[The Complete Works of Whittier by John Greenleaf Whittier]@TWC D-Link book
The Complete Works of Whittier

CHAPTER VI
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God's peace be with you; and that love be around you, which has been to me as the green pasture and the still water, the shadow in a weary land." And the stranger went his way; but the lady and her lover, in all their after life, and amidst the trials and persecutions which they were called to suffer in the cause of truth, remembered with joy and gratitude the instructions of the pure-hearted and eloquent William Penn.
DAVID MATSON.
Published originally in Our Young Folks, 1865.
WHO of my young friends have read the sorrowful story of "Enoch Arden," so sweetly and simply told by the great English poet?
It is the story of a man who went to sea, leaving behind a sweet young wife and little daughter.

He was cast away on a desert island, where he remained several years, when he was discovered and taken off by a passing vessel.
Coming back to his native town, he found his wife married to an old playmate, a good man, rich and honored, and with whom she was living happily.

The poor man, unwilling to cause her pain and perplexity, resolved not to make himself known to her, and lived and died alone.
The poem has reminded me of a very similar story of my own New England neighborhood, which I have often heard, and which I will try to tell, not in poetry, like Alfred Tennyson's, but in my own poor prose.

I can assure my readers that in its main particulars it is a true tale.
One bright summer morning, not more than fourscore years ago, David Matson, with his young wife and his two healthy, barefooted boys, stood on the bank of the river near their dwelling.

They were waiting for Pelatiah Curtis to come round the point with his wherry, and take the husband and father to the port, a few miles below.


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