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Simms, William Gilmore, 1806-1870

"Charlemont; Or, the Pride of the Village. a Tale of Kentucky"

Yet many a backward glance was sent by the
elder of the travellers, whose eyes, beaming with satisfaction,
sufficiently declared the delight which he received from the
contemplation of so many of the mingled graces of physical and
moral nature. His loitering steps drew from his young companion an
occasional remark, which, to ears less benevolent and unsuspecting
than than those of the senior, might have been deemed a sarcasm; and
more than once the lips of the nephew had curled with contemptuous
smiles, as he watched the yearning glances of his uncle on each
side of the avenue, as they wended slowly through it.
At the end of the village, and at the foot of the opposite hills,
they encountered a group of young people of both sexes, whose bursts
of merriment were suddenly restrained as they emerged unexpectedly
into sight. The girls had been sitting upon the grassy mead, with
the young men before them; but they started to their feet at the
sound of strange steps, and the look of strange faces. Charlemont,
it must be remembered, was not in the thoroughfare of common travel.


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