[The Old Peabody Pew by Kate Douglas Wiggin]@TWC D-Link bookThe Old Peabody Pew CHAPTER III 1/7
Justin Peabody had once faithfully struggled with the practical difficulties of life in Edgewood, or so he had thought, in those old days of which Nancy Wentworth was thinking as she wiped the paint of the Peabody pew.
Work in the mills did not attract him; he had no capital to invest in a stock of goods for store-keeping; school-teaching offered him only a pittance; there remained then only the farm, if he were to stay at home and keep his mother company. "Justin don't seem to take no holt of things," said the neighbours. "Good Heavens!" It seemed to him that there were no things to take hold of! That was his first thought; later he grew to think that the trouble all lay in himself, and both thoughts bred weakness. The farm had somehow supported the family in the old Deacon's time, but Justin seemed unable to coax a competence from the soil.
He could, and did, rise early and work late; till the earth, sow crops; but he could not make the rain fall nor the sun shine at the times he needed them, and the elements, however much they might seem to favour his neighbours, seldom smiled on his enterprises.
The crows liked Justin's corn better than any other in Edgewood.
It had a richness peculiar to itself, a quality that appealed to the most jaded palate, so that it was really worth while to fly over a mile of intervening fields and pay it the delicate compliment of preference. Justin could explain the attitude of caterpillars, worms, grasshoppers, and potato-bugs toward him only by assuming that he attracted them as the magnet in the toy boxes attracts the miniature fishes. "Land of liberty! look at 'em congregate!" ejaculated Jabe Slocum, when he was called in for consultation.
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