The glow that
succeeds to the plentiful use of this de-
lightful element, will amply repay you
'for the first chilling sensation which it
may occasion.
succeeds to the plentiful use of this de-
lightful element, will amply repay you
'for the first chilling sensation which it
may occasion.
Childrens - Roses and Emily
handle.
net/2027/hvd.
hn2hfl Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www.
hathitrust.
org/access_use#pd-google
? SKETCHES OF YOUTH. 133
"Here is a letter for you, my love,"
said Mrs, Sydney to Emily, " read it
whilst I peruse mine. " Emily took it
with a blush; she could not read it, and
in confusion, returned it to her friend.
*{ Will you, madam, be so kind as to
read it to me ? --I cannot;" and tears
of shame and sorrow streamed from her
eyes. Mrs. Sydney read as follows :--
"My beloved child,
"To inform your mind, and to amend
your heart, are the first wishes of mine;
your happiness is the first object of my
life; to promote which, I have consent-
ed to part with you; to tear myself from
the sole comfort of my existence, and
for some years to leave you under the
guidance and protection of the only
person to whom I would consign my
treasure. Consider Mrs. Sydney in every
respect as your mother; love, honour,
and obey her as such ;? regard her daugh-
ters as your sisters and it is my parti-
cular desire that in every thing. which I
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? 134 ROSE AND EMILY } OK,
have sent you. Rose should participate.
This blended interest, will, I trust, at-
tach you more closely to each other, and
strengthen the bond of love and harmony.
"You will find books of various kinds,
from which you may derive, under the
direction of your best of friends, Mrs*
Sydney, all the information I am desi-
rous you should obtain. To amuse and
enliven some of your evening hours, I
have sent you a variety'of games; and,'
as a farther entertainment, a hand organ
with barrel s^ for fifty tunes. "
A hand organ with barrels for fifty
tunes! " exclaimed Rose; and springing
from her seat, threw her arms round
Emily in a transport of joy. Mrs. Syd-
ney smiled, but commanded silence, and:
continued :--
't Be a good chiid; follow implicitly
the directions of Mrs. and Miss Syd-
ney, that you may become as dear'to
them as you are to me. In a few years,
I hope to see you the amiable and
well informed woman; and then, with
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? SKETCHES OF YOUTH. 135
what pride and affection shall I press you
to my bosom. God bless you, my darling
Emily, and remember your father. '
The affectionate anxiety expressed in
this letter, (the first which Emily had ever
received) the earnest appeal of the father
to his child, deeply penetrated her heart,
and she sat silent and thoughtful; the
books, drawings, organ--every thing was
forgotten, but her father's letter. Mrs.
Sydney held out her hand to her, and
she threw herself weeping on her bosom.
"Omy dear madam, will you ever love
such a naughty, ignorant girl as I am?
I remember how often I have vexed
my poor papa, and how good he was
to me. I wish I could write; but
when he desired me to learn I would
not, and I blotted my book instead
of making letters; I wish I could tell
him that I will never grieve him again,
and that I will try to be as good and
clever as he wishes me. " Mrs. Sydney re-
turned her theletter,(whichshekissedand
placed. in her bosom). and was pleased to
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? 136 ROSE AND EMILY J OB,
see the strong feeling of filial affection,
and of contrition for past errors, awaken-
ed in the breast of her pupil; and to ob-
serve that the hopes of her father, ex-
pressed in all the tenderness of parental
anxiety, had excited an emulation which
might lead to their accomplishment.
Rose's vivacity was for a time checked
by the tears of Emily; but when her
face had resumed its composure, she
again exclaimed--" A hand-organ with
fifty tunes! O how I long to hear it! "
"Be patient, my love, till to-morrow,"
said Mrs. Sydney, " and then. you will
be gratified. " It was < difficult for Rose
to restrain her impatience and pleasure;
the tide of joy rushed so . rapidly to her
little heart, that. she knew not how to con-
fine it within proper bounds, but her
mamma's. decision was never murmured
at, and she smilingly acquiesced, though
anxiously wishing for the morrow. The
morrow came, and this object of her cu*
riosity was taken from its case. Its gay
and gilded exterior produced an excla-
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? SKETCHES OF YOUTH. 137
mation of surprise and admiration; but
when she first heard its tones, delight for
once checked her Utterance, and she
listened in mute astonishment. Not the
harp of Memnon, when touched by the
rays of Phoebus, ever excited more sur-
prise or rapture to its votaries, than did
the notes of the organ to the wondering
Rose; it was the first she had ever heard,
and she had no words to express her
transport.
In the liberality and variety of these
gifts Mrs. Sydney perceived the true mo-
tives of the friend and father; anxious not
only to promote the instruction of his
child, but the happiness and amusement
of the whole family. It is often by
attention to minor pleasures and trifling
comforts, that the heart of friendship
most forcibly reveals itself; and though
real services may claim our gratitude,
little kindnesses will always engage our
love,
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? 238 KOSE AND EMILY; OR,
CHAP. X.
The education of Emily now began to
assume the regular form of lessons, and
the habits she had imbibed, when under
no controul, were gradually yielding to
the admonitions of Mrs. Sydney, and the
example of her daughters, whilst her un-
derstanding, like a rich border of earth
newly cultivated. promised abundantly
to repay the care of the improver. The
mind of Mrs. Sydney, thus compelled to
exertion, acquired strength and compo-
sure; her thoughts, urged into new
channels, no longer brooded over her ca-
lamities; she had now positive duties to
perform; and except at some occasional
intervals, when the chord of sorrow vi-
biated to some accidental touch, her
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? SKETCHES OF YOUTH. 139
feelings had, in a great degree, regained
their former tone and harmony.
Winter glided swiftly away, as duty
and affection went hand in hand. The
children. found in Mrs. Sydney the mo-
ther, the monitress, and the friend; and
in them she beheld the sun that gave light
and warmth to her existence, that bright,
ened every prospect, and the springs
that fed every vital part. In the
gentle nature, the equal temper, and
the unvarying affections of Isabel, she
had a blessing on which her heart might
safely repose. In the vivacity and good-
thumour of Rose there was an amusement
which diverted her thoughts and ani-
mated her spirits; and in the interest
she felt for Emily, and her gratitude
io Mr. Blandford, a stimulus to exertion
that rendered the indulgehce of all sel-
fish sorrow both injurious and unjust.
Their garden began to assume a cheerful
appearance; the aconite, the first child
of spring, was pointed out by Rose in
triumph. "Look mamma at that dear
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? 140 ROSE AND EMILY; OR,
little yellow cup in a green saucer," she
exclaimed; "what a pity it is poisonous,
it is so pretty. " "Even in this simple
blossom, my Rose, you may learn a use-
ful lesson--not to value any thing for its
exterior only; yet nothing is given in
vain, and poison as frequently ministers
to health, as it is the instrument of death. "
Crocuses, snow-drops, and " the sad
anemone," next succeeded; but with
what joy did she discover the first violet*
whose sweetness betrayed where it was
concealed; she brought it to her mamma
as the loveliest blossom in the garden.
A small piece of ground was allotted for
the children, and Emily soon received
pleasure from cultivating it, though she
could not understand Rose's enthusiastic
fondness for flowers, which, in the exu-
berance of her fancy, she almost per-
sonified, and often appropriated as em-
blems of different persons. This taste
and feeling were in themselves so amu-
sing, so natural, and so innocent,that Mrs.
Sydney never attempted to restrain them!
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? SKETCHES OF YOUTH. 141
though she often smiled at the little absur-'
dities of her young enthusiast of nature.
The first of May arrived, and Rose,
whose beauty, engaging manners, and
sweet temper, had rendered her the little
pet and darling of the village, again re-
ceived the customary congratulations on
? her birth-day; the boys and girls, with
Phoebe #t their head, assembled early in
the morning at the gate of the parsonage,
with their gay garlands of flowers. Rose
was soon in the midst of them, her cheeks
glowing with joy, her heart beating with
. exultation; again she received her simple
offerings, again was crowned queen of
. the May, and again garlanded and deco-
rated with the treasures of Flora, shewed
herself in triumph to her mamma, who,
though the remembrance of other times
? pressed upon her heart, and clouded her
feelings, completed the happiness of her
child by bestowing her fondest kiss and
blessing.
* gummer came, and the hours which
were not devoted to study, were spent in
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? 142 ROSE AND EMILY; OR,
rural walks, in the amusements of botany,
in taking sketches from nature, in gar-
dening,'and in visiting the poor families
who required either assistance or con-
dolence. Emily, who had never before
lived in the country, or been accustomed
to its habits, was at first fatigued by walk-
ing; the beauties of rural scenery had
never been pointed out to her; she had
not felt their charm, and her eye passed
over them in vacant indifference, till
awakened from. her listlessness by the
enthusiastic exclamations of Rose, or the
effusions of admiration that frequently
escaped the lip's of Mrs. Sydney and Isa-
bel, as they wandered among the rocks,
woods, and mountains of this highly
picturesque country; in time she began
to observe, and at length to feel them.
The study of botany gave a constant in-
terest to their walks, and in the wonder-
ful construction of the simplest flowers,
they could not fail to trace the hand of
that Providence which disdains nothing
that it has made; but provides even for
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? SKETCHES OP YOUTH. 143
the security of the infant blossom, ex-
tending its guardian care alike over the
vegetable as well as the animal creation.
Emily was taught needle-work; for
Mrs. Sydney knew'that in woman's life,
without this useful and pleasant resource,
many hours must pass in idleness. She
? had known mothers who considered it al-
most as derogatory to their daughters to
use a needle; and daughters who boasted
of their incapacity to work, as if an igno-
rance of such common-place knowledge
indicated a superiority of understanding;
but examine the occupations of their
day, and though music, drawing, and
reading, may fill up a portion of it, still a
large part will be vacant; the fingers
may be usefully employed while the
mind is active; plans may be formed5
and reflections made, which may bene-
ficially tend to the regulation of our con-
duct, while some little work progressively
advances; and in this double occupation
of mind and body, we, in some degree, re-
semble the industrious and ingenious Chi-
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? 144 ROSE AND EMILY; OR,
nese, whose hands, feet, and mouth, t
will each be usefully engaged at the same
moment.
In making little articles of wearing ap-
parel for the children of their poor neigh-
bours, Emily found an amusement which
at first she did not believe possible to be
derived from such an employment. Rose
was generally the instigator and promoter
of these plans of industry and charity;
for, always active, she was usually the
first who discovered the most necessitous
objects. Emily was seldom tardy in aiding
the benevolent wishes of her friend, whose
busy mind and sympathising heart found
for them both constant occupation. Some-
times Emily would w ish the work finish-
ed,and then Hose would redouble her own
exertions, and remind her friend of the
happiness they should dispense when
they carried the frock or cap to the
mother of the child for whom it was in-
tended; sometimes slie would sing;
sometimes relate a story, and thus
t Vide Lord Macartney's Embassy to China.
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? SKETCHES OF YotiTft. * 145
beguile the time when she perceived it
was beginning to grow tedious. The
completion of the work always brought
its reward $ they carried it to the cottage,
received the thanks of the mother, and
witnessed the happy smiles of the child,
as they arrayed it in its new clothes.
The advantages of neatness, Mrs. Syd-
ney not only inculcated by precept, but,
in her own person, set her children and
Emily the fairest example. "It not only
renders us more pleasing to society,"
she would say, "but greatly contributes
to our health. I would not have you,
my dear girls, shrink, with hydrophobial
horror, from cold water; or be satisfied
in the morning with just dipping the cor-
ner of a towel in a bason, and wiping
your hands and face.
The glow that
succeeds to the plentiful use of this de-
lightful element, will amply repay you
'for the first chilling sensation which it
may occasion. I have known many per-
sons, who, from indolence, indulge in.
the most offensive habits of dirtiness;
and, as an excuse, will urge that they
H
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? 146 ROSE AND EMILY; OR,
cannot spare the time to make themselves
clean; while, possibly, they waste a larger
portion of it in pinning a ribbon, and ad-
justing a flower or feather, than any one
would employ in the habitual customs of ?
neatness. I know not a more disagreeable
companion than one whose hair,teeth, and
nails betray marks of negligence; water
is liberally dispensed by the bountiful
Author of the Universe; articles and im-
plements of cleanliness are easily pro-
cured, and there are few people, (except
among the very poor and laborious) who
cannot be neat, if they desire to be so:
for my own part, I scarcely ever found
a palliation, in any one for the neglect
of this duty, and I turn disgusted from
the finest talents, if the possessor of
them be deformed by dirt. Neatness
is recommended to us as a minor virtue;
it is even placed next to godliness, in-
ferring from the purity of the body,
that of the soul. The Mahometans
make it a part of their religion; and a
Mussulman, who was one day pursued
by a succession of misfortunes, in
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? SKETCHES OP YOUTHi
147
endeavouring to account for them, at last
recollected that he had left his house in
the morning without having performed
his customary ablutions. "
About the end of the summer, the
health of poor Mrs. Bloomfield, the good
farmer's wife, began to decline. As a
wife and mother she had been most ex-
emplary; as a neighbour, Mrs. Sydney
had experienced from her benefits and
kindnesses; and she observed with deep
concern the hopelessness of her situation.
All the time she could spare from her own
family, she devoted to the sufferer, who,
perfectly conscious of her danger* fre-
quently conversed upon the subject with
calmness and submission. Resigned to
the will of Heaven as it affected herself,
her only solicitude was for Phoebe, who,
being the youngest of her children, was,
possibly, the object of her greatest ten-
derness: she had also been a delicate
child, so that affection had been height-
ened by anxiety. She was now nearly
twelve years old; her sisters were married
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? 148 HOSE AND EMILY J OR,
and had families; to them she would be
an incumbrance; she was too young to
keep her fathers house, too young to be
left without a guide, and too young to go
into service. As the good woman ex-
pressed her maternal solicitude for this
last-born treasure, Mrs. Sydney tenderly
took her hand, and endeavoured to relieve
her anxiety by the assurance that she
would be the protector of her child, till
she was old enough to take the manage-
ment of her father's house. Tears of
gratitude filled her eyes; she pressed the
hand of Mrs. Sydney, and silently re-
. turned thanks to Heaven for his mercy
and goodness in sending her such a com-
forter. "My dear Mrs. Bloomfield,"
said Mrs. Sydney, observing her labour-
ing to speak, "what do I not owe you!
in my hour of sorrow did I not receive
succour from your hand, and shelter
under your roof? and now that Providence
has placed it in my power, shall I not
seek to return these benefits? "Whilst I live,
and she is happy with me, Phcebe shall
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? SKETCHES OF^TOUTH. 1 49
find a home with me, unless her father
should wish her, when at a proper age,
to return to him. v Both parents grate-
fully accepted this benevolent promise;
and it was but too soon claimed: poor
Mrs. Bloomfield in a few days afterwards
breathed her last, and Phcebe became
the humble protegee at the parsonage.
Could any thing have mitigated the
unfeigned sorrow of the child for the loss
of her parent, it would have been the
tender attentions she received from Mrs.
Sydney and Isabel, and in being a re-
sident in the same house with her darling
Rose, whom she had loved from infancy
better than she loved any one, except her
parents. Artless, obliging', industrious,
and affectionate, she was ever ready to
obey the slightest wishof her benefactress;
her look was a command; her word was
a law; and except when now and then a
tear would arise as she remembered her
mother, she thought herself the happiest
girl in the world in being permitted to
live with Mrs. Sydney and her daughters.
H3
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? 150 ROSE AND EMILY } OR,
Change of season alone produced
change of pleasure or occupation to this
sequestered family. A few visitors some-
times made them a passing call; and oc-
casionally, a relation or friend remained
? with them for a few days; but to themselves
principally, did they turn for their a-
musements; and in themselves they found
all their sweetest and surest sources of
happiness.
The village, lying in a direct road to a
place of fashionable resort, possessed a
cheerfulness inthesummer months, which
in the winter it entirely lost. The gay
equipages of the travellers excited a tran-
sient look of admiration, and then were
thought of no more; sometimes a weary
or sentimental tourist would stop at the
little inn that offered its "good accommo-
dation," and wander . for a few days
amongst those wild and romantic scenes
of nature, before he joined the gay and
fashionable crowd at Matlock: here
he found subjeots for his pencil, and
excitements for his fancy. . A glimpse of
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? SKETCHES OF YOUTH. 151
the inhabitants of the parsonage might
produce a transient emotion of curiosity;
but in, a scene where all is strange and
new, we seldom pause to make personal
comments or observations.
. Faithfully attached to each other, hap.
py in their own little society, Mrs. Sydney
and her daughters, Emily and thaeue
found that union of heart which renders
every relative or social tie firm and en-
dearing. Mr. Blandford had left England,
and in his tour frequently wrote to his
daughter and Mrs. Sydney, conjuring the
latter to be the 'guardian of his Emily
till . his return, however distant might
be that period. ? ? ':
The understanding of Emily was more
solid than shewy: she did not receive in-
struction quickly, but she retained all
that was imparted; she reflected and ex-
amined, and even doubted before she de-
termined. Distant, unless noticed; silent,
unless addressed; chitting, unless warmed
by kindness, her affections, like her ideas,
H4
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? 152 ROSE AND. EMILY; OR,
were slow in forming; but when formed,
they were fixed. Rose^on the contrary, the
child of whim, the votary of fancy, instant-
ly received and comprehended whatever
was imparted:. but her thoughts, rapid as
theraysof light,quickly chased each other
away, which rendered her memory less
retentive. than Emily's; and frequently
when her explanations have assisted her
friend in making the mysterious clear,
Emily has been ef equal use to Rose, in
recalling to her mind some events of
history, or rules of science which she had
forgotten. The heart of Rose expanded
in kindness to every human being; in
tenderness to the dumb creation; and for
the vegetable^ she felt an enthusiastic
admiration. Her unaffected gaiety, and
artless playfulness Would frequently in-
spire mirth and ease in the manner of the
naturdly reserved Emily, and draw her
into? the circle of innocent pleasures. --
"You sometimes make me laugh against
my will," she w. ould say,/' yet Hove you
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? SKETCHES OF YOUTH. 153
Rose, even for making me laugh. " "I
laugh" Rose would reply, "because I
have nothing to make me sad: dear mam-
ma is well, and smiles upon us as she used
to do; Isabel is happy, and you are hap-
py, and so is our poor Phoebe; but if she
only . were sad, I could not laugh. How
beautiful is our garden Emily! I do not
wonder that Adam and Eve were so un-
happy when they left the garden of Eden;
I am sure I should be very sorry to leave
mine, for the more I am in it the more
I love it. " Emily blushed at the mention
of Adam. and Eve, but after a moment's
reflection, she said, smiling, "Do you
remember Rose, our quarrel about Adam
and Eve? " "My dear Emily I" exclaimed
Rose, "I remember it. now, but. indeed
I had quite forgotten it: pray forgive me
for recalling it to your memory. " "Yes
Rose, I :forgive you now with all my
heart: I am wiser. and better than I was
then, for am I not the child and pupil of
Mrs. Sydney! " Praise, however indirect,
h5
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? 164' ROSE AND EMILY; ORy
'to her mother, always brought a flush of
joy to the cheeks of Rose; she gave
Emily a kiss of gratitude, and then turned
to her flowers. ? < See Emily, I am raising
a plant to place on mamma's flower-stand,
on ber birth-day: I have chosen a balm
ofGilead; it is her emblem, for she is
balm to us. Isabel has a variegated ge-
ranium; she says it is like her life, a
mixture of light and shade; and what
will you have? " "A rose, I think," re-
plied Emily, smiling? and catching a
spark of her friend's fanciful appropria-
tions, "your emblem, arose,hut-not xvith-
out a thorn. " "Not without a thorn!
Emily; do I ever wound you? I would not
for the world, if I knew it. " I. am sure
you would not if you thought of it: but
do you not sometimes speak before you
think? " "I am afraid I do; but tell me
of my thorns or my faults, Emily, for that
will be kind: I love you as my sister, I
lqve you next to Isabel, and would not
4p or say any thing intentionally to hurt*
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? SKETCHES OF YOUTH. 155
or vex either of you. " "Then I wish,
my dear Rose, you would not do or say
any thing to hurt or vex poor Phoebe; did
you not see hel>> cry yesterday when you
laughed at her. " *'I did not think she
would cry, Emily, or I would not have
laughed; yet who could forbear laughing
a little, when she told me she would give
my mamma a pot of honesty? " "I did not
laugh even a little, or feel inclined to
laugh . " "No* you did not laugh Emily,
but you must have thought it ridiculous. "
** I thought more of what was unkind/*
**0Emily," said Rose, bursting into tears,
"*if you blame me, I am sure I was wrong:
itis almost wicked to be unkind to Phoebe,
poor. Phoebe ! ? who has no mother as I
have. '' At that moment Phoebe appeared,
and Rose ran and kissed her affectionate-
ly: the delighted girl was all smiles afc
this tender greeting, and said, "I have
thought of something for your mamma's
birth-day, Rose, which. 1 hope you will
like: it is thishoneysuckle, and it seems
H6
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? 156 ROSE ANI>. EMILY; OR,
a little to resemble me, for so should I
fall to the ground," added she, sighing:,
unless your good mamma supported me/'
This simple fancy, whiah feeling and
gratitude inspired* was so in unison with.
her own, that Rose. instantly com-
mended her choice, and poor Phoebe
was happy.
Mrs. Bloomfield had brought up her
daughter. to be useful and industrious^,
Mrs. Sydney continued to *do the same y
for however;sheloved and compassionated
the child, she considered that as. she was
born in an humble rank. of life, and pro-
bably destined to . fill . such a ,one, it might
render her discontented to raise her ideasy
or alter her habits, by any artificial; re-
finements, or mistaken indulgences: the
superintendance of their little dairy, the
care of the poultry, and many other do-
mestic employments, were assigned her,.
to which she paid a. scrupulous and un-.
remitting attention. Phoebe's mind and
wishes accorded with her situation: she
?
? SKETCHES OF YOUTH. 133
"Here is a letter for you, my love,"
said Mrs, Sydney to Emily, " read it
whilst I peruse mine. " Emily took it
with a blush; she could not read it, and
in confusion, returned it to her friend.
*{ Will you, madam, be so kind as to
read it to me ? --I cannot;" and tears
of shame and sorrow streamed from her
eyes. Mrs. Sydney read as follows :--
"My beloved child,
"To inform your mind, and to amend
your heart, are the first wishes of mine;
your happiness is the first object of my
life; to promote which, I have consent-
ed to part with you; to tear myself from
the sole comfort of my existence, and
for some years to leave you under the
guidance and protection of the only
person to whom I would consign my
treasure. Consider Mrs. Sydney in every
respect as your mother; love, honour,
and obey her as such ;? regard her daugh-
ters as your sisters and it is my parti-
cular desire that in every thing. which I
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? 134 ROSE AND EMILY } OK,
have sent you. Rose should participate.
This blended interest, will, I trust, at-
tach you more closely to each other, and
strengthen the bond of love and harmony.
"You will find books of various kinds,
from which you may derive, under the
direction of your best of friends, Mrs*
Sydney, all the information I am desi-
rous you should obtain. To amuse and
enliven some of your evening hours, I
have sent you a variety'of games; and,'
as a farther entertainment, a hand organ
with barrel s^ for fifty tunes. "
A hand organ with barrels for fifty
tunes! " exclaimed Rose; and springing
from her seat, threw her arms round
Emily in a transport of joy. Mrs. Syd-
ney smiled, but commanded silence, and:
continued :--
't Be a good chiid; follow implicitly
the directions of Mrs. and Miss Syd-
ney, that you may become as dear'to
them as you are to me. In a few years,
I hope to see you the amiable and
well informed woman; and then, with
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? SKETCHES OF YOUTH. 135
what pride and affection shall I press you
to my bosom. God bless you, my darling
Emily, and remember your father. '
The affectionate anxiety expressed in
this letter, (the first which Emily had ever
received) the earnest appeal of the father
to his child, deeply penetrated her heart,
and she sat silent and thoughtful; the
books, drawings, organ--every thing was
forgotten, but her father's letter. Mrs.
Sydney held out her hand to her, and
she threw herself weeping on her bosom.
"Omy dear madam, will you ever love
such a naughty, ignorant girl as I am?
I remember how often I have vexed
my poor papa, and how good he was
to me. I wish I could write; but
when he desired me to learn I would
not, and I blotted my book instead
of making letters; I wish I could tell
him that I will never grieve him again,
and that I will try to be as good and
clever as he wishes me. " Mrs. Sydney re-
turned her theletter,(whichshekissedand
placed. in her bosom). and was pleased to
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? 136 ROSE AND EMILY J OB,
see the strong feeling of filial affection,
and of contrition for past errors, awaken-
ed in the breast of her pupil; and to ob-
serve that the hopes of her father, ex-
pressed in all the tenderness of parental
anxiety, had excited an emulation which
might lead to their accomplishment.
Rose's vivacity was for a time checked
by the tears of Emily; but when her
face had resumed its composure, she
again exclaimed--" A hand-organ with
fifty tunes! O how I long to hear it! "
"Be patient, my love, till to-morrow,"
said Mrs. Sydney, " and then. you will
be gratified. " It was < difficult for Rose
to restrain her impatience and pleasure;
the tide of joy rushed so . rapidly to her
little heart, that. she knew not how to con-
fine it within proper bounds, but her
mamma's. decision was never murmured
at, and she smilingly acquiesced, though
anxiously wishing for the morrow. The
morrow came, and this object of her cu*
riosity was taken from its case. Its gay
and gilded exterior produced an excla-
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? SKETCHES OF YOUTH. 137
mation of surprise and admiration; but
when she first heard its tones, delight for
once checked her Utterance, and she
listened in mute astonishment. Not the
harp of Memnon, when touched by the
rays of Phoebus, ever excited more sur-
prise or rapture to its votaries, than did
the notes of the organ to the wondering
Rose; it was the first she had ever heard,
and she had no words to express her
transport.
In the liberality and variety of these
gifts Mrs. Sydney perceived the true mo-
tives of the friend and father; anxious not
only to promote the instruction of his
child, but the happiness and amusement
of the whole family. It is often by
attention to minor pleasures and trifling
comforts, that the heart of friendship
most forcibly reveals itself; and though
real services may claim our gratitude,
little kindnesses will always engage our
love,
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? 238 KOSE AND EMILY; OR,
CHAP. X.
The education of Emily now began to
assume the regular form of lessons, and
the habits she had imbibed, when under
no controul, were gradually yielding to
the admonitions of Mrs. Sydney, and the
example of her daughters, whilst her un-
derstanding, like a rich border of earth
newly cultivated. promised abundantly
to repay the care of the improver. The
mind of Mrs. Sydney, thus compelled to
exertion, acquired strength and compo-
sure; her thoughts, urged into new
channels, no longer brooded over her ca-
lamities; she had now positive duties to
perform; and except at some occasional
intervals, when the chord of sorrow vi-
biated to some accidental touch, her
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? SKETCHES OF YOUTH. 139
feelings had, in a great degree, regained
their former tone and harmony.
Winter glided swiftly away, as duty
and affection went hand in hand. The
children. found in Mrs. Sydney the mo-
ther, the monitress, and the friend; and
in them she beheld the sun that gave light
and warmth to her existence, that bright,
ened every prospect, and the springs
that fed every vital part. In the
gentle nature, the equal temper, and
the unvarying affections of Isabel, she
had a blessing on which her heart might
safely repose. In the vivacity and good-
thumour of Rose there was an amusement
which diverted her thoughts and ani-
mated her spirits; and in the interest
she felt for Emily, and her gratitude
io Mr. Blandford, a stimulus to exertion
that rendered the indulgehce of all sel-
fish sorrow both injurious and unjust.
Their garden began to assume a cheerful
appearance; the aconite, the first child
of spring, was pointed out by Rose in
triumph. "Look mamma at that dear
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? 140 ROSE AND EMILY; OR,
little yellow cup in a green saucer," she
exclaimed; "what a pity it is poisonous,
it is so pretty. " "Even in this simple
blossom, my Rose, you may learn a use-
ful lesson--not to value any thing for its
exterior only; yet nothing is given in
vain, and poison as frequently ministers
to health, as it is the instrument of death. "
Crocuses, snow-drops, and " the sad
anemone," next succeeded; but with
what joy did she discover the first violet*
whose sweetness betrayed where it was
concealed; she brought it to her mamma
as the loveliest blossom in the garden.
A small piece of ground was allotted for
the children, and Emily soon received
pleasure from cultivating it, though she
could not understand Rose's enthusiastic
fondness for flowers, which, in the exu-
berance of her fancy, she almost per-
sonified, and often appropriated as em-
blems of different persons. This taste
and feeling were in themselves so amu-
sing, so natural, and so innocent,that Mrs.
Sydney never attempted to restrain them!
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? SKETCHES OF YOUTH. 141
though she often smiled at the little absur-'
dities of her young enthusiast of nature.
The first of May arrived, and Rose,
whose beauty, engaging manners, and
sweet temper, had rendered her the little
pet and darling of the village, again re-
ceived the customary congratulations on
? her birth-day; the boys and girls, with
Phoebe #t their head, assembled early in
the morning at the gate of the parsonage,
with their gay garlands of flowers. Rose
was soon in the midst of them, her cheeks
glowing with joy, her heart beating with
. exultation; again she received her simple
offerings, again was crowned queen of
. the May, and again garlanded and deco-
rated with the treasures of Flora, shewed
herself in triumph to her mamma, who,
though the remembrance of other times
? pressed upon her heart, and clouded her
feelings, completed the happiness of her
child by bestowing her fondest kiss and
blessing.
* gummer came, and the hours which
were not devoted to study, were spent in
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? 142 ROSE AND EMILY; OR,
rural walks, in the amusements of botany,
in taking sketches from nature, in gar-
dening,'and in visiting the poor families
who required either assistance or con-
dolence. Emily, who had never before
lived in the country, or been accustomed
to its habits, was at first fatigued by walk-
ing; the beauties of rural scenery had
never been pointed out to her; she had
not felt their charm, and her eye passed
over them in vacant indifference, till
awakened from. her listlessness by the
enthusiastic exclamations of Rose, or the
effusions of admiration that frequently
escaped the lip's of Mrs. Sydney and Isa-
bel, as they wandered among the rocks,
woods, and mountains of this highly
picturesque country; in time she began
to observe, and at length to feel them.
The study of botany gave a constant in-
terest to their walks, and in the wonder-
ful construction of the simplest flowers,
they could not fail to trace the hand of
that Providence which disdains nothing
that it has made; but provides even for
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? SKETCHES OP YOUTH. 143
the security of the infant blossom, ex-
tending its guardian care alike over the
vegetable as well as the animal creation.
Emily was taught needle-work; for
Mrs. Sydney knew'that in woman's life,
without this useful and pleasant resource,
many hours must pass in idleness. She
? had known mothers who considered it al-
most as derogatory to their daughters to
use a needle; and daughters who boasted
of their incapacity to work, as if an igno-
rance of such common-place knowledge
indicated a superiority of understanding;
but examine the occupations of their
day, and though music, drawing, and
reading, may fill up a portion of it, still a
large part will be vacant; the fingers
may be usefully employed while the
mind is active; plans may be formed5
and reflections made, which may bene-
ficially tend to the regulation of our con-
duct, while some little work progressively
advances; and in this double occupation
of mind and body, we, in some degree, re-
semble the industrious and ingenious Chi-
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? 144 ROSE AND EMILY; OR,
nese, whose hands, feet, and mouth, t
will each be usefully engaged at the same
moment.
In making little articles of wearing ap-
parel for the children of their poor neigh-
bours, Emily found an amusement which
at first she did not believe possible to be
derived from such an employment. Rose
was generally the instigator and promoter
of these plans of industry and charity;
for, always active, she was usually the
first who discovered the most necessitous
objects. Emily was seldom tardy in aiding
the benevolent wishes of her friend, whose
busy mind and sympathising heart found
for them both constant occupation. Some-
times Emily would w ish the work finish-
ed,and then Hose would redouble her own
exertions, and remind her friend of the
happiness they should dispense when
they carried the frock or cap to the
mother of the child for whom it was in-
tended; sometimes slie would sing;
sometimes relate a story, and thus
t Vide Lord Macartney's Embassy to China.
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? SKETCHES OF YotiTft. * 145
beguile the time when she perceived it
was beginning to grow tedious. The
completion of the work always brought
its reward $ they carried it to the cottage,
received the thanks of the mother, and
witnessed the happy smiles of the child,
as they arrayed it in its new clothes.
The advantages of neatness, Mrs. Syd-
ney not only inculcated by precept, but,
in her own person, set her children and
Emily the fairest example. "It not only
renders us more pleasing to society,"
she would say, "but greatly contributes
to our health. I would not have you,
my dear girls, shrink, with hydrophobial
horror, from cold water; or be satisfied
in the morning with just dipping the cor-
ner of a towel in a bason, and wiping
your hands and face.
The glow that
succeeds to the plentiful use of this de-
lightful element, will amply repay you
'for the first chilling sensation which it
may occasion. I have known many per-
sons, who, from indolence, indulge in.
the most offensive habits of dirtiness;
and, as an excuse, will urge that they
H
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? 146 ROSE AND EMILY; OR,
cannot spare the time to make themselves
clean; while, possibly, they waste a larger
portion of it in pinning a ribbon, and ad-
justing a flower or feather, than any one
would employ in the habitual customs of ?
neatness. I know not a more disagreeable
companion than one whose hair,teeth, and
nails betray marks of negligence; water
is liberally dispensed by the bountiful
Author of the Universe; articles and im-
plements of cleanliness are easily pro-
cured, and there are few people, (except
among the very poor and laborious) who
cannot be neat, if they desire to be so:
for my own part, I scarcely ever found
a palliation, in any one for the neglect
of this duty, and I turn disgusted from
the finest talents, if the possessor of
them be deformed by dirt. Neatness
is recommended to us as a minor virtue;
it is even placed next to godliness, in-
ferring from the purity of the body,
that of the soul. The Mahometans
make it a part of their religion; and a
Mussulman, who was one day pursued
by a succession of misfortunes, in
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? SKETCHES OP YOUTHi
147
endeavouring to account for them, at last
recollected that he had left his house in
the morning without having performed
his customary ablutions. "
About the end of the summer, the
health of poor Mrs. Bloomfield, the good
farmer's wife, began to decline. As a
wife and mother she had been most ex-
emplary; as a neighbour, Mrs. Sydney
had experienced from her benefits and
kindnesses; and she observed with deep
concern the hopelessness of her situation.
All the time she could spare from her own
family, she devoted to the sufferer, who,
perfectly conscious of her danger* fre-
quently conversed upon the subject with
calmness and submission. Resigned to
the will of Heaven as it affected herself,
her only solicitude was for Phoebe, who,
being the youngest of her children, was,
possibly, the object of her greatest ten-
derness: she had also been a delicate
child, so that affection had been height-
ened by anxiety. She was now nearly
twelve years old; her sisters were married
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? 148 HOSE AND EMILY J OR,
and had families; to them she would be
an incumbrance; she was too young to
keep her fathers house, too young to be
left without a guide, and too young to go
into service. As the good woman ex-
pressed her maternal solicitude for this
last-born treasure, Mrs. Sydney tenderly
took her hand, and endeavoured to relieve
her anxiety by the assurance that she
would be the protector of her child, till
she was old enough to take the manage-
ment of her father's house. Tears of
gratitude filled her eyes; she pressed the
hand of Mrs. Sydney, and silently re-
. turned thanks to Heaven for his mercy
and goodness in sending her such a com-
forter. "My dear Mrs. Bloomfield,"
said Mrs. Sydney, observing her labour-
ing to speak, "what do I not owe you!
in my hour of sorrow did I not receive
succour from your hand, and shelter
under your roof? and now that Providence
has placed it in my power, shall I not
seek to return these benefits? "Whilst I live,
and she is happy with me, Phcebe shall
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? SKETCHES OF^TOUTH. 1 49
find a home with me, unless her father
should wish her, when at a proper age,
to return to him. v Both parents grate-
fully accepted this benevolent promise;
and it was but too soon claimed: poor
Mrs. Bloomfield in a few days afterwards
breathed her last, and Phcebe became
the humble protegee at the parsonage.
Could any thing have mitigated the
unfeigned sorrow of the child for the loss
of her parent, it would have been the
tender attentions she received from Mrs.
Sydney and Isabel, and in being a re-
sident in the same house with her darling
Rose, whom she had loved from infancy
better than she loved any one, except her
parents. Artless, obliging', industrious,
and affectionate, she was ever ready to
obey the slightest wishof her benefactress;
her look was a command; her word was
a law; and except when now and then a
tear would arise as she remembered her
mother, she thought herself the happiest
girl in the world in being permitted to
live with Mrs. Sydney and her daughters.
H3
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? 150 ROSE AND EMILY } OR,
Change of season alone produced
change of pleasure or occupation to this
sequestered family. A few visitors some-
times made them a passing call; and oc-
casionally, a relation or friend remained
? with them for a few days; but to themselves
principally, did they turn for their a-
musements; and in themselves they found
all their sweetest and surest sources of
happiness.
The village, lying in a direct road to a
place of fashionable resort, possessed a
cheerfulness inthesummer months, which
in the winter it entirely lost. The gay
equipages of the travellers excited a tran-
sient look of admiration, and then were
thought of no more; sometimes a weary
or sentimental tourist would stop at the
little inn that offered its "good accommo-
dation," and wander . for a few days
amongst those wild and romantic scenes
of nature, before he joined the gay and
fashionable crowd at Matlock: here
he found subjeots for his pencil, and
excitements for his fancy. . A glimpse of
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? SKETCHES OF YOUTH. 151
the inhabitants of the parsonage might
produce a transient emotion of curiosity;
but in, a scene where all is strange and
new, we seldom pause to make personal
comments or observations.
. Faithfully attached to each other, hap.
py in their own little society, Mrs. Sydney
and her daughters, Emily and thaeue
found that union of heart which renders
every relative or social tie firm and en-
dearing. Mr. Blandford had left England,
and in his tour frequently wrote to his
daughter and Mrs. Sydney, conjuring the
latter to be the 'guardian of his Emily
till . his return, however distant might
be that period. ? ? ':
The understanding of Emily was more
solid than shewy: she did not receive in-
struction quickly, but she retained all
that was imparted; she reflected and ex-
amined, and even doubted before she de-
termined. Distant, unless noticed; silent,
unless addressed; chitting, unless warmed
by kindness, her affections, like her ideas,
H4
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? 152 ROSE AND. EMILY; OR,
were slow in forming; but when formed,
they were fixed. Rose^on the contrary, the
child of whim, the votary of fancy, instant-
ly received and comprehended whatever
was imparted:. but her thoughts, rapid as
theraysof light,quickly chased each other
away, which rendered her memory less
retentive. than Emily's; and frequently
when her explanations have assisted her
friend in making the mysterious clear,
Emily has been ef equal use to Rose, in
recalling to her mind some events of
history, or rules of science which she had
forgotten. The heart of Rose expanded
in kindness to every human being; in
tenderness to the dumb creation; and for
the vegetable^ she felt an enthusiastic
admiration. Her unaffected gaiety, and
artless playfulness Would frequently in-
spire mirth and ease in the manner of the
naturdly reserved Emily, and draw her
into? the circle of innocent pleasures. --
"You sometimes make me laugh against
my will," she w. ould say,/' yet Hove you
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? SKETCHES OF YOUTH. 153
Rose, even for making me laugh. " "I
laugh" Rose would reply, "because I
have nothing to make me sad: dear mam-
ma is well, and smiles upon us as she used
to do; Isabel is happy, and you are hap-
py, and so is our poor Phoebe; but if she
only . were sad, I could not laugh. How
beautiful is our garden Emily! I do not
wonder that Adam and Eve were so un-
happy when they left the garden of Eden;
I am sure I should be very sorry to leave
mine, for the more I am in it the more
I love it. " Emily blushed at the mention
of Adam. and Eve, but after a moment's
reflection, she said, smiling, "Do you
remember Rose, our quarrel about Adam
and Eve? " "My dear Emily I" exclaimed
Rose, "I remember it. now, but. indeed
I had quite forgotten it: pray forgive me
for recalling it to your memory. " "Yes
Rose, I :forgive you now with all my
heart: I am wiser. and better than I was
then, for am I not the child and pupil of
Mrs. Sydney! " Praise, however indirect,
h5
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? 164' ROSE AND EMILY; ORy
'to her mother, always brought a flush of
joy to the cheeks of Rose; she gave
Emily a kiss of gratitude, and then turned
to her flowers. ? < See Emily, I am raising
a plant to place on mamma's flower-stand,
on ber birth-day: I have chosen a balm
ofGilead; it is her emblem, for she is
balm to us. Isabel has a variegated ge-
ranium; she says it is like her life, a
mixture of light and shade; and what
will you have? " "A rose, I think," re-
plied Emily, smiling? and catching a
spark of her friend's fanciful appropria-
tions, "your emblem, arose,hut-not xvith-
out a thorn. " "Not without a thorn!
Emily; do I ever wound you? I would not
for the world, if I knew it. " I. am sure
you would not if you thought of it: but
do you not sometimes speak before you
think? " "I am afraid I do; but tell me
of my thorns or my faults, Emily, for that
will be kind: I love you as my sister, I
lqve you next to Isabel, and would not
4p or say any thing intentionally to hurt*
? ? Generated for (University of Chicago) on 2014-12-24 14:36 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/hvd. hn2hfl Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? SKETCHES OF YOUTH. 155
or vex either of you. " "Then I wish,
my dear Rose, you would not do or say
any thing to hurt or vex poor Phoebe; did
you not see hel>> cry yesterday when you
laughed at her. " *'I did not think she
would cry, Emily, or I would not have
laughed; yet who could forbear laughing
a little, when she told me she would give
my mamma a pot of honesty? " "I did not
laugh even a little, or feel inclined to
laugh . " "No* you did not laugh Emily,
but you must have thought it ridiculous. "
** I thought more of what was unkind/*
**0Emily," said Rose, bursting into tears,
"*if you blame me, I am sure I was wrong:
itis almost wicked to be unkind to Phoebe,
poor. Phoebe ! ? who has no mother as I
have. '' At that moment Phoebe appeared,
and Rose ran and kissed her affectionate-
ly: the delighted girl was all smiles afc
this tender greeting, and said, "I have
thought of something for your mamma's
birth-day, Rose, which. 1 hope you will
like: it is thishoneysuckle, and it seems
H6
? ? Generated for (University of Chicago) on 2014-12-24 14:36 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/hvd. hn2hfl Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? 156 ROSE ANI>. EMILY; OR,
a little to resemble me, for so should I
fall to the ground," added she, sighing:,
unless your good mamma supported me/'
This simple fancy, whiah feeling and
gratitude inspired* was so in unison with.
her own, that Rose. instantly com-
mended her choice, and poor Phoebe
was happy.
Mrs. Bloomfield had brought up her
daughter. to be useful and industrious^,
Mrs. Sydney continued to *do the same y
for however;sheloved and compassionated
the child, she considered that as. she was
born in an humble rank. of life, and pro-
bably destined to . fill . such a ,one, it might
render her discontented to raise her ideasy
or alter her habits, by any artificial; re-
finements, or mistaken indulgences: the
superintendance of their little dairy, the
care of the poultry, and many other do-
mestic employments, were assigned her,.
to which she paid a. scrupulous and un-.
remitting attention. Phoebe's mind and
wishes accorded with her situation: she
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