Heart-Histories and Life-Pictures
HEART-HISTORIES AND LIFE-PICTURES. BY T. S. ARTHUR. NEW YORK: 1853. INTRODUCTION. So interested are we all in our every-day pursuits; so given up, body and mind, to the attainment of our own ends; so absorbed by our
why he was so absorbed in his garden. When he was not weeding or
watering or planting, he was counting the number of pea-pods on every
vine, or the ears of corn as they tasselled out on each stalk. He had
put brains as well as muscle into his summer's work, asking questions
and advice of every gardener in Bardstown, and carefully reading the
agricultural papers one of them loaned him. Every vegetable he
attempted to raise was a success, and he carried them all three miles
down the road toward the city, to some rich customers that he found in
the elegant suburban homes there. They were willing to pay nearly
double the price that the Bardstown people offered him, everything he
had was so fresh and good.
It was a long way to trudge with his heavy baskets, and he longed
every day for the wheel he was trying so hard to win. "Won't I spin
along then!" he said to himself on more than one occasion, as he
dragged his tired feet homeward.
His Aunt Jane wanted to buy some of his vegetables, and hinted several
times that he might supply the table once in awhile for nothing; but
beyond an occasional contribution in the way of a few inferior
vegetables that he could not sell, he would not part with any at the
price she offered.
"He's a boy after your own heart, Peter Morgan," she complained to her
husband. "He's closer than the bark on a tree."
HEART-HISTORIES AND LIFE-PICTURES. BY T. S. ARTHUR. NEW YORK: 1853. INTRODUCTION. So interested are we all in our every-day pursuits; so given up, body and mind, to the attainment of our own ends; so absorbed by our