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be laid up to go to make up the sum of his redemption money; Mose and Pete were thriving and the baby was trotting all about the house, under the care of Sally and the family generally. Tom’s cabin was shut up for the present; but George expatiated brilliantly on ornaments and additions to be made to it when Tom came back. The rest of this letter gave a list of George’s school studies, each one headed by a flourishing capital; and also told the names of four new colts that appeared on the premises since Tom left; and stated, in the same connection, that father and mother were well. The style of the letter was decidedly concise and terse; but Tom thought it the most wonderful specimen of composition that had appeared in modern times. He was never tired of looking at it, and even held a council with Eva on the expediency of getting it framed, to hang up in his room. Nothing but the difficulty of arranging it so that both sides of the page would show at once stood in the way of this undertaking. The friendship between Tom and Eva had grown with the child’s growth. It would be hard to say what place she held in the soft, impressible heart of her faith- ful attendant. He loved her as something frail and earthly, yet almost worshipped her as something heavenly and divine. He gazed on her as the Italian sailor gazes on his image of the child Jesus-with a mixture of reverence and tenderness; and to humor her graceful fancies, and meet those thousand simple wants which in- vest childhood like a many-colored rainbow, was Tom’s chief delight. In the mar- ket, at morning, his eyes were always on the flower stalls for he was ever |