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Автор: Kate Sanborn
Издательство: Bookwire
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Жанр произведения: Языкознание
Год издания: 0
isbn: 4064066212667
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       Kate Sanborn

      Memories and Anecdotes

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066212667

       ILLUSTRATIONS

       MEMORIES AND ANECDOTES

       CHAPTER I

       CHAPTER II

       CHAPTER III

       CHAPTER IV

       CHAPTER V

       CHAPTER VI

       CHAPTER VII

       Table of Contents

       Greetings and Welcome to Every Reader (Kate Sanborn) Frontispiece

       The Street Fronting the Sanborn Home at Hanover, N.H.

       Mrs. Anne C. Lynch Botta

       President Barnard of Columbia College

       Professor R. Ogden Doremus

       Sophia Smith

       Peter MacQueen

       Sam Walter Foss

       Pines and Silver Birches

       Paddling in Chicken Brook

       The Island Which We Made

       Taka's Tea House at Lily Pond

       The Lookout

       The Switch

       How Vines Grow at Breezy Meadows

       Grand Elm (over Two Hundred Years Old)

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      My Early Days—Odd Characters in our Village—Distinguished Visitors to Dartmouth—Two Story Tellers of Hanover—A "Beacon Light" and a Master of Synonyms—A Day with Bryant in his Country Home—A Wedding Trip to the White Mountains in 1826 in "A One Hoss Shay"—A Great Career which Began in a Country Store.

      I make no excuse for publishing these memories. Realizing that I have been so fortunate as to know an unusual number of distinguished men and women, it gives me pleasure to share this privilege with others.

      One summer morning, "long, long ago," a newspaper was sent by my grandmother, Mrs. Ezekiel Webster, to a sister at Concord, New Hampshire, with this item of news pencilled on the margin:

      "Born Thursday morning, July 11, 1839, 4.30 A.m., a fine little girl, seven pounds."

      I was born in my father's library, and first opened my eyes upon a scenic wall-paper depicting the Bay of Naples; in fact I was born just under Vesuvius—which may account for my occasional eruptions of temper and life-long interest in "Old Time Wall-papers." Later our house was expanded into a college dormitory and has been removed to another site, but Vesuvius is still smoking placidly in the old library.

      Mine was a shielded, happy childhood—an only child for six years—and family letters show that I was "always and for ever talking," asking questions, making queer remarks, or allowing free play to a vivid imagination, which my parents thought it wise to restrain. Father felt called upon to write for a child's paper about Caty's Gold Fish, which were only minnows from Mink Brook.

      "Caty is sitting on the floor at my feet, chattering as usual, and asking questions." I seem to remember my calling over the banister to an assembled family downstairs, "Muzzer, Muzzer, I dess I dot a fezer," or "Muzzer, come up, I'se dot a headache in my stomach." I certainly can recall my intense admiration for Professor Ira Young, our next door neighbour, and his snowy pow, which I called "pity wite fedders."

      As years rolled on, I fear I was pert and audacious. I once touched at supper a blazing hot teapot, which almost blistered my fingers, and I screamed with surprise and pain. Father exclaimed, "Stop that noise, Caty." I replied, "Put your fingers on that teapot—and don't kitikize." And one evening about seven, my usual bedtime, I announced, "I'm going to sit up till eight tonight, and don't you 'spute." I know of many children who have the same habit of questions and sharp retorts. One of my pets, after plying her mother with about forty questions, wound up with, "Mother, how does the devil's darning needle sleep? Does he lie down on a twig or hang, or how?" "I don't know, dear." "Why, mother, it is surprising when you have lived so many years, that you know so little!"

      Mr. Higginson told an absurd story of an inquisitive child and wearied mother in the cars passing the various Newtons, near Boston. At last the limit. "Ma, why do they call this West Newton?" "Oh, I suppose for fun." Silence for a few minutes, then, "Ma, what was the fun in calling it West Newton?"

      I began Latin at eight years—my first book a yellow paper primer.

      I was always interested in chickens, and dosed all the indisposed as:

      Dandy Dick

       Was very sick,

       I gave him red pepper

       And soon he was better.

      In spring, I remember the humming of our bees around the sawdust, and my craze for flower seeds and a garden of my own.

      Father had a phenomenal memory; he could recite in his classroom pages of Scott's novels, which he had not read since early youth. He had no intention of allowing my memory to grow flabby from lack of use. I often repeat a verse he asked me to commit to memory:

      In reading authors, when you find

       Bright passages that strike your mind,

       And which perhaps you may have reason

       To think on at another season;

       Be not contented with the sight,

       But jot them down in black and white;

       Such respect is wisely shown