Seven-Up
In a pleasant farm house, one wintry eve after supper and a hard day’s work at thrashing, Samuel Grey rose from his chair with a sad, weary look, and stood before the drawer of an old bureau.
“Samuel, what is thee doing?” asked his mother, following him. “Thee is not going out tonight, when so tired?”
“Yes, mother,” he replied, taking up with a sigh, a small calico bag, which seemed well filled.
“Why, that is the mortgage money, Samuel; what does thee want with that? It is not due till next spring.”
“I know it, mother, but I must have this money this night,” he answered in a determined tone.
“For what, my son? Thee has always told me everything. We earned the money together.”
“I know it, mother. All these years we have toiled to pay off that mortgage left on the farm at my father’s death, and now it has all come to nothing. Sit down in your chair, mother, and I will tell you the truth, as I trust I have ever done. I do not fear your blame, as I have always loved your praise. This one egregious error has taught me great lessons already. They say women can bear troubles better than men.”
Samuel’s mother trembled very much, but she sat quietly down. Her face was pleasant to look at—healthy and fresh, with a clean Quaker cap crimped about it. She could not believe her son had done anything so very wrong; but all was a mystery.
“Last evening you know how late I staid away, and I presume you thought I was with Ellen at the farm; but I was not; more is the pity. I went on an errand to the tavern to get some oil for our lame horse’s leg. The bar-room was a blaze of light, and all the boys there, and I stepped in to warm. There were two finely dressed gentlemen from Boston sitting around the table, calling for the best of port wine, and treating the company. They called me to join so cordially that I consented, and felt… Read More