A Country Doctor and Selected Stories and Sketches eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 534 pages of information about A Country Doctor and Selected Stories and Sketches.

A Country Doctor and Selected Stories and Sketches eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 534 pages of information about A Country Doctor and Selected Stories and Sketches.

“I had the best part of anybody,” said Mrs. Hender, smiling and going on with her Saturday morning work.  “I’m real glad they showed him proper respect,” she added a moment afterward, but her voice faltered.

“Why, you ain’t been cryin’, grandma?” asked the girl.  “I guess you’re tired.  You had a real good time, now, didn’t you?”

“Yes, dear heart!” said Abby Hender. “‘T ain’t pleasant to be growin’ old, that’s all.  I couldn’t help noticin’ his age as he rode away.  I’ve always been lookin’ forward to seein’ him again, an’ now it’s all over.”

* * * * *

Looking Back on Girlhood

In giving this brief account of my childhood, or, to speak exactly, of the surroundings which have affected the course of my work as a writer, my first thought flies back to those who taught me to observe, and to know the deep pleasures of simple things, and to be interested in the lives of people about me.

With its high hills and pine forests, and all its ponds and brooks and distant mountain views, there are few such delightful country towns in New England as the one where I was born.  Being one of the oldest colonial settlements, it is full of interesting traditions and relics of the early inhabitants, both Indians and Englishmen.  Two large rivers join just below the village at the head of tide-water, and these, with the great inflow from the sea, make a magnificent stream, bordered on its seaward course now by high-wooded banks of dark pines and hemlocks, and again by lovely green fields that slope gently to long lines of willows at the water’s edge.

There is never-ending pleasure in making one’s self familiar with such a region.  One may travel at home in a most literal sense, and be always learning history, geography, botany, or biography—­whatever one chooses.

I have had a good deal of journeying in my life, and taken great delight in it, but I have never taken greater delight than in my rides and drives and tramps and voyages within the borders of my native town.  There is always something fresh, something to be traced or discovered, something particularly to be remembered.  One grows rich in memories and associations.

I believe that we should know our native towns much better than most of us do, and never let ourselves be strangers at home.  Particularly when one’s native place is so really interesting as my own!

Above tide-water the two rivers are barred by successive falls.  You hear the noise of them by night in the village like the sound of the sea, and this fine water power so near the coast, beside a great salmon fishery famous among the Indians, brought the first English settlers to the town in 1627.  I know some families who still live upon the lands which their ancestors bought from the Indians, and their single deed bears the queer barbaric signatures.

There are many things to remind one of these early settlers beside the old farms upon which they and their descendants have lived for six or seven generations.  One is a quaint fashion of speech which survives among the long-established neighborhoods, in words and phrases common in England in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.

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A Country Doctor and Selected Stories and Sketches from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.