[Aunt Phillis’s Cabin by Mary H. Eastman]@TWC D-Link book
Aunt Phillis’s Cabin

CHAPTER XVIII
18/18

How could she have reposed had she felt the protection of the Everlasting Arms! But time, though it does not always heal, must assuage the intensity of grief; the first year passed after William's death, and Ellen felt a wish for other scenes than those where she had been accustomed to see him.

She had now little to which she could look forward.
Her chief amusement was in retiring to the library, and reading old romances, with which its upper shelves were filled; this, under other circumstances, her aunt would have forbidden, but it was a relief to see Ellen interested in any thing, and she appeared not to observe her thus employing herself.
So Ellen gradually returned to the old ways; she studied a little, and assisted her industrious aunt in her numerous occupations.

As of old, her aunt saw her restlessness of disposition, and Ellen felt rebellious and irritable.

With what an unexpected delight, then, did she receive from her aunt's hands, the letters from Mrs.Weston, inviting her to come at once to Exeter, and then to accompany them to Washington.

She, without any difficulty, obtained the necessary permission, and joyfully wrote to Mrs.
Weston, how gladly she would accept the kind invitation..


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