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Of dainty red roses
Beneath a red moon.
The star-pearls that midnight
Casts down on the sea,
Dark gold of the sunset,

Her fortune shall be.
And ever she whispers,

More tenderly sweet,
"Love am I, love only,

Love perfect, complete.
The world is my lordship,
The heart is my slave;

I mock at the ages,

I laugh at the grave.
Wilt sail with me ever

A dream-haunted sea,
Whose whispering waters
Shall murmur to thee
The love-haunted lyrics

Dead poets have made
Ere life had a fetter,

Ere love was afraid?"
Then up with the anchor!
Set sail and away!

The ventures of loveland

Are thine for a day.

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MARY RUSSELL MITFORD

(1787-1855)

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HE best description of Miss Mitford is given by Mrs. Browning in a letter to Mr. Horne, where she speaks of her as «< friend of Three Mile Cross, who wears her heart upon her sleeve' and shakes out its perfume at every moment." And indeed, like the sun, Miss Mitford shone upon the just and the unjust: her flowers, her dogs, her servants, neighbors and friends, her devoted mother, and her handsome, graceless father, all shared alike her sunny sweet-heartedness.

Mary Russell Mitford was born at Alresford, in the town of Wither, England, December 16th, 1787, and began her career as a writer in 1810, publishing then her first volume, Miscellaneous Poems.' In reading the account of her life given in her own letters, edited by Mr. L'Estrange, it is impossible not to be touched by the revelation of her pathetically cheerful struggle to support her parents, as well as provoked by her unfailing devotion to her good-fornothing father. Indeed, so deeply does her love for him impress the reader, that at last it comes near to protecting him from criticism. Squandering first his own fortune, Dr. Mitford married Miss Russell, a devoted woman, ten years his senior, whose friends he proceeded to offend, and whose fortune he promptly dissipated. At the first touch of pecuniary embarrassment he moved from Alresford to Lynn Regis, where for one year they lived in the greatest luxury. In 'Recollections of a Literary Life' Miss Mitford says: "In that old historical town [Lynn Regis] I spent the eventful year when the careless happiness of childhood vanished, and the troubles of the world first dawned upon my heart. Nobody told

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MARY R. MITFORD

me, but I felt, . . . I knew, I can't tell how, but I did know that everything was to be parted with, and everybody paid." Then follows a description of chests being carried away in the night by faithful servants, and of a dreary journey for herself and her mother, and of the first touch of dreadful poverty. Settled in lodgings in London, this incredible father took his little daughter to buy a lottery

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ticket; she selected one whose added numbers made her age ten years and would have none other. This ticket was bought, and drew for Dr. Mitford twenty thousand pounds. Once more with a fortune, he bought a place near Reading,- Bertram House, - and sent his daughter, of whom he was excessively proud, to school in London. It was while at Bertram House that Miss Mitford published her first volume, following it in 1811 by Christine,' and other smaller things. In 1820 they move from Bertram House into a tiny cottage at Three Mile Cross, and from this time on it is one long struggle for money. From this place are written Miss Mitford's most charming letters, in which we read of her difficulties about her tragedies, and how, because of these difficulties, she took up another line of work as less harassing, and began to write short sketches of the life about her: sketches which Campbell refused as too light,— which the world put next to Lamb's Essays,- and which, collected, made 'Our Village.'

Between 1823 and 1828 three of her plays, 'Julien,' 'Foscari,' and 'Rienzi,' were put upon the stage by Macready and Kemble; 'Our Village had an enormous success, and Miss Mitford was toasted and made much of by all the world of London. But as her father "played a very fine hand at whist," she could never be very long away from Three Mile Cross and her writing-table; and she goes back quite cheerfully to a daily task of from seven to twelve hours writing. Her work is most voluminous: including plays, poems, 'Dramatic Scenes,' 'Stories of American Life,'-of which she could not have known very much,- 'Stories for Children,' and in 1835 another collection of sketches, called 'Belford Regis.' Besides all this, she contributed to newspapers, magazines, 'Amulets' and 'Forget-me-nots,' and edited from 1838 to 1841 Finden's Tableaux; finishing her work in 1852-4 with 'Recollections of a Literary Life,' and 'Atherton and Other Tales.' Driven by want and harassed by debt, she could not produce much that would live; but the careful reader of Miss Mitford's letters will never criticize Miss Mitford's failures. At Three Mile Cross, after much ill health, her mother died, and later her "beloved father"; and here she lived until in 1850 the little house began to fall to pieces; and she moved to Swallowfield, not very far away, there to finish her life.

Miss Mitford tells us that she "delighted in that sort of detail which permits so intimate a familiarity with the subject of which it treats,” — and she gives it to us in her work. She describes a cowslip ball so accurately that one smells the cowslips and helps her to tie it; she makes us intimately acquainted with the "spreading hawthorn"; the shower pelts us in wetting her, and we change our clothes too—or we long to do so-in order to sit down with her near the fire. She loses her walking-stick, and we go back with her over

the whole expedition to find it; it is a personal loss, and we are much relieved when the children bring it home again. Frost comes; and we are out under the solemn white avenue, looking at the "landscape of snow," at the frozen weeds, and becoming friendly with the little bird tamed by the cold,-"perched in the middle of the hedge, nestling as it were among the cold bare boughs, seeking, poor pretty thing, for the warmth it will not find." Then the description of the thaw, not much more than a paragraph,- a dismal thaw, the dreariness of which she fights against quite palpably, stopping so abruptly that one is sure that she found it too forlorn to dwell upon safely.

But through all the sunny charm of her work, she is conscious of the shadow of the hopeless struggle she is making; one knows that she did not dare to tread too heavily on the thin ice of her happiness, and one steps lightly along with her, and makes a conscious effort to forget the father and his endless folly. When at last she is alone in the world, and has to move from Three Mile Cross, she says: "It was a great grief to go. I had associations with those old walls which endeared them to me more than I can tell. There I had toiled and striven, and tasted of as bitter anxiety, of fear and of hope, as often falls to the lot of women. There in the fullness of age I had lost those whose love had made my home sweet and precious." And one longs to step back fifty years and maul that delinquent father; not so much, perhaps, because he was selfish, as because she loved him so. But in the next paragraph her invincible cheerfulness again comes to the front, and we begin to like Swallowfield almost as much as Three Mile Cross. A brave soul was Miss Mitford; and a strange contrast to her "beloved young friend" Elizabeth Barrett, who in the depth of ease and luxury nursed the one grief of her life, as if it were the only specimen of sorrow in the world. A brave and sturdy soul; and her reward is immortality for the flower that sprang from her heroic self-abnegation—immortality for her humble home, 'Our Village.'

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THE NEIGHBORHOOD

From Our Village'

F ALL situations for a constant residence, that which appears to me most delightful is a little village far in the country; a small neighborhood, not of fine mansions finely peopled, but of cottages and cottage-like houses, "messuages or tenements," as a friend of mine calls such ignoble and nondescript

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dwellings, with inhabitants whose faces are as familiar to us as the flowers in our garden; a little world of our own, close-packed and insulated like ants in an ant-hill, or bees in a hive, or sheep in a fold, or nuns in a convent, or sailors in a ship; where we know every one, are known to every one, interested in every one, and authorized to hope that every one feels an interest in us. How pleasant it is to slide into these true-hearted feelings from the kindly and unconscious influence of habit, and to learn to know and to love the people about us, with all their peculiarities, just as we learn to know and to love the nooks and turns of the shady lanes and sunny commons that we pass every day. Even in books I like confined locality, and so do the critics when they talk of the unities. Nothing is so tiresome as to be whirled half over Europe at the chariot-wheels of a hero, to go to sleep at Vienna and awaken at Madrid; it produces a real fatigue, a weariness of spirit. On the other hand, nothing is so delightful as to sit down in a country village in one of Miss Austen's delicious novels, quite sure before we leave it to become intimate with every spot and every person it contains; or to ramble with Mr. White over his own parish of Selborne, and form a friendship with the fields and coppices, as well as with the birds, mice, squirrels, who inhabit them; or to sail with Robinson Crusoe to his island, and live there with him and his goats and his man Friday;-how much we dread any new-comers, any fresh importation of savage or sailor! we never sympathize for a moment in our hero's want of company, and are quite grieved when he gets away; or to be shipwrecked with Ferdinand on that other lovelier island, the island of Prospero, and Miranda, and Caliban, and Ariel, and nobody else, none of Dryden's exotic inventions,— that is best of all. And a small neighborhood is as good in sober waking reality as in poetry or prose; a village neighborhood, such as this Berkshire hamlet in which, I write, a long, straggling, winding street at the bottom of a fine eminence, with a road through it, always abounding in carts, horsemen, and carriages, and lately enlivened by a stage-coach from B― to S——, which passed through about ten days ago, and will I suppose return some time or other. There are coaches of all varieties nowadays; perhaps this may be intended for a monthly diligence, or a fortnightly fly. Will you walk with me through our village, courteous reader? The journey is not long. We will begin at the lower end, and proceed up-hill.

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