登陆注册
15704700000040

第40章 BY THE RIVER(2)

I was as tall as a woman at thirteen,and my older sisters insisted upon lengthening my dresses,and putting up my mop of hair with a comb.I felt injured and almost outraged because my protestations against this treatment were unheeded and when the transformation in my visible appearance was effected,I went away by myself and had a good cry,which I would not for the world have had them know about,as that would have added humiliation to my distress.And the greatest pity about it was that I too soon became accustomed to the situation.I felt like a child,but considered it my duty to think and behave like a woman.I began to look upon it as a very serious thing to live.The untried burden seemed already to have touched my shoulders.For a time Iwas morbidly self-critical,and at the same time extremely reserved.The associates I chose were usually grave young women,ten or fifteen years older than myself;but I think I felt older and appeared older than they did.

Childhood,however,is not easily defrauded of its birthright,and mine soon reasserted itself.At home I was among children of my own age,for some cousins and other acquaintances had come to live and work with us.We had our evening frolics and entertain-ments together,and we always made the most of our brief holiday hours.We had also with us now the sister Emilie of my fairy-tale memories,who had grown into a strong,earnest-hearted woman.We all looked up to her as our model,and the ideal of our heroine-worship;for our deference to her in every way did amount to that.

She watched over us,gave us needed reproof and commendation,rarely cosseted us,but rather made us laugh at what many would have considered the hardships of our lot.She taught us not only to accept the circumstances in which we found ourselves,but to win from them courage and strength.When we came in shivering from our work,through a snowstorm,complaining of numb hands and feet,she would say cheerily,"But it doesn't make you any warmer to say you are cold;"and this was typical of the way she took life generally,and tried to have us take it.She was constantly denying herself for our sakes,without making us feel that she was doing so.But she did not let us get into the bad habit of pitying ourselves because we were not as "well off"as many other children.And indeed we considered ourselves pleasantly situated;but the best of it all was that we had her.

Her theories for herself,and her practice,too,were rather severe;but we tried to follow them,according to our weaker abilities.Her custom was,for instance,to take a full cold bath every morning before she went to her work,even though the water was chiefly broken ice;and we did the same whenever we could be resolute enough.It required both nerve and will to do this at five o'clock on a zero morning,in a room without a fire;but it helped us to harden ourselves,while we formed a good habit.The working-day in winter began at the very earliest daylight,and ended at half-past seven in the evening.

Another habit of hers was to keep always beside her at her daily work something to study or to think about.At first it was "Watts on the Improvement of the Mind,"arranged as a textbook,with questions and answers,by the minister of Beverly who had made the thought of the millennium such a reality to his people.She quite wore this book out,carrying it about with her in her working-dress pocket.After that,"Locke on the Understanding"was used in the same way.She must have known both books through and through by heart.Then she read Combe and Abercrombie,and discussed their physics and metaphysics with our girl boarders,some of whom had remarkably acute and well-balanced minds.Her own seemed to have turned from its early bent toward the romantic,her taste being now for serious and practical,though sometimes abstruse,themes.I remember that Young and Pollock were her favorite poets.

I could not keep up with her in her studies and readings,for many of the books she liked seemed to me very dry.I did not easily take to the argumentative or moralizing method,which Icame to regard as a proof of the weakness of my own intellect in comparison with hers.I would gladly have kept pace with her if Icould.Anything under the heading of "Didactick,"like some of the pieces in the old "English Reader,"used by school-children in the generation just before ours,always repelled me.But Ithough it necessary to discipline myself by reading such pieces,and my first attempt at prose composition,"On Friendship,"was stiffly modeled after a certain "Didactick Essay"in that same English Reader.

My sister,however,cared more to watch the natural development of our minds than to make us follow the direction of hers.She was really our teacher,although she never assumed that position.

Certainly I learned more from her about my own capabilities,and how I might put them to use,than I could have done at any school we knew of,had it been possible for me to attend one.

I think she was determined that we should not be mentally defrauded by the circumstances which had made it necessary for us to begin so early to win our daily bread.This remark applies especially to me,as my older sisters (only two or three of them had come to Lowell)soon drifted away from us into their own new homes or occupations,and she and I were left together amid the whir of spindles and wheels.

One thing she planned for us,her younger housemates,--a dozen or so of cousins,friends,and sisters,some attending school,and some at work in the mill,--was a little fortnightly paper,to be filled with our original contributions,she herself acting as editor.

I do not know where she got the idea,unless it was from Mrs.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 请你带我回家

    请你带我回家

    请带我回家。那个小女孩抬头,冲着他微笑。看到女孩的那一瞬他的心被狠狠的触动了一下,胸口开始疼,他想,或许这个女孩让他想起来了很久以前的一些事情。他鬼使神差的带了小女孩回家,从没想到过小女孩会给他的生活带来什么。他画画,她想让他画萌系少女漫画,他说:不听话就滚,她饿了,找冰箱里的泡面吃,嫌不好吃;他不肯去参加姐姐的婚礼,她死拽硬拽的拉去了;他心情不好去酒吧喝的烂醉,她一边骂一边拖他回来。……两个人在不知不觉中长大了。他总以为,这辈子就这样过去了。但是,有一天,小女孩悄悄地离开了,他忽然开始不淡定了……
  • 奇门正道1

    奇门正道1

    与鬼斗,其乐无穷;与人斗,其乐无穷;与命斗,其乐无穷。一日不斗,玩物丧志;一月不斗,魂黄魄瘦;一年不斗,仙途难觅;一生不斗,身归黄泉。
  • 圣师传说

    圣师传说

    之所以称之为传说,是先成了传奇。之所以称之为圣师,是先成了圣者。你打开的,就是一本传说。也是一本传奇之旅。……因为,多年之后,有人称他为白帝。
  • 半粒珍珠

    半粒珍珠

    什么人会上天堂?什么人会下地狱?梦到底是什么?十岁小女孩马豆豆的父亲马尚升突然失踪了!在一个神秘人的指引下,她遇到了以萧挺为首的“龙门三瓢客”。这三个人中,萧挺能够打开可以通往灵界的三生门;席万财是数学奇才,通过观察数字即可富可敌国;罗小浩是个武艺高强的大胖子,也是个逗逼的大胖子。在一个梦中神秘人的指引,萧挺三人开始了一段上天入地的奇幻旅程。另外,故事里会出现你正在饲养的宠物潘潘们,它们将助力主人公斩妖除魔,卡哇伊andKiumi!什么是潘潘?哈哈,看文吧!感谢阅文书评团提供书评支持!
  • 天价弃妇,总裁请止步

    天价弃妇,总裁请止步

    【全本完结】【番外小简介:所有人都知道她是他的童养媳,就他不知道,他的心情复杂啊。】他说,掠夺她的身体,只是他的一个习惯而已*她隐瞒新身份归来只为复仇,他却像狗皮膏药贴上她。他高高在上,是狂傲的商界天才;是所以女人的坟墓;更是她复仇游戏中的意外被他一次次相救,她无可避免的动心了,心动的同时,也是她毁灭的时候……她为了他,改变复仇计划,换来的却是他轻飘飘的一句:“月,我要结婚了。”结婚的对象却不是她。接近她,不过是为了达到他的目的。于是她悄无声息的去了一趟医院,回来跟他说,孩子已经流掉了。几天后,她对他说:“辰,我要结婚了。”结婚的对象却不是他!他愤怒的将她压在身上,恨不得撕碎她:“你竟然敢打掉我的孩子!”“竟然敢跟别的男人结婚!”他…狠狠的折磨她!鲜血淋淋的占有…她只有逃,消失了整整六个月,才再出现。她再次出现,也只是为了复仇,而他却将她囚禁在房间里,百般凌辱,非逼她再怀上他的孩子不可。他对她说:“就算如此,你也要留在我身边!”
  • 这一界

    这一界

    一场惊天动地的巨变改变了一个整天无所事事的啃老宅男的人生
  • 国民男神stop:我不喜欢你

    国民男神stop:我不喜欢你

    年少时,“冷逸辰,我被欺负了!”“那就欺负回去,没打死,算我输!”;“冷逸辰,他们说我配不上你!”“那他们连给你提鞋的资格都没有!”;“冷逸辰,我不去学校了!”“那就别去了,老公养你!”这拒人千里之外的冷少,唯独让他的未婚妻集万千宠爱于一身。但也在当那个她回来后,一切就变了。甚至抢走了安沫雨的一切。告诉安沫雨:“你只不过是冷逸辰的一枚棋子罢了。别痴心妄想了。醒醒吧。”安沫雨自嘲一笑,也义无反顾地走了。一场破蛹成蝶的蜕变后,霸气归来!成为上帝的宠儿,千万人民的女王!面对冷逸辰这个名义上未婚夫,她又敢如何?
  • 你好,九尾狐

    你好,九尾狐

    阎王手里的那本生死簿竟被一届误打误撞进来的妖女撕毁了。匆匆忙忙捡回来的生死簿合成之后竟然少了一页,那一页,封印着上古神兽九尾狐。因他生性顽劣,好不容易被一位阎王封进生死簿里,可他并没有死去,只是在生死簿里头受苦。如今放出来之后,不知要造成多大麻烦。妖女莫小娅踏上寻找九尾狐之路。
  • 忆君心似北江水

    忆君心似北江水

    我们的相遇恰好是因为孤独,孤独把我们捆绑,没有死结,没有爱。我们的相遇都是我美好的向往。人生啊,人啊。
  • 黄泉刀

    黄泉刀

    这个世界,有一个势力!一旦某一个人被这个势力盯上,就会谋其命,收其念,拘其魂,役其灵,永世不得超生!他们来自灵殿,一个号称可以取代黄泉的存在,游走在世间的每一个角落,寻找着他们的猎物!怨恨阴煞,灵殿的四位主宰者,三年前,煞为了收集煞气,灭了一个威名赫赫的地下杀手组织,三年后,这个杀手组织的唯一幸存者,带着一柄只有死者才能看到,只有亡者才会感到恐惧的灭灵之刀归来,这是来自黄泉的杀鬼灭灵之刀,这世间的灵畏惧其威,尊其为黄泉刀。