretful groan. ' Well,' says old Miss Pendergrass, says she, ' I 'm glad you feel so sar- tin about yer condition I 'd as lieve the Lord would finu me a weavin' cloth as a takin* snuff." 1 " " Well, that was a good un I It ought to stopped the old woman's mouth and sot her a thinkin'. Miss Fustick is some such a woman in some respects." "I was pleased to hear Cappen Smalley take up agin her in favor o' tea and coffee, t' other night, in to Miss Grimes's. By the way, Cappen Smallsy 's quite an intellectible man, ain't he ?" "Why, yes he knows enough. It kind o' strikes me he 's a steppin' up to Charity -seems to go thsre considerable." "You don't I Well ther 's no accountin' for tastes, I dew say. I should a took the cappen for a man d 1 better judgment than to be pleased with such a critter Don't you think she 's awful disagreeable ?" " Well, 1 must say I don't admire her no great." DISCOURSE ON VARIOUS TOPICS. 126 "And then she's so awful humbly tew. What a draw up nose she's got! And she's so turribly af fected and stuck up. I took a dislike tew her the first time I ever see her when she come in here with her mother. The widder 's a skew-jawed oncomforta- ble lookin' old critter, ain't she ?" " Yes and no wonder, for she 's tew stingy to feel comfortable, and of course she can't look so. You was sayin', a spell ago, that I thought every body was dretful nice, and dretful clever, and I told ye ther was some folks I had a tumble mean opinion of well, the Widder Grimes is one on 'em she's the meanest woman in the neighborhood." " Is, hay ! Well I reckoned whether or no she wa'n't when I seen her." " And Charity 's a chip o' the old block. They git their livin' by visitin' and borrerin'. They keep that little black girl o' theirn on a trot the heft o' the time runnin' after a little piece o' butter here, a half a loaf o* bread there, and a little o' this that and t' other in another place and they ain't everlastin' particklei about payin*. They borrer a good deal o' me, and I gmerally let 'em have it. 'T ain't much they ax for at once, and I hate to refuse when I Ve got it in the house. They send every lew days for a slice or tew of bread, and so ii goes on for some time till wh.it they Ve got amounts to mabbe, half a dozen loaves - and then the little nigger comes in with a loaf o' bread. J26 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS. and says she, ' Missy Grimes sends this loaf o' bread and wants Missy Magwire to take off what's right, The last time she sent hum bread in that way only a few days ago husband was in I took the loaf and was a gwine to cut off a piece as usual but husband laid his hand on my arm, and says he, ' Stop, Melissy don't you cut that here, Snowball, take it hum and tell Miss Grimes 't wouldent be right to take off none on V I don't know whether they took the hint time '11 show. But I got rid o' ther borrerin' coffee the slickest or ruther husband did 'twas his dew ins. They used to send about once a week afitei coffee and once in a while they 'd send hum a cup full, ready ground and of all things ! such miserable stuff I never laid my mouth tew I 't was as black as dirt. I biled some on 't once or twice, and then I gin it up for husband nor Jeff wouldent nary one on 'em touch it they declared 't wa'n't nothin' but burnt bread-crusts. At last, one day when Miss Grimes sent hum some coffee, husband happened to be in. After the nigger 'd gone he says to me, says he, : Now, Melissy, you save that coffee, and the next time Miss Grimes sends to borrer, jest give it tew hsr.' Well, 't want long afore they sent agin. Dianny come in with her cup and said Missy Grimes had company come onexpected, and hadent no coffee burnt, and wanted to git a little. So I goes to the cubberd and fetches out the same old stuff and gives it tew her DISCOURSE ON VARIOUS TOPICS. 127 1 tell ye I felt rather mean when I gi'n it tew her, but then I 'd promised husband I would, and besides. I kind o' wanted to see how 't would operate. That was three months ago, and they hain't sent for coffee sence." " Well that was about the cutest thing I ever heerd o' your dewin, Melissy. You sarved 'em right. But ain't it curus 't Cappen Smalley should be pleased with Charity ? wonder if he knows how mean they be ?" " If he did 't would be a recommendation tew him." "What! Cappen Smalley ain't a tight man, is he?" " Tight ! yes, tight as the skin tew his back." "Well, now, I am beatl Why how oncommon good and ginerous he talked t 7 other night, when he come in to Parson Tattle 's, when we was there to tea seemed to be so ingaged in every menevolent opera- tion.' " Yes, he 's famous for wishin' 't every body might be warmed and clothed ; but somehow or another he never hands over. Whenever any body goes tew him with a subscription-paper, he always seems highly de- lighted with it says it 's an excellent objick an objick he feels wonderfully interested in he does hope they '11 succeed m raisin' enough for ! r t would be shameful if they dident. But he 'd rather not put his name down he has an aversion to inakin' a dis- play he wishes thej 'd go all round and raise what they can. and if they don't git enough, come to him ; 128 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS. and he '11 make up what 's lackiri. Somehow or another it don't often happen 't he 's called on to make up what 's lackin' : when he is, lie 's generally niissin'. Parson Tuttle don't seem to see through him yet he thinks he 's a wonderful charitable man." " Speakin' o' Parson Tuttle seems to me he ain't very deep} 1 "O, Parson Turtle's considerable of a man; he's young yet., but I think he 's got a good deal o' stami- ny in him. He '11 improve as he grows older." " "vTell, whether he improves or not, it 's my opin- ion he won't never be able io held a candle to Elder Sniffles." " Granf'ther grievous I you ain't in airnest, Silly ?" " I be tew. I think Elder Sniffles is equil to Parson Potter." " Well, T '11 give it Tip now. I always thought the elder was ruther of a dough-head." "Nothin* but prejudice, Melissy nothin' in the world but prejudice, 'cause he happens to belong to a different seek from yourn 't ain't right to be so set in yer way." " Deary me, Silly ! seems to me you 're got to be wonderful forbeann', lately; you used to blaze away about the Baptists turnbly." " I know I dident use to like 'em much, but 't was 'cause J dident know much about 'em, and husband you know, couldent Lear 'em. 1 ' DISCOURSE ON VARIOUS TOPICS. 129 " Well, I disremember about that ; but I dew reinem ber o' hearin' you blow him up once for gwlne to Bap- tist meetin'." " Well, I say for \ your memory 's wonderful good considerable better 'n mine. Any how s'posen a body does dislike a sartin seek, and express ther senti- ments agin 'em is that any reason why they should ent be open to conviction, and alter ther minds con sarnin' em ?" " To be sure not but it does seem queer to me 't you should be so eat up with Elder Sniffles, when you hain't heerd him preach but once : but he 's widdiwer now, and I s'pose that makes his preachin' a good deal interestiner. Shouldent wonder if you 'd heerd he 'd lost his wife, afore you went to his meetin' hadent ye ? now, Silly, own up." " Melissy Magwire ! I should like to know what you mean to insinniwate. If I take a notion to go to Baptist meetin' or any other meetin', I got a right to dew it, and I will dew it as much as I 'm a mind tew, and if my motives is impunged, I can't help itthat 's all." Enter Mr. Maguire " What ye jawin', about, now ?" " We wa'n't a jawin', was we, sister Bedott ? we was only discussinV "Cussin', hey? well, then, what was ye cus&in about?" " What a critter you be to misunderstand ! I did 6* 130 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPERS. ent say cussin\ but c?tscussin'. We was discussin' Elder Sniffles ye know Silly thinks he 's something super- natral." " Haw ! haw ! haw ! what if Silly should git to be a Baptist! wouldent it be a joke, though? But look here, Silly, you must be earful how ye set yer traps for the elder it might be dangerous to interfere with Sally Hugle's pretensions. Don't ye s'pose wife, that Sally 's ruther a squintin' that way ?" " Well, I shouldent wonder if she was ; I don't s'pose she 'd have any serus objections to changin' her condition. That are piece of poitry o' hern, that cum out in the paper last week, looked ruther pinted^ did* ent it?" " What I sister Magwire, you don't mean to say 't Sally Hugle writes poitry ?" "Lawful sakes, yes ! she writes bushels on \ curus kind o' poitry, tew. Ther 's some on 't comes out al- most every week in the ' Scrabble Hill Luminary She signs it 'Hugeliner.' She generally calls 'em 'sunnets 1 Jeff says they ought to be called moonets, cause they 're always full o' stuff about the moon and stars, and so on. She 's always groanin' away about her inward griefs, and unknown miseries. I don't know what to make on 't. Sally Hugle never had no par- tickler trouble as I know on without 't was her not bein able to ketch a husband." " See, wife what was that she writ on the death of DI8COUBSE ON VAEIOUS TOPICS 131 Elder Sniffleses wife? can't you remember some on 't [ thought that was about as rich as any thing o' hern [ 'd seen." " Lemme see. I 'm sure I 'd ought to remember it ; for Jeff had it over all the time for about a week a singin' it through his nose to the tune o' ' Saint Mar- tins' that goes shakin' up and down ye know, kind o' sollem. Less see seems to me this was the way it begun. ' As droops the pale effulgent flower. By wintry breezes tried So, in an onexpected hour, Dear Missis Snifflea died.' Now what comes next ? Oh, I remember ' No moie her sorrowin' pardner hears The voice he loved below While tears, unmitigated tears, Eevepl his bosom's woe, la that respect such grief as hisen IP different from my own, Which, in my heart's dark mournful prison, Lies ranklin' unbeknown ' " Ther s moie on : t, but I forgit what r tis." " That 's enough any way, wife what do ye think on 't, sister Bedott spose ye could beat it?" " I should, be sorry if I couldent why I could make better poitry 'n that by throwin' an inkstand at a sheet o' paper. I wonder if she expects the elder '!] be took with such sfciT. If he is, I 'm mistaken." " S'pose you take bold, then, and see if ye can't 132 WIDOW BEDOTT PAPEES. write her down wouldent it be a capital idee, wife, for Silly to write a piece o' poitry to the elder, and have it printed in the * Luminary.' Come on, Silly that you writ on Miss Crane's death was very toitchin\ though it dident seem to touch Mr. Crane much." " Brother Magwire, I look upon 't as an insult, to have old Crane's name mentioned in my hearin' con- Biderin' all the lies that 's told about him and me, and all the trouble his disagreeable attentions gin me and I hope in futur you '11 keep silent on that onpleasant subjick." " I beg yer pardon, sister Bedott. I forgot you was so sore on that pint. But I 'm in arnest about that poitry. Why not try, and see if you can't beat ' Hu- geliner' all holler." " Seems to me you 're changed yer mird about my Doitry ; you used to turn up yer nose ai It." " 0, well, my ta^te improves as I git older. I ad- mire poitry more 'n i used to." " Well, I '11 show you some srarses I writ a spell ago on the Mexican War and see what you think on 'em " (She goes to bring them, and Mrs. Maguire re- marks ) ''Now, Joshaway, ain'* you ashamed o' yerself! You 'd ought to know better 'n to go to puttin' Silly up to writin' poitry first we know she '11 be a sendin' some of her stuff to the 'Luminary,' and it '11 make her ridickilous, and us tew." DISCOURSE ON VARIOUS TOPICS. 133 11 Don't fret your gizzard, Melissy. Nobody won't think nothing she does is ridickilous for ye know its ginerally thought she 's a rich widder, and every body '11 be ready to swaller her poitry I don't care if it 's the tarnalest mess o stuff that ever was put together." xnr. % 8i&0to (rafting fmfc tfcat