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首页沉睡谷传奇在线阅读THE PRIDE OF THE VILLAGE.

THE PRIDE OF THE VILLAGE.

        No boysterous ormes e her,

        t s eart, like a spring,

        IN te ties of England, I ruto one of t lead ts of try, and stopped oernoon at a village tuation of ired. tive simplicity about its inants not to be found in t coacermio pass t taken an early dinner, strolled out to enjoy the neighb sery.

        My ramble, as is usually travellers, soon led me to tood at a little distance from the village.

        Indeed, it    of some curiosity, its old toely overrun    only ting buttress, an angle of gray astically carved or peered t c. It    of t in ternoon it ill    tract of golden sky in t, from    up all Nature into a melanc seemed like ting ian smiling on ty of    he will rise again in glory.

        I ed myself on a ombstone, and    to do at ted    ses     and early friends--on tant and t kind of melaneter even troke of a bell from tos tones ead of jarring, c ime before I recollected t it must be tolli of tomb.

        Presently I sarain moving across t , and reappeared til it passed tting. ted by young girls dressed in    teen, oken t ts.

        tter order of peasantry.

        to repress    racted bro    aloud s of a mothers sorrow.

        I folloo tre aisle, and t of e gloves, was    whe deceased had occupied.

        Every one knounate as o o tomb? But ence, ing? At t simple but most solemn sig of to t;Earto earto as to dust!"--tears of traiill seemed to     struggle o fort    t t of    do of its sness; s;m over    be forted."

        Ourning to t tory of the deceased.

        It old. Sy and pride of t farmer, but a up entirely at y of rural life. Sor, te lamb of tle ?ock.    t ernal care; it ed and suitable to to move, for    to make    to ation in life, not to raise . tenderness and indulgence of s and tion from all ordinary occupations ered a natural grad delicacy of cer t accorded ender plant of tally amid tives of the ?elds.

        ty of    and ao envy, for it leness and winning kindness of    migruly said of her:

        "ttiest lo ever

         Ran on thing she does or seems

         But smacks of someter than herself;

        tered spots ain some vestiges of old Englisoms. It s rural festivals     and imes, and still kept up some faint observance of tes of May. ted by its present pastor, ians t ting joy oood from year to year in tre of t ed reamers, and a queen or lady of ted, as in former times, to preside at ts and distribute turesque situation of ts rustic fetes en attract tice of casual visitors. Among t ly quartered in tive taste t pervaded t, but, above all,    e lessness of rural s enabled o make anacy, and paid    to    untoo apt to tri?e ic simplicity.

        to startle or alarm. alked of love, but t more eloquent t subtilely and irresistibly to t. tone of voice, tendernesses ion,--true eloquence of love, and    al and uood, but never described.     t young, guileless, and susceptible? As to    unsciously; s     and feeling, or o be its sequences.

        S to ture. , tention;    of    intervieies in Nature; alked in te and cultivated life, and breato cry.

        Per    girls. t ?gure of ary attire mig ?rst    it    t ivated . tac    of idolatry. So o a being of a superior order.

        S in y turally delicate and poetical, and no ao a keen perception of tiful and grand. Of tins of rank and fortune s not ellect, of demeanor, of manners, from tic society to    elevated en to    look of mute deligle ured a simid admiration, it    tive unhiness.

        ure. ion iy, for en    of ts, and t some triumpo ation as a man of spirit. But oo full of yout    yet been rendered suf?tly cold and sel?sed life: it caug sougo kindle, and before ure of uation he became really in love.

        acles tacs. itled es, o trimony; but ender and ?ding, ty in y in    aious feeling. In vain did ry to fortify less examples of men of faso t    cold derisive levity alk of female virtue:    mysterious but impassive        live.

        t to repair to ti pleted t time in a state of t painful irresolution; ated to unicate tidings until t elligen the course of an evening ramble.

        ting o    broke in at once upon y; s as a sudden and insurmountable evil, and    y of a co ears from    ingled sorroenderness uous, and t of beauty apparently yielding in o overo propose t sunes.

        e a novi sedu, and blusered at    so i of mind im t s ?rst at a loss to preive village and ts.    last ture of     o reproac a    s as from a viper, gave    pierced to o tage.

        tired founded, ed, aant. It is uain    of    s been diverted by tle of departure. Need i?ed enderness; yet, amidst tir of camps, ttles, s imes steal back to t and village simplicity--te cottage, tpattle village maid l along it, leaning on ening to ion.

        tru of all ings and erics    ?rst sender frame, and tled and pining melang troops. Sriump trumpet and trained a last acer tered about    vision from , a her all in darkness.

        It rite to diculars of er story.

        It ales of love, meland    alone in t frequented , like tri deer, to    rankled in imes se of an evening sitting in turning from tive ditty in t in ions at ced a i and t ual, and looking after heir heads in gloomy foreboding.

        S a vi t sening to tomb, but looked foro it as a place of rest. t o existence o be no more pleasure ule bosom ertained rese against    inguis of saddeenderness ster. It    toucs very simplicity. Sold    s ceal from     ed t cluded    s die in peatil s him her fiveness and her blessing.

        By degrees rengt stage. Sotter to t o sit all day and look out upon till stered no plaint nor imparted to any o y over till ?attering t it migo fres t uimes ?us be turning h.

        In ted beternoon; tice    air t stole in broug tering rained round the window.

        been reading a cer in t spoke of ty of    seemed to    and serenity through her bosom.

        ant village colled for t villager o to t illness peculiar to t. s rembled in    blue eye. as ss o t distant co hered?

        Suddenly to ttage; ed before t exclamation and sunk ba     lover. o to clasp o    ed form, enance--so    so lovely in its desolation--smote o t . Soo faint to rise--stempted to extend rembling    no iculated; sterable tenderness, and closed her eyes forever.

        Suciculars wory.

        t sty, and I am scious tle y to reend t rage also for strange i and ive trite and insigni?t, but terested me strongly at time; and, taken in e ing ceremony nessed, left a deeper impression on my mind tances of a more striking nature. I ed tter motive ty. It ry evening: trees ripped of tled coldly the dry grass.

        Evergreens, ed about te, and osiers    over it to keep turf uninjured.

        tepped in. t of ?o is true, but care seemed to aken t no dust seness. I s s poo aator, but I     spoke more touy    t delicate memento of departed innoce.
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