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[Illustration: SWEET CICELY.]
SWEET CICELY
OR
JOSIAH ALLEN
AS A
POLITICIAN
BY
"JOSIAH ALLEN'S WIFE"
(MARIETTA HOLLEY)
_WITH ILLUSTRATIONS_
EIGHTH EDITION
TO
THE SAD-EYED MOTHERS,
WHO, LIKE CICELY,
ARE LOOKING ACROSS THE CRADLE OF THEIR
BOYS INTO THE GREAT WORLD OF
TEMPTATION AND DANGER,
This Book is Dedicated.
PREFACE.
Josiah and me got to talkin' it over. He said it wuzn't right to think
more of one child than you did of another.
And I says, "That is so, Josiah."
And he says, "Then, why did you say yesterday, that you loved sweet Cicely
better than any of the rest of your thought-children? You said you loved
'em all, and was kinder sorry for the hull on 'em, but you loved her the
best: what made you say it?"
Says I, "I said it, to tell the truth."
"Wall, what did you do it _for_?" he kep' on, determined to get a
reason.
"I did it," says I, a comin' out still plainer,--"I did it to keep from
lyin'."
"Wall, when you say it hain't right to feel so, what makes you?"
"I don't know, Josiah," says I, lookin' at him, and beyend him, way into
the depths of emotions and feelin's we can't understand nor help,--
"I don't know why, but I know I do."
And he drawed on his boots, and went out to the barn.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER I
CHAPTER II
CHAPTER III
CHAPTER IV
CHAPTER V
CHAPTER VI
CHAPTER VII
CHAPTER VIII
CHAPTER IX
CHAPTER X
CHAPTER XI
CHAPTER XII
CHAPTER XIII
CHAPTER XIV
SWEET CICELY
CHAPTER I.
It was somewhere about the middle of winter, along in the forenoon, that
Josiah Allen was telegrafted to, unexpected. His niece Cicely and her
little boy was goin' to pass through Jonesville the next day on her way to
visit her aunt Mary (aunt on her mother's side), and she would stop off,
and make us a short visit if convenient.
We wuz both tickled, highly tickled; and Josiah, before he had read the
telegraf ten minutes, was out killin' a hen. The plumpest one in the flock
was the order I give; and I wus a beginnin' to make a fuss, and cook up
for her.
We loved her jest about as well as we did Tirzah Ann. Sweet Cicely was
what we used to call her when she was a girl. Sweet Cicely is a plant that
has a pretty white posy. And our niece Cicely was prettier and purer and
sweeter than any posy that ever grew: so we thought then, and so we think
still.
[Illustration: JOSIAH TELLING THE NEWS TO SAMANTHA.]
Her mother was my companion's sister,--one of a pair of twins, Mary and
Maria, that thought the world of each other, as twins will. Their mother
died when they wus both of 'em babies; and they wus adopted by a rich
aunt, who brought 'em up elegant, and likely too: that I will say for her,
if she wus a 'Piscopal, and I a Methodist. I am both liberal and truthful
--very.
Maria wus Cicely's ma, and she wus left a widow when she wus a young
woman; and Cicely wus her only child. And the two wus bound up in each
other as I never see a mother and daughter in my life before or sense.
The third year after Josiah and me wus married, Maria wusn't well, and the
doctor ordered her out into the country for her health; and she and little
Cicely spent the hull of that summer with us. Cicely wus about ten; and
how we did love that girl! Her mother couldn't bear to have her out of her
sight; and I declare, we all of us wus jest about as bad. And from that
time they used to spend most all of their summers in Jonesville. The air
agreed with 'em, and so did I: we never had a word of trouble. And we used
to visit them quite a good deal in the winter season: they lived in the
city.
Wall, as Cicely got to be a young girl, I used often to set and look at
her, and wonder if the Lord could have made a prettier, sweeter girl if he
had tried to. She looked to me jest perfect, and so she did to Josiah.
And she knew so much, too, and wus so womanly and quiet and deep. I s'pose
it wus bein' always with her mother that made her seem older and more
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