[Aunt Phillis’s Cabin by Mary H. Eastman]@TWC D-Link bookAunt Phillis’s Cabin CHAPTER I 4/15
There was an engagement between him and his cousin, though Alice was but fifteen when it was formed.
They had been associated from the earliest period of their lives, and Arthur declared that should he return home on a visit, he would not be able to break away from its happiness to the routine of a college life: he yielded therefore to the earnest entreaties of his father, to remain at New Haven until he graduated. Mr.Weston will stand for a specimen of the southern gentleman of the old school.
The bland and cheerful expression of his countenance, the arrangement of his soft fine hair, the fineness of the texture and the perfect cleanliness of every part of his dress, the plaiting of his old-fashioned shirt ruffles, the whiteness of his hand, and the sound of his clear, well-modulated voice--in fact, every item of his appearance--won the good opinion of a stranger; while the feelings of his heart and his steady course of Christian life, made him honored and reverenced as he deserved.
He possessed that requisite to the character of a true gentleman, a kind and charitable heart. None of the present members of his family had any lawful claim upon him, yet he cherished them with the utmost affection.
He requested his brother's widow, on the death of his own wife, to assume the charge of his house; and she was in every respect its mistress.
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