Autobiography of a Child
By HANNAH LYNCH
New York
Dodd, Mead & Company 1899
Copyright, 1898 , By Dodd, Mead and Company
AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF A CHILD
The picture is clear before me of the day I first walked. My mother, a handsome, cold-eyed woman, who did not love me, had driven out from town to nurse's cottage. I shut my eyes, and I am back in the little parlour with its spindle chairs, an old-fashioned piano with green silk front, its pink-flowered wall-paper, and the two wonderful black-and-white dogs on the mantelpiece. There were two pictures I loved to gaze upon—Robert Emmett in the dock, and Mary Stuart saying farewell to France. I do not remember my mother's coming or going. Memory begins to work from the moment nurse put me on a pair of unsteady legs. There were chairs placed for me to clutch, and I was coaxingly bidden to toddle along, over to mamma. It was very exciting. First one chair had to be reached, then another fallen over, till a third tumbled me at my mother's feet. I burst into a passion of tears, not because of the fall, but from terror at finding myself so near my mother. Nurse gathered me into her arms and began to coo over me, and here the picture fades from my mind.
My nurse loved me devotedly, and of course spoiled me. Most of the villagers helped her in this good work, so that the first seven years of my childhood, in spite of baby-face unblest by mother's kiss, were its happiest period. Women who do not love their children do well to put them out to nurse. The contrast of my life at home and the years spent with these rustic strangers is very shocking. The one petted, cherished, and untroubled; the other full of dark terrors and hate, and a loneliness such as grown humanity cannot understand without experience of that bitterest of all tragedies—unloved and ill-treated childhood. But I was only reminded of my sorrow at nurse's on the rare occasion of my mother's visits, or when nurse once a month put me into my best clothes, after washing my face with blue mottled soap—a thing I detested—and carried me off on the mail-car to town to report my health and growth. This was a terrible hour for me. From a queen I fell to the position of an outcast. My stepfather alone inspired me with confidence. He was a big handsome man with a pleasant voice, and he was always kind to me in a genial, thoughtless way. He would give me presents which my mother would angrily seize from me and give to her other children, not from love, for she was hardly kinder to them than to me, but from an implacable passion to wound, to strike the smile from the little faces around her, to silence a child's laughter with terror of herself. She was a curious woman, my mother. Children seemed to inspire her with a vindictive animosity, with a fury for beating and banging them, against walls, against chairs, upon the ground, in a way that seems miraculous to me now how they were saved from the grave and she from the dock.
Hannah Lynch
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Contents
Chapter I. LOOKING BACKWARD.
Chapter II. MARY JANE.
Chapter III. MY BROTHER STEVIE.
Chapter IV. THE LAST DAYS OF HAPPINESS.
Chapter V. MARTYRDOM.
Chapter VI. GRANDFATHER CAMERON.
Chapter VII. PROFILES OF CHILDHOOD.
Chapter VIII. REVOLT.
Chapter IX. MY FRIEND MARY ANN.
Chapter X. THE GREAT NEWS.
Chapter XI. PREPARING TO FACE THE WORLD.
Chapter XII. AN EXILE FROM ERIN.
Chapter XIII. AT LYSTERBY.
Chapter XIV. THE WHITE LADY OF LYSTERBY.
Chapter XV. AN EXILE IN REVOLT.
Chapter XVI. MY FIRST CONFESSION.
Chapter XVII. THE CHRISTMAS HAMPERS.
Chapter XVIII. MR. PARKER THE DANCING-MASTER.
Chapter XIX. EPISCOPAL PROTECTION.
Chapter XX. HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS.
Chapter XXI. OLD ACQUAINTANCE.
Chapter XXII. A PRINCESS OF LEGEND.
Chapter XXIII. MY FIRST TASTE OF FREEDOM.
Chapter XXIV. MY ELDEST SISTER.
Chapter XXV. OUR BALL.
Chapter XXVI. THE SHADOWS.
Chapter XXVII. A DISMAL END OF HOLIDAYS.
Chapter XXVIII. MY FIRST COMMUNION.
Chapter XXIX. THE LAST OF LYSTERBY AND CHILDHOOD.