Elsie's Motherhood

In a frightening incident, Elsie¿s husband, Edward Travilla, narrowly survives an accidental shooting when friends tease son Edward, Jr., into firing a loaded pistol. The shot grazes Edward¿s head, and he survives with only minor damage.

Soon life in the Travilla household returns to its calm routine. In the meantime, Elsie welcomes a cousin from Scotland who brings a very special talent with him as well as news of her mother¿s ancestral family.

Elsie and Edward take great delight in their burgeoning family. The aftermath of the Civil War provides them with many opportunities to uphold their heritage and faith in practical ways, but they are caught up in a campaign against a powerful adversary¿the Ku Klux Klan¿as they fight to protect the innocent from unjust persecution.

A Blackstone Audio production.

1101069123
Elsie's Motherhood

In a frightening incident, Elsie¿s husband, Edward Travilla, narrowly survives an accidental shooting when friends tease son Edward, Jr., into firing a loaded pistol. The shot grazes Edward¿s head, and he survives with only minor damage.

Soon life in the Travilla household returns to its calm routine. In the meantime, Elsie welcomes a cousin from Scotland who brings a very special talent with him as well as news of her mother¿s ancestral family.

Elsie and Edward take great delight in their burgeoning family. The aftermath of the Civil War provides them with many opportunities to uphold their heritage and faith in practical ways, but they are caught up in a campaign against a powerful adversary¿the Ku Klux Klan¿as they fight to protect the innocent from unjust persecution.

A Blackstone Audio production.

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Elsie's Motherhood

Elsie's Motherhood

by Martha Finley
Elsie's Motherhood

Elsie's Motherhood

by Martha Finley

 


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Overview

In a frightening incident, Elsie¿s husband, Edward Travilla, narrowly survives an accidental shooting when friends tease son Edward, Jr., into firing a loaded pistol. The shot grazes Edward¿s head, and he survives with only minor damage.

Soon life in the Travilla household returns to its calm routine. In the meantime, Elsie welcomes a cousin from Scotland who brings a very special talent with him as well as news of her mother¿s ancestral family.

Elsie and Edward take great delight in their burgeoning family. The aftermath of the Civil War provides them with many opportunities to uphold their heritage and faith in practical ways, but they are caught up in a campaign against a powerful adversary¿the Ku Klux Klan¿as they fight to protect the innocent from unjust persecution.

A Blackstone Audio production.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940169602944
Publisher: Blackstone Audio, Inc.
Publication date: 08/07/2008
Series: Original Elsie Classics , #5
Edition description: Unabridged
Age Range: 8 - 11 Years

Read an Excerpt

Elsie's Motherhood


By Martha Finley

Hendrickson Publishers Marketing, LLC

Copyright © 1876 Hendrickson Publishers Marketing, LLC
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-59856-595-9


CHAPTER 1

Meantime, a smiling offspring rises round,
And mingles both their graces. By degrees
The human blossom blows, and every day,
Soft as it rolls along, shows some new charm,
The father's lustre, and the mother's bloom.

—Thomson's Seasons


"Mamma! Papa, too!" It was a glad shout of a chorus of young voices as four pairs of little feet came pattering up the avenue and onto the veranda; then as many ruby lips were held up for the morning kiss from the children's dearly loved father.

They had already had their half hour with mamma, which made so sweet a beginning of each day; yet she, too, must have a liberal share of the eagerly bestowed caresses. And Bruno, a great Newfoundland, the pet, playfellow, and guardian of the little flock, testified his delight in the scene by leaping about among them, fawning upon one another, wagging his tail, and uttering again and again a short, joyous bark.

Then followed a merry romp, cut short by the ringing of the breakfast bell, when all trooped into the house. Harold was riding on papa's shoulder, mamma following with Elsie, Eddie, and Vi, while Dinah, with baby Herbert in her arms, brought up the rear.

The children had been very happy, full of laughter and sweet innocent prattle; but a sudden hush fell upon them when seated about the table in the bright, cheerful breakfast parlor. Little hands were meekly folded and each young head bent reverently over the plate, while in a few simple words that all could understand, their father gave God thanks for the food and asked His blessing upon it.

The Ion children were never rude even in their play, and their table manners were almost perfect. They were made the constant companions of cultivated, refined parents whose politeness sprang from genuine unselfishness that was never laid aside. It was shown on all occasions, to rich and poor, old and young alike. They were governed with a wise mixture of indulgence and restraint, mildness and firmness; they imitated the copies set before them and were seldom other than gentile and amiable in their deportment, not only toward their superiors, but to equals and inferiors also.

They were never told that "children should be seen and not heard," but when no guests were present, were allowed to talk in moderation; a gentle word or look of reproof from papa or mamma being quite sufficient to check any tendency to boisterousness or undue loquacity.

"I think we should celebrate this anniversary, Elsie," remarked Mr. Travilla, stirring his coffee, and gazing with fond admiration into the sweet face at the opposite end of the table.

"Yes, sir, though we are rather late in thinking of it," she answered smilingly, the rose deepening slightly on her cheek as delicately rounded and tinted as it had been ten years ago.

Little Elsie looked up inquiringly. "What is it, papa? I do not remember."

"Do you not? Ten years ago today there was a grand wedding at the Oaks and your mamma and I were there."

"I, too?" asked Eddie.

"Yes, course, Eddie," spoke up five-year-old Violet. "Grandpa would 'vite you and all of us; and I b'lieve I 'member a little about it."

"Me, too," piped the baby voice of Harold. "Me sat on papa's knee."

There was a general laugh, the two little prattlers joining in right merrily.

"I really don't remember that as part of it, Harold," said papa. Meanwhile wee Elsie—as she was often called by way of distinguishing her from mamma, for whom she was named—shook her curly head at him with a merry "Oh, you dear little rogue, you don't know what you are talking about." And mamma remarked, "Vi has perhaps a slight recollection of May Allison's wedding."

"But this one at the Oaks must have been before I was born," said Elsie, "because you said it was ten years ago, and I'm only nine. Oh, mamma, was it your wedding?"

"Yes, daughter. Shall we invite our friends for this evening, Edward?"

"Yes, my dear wife, suppose we make it a family party, inviting only relatives, connections, and very intimate friends."

After a little more discussion it was decided they would do so. It was also decided that the children should have a full holiday. While their mother was giving orders and overseeing all of the necessary preparations for the entertainment, papa should take them all into the roomy family carriage and drive over to the Oaks, Roselands, Ashlands, and Pinelands to give the invitations. Besides these near friends only the minister and his wife were to be asked. But, as Adelaide and her family were at this time paying a visit to Roselands, and Lucy Ross was doing the same at her old home, and all the younger generation except the mere babies were to be included in the invitation, should all accept it would be by no means a small assemblage.

Early hours were named for the sake of the little ones—guests to come at six, refreshments to be served at eight, and the Ion children, if each would take a nap in the afternoon, to be allowed to stay up till nine.

How delighted they were. How the little eyes danced and sparkled, and how eagerly they engaged to fulfill the conditions—not to fret or look cross when summoned at nine to leave the drawing room and be put to bed.

"Oh, mamma, won't you wear your wedding dress?" cried little Elsie. "Do, dear mamma, so that we may see just how you looked when you were married to papa."

Elsie smiled, "You forget, daughter, that I am ten years older now, and the face cannot be quite the same as it was that night."

"The years have robbed it of none of its beauty," said Mr. Travilla.

"Ah, love is blind," she returned with a blush and smile as charming as those of her girlhood days. "And the dress is quite out of date."

"No matter for that. It would gratify me as well as the children to see you in it."

"Then it shall be worn, if it fits or can be altered in time."

"Veil and all, mamma," pleaded Elsie, "it is so beautiful. Mammy showed it to me only the other day and told me you looked so, so lovely; and she will put the orange blossoms in your hair and on your dress just as they were that night, for she remembers all about it."

The children, ready dressed for their drive, were gathered in a merry group on the veranda, Eddie astride Bruno, waiting for papa and the carriage, when a horse came cantering up the avenue, and Mr. Horace Dinsmore alighted and stepped into their midst.

"Oh, grandpa, what you tum for?" cried Harold in a tone of disappointment. "We was dus doin' to 'vite you!"

"Indeed!"

"Yes, grandpa, it's a 'versary today," explained Vi.

"And mamma's going to be married over again," said Eddie.

"No; only to have a party and wear her wedding dress," corrected Elsie.

"Papa, good morning," cried their mother, coming swiftly through the hall. "I'm so glad, always so glad to see you."

"I know it," he said, pressing a fatherly kiss on the sweet lips, then holding her off for an instant to gaze fondly into the fair face. "And it is ten years today since I gave Travilla a share in my treasure. I was thinking of it as I rode over and that you should celebrate this anniversary at your father's house."

"No, no, Dinsmore, you must be our guest," said Travilla, coming out and shaking hands cordially with his old friend. "We have it all arranged—a family gathering—and Elsie to gratify us by wearing her bridal clothes. Do you not agree with me that she would make as lovely a bride today as she did ten years ago?"

"Quite. I relinquish my plan for yours; and don't let me detain you and these eager children."

"I thank you; I will go then, as the invitations will be late enough with all the haste we can make."

The carriage was at the door and in a moment grandpa and papa had helped the little ones. Not even baby Herbert was left behind, but seated on his mammy's lap cooed and laughed as merrily as the rest.

"Ah, mamma, you come, too!" pleaded the little voices, as their father took his place beside them. "Can't mammy and Aunt Dicey and the rest know what to do without you to tell them?"

"Not this time, dears; and you know I must make haste to try on the dress, to see if it fits."

"Oh, yes, mamma!" and throwing a shower of kisses, they drove off.

"A carriage load of precious jewels," Elsie said, looking after it as it rolled away. "How the ten years have added to my wealth, papa."

She stood by his side, her hand soft on his arm, and the soft sweet eyes lifted to his were full of a content and gladness beyond the power of words to express.

"I thank God every day for my little darling's happiness," he said low and tenderly, softly smoothing her shining hair.

"Ah, it is very great, and my father's dear love forms no small part of it. But come in, papa, I want to consult you about one or two little matters; you know that Edward and I rely very much upon your taste and judgment."

"To Roselands first," was Mr. Travilla's order to the coachman.

The old house of the Dinsmores, though shorn of the glory of its grand trees, was again in a beautiful place. The new house was in every respect a finer one than its predecessor. It was of a higher style of architecture, more conveniently arranged, more tastefully and handsomely furnished; lawns, gardens, and fields had become neat and trim as in the days before the war, and a double row of young, thrifty trees bordered the avenue.

Old Mr. Dinsmore now resided there and gave a home to his two widowed and impoverished daughters—Mrs. Louise Conly and Mrs. Enna Johnson—and their families.

These two aunts loved Elsie no better than in earlier years—it was gall and wormwood to them to know that they owed all these comforts to her generosity; nor could they forgive her that she was more wealthy, beautiful, lovely, and beloved than themselves. Enna was the more bitter and outspoken of the two, but even Louise seldom treated her niece to anything better than the most distant and frigid politeness.

In a truly Christian spirit, Elsie returned them pity and compassion because of their widowhood and straitened circumstances, invited them to her house, and when they came, received them with kindness and cordiality.

Her grandfather had grown very fond of her and her children, was often at Ion, and for his sake she occasionally visited Roselands. Adelaide's presence had drawn her there more frequently as of late. The invitation Mr. Travilla carried was to the grandfather, three aunts, and all their children.

Adelaide and Enna were in the drawing room when the Ion carriage drew up at the door.

"There's Travilla, the old scalawag. How I hate him! Elsie, too, I presume," exclaimed the latter, glancing from the window. "I'll leave you to entertain them," and she hastily left the room.

Adelaide flashed an indignant look after her, and hurried out to meet and welcome the callers. Mr. Travilla had alighted and was coming up the steps of the veranda.

"How d'ye do. I'm very glad to see you," cried Adelaide, extending her hand. "But where is Elsie?"

"We left her at home for once," he answered merrily, "but I come this morning merely as her ladyship's messenger."

"But won't you come in, you and the children?"

"Thanks, no, if you will permit me just to deliver my message and go, for I am in haste."

Mrs. Allison accepted the invitation for herself and children with evident pleasure, engaged that her sisters would do the same, then went to the carriage window for a moment's chat with the little ones, each of whom held a large place in her warm heart. "Aunt Addie," said Elsie in an undertone, "mamma's going to wear her wedding dress tonight, veil and all."

"Is she? Why that's an excellent idea. But don't tell it anywhere else you go; it will be such a nice surprise to the rest if we can keep it a secret."

"That was a good suggestion of Aunt Addie's." Mr. Travilla remarked as they drove down the avenue. "Suppose we carry it out. How many of you can refrain from telling what mamma is to wear tonight? How many can I trust to keep it a secret?"

"All of us papa!" "Me, papa, me!" "I won't tell," cried the little voices in chorus.

"Yes, I believe I can trust you all," he answered in his cheery way. "Now on to the Oaks, Solon, then to Pinegrove, Springbrook, and the Ashlands. That will be the last place, children, and as our hurry will then be over, you shall get out of the carriage and have a little time to rest before we start for home."

Re-entering the house, Mrs. Allison went to the family sitting room, where she found both her sisters and several of the younger members of the household. "So they have asked for us?" exclaimed Louise in a tone of vexation, "and at such an unreasonable hour, too. Well," with a sigh of resignation, "I suppose we must show ourselves or papa will be displeased—so wonderfully fond of Elsie he has grown as of late."

"As well he may," returned Adelaide pointedly, "but Elsie is not here nor has anyone inquired for any of you."

"No, I presume not," interrupted Enna with a sneer. "We are not worth inquiring for."

Indignation kept Adelaide silent for a moment; she was sorely tempted to administer a severe and cutting rebuke. But Enna was no longer a child, and controlling herself she calmly delivered Mr. Travilla's message.

"Oh, delightful! Cousin Elsie always does give such splendid parties, such elegant refreshments!" cried Virginia and Isadore Conly, girls of ten and twelve. "Mamma, you'll never think of declining?"

"No, your grandfather wouldn't like it," said Louise, as anxious as her daughters to enjoy the entertainment, yet glad to save her pride, by putting her acceptance on the score of pleasing her father.

"And you'll go, too, and take us, mamma, won't you?" anxiously queried Molly Percival, who was between her cousins in age.

"Of course, I'll go; we all want our share of the good things, and the pleasure of seeing and being seen," answered Enna, scorning Louise's subterfuge, "and if you and Dick will promise to make me no trouble, I'll take you along. But Bob and Betty may stay at home; I'm not going to be bothered with them—babies of five and three. But what shall we wear, Lu? I do say it's real mean of them to give so short a notice. But, of course, Elsie enjoys making me feel my changed circumstances. I've no such stock of jewels, silks, and laces as she, nor the full purse that makes it an easy matter for her to order a fresh supply at a moment's warning."

"You have all, and more than the occasion calls for," remarked Adelaide quietly. "It is to be only a family gathering."

CHAPTER 2

Though fools spurn Hymen's gentle powers,
We, who improve his golden hours,
By sweet experience know
That marriage, rightly understood,
Gives to the tender and the good
A paradise below.

—Cotton


Mr. Allison had fully kept his promise to his daughter, Sophy, and Ashlands was again the fine old place it had been prior to the war. The family, consisting of the elder Mrs. Carrington, a young man named George Boyd—a nephew of hers who had taken charge of the plantation—Sophy, and her four children, had now been in possession for over a year

Sophy, still an almost inconsolable mourner for the husband of her youth, lived a very retired life, devoting herself to his mother and his orphaned little ones.

Mrs. Ross, expecting to spend the fall and winter with them, had brought all her children and a governess, Miss Fisk—who undertook the tutelage of the little Carringtons also during her stay at Ashlands, thus leaving the mothers more at liberty for the enjoyment of each other's society.

It was in the midst of school hours that the Ion carriage came driving up the avenue. Philip Ross, lifting his head from the slate over which he had been bending for the last half hour, rose hastily, threw down his pencil, and hurried from the room. He paid no attention to Miss Fisk's query, "Where are you going, Philip?" or her command, "Come back instantly: it is quite contrary to rules for pupils to leave the schoolroom during the hours of recitation, without permission." Indeed, he had reached the foot of the staircase before the last word had left her lips—she being very slow and precise in speech and action, while his movements were of the quickest.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Elsie's Motherhood by Martha Finley. Copyright © 1876 Hendrickson Publishers Marketing, LLC. Excerpted by permission of Hendrickson Publishers Marketing, LLC.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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