“DON’T mention it again for your life.”
“No, of course not. The
least said about such things the better.”
“Don’t for the world.
I have told you in perfect confidence, and you are
the only one to whom I have breathed it. I wouldn’t
have it get out for any consideration.”
“Give yourself no uneasiness.
I shall not allude to the subject.”
“I merely told you because I
knew you were a friend, and would let it go no farther.
But would you have thought it?”
“I certainly am very much surprised.”
“So am I. But when things pass
right before your eyes and ears, there is no gainsaying
them.”
“No. Seeing is said to be believing.”
“Of course it is.”
“But, Mrs. Grimes, are you very sure that you
heard aright?”
“I am positive, Mrs. Raynor.
It occurred only an hour ago, and the whole thing
is distinctly remembered. I called in to see Mrs.
Comegys, and while I was there, the bundle of goods
came home. I was present when she opened it,
and she showed me the lawn dress it contained.
There were twelve yards in it. ’I must see
if there is good measure,’ she said, and she
got a yard-stick and measured it off. There were
fifteen yards instead of twelve. ‘How is
this?’ she remarked. ’I am sure I
paid for only twelve yards, and here are fifteen.’
The yard-stick was applied again. There was no
mistake; the lawn measured fifteen yards. ’What
are you going to do with the surplus?’ I asked.
‘Keep it, of course,’ said Mrs. Comegys.
’There is just enough to make little Julia a
frock. Won’t she look sweet in it?,’
I was so confounded that I couldn’t say a word.
Indeed, I could hardly look her in the face.
At first I thought of calling her attention to the
dishonesty of the act; but then I reflected that,
as it was none of my business, I might get her ill-will
for meddling in what didn’t concern me.”
“And you really think, then,
that she meant to keep the three yards without paying
for them?
“Oh, certainly! But then
I wouldn’t say anything about it for the world.
I wouldn’t name it, on any consideration.
Of course you will not repeat it.”
“No. If I cannot find any
good to tell of my friends, I try to refrain from
saying anything evil.”
“A most excellent rule, Mrs.
Raynor, and one that I always follow. I never
speak evil of my friends, for it always does more harm
than good. No one can say that I ever tried to
injure another.”
“I hope Mrs. Comegys thought
better of the matter, upon reflection,” said
Mrs. Raynor.
“So do I. But I am afraid not.
Two or three little things occur to me now, that I
have seen in my intercourse with her, which go to
satisfy my mind that her moral perceptions are not
the best in the world. Mrs. Comegys is a pleasant
friend, and much esteemed by every one. It could
do no good to spread this matter abroad, but harm.”
After repeating over and over again
her injunction to Mrs. Raynor not to repeat a word
of what she had told her, Mrs. Grimes bade this lady,
upon whom she had called, good morning, and went on
her way. Ten minutes after, she was in the parlor
of an acquaintance, named Mrs. Florence, entertaining
her with the gossip she had picked up since their
last meeting. She had not been there long, before,
lowering her voice, she said in a confidential way-
“I was at Mrs. Comegys’
to-day, and saw something that amazed me beyond every
thing.”
“Indeed!”
“Yes. You will be astonished
when you hear it. Suppose you had purchased a
dress and paid for a certain number of yards; and when
the dress was sent home, you should find that the storekeeper
had made a mistake and sent you three or four yards
more than you had settled for. What would you
do?”
“Send it back, of course.”
“Of course, so say I. To act
differently would not be honest. Do you think
so?”
“It would not be honest for me.”
“No, nor for any one. Now,
would you have believed it? Mrs. Comegys not
only thinks but acts differently.”
“You must be mistaken, certainly, Mrs. Grimes.”
“Seeing is believing, Mrs. Florence.”
“So it is said, but I could
hardly believe my eyes against Mrs. Comegys’
integrity of character. I think I ought to know
her well, for we have been very intimate for years.”
“And I thought I knew her, too. But it
seems that I was mistaken.”
Mrs. Grimes then repeated the story of the lawn dress.
“Gracious me! Can it be
possible?” exclaimed Mrs. Florence. “I
can hardly credit it.”
“It occurred just as I tell
you. But Mrs. Florence, you mustn’t tell
it again for the world. I have mentioned it to
you in the strictest confidence. But I need hardly
say this to you, for I know how discreet you are.”
“I shall not mention it.”
“It could do no good.”
“None in the world.”
“Isn’t it surprising,
that a woman who is so well off in the world as Mrs.
Comegys, should stoop to a petty act like this?”
“It is, certainly.”
“Perhaps there is something
wrong here,” and Mrs. Grimes placed her finger
to her forehead and looked sober.
“How do you mean?” asked the friend.
“You’ve heard of people’s
having a dishonest monomania. Don’t you
remember the case of Mrs. Y ?”
“Very well.”
“She had every thing that heart
could desire. Her husband was rich, and let her
have as much money as she wanted. I wish we could
all say that, Mrs. Florence, don’t you?”
“It would be very pleasant,
certainly, to have as much money as we wanted.”
“But, notwithstanding all this,
Mrs. Y - had such a propensity to
take things not her own, that she never went into a
dry goods store without purloining something, and
rarely took tea with a friend without slipping a teaspoon
into her pocket. Mr. Y - had
a great deal of trouble with her, and, in several
cases, paid handsomely to induce parties disposed
to prosecute her for theft, to let the matter drop.
Now do you know that it has occurred to me that, perhaps,
Mrs. Comegys is afflicted in this way? I shouldn’t
at all wonder if it were so.”
“Hardly.”
“I’m afraid it is as I
suspect. A number of suspicious circumstances
have happened when she has been about, that this would
explain. But for your life, Mrs. Florence, don’t
repeat this to any mortal!”
“I shall certainly not speak
of it, Mrs. Grimes. It is too serious a matter.
I wish I had not heard of it, for I can never feel
toward Mrs. Comegys as I have done. She is a
very pleasant woman, and one with whom it is always
agreeable and profitable to spend an hour.”
“It is a little matter, after
all,” remarked Mrs. Grimes, “and, perhaps,
we treat it too seriously.”
“We should never think lightly
of dishonest practices, Mrs. Grimes. Whoever
is dishonest in little things, will be dishonest in
great things, if a good opportunity offer. Mrs.
Comegys can never be to me what she has been.
That is impossible.”
“Of course you will not speak of it again.”
“You need have no fear of that.”
A few days after, Mrs. Raynor made
a call upon a friend, who said to her,
“Have you heard about Mrs. Comegys?”
“What about her?”
“I supposed you knew it. I’ve
heard it from half a dozen persons. It is said
that Perkins, through a mistake of one of his clerks,
sent her home some fifteen or twenty yards of lawn
more than she had paid for, and that, instead of sending
it back, she kept it and made it up for her children.
Did you ever hear of such a trick for an honest woman?”
“I don’t think any honest
woman would be guilty of such an act. Yes, I
heard of it a few days ago as a great secret, and have
not mentioned it to a living soul.”
“Secret? bless me! it is no
secret. It is in every one’s mouth.”
“Is it possible? I must
say that Mrs. Grimes has been very indiscreet.”
“Mrs. Grimes! Did it come
from her in the first place?”
“Yes. She told me that
she was present when the lawn came home, and saw Mrs.
Comegys measure it, and heard her say that she meant
to keep it.”
“Which she has done. For
I saw her in the street, yesterday, with a beautiful
new lawn, and her little Julia was with her, wearing
one precisely like it.”
“How any woman can do so is
more than I can understand.”
“So it is, Mrs. Raynor.
Just to think of dressing your child up in a frock
as good as stolen! Isn’t it dreadful?”
“It is, indeed!”
“Mrs. Comegys is not an honest
woman. That is clear. I am told that this
is not the first trick of the kind of which she has
been guilty. They say that she has a natural
propensity to take things that are not her own.”
“I can hardly believe that.”
“Nor can I. But it’s no
harder to believe this than to believe that she would
cheat Perkins out of fifteen of twenty yards of lawn.
It’s a pity; for Mrs. Comegys, in every thing
else, is certainly a very nice woman. In fact,
I don’t know any one I visit with so much pleasure.”
Thus the circle of detraction widened,
until there was scarcely a friend or acquaintance
of Mrs. Comegys, near or remote, who had not heard
of her having cheated a dry goods dealer out of several
yards of lawn. Three, it had first been alleged;
but the most common version of the story made it fifteen
or twenty. Meantime, Mrs. Comegys remained in
entire ignorance of what was alleged against her,
although she noticed in two or three of her acquaintances,
a trifling coldness that struck her as rather singular.
One day her husband, seeing that she
looked quite sober, said-
“You seem quite dull to-day,
dear. Don’t you feel well?”
“Yes, I feel as well as usual, in body.”
“But not in mind?”
“I do not feel quite comfortable
in mind, certainly, though I don’t know that
I have any serious cause of uneasiness.”
“Though a slight cause exists. May I ask
what it is?”
“It is nothing more nor less
than that I was coolly cut by an old friend
to-day, whom I met in a store on Chesnut street.
And as she is a woman that I highly esteem, both for
the excellence of her character, and the agreeable
qualities, as a friend, that she possesses. I
cannot but feel a little bad about it. If she
were one of that capricious class who get offended
with you, once a month, for no just cause whatever,
I should not care a fig. But Mrs. Markle is a
woman of character, good sense and good feeling, whose
friendship I have always prized.”
“Was it Mrs. Markle?” said the husband,
with some surprise.
“Yes.”
“What can possibly be the cause?”
“I cannot tell.”
“Have you thought over every thing?”
“Yes, I have turned and turned
the matter in my mind, but can imagine no reason why
she, of all others, could treat me coolly.”
“Have you never spoken of her
in a way to have your words misinterpreted by some
evil-minded person-Mrs. Grimes, for instance-whose
memory, or moral sense, one or the other, is very
dull?”
“I have never spoken of her
to any one, except in terms of praise. I could
not do otherwise, for I look upon her as one of the
most faultless women I know.”
“She has at least shown that she possesses one
fault.”
“What is that?”
“If she has heard any thing
against you of a character so serious as to make her
wish to give up your acquaintance, she should at least
have afforded you the chance of defending yourself
before condemning you.”
“I think that, myself.”
“It may be that she did not see you,”
Mr. Comegys suggested.
“She looked me in the face, and nodded with
cold formality.”
“Perhaps her mind was abstracted.”
“It might have been so.
Mine would have been very abstracted, indeed, to keep
me from a more cordial recognition of a friend.”
“How would it do to call and see her?”
“I have been thinking of that.
But my feelings naturally oppose it. I am not
conscious of having done any thing to merit a withdrawal
of the friendly sentiments she has held towards me;
still, if she wishes to withdraw them, my pride says,
let her do so.”
“But pride, you know, is not always the best
adviser.”
“No. Perhaps the less regard we pay to
its promptings, the better.”
“I think so.”
“It is rather awkward to go
to a person and ask why you have been treated coldly.”
“I know it is. But in a
choice of evils, is it not always wisest to choose
the least?”
“But is any one’s bad
opinion of you, if it be not correctly formed, an
evil?”
“Certainly it is.”
“I don’t know. I
have a kind of independence about me which says, ’Let
people think what they please, so you are conscious
of no wrong.’”
“Indifference to the world’s
good or bad opinion is all very well,” replied
the husband, “if the world will misjudge us.
Still, as any thing that prejudices the minds of people
against us, tends to destroy our usefulness, it is
our duty to take all proper care of our reputations,
even to the sacrifice of a little feeling in doing
so.”
Thus argued with by her husband, Mrs.
Comegys, after turning the matter over in her mind,
finally concluded to go and see Mrs. Markle.
It was a pretty hard trial for her, but urged on by
a sense of right, she called upon her two or three
days after having been treated so coldly. She
sent up her name by the servant. In about five
minutes, Mrs. Markle descended to the parlor, where
her visitor was awaiting her, and met her in a reserved
and formal manner, that was altogether unlike her
former cordiality. It was as much as Mrs. Comegys
could do to keep from retiring instantly, and without
a word, from the house. But she compelled herself
to go through with what she had begun.
Mrs. Markle did, indeed, offer her
hand; or rather the tips of her fingers; which Mrs.
Comegys, in mere reciprocation of the formality, accepted.
Then came an embarrassing pause, after which the latter
said-
“I see that I was not mistaken
in supposing that there was a marked coldness in your
manner at our last meeting.”
Mrs. Markle inclined her head slightly.
“Of course there is a cause
for this. May I, in justice to myself as well
as others, inquire what it is?”
“I did not suppose you would
press an inquiry on the subject,” replied Mrs.
Markle. “But as you have done so, you are,
of course, entitled to an answer.”
There came another pause, after which,
with a disturbed voice, Mrs. Markle said-
“For some time, I have heard
a rumor in regard to you, that I could not credit.
Of late it has been so often repeated that I felt it
to be my duty to ascertain its truth or falsehood.
On tracing, with some labor, the report to its origin,
I am grieved to find that it is too true.”
“Please say what it is,”
said Mrs. Comegys, in a firm voice.
“It is said that you bought
a dress at a dry goods store in this city, and that
on its being sent home, there proved to be some yards
more in the piece of goods than you paid for and that
instead of returning what was not your own, you kept
it and had it made up for one of your children.”
The face of Mrs. Comegys instantly
became like crimson; and she turned her head away
to hide the confusion into which this unexpected allegation
had thrown her. As soon as she could command
her voice, she said-
“You will, of course, give me
the author of this charge.”
“You are entitled to know, I
suppose,” replied Mrs. Markle. “The
person who originated this report is Mrs. Grimes.
And she says that she was present when the dress was
sent home. That you measured it in her presence,
and that, finding there were several yards over, you
declared your intention to keep it and make of it a
frock for your little girl. And, moreover, that
she saw Julia wearing a frock afterwards, exactly
like the pattern of the one you had, which she well
remembers. This seems to me pretty conclusive
evidence. At least it was so to my mind, and
I acted accordingly.”
Mrs. Comegys sat for the full space
of a minute with her eyes upon the floor, without
speaking. When she looked up, the flush that had
covered her face had gone. It was very pale, instead.
Rising from her chair, she bowed formally, and without
saying a word, withdrew.
“Ah me! Isn’t it
sad?” murmured Mrs. Markle, as she heard the
street door close upon her visitor. “So
much that is agreeable and excellent, all dimmed by
the want of principle. It seems hardly credible
that a woman, with every thing she needs, could act
dishonestly for so small a matter. A few yards
of lawn against integrity and character! What
a price to set upon virtue!”
Not more than half an hour after the
departure of Mrs. Comegys, Mrs. Grimes called in to
see Mrs. Markle.
“I hope,” she said, shortly
after she was seated, “that you won’t
say a word about what I told you a few days ago; I
shouldn’t have opened my lips on the subject
if you hadn’t asked me about it. I only
mentioned it in the first place to a friend in whom
I had the greatest confidence in the world. She
has told some one, very improperly, for it was imparted
to her as a secret, and in that way it has been spread
abroad. I regret it exceedingly, for I would be
the last person in the world to say a word to injure
any one. I am particularly guarded in this.”
“If it’s the truth, Mrs.
Grimes, I don’t see that you need be so anxious
about keeping it a secret,” returned Mrs. Markle.
“The truth! Do you think
I would utter a word that was not true?”
“I did not mean to infer that
you would. I believe that what you said in regard
to Mrs. Comegys was the fact.”
“It certainly was. But
then, it will do no good to make a disturbance about
it. What has made me call in to see you is this;
some one told me that, in consequence of this matter,
you had dropped the acquaintance of Mrs. Comegys.”
“It is true; I cannot associate
on intimate terms with a woman who lacks honest principles.”
“But don’t you see that
this will bring matters to a head, and that I shall
be placed in a very awkward position?”
“You are ready to adhere to
your statement in regard to Mrs. Comegys?”
“Oh, certainly; I have told
nothing but the truth. But still, you can see
that it will make me feel exceedingly unpleasant.”
“Things of this kind are never
very agreeable, I know, Mrs. Grimes. Still we
must act as we think right, let what will follow.
Mrs. Comegys has already called upon me to ask an
explanation of my conduct wards her.”
“She has!” Mrs. Grimes
seemed sadly distressed. “What did you say
to her?”
“I told her just what I had heard.”
“Did she ask your author?” Mrs. Grimes
was most pale with suspense.
“She did.”
“Of course you did not mention my name.”
“She asked the author of the charge, and I named
you.”
“Oh dear, Mrs. Markle!
I wish you hadn’t done that. I shall be
involved in a world of trouble, and the reputation
of a tattler and mischief-maker. What did she
say?”
“Not one word.”
“She didn’t deny it?”
“No.”
“Of course she could not.
Well, that is some satisfaction at least. She
might have denied it, and tried make me out a liar,
and there would have been plenty to believe her word
against mine. I am glad she didn’t deny
it. She didn’t say a word?”
“No.”
“Did she look guilty?”
“You would have thought so, if you had seen
her.”
“What did she do?”
“She sat with her eyes upon
the floor for some time, and then rose up, and without
uttering a word, left the house.”
“I wish she had said something.
It would have been a satisfaction to know what she
thought. But I suppose the poor woman was so
confounded, that she didn’t know what to say.”
“So it appeared to me.
She was completely stunned. I really pitied her
from my heart. But want of principle should never
be countenanced. If we are to have social integrity,
we must mark with appropriate condemnation all deviations
therefrom. It was exceedingly painful, but the
path of duty was before me, and I walked in it without
faltering.”
Mrs. Grimes was neither so clear-sighted,
nor so well satisfied with what she had done, as all
this. She left the house of Mrs. Markle feeling
very unhappy. Although she had been using her
little unruly member against Mrs. Comegys with due
industry, she was all the while on the most friendly
terms with her, visiting at her house and being visited.
It was only a few days, before that she had taken tea
and spent an evening with her. Not that Mrs.
Grimes was deliberately hypocritical, but she had
a free tongue, and, like too many in society, more
cautious about what they said than she, much better
pleased to see evil than good in a neighbour.
There are very few of us, perhaps, who have not something
of this fault-an exceedingly bad fault,
by the way. It seems to arise from a consciousness
of our own imperfections and the pleasure we feel
in making the discovery that others are as bad, if
not worse than we are.
Two days after Mrs. Comegys had called
on Mrs. Markle to ask for explanations, the latter
received a note in the following words:
“MADAM.-I have no
doubt you have acted according to your own views of
right in dropping as suddenly as you have done, the
acquaintance of an old friend. Perhaps, if you
had called upon me and asked explanations, you might
have acted a little differently. My present object
in addressing you is to ask, as a matter of justice,
that you will call at my house to-morrow at twelve
o’clock. I think that I am entitled to
speak a word in my own defense. After you have
heard that I shall not complain of any course you
may think it right to pursue.
“ANNA COMEGYS.”
Mrs. Markle, could do no less than
call as she had been desired to. At twelve o’clock
she rang the bell at Mrs. Comegys’ door, and
was shown into the parlor, where, to her no small
surprise, she found about twenty ladies, most of them
acquaintances, assembled, Mrs. Grimes among the number.
In about ten minutes Mrs. Comegys came into the room,
her countenance wearing a calm but sober aspect.
She bowed slightly, but was not cordial toward, or
familiar with, any one present. Without a pause
she said-
“Ladies, I have learned within
a few days, very greatly to my surprise and grief,
that there is a report circulated among my friends,
injurious to my character as a woman of honest principles.
I have taken some pains to ascertain those with whom
the report is familiar, and have invited all such
to be here to-day. I learn from several sources,
that the report originated with Mrs. Grimes, and that
she has been very industrious in circulating it to
my injury.”
“Perhaps you wrong Mrs. Grimes
there,” spoke up Mrs. Markle. “She
did not mention it to me until I inquired of her if
the report was true. And then she told me that
she had never told it but to a single person, in confidence,
and that she had inadvertently alluded to it, and
thus it became a common report. So I think that
Mrs. Grimes cannot justly be charged with having sought
to circulate the matter to your injury.”
“Very well, we will see how
far that statement is correct,” said Mrs. Comegys.
“Did she mention the subject to you, Mrs. Raynor?”
“She did,” replied Mrs.
Raynor. “But in strict confidence, and
enjoining it upon me not to mention it to any one,
as she had no wish to injure you.”
“Did you tell it to any one?”
“No. It was but a little
while afterward that it was told to me by some one
else.”
“Was it mentioned to you, Mrs.
Florence?” proceeded Mrs. Comegys, turning to
another of the ladies present.
“It was, ma’am.”
“By Mrs. Grimes?”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“In confidence, I suppose?”
“I was requested to say nothing
about it, for fear that it might create an unfavorable
impression in regard to you.”
“Very well; there are two already.
How was it in your case, Mrs. Wheeler?”
This lady answered as the others had
done. The question was then put to each lady
in the room, when it appeared that out of the twenty,
fifteen had received their information on the subject
from Mrs. Grimes, and that upon every one secrecy
had been enjoined, although not in every case maintained.
“So it seems, Mrs. Markle,”
said Mrs. Comegys, after she had finished her inquiries,
“that Mrs. Grimes has, as I alleged, industriously
circulated this matter to my injury.”
“It certainly appears so,”
returned Mrs. Markle, coldly.
Thus brought into a corner, Mrs. Grimes
bristled up like certain animals, which are good at
running and skulking, but which, when fairly trapped,
fight desperately.
“Telling it to a thousand is
not half as bad as doing it, Mrs. Comegys,”
she said, angrily. “You needn’t try
to screen yourself from the consequences of your wrong
doings, by raising a hue and cry against me.
Go to the fact, madam! Go to the fact, and stand
alongside of what you have done.”
“I have no hesitation about
doing that, Mrs. Grimes. Pray, what have I done?”
“It is very strange that you should ask, madam.”
“But I am charged, I learn,
with having committed a crime against society; and
you are the author of the charge. What is the
crime?”
“If it is any satisfaction to
you, I will tell you. I was at your house when
the pattern of the lawn dress you now have on was sent
home. You measured it in my presence, and there
were several yards in it more than you had bought
and paid for”-
“How many?”
Mrs. Grimes looked confused, and stammered
out, “I do not now exactly remember.”
“How many did she tell you, Mrs. Raynor?”
“She said there were three yards.”
“And you, Mrs. Fisher?”
“Six yards.”
“And you, Mrs. Florence?”
“Fifteen yards, I think.”
“Oh, no, Mrs. Florence; you
are entirely mistaken. You misunderstood me,”
said Mrs. Grimes, in extreme perturbation.
“Perhaps so. But that is
my present impression,” replied Mrs. Florence.
“That will do,” said Mrs.
Comegys. “Mrs. Grimes can now go on with
her answer to my inquiry. I will remark, however,
that the overplus was just two yards.”
“Then you admit that the lawn
overran what you had paid for?”
“Certainly I do. It overran just two yards.”
“Very well. One yard or
a dozen, the principle is just the same. I asked
you what you meant to do with it, and you replied,
’keep it, of course.’ Do you deny
that?”
“No. It is very likely
that I did say so, for it was my intention to keep
it.”
“Without paying for it?” asked Mrs. Markle.
Mrs. Comegys looked steadily into
the face of her interrogator for some moments, a flush
upon her cheek, an indignant light in her eye.
Then, without replying to the question, she stepped
to the wall and rang the parlor bell. In a few
moments a servant came in.
“Ask the gentleman in the dining-room
if he will be kind enough to step here.”
In a little while a step was heard along the passage,
and then a young man entered.
“You are a clerk in Mr. Perkins’
store?” said Mrs. Comegys.
“Yes, ma’am.”
“You remember my buying this lawn dress at your
store?”
“Very well, ma’am.
I should forget a good many incidents before I forgot
that.”
“What impressed it upon your memory?”
“This circumstance. I was
very much hurried at the time when you bought it,
and in measuring it off, made a mistake against myself
of two yards. There should have been four dresses
in the piece. One had been sold previous to yours.
Not long after your dress had been sent home, two
ladies came into the store and chose each a dress from
the pattern. On measuring the piece, I discovered
that it was two yards short, and lost the sale of
the dresses in consequence, as the ladies wished them
alike. An hour afterward you called to say that
I had made a mistake and sent you home two yards more
than you had paid for; but that as you liked the pattern
very much, you would keep it and buy two yards more
for a dress for your little girl.”
“Yes; that is exactly the truth
in regard to the dress. I am obliged to you,
Mr. S -, for the trouble I have given
you. I will not keep you any longer.”
The young man bowed and withdrew.
The ladies immediately gathered around
Mrs. Comegys, with a thousand apologies for having
for a moment entertained the idea that she had been
guilty of wrong, while Mrs. Grimes took refuge in a
flood of tears.
“I have but one cause of complaint
against you all,” said the injured lady, “and
it is this. A charge of so serious a nature should
never have been made a subject of common report without
my being offered a chance to defend myself. As
for Mrs. Grimes, I can’t readily understand
how she fell into the error she did. But she
never would have fallen into it if she had not been
more willing to think evil than good of her friends.
I do not say this to hurt her; but to state a truth
that it may be well for her, and perhaps some of the
rest of us, to lay to heart. It is a serious thing
to speak evil of another, and should never be done
except on the most unequivocal evidence. It never
occurred to me to say to Mrs. Grimes that I would
pay for the lawn; that I supposed she or any one else
would have inferred, when I said I would keep it.”
A great deal was said by all parties,
and many apologies were made. Mrs. Grimes was
particularly humble, and begged all present to forgive
and forget what was past. She knew, she said,
that she was apt to talk; it was a failing with her
which she would try to correct. But that she
didn’t mean to do any one harm.
As to the latter averment, it can
be believed or not as suits every one’s fancy.
All concerned in this affair felt that they had received
a lesson they would not soon forget. And we doubt
not, that some of our readers might lay it to heart
with great advantage to themselves and benefit to
others.