"I think -- I think," said Agatha, "that Nancy Ellen has much upon

which to congratulate herself. More education would not injure

her, but she has enough that if she will allow her ambition to

rule her and study in private and spend her spare time communing

with the best writers, she can make an exceedingly fair

intellectual showing, while she surely is a handsome woman. With

a good home and such a fine young professional man as she has had

the good fortune to attract, she should immediately put herself at

the head of society in Hartley and become its leader to a much

higher moral and intellectual plane than it now occupies."

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"Bet she has a good time," said young Adam. "He's awful nice."

"Son," said Agatha, "'awful,' means full of awe. A cyclone, a

cloudburst, a great conflagration are awful things. By no stretch

of the imagination could they be called nice."

"But, Ma, if a cyclone blew away your worst enemy wouldn't it be

nice?"

Adam, Jr., and Kate laughed. Not the trace of a smile crossed

Agatha's pale face.

"The words do not belong in contiguity," she said. "They are

diametrically opposite in meaning. Please do not allow my ears to

be offended by hearing you place them in propinquity again."

"I'll try not to, Ma," said young Adam; then Agatha smiled on him

approvingly. "When did you meet Mr. Gray, Katherine?" she asked.

"On the foot-log crossing the creek beside Lang's line fence.

Near the spot Nancy Ellen first met him I imagine."

"How did you recognize him?"

"Nancy Ellen had just been showing me his picture and telling me

about him. Great Day, but she's in love with him!"

"And so he is with her, if Lang's conclusions from his behaviour

can be depended upon. They inform me that he can be induced to

converse on no other subject. The whole arrangement appeals to me

as distinctly admirable."

"And you should see the lilac bush and the cabbage roses," said

Kate. "And the strangest thing is Father. He is peaceable as a

lamb. She is not to teach, but to spend the winter sewing on her

clothes and bedding, and Father told her he would give her the

necessary money. She said so. And I suspect he will. He always

favoured her because she was so pretty, and she can come closer to

wheedling him than any of the rest of us excepting you, Agatha."

"It is an innovation, surely!"

"Mother is nearly as bad. Father furnishing money for clothes and

painting the barn is no more remarkable than Mother letting her

turn the house inside out. If it had been I, Father would have

told me to teach my school this winter, buy my own clothes and

linen with the money I had earned, and do my sewing next summer.

But I am not jealous. It is because she is handsome, and the man

fine-looking and with such good prospects."




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