- - : I | j 1 I EFFIE AND I; OR, SEVEN TEARS IN A COTTON MILL. IF 1 ran s3>isriDiLiiB BY MRS. CHARLOTTE S. HILBOURNE. CAMBRIDGE: PRINTED BY ALLEN AND FARNHAM. 1863. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1863, by MRS. CHARLOTTE S. HILBOURNE, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the District of Massachusetts. THIS LITTLE VOLUME IS MOST RESPECTFULLY INSCRIBED OWNERS AND OPERATIVES OF COTTON MILLS, THE AUTHOR. KATE STANTON'S PREFACE. DEAR PUBLIC : ROSA was going to tell you in a preface, how she got her " Cotton Mill " started. But, I said, not a bit of it, Rosa, for it will take my ' World ' and all the power and magic of my pen, to do justice to those kind Cambridge gentlemen, who furnished the capital for that little work- shop. My " World" will get a jog by-and-by, and some will find themselves in the shadow, and some in the broad golden sunlight, right beside those good Cambridge gen- tlemen, only a good way behind, and some will go to verdure. So, Mr. Public, if you want to find yourself in a favorable light, and conspicuous place, just be liberal in patronizing the firm of " Effie and I" and Co. % in their travels through Uncle Sam's domains. It is just the book for everybody, and nothing can eclipse it but my " World," Longfellow excepted. It will cure the hypo VI PREFACE. and all disagreeable sensations in the head, by laughing you into convulsions or a healthful perspiration, which will prove more effectual than all the doctor's bags and bills in Christendom. I ain't sure but what it will put down rebeldom, and send all secesh to the Shampeaceso territories, or the Pee-wee Islands. At any rate, it will work wonders in camp-life, and tell them that cotton ain't dead at the North, although he can't be king of rebeldom. Exit. KATE STANTON. CONTENTS. PAGE INTRODUCTION, . . . 1 CHAPTER I. My Childhood's Home. Family Joys and Bereavements. A Deathbed Scene, . . . . . . ... . .11 CHAPTER IT. The Burial. An unbidden Guest. The Cross and the Crown, 18 CHAPTER III. Our Home without a Mother, . . . . . .23 CHAPTER IV. Our Brother's Dream. His Guide through the Forest. Her Castle Home, . . . ' , 28 CHAPTER V. The Separations. Visit of two Young Ladies from Lowell. Their glowing Descriptions of Factory Life. My Resolve and Trials, . . .37 Vlii CONTENTS. CHAPTER VI. My Journey to Lowell. The Arrival. First Impressions. First Introduction into the Boarding-house and Cotton Mill, 44 CHAPTER VII. Letters from Home. Malta's Marriage. Sudden Death of our Father. My Treasure. A Brother's Grave, . . .50 CHAPTER VIII. Our last Brother dies in New Orleans. The Sacrilege in our Childhood's Home. Minnie's Marriage. Lula with me in .Lowell, 57 CHAPTER IX. Return to the Scenes of my Childhood. Lula's Home. Matta's Bereavements. Lula's Letters ; her Frank is dying, . .64 CHAPTER X. Death of Lula's Cherub Boy. Her Husband's triumphant Death. Her Home made Desolate, ....... 70 CHAPTER XI. I return to the Spindle City. Changes in No. 10, A Pleasant Companion. Little Weeping Willow, 76 CHAPTER XII. Effie Lee's glowing Description of her Childhood's Home. Es- quire Stoneheart's Paupers, 82 CONTENTS. IX CHAPTER XIII. Effie's Parents commence the Privations of Pauperism under the Auspices of Alexander Stoneheart, Esq. An unexpected Friend, i . . . .89 CHAPTER XIV. Angelica Stoneheart's Casket of Treasures. Taken by Surprise. Esquire Homer's Gift of Glen Cottage to the Lees, . . 95 CHAPTER XV. Life's Changes. The Lees in Glen Cottage. The Fearful Visi- tant. Effie and her Brother alone, 102 CHAPTER XVI. Effie's Brother becomes a Student. His sudden Death. Effie alone and Homeless. Resorts to a Cotton Mill. Kate Stan- ton's Debut, 108 CHAPTER XVII. Effie becomes a Factory Girl. Kate Stanton taking Lessons in < the Mysteries of Woman's Rights, 114 CHAPTER XVIII. Kate Stanton gone to the Wild-woods. Effie becomes a Bride. Her happy Leave-taking, 120 CHAPTER XIX. Changes in No. 10. Preparations for the Eastham Camp-meet- ing. Sister Lula's departure to the Spirit-world. Visit to my Mother's Grave. Effie's Heart is breaking, . . .125 CONTENTS. CHAPTER XX. Kate Stanton's Visit. Her Tour through Maine. Description of Heatherton Hall and Willow Dale, 132 CHAPTER XXI. Kate Stanton's unexpected Meeting with Effie Lee. They Jour- ney together, 138 CHAPTER XXII. Kate's Arrival at the Old Hall. The Coachman thinks she is from the Southward, and mistakes her Baggage for Log Cabins. Aunt Heatherton's cordial Greeting. Kate's fears and pleas- ant Surprise. Her Mother's Bridal Chamber. - The Family Portraits, ; ... 143 CHAPTER XXIII. Kate in the ancestral Chair. Her Vision. Is taken for a Rap- ping Medium. Her Aunt's Horror of Spiritualists. Kate's Fun-loving Spirit aroused, . .. ... . . .150 CHAPTER XXIV. Kate's wild Freaks: Her Aunt's History of the Lees. Her Prediction verified. Planning a Visit to Effie, . . . 158 CHAPTER XXV. On the way to Glen Cottage. The Tomb of the Heathertons. Effie found senseless upon her Mother's Grave. Little Charley joyfully recognizes Kate. Effie restored to Consciousness. Aunt Heatherton the Good Samaritan, 165 CONTENTS. XI CHAPTER XXVI. Effie denied Kepose in Glen Cottage. Aunt Heatherton's Balm. The New Home, . , .; ; - : . . .172 CHAPTER XXVII. Effie in Heatherton HalL Her Prostration and Kecovery. Giving a History of her Love and Desertion, . . . 176 CHAPTER XXVIII. Effie's Flight from her treacherous Husband. Is denied admission to the Home of a former Friend. Her Rescue and Relief, . 184 CHAPTER XXIX. Effie's unexpected Meeting with Kate Stanton at the Wayside Inn. They Journey together. Her Reception at Glen Cot- tage. Going to colonize the Pee-wee Islands, . . .15?) CHAPTER XXX. Kate Stanton's Soliloquy. The World upside down. Going to set a Peg or two loose, to give the Great Wheel a jog the right way. Aunt Heatherton's Fears for Kate's Sanity. Kate leaves Heatherton Hall, 195 CHAPTER XXXI. Kate's Journey to the Spindle City. She visits old Associates. Her Reception at Col. G 'a Country-seat, . . . .201 CHAPTER XXXII. A Factory Girl's Home, 206 Xii CONTENTS. CHAPTER XXXIII. Kate visits Lotty Elton in the Old Granite State. Her Story. Mira Grandby going to Aunt Boston's, 114 CHAPTER XXXIV. Mira Grandby's Visit at Aunt Boston's, and what came of it, . 220 CHAPTER XXXV. Lott/s Letter to Mira Grandby. Her Vindication of Factory Girls, . V ......... 226 CHAPTER XXXVI. Mira Grandby weds an Aristocrat. He proves a Gambler and Spendthrift. At last deserts Her, 232 CHAPTER XXXVII. Kate on an Exploring Expedition. She makes a Discovery. Her Signs of a Good Husband, 239 CHAPTER XXXVIII. Rosa back again to the Spindle City, 246 CHAPTER XXXIX. Kate Stanton's Christmas. Aunt Heatherton's Letter. Effie's Bridal. Conclusion, . . . . . . . .251 INTRODUCTION. mHE NINETEENTH of April, 1861. How -- white, and thick, and fast the snow came down. How merrily it flew through the air, and danced Yankee reels, to the shrill pipings of old Boreas, upon the broad pavements. How sly and saucily it kissed the cold cheeks of bachelor pedestrians, reminding them of loving lips and dimpled cheeks, in the long, long ago. How the restless school-boy shouted and floundered in the feathery wreaths, laughing in high glee, at the mischief those fairy revellers were making with his sister's sunny ringlets, twining a wreath of fantastic beauty around her fair young brow. It was a regal gala day with old dame Nature ; her winding-up season ball. Nobody in the City of Spindles ever witnessed such a carnival as that which dame Nature held on the 19th of April, 1861. All Lowell i a INTRODUCTION. was astir too ; far above the shrill piping and blustering of old Boreas, came the loud, hasty war-cry "To arms ! to arms 1 " Every heart was athrob with pa- triotism. Every soul was ignited with loyalty. Every manly arm was ready to strike for freedom and the right ; and every wife, mother, and sister were ready for the sacrifice. What shouts rent the air when the glorious Sixth, the first to respond to the clarion call, the first to shed the martyr's blood, the first to wear a martyr's crown, with waving plumes and floating banners, went out from the lofty archway of Huntmgton Hall station, led on by the brave, heroic Butler, and his fearless lifeguards. Who ever witnessed such a hasty response to the bugle's call ! Such a kindling of patriotism ! Such a mingling of brave hearts and sinewy arms, to protect the glorious institutions of their native land. It was a proud day for the mothers and daughters of the Spindle City ; and even dame Nature put on her gala robes, and danced and piped joyously, while she twined her fantastic wreaths around the brows of those brave and loyal volunteers. My whole soul was gushing with enthusiasm for the patriotic loyalty which characterized the noble sons of INTRODUCTION. 3 the Spindle City, the city of my adoption ; when, like a floating iceberg upon a tropical sea, Mrs. Allstone and there are many Mrs. Allstones in every commu- nity made her appearance, equipped for a leave- taking and a journey. " Where away, Mrs. Allstone ? " I inquired as she settled herself most unceremoniously among my writing materials and patriotic effusions, which the occurrences of the day had called forth. " Oh ! " she answered, " I am sick of this low, detes- table Spindle City ; and I am determined to take up my line of march, and flee from it, as Lot fled from the doomed city of Sodom ; and I shah 1 be in no danger of becoming petrified, as was his foolish wife, by looking back with any desire to return to its vices and vanities." " You are beside yourself, Mrs. Allstone," I an- swered. " What mean you, by such unjust epithets applied to our goodly city." " What mean I, Mrs. Hartwell ? Ask the widow who has been defrauded of her little competence, by that wicked Dives who rides in his fur-lined carriage, and gloats himself with the luxuries upon his sumptuous table. " Ask her fatherless children, who fain would satisfy 4 INTRODUCTION. their cravings of hunger with the crumbs that fall unheeded at his feet. " Ask those, wfcose shivering, half-clad forms, in vain .-seek the warmth of the expiring embers to relax the palsied limbs, and stir the life-current which moves with the sluggishness of death through the half frozen .thoroughfares of the heart. " Ask that deserted wife, who, in her desolate and comfortless abode, bends anxiously and tearfully over her suffering child, bathing his parched lips with her fond kisses ; cooling his fevered brow with the tears that gush forth from her agonized heart ; never relaxing her watchful vigil through the long, lone night hours, lest her darling babe, in his fevered restlessness, expose his tender limbs to the cold, chilling atmosphere of her com- fortless chamber. " Listen to her anguished heart-throbbings, and half- frenzied invocations to the God of the friendless, ming- ling with the night dirges which sweep in moaning response back to her widowed heart. " Ask her faithless husband, who, all unheedful of their wrongs and sufferings, lavishes his smiles and his gold alike upon the vile partner of his guilty desertion ; casting aside as a thing of naught the holy bonds of INTRODUCTION. 5 his marriage vows ; the pure and holy love of a truthful heart, a father's godlike responsibility, and the elevat- ing and ennobling position which they command in the world. All these are as naught, while the voice of his guilty syren lures him on, on, blinded by her fiendish fascinations to destruction and death. " Ask the debauchee, who hastens to his infamous resort with the last dime, for which his children are< starving or freezing in the pitiless blast ; and the horde of wretched creatures whose gay robes sweep flaunt- ingly through the streets, divested of the pure shining circlet with which Virtue designates her children ; and see the long train of blinded votaries which follow, and their name is legion. Ask those who hold the scales of law and power, and controvert that of justice, what I mean. " Then go into those living tombs, those slave-palaces, and see the pale, shrinking, overtasked thousands, toiling on, year after year, for the mere pittance to prolong a miserable existence, and for what? " To fill the coffers of the wealthy capitalists, and rear marble palaces for their aristocratic sons and daughters, who would not deign to have them touch the 6 INTRODUCTION. hem of their golden drapery, lest it should be polluted by their plebeian proximity." " Really, Mrs. Allstone, you have got off a long yarn, without the aid of ' Roper,' or ' Spinning Jenny.' But I must contend, that you have given only the dark side of the picture. * " Your Dives, or his counterpart, will be found in 'almost every city and clime in the wide world ; and so will be his wronged and suffering victims. But they, like Lazarus of old, will at last find a resting-place in Abraham's bosom, while Dives is famishing for a drop of water to cool his burning tongue. " And the husband, who would desert a true and faithful wife in the City of Spindles, would, if in para- dise, desert the fairest daughter of Eve to follow the fascinating trail of the hissing serpent into a thicket of thorns. " Lowell is not a paradise, I will admit ; yet there is much of good illuminating and spanning, like the bow of hope and promise, the dark picture you have presented to my view. To me it seems an asylum for the oppressed, a home for the homeless, and a broad highway leading to wealth and honor. " The influence of the Spindle City is felt throughout INTRODUCTION. 7 almost the entire universe. It is one of the main- springs which moves the great wheel of enterprise and commerce. " Food and clothing have gone out from her portals to the starving sons and daughters of the Emerald Isle, as though they had been brothers and sisters of the same paternal roof. " Kansas, bleeding, famishing, and dying, has revived again, and put on her beautiful garments of hope and strength, when the full-freighted ship has neared her borders, which Lowell has contributed to send forth to her aid. " And this is not all. Lowell has sent out, and not stintily, the bread of life to far distant India. And from what you have termed ' slave-palaces,' ' living tombs,' have gone out missionaries, ministers, lawyers, doctors, poets, and artists, that will compare, nay, com- pete, with many that have been reared in the hot-beds of affluence and ease. And, may-be, our nation's future president is even now the little sooty bobbin-boy, bash- fully going his rounds in that humble capacity. " Ask them where they received their first inspira- tions, and they will tell you amidst the clattering of machinery in the busy Spindle City. 8 INTRODUCTION. " Call it not a life of oppression, while the rose-tinted cheek, and beaming eye, glows with animation and happiness ; while the elastic, graceful step, the light, joyous song, the clear silvery laugh, tell not of laborious toil, or wearying care. " Ask that widowed mother, in some obscure country town, who, perhaps, for months and years has been a helpless invalid, what has brought back the light of happiness to her eye, the glow of health to her cheek, and the smile to her lips ; and she will tell you, that, away in the busy Spindle City, her fatherless children have found a home, and are steadily acquiring a competence for all their need. " The capitalists, whom you have designated proud and aristocratic, are truly their benefactors. " Visit the hundreds of large, commodious factory boarding-houses, and see the poor widows, with their fatherless children installed there, surrounded by every comfort, while their children are receiving an education which will fit them for any position, however honorable, in life. And when panics and famines, and other calamities, have visited the land, have these wealthy factory capitalists crushed these poor widows with an iron heel, or ground the faces of the poor into the dust of the earth ? INTRODUCTION. 9 " No ; through the long cold winters they have lived securely in their factory homes, rent free. Not a tithe has been demanded from the widow or her little competence to swell the purse of the millionaire, till prosperity again visits the land. " Yes, ah yes, your ' slave-prisons,' and ' charnel- houses,' are the very life-springs of the whole universe. Let some formidable panic stop the evolutions of the great wheel of manufacture in our Spindle City, and, like electricity, the effects of that result reaches from pole to pole. " The factory system is not, as you have hinted, demoralizing in its tendency. Its every regulation strictly .prohibits immorality, and demands of every operative a strict observance of the Sabbath and its holy institutions. Vice and immorality are not engen- dered by the wholesome laws and discipline of factory life. " Many who have come here vile and degraded, have soon been led into the higher walks of virtue and sobriety, by the kindly hand and angelic sympathy of some of the good factory missionaries. " Yes, amongst our operatives there are many mis- sionaries, many good Samaritans, who are working for 10 INTRODUCTION. God and eternity in that vast harvest-field ; the' result of whose labors will only be known when the Father judges and rewards the works of the faithful. " A thousand times more truly are those men the real benefactors of the widow, the orphan, and the poor generally, than those who build almshouses, asylums, and other institutions of charity ; where those who enter eke out a miserable existence of dependent beg- gary, instead of the competence acquired by their own cheerful, enervating, and elevating industry, amidst the clattering of machinery in the various departments of factory operations. " You look incredulous, Mrs. Allstone, but I will prove to you that I have not exaggerated, by giving you a sketch of my own experience of factory life within this same, and to you, detestable City of Spindles." EFFIE AND I; SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. CHAPTER I. MY CHILDHOOD'S HOME. FAMILY JOYS AND BEREAVEMENTS. A DEATHBED SCENE. THAT LITTLE brown cottage! How vividly it rises to my view, nestled so quietly beneath the shadowy branches of that wide-spreading oak ; and be- neath it, on the green turf, are half a score of laughing, rollicking boys and girls, singing, chatting, and romping, from the silver-haired baby, to the rough blowsy boy in his teens. How they made the glens and woodlands send back the mocking echo of their merriment, till it became almost a scene of enchantment, peopled with invisible and fairy-like revellers. 12 EFFIEANDi;OR, Again I stand within the vast arena of those magnifi- cent hills, where above and beneath, the mighty forests throw their sombre shadows, or lift the glossy foliage of their gigantic branches to the whispering zephyrs, whjch float lazily along in a summer twilight, laden with the rich fragrance gathered from the sweet fresh wild-flowers, hidden beneath the tangled brushwood. Again I listen, half-entranced, to the wild melody gushing out from the forest vistas, sweet and soul-stir- ring as the dulcet strains which vibrate upon a wind- swept aeolian. Again I look with admiration upon the broad lakes, which lay side by side, like loving sisters, till their white- crested wave, sweeping gracefully over the surface, min- gle into one. I follow the windings of the murmuring streams, half hidden by shrubbery and lily-beds, laying like crests of laurel and pearl upon the sparkling wave. Again I see the broad fields, in the golden harvest month, and listen to the songs of the happy reaper, while he binds his heavy sheaves, or bears them in tri- umph to his home sweet home. I hear the lowing of the herds, and the bleating of the flocks upon the adjacent hills, or sit spell-bound beneath the broad harvest-moon, laying like a sheet of golden lava upon our cottage home, and the adjacent wood- lands ; where the owls " too-hoo" far away in the old SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 13 hollow he has chosen for his retreat, mingles in rough cadence with the distant waterfall and the shrill chirp of the harvest insects. I see the old school-house upon the brow of the hill, and hear the wild rush of childish feet and long pent up mirthfulness, as one after another comes dashing and bounding through the old porch like the frogs of Egypt, impatient to destroy every impeding and opposing obsta- cle before them. Again I hear the dreamy tap tap tap of the summer showers, falling upon the tufts of moss, chucked here and there within the gaping crevices of our own little brown cot, and see the bright sunbeams shimmering playfully through the loose shingles, revel- ling here and there in fantastic shapes, like a whole troop of frolicksome fairies, upon the rough, unpainted floor. And the old oak-tree sways its branches to and fro over the tufts of moss and gaping crevices, while be- neath its deep foliage the lark chants his lay, and the whippoorwill sings his plaintive good-night. Again I see the bright wild-flowers spring up be- neath the low hedge, and the soft breezes waft their sweet aroma through the low casements, sprinkling here and there their fresh perfume upon little knots of shining curls, kissing in playful mood the fair white brows half hidden beneath them. 2 14 EFFIB AND I ; OR, The silvery moonbeams never bathed the battlements of a regal home more gorgeously or witchingly than they did the moss-tufted roof of our own little cot. And then the merry huskings, and apple-parings, and quilting parties, and evening dances, where, with buoy- ant step and lighter hearts, we danced away the long autumn evenings, till the small hours chimed ominously from the tall, old-fashioned clock in the hall. And then the happy good-nights, as we left one after another of our companions, till we reached our own quiet home, be- neath the swaying branches of the old oak-tree. Oh, yes ! I remember it now, when the long winter evenings came ; then came the merry sleigh-bells to our cottage door, till the rooms were filled with the comely lads and lasses of Seclusivale, with viols, flutes, and fifes, and voices all in tune for a right good old-fashioned sing. ^)ur father was a music-teacher, and my mother, I never heard her voice excelled, so clear, melodious, and soul-stirring ; and then half a score of us beside, all with voices which defied competition. Oh, how many, many, many times, when I have sat, deserted and alone, in my comfortless room, have my thoughts reverted to those happy winter evenings in my childhood's home, where the voices of music and gladness reverberated till the forests and glens almost sent back an answering response. There were my parents, brothers, and sisters, eleven of SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 15 us all, and I did not dream that the links which bound us together could be severed in the bright sunny days of our beauty and youth. The first great sorrow came like a dark, fearful shadow. It fell alike upon our hearts and home. It was in the harvest month, when the reapers were gathering the yellow corn and full ripe sheafs into the garner. When the summer flowers were fading and drooping, one after another, from the parent stem ; when the fields and forests were gorgeous with the rainbow hues the for- est king had painted ; when the sky looked regal with crimson and gold, mingled with the dark, heavy folds of the threatening storm-cloud ; when the birds were chant- ing their farewell songs in their summer bowers, and the eold winds were sweeping relentlessly over the distant mountains. I remember it well ; it was one of those dreamy, hazy, sunny days of autumn, that a group of friends and neighbors were gathered in the little darkened chamber where she lay, our sister, the eldest of our happy band. A long while she had been drooping, till her slight form seemed almost etherial, and her large blue eyes beamed with a radiance so spiritual and holy, that, child as I was, I felt awed with the angelic and heavenly ex- pression which radiated every feature of her pale, wan face. Oh, she was beautiful as^he lay there, with her brow 16 EFFIEANDi;OH, clear and white as Parian marble, pressed against the pillow, contrasting so strangely with the deep crimson upon the wasted cheek, and the light which shone out from the clear depths of her large blue eyes, partially shaded by the long damp masses of golden curls, which lay in careless negligence around her neck and brow. Our parish minister was there too ; and his voice went up in a heart-felt benediction to the Holy of Holies, for her who lay just upon the verge of heaven ; beholding even then with her spirit-vision the glories of the New Jerusalem. He sprinkled the baptismal waters upon her upturned brow, and administered to her the emblems of a Saviour's love. Then they chanted a low sweet hymn, spoke to us kindly words of sympathy, and a tearful farewell to the dying one, and the room was left silent and vacant, save only by the little band which yet remained unbroken. A few days more passed away, and then she lay tran- quil as marble in her death-robes. Death awed me ; beautiful as she lay there, I could not look upon her ; and I fled to my mother's room$ to pour out my first sorrow upon her maternal bosom. my mother ! my mother ! I never shall forget that scene. There she knelt, pale as the death-form I had fled from, in tearless and silent communion with God and the freed spirit of hej; eldest born which was then SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 17 hovering over her, clothed in the beautiful garments of sainted immortality. I spoke not I moved not, for I felt that a holy unction had fallen upon her and that home of death. The hand of God was upon us ; and I then knew that it was not in anger He had afflicted us, but in merciful kindness. 2* CHAPTER II. THE BURIAL. AN UNBIDDEN GUEST. THE CROSS AND THE CROWN. THE D A Y of burial came ; and oh, I felt it was a sacrilege to lay her, beautiful as she was, beneath the cold, damp turf. When the spring-time came again the trees bloomed over her grave, and the wild flowers sprang up around the raised turf : and then we sat there many an hour, and talked of her, and sang the songs she loved to hear. We nestled more closely together in our own home nest,. Our mirthfulness was more subdued, our songs more plaintive, and although a link was broken in our little band, and we missed her sweet smiles and sisterly counsellings, yet we mourned not without hope, for was not one of us a white-robed angel, and were there not many yet remaining to bind us to our earth-home, to guide and cheer us through the sunny paths of childhood and youth ? And we thought, too, that the cravings of the death- angel were appeased ; that not for many, many years, would his bony fingers rap again at the door of our happy, though humble home. SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 19 Oar eyes were bright and sparkling, our cheeks round and ruddy ; our songs gushed forth from lightsome hearts ; our steps light and free as health and buoyancy could make them. Oh, no, there was no more work for the death-angel in our home. Our mother's cheek grew paler and more wan, to be sure ; her slight form, oh, so like a shadow ; but her eyes were bright, her brow so serene, and we knew that she prayed often, very often, to Him who had taken her eldest born, in the bloom and beauty of youth, to become an heir with Him, and joint heir with Jesus Christ, with- in the pearly gates of the New Jerusalem. But the death-angel would spare her ! he would not, he could not, take her from us ! Again it is autumn ; twice has the song of the reapers floated out upon the evening breezes in the gulden har- vest-month ; since the death-angel shattered the earth- clogs, and our sister Olivia soared away to the higher life in the city of our God. Far away over the western hills the broad red sun is sinking to repose beneath the rich drapery that hangs in gorgeous festoons from the blue canopy above, throwing a halo of beauty over hill and dale. From the deep sombre recesses of the adjacent for- ests comes the clear rich strains of the night-bird, imparting a peaceful delight to the weary, and filling the still evening air with plaintive melody. The shadows of evening are gathering quietly around 20 BFFIEANDi;OR, the old oak-tree, which throws its gigantic arms so pro- tectingly over our cottage home. We are awed with the imposing stillness which pervades it, till the very foot- fall seems a sacrilege. Step reverently; for a mighty conqueror is even now waiting for admission, bearing a message from the King of kings. Step softly ; for holy angels are bending over the couch of the dying one, chanting the strains of the New Jerusalem ; binding upon her marble brow already glowing with a holy radiance the crown of the faithful and the redeemed. Step lightly ; for loved ones are kneeling by the sick one's couch, and the gushing tears of heart-felt sorrow are falling unchecked upon the snowy drapery. Bleeding hearts are offering up their silent and fervent invocations to Heaven's throne. Oh ! it is a holy place ; just on the verge of the spirit-world ; and every breath seems wafted from Elysian bowers. Step aside ; for the grim messenger approaches. He heeds not the prayers, the tears, the sighs, nor the beseeching looks of love. He cares not for the vacant chair, the deserted hearth, the bleeding hearts, the orphan's tears. He lays his icy hand upon that ashy brow, already crowned with a halo of glory. He shuts out from her mortal vision the dear, famil- iar objects of home, and the little flock her love has so tenderly sheltered, and opens to her wandering view SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 21 the dazzling glories of the spirit-world, with the great white throne, the Lamb, and the blood-washed throng ; the immaculate robes, the palms, the crowns, the harps of gold, the tree of life, bending beneath delicious fruit. The golden gates are swung, and she sees streets of pearl, placid rivers, smooth as polished silver; and hears far, far away, strains from seraph, harp, and lyre. Hushed was the voice that had so often made our quick pulses leap with joy. The fond smile was chilled upon her icy lips ; the thin hands were clasped peace- fully over the rigid breast; the white drapery folded gracefully over the marble features, and all that was of earth earthy, was given back to corruption. In the little* burying-ground where she had so often knelt and prayed over the grave of her eldest born, they reverently bore our mother to her silent resting- place. We bowed to the smiting rod ; but our bruised and bleeding hearts told how deeply and surely the shaft had pierced them. How, in the silent anguish of my stricken heart, I prayed to lay me down beside the senseless form they slowly laid within the open vault. But the death-angel comes not at our bidding, and they bore me back to the desolations of a motherless home. Who can portray the heart-anguish of bereaved ones when they return from a mother's burial to the desolate home. Words are a mockery at description. 22 EFFIEANDI. There stands the old arm-chair in its accustomed nook, but the occupant is not there. The well-worn Bible lays in the selfsame spot upon the shelf where her hands had placed it. The bed where she suffered and died is draped in fresh white linen, and bears no token of a recent occupant. The table is spread, but a neighbor assumes the place erst made sacred by a mother's presence. With awe and hushed silence we gather around the once cheerful fireside ; we turn at a thought, a word, for the approving smile, or look of approbation, but she is not there ; the death-angel has borne her away, away to the mansions of rest in the happy spirit-world ; where she no longer feels pain or weariness ; where hej spirit bounds with all the freshness and vigor of youth ; and her form, light and etherial, floats gracefully along over streets of pearl and glittering gold, to the throne of the Immaculate, to mingle her notes of praise with myriad angel voices to the Lamb who sits thereon, arrayed in the dazzling glory of His majesty and power. Closer we nestled together, while we wept, and prayed, and mourned for the mother, who in love had sheltered her little flock from the storms and blasts of a pitiless world ; and we felt that God might have spared her -yet a little longer to her tender lambs. But we saw not the frightful herd of hungry wolves, crouching without the fold, impatient to suck the life-blood of the flock, which had been sheltered only by a mother's tenderest care. CHAPTER III. i OUR HOME WITHOUT A MOTHER. THE COLD dark days of winter came ; but the evenings were no longer whiled away in merry pastime. The viol and flute no longer reverberated through those hushed apartments. The lightsome song and gleeful laugh were strangers to our bereaved hearts. And we wept, as we nestled closer together by the evening fireside, for the mother's love which had for- ever departed from that silent hearth. Then the spring-time .came, and the summer flowers bloomed over the grave of mother and sister, side by side, which our- little hands had planted there. But the death-angel was not appeased ; for ere the summer flowers- had faded from off the turf reared above their graves, he came again ; and oh, so fearful was his coming. Our eldest brothers, two of them, were stricken down in the vigor and beauty of early manhood, with scarcely a mOTnent's warning of their fearful dissolution. Frank, our brave and noble sailor boy, found a grave 24 E F F I E A N D I ; R , beneath the blue waves he loved so well, far, far away from our desolate home ; and Harry, the free, jovial, graceful Harry, just one week later, was stricken dowfc by an epidemic which swept fearfully through a distant city, where he had hoped to win fortune and favor by genius and toil. Oh, the pall-like gloom! how heavily it fell upon our hearts and home, wrapping us closer and closer within its sable folds. Neighbors gathered around us with words of sympathy and condolence ; but we could not be comforted. Long we had listened for their approaching footfall, in hopeful expectancy that the tales they might tell us of sea and land would dissipate somewhat the gloom which shrouded our desolate home. But instead of their cheering presence, two letters, .draped in black, told us a tale too fearful for our stricken and bleeding hearts to bear; and again we bowed to the scourging lacerations of the bereaving rod. Six . of us then remained ; some in early child- hood, and Carro, the oldest, scarcely in the prime of girlhood. Yet all the duties and responsibilities attend- ant upon us and home rested upon her. She struggled nobly with her unused task, casting all her cares upon Him who was able to sustain her. But He had another mission for her ro perform, a higher and nobler work, in the mansions He had pre- pared for her. SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 25 And so we saw her cheek pale, day by day, her eye grow more lustrous, her slight form more fragile, and that same hoarse, hollow cough, oh, we had heard it long before ; and we knew she, too, must die. When the summer flowers had bloomed twice over our mother's grave, and the cold blasts of winter had folded over them a winding-sheet, spotless, and pure as an angel's drapery, then sister Carro laid aside her earth- tasks, which had been so faithfully and lovingly per- formed, and, in the spring-tide of youth and beauty, calmly resigned herself to the repose of death and the tomb. Angels had called her away, with their soft, sweet whisperings ; and, calm and silently as the passing of the summer zephyr, she soared away from the earth- clogs, to mingle her songs with those who had gone before, in the happy spirit-land, where the weary are for ever at rest. Surely the heart knows not how much it can bear, until it is brought to the test. Other sorrows awaited us, aside from the bereavement which death had wrought upon us. The meagre hand of poverty was stalking around our dwelling. We heard his iron heel upon the threshold, and his gaunt form threw a frightful shadow through the desolate apartments. His sharp fingers clutched mercilessly our delicate 26 EFFIEANDIJOR, frames ; his stony eyes chilled the life-blood in our young and sensitive hearts, as he bound us with his heavy manacles, and made us the helpless slaves of his tyranny and power. Who will say that poverty is a blessing, and welcome his approach as an ambassador of peace and content- ment ? He may come as a blessing to the gloated, gouty votary of luxury and ease, who groans and grapples with his gluttonous disease upon a bed of softest down, till he curses the wealth he has so sinfully abused, and his Maker, too, for the life which is prolonged, to endure his merited sufferings. But not to the little motherless flock, who shrank with fear and trembling from his pitiless grasp, did he come as a blessing, or a messenger of good. He was there ; his hard heel was grinding us into the very dust of the earth ; and it was then we felt that the death-angel were a thousand times more welcome than the tyrant, which stalked so frightfully around our little cot. Our father had become disheartened ; his strong frame yielded unresistingly to the bereaving rod ; a dark cloud shadowed his home, and it had become dreary and insupportable to him. He fled from it to new scenes and new associations ; and, in the excitements of the ^usy city, sought forgetfulness of the unhappy past. SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 27 But memory is a faithful attendant, which neither time nor distance, pleasure or pain, can annihilate. We had one brother, a noble, studious boy, whose heart yearned and aspired to an honorable name and position amongst the famed literati of the land. But the fond anticipations of his young heart had been blasted. Poverty had reared an impenetrable bulwark between him and the boon he so ardently craved, which only time, toil, and perseverance could demolish. CHAPTER IV. OUR BROTHER'S DREAM. HIS GUIDE THROUGH THE FOREST. II i;u CASTLE HOME. ONE MORNING, as he seated himself at our scantily furnished breakfast table, he joyfully ex- claimed, " my sisters ! I have had such a dream ! It even now seems a vivid reality. " I thought I wandered alone, alone through a dense forest. So intricate were its windings and thick branches, that not even the sun's rays could penetrate through the thick, dark foliage. Narrow footpaths branched out on every side, leading to the high, verdure- crowned mountains, with which the forest was sur- rounded. " The free, gushing melody of the wild-birds' song came floating on the fragrant zephyrs from their sunny bowers. The low murmuring of distant water-falls reached my ears, mingled with the hum of happy voices, and my heart yearned to join in the festive joys of those rural scenes. " Exhilarated with hope and buoyancy I turned into one of the most inviting footpaths ; but I soon found SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 29 it was overgrown with sharp thorns and briers, which tore my garments and lacerated my flesh, so that I was unable to proceed. " I turned to another, but was soon lost in its dark, narrow, and intricate windings. And then another seemed to invite me, and I followed on, and on, till it ter- minated abruptly above a deep, dark, yawning abyss. " Faint and weary, I sat me down, hopelessly, upon the hard fragments of a jutting rock, and wept. Clouds were gathering darkly and ominously around me ; the deep, heavy thunders roared fearfully in the distance. " I could not retrace my steps, for the increasing blackness of the approaching storm hid from my view the narrow footpath which had guided me thither. I could not proceed, for the dark abyss yawned to engulf me. I stretched myself "hopelessly upon the cold, damp ground, and gave myself up to weeping and despair. " The storm became darker and more terrific ; the. lightnings flashed vividly, and the thunders came booming and crashing through the deep, dark vistas of the old forest, like the deafening artillery of a mighty war-troop. I looked up through the blinding tears, for just then I felt a hand laid lightly upon my shoulders.. " A tall form bent over me, enveloped .in a dark, flowing mantle, half concealing her features, while -the long white hair floated, like snow-flakes, upon the pass- 30 EFFIEANDIJOR, ing breeze. Her arm was upraised, and her long, bony fingers pointed ominously to the approaching storm. " ' Arise, young man,' she said, ' why tarryest thou in the forest ? Seest thou not the storm approaching ? Fearest thou not the thunder's crashing roar ? the lightning's vivid flash ? the tornado's withering blast ? Arise ; flee to the mountains, lest they bury thee be- neath the oblivious gulf.' " ' Alas ! ' I answered, despondingly, ' I know not the way ; and there is none to guide me. Thrice have I attempted it, and as often have been driven back by some formidable, impeding barrier.' " ' Perseverance would have surmounted all those formidable barriers/ she answered, as she bent her keen, dark eyes upon me. ' Just beyond that thicket of thorns, which you so much feared, was a broad, smooth path, leading, with a gradual and pleasant .ascent, directly to the mountains. Perennial flowers bloom on either side, wooing and refreshing the traveller with their aromatic odors. " ' The other path was more circuitous ; requiring more time, labor, patience, and a keener penetration. For if you had raised your eyes, instead of keeping them upon the brush-wood and pebbles beneath your feet, you would have seen finger-posts, directing you ever and invariably to the right. And then you would have escaped the seemingly pleasant path, which lured you onward, and onward to this frigTitful gulf.' SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 31 " I shuddered, and cast ray eyes fearfully down to the yawning abyss. " ' Who art thou ? ' I inquired, turning to the strange being beside me. ' Who knowest so well the forest paths and the mountain heights. Wilt thou direct me to the broad highway, that I be not again driven back in dismay by formidable barriers.' " ' I am,' she answered, ' the Genius of the forest. My castle is on the highest pinnacle of the mountain's brow. " ' I wander forth, from the sunny bowers of my moun- tain home, through the dark forest windings, in search of those who have foolishly strayed, or lost their way in the many narrow and seemingly intricate windings of this lowland forest. " ' Many I have extricated from the brink of this fearful abyss, whom I have afterwards crowned with a fadeless laurel. " ' And many have perished here for lack of courage to surmount the threatening barriers, or strength to ascend the mountain path. " ' Will you go ? ' she asked. ' The forest is dark, the paths narrow and uneven ; the thunders howl fear- fully through the deep vistas ; the scorching lightnings are flashing and hissing through the swaying branches ; the tornado's roar comes booming from the distant plains. 32 EFFIEANDi; OR, " ' Remain, and you perish. Go, and you .' She raised her arm, and pointed significantly to her far off mountain home. " ' I will go,' I answered, as, with a quick gesture, I reached forth my hand to her, ' if you will lead me through the dark, narrow forest paths.' " for a sudden faintness came over me, when I thought of my previous attempt to penetrate the thicket of thorns ; and I fain would have a companion to battle with me those formidable opponents. " ' I will guide you,' she answered, waving back my extended hand, ' but I cannot lead you. The path is narrow, follow. " ' Depend upon your own strength, your own exer- tions. Remember that the race is not to the swift, nor the battle to the strong ; but those who persevere to the end shall win the prize. " ' Look not to the right nor to the left, nor back upon the forest ; but keep your eye steadily upon the moun- tain. " ' If you fearlessly follow me through the dark forest windings, you can walk by my side when we emerge into the broad, mountain path ; and when you gain the dizzy heights of yonder pinnacle, you shall be an honored guest within my castle home.' " She said no more, but turned into a path which I had not before observed, and glided noislessly along SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 33 through the windings, which grew broader and pleas- anter, as we progressed in our journey. " Soon I began *fco feel sensible of a gradual ascent ; but it was pleasant and less fatiguing than the narrow forest paths. " My guide turned to me and said, approvingly, ' Thus far you have gained the victory,' and added, as she bent her dark eyes searchingly upon me, " ' The will opens to us the way. W.e have gained the mountain path, and now you are worthy to walk by my side.' if The dark clouds had all disappeared ; the calm blue sky was over us ; the warm, dazzling sunbeams lay, like a flood of golden lava, over the deep rich verdure that crowned the mountain side. " Soft whispering zephyrs, heavy with the fragrance of aromatic flowers, came floating lazily by, mingled with the wild birds' gushing melody from their own native bowers. " Half bewildered with the intoxicating scene, I knew not that I had been making any advancement, till I found myself upon the dizzy heights of the mountain brow. " ' Behold,' said my guide, ' the reward of persever- ance.' " And she reached forth her hand, and waived a glit- tering sceptre over broad plains, upon which the golden sun rays lay in liquid beauty. 34 EPFIBANDi;OK, " I cast my eyes upon the plains below, and a scene more beautiful than imagination had ever portrayed to me, met my wandering vision. " Cities and towns lay there, interspersed with rich vales and flowing streams. Broad fields, where the golden harvest swayed to and fro in the sunlight like the ocean waves. " Deep shady woodlands, where birds of brilliant plumage warbled their delicious songs, all met my bewildered gaze ; and I turned inquiringly to my guide. ' They are yours,' she said, ' the prize is at the end of the race.' " Hadst thou remained in the forest, ere this thou wouldst have been lost in oblivion. Behold the reward of perseverance ! ' She drew from her girdle a laurel wreath, upon which was inscribed, in golden letters, ' fame.' " ' I crown you,' she said,' twining the wreath upon my brow, ' I crown you the rightful monarch here. My castle shall be your fortress, and this lofty pinnacle your throne.' " ' Who art thou ? ' I said, casting myself in be- wildered astonishment at her feet. " Her long flowing mantle fell to the ground, revealing a face and form, so dazzlingly beautiful. Oh ! I can never describe it ; but upon her fair, Parian brow, rested a lustrous crown, upon which glittered, among costly gems, ' Genius.' SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 35 " I sprang to embrace her, and awoke only to find myself lost in the dark forest windings and thorny thickets of poverty, or laying myself hopelessly down upon the fearful brink of the yawning abyss of inaction and despair. But the crown of perseverance I may still obtain, by following the genius of the mountain, the ' I will,' of the forest windings. It is that magical power which will carry us to the pinnacle of fame and for- tune, and spread at our feet the broad harvest fields and golden sheaves, bathed in liquid sunlight, as a reward for all our toil. ".What others have accomplished before me, I can accomplish, I will accomplish. Our dear mother often told us that God would help those who would help themselves. And I believe it. But I must leave you ; this is no place for me. My path to the mountain may be far from here, but I know that the God whom my sainted mother delighted to honor, will guide me to it. "And when I stand upon the mountain's height, reaping the laurels which toil and perseverance have strewn for me, then, my sisters, you shall share with me the bless- ings of Him who has bereaved us, and desolated our home in our life's gushing springtide. Not in anger, I trust, has He shattered our earth-idols ; but in merciful kindness, that we might become heirs with them to an inheritance which no death-king can wrest from us." We prepared as best we could the scanty wardrobe, 36 EFFIEANDT. and when all had been nicely packed within the little valise, then we laid upon the top the tiny Bible, with its shining clasp, which had been our mother's in the days of happy girlhood. And upon a delicate fly-leaf we traced this injunction : " Remember thy mother's instructions, and forget not the teachings which her little Bible contains. They will lead you safely through the dangerous paths of youth, and crown you with honor lofty as heaven, and endurable as eternity." CHAPTER V. THE SEPARATIONS. VISIT OF TWO YOUNG LADIES FROM LOWELL. THEIR GLOWING DESCRIPTIONS OF FACTORY LIFE. MT RESOLVE AND TRIALS. ANOTHER GREAT trial awaited us. Our father's small remittances were not sufficient for the four young and inexperienced girls, who still re- mained in the little cot, nestled so lovingly beneath the shadow of the old oak-tree. There were no manufactories, no needle-work, no straw braiding, near our far-off country home, that we might apply ourselves to the needful task of money- making, in order to sustain ourselves comfortably in our loved, though desolate home ; and we saw no alternative but a separation. Matta, the oldest of us, was a brave, healthy, rosy- cheeked girl, who neither yielded to impossibilities, nor crouched before the tyrant, who swayed his fearful sceptre around our little dwelling. With her to resolve, was to execute. Farmers' wives were busy rith the wheel and the loom, and she met with no obstruction in procuring a place (at fifty cents a week), well suited to her active temperament and genial 38 EFFIEANDi;OR, disposition, with a well-to-do farmer's family, just over the hill, all in sight of the blue smoke which rose in graceful curves through the branches of the old oat? above our cottage home. Then there was little Lula, our baby sister, with knots of shining curls clustering all around her fair brow, like a cloud of sunbeam ; and her pale, fragile sister-mate, deli- cate as the snow-wreath, and sensitive as the trembling aspen. They must be separated. They who had slept in each other's arms almost from infancy; whose every thought and expression had been that of one mind ; whose lessons had been conned from the same book ; who had romped to- gether, chasing the shadows and the sunbeams upon the green turf, beneath the old oak which shook his heavy branches playfully to the passing zephyrs. They who nightly, with hand clasped in hand, had mingled their voices together in prayer to the God who shelters the motherless lambs -of the flock in the bosom of His divine love. They who had mingled their tears in childish grief over the cold, rigid features of a dead mother, and won- dered if she would not send for them to come to her beautiful home in the far blue sky, that the good angels had prepared for her. Oh, they had been very happy till mother died ; for she had sheltered her little flock with tenderest solici- SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 39 tude, till the death-angel called "her away, and placed upon her brow the dazzling coronet prepared for those who so faithfully perform their earth-mission. But now she could no longer ward off the merciless fangs of the gaunt tyrant, which stalked so fearfully around our quiet home ; and they, our baby sisters, must be separated, and seek a shelter by a stranger's fireside. None but God saw the tears that were shed by the flickering flames of our desolate hearthstone. None but God heard the cries -and prayers of anguish that went up from our bruised and bleeding hearts to Him who heedeth the sparrow's fall, and clothes the lilies of the field in their beautiful raiment. None but God knew how mercilessly the gaunt tyrant clutched at our vitals, or chilled the warm life-blood in our young veins, to satisfy his imperious and relentless demands. And so our baby sisters were separated miles away, and I remained alone in that desolate home. No language can portray the anguish of my heart, as I wept and prayed to the orphan's God for strength to go out into the pitiless world, and to bear meekly the burden which He had laid upon me. I opened the old family Bible ^my mother's Bible to Psalm 91s.t. I felt that the words were prophetic, and arose from my kneeling position comforted and strength- ened in Him who doeth all things well. Some young ladies had just returned from Lowell, and 40 EFFIEANDi;OR, by their glowing descriptions of factory life, induced me, with some of my young associates, to return with them to the busy Spindle City. Always of a delicate" constitution and feeble health, I could not, with Matta, engage in the more hardy employ- ments of domestic life, and I had no means to devote myself to study and the fine arts which I had so ar- dently and hopefully desired. And so I, who had scarcely ever lost sight of my cot- tage home and the old oak swaying its branches so lovingly above it, resolved to venture far away, and become an operative in a cotton mill. The very idea was repulsive to my delicate and sensi- tive nature. Must I go where the learned and the un- learned, the old and young, beauty and ugliness, virtue and vice, all mingled together in one common mass, with no nice distinctions by the lookers-on, but all placed upon the low vulgar grade of " Operatives ? " But there seemed no alternative ; necessity compelled me, and I had only to obey her mandates. I sought the little room where my mother's last look rested upon me ; where her last breath embalmed my brow like a holy anointing from the spirit world. And there I knelt and prayed to Him who had said, " When thy father and thy mother forsake thee, then I will take thee up." I there and then committed myself to his merciful care, and felt that my trust was not in vain. SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 41 It seemed that the spirit of my sainted mother was hovering over me, and that she would be my guardian angel in a far-off stranger's home. I looked around the apartment for some little relic of my mother's, that I might treasure it as a sacred me- mento of her and my childhood's home, when far away. A dress lay carefully folded within the little wardrobe. It was the last dress that my mother had worn in life. I would take that, and every time I looked upon it I should see my mother, I should feel her presence with me.* . Oh, how sacred it seemed to me then ; no eyes but mine should look upon it, no stranger's hand should dese- crate it ; for, sacred as the pearl of great price, I would keep and preserve it. Then, after penning a little son- net to my " Childhood's Home," I bade it a long and sad farewell. I will here repeat a few verses, and then pro- ceed with my story. ADIEU, MY CHILDHOOD'S HOME. Adieu, my childhood's home, adieu ! My grotto, streamlet, dell, My parting tribute is to you, A tear and sad farewell. Beneath thy shades I've wandered free, Nor care, nor sorrow knew, No longer bloom thy joys for me My childhood's home, adieu ! * That dress is mine still. 4* 42 EFFIEANDIJOR, Adieu each towering, misty height, By our familiar bowers My mountain streams arrayed in light, Where laves the sunlit flowers. How oft thy undulating notes, Low murmuring to the sea, Entranced, with witching power, my thoughts In dreams of ecstasy. Though other scenes call me away, No joys my bosom fill ; For memory, with her chast'ning ray, Will twine around me still. While soft o'er each endearing scene, Hope spreads her'magic wand ; Dispelling clouds that darkly seem To veil my native land. My childhood's home, to me how fair, Beneath thy wildwood shade, Where with a parent's shielding care And joyous heart I strayed ; Thy skies reflect a deeper blue, When mirrored in the tide, And brighter glows the sunset hue That tints the even-tide. When twilight o'er the azure sky Her soft enchantments throw, And summer zephyrs passing by Where strains all gently flow, Like lute-strings swept by fairie's hand ' Far o'er the clear blue sea ; Thus o'er me steals my native land, Sweet memories of thee. SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 43 If e'er from dreary wanderings I reach my childhood's home, Then naught from my owu mountain streams Shall tempt my feet to roam ; I leave thee with a kind farewell, While tears mine eyes bedew, And fond emotions inly swell, My childhood's home, adieu ! You must remember that I was young, and little used to verse-making ; but it was the heart's tributary fare- well, and as such I present it to you. CHAPTER VI. MY JOURNEY TO LOWELL. THE ARRIVAL. FIRST IMPRESSIONS. FIRST INTRODUCTION INTO THE BOARDING-HOUSE AND COT- TON MILL. THREE D.R E A R Y days dreary because the sun had hid his smiles and radiance behind the murky clouds, while the heavy fogs and chilling mists enveloped us like the gloomy folds of a sable pall we were tossed and jostled in an old lumbering stage-coach, which was then the only public conveyance from the home of our nativity to the nearest railroad station, on our way to the Spindle City. Weary and worn, we arrived there just as the setting sun was guilding the tops of the tall steeples which met our longing visions so cheeringly in the distance. We crossed the bridge which spanned the majestic Merrimac, and was soon set down amidst a cluster of long brick blocks, termed by our initiated companions, " Factory Boarding-houses." Then came another trial. There were several of us, " green hands," who had never seen the inside nor the outside of a cotton mill. We could not all find em- ployment in one room or mill ; nor even could we all be provided for within the several mills of one corpo- ration. SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 45 * So it fell to my lot to be the stray lamb again ; and, after a weary and discouraging search, a vacancy was discovered in a weaving room, on the H Corporation, about a mile distant from where my companions had been located. A boarding-house was the next consideration ; but there was no choice in selection. Wherever there was. a vacancy or spare corner in a bed, there I must locate. At last one vacancy was discovered, the only vacancy on the corporation ; for it was the season of gathering in, from hamlet and cot, of youths and maidens desirous . of securing a permanent location through the approach- ing winter. Well, my little trunk found an obscure corner in the " upper front " of No. 5, and I a small space in the narrow bed appropriated to me and a fat, blousy maiden from the old Granite State, who was troubled exceed- ingly with scrofula and salt rheum ; so much so, that I often found it necessary to lay my weary, aching head upon the hard beam, in preference to the pillow which was intended for both our use. Beneath us was a trundle-bed where an old grandma and her foster child found repose. And to the left, another bed in close proximity, occupied by two spinster sisters, who had, years ago, " been through the mill," and could tell us wondrous tales of " reductionSj" and " turnouts," and " stump speeches," and "serenades," and "dona- 46 EFFIEANDi;OR, tions," and " clerical sympathy," and " legal interfei* ence," winding up with a grand stampede back to the loom and spinning-frame, with acknowledgments and promises again to walk worthy of the vocation to which they had been called. 4 Such were my sleeping-room companions of that fac- tory boarding-house. By dint of much consideration and skilful manoeuvring, a seat was provided for me upon a low bench by the side of one of the long tables extending through the dining-hall, where I was seated in a most unceremonious manner between a brawny lassie from the Emerald Isle and a Green Mountain boy, who kept up a continual animosity and sharpshooting of bombshells, in the shape of potato-parings and apple-sauce, taking me, without leave or license, for their wall of defence in the hottest of their hostile affray. In the mean time, while I managed as best I could, by dint of dodging and crouching, to escape the flying mis- siles, my opposite neighbors had taken upon themselves the responsibility of annihilating the meat, vegetables,- and staff of life, sending them all together to oblivion ; for no traces of them were left to the longing vision of a hungry soul. " Every man for himself, Miss, in a factory boarding- house," said a gray-haired man, on witnessing my aston- ishment at the rapidly disappearing edibles. " We should starve on complimentary gentility. There is a SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 47 slice for each, and a slice for all ; but woe to him who tarrieth by the way ; for there are no loaves and fishes, nor the fragments thereof, to be gathered up after the cravings of the multitude have been appeased." In the morning we were hurried from our restless slumbers by the loud booming of the bells to the break- fast table. But the sour bread, rancid butter, and the unpalatable substitute for coffee, sweetened with the sugar of molasses' casks, gave me such a sickening sen- sation, that I turned away with disgust from the sight and steam of such unpalatable preparations. I wept, as I turned with loathing from the untasted food, and my thoughts reverted to the past, when my mother's little hands had prepared the sweet corn-cakes, fresh butter, and bo.wl of rich warm milk for our morn- ing's repast. "All the boarding-houses are hot like this," said a young girl from my own native State, who had been a witness of my tears and loathings and untasted food for several previous mornings. " I have engaged the first vacancy at No. 10. Two of the boarders are already on their notice, and if you wish to a'ccompany me, I will make an engagement for you to-day. There you will find clean dishes, nice warm biscuits, and butter and coffee that even your delicate taste will not turn from with disgust." I eagerly assented to the arrangement, and with the hope of better days in prospective, met more cheerfully 48 EFFIEANDIJOR, the disgusting privations which attended me in that un- congenial and comfortless abiding-place. I found that factory life was not all a pleasant pastime. The whirl and bustle, the din and clatter of machinery, wrought harshly upon my sensitive nerves, causing excruciating headaches, sickening sensations, and long- ings for the peaceful quietude and retirements of my dear native home. Alas ] for the lone wanderer, it would never be home again. A few weeks of preparatory instructions from an experienced weaver, and then I was placed in charge of a pair of looms, beside a girl as young and inexpe- rienced as myself. She had the misfortune of a handsome face, and spent much of her time before the little glass which hung upon the opposite wall. Her work was neglected, and oft the threadless shuttle would bound with fearful velocity into the warp which I had just managed, with the assistance of an older hand, to coax into tolerable running order, and before I could prevent the mischief, her shuttle and mine, like fearful opponents, were cutting down and making waste of the threads and fabric I had so wearily and hopefully attended. Then, when all was in running order again, a fearful whiz and stunning blow from its neglected and threadless mate, would send me reeling and fainting to my seat, with a fearful contusion upon my brow or temples, bursting with pain and indignation at the neglect which SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 49 had wrought upon me so much trouble and toil. In every way, I seemed in momentary peril of my limbs or life. If I sought refuge from the flying shuttles on the other side, then the swift revolving of the whizzing clogs and heavy belts would draw, like the treacherous whirl- pool, my garments into their fearful embrace. Or the belts would break loose from the heavy drums, and, like the fiery fangs of the flying dragon, clutch me fearfully in their angry grasp. After a while things assumed a more cheering aspect. The handsome girl, who was only a " spare hand," resigned her place to the rightful owner, a quiet, intel- ligent girl, who had been on a visit to her friends and home in a neighboring State. I had become more accustomed to the whjz and whirl of the machinery, and had learned the art not only of keeping my threads and spirits up, but of dodging a flying shuttle, and the treacherous fangs of the sweep- ing dragon. I left my " bed and board " at No. 5, and refused longer to remain a target for the Green Mountain boy and his Irish lassie. No. 10 was a home for young ladies, intelligent and church-going young ladies. The dishes were clean, meats palatable, the beds and rooms kept in perfect order, and every thing as quiet and domesticated as a pious maiden lady could wish or devise. CHAPTER VII. LETTERS FROM HOME. MATTA'S MARRIAGE. SUDDEN DEATH OF OUR FATHER. MY TREASURE. A BROTHER'S GRAVE. A YEAR PASSED away, and I was begin- ning to feel at home and happy, often receiving sisterly testimonials from Matta, Minnie, and Lula ; and sometimes I would make them returns in the shape of a few dollars, nicely secured within the folds of my little note. One day two letters came to my address. One was from dear, dear brother, written in a cheerful, hopeful, encouraging tone, characteristic of his noble, ardent, and sanguine nature ; telling me how rapidly he was progressing in his studies, under the tuition of his kind instructors and benefactors ; pointing me hopefully for- ward to the future, when the little scattered flock would once more nestle lovingly together within the same fold, never again to be driven out by the grim, meagre tyrant, Want. The other was from Matta; her's was written in a free, easy, hopeful tone, as they ever had been, inform- ing me of her late marriage with a young mechanic. SEVEN YEAKS IN A COTTON MILL. 51 " You will be. surprised at this, Rosa," she said, "knowing as you did of my previous engagement to Walter Seaton, who has just entered upon his profession of M. D. I have kept you in ignorance of all that has transpired in regard to us for the past year, fearing that it might give you unnecessary pain. But now it is all over, and the future, perhaps, will show us that it was all for the best. " Walter, you know, belonged to a family which made some pretensions to aristocracy. His sister had married a man who lived in a fine house and kept an elegant carriage. She can assume the position of a lady of fashion, with servants at her command, to do her every bidding. " When she had become acquainted with our dis- tressed situation, and learned the fact that I, her brother's intended, was a hireling, she forbade, upon the authority of an elder sister, all further intercourse between us, on pain of her everlasting displeasure. " Walter was under some obligations to her for money remittances during his collegiate acquirements, and also had the promise of assistance in commencing his medical profession. " He saw no alternative but acquiescence to her un- reasonable demands ; and forthwith sought an interview with me, desiring me to release him from the vows we had previously and sacredly plighted. 52 EFFIEANDIJOR, " I would hold no unwilling captives," I said. " If freedom from those sacred vows would make him honored and happy, then he should be free. But," I added, " Retributions sometimes follow hard upon the heel of the inconstant and faithless. He who has reg- istered our vows will judge between us. " You remember Ada Morton, that cold, proud, contemptuous girl who spurned the very dust beneath her dainty feet. Well, in all Seclusivale, not one had even dared to bow before the regal throne of her forbid- ding haughtiness. " Walter, or rather his wealthy sister, thought that she might be a fitting bride to bear his honored name ; and so, after a few preliminary negotiations, they made immediate preparations for the nuptials, which were to be celebrated a day or two before his removal to P , a section made vacant by the demise of a former occupant. " The wedding, I understand, was a magnificent affair ; for Madam R , the sister of the groom, spared no pains or money to make it all her haughty vanity could desire. " And I am married too, and shall soon be the mis- tress of an humble, though I trust a happy home." A hasty postscript was appended as follows : " Dear Rosa, the painful intelligence has just reached me, since writing the above, of the sudden death of our father from a malignant fever. SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 53 " Erst a stout, erect, and portly man, he had assumed the stoop and debility of age, and, therefore, became an easy 'victim to the fell destroyer, death. " When, oh when will death's ravages cease amongst us? When will his fearful commission be withdrawn from our little band ? When will the wail of anguish eease to go out from our bereaved and bleeding hearts ? When will the pall-like gloom, which for years has over- shadowed us, be cheered by the dawning of prosperity and hope ? " Above these dark clouds may be the sunbeams which will dry up our tears and light with joy our future pathway. " Let us hope and trust in the orphan's God, and claim his promises, which are sure as eternity, and unchanging as the Rock of Ages." Again I must drink of the wormwood and the gall, and quaff alone its bitterest dregs. Those who had mourned with me in former bereavements were far away. There were none to understand my grief or to sympathize with me in that time of bitter distress. Oh that I could fly away to that dear, deserted home, and tell my anguish to its silent walls with the tears and wailings of my orphaned and bleeding heart ! Oh that I could press my aching head and throbbing bosom, to some dear and familiar object of home, the pillow where my mother died, the old arm-chair, or her well-worn Bible on the shelf ! 54 EFFIEANDi;OR, Her dress ! I grasped it eagerly from its secret hiding-place, and drenched it with the scalding tears which gushed up from my breaking heart. My mother was with me ; I felt her presence as visi- bly as when her gentle spirit was clothed with the mortal. How soothing her soft spiritrwhisperings ; how cheering the inspirations which enveloped me, like a halo of light from the golden gates and sapphire throne of the Im- maculate. Many times before, I had wept and prayed over that little memento, and I always felt that my mother was with me, soothing, jcomforting, and encouraging me through my lone, rough, shadowy pathway. Worlds of wealth would not, could not purchase the garment which my mother laid aside for her burial robes and an angel's garb. I was no longer alone. Every day some sweet vision of the departed loved ones flitted before me with soft, soothing, encouraging whis- perings ; and, with renewed vigor and hope, I resumed my daily tasks, with the assurance that my mother's God would lead me safely through the rugged paths of life to her blessed abode in the happy spirit-world. Several months passed away in a calm, quiet, monot- onous way, for factory life is one continual round of sameness, year after year, save now and then a new comer, or a vacancy caused by the sickness, death, or absence of faces, with which our vision had been famil- iar for days and weeks and months before. SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 55 I had replenished niy wardrobe, and accumulated quite a little sum, aside from the small remittances made now and then to Minnie and Lula. The din and clatter of machinery was no longer an annoyance ; it destroyed the sound of uncongenial voices ; the coarse joke and vulgar song were lost in its familiar din ; and, undisturbed, I could commune with my own heart and the guardian spirits which ever attended me. I relieved much of the dull monotony of factory life with books and pen. Many little sonnets I composed while bending busily over my daily task. One I will repeat to you here. It was a tribute to the brave and noble sailor boy, our brother Frank. A BROTHER'S GRAVE. He has gone to his rest, but 'tis not where the dark pine, The willow and cypress a plaintive dirge sing ; 'Tis not where the wild rose, the sweet-brier and woodbine Around him in silence their rich fragrance fling. No cold sculptured marble is reared for his pillow, No mound marks the spot where he silently sleeps ; For he lies 'neath the dark foamy surf of the billow And naught but the sea-star a watch o'er him keeps. The sea-nymph that rocks on the breast of the ocean, A garland to memory will twine o'er the dead, And cheer by her smiles the rude tempest's commotion, While sweetly she sings o'er his wave-girdled bed. 56 EFFIEANDi;OR, Rest, peacefully rest, beneath thy loved ocean, No more shall thy bark proudly ride o'er the wave ; No more will thy breast beat with raptured emotion, For it lies with the gem 'neath its pearl-crested cave. When the purified throng shall have reached their bright haven, With them may we join in the songs of the blest ; Where no tear dims the eye, and no lone heart is riven Where the weary with God are forever at rest. CHAPTER VIII. OCR LAST BROTHER DIES IN NEW ORLEANS. THE SACRILEGE IN OUR CHILDHOOD'S HOME. MINNIE'S MARRIAGE. LULA WITH ME IN LOWELL. A FEW MONTHS more passed away, and then another letter came, with the astounding in- telligence that our last, our only brother, had been called suddenly, in the bloom of youth and health, to meet his God and the friends who had gone before, to the man- sions of rest in the city of His holiness. He had gone, buoyant with health and youthful antici- pations, with his friend and instructor, to spend the winter in the far South. It was the sickly season. The fever was making fearful ravages throughout the city, sweeping down, like the plague and pestilence, the young and old, rich and poor, bond and free. And before they had been resi- dents of New Orleans three days, my brother and his kind benefactor were filling a stranger's grave. My heart died within me. I could not be comforted. And many and many a day I lay upon my bed almost insensible to every thing but the bereavements which 58 BFFIEANDi;OR, had shrouded my heart and desolated the home of my childhood. Our dear, dear brother ! how hopefully he had parted with us at the cottage door, where the old oak was nod- ding a kindly farewell to the young adventurer. How cheeringly he wrote to us in his absence ; point- ing us forward to a future of pleasure and plenty, when he had become master of the profession for which he was so hopefully striving. Alas, for that future ! no earth- greeting would ever behold it. While we were struggling with the heavy bereavements which had so suddenly and fearfully stricken our young hearts, sacrilegious hands were making fearful ravages within the silent walls of our desolate home. Every choice keepsake and available article was pil- fered, one after another, from thence, till nothing re- mained for the weeping sisters, who were struggling with the bereaving rod and their relentless fate, in a stran- ger's home. Our mother's Bible and chair were stealthily con- veyed to one abode, while other articles of furniture were secreted here and there in other homes, till nothing re- mained to welcome us back but the silent walls and the old oak-tree swaying its branches mournfully above them. Three years had passed away before I returned to my childhood's home, and then the house was gone too, and the old oak-tree. But the graves of some of the loved SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 59 ones were there, and the turf seemed too sacred for my feet to press. With awe and reverence I bowed my head, and watered it with the tears which gushed out from a breaking heart. Matta, soon after her marriage, had removed to a distance ; and Minnie and Luk, were too far away to know aught of what was passing in our little cot. And so the sacrilegious hand was not stayed, till all had been pilfered by those stealthy ravagers. " God ! " I cried, " all this injustice and outrage beneath that Holy Eye which cannot look upon sin with any degree of pleasure ! All this beneath the scales of justice thine own strong hand poises above them and their wicked acts ! All this within the precincts of civil- ization and the Holy Bible, which says, ' Thou shalt not steal nor covet ! " I knew that all those sinful acts had been registered by Him who judges the people in righteousness. And although His judgments are sometimes slow, yet they are sure ; and are like the heavy mill-stone, grinding to pow- der the wicked transgressors. Minnie had grown up a handsome, laughing girl, of a mild and pleasant disposition, graceful and attractive in deportment, and, while yet young, was married to a handsome youth, and removed many miles away from our native home. 60 EFFIEANDi;OR, Lula, our baby-pet, now a tall, graceful, intelligent girl, accompanie^ me to the Spindle City. But the confinements of factory life, exposure from the heated rooms to the cold atmosphere and fierce storms of winter, wrought so fearfully upon her delicate con- stitution, that there was no alternative but to abandon her labors in that locality, and return to the more healthy and congenial pursuits of domestic country life. She therefore bade me an affectionate adieu, and re- turned to Matta, who was the happy mother of a prattling girl, with the roses and sunshine of two laughing sum- mers twined around her fair white brow, to whom she had given the name of our sainted mother, and also of a cherub baby boy, who bore the name of that loved brother who was filling a stranger's grave in a southern clime. Time passed on, and then another letter came ; and, within it, a delicate bridal card, and a tiny flaxen curl carefully secured to the well-filled sheet. The card informed me that our little Lula had given her heart and hand to a young and enterprising me- chanic, and was already mistress of a very pretty home, in the village of M , with the best regards of her husband and self to sister Rosa, and a cordial invitation that she might soon be one of their happy group. " You are lonely there, Rosa," she continued, " and need the quiet repose and sympathy of our home and hearts, and also the pure, invigorating air of the healthful SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 61 country. Come to us. There is room in our home and hearts, and dear, dear Frank wants to see his sister Rosa." ' That little flaxen ringlet ! "0 Matta ! Matta ! my heart bleeds for you. Has the death-angel indeed found his way to your happy home ? Has he laid his 'cold icy hand upon the pure white brow and laughing lips of your first-born ? Has he hushed th'e childish prattle and the soft pattering of tiny feet upon the cottage floor ? Has he closed those lustrous eyes, so pure and saint-like in expression, and folded the slender, waxen fingers nerve- lessly upon the pulseless bosom ? Has he pierced your heart anew, and given, you yet another cup to quaff the gall of bitterness to the very dregs ? Oh, stay ! stay thy hand, thou mighty destroying conqueror ! Let thy past desolations suffice thee, which thou hast wrought in the home of our childhood ! And spare, oh spare the little remaining remnant from thy scourg- ing rod." Many a bitter tear I wept for that household pet. Many a heartfelt invocation I sent up to our God and her God, for that young and sorrowing mother, that her home, as ours had been, might not be darkened and desolated by that fell destroyer, death. Sdon after Lula's marriage I received" an. invitation to go to the South, or rather to the south-west. But to me 62 EFFIEANDi;OR, there seemed no place like a New England home, even though it was within the crowded walls of a factory boarding-house. I therefore immediately penned a note to the one who had kindly tendered me the invitation, accompanied by the following lines, suggested by the above solicitation. MY OWN NEW ENGLAND HOME. Oh, tell me not of distant climes, Where palms their broad leaves wave, And where the weeping willow twines Its branches o'er the waves ; Oh, tell me not of skies so fair, And deeply shaded bowers, And say not that the balmy air Breathes o'er ambrosial flowers. Oh, tell me not that crystal streams Flow o'er their beds of pearl, O'er placid lakes the moon's bright beams Their witching charms unfurl. I love New England's hills and dales, Her foamy, broad blue sea ; The rocky shores and fertile vales, All, all have charms for me. Our skies are bright and lovely too, And health floats on the breeze ; And gorgeous is the sunset hue, O'er our transparent seas. SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 63 These craggy heights more beauteous are Than prairies broad can be ; New England still thy home is dear, Land of the brave and free. Oh, lovely are these snow-capped hills And wild-wood shades to me ; There's music in the rippling rills, _ A charm is o'er the sea. No sable slave doth till thy soil, Sweet land of liberty ; No whip-lash wakes to daily toil, For all thy sons are free. Land where the Indian's warwhoop rang, Land where their chieftains bled ; And where their vanquished warriors sang The wild dirge o'er their dead. Our fathers, in thy forests drear, Have fought and died for thee ; New England still thy home is dear, Land of the brave and free. No more shall. Paugus' darkening form Thy peaceful homes invade ; From Lovell's band a dauntless arm The chieftain low hath laid. He sleeps where Saco's waters flow, Beneath the tall pine-tree ; And warmer hearts for thee now' glow, Land of the brave and free. CHAPTER VIII. RETURN TO THE SCENES OF MY CHILDHOOD. LDLA'g HOME. MATTA'S BHtEAVEMENTS. LULA'S LETTERS ; HER FRANK is DYING. ONE YEAR had sped by since Lula's marriage, .and my lone heart yearned to greet her again, and visit once mof| the scenes of my early childhood, where the senseless form of my mother was silently moulder- ing. And so one bright summer's morning I left the din and clatter of machinery, the noise and bustle of a factory boarding-house, and was soon out of sight of the tall spires which reared themselves so loftily above the busy Spindle City. Lula met me with joyful acclamations and sisterly greetings at the door of her pretty home, and proudly placed within my arms an infant cherub boy, her boy, the first-born of my baby sister. It seemed but yesterday since we r<5mped together, and, in our childish glee, chasing the shadows and the sunbeams beneath the swaying branches of 'the old oak- tree. It seemed but yesterday since we had wept together SEVEN YEARS IN "A COTTON MILL. . 65 over the rigid features of a dying mother, and nestled closer together, a little motherless band, by the silent hearthstone of our desolate home. | And now she, the youngest of the fold, herself a proud, happy mother and wife, and mistress of a pretty and iJeasant abode. * " I have named him Frank, Rosa. Is. it not pretty ? That is the name of my dear, dear husband, you know, and to me the sweetest name in all the world." I pressed him tenderly to my trembling lips, and bathed his fair young brow with the tears which welled up from my bursting heart. For dear to me as Lula herself, was her infant cherub boy. I was pleased with her home, with the neatness, regularity, and promptness with which every thing was accomplished in their due season. We chatted of olden tunes, sang together the songs we used to love, rambled hand in hand through the green meadows, plucked the delicious berries which grew in tempting luxuriance at our feet, and had long drives together, over the hills and far away, in the little light vehicle which her Frank had manufactured with his own hands." And then we visited Matta together. Another bird- ling warbled its soft preludes in her dear home. It was a girl, too, like the first-born she had laid away beneath 6* 66 EFFIEANDi; OR, the silent turf, where the form of our sainted mother was reposing. " This little pledge of our earth-love I shall name for you, dear Rosa," she said, as she laid it tenderly within my arms. " We love it very, very much ; and more, because we fear that the death-angel will wrest ifcfrom us as he did our first-born darling babe." Then little Ernest, who bore the name of our dead brother, came shyly to my side, and laid his little dim- pled hand coaxingly within my own. In the first glad joy of sisterly greeting, he had been overlooked-; but now he raised his little winsome face to mine, around which the long flaxen curls were streaming in sunny beauty, while the little plump lips half pouting, half laughing, were temptingly held up for " aunty's kiss." I pressed his dimpled cheeks and flaxen curls wildly to my throbbing bosom, accompanied with such a shower of stifling kisses, that he was 'glad to beat a retreat, and screen himself within the folds of his mother's dressing- gown. A few weeks were spent with Matta and her babes, and then we hied us away to Minnie's abode in the city of P . Minnie had no babes to claim our share of atten- tion ; but she was a light, joyous, happy creature, making sunshine and gladness wherever she went, SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 67 with her bright smiling face and free gushing laugh- ter. And so in Minnie's home the days sped on with electric velocity, till the cold, bleak winds of autumn swept threateningly from the distant mountains, warning me of the near approach of winter, and the necessity of resuming my labors in my factory home. And, back again, the weeks and months sped on in the same monotonous way as formerly. The same kindly greetings and familiar faces met me as erst, passing to and fro. In the same little screen, stood my plants and flowers, and just above them hung the little mirror, where I had so often smoothed my hair and "laved my heated brow with the cooling draught. The same shining shuttles were flying as merrily as ever through the forest of snowy threads, always es- caping with wonderful tenacity the threatening thump, thump, thump of the heavy lathe. The whirl and whiz of belts and clogs, all seemed like the greetings of cherished friends. I wrote and sang and chatted, fearless of listening critics, and my daily invocation's to Heaven's throne were heard only by the great Father, as they arose from my lips, while bending busily over my daily task. It was midwinter, and the wail of anguish again reached me from Mattie's far-off home. Little Ernest 68 EFFIEANDIJOR, had fallen a victim to a fatal disease, and was already clothed in a seraph's shining garb, roaming with his sainted sister over the fields ambrosial in the happy spirit-world. Mattie's home was again darkened, and her heart crushed by the bereaving rod. Where could she fly for consolation ? Earth had no balm for those bleeding wounds. Many a day I wept over the fate of poor little Ernest, and mourned for the bereaved mother, till the spirit-whisper- ings answered, " It is well with the child." The dark, fearful shadow of the death-angel was already nearing the threshold of Lula's happy home. That fell destroyer, consumption, was clutching his fatal fangs into the heart-depths of her young and idol husband. Yet he came so stealthily, so treacherously, that they knew not an enemy was stalking around their dwelling, till they heard the ominous clanking of his iron heel, and the dark shadow of his gaunt form fell threateningly upon their hearts and home. Then a letter reached me from Lula's home, saying entreatingly, " Do come to me, Rosa ; my heart is break- ing. I cannot bear this great affliction alone. Come to me, for the hand of God is laid heavily upon me. "Why, oh why must it ever be thus, that our heart's cherished ones, our idols, must ever be wrested from us, when we cling to them with such idolatrous devotion ? SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 69 " I cannot part with dear, dear Frank ; he is my world, my light, my life, my heaven below. And little Frank is just beginning to climb upon his knees, and lisp his name so prettily too. Oh, our home has been a little paradise. Must it be shrouded in the gloom of death and the tomb ? " I made immediate preparations to go to Lula, hoping and praying that the angel of death might pass them by ; that he would stay his hand, ere the light of their happy home had forever departed from her. They had been so happy together. I could not think he was dying. CHAPTER, X. DEATH OF LULA's CHEETTB B&Y. HER HUSBAND'S TRIUMPHANT DEATH. HER HOME MADE DESOLATE. IN A FEW DAYSI stood upon the threshold of my sister's dwelling. No joyful acclamations reached my ear, as I cautiously raised the latch to gain admittance to the room where we last parted one little year ago, she a happy wife and mother, with the roses and sunshine of youth and health upon her fair white brow, little dreaming that the sunlight would so soon be darkened by the heavy clouds of sorrow, or that the roses would fade and wither beneath the cypress-wreath and badges of bereavement and death. I entered. No one saw my approach, for a mightier than I had preceded me ; and they were bowing in hushed awe and speechless silence before the dark sceptre he wielded commandingly before them. He was no stranger to me. Many times I had seen him enter the little cot which erst nestled so lovingly beneath the old oak-tree. Many times that dark sceptre had severed a link from out our happy band, and driven the dancing sunlight from our hearts and home. And he was the same, the very same in that little darkened SEVEN YEAKS IN. A COTTON MILL. 71 room, where Lula was kneeling in hopeless grief beside the couch of her only, her idol boy. . How sweet he looked, as he lay there in the still repose of death ; his soft white lids drooping over the marble cheek ; his waxen fingers clasped lovingly over a pulseless breast ; his innocent prattlings all hushed by the cold, icy fingers of death ; and his delicate limbs shrouded in the habiliments of the tomb. How the pent-up fountains of that mother's heart gushed forth in unrepressed and uncontrollable grief, as she knelt there with her cold white hand pressing con- vulsively its pulseless brow. Grief and despair were throwing around her their dark, impenetrable shroud. She saw her child torn away from her yearning heart and shielding bosom, and the dark and silent tomb yawning to receive it. Neighbors and friends were gathered around her with tears of sympathy and words of condolence ; but she re- fused to be comforted. Oh that our angel-mother could fold her wings around her stricken child, and, in a still small voice, breathe words of sweet consolation into her troubled ear as oft she had to mine. I felt that that angel-mother was already hovering around us ; and I prayed that her soft, soothing in- spirations might calm the deep anguish, the* crushing agony, of Lula's bleeding heart. Oh that hope might gleam to her through the dim, 72 EFFIEANDIJOR, dark distance. That with an eye of faith she might penetrate the dark clouds of despair ; and, far beyond, see the etherial form of our sainted mother clothed in a garb of dazzling beauty, bearing, within her snowy pin- ions, her infant babe safely within the golden gates of the New Jerusalem, to repose in her sainted bosom free from the sins, the sorrows, and sufferings of this lower earth. " Lula," I whispered, as I twined my arm caressingly around her neck, " be firm in the strength of Abraham's God ; for it is well with the child." Lula laid her head upon my throbbing bosom, and sob- bed aloud. " Rosa ! my heart is breaking for my darling babe." How many a mother has knelt and wept as despairingly as Lula did, over the pale features of a darling, an only babe, made lifeless by that fearful scourge, the scarlet fever. How many families have been swept away by its de- vastating power. How many villages have been desolated by its sweeping breath and fiery fangs. Well may a mother tremble, and press more closely to her bosom her darling babes, when she hears the sound of his chariot wheels in the- far-off distance. He is a mighty conqueror ; his shafts are swift and -fatal to tfie sweet heart-blossoms a mother's love has nourished with the tenderest care and fondest solicitude. They bore her household pet to the little vault which was SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 73 opened to receive him. And then Lula returned, with a breaking heart, to perform her mission of love beside the couch of her invalid husband. How softly and shadow-like she moved around the darkened apartment, lest her slightest foot-fall might arouse him from a momentary forgetfulness of his tor- turing disease. How tenderly her soft hand laved his burning brow, or held the cooling beverage to his parched and fevered lips. How carefully she adjusted the downy pillows so that he might recline in a position of greater ease and repose. And through the dark and stilly night hours she hov- ered around the couch of the restless sufferer, perform- ing, ever and anon, some act of love ; never herself indulging in needful repose while her services were re- quired at his side, or her hand could alleviate one pain, or perform one more act of tenderness to the suffering one. But her tenderest care could not restore him, her love could not detain him, her tears and prayers could not soften the mandates of the death-king, who strode threat- eningly around their dwelling, and rapped impatiently at the door of their little bridal chamber. " my husband, you must not, you will not, leave me here alone ! You cannot die while my heart beats so fondly for you. My love must detain you. The death- 74 EFFIEANDI. king must not enter our little home again, and wrest you from my bleeding bosom." " Jesus calls me, dear Lula. I fear not the death- king ; for an angel-band will bear me safely to the man- sion he has prepared for me in the spirit-world. I shall only change the mortal for the immortal ; only exchange weakness for strength ; sorrow and pain for the glories of heaven. I shall not be far from you, Lula. I will watch over you, comfort and counsel you, till we mingle our notes of praise, with myriad angel voices, to God and the Lamb in the happy spirit- world. Be" comforted, Lula, you will meet me there soon, never, no never to part again." And thus he passed away from earth, and Lula, wid- owed and childless, bowed meekly to the bereaving rod. But the shaft went home to the heart's core, and no earth-balm could heal the wound it made. How desolate was her heart when she returned from the graves of her idols to her cheerless home. Alas ! for Lula it was home no longer. Her tears had not been stayed ; her heart-meanings were not hushed, ere the relatives, who had long cov- eted the little wealth which her husband had accumulated by persevering industry, took measures to secure it to themselves ; and even to wrest from her the widow's mite, lawfully hers, by false representations and stealthy conveyances of valuable articles from the manufacturing establishment of her departed husband. SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 75 And so Lula once more was penniless, homeless, and alone, with crushed spirits, a bleeding heart, and en- feebled constitution. To Matta's home then she fled, till health and strength should once more enable her to wrestle with the heavy billows of adversity which were surging so heavily and surely against the little bark, that lay wrecked and disabled upon the bleak, barren rocks of her stormy life-sea. Minnie had removed far away. Many months her delicate constitution had been yielding slowly, but surely, to that fell-destroyer of youth and beauty, consumption. One day a letter came to us. It was in a stranger's hand, but the fearful forebodings of our hearts told us too truly what it contained. Minnie, too, was dead. Her free, gushing joyousness was hushed, and the sunshine of her happy smiles had gone out from her pleasant home. We mourned for our gentle Minnie, as we had mourn- ed for those who had gone before ; and wept that she, too, must fill a stranger's grave, far, far away from the scenes and associations of our happy childhood. Three of us then was all that remained of that once numerous family ; and which, we knew not, would be the next victim to that fell and relentless destroyer. We felt that his cravings would not be appeased, till he had sucked the last life-drop from the hearts he had yet spared in the shattered remnant of that hapless family. CHAPTER XI. I RETURN TO THE SPINDLE CITY. CHANGES IN NUMBER TEN. A PLEASANT COMPANION. LITTLE WEEPING WILLOW. ONCE MORE I returned to the Spindle City ; and as my foot again pressed the threshold of that old familiar home, No. 10, a prayer went up with heart- felt thankfulness to the orphan's God, that there was yet this asylum left to shelter the lone wanderer and heart- stricken orphan. Many times it had changed occupants since I had sought its quiet, protecting roof. Kindly hearts and fa- miliar faces had often departed, with a tearful farewell, from those pleasant associations, again to gladden the homes of their childhood, or to diffuse the light of love and devotion in the homes and hearts of those they had chosen, for weal or woe, through the journey of shadows and sunbeams in life's pilgrimage. Such changes had taken place in my recent absence, and in my pleasant sleeping apartment, none but strange faces awaited to greet my return. So Miss Gourdon, my old friend and mistress of the house informed me, after her kindly greetings and motherly congratulations on my safe return. SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 77 " They have already procured places, and are already quite factoryfied, with the exception of the little pale, drooping Effie Lee. The girls call her the ' Weeping Willow.' She has been here but a few days, and hardly made an effort to procure employment. She seems very sensitive and friendless; and I am so glad that you have come, for I know that your sympathies will be enlisted in her favor, as also your influence in behalf of her welfare." I quickly followed the coachman with my luggage, and bade him leave it in the hall, outside the door of my sleeping apartment. My heart was gushing with sym- pathy for the lone one. But when I entered that old, familiar apartment, and my eyes rested upon the droop- ing form of the unknown, my sympathies found vent in a gush of unsuppressed tears. She sat at my own little writing-table ; her head bowed low, her face leaning upon her clasped hands, concealed by a heavy fall of bright golden tresses, resembling a cloud of sunlight resting upon a lily bed, surrounded by the sable drapery of the storm-cloud. She did not raise her head, and I knew by the half- suppressed sob and the heavy throbbing of the bosom, beneath the folds of the sable dress, that she was weep- ing. Aye, weeping tears of bitter arid hopeless bereave- ment. Instinctively I was drawn to her side, and laying my 78 EFFIEANDi;OR, hand caressingly upon the soft curls which shaded her throbbing temples, I whispered tenderly, " A little home- sick, my dear, I think ; but it will soon pass away, and you will even learn to love the scenes and associations which at first seem so uncongenial and repulsive to a delicate and sensitive nature. " It is what I call the orphan's home ; a resort for the poor and friendless. I hail it with gratitude to the great Father, who is also the orphan's God, that He has endowed men with the means, ability, and disposition, to erect such institutions of industry, where any and all may acquire a competence, independent and free from the degradation which charitable obligation demands. " Miss Gourdon has told me that you are a stranger here, without even an acquaintance to give you the warm hand of friendship, or a kindly word of encourage- ment, in this eventful era of your young life, which has elicited my warm sympathies in your behalf, as it shall my influence, in procuring for you the situation which you desire." She raised her head, and pressed convulsively my cool palm to her burning brow. " Oh ! " she articulated, " I am alone, alone in the wide world. Not one remains to whom my heart can claim kindred. All, all are gone, and this heart, this life, is oh so desolate ! " Why, oh why was I left to tread this dark, thorny life-path alone alone ? " SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 79 " Nay, not alone," I said, " for they are all with thee still, that household band ; and God, even the great Jeho- vah, holds thee by the right hand of His power and mercy." The welcome sound of the tea-bell rang merrily through the hall, and hastily wiping the tear-drops from the swollen cheeks of my little protege, I drew her arm affectionately within my own, and hastened to my old, familiar seat in the dining-hall below. Miss Gourdon smiled a kindly greeting as we entered, and introduced me as the Rosa Lyrid she had been ex- pecting to occupy the bed and room which had formerly been appropriated to my use. " I did not wait for your permission, Rosa," she said, " in the selection of your lodging companion, for I felt that you would be just the ones of all the world, the very best friends imaginable. " And I hardly know which to congratulate the most ; you Rosa, for having found one on whom you can lavish the love and sympathy of your warm heart, or the shrinking, sensitive, tearful Effie, who can lean upon your kindly arm, and grow strong, and hopeful, and happy, 'neath your encouraging smiles and sisterly affec- tion." " Congratulate me, Mother Gourdon, for having found one who will suffer me to act in the double capacity of friend and sister. 80 BFFIBANDIJOK, " Yes, we will be sisters, Effie dear, as well as friends and room-mates. For how truly can our hearts sympa- thize with each other in the sorrows and bereavements which have desolated our homes, and twined our brows with the cypress wreath of lonely orphanage." Effie's large blue eyes glistened with hopeful tears, as they beamed with a look of gratitude upon me. Her fair, white, transparent brow grew placid and serene, a delicate -tinge suffused her cheek, while a faint smile played alternately around the dimples of her pretty mouth. After answering ^the many questions of Mother Gour- don, in relation to the sorrowful events which had transpired in my absence, of Lula's bereavements and her desolate home, we repaired again to the cosy little room appropriated to our use. Very little etiquette or formality is served up amongst factory girls, whether they compose the same household circle, or mingle with the mass in the factory yard. Wherever they meet, reserve and shyness give place to pleasant greetings and sisterly familiarity. And taking advantage of this privilege, I said, " It will be one whole hour before bell time yet, Effie ; and, with your permis- sion, we will spend it in making ourselves a little better acquainted with each other, by relating some of the incidents of our sad, eventful lives. " And so you must gratify my curiosity first," I con- SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 81 tinued in a cheerful tone, twining my arm affectionately around her snowy neck, as I seated myself by her side, " by telling me how such a little, sensitive, shrinking creature as you seem to be, ever found the way from the Pine-tree State to our busy Spindle City." Effie smiled mournfully, while the tears started afresh to her clear blue eyes. In a moment she mastered her emotions, and said, " Oh, it is a sad, sad story ; but I feel that it will be a relief to unburden my heart to one who can, from experience, sympathize with my loneliness and orphanage." CHAPTER XII. EFFIE LEE'S GLOWING DESCRIPTION OF HER CHILDHOOD'S HOME. ESQUIRE STONEHEABT'S PAUPERS. " ll/T ^ FATHER was tfnce an enterprising -L-'J- mechanic, and being a superior workman, soon accumulated a handsome little fortune which seemed the sure precursor to wealth and an elevated position in the ranks of the world. It is an old saying, and I believe a true one, that misfortunes never come single-handed. Nevertheless, it proved true in relation to my father and his little competence. " A fire occurred which proved very disastrous in the village where he was located, and with one fell swoop it took all that my father possessed, with the exception of the lives of his darling ones. " When my father became fully sensible of the ruin and desolation which had befallen him, and saw the morn- ing sunlight smiling mockingly upon the thick smoke and charred timbers of the elegant home his own industry had reared, it completely unmanned him. " Many weeks he lay bereft of strength and reason, and when at last they returned to him, they brought not SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 83 back his former hopeful aspirations and energetic will, which had characterized him in his previous efforts. He was physically and mentally shattered by the sad catas- trophe which had beggared him. " Yes, my father was penniless, and their only means of support through his long and tedious illness was pro- vided by public charity. " One evening, just as my father had begun to venture out a little, assisted by my mother, they were surprised by the entrance and introduction of a tall, coarse-fea- tured, hard-fisted man, whom my father at once recog- nized as one of the officials of his native town. " My father recoiled with horror at the sight of him, for a presentiment that he had not yet drank off the dregs of the bitter cup, rushed over him with irresisti- ble and overpowering force. With a groan, which wells up only from a broken and bleeding heart, he sank back fainting upon the throbbing bosom of my gentle mother. " ' Is this the reception I meet with, hey, boy ? ' said the official with an insulting leer, * when I come to help you out of your troubles ? Come, I am going to take you back to B ; I knew you could not get along without us. The fact is we have had a town meeting, and Esquire Stoneheart has consented to take you. " ' He said that he would take you at the lowest possi- ble price, and he has made a bargain this time, I swow, and is in a deuced hurry to have the pay-roll in black and white upon his logbook and ledger.' 84 EFFIEANDIJOR, " And he fastened his small, snaky eyes, with an in- sulting, licentious glare upon my sensitive mother, who recoiled with horror from his rude gaze. " ' Come, Lee,' he continued, ' bestir yourself, you'll find that you have got precious little time to waste in conniptions ; for I shall start with you to-morrow morn- ing, whether you will or no, and place you under good protection for a while or so, I reckon.' " The full force of his assertions came like the scathing lightning to those heart - stricken and desolate ones. And words have no power to express the anguish which those assertions conveyed to their hearts. " They were paupers, and had been knocked down under the hammer of the auctioneer, like cast-off clothing or more worthless refuse. " ' Is there no way of escape, dear George ? no al- ternative ? ' asked my mother, as the door closed upon the tall, gaunt form of him who had come to deal this last and heavy blow. " ' Alas ! none, I fear, my precious wife. You know that I for many years have been an orphan, left to hew my way alone through the rough sandstones of life ; and your father is dead also, and the portion which he left you is devoured by the greedy flames. " ' Whither shall we go ? to what turn for comfort or assistance, but to Him who doeth all things well ? Let us trust Him, my gentle wife, and may-be we shall find him all-sufficient. SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 85 " ' We must go with this man ; I see no alternative." It will, I fear, be long before I recover my health suffi- ciently to do aught for the comfort or well-being of my family ; and you, dearest, will soon need the most deli- cate attentions, which a sick and beggared husband cannot tender you.' " ' Talk not of me, dear George ; for whither thou goest, I will 1 go,' said my mother. ' I will never repine, though fate deals harshly with us, if so be that we are not sepa- rated by misfortune, or the stern, relentless hand of death. " ' Yes ; I will go, hoping that you will soon recover your health ; and then, with our united efforts, we shall soon be able to raise ourselves from this mortifying deg- radation. " ' Let us, with microscopic faith, penetrate these dark clouds which hang so ominously around us, and look trustingly and hopefully into the future. " ' We will not always be thus. The hill is before us ; we must either remain inactive at the base, or go up. The ascension will be easier, when we make it hand in hand together, dearest. " ' You have yet to learn the energy, courage, and perseverance of your wee-pet wife. I already feel my- self a David nay, more ; were fifty giants in the way to impede my progress, I could slay them all, and lay them lifeless at my feet. " ' Courage, George ; though the waters are dark and 86 EFFIBANDi;OR, 'turbid through which we must pass, I know there are green fields beyond, and flowers and sunshine, and, over all, a calm, cloudless sky. '"I fear not now to beat back and struggle with the dark waves of this turbid stream ; we shall soon be be- yond it, and so happy.' " The morning dawned, and they were hurried from their couch, where they had spent a sleepless night of intense anxiety and bitter anguish, and bidden to make their preparations as brief as possible, as the magistrate was in haste to proceed on his journey. " Neither my father or mother tasted aught of the food which had been prepared ; and they even turned from it with loathing and disgust. " ' Never mind,' said the dignitary. ' A day or two of hard riding, through this sharp November air, will whet their dainty teeth, I'll warrant me. " ' Never mind the breakfast. They will come around all right, when they get accustomed to Esquire Stone- heart's luxuries. Pooh ! what right have paupers to luxuries ? " * The fact is, we have too many of them to grant them many indulgences. Ha ! ha ! It would take all the funds of Uncle Sam's treasury to buy luxuries for such a host of lazy gormandizers. This way to my con- veyance, gentlefolk,' he said mockingly, as he led the way to the back door. " ' It may be it is not quite so nice as the one you SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 87 used to ride in, and which, unfortunately, was amongst the missing on the night of that dreadful fire ; but it is such as the good fathers of B furnish, when they send abroad to recall their prodigal children to the home which their bounty provides. " ' The fact is, Miss,' he continued, as he placed my mother upon the rough, hard seat, beside her ex- hausted and fainting husband ; ' the fact is, Miss, we live too fast in these degenerate times. We build houses and barns, and add to them greater magnifi- cence than that of Solomon's temple. And then we say we will make unto ourselves a golden idol, that we may worship it, forgetting that there is a jealous God, who, in his anger, can send the scathing fire, and who makes your idols and wealth disappear like chaff before the whirlwind. " ' There, now, we are all right, eh ? ' he continued, as he tucked the scanty corners of the rough blanket around the shivering form of the invalid. " ' A very good day to you, Madam,' he said, raising his whip, and giving a sly nod and wink to the hostess, which she well knew how to understand. ' Take very good care of the children, and don't let them run away before I make another trip east'ard, because I shall be responsible for all the missing ones, you know. " ' The fact is, Miss Lee, I didn't come prepared to take a whole township ; and so I must wait for another cargo and further orders.' 88 EFFIEANDI. " ' Oh, here ! John ! Nelly ! Stop, sir ! You are not going to leave my children here alone, unprotected and beggared, while you tear us helplessly and hopelessly away from them ? ' said my mother, pleadingly. " ' John ! Nelly ! ' she cried again, with heart-rend- ing anguish, as, with a wild, hysterical bound, she made a desperate effort to leap from the carriage. " But the functionary anticipated her frenzied designs, and sprang upon the back of the sleigh behind her, at the same time throwing his long, sinewy limbs on either side of her delicate neck, till his large shapeless feet, encased in heavy cowhide boots, fell like leaden weights upon her lap. " And in this indelicate, inhuman, and vise-like posi- tion he held her, lashing his horse to the utmost of his speed, till the cries of the children, who had run screeching imploringly to be taken with their parents, had died away behind the receding hill-tops, and the fren- zied convulsions of the distracted mother had given place to a swoon of death-like insensibility, from which, happy would it have been for her, had she never recovered. " The sufferings of my mother were indescribable, both physically and mentally, through that tedious journey, by the disgusting position in which she was compelled to remain in the hours of her unhappy consciousness, and the inexpressible agony which she suffered by being torn, with such inhuman voracity, from the helpless lambs of her little flock. CHAPTER XIII. KFFIE'S PARENTS COMMENCE THE PRIVATIONS OF PAUPERISM UNDER THE AUSPICES OP ALEXANDER STONEHEART, ESQ. AN UNEXPECTED FRIEND. u '/^\ EORGE,' she whispered, when at nightfall VJT she laid her head despairingly upon his almost pulseless bosom, ' George, is there a God ? one who says, " Vengeance is mine ; I will repay ? " Tell me, dearest, is it so? or am I am I mad, frenzied, or dreaming ? George ! have we passed through so much, and survived it, while a just and holy God has been looking calmly down upon the scene of wrong and anguish ? ' " ' Hush, Effie, dear ; God's arm is not shortened that it cannot save, neither is his ear heavy that it can- not hear. " ' Our wrongs and sufferings are all written down in His unerring Book, and in a way that we know not of, He will avenge them, and carry us safely through the almost overwhelming tide of this dark, turbid stream, to the green fields and smiling sunlight beyond. " ' Effie, where is your courage of a night ago ? How many giants have you left lifeless on the battlefield ? 90 EFFIEANDi;OR, " ' Come, wifey dear,' continued my father, ' cheer up, for you know that we must encourage each other, or our children will be left unloved orphans in their helpless infancy.' " ' But, husband,' said my mother, ' they are already wrested from us by a hand more cruel and relentless than that of death.' " ' Only for a while is this separation from us. I am going where I am known ; and if I can only recover a little, I shall soon find my way to some kind, sym- pathetic heart. And I shall institute a complaint against the tyrannical treatment of to-day, if I live, and God will help the right, wifey mine.' " ' George ! ' She could say, no more ; for her head nestled closer to his bosom, and her heart found relief in a gush of friendly, soothing tears the first that had cooled the hot lava of her burning brain since the cruel separation from her tender babes. " A sweet sleep stole over them, like the soft whisper- ings of angels. And when the harsh voice of that tyrannical official aroused them at early dawn, it seemed like drawing them away from the enchanting strains of a seraph's lyre, to the rack and torture of some hated inquisition. * " Oh, that night of peaceful repose ! never again forgotten through the years which sped by in their after-life of shadows and sunlight. That day they ar- SEVEN YEAKS IN A COTTON MILL. 91 rived at their destination, and commenced the pauper's fare under the auspices of Alexander Stoneheart, Esq. " He had his warm parlors, his soft carpets, his easy chairs, and comfortable lounges ; and upon his table were savory meats, tempting viands, delicious and invig- orating cordials ; fruits, foreign and domestic, which would have been so grateful to the tardy convalescence of my father, or the varying cravings of my mother, in her delicate situation. " But no : ' What business have paupers with luxu- ries ? ' said the pompous Esquire. " A pine table in the uncarpeted kitchen, a corn-cake, fried pork and potatoes, with now and then the deli- cious addition of salt-fish and weak tea or coffee, made from remnants which had been removed from his table, was good enough for a pauper's fare. And as for easy chairs for the sick ones ' Oh, the very idea was presumptuous. Who ever heard of such a thing ? ' " But Esquire Stoneheart did consider the delicate health of my parents, at least he thought so, enough to grant them the indulgence of a sleeping apartment over the cooking-room. ' It was large enough for all the fam- ily,' so he said, ' and warm enough too, for the chim- ney ran directly through the centre of the room, warmed by the heat below. The roaches might be a little thick there, but ' " ' La ! ' said the fascinating Miss Stoneheart, ' poor 92 EFFIEANDI|OR, folks are accustomed to such things. And paupers will never mind roaches in Esquire Stoneheart's mansion.' " ' Some paupers would not, my dear Angelica,' an- swered Mrs. Stoneheart, complacently ; ' but you know the Lees have been accustomed to a different style of living, so genteel and high-minded withal, that I fear we shall find some trouble in bringing them down to a pauper's fare.' " ' Leave that to me, mother, and I will soon make them know their places, as easily as Brown and Brindle and Broad-horns know their places in the tie-up. " ' She has got to serve us better than to fold her lady-like hands, and sigh and sob away the live-long day, over the ease 'and happiness which have forever passed away. " ' You know how many old garments we have got up in the garret? Well, I am going to have an over- hauling there, and set her to work upon them. It will be just the kind of work for her, in her present situa- tion, because she can do it in her own room, and keep her brats there too. " ' Only think, what nice large warm mats they will make for the entries, dining-room, and chambers appro- priated to the hired men. And he can tie the thrumbs together which we want to weave into the horse-blan- kets, just as well as to lay there groaning and lounging away his time, to no possible purpose. Oh, we can make them useful, just with a little tact and persever- SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 93 ance. And I mean to do it, too, for it shall never be said that Esquire Stoneheart's mansion contains any live drones." " A few days after the arrival of my parents at the Stoneheart mansion, a gentleman, who had known my father's family, heard of his misfortunes, and called im- mediately to express his heart-felt sympathy for them, suffering as they were from the afflictive dispensations which had so recently been visited upon them. But he had not prepared himself for such a recital of outrage, insult, tyranny, and degradation as fell from their trem- bling lips. And oh, how he wept, when they told him of the duplicity practised upon them in regard to their innocent children, the scene which followed, and their present hopeless position in regard to them. " ' Fear not,' said their kind friend, ' I will seek your children, and, under my own protection, if our lives are spared, they shall come safely to your yearning hearts. " ' And George,' he continued, addressing my father, ' arouse thee from this desponding torpor. All is not yet hopelessly lost. Your life, youth, and intellect are yet spared to you ; and these dear ones too,' he said, looking around upon the little group, ' are they not worth another effort ? " ' Come, George,' he continued, ' I loved your father too well to see his son remain long a a pauper, and in trouble too. " I have a little unoccupied cottage a few miles from 94 EPFIBANDI. here, and just the place for such a group as this. Take it, and when you have grown strong, and well, and pros- perous, buy it, if you wish, but while you remain sick and poor it is yours, rent free. " No thanks, George ; keep your seat Mrs. Lee ; I have as yet done nothing, and therefore wish for no de- monstrations of gratitude. Yield yourselves to the repose you so much need, and in a very few days I will call on you again.' And he glided from the room so quietly, leaving such a ray of light, hope, and consolation, that it seemed like the departure of some heavenly visitant. " It was many moments before either of the occupants of that dreary chamber could give utterance, in words, to their deep and heart-felt emotions. For my mother was weeping convulsively upon her husband's bosom ; and that bosom was heaving and struggling with the reacting tide of the turbid stream, through which they had so recently passed. " ' And now,' he said, ' oh now the green fields are in view, the sunlight is pouring its beatific effulgence into my soul. I feel its invigorating, its life-giving vitality, to the heart's core, warming and stimulating the sluggish current through every avenue of this emaciated form. " ' Dear Effie,' he continued, ' I can bear those tears now ; for I know that they are not born of sorrow and anguish, but are like the dew-drops of a summer's morn, kissed away by the cheering sun-rays of prosperity and love.' " CHAPTER XIV. ANGELICA STONEHEART'S CASKET OF TREASURES. TAKEN BY SURPRISE. ESQ. HOMEU'S GIFT OF GLEN COTTAGE TO THE LEES. " TVT ISS A N G E L I C A had occupied much of her -^-'J- precious time amongst the old garments of the rag barrels, arranging and rearranging the textures, shades, and colors to her own precise, peculiar, and refined taste, into various piles, and then summing up the probable number of nice heavy mats which would be made from them by the delicate fingers of over-nice, ladylike pau- perism. " And so, a few mornings subsequent to the events nar- rated, she condescended to enter the little back chamber over the cook-room, followed by a pauper with a huge basket of assorted rags and cast-off clothing which she was ordered to deposit upon the only unoccupied space the small room would allow. " ' Madam,' she said haughtily, addressing my mother, ' I have observed that, for a few days, you have grown rapidly convalescent, recovering marvellously from the woe-begone appearance you assumed on your first ad- mission to my father's keeping. And you are putting 96 EFFIEANDIJOR, on airs, too, of dignified independence, as though you felt not the loathsome degradation of a pauper's position. " ' You are verj free indeed from the perplexities and cares of domestic duties, and so loftily raised in the scale of affluence, as to be the honored recipient of an annuity provided by the charitable donations of the residents of B ; and, in acquiescence to their wishes, my father has taken you within his affluent home. " ' It may be that has somewhat raised your ideas of self-consequence. Indeed, you already assume the regal dignity of an enthroned princess. But may I deign to ask a favor of your royal highness ? " ' There is a casket of treasures which, by my com- mands, have been deposited lavishingly at your feet.' " Her back was turned to the door, and she saw not a tall form bending eagerly forward, with flushed cheek and kindling eyes, listening with painful interest to the words of insulting scorn which fell from her haughty lips. " ' Spare them further insult, Miss,' he said, stepping quickly forward ; ' these are my friends, and no longer dependents within your affluent home.' " ' Come, George, and my dear Mrs. Lee,' he said, taking her hand with the warm cordiality of a true friend. ' This is no place for you in your present state of health. Come with me ; the storm is severe without, but you had better brave the raging elements than the scorn and con- tempt of unprincipled arrogance and pride. Come, my SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 97 dear friends, no more tears, for angds if angels can weep have wept over your sorrows, and God himself has come to your assistance.' " Miss Angelica, with blanched cheek and trembling step, made a hasty retreat from the room. " She Avell knew who was this benevolent gentleman, the friend and benefactor of my parents, in this their time of bitter need. It was the wealthy Judge Homer ; and his son, a noble specimen of manhood, just graduated with the highest collegiate honors, had been paying very par- ticular attention to Miss Angelica, and was just on the eve of a declaration, or rather, he had fully made up his mind to propose for her hand. " But when his father returned that evening, and nar- rated to his son the incidents of the morning, and the part performed by the beautiful Angelica, it somewhat cooled the ardor of his love for her ; and not wishing to address in person one whom he could not now respect, he penned her a note of dismissal ; and then, with his father's consent, made preparations for a tour to a distant State. " My parents were speedily removed to the cottage which Judge Homer had provided ; and, through his in- fluence, it was comfortably furnished by a few benevolent friends who had known my father in earlier days. " And thus, by a few dollars, the loss of which no one 98 EFFIEANDIJOR, felt the poorer, they were removed from the foul stigma and degradation of pauperism. " But the wound, deep and painful, had left its life-im- press upon their hearts ; crushing down the hopes and aspirations which had so characterized them in other days. " By the influence of Judge Homer, John and Nelly were restored once more to the arms of our parents. And when the warm April suns and showers began to unfold the bursting buds of tree and flower, then I, a wee-bit, feeble thing, came to claim their love and care. " Years sped on, bringing with them the sunbeams and shadows of real life, adding another and another in helpless infancy to their little flock, though not as yet removing any from them by the relentless hand of death. " And so they struggled on, meekly and calmly, hoping and praying that the bright elysium would yet open to their view, and crown their unceasing efforts. "But every succeeding year brought them only what the past had done, an addition to their family, or ex- penses incurred by sickness, or misfortunes in various other ways beyond their power to avert. " ' Thus far shalt thou come, and no further,' seemed written upon the success for which they had struggled so hopefully and so long. And my father, mentally and physically shattered, grew inert and desponding ; and my mother, feeble and emaciated from the weight of sor- row and the many cares which oppressed her. SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 99 " John was obliged to leave his books and go to service. Farmer Smith held out glowing inducements to him, which he accepted for the sake of the dear ones at home. " ' Let us trust that God rules the destinies of men,' said my mother, encouragingly to him, ' and may be that something will turn up for the better by-and-by. " 'After all, it is not so bad, Johnny ; you will be so near home, and can run in and play a bit with the baby, romp with Nelly, and spin the top a moment for Charley, read a story or two for Eddy, and bring me fresh wild flowers every morning from your own favorite dell, for my little vase on the mantle nook ; and when you are sick, you can come to me, and I shall nurse you so tenderly. John, it might be worse. Cheer up, my noble boy, and hope for the best.' " And farmer Smith laid his broad, hard palm caress- ingly upon his shoulder, and said cheerfully, ' You must be my Johnny now. Bright and Golden are lazily chewing their cuds, waiting for the plow-boy's whistle and smart " jee-up." The little black pony is capering at will over the highlands and lowlands, for want of an expert little rider. Old Rove stretches himself at leisure in his little sunny nook, waiting for a companion to chase the cunning fox, the bounding doe, the nimble squirrel, and explore the underground castles of the timid hare. " ' The fields of grain are waving their golden heads in- vitingly for the glittering sickle, and the reaper's song. 100 EFFIE AND I ; OK, And then will come the long merry hay-days, and corn- huskings, and apple-frolics, and cider-making, and oh, such jolly times as we farmers have, worth all the schools and books, pronouns and professions in Christendom.' " Time passed on, but my brother found no time for laughter or pleasant interchanges with the dear ones at home. " The wee-bit baby had turned his violet eyes, with a coaxing ' goo-goo,' many, many times to the cottage door for the wonted smile and caress. " Charlie's top lay unspun, the stories unread ; Nelly moped and sighed for the gleesome romp ; the flowers had withered in the vase, which stood untouched in the little nook. " Old Rove was still stretching himself at leisure, for the want of a companion in the merry chase ; the little black pony bounded as lightly as ever over the highlands and lowlands, waiting for his expert little rider. " His reaper's song was the song of the captive. * The long, merry hay-days' were any thing but a pastime and mirthfulness. " Work, work, work, from early morn till the eventide. No days for relaxation. No hours for careless sport on the smooth green lawn, where the restless school-boy rolled his ball and v hoop. " No time to ease his heart-yearnings and heart-achings with books or play. But in the deep midnight hour, SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 101 when none but the All-seeing witnessed his lofty aspira- tions, he resolved to press onward and upward, never diverging from the right, though myriads of formidable barriers should appear to obstruct his progress. " ' Great men have lived before me,' he said ; ' great men will live after me. And what has made them great? What more will make them great, but in- domitable will and perseverance ? They are at my com- mand, they shall be my servants. The path to honor is not one of repose ; nor can I hope to be transported, without an effort, to the enchanting bowers of paradisi- acal ease and beauty. But " onward and upward " shall be my motto, never diverging from the right till the elysian is in view, and the prize won and secured.' 9* CHAPTER XV. LIFE'S CHANGES. THE LEES IN GLEN COTTAGE. THE FEARFUL VISITANT. EFFIE AND HER BROTHER ALONE. "J71IFTEEN YEARS! What a long space in JL the annals of time. How manj have grown from childhood to youth. How many from youth to manhood. How many from maturity have passed somewhat adown the shady side, and from green old age to helpless im- becility. " Many, with joyful acclamations, have been ushered into existence ; and many, with the wail of despair and broken hopes, have passed along to the spirit-land. " Fortunes have been won and lost. Friends have deserted and forgotten. Eyes have wept, hearts have bled, which have been unused to sorrow. And death has borne along, on the sweeping tide, the rich spoils he has gathered in the space of fifteen long years. " And they had passed away since my parents took possession of their cottage home, and I had come with feeble wail to claim their love and care. Time and sorrow had not passed lightly over that humble home ; for the voices of gladness and mirth, that erst rever- SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 103 berated there, were hushed, one after another, in the silence of sorrow and death. " Yes, that stern messenger, Death, entered many times unbidden that cottage door. " First, the joyful carol of the baby-pet was hushed in death. The tiny, waxen fingers lay motionless over the pulseless bosom ; and the soft, blue-veined lids drooped heavily over the violet-tinted eyes. " How the little band then flocked together to weep their tears of sorrow over our little wee-pet, and whisper a word of condolence to each stricken heart. Oh ! it was sorrow such as had never before visited our humble home. " The little family had been scattered long before, but not in death. Other homes had sheltered them, but sometimes they fled back to our own home-nest to mingle together our tears of joy and sorrow. " Now one had departed. Our little household idol had been shattered, and our hearts bled that it must be so. How silent and desolate seemed our home, when its joyful carols were hushed. Death ! how unwel- come were thy visitations in our little home. Not one too many had ever come to gladden our humble abode. Poor, but the mite was not meagrely divided. " The turf was yet fresh over the baby's little grave, when another little mound was raised by its tiny side. Charley had laid himself wearily down beside his childish 104 EFFIE AND IJ OR, toys, as a white-winged seraph floated around him, whis- pering of heaven, of golden harps, of angel bands ; wooing him with soft, delicious, and enchanting strains to her happy spirit-home. " Then Eddy, the little studious Eddy, grew pale and wan and weary. A brighter light was in his eye, a deeper flush was on his cheek, and a hollow cough fell like a funereal knell upon the heart of his anxious mother. Nought could save him ; for when the autumn winds swept rudely by, and the summer flowers faded away from the earth, then they laid him quietly down beside the baby's grave, in the long and sweet repose of death. " Then Nelly, the eldest born, so good and gentle withal, she in whom my mother had trusted to lean upon in life's decline, passed away like a summer flower ; and oh ! how we missed her in our cottage home. We missed her gleesome laugh, her lightsome song, her sis- terly greetings, and welcome smiles. We missed her by the hearth-stone, where we wept in heart-felt sorrow over her untimely departure. " Oh ! how desolate had our home become ; none now remained in that dear home-nest but John and myself to cheer the hearts of our stricken parents. And yet the cravings of death were not appeased, till husband and sire had been sacrificed upon the funereal pyre ; and we and my mother returned alone and broken-hearted to our desolate home and silent hearth. SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 105 " Mj mother lived on, but hope seemed to have taken its final departure from her. There were no bright rays peering through the deep dark folds which closed so ominously around her in those hours of widowed loneli- ness. " But one day the death-summons came to her, and sudden and fearful was his coming. " A deep groan of anguish arrested my ear. I knew my mother was dying, for the purple life-blood oozed slowly out from her pale, rigid lips, while she fell heavily back into my extended arms, murmuring, in broken accents, ' God help you, my children, for you will soon be alone alone in a cold cold world. Alone ' " ' mother ! mother ! ' I cried, in frantic dismay, ' you must not, cannot die, and leave us here alone. God will not take you from us. He will not lay His hand so unkindly, so heavily upon us. " ' Has He not already made our home and our hearts desolate ? Oh, so desolate ! And will He now be so unjust as to tear asunder the bleeding, quivering wounds, deep in the heart's core, His oft-repeated scourge has inflicted there ? " ' Can God be merciful,' I asked, in that moment of frantic grief, ' and yet deal so unkindly with the creatures He has made in His own likeness and for His own pleasure ? " ' What have we done to call down His vengeance so 106 EPFIE AND I ; OR, oft and so heavily upon us ? Oh God ! if there is a God, stay thy hand, and spare the remaining victims of thy fearful, unmerited vengeance.' " ' Effie ! ' whispered my dying mother, ' there is a God. Never, no never, in all the sorrows of thy after- life, give up thy hope, thy trust in Him. He will surely be to thee an anchor firm and steadfast as the Rock of Ages. " ' Lean upon Him in all the ills that betide thee, and it will be well. I am dying ; trust in God, my children, and you will find Him all-sufficient. He will never, never forsake you.' " ' mother ! mother ! ' I cried in dismay, ' you must not die ! We cannot part with you ! We cannot live without your love ! mother ! stay yet a little while longer, or take us with you.' " But she heard not my frantic appeal, for the pulses had ceased their vibrations, and that loved form was cold and rigid in death. " Who can portray the feelings of a desolate one, when all of life and love and hope have departed ; when all the heart-blossoms have withered and faded away ; when hope's meteor light no longer flashes in the distance ; and despair throws around us the drapery of sable gloom ? " It was thus with me and my brother, as we sat by the vacant hearth in our silent and desolate home. No SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 107 lightsome tread or gladsome voice cheered its silent gloom. No friendly condolence fell like the healing balm upon our wounded hearts. No strong arm was extended to lead and support us through life's dreary pathway. " Oh, how we missed the glad voices that erst rang out in innocent glee, when we romped together in our childish sports. But they had all passed away, and a sad, sad change had been wrought in our childhood's home/' CHAPTER XVI. EFFIE'S BROTHER BECOMES A STUDENT. HIS SUDDEN DEATH. EFFIE ALONE AND HOMELESS. RESORTS TO A COTTON MILL. KATE STANTON'S DEBUT. " i~\ U R HOME became insupportable to us in its v_/ loneliness, after they had all passed away ; and as my brother was wishing to pursue his education, we proposed to dispose of the cottage and a few acres of land belonging to it ; the proceeds of which would enable him to go forward in that desired object. " I was to remain with an acquaintance until he could make provision for me, in the vicinity of the Institution, where he designed to pursue his studies, the completion of which would prepare him for usefulness and honor, in the ranks of the world. " He had been a student in that institution about six months, when a letter reached me with the information that he had procured for me a very desirable situation in the family of one of the teachers, where I could have the benefit of a superior school, the advantages of a quiet home and daily intercourse with him, for the mere trifling expense of a few hours of needle-work, daily SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 109 given to the family as a recompense for my board. I thankfully availed myself of this proposal, and immedi- ately set out, in compliance with his request, to join him in the distant village of A , and take up my abode in a stranger's home. " When I arrived I found my brother in the wild delirium of a malignant fever. The old doctor shook his head ominously, when I wildly interrogated him for a word of hope and encouragement, in relation to his recovery. " My heart had been bounding and leaping, with hope- ful anticipations, through that long, and it seemed almost endless journey, to meet my dear, my only brother, where I could weep out all my heari^sorrows, and twine a garland from my newly fledged hopes and the bursting flower-buds which had so recently sprung up beneath the sunny rays of my young life-path, reaching far away into the undimmed future. " And I could not, oh, I could not fall back again into the dark shadows which had ever before thrown around me their bereaving shroud. " A few hours after my arrival, my brother lay still and cold in the repose of death, in the sleep that knows no earth-waking. " Many -were the prayers which were oflered up to the orphan's God for the bereft sister. Many were the tears of sympathy which fell unfeignedly for the 10 110 EFFIE AND 1 ; OR, orphaned stranger. Many were the words of condolence which trembled upon the lips, to soothe my heart-anguish. All, all were like mockeries to my stricken and desolate heart. " I could not be comforted. There was no earth- balm that could heal the bleeding lacerations of my lone heart ; and I cried out, in my deep anguish, with the psalmist : ' Lover and friend hast thou put far from me, and mine acquaintance into darkness.' " They buried him beneath the cypress shade, in the little enclosure appropriated to the stranger and student, while his classmates and friends reared a memento of respect above his silent resting-place. " I could not remain in A ; I could not return to the desolations of 'my childhood's home; for every asso- ciation was so interwoven with the dark, painful, afflicting bereavements of the past, as to make remembrance, and even life itself, unendurable. " Study seemed loathsome to the overwrought emo- tions of my bereaved heart ; and I longed for forgetful- ness, for annihilation even, to shroud me from the painful, insupportable memories of the past. " But death and forgetfulness come not at our bidding ; and so I have sought the din, and clatter, and excite- ments of a cotton mill to lull " A loud peal of merry laughter broke like a flood of sunlight upon the orphan's sad recital ; and the next SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. Ill moment a gay, laughing, rollicking girl, bounded into the room, setting chairs, tables, and band-boxes to dancing Yankee reels and devil's jigs, by the wild outbursts of her youthful hilarity, "which," she said, "was just as much a part and parcel of her nature, as the marrow was to the bone of Jack the Giant-killer. " I am," she continued, "just as natural as a natural fool ; and could not for the life of me conceal my cloven foot, even if King Solomon, in all his glory, should appear before me in the dazzling radiance of his majesty and power. " Sister Sarah, that little demure Methodist girl, whom Mother Gourdon designates my ' chum,' tells me that I'm in the broad road to destruction, and unless I wheel about and take up my burden, and creep through the little narrow gate, or the camel's eye I've forgot- ten which, that there '11 be no mercy or hope for me. Just as if such a leopard as I could change these spots for the snowy plumage of a dove, or an angel's drapery. " I can digest her ' amens,' and ' glories,' and ' halle hallelujah's,' and all that ; but her fire and brimstone- I can't swallow." " Kate Stanton ! will you never give over your wild freaks ? " said a soft voice behind me, and looking up I saw a very sweet, placid face, half hidden within the deep shadow of a plain Shaker bonnet, with large dark 112 EFFIE AND I | OR, eyes bent half sadly, half reproachfully, upon the gay girl whom she had designated as Kate Stanton. " Wild oats must be sown, sister Sarah, and the sooner they are scattered to the four winds, the better it will be for the peace of all concerned. " So let me work while the day lasts, and the sun shines, and the flowers bloom, and the rivulets leap, and dance, and sing, for the joy that now is ; while the rain- bow of hope and promise is bright and undimmed in my life-sky. " Dark clouds will come soon enough, and until they do, ' We'll make the best of life we can, Nor render it a curse.' She went on, singing in her wild, rollicking glee, ' And since we are here, with friends so dear, We'll drive dull cares away.' " I shall remember you at the throne of grace, Kate," said sister Sarah, meekly, as she took her little book of Revival Hymns, and went noislessly out to meet her brethren in the social class. " I shall be ever so much obliged to you, sister Sarah, if you will ; for I always like to be remembered to my best friends. Only I wish I was a little more worthy of remembrance. But don't sing that dubious song, ' We SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 113 won't go home till morning ; ' because, if you do,- you will find me, and the bed too, a dreadful one-sided affair when you do come. ' Sing me the songs that I used to hear, Long, long ago long, long ago.' " The pale, drooping Effie, had nestled closer to my side, and pillowed her bright head lovingly upon my shoulder, while the gay Kate Stanton flitted out and in like a fairy elf, carrying sunshine and gladness wherever she went, till the heavy booming of the factory bells an- nounced the hour of bedtime. 10* CHAPTER XVII. EFFIE BECOMES A FACTORY GIRL. KATE 8TANTON TAKING LES- SONS IN THE MYSTERIES OF WOMAN'S RIGHTS. THE NEXT morning Effie and I mingled with the throng which rushed through the ample gate- way, or thoroughfare, opening into the M yard ; where she, for the first time, was ushered into a cotton mill, and introduced to my overseer, who readily con- sented to receive her. Informing her that she could be my " spare hand," for a week or two ; and by that time the looms adjoining mine would be vacated by the present occupant, who was already on her notice, to which she should be the successor. Effie's large blue eyes glistened with a hopeful tear at this announcement, and her pale cheek flushed with animation, when I answered her interrogation, as to the meaning of " spare hand." " Then we are not to be separated, Rosa dear ? " she ejaculated. " This is so kind ; I know my task will be light and pleasant too, with you always by my side. SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 115 How much I have to thank you for, my very dear friend." So Effie and I became inseparable companions. I instructed her in the art and mysteries of clogs, belts, drums, flying shuttles, dresser's knots, and the many little essentials belonging to a good weaver ; to all of which I found her an expert and tractable pupil, as well as companion and friend. Thus days and weeks and months flew pleasantly and rapidly by, with very little change or variation, save an occasional letter from our friends, or some wild, uproarious freak of Kate Stanton, with the little sanctimonious sister Sarah, which always ended with a halle-hallelujah from the little Revival Hymn-book, or the promise that she would make her the burden of her prayers the next class- night. " And," she continued, " I have faith to belie v- that the tune will come when^ you will be one of the strong pillars of the church which you now so lightly and thoughtlessly revile." " And when I do, sister Sarah," answered Kate, laugh- ingly, " you may be sure that I shall never be guilty of hiding my light under a bushel, nor burying my talent in the sand-bank. But you will find me in the pulpit, or on the house-top, or a watchman upon the strong walls of Bashan, or a travelling preacher, with the whole world for a circuit. " But your itinerants and locals, and superannuaries, 116 EFFIE AND I ; OR, x's, and units, pshaw, I shall make a shaking amongst the dry bones when I do start, sister Sarah, which will make up for all the time I have wasted in my outfit and Vanity -Fair preparations. I am even now taking lessons in the mysteries of woman's rights, and when I have so far advanced as to be a good imitator of Lucy Stone, or some of her contemptibles, I am going to start out on a lecturing tour against the rights of man generally, from the Lilliputian Tom Thumb to old Adam, away back in the garden of Eden, who didn't know any better than to nibble that apple, just because his silly wife told him that he must. " Wasn't he a thorough-going woman's rights man ? And didn't that sarpent know it too, when he offered her that apple, and told her to give Adam a piece, and all that. " Well, so you see that through her means the whole world has become depopulated ; and Eden is not the only place that has Adams and Eves, and sarpents and apples, and advocates of the woman's rights system. Mother Eve has got some representatives left yet, and daughters too, who wouldn't mind nibbling an apple now and then, with an Adam or too to munch the other side of it. " I say it is time that there were some strong-minded women, like myself, to come to the rescue of the weaker party. And I'll do it, only let me get my lesson first, and there will be more than one broken jug that will cry out Katy-did.' " SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 117 " But I'm going out now, and spring is coming in, that gay, laughing, rollicking, dancing spring, just like this wildwood Kate. " Yes, I'm going out ; out of the mill, out of the boarding-house, out of the Spindle City, out into the broad sunlight, out into the country, out among the flowers, out into the wildwoods and glens and mountain passes, out into the clear, free dancing zephyrs, and, out of my wits, I verily believe, for the kind condescension of my mother, in permitting me to undertake this great feat of visiting her and my home in the back-woods, after eighteen months of this nunnery sort of life in a cotton- 'mill. " But don't flatter yourself, sister Sarah, that there is any peace for the wicked ; for I'm coming back again. 1 Oh, a factory life is the life for me,' " she sang gaily. " Yes, I'm coming back again after the sacrifice has been offered up. For wild as I am, I never could look calmly upon martyrdom and the offering up of innocence upon the altar of a " " What mean you, Kate ? " I asked, surprised at the turn her raillery had taken. " What mean I, Rosa ? " Why, I mean that the lamb never can lie down with the wolf in these degenerate times, without making the sacrifice of life and limb for its innocent presumption. " That little weeping willow of ours, or yours, pure 118 EFFIE AND I | OR, as the snow-flake, spotless as the lily's folds, beautiful as the morning, gentle as the floating zephyr of a summer's eve, unsuspecting as the cooing dove, is about to make a sacrifice of all, and more, of happiness and life, to that Balaam's a long-eared colt. Oh, I lose all patience when I think how blinded you all are by the false blandishments and pretensions assumed by that un- principled, heartless villain, Wilton Harriman." " If he is a villain, Kate, he wears his mask well. For it seems to me that I have never seen one more perfectly a gentleman, more noble in heart and soul and principle, than Wilton Harriman. And so active, too, in the church, in the prayer-meetings, so earnest in his exhortations to the unconverted " " All moonshine, Rosa ; a wolf in sheep's clothing, artfully concealing his long ears and claws from the little lamb he has singled out, to gloat himself at leisure upon the warm life-blood of her young heart, tih 1 the sacrifice is complete. Why, I do believe that Nature herself will cry out against this unequal oh, I know not what to call it ; for the day has not arrived when the lamb and the lion can lie down together in peaceful security and happy trust." " Nevertheless, Kate, I hope, for dear Effie's sake, that your penetration will prove defective for once in your life. And I even think it will. For, aside from his pre- possessing appearance, his lofty principle, and unblemished SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 1J9 character, he has a home of comfort and security to offer to our stricken lamb, our orphaned Effie." " Better a thousand, a thousand times better spend her life in a cotton mill, free from care and from sorrow as the mountain zephyrs which fan the wild flowers by the dancing stream. " No, I can never see her give that little sinless hand into the keeping of a tyrant's sensual grasp. I am going home, and when I return again the sacrifice will be made, and Effie will be far away." CHAPTER XVIII. . KATE 8TANTON GONE TO THE WILD-WOODS. EFFIE BECOMES A i:i: I Hi:. HER HAPPY LEAVE-TAKING. ONE Y E A R had flown happily by since Effie's introduction to factory life ; and she had grown very beautiful and hopeful and lovely, when Wilton Harriman came a stranger to our city, and, attracted by her beauty and gentleness withal, he sought and won her for his trusting bride. A new life seemed to dawn upon her, lighting, with unclouded brilliancy, the far-off future ; for Effie's warm, impulsive nature, seemed at once to yield to the cheer- ing influence of his bland smiles and tender wooings. And when he asked her to become his own little wife, and go with him to his rural home, she laid her hand all trustingly within his, and murmured forth her heart's devotion, all unconscious that treachery lay concealed beneath that handsome, calm, and graceful exterior. She could not penetrate with her love-blinded eyes, as Kate did, his shallow-heartedness, or see the dark plague- spots which lay concealed beneath the assumed ex- SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 121 pression of devotional love and tenderness, which he so well knew how to call forth subservient to his will. The winter had passed, the spring-tide was chanting melodies all around us. Kate had flown to her native bowers, and May, beautiful, joyous, laughing May, had come to twine a bridal wreath of sunshine and flowers around the fair white brow of the happy bride. They were to be married at the parsonage ; and every arrangement had been completed for them to proceed directly to their distant home. The bridal morning dawned, but the sky was com- pletely shrouded in the pall-like blackness of the tomb, and the rain poured down in fearful torrents upon the already drenched earth. Not even a zephyr swept by to change the fearful monotony of that bridal morn. Were Kate's words pro- phetic ? which said, " I do believe that nature will cry out against this unequal oh, I know not what to call it." A something seemed to whisper, " they were. Nature weeps over the dark fate of the orphan bride." How I would at that moment have plucked her as a brand from the burning, and sheltered that innocent lamb, in my heart of hearts, from the fire and the altar upon which I feared the love and hopes of her young life must so soon be offered up as a sacrifice. I would not, for the world, have breathed my sus- 11 122 EFFIE AND I J OR, picions to Effie, for she looked upon him as a being of immaculate purity and perfection. They were married ; and, when the guests had all departed, I pressed her hands within my own, and looked down, down, through the clear depths of her love-lit eyes, into the heart where no guile or fear of treachery had ever entered. " Effie," I whispered, " you are happy now ; and God grant that the love-light which now throws its ra- diance upon your life-path, may never again be dark- ened by the storm-clouds of sorrow. But should they come upon you, Effie," I said, with emphasis, " as come they may, then come to me, and remember that my heart and hand are ready to receive you. " Although all others turn coldly away, and pass by on the other side, regardless of your need, this heart will ever be ready to receive and cherish you. I am your long-tried friend, and you know that I am not one to change lightly." Effie could not speak the words which trembled upon her lips, but I read, in the expression of the tearful eyes, the language of her grateful, appreciative heart. " Mr. Harriman," I continued, resigning the fair white^hand of the bride to its rightful owner, " take the prize you have won. Cherish it in your heart of hearts ; and let no sorrow, which your own faithful love SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 123 and manly arm can crush back, come near to mar the blissful anticipations of her bridal morn. " Deal kindly and gently with the lone and stricken dove which folds her weary wings and nestles so trust- ingly within thy manly bosom. The Lord do so to thee, and more also, if thou betrayest the sacred trust re- posed in thee, or turn from the pure heart you have won, to bow in guilt at another's shrine." He took the. hand of his bride, and led her to the carriage which was to convey her from the friends who had loved her long and well. Effie waved me a kindly adieu, while the tears fell from the long drooping lashes, mingling with the heavy shower-drops which gathered thickly and ominously around her. I shuddered, as I thought of the fate which might await the bride in her husband's home, and involun- tarily sent up a prayer to high Heaven in behalf of the orphan upon whom the hand of God had been so oft and so heavily laid, that the doom might pass on and away from that innocent and guileless one. The sun peered through the scattering storm-clouds, and anon burst upon us with all the effulgence of its unclouded splendor. The storm had passed away, and not another cloud was visible upon the clear blue sky through that long summer's day. And a glorious day it was, with the 124 EFFIE AND I. broad golden sunlight, the smiling flowers, and fragrant buds, bursting into bloom. The clear, shrill music of the woodland songsters rang through the deep, heavy foliage of the swaying branches ; the loud murmuring of the swollen streams and distant water-falls mingling with the joyful bleating of the flocks and lowing of the herd on the hills and pasture-land. Oh, such music : the music of nature. all around me ; ihe broad golden sunlight laying upon the green herb- age ; the smiling flowers, the shower-drenched earth ; all burst upon me like a holy unction from the spirits world. And involuntarily I exclaimed, " God grant, Effie, that such thy future life may be. Unclouded sunshine upon thy flower-strewn path, music and melody in thy heart, and in thy home, and in the world beyond." I thanked God for the sunlight, for the clear blue sky, and the sweet music which rang out from the forest bowers ; and for the gladsome murmuring of the waterfalls, and the fragrance of the bursting flower- buds, which swept along on the light-winged zephyrs on this, our Effie's bridal day. And I tried to drive away from my mind the ominous forebodings of the morning, as the storm-clouds had been scattered by the summer breeze ; hoping and praying that she had drank the last drop from her bitter cup of sorrow. CHAPTER XIX. CHANGES IN NUMBER TEN. PREPARATIONS FOR THE EASTHAM CAMP-MEETING. SISTER LULA's DEPARTURE TO THE SPIRIT- WORLD. VISIT TO MY MOTHER'S GRAVE. EFFIE'S HEART is BREAKING. MANY CHANGES were being wrought in No. 10 during the summer months. Some, like Effie, had gone out with the bridal wreath circling their fair young brows ; with the bright halo of love illumin- ating their hearts, and throwing a mellow radiance along their future life-path ; as though no dark storm-clouds would ever arise to shatter their love-freighted bark out upon the broad ocean of matrimonial felicity. Some, like Kate, had only gone out into the wild- woods and glens, among the green fields and fresh wild- flowers and sparkling streams and broad sunshine, to sip the nectar from the mountain zephyrs, and return again, laden with the aroma of a thousand flowers, ere the autumn winds should sound their clarion, loud and shrill, from their mountain eyry. Sister Sarah free alike from her persecutor and 11* 126 EFFIE AND I ; OR, persecutions, and happy as her prayers and little Revival Hymn Book . and class meetings and social gatherings could make her was busily preparing for the Eastham camp-meeting, where the old ship of Zion was moored with safety every year, laden with faithful volunteers, clad in their bright and glittering armors, ready to con- quer or to die in the great opposing battle of sin and the world. And I was preparing for an approaching event in my own life history, whether of weal or of woe, of sun- shine or of shadows, the heart's prophecy would not disclose to me. But suffice it, I had given my heart's best and purest love to one who, I doubted not, would cherish it in a heart as true and faithful as my own. I saw no ominous shadows looming up in the future before me. Every thing seemed wrapt in a charm of mystic beauty and enchantment. My future life-path seemed strewn with thornless roses, with undimmed and unbroken sunshine. I felt that to possess the love of my husband, was all-sufficient for my future life-bliss, whether I dwelt in a forest cabin or a palace of luxurious wealth. " Rich ! would not his love be an inexhaustible treas- ure to the lone heart which had grown chill and slug- gish by the sorrowful bereavements of former years ? And would it not be bliss to lean upon the strong, manly SEVEN YEAKS IN A COTTON MILL. 127 arm of my heart's chosen, which could and would pro- tect me from every harm and threatening danger? And shielded in his heart of hearts, no ill could betide me. And yet, with all these blissful anticipations, I could not bid adieu to the pleasant associations of my factory life, and go out from the protecting roof of No. 10 and the kind matron who presided there, without a tear of regret and a sad farewell. Often, a little missive of sisterly remembrance had reached me from Lula, but every line traced therein seemed like the plaintive meanings of a stricken dove. Her heart was with her idols ; and she mourned for them as the lone dove mourns for the mate of its sum- mer bowers. I knew that they were calling her to their far-off elysium, and often, around her lonely pillow, floated the soft spirit-strains : " We are coming, sister Lula, we are coming by and by ; Be ready, sister Lula, for the time is drawing nigh." Two years I had been a wife, when a summons came to me that Lula was passing away, soaring aloft to the higher life. As the fragrance from the crushed flower is borne along by the passing zephyr, so she was pass- ing, all gently and silently, to the spirit-world. Again I hastened to the bedside of a dying sister. 128 EFFIE AND I ; OR, Dying? No! I have never made her dead, although she breathed her last breath of the mortal upon my throbbing bosom. Even now, I hear her light form flitting by, and hear the glad music tones of her sisterly greetings, and feel, yes, many times I have felt her gentle touch upon my shoulder, when tears and sorrow, desertion and despair have darkly enveloped my life-path, and heard her soft whisperings of hope directing me to a future of sunshine and flowers. They laid her beside her heart's idols, in the little rural enclosure appropriated to the family, where the fir and the cypress and the summer flowers blend in lofty anthems of praise, such as the angels hear and chant together. Still, " She comes to me, and the solemn joy Of her presence fills my room ; Though far away, on a sunny slope, Where I know the violets bloom, Her grave is bright with the spring's first gift, And fragrant with its perfume. " She comes to me when I dream alone, ^ In the hearth-glow bright and warm, And hear the wail of the wintry winds, As they strive with night and storm ; She holds my hand, and leads me on, Far into the golden morn. SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 129 " Ah ! well I know that the violets blue Are vailing her tender eyes, But calm and deep in my soul they smile Through the blooms of Paradise ; And still I lean to her gentle clasp, "Where darkest my pathway lies." Once more I sought the enclosure where our mother was peacefully reposing, and wept upon the senseless turf the tears which welled up from a breaking heart. How fleeting and shadow-like life appeared to me when I bade adieu to the scenes of my childhood and the graves of those loved ones for my distant home. When I arrived there I found letters awaiting my return ; one from Effie, one from Kate, and some from the Spindle City. " Effie ! " How eagerly I grasped the little delicate missive her own hand had folded for her absent friend. I had never seen Effie since her bridal morn ; and some- how, of late, her letters had been few, and not very con- fidential. But I knew, from the sad tones and expressions of her few communications, that the storm had gathered around her, and was bursting relentlessly upon her defenceless head. Yes, I knew, long ago, that her heart was breaking, and he in whom she had trusted so confidingly had grown cold, perhaps unfaithful, or, indeed, had utterly deserted her. 130 EFFIE AND I ; OR, I learned it all from the few letters which vainly made an effort to represent a cheerful, hopeful spirit, and a heart which would safely repose in the love of its idol. But here she speaks of desertion, utter, hopeless de- sertion, and a heart breaking from the intensity of its grief and utter loneliness. " And oh ! " she continued, " my heart yearns for the scenes and associations of my childhood, that my tor- tured and burning brain may be soothed by the tears shed over a mother's grave, and cheated into forgetful- ness. Oh ! that I could forget the crushing, blighting sorrows of my later years. " Thus it has been with my whole life ; with all that I loved, all that I have hoped for or trusted in. A chilling mist, a mildew blight, the blackness and darkness of despair, have shrouded and blasted forever. " And the hope of solace in my childhood's home, is perhaps only another disappointment in store for me. Yet she, who now presides there, was in my happier days my friend and confidant. We loved as sisters love. But oh! adversity and sorrow bring desertion, and she too will be changed." With a heart throbbing with painful emotions, I laid aside the letter of that heart-broken one, and turned for relief to that of the light-hearted, joyous Kate Stanton. This informed me, that she was taking a tour through SEVEN YEAKS IN A COTTON MILL. 131 some of the British provinces and eastern Maine, where she designed to spend a few weeks with an old maiden aunt of her mother's ; after which, on her way to the Spindle City, she designed to visit me in my home at R , when she would give me a verbal account of her travels herself, and all the wild freaks in which she had participated through her eastern tour. CHAPTER XX. KATE STANTON'S VISIT. HER TOUR THROUGH MAINE. DESCRIP- TION OF HEATHERTON HALL AND WILLOW DALE. IT W A S a cold, stormy autumn evening, that on which Kate Stauton arrived at my dwelling, and, after the first glad greetings were over, the tea things removed, and the fire replenished, so that it imparted a genial light and heat to our cosy little sitting-room, Kate leaned leisurely back in the comfortable arm-chair, and commenced a rambling sketch of her journey to the East. " You know, Rosa," she commenced, " that I was always fond of adventure, and also a great lover of the wild and romantic, the grand and sublime of nature. " Well, for several weeks I had been travelling and feasting with delight upon the wild scenes which pre- sented themselves to my view, through the wildest portions of eastern Maine, as also across the boundary to the dominions of the British queen. " I had made the tour of many of its romantic rivers, up to the wild clearings of Moosehead Lake I had SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 133 looked far away over its glassy surface to the dark pine- clad highlands, where neither the axe or footsteps had ever reverberated. " I had climbed over the charred logs and smoking turf to look within a logger's cabin or a new settler's hut. " I had threaded wild forest-paths to get a peep within an Indian's wigwam and listen to the strains of the dark-eyed forest flower, while she wove her baskets of fanciful colorings beside her Indian lover. " I had sat me dreamily down beneath the forest pines, where the Red men had lighted their council fires, and danced to the wild war-song of their fearless chief- tains. " I had rested me beside the glassy lake, where the plumed warrior had twined the rich wampum, amidst the dark braids of his forest princess, while she chanted to him the tales and legends of her noble sires. " Spell-bound, I had watched the soft moonbeams flittering coquettishly over the rippling wave, broken here and there by the lazy motion of a passing skiff or a boatman's oar, keeping time to the mellow strains of 1 row, boatman, row.' " I had climbed fearful steeps to the mountain's brow, and looked far, far down into the deep abyss below. " I had travelled over highlands and lowlands, through the wild woods and clearings, where the deer bounded 12 134 EPFIE AND I ; OR, * lightly over the knarled and tangled wildwood, and the howlings of the hungry wolf rang fearfully out from his hidden recess. " I had followed the various windings of the far-famed Penobscot and romantic St. Croix, and cooled my brow in the clear waters of the Passamaquoddy Bay. " I have sailed around its pretty islands, its bold and rugged bluffs, and paid a passing tribute to the venerable ' frair,' who for centuries has stood like a faithful senti- nel at his post, an object of interest to the artist and tourist. " I had looked far away over the grand old ocean, where the majestic steamship seemed a tiny, floating feather upon the white-dashing foam of its hissing moun- tain waves. " I had roamed over the parks and pleasure-grounds of English nobility, and knelt in thoughtful mood beside the marble urns of their lamented dead. " I had been a welcome guest within a fisher's hut, and listened with delight to their tales of wild, and peril- ous adventures. " I had looked within the mouldering and rusty ruins of ancient magnificence, and filled my palms with me- mentos from demolished forts and long-deserted battle- grounds. " I had visited crowded jails and the prison cells, alms- houses and asylums, houses of reform, and the resorts of the fashionable elite. SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 135 " I had visited juvenile schools and colleges for the classical student. " I had been a recipient of favors from the queen's royal household, and disdainfully spurned by cod-fish aristocracy. I had received many a heart-felt ' God bless you,' and listened oft to the muttered curses of envious hate. " I had feasted upon wild forest scenes, unbroken for many and many a mile, save only by some rude and wild convulsion of nature, and listened spell-bound to the sweet gushing melody which floated out from its hidden recesses. " And thus for many weeks I had passed from scene to scene, almost intoxicated with the wild beauties and sublimity alternately presented to my view, till, weary and travel worn, I at last reluctantly turned my course to the tune of ' homeward bound.' " I had resolved to take the shore towns on my home- ward tour, not only for variety of scene, but partially, as I have told you, to visit an old maiden aunt of my mother's, who, although possessing many broad acres and the antiquated home of her father's sire, was one of the kindest and most eccentric old dames in existence. " I had heard this from my mother, and wishing to explore the old castle-like mansion of my venerable sires, whose magnificence and glory had long ago de- parted, I booked my name at the principal stage-office 136 EFFIE AND I ; OR, of a provincial 'town for ' Heatherton Hall, Willow Dale.' " My heart bounded lightly, and my head too, dear Rosa, as I seated myself in an old box-wagon which served for a public stage-coach, set in motion by the lash and lingo of an uncouth driver upon the backs of two fiery Canadian grays. " But it was a fine summer's morning. The air was fresh and balmy ; the sun was rising gloriously from out a forest of pines, which nodded fantastically here and there, in the light morning breeze. " Undisturbed by the few tired and sleepy occupants of the old vehicle, I soon and willingly yielded to the in- spiration which the wild and changing scenes produced. " I scarcely heeded time or distance, so infatuated was I with the wild and picturesque beauties which sur- rounded me. " And not until the long summer twilight had deep- ened into a more sober hue, could I arouse myself from the spell-like reveries hi which I had indulged through that long summer's day. " Nearly the whole of the afternoon we had travelled through a wild unbroTcen forest, with no signs of life or civilization save only now and then the ashes, or charred logs, where the weary or benighted traveller had lighted a fire for security, as he sought repose within those forest shades, or waited impatiently for the morrow's dawn to proceed in safety on his lonely journeyings. SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 137 " This vast extent of woodland surpassed every thing of a wild, picturesque, novel beauty, that my most glow- ing imagination had ever conceived. " Here it seemed that nature had played her wildest freaks, carelessly throwing together and combining, in rude masses, beauty and deformity, light and shade, life and music, as also the death-like silence of hushed deso- lation. " Huge masses of rocks were piled one above the other hundreds of feet, as though rudely thrown together by some mighty convulsion of nature, and left in a threatening position, as if to terrify or destroy all who dared to venture within their fearful locality. " On he other hand, the clear, smooth surface of an inland lake, sparkling in the sunbeams, glimmered through the overarching branches, as the light breeze lifted the deep heavy foliage from their forest bowers. " Then, all so suddenly, the dashing, foaming waters of a mountain torrent came leaping and bounding along, as if, in its rude sport, it would sweep us on and away into the deep stream below. " Oh ! it was wild, majestic, and grand ! that forest scene. " There the nimble deer sported fearlessly the live- long day. The wolf and bear roamed at large, or rested securely in their wild retreat." .12* CHAPTER XXI. KATE STANTON'S UNEXPECTED MEETING WITH EFFIE LEE. THEY JOURNEY TOGETHER. T WILIGHT, as I said, was giving place to the more sober hues of evening, ere we left the forest road, and sought repose within a wayside inn, erected upon the rude clearings of an eastern wilderness. This was situated at the junction of stage-roads, and other travellers were there before us. Among them was a pale, sad-looking woman, soothingly endeavoring to hush the weary meanings of a sickly child. " With an impulse of sympathy I could not resist, my heart went out to her, and, taking a seat by her side, with a word of kindly greeting, she immediately turned her tear-drenched face full upon me ; but her words of sad response instantly gave place to the joyful acclama- tions of recognition. ' Kate ! ' ' Effie ! ' Her head, for it was indeed Effie, fell convulsively upon my throbbing bosom, and she wept long and bitterly. " I knew that those tears were a heart-balm ; and so I gently took her child from her* trembling arms, and SEVEN YEARS IN A CO.TTON MILL. 139 beguiled it with childish tales into a sweet and soothing repose. " I knew by the deep and settled expression of an- guish upon Effie's brow, and the ready tears which came alternately to the trembling lashes, that the deep foun- tain of her heart had been rudely and painfully stirred. And the deep sobs and sighs of anguish which sounded in my ears at intervals, through the entire night, only served to confirm the painful conviction. " But not for once did I dream how desolate and lone she had -become, nor how deep the flood, and scathing the fire of affliction through which she had so recently passed. " I was gratified to learn that her course lay in the same direction of my own, and was pleased, on the fol- lowing morning, although she looked paler and sadder, to see her take the unoccupied seat by my. side in that rude old coach. " I tried, as best I could, to divert her mind from its crushing sorrows, and bring back once more the smiles and sunshine to her still handsome face. " She spoke little of her past sorrows, only that, after a long and painful absence, she was returning to Glen cottage in B , the place of her nativity. " ' B ? ' I inquired. ' Is not Willow Dale and Heatherton Hall in that vicinity ? ' " ' Oh, yes ! ' she answered. ' I know their locality well. Many times, in my childish days, I visited the old 140 EFFIE AND I ; OR, hall, and played " hide and go seek " in its parks and pleasure-grounds. ' " ' Then,' I answered, ' this is a double pleasure ; and how strange, indeed, that we have never spoken to each other in our former acquaintance of Heatherton Hall, for I am designing to visit it, and perhaps spend a few weeks with my lone old aunt, if I find her not too eccentric to claim relationship with such a wild specimen of humanity. " ' My heart yearns to revel in those old halls, bereft of their former magnificence. To pore over the musty parchments penned by my venerable ancestors in the days of " long ago." To dream away the long summer days within the shades of its grand old park, and listen, in the mellow moonlight, to the legends and love adven- tures of that lone old aunt in the days of her beauty and bloom. \ " A faint smile passed over the pale, sad features of my companion, while she answered : " ' You will find your lone old aunt, as you are pleased to designate her, any thing but an imbecile, love-stricken dame, mourning over the disappointments of blighted or faithless love in the days of her youth. " ' She is one of nature's specimens of nobility ; for she needs no airs or embellishments to perfect her genuine worth. There are few so pure, so good, and spiritually inclined, as to comprehend her; and therefore she is called eccentric.' SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL 141 " I was pleased with the praise, which I knew was no flattery, paid to my worthy relative ; and by every act of kindness, both to Effie and her child, I strove to con- vince her how much I appreciated it. " Thus each day of our journey and companionship had passed in pleasant and friendly intercourse, till at last, as the shades of evening were closing around us on the third day, we drew near to the place of our destination. " My own heart, bounding with hopeful expectancy, hers growing sadder from the dark forebodings and fearful apprehensions which closed around her, like the impene- trable misty fog from the adjacent bay. "I had indulged in a pleasant reverie, but aroused myself as we merged from the forest-road into the broad, open space of cultivated mainland. " Lights were glimmering through the misty fog in the dim distance, and while my companion was wiping away the blinding tears from her eyes, attracted by my glad- some exclamations, the driver reined in the panting horses with a prolonged ' w-h-o-a,' in front of a mas- sive gate and a venerable looking mansion, which appeared to me like some long-preserved relic of antiquity, so singular was it in appearance and construction. " ' Oh, yes ! ' said Effie, grasping my hand frantically, 'here we are, at dear Heath Hall, and Glen Cottage is only a few miles beyond. It is with heart-felt regret that I must leave you, Kate. But may I indulge in the 142 EFFIE AND I. hope that we shall meet again while you remain at the hall?' " ' Indeed you may, Effie dear,' I answered, en- couragingly ; ' and many, many times I hope we shall meet again, when these dark clouds of sorrow have all disappeared, and the sunlight of happiness and prosperity rests smilingly upon your life-path.' " Her burning lips trembled for a moment upon my hand, while they murmured a low ' God bless you, Kate,' and a sad ' good-night.' " CHAPTER XXII. KATE 8 ARRIVAL AT THE OLD HALL. THE COACHMAN THINKS SHE IS FROM THE SOUTHWARD, AND MISTAKES HER BAGGAGE FOR LOG CABINS. AUNT HEATHERTON's CORDIAL GREETING. KATE'S FEARS AND PLEASANT SURPRISE. HER MOTHER'S BRIDAL CHAMBER. THE FAMILY PORTRAITS. ee that he was de- termined upon the annexation, even if he had to storm the whole fortification. " I knew that I couldn't count as many men as he could, and so I thought it would be better to compromise a little, even if he did annex a part of my domains to his own territory. " Effie came in just then, looking very demure and very happy, and I went out. " Somehow, the corners of my apron became a nec- essary appendage to my eyes the rest of the afternoon ; and after that I let things take their own way, only I said, ' If it must be so, that the wedding should be cele- brated at the Hall.' " And they all said, ' Yes, it should be as Aunt Heatherton said about that part of the arrangement.' " You can't imagine what a pyramid of finery, and it isn't finery either, but rich, substantial fixings, he has already crowded upon her acceptance, for her bridal gear. SEVEN YEARS IN A COTTON MILL. 259 " And I, determined not to be outdone, am making arrangements for one of the most brilliant feats that has ever been witnessed at Willow Dale. " I know that the sun of prosperity has now 'risen upon Effie's life-path ; the clouds have all disappeared, and she will find safety and happiness in the heart and home of him who now proffers to her his faithful love and protection. " Charley is very happy, too, that he is going to have a darling brother and sister and a dear papa. " But he says, ' that he shall come to the Hall, oh, so often, to see aunty dear ; and he shall take her down to mamma's other home ; and when he gets to be a man, he will come and live at the Hall with his sister, to take care of the things and aunty too.' " Glen Cottage is just now without an occupant ; for she, who so inhumanly thrust Effie and her babe out upon the cold mercies of the world, is herself widowed and penniless, and obliged to seek the aid which she so tauntingly proposed to her in her hours of bitter need and desertion. " Judge Homer says, ' that he shall purchase Glen Cottage for a present to his Effie, and she may fit it up, as her own taste shall dictate, for a widow and orphans' home.' " Effie is very happy and very grateful ; and she says,, ' there is not another man in all the world so good and noble as Judge Homer.' 260 EFFIE AND I. " You recollect I told you that Angelica Stoneheart had married, and removed to a distant city. Her husband proved to be not only a fortune-hunter, but a reckless spendthrift. " And so, after a few years of miserable suffering abroad, she has returned a poor, faded, forlorn creature, to her widowed and almost penniless mother, to die or suffer still more from the griping hand of poverty, which is laid heavily and surely upon them. " For when her father, Esquire Stoneheart, died, it was proved that his claims to wealth were utterly null and void. " So you see that the tables turn, once in a while, without the artificial aid of rapping mediums. And that moneyed wealth is not a sure foundation upon which to build the pyramids of hope and happiness, nor even of true greatness. Neither is poverty the handmaid of vice and degradation, but often the stepping-stone to honor and genuine nobility." " Just tell them, Rosa, before you give your manu- script to good old Mr. Finis, that Kate Stanton's ' World as it is ' will soon be in motion, and will follow at a respectful distance your ' Cotton Mill.' Then, Rosa, won't I give it a jog the right way ? " To be answered in our next. LINES ADDRESSED TO MY MOTHER IN HEAVEN. I'M thinking now of thee, mother ; I'm thinking now of thee, And of our low-roofed cottage home, Beside the old oak-tree, As erst it stood of yore, mother, Ere death had entered there, To take the choicest flower away, That bloomed beneath thy care. I'm thinking how thy cheek, mother, Grew paler, day by day ; How fearful, too, thy tearless grief When sister passed away. She was the first loved child, mother, Of a merry, happy band ; The first with autumn flowers, away She passed to the spirit-land. I'm thinking of the night, mother, When thou wert dying too ; We dreamed not when sweet sister died, Thou wert the next to go. In grief I pressed thy cold white lips, Which gave me back no kiss, And thought my heart was breaking then, For I was motherless. Then how we wept for thee, mother, Through many a weary day ; Our home was drear and desolate Our brothers far away 274 But ere a twelvemonth passed, mother, That we had mourned for thee One died within a stranger's home, Another on the sea. Then how I wished ('twas wrong, mother), That I was with the dead For hope's bright visions charmed no more < My life's sweet dreams had fled ; For Cairo grew so pale, mother, So lustrous bright her eye The oldest that was left us then We knew she, too, must die. And so one winter's day, mother, She plumed her pinions free, And soared from earth away, away, To join her songs with thee. And then our father died, mother, And the last loved brother too, And I felt that God was hard indeed, To shroud our life's morn so. And then our Lula dear, mother, "With the dark and brilliant eye, And the gentle, blue-eyed sister mate, Were the next and last to die. They are all in heaven now, mother, They are all in heaven with thee Save sister Mary, who alone Remains to weep with me. I have felt my share of grief, mother, And there's little left of joy, Save the treasure that I cherish now My laughing, blue-eyed boy. My tears are flowing fast, mother, My heart is throbbing wild, For there are none- to love me so As erst you loved your child. 275 LINES ON THE DEATH OF SISTER LULA. SISTER, farewell, the last fond tie is riven, Which linked thy guileless heart with things of earth ; And now thy spirit long since winged for heaven, Has claimed with sainted ones a heavenly birth. Sister, farewell, thy loved form sweetly slumbers Beneath the verdant turf of beauteous Spring, Where songsters breathe their wild melodious numbers, And 'neath their shades a requiem for thee sing. Sister, sleep on : I would not wake to sorrow Thy pure and sainted spirit from its rest, I would not e'en a blissful moment borrow From thee, enrobed in glory with the blest. But I would chant with thee in living bowers The lofty anthems of thy spirit-land ; And roam with thee 'mongst fair ambrosial flowers Where youth and beauty feel no withering hand. Sleep on in peace, this heart with anguish riven, No more can greet thee whom I loved so well ; 'Till I have gained thy far-off blissful haven, 'Till then, sweet sister, loved one, fare thee well. 276 THE SOLDIER'S BURIAL. FAR away from his home in his manhood's bloom, They bear him all silently to the tomb ; Where the wild-flowers blush, and the zephyrs chime His requiem plaints in a southern clime. Oh, sadly the tones on the soft air come, Of the mournful fife, and the muffled drum ; But sadder the hearts of that gallant band That bear him to rest in a stranger's land. His shroud is the banner he proudly bore From his childhood's home and his native shore, While far o'er the woodlands, and hill-tops, and dells, The parting salute of his brave clan swells. They have gone all gone, those warriors brave, With measured step from his lonely grave ; But the tear-drops are sparkling they sorrowing shed, Like pearls in night's drapery, 'circling his bed. The willows, like sad hearts, o'er broken hopes bend Their shadows with those of the dark cypress blend ; With their soft sighing voices, and wide, solemn wave, They guard, by sweet vigil, the soldier's lone grave. University of California SOUTHERN REGIONAL LIBRARY FACILITY 405 Hilgard Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90024-1388 Return this material to the library from which it was borrowed. DATE RECEIVED A 000 131 306 3