The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 20, No. 119, September, 1867 / A Magazine of Literature, Science, Art, and Politics
Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1867, by Ticknor and Fields, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the District of Massachusetts.
Transcriber's Note: Minor typos have been corrected and footnotes moved to the end of the article. Table of contents has been created for the HTML version.
Not long after the tableau performance had made Myrtle Hazard's name famous in the school and among the friends of the scholars, she received the very flattering attention of a call from Mrs. Clymer Ketchum, of 24 Carat Place. This was in consequence of a suggestion from Mr. Livingston Jenkins, a particular friend of the family.
They've got a demonish splendid school-girl over there, he said to that lady,— made the stunningest-looking Pocahontas at the show there the other day. Demonish plucky-looking filly as ever you saw. Had a row with another girl,—gave the war-whoop, and went at her with a knife. Festive,—hey? Say she only meant to scare her,— looked as if she meant to stick her, anyhow. Splendid style. Why can't you go over to the shop and make 'em trot her out?
The lady promised Mr. Livingston Jenkins that she certainly would, just as soon as she could find a moment's leisure,—which, as she had nothing in the world to do, was not likely to be very soon. Myrtle in the mean time was busy with her studies, little dreaming what an extraordinary honor was awaiting her.
That rare accident in the lives of people who have nothing to do, a leisure morning, did at last occur. An elegant carriage, with a coachman in a wonderful cape, seated on a box lofty as a throne, and wearing a hat-band as brilliant as a coronet, stopped at the portal of Madam Delacoste's establishment. A card was sent in bearing the open sesame of Mrs. Clymer Ketchum, the great lady of 24 Carat Place. Miss Myrtle Hazard was summoned as a matter of course, and the fashionable woman and the young girl sat half an hour together in lively conversation.
Myrtle was fascinated by her visitor, who had that flattering manner which, to those not experienced in the world's ways, seems to imply unfathomable depths of disinterested devotion. Then it was so delightful to look upon a perfectly appointed woman,—one who was as artistically composed as a poem or an opera,—in whose costume a kind of various rhythm undulated in one fluent harmony, from the spray that nodded on her bonnet to the rosette that blossomed on her sandal. As for the lady, she was captivated with Myrtle. There is nothing that your fashionable woman, who has ground and polished her own spark of life into as many and as glittering social facets as it will bear, has a greater passion for than a large rough diamond, which knows nothing of the sea of light it imprisons, and which it will be her pride to have cut into a brilliant under her own eye, and to show the world for its admiration and her own reflected glory. Mrs. Clymer Ketchum had taken the entire inventory of Myrtle's natural endowments before the interview was over. She had no marriageable children, and she was thinking what a killing bait Myrtle would be at one of her own parties.
Various
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ATLANTIC MONTHLY.
VOL. XX.—SEPTEMBER, 1867.—NO. CXIX.
Contents
CHAPTER XXIV.
CHAPTER XXV
CHAPTER XXVI.
Sir Thomas Browne.—1682.
Bishop Berkeley.—1726.
Turgot.—1750.
John Adams.—1755, 1776, 1780, 1785, 1787.
Galiani.—1776, 1778.
Adam Smith.—1776.
Governor Pownall.—1777, 1780, 1785.
David Hartley.—1775, 1785.
Count d'Aranda.—1783.
Burns.—1788.
Fox.—1794.
George Canning.—1826.
Richard Cobden.—1849.
Lucas Alaman.—1852.
Conclusion.
FOOTNOTES:
SONNET 129.
SONNET 134.
SONNET 191.
CANZONE XXIII.
SONNET 128.
SONNET 123.
SONNET 251.
SONNET 253.
Sonnet 261
SONNET 302.
SONNET 309.
II.
I.
II.
III.
IV.
FOOTNOTES:
FOOTNOTES:
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