The Story of Waitstill Baxter

“Tell me more; it is so long since we talked together”
By Kate Douglas Wiggin With illustrations by H. M. Brett
Copyright 1913, by Kate Douglas Riggs All Rights Reserved Published October 1913
TO MY HUSBAND
THE STORY OF WAITSTILL BAXTER
FAR, far up, in the bosom of New Hampshire's granite hills, the Saco has its birth. As the mountain rill gathers strength it takes
“Through Bartlett's vales its tuneful way, Or hides in Conway's fragrant brakes, Retreating from the glare of day.”
Now it leaves the mountains and flows through “green Fryeburg's woods and farms.” In the course of its frequent turns and twists and bends, it meets with many another stream, and sends it, fuller and stronger, along its rejoicing way. When it has journeyed more than a hundred miles and is nearing the ocean, it greets the Great Ossipee River and accepts its crystal tribute. Then, in its turn, the Little Ossipee joins forces, and the river, now a splendid stream, flows onward to Bonny Eagle, to Moderation and to Salmon Falls, where it dashes over the dam like a young Niagara and hurtles, in a foamy torrent, through the ragged defile cut between lofty banks of solid rock.
Widening out placidly for a moment's rest in the sunny reaches near Pleasant Point, it gathers itself for a new plunge at Union Falls, after which it speedily merges itself in the bay and is fresh water no more.
At one of the falls on the Saco, the two little hamlets of Edgewood and Riverboro nestle together at the bridge and make one village. The stream is a wonder of beauty just here; a mirror of placid loveliness above the dam, a tawny, roaring wonder at the fall, and a mad, white-flecked torrent as it dashes on its way to the ocean.
The river has seen strange sights in its time, though the history of these two tiny villages is quite unknown to the great world outside. They have been born, waxed strong, and fallen almost to decay while Saco Water has tumbled over the rocks and spent itself in its impetuous journey to the sea.

Kate Douglas Smith Wiggin
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Год издания

1999-04-01

Темы

Sisters -- Fiction; Fathers and daughters -- Fiction; New England -- Social life and customs -- 19th century -- Fiction

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