The Gilded Age


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with easy facility to look to the son for a support; and he said, "Keep  
yourself informed of poor Washington's condition and movements, and help  
him along all you can, Clay."  
The younger children, also, seemed relieved of all fears and distresses,  
and very ready and willing to look to Clay for a livelihood. Within  
three days a general tranquility and satisfaction reigned in the  
household. Clay's hundred and eighty or ninety, dollars had worked a  
wonder. The family were as contented, now, and as free from care as they  
could have been with a fortune. It was well that Mrs. Hawkins held the  
purse otherwise the treasure would have lasted but a very little while.  
It took but a trifle to pay Hawkins's outstanding obligations, for he had  
always had a horror of debt.  
When Clay bade his home good-bye and set out to return to the field of  
his labors, he was conscious that henceforth he was to have his father's  
family on his hands as pensioners; but he did not allow himself to chafe  
at the thought, for he reasoned that his father had dealt by him with a  
free hand and a loving one all his life, and now that hard fortune had  
broken his spirit it ought to be a pleasure, not a pain, to work for him.  
The younger children were born and educated dependents. They had never  
been taught to do anything for themselves, and it did not seem to occur  
to them to make an attempt now.  
The girls would not have been permitted to work for a living under any  
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Page
70 71 72 73 74

Quick Jump
1 170 341 511 681