Lays of Ancient Virginia, and Other Poems
LAYS OF ANCIENT VIRGINIA, AND OTHER POEMS: BY JAMES AVIS BARTLEY, OF ORANGE COUNTY, VIRGINIA. RICHMOND: J.W. RANDOLPH, PUBLISHER 1855 Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1855, BY J.A. BARTLEY,
Besides, she still looked for him to take a hint.
He did, after his own fashion. "You ought to see Judith here," he
laughed to a caller, "practising her kindergarten methods on me." His
imperturbability was at once a boast and a slight.
"He doesn't mean it," she apologized, later, protecting herself by
defending him. "You know how men are; the best of them a bit stupid
about some things. They don't mean to hurt you. You know it, but you
can't help crying."
"Oh, I understand!" (That any one should sympathize with her! It was
not so much her vanity that suffered as her precious regard for him,
her pride in their marriage.) "Nobody minds little things like that
against such devotion and constancy. Why, he talks of you all the
time, Judith; of your style, your housekeeping. You are his pet boast.
He says you can do more with less than anybody he ever saw." And then
Judith laughed.
They were all articles of the creed she herself repeated--and doubted
more and more. Faithful enough. He never came or went without the
customary kiss. When he had typhoid fever, no one might be near him
but her, until her exhaustion could no longer be concealed, when he
fretted about her--until he fretted himself back into high temperature
and had a relapse.
LAYS OF ANCIENT VIRGINIA, AND OTHER POEMS: BY JAMES AVIS BARTLEY, OF ORANGE COUNTY, VIRGINIA. RICHMOND: J.W. RANDOLPH, PUBLISHER 1855 Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1855, BY J.A. BARTLEY,