Lyddy's Recognition, by Thomas 
Nelson Page 
 
Project Gutenberg's Mam' Lyddy's Recognition, by Thomas Nelson 
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Title: Mam' Lyddy's Recognition 1908 
Author: Thomas Nelson Page 
Release Date: November 16, 2007 [EBook #23512] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MAM' 
LYDDY'S RECOGNITION *** 
 
Produced by David Widger 
 
MAM' LYDDY'S RECOGNITION 
By Thomas Nelson Page 
Charles Scribner's Sons New York, 1908
Copyright, 1891, 1904, 1906 
 
I 
When Cabell Graeme was courting pretty Betty French up at the 
Château place, though he had many rivals and not a few obstacles to 
overcome, he had the good fortune to secure one valuable ally, whose 
friendship stood him in good stead. She was of a rich chocolate tint, 
with good features, and long hair, possibly inherited from some Arab 
ancestor, bead-like black eyes, and a voice like a harp, but which on 
occasion could become a flame. Her figure was short and stocky; but 
more dignity was never compressed within the same number of cubic 
inches. 
Mam' Lyddy had been in the French family all her life, as her mother 
and grandmother had been before her. She had rocked on her ample 
bosom the best part of three generations. And when Freedom came, 
however much she may have appreciated being free, she had much too 
high an estimate of the standing of the Frenches to descend to the level 
of the class she had always contemned as "free niggers." She was a 
deep-dyed aristocrat. 
The Frenches were generally esteemed to be among the oldest and best 
families in the county, and the Château plantation, with its wide fields 
and fine old mansion, was commonly reckoned one of the finest in that 
section. But no such comparative statement would have satisfied Mam' 
Lyddy. She firmly believed that the Frenches were the greatest people 
in the world, and it would have added nothing to her dignity had they 
been princes, because it could have added nothing to it to be told that 
she was a member of a royal house. Part mentor, part dependent, part 
domestic, she knew her position, and within her province her place was 
as unquestioned as was that of her mistress, and her advice was as 
carefully considered. 
Caesar, her husband, a tall, ebony lath, with a bald head and meek eyes, 
had come out of another family and was treated with condescension.
No one knew how often he was reminded of his lower estate; but it was 
often enough, for he was always in a somewhat humble and apologetic 
attitude. 
The Frenches were known as a "likely" family, but Betty, with her oval 
face, soft eyes, and skin like a magnolia flower, was so undeniably the 
beauty that she was called "Pretty Betty." She was equally undeniably 
the belle. And while the old woman, who idolized her, found far more 
pleasure than even her mother in her belleship, she was as watchful 
over her as Argus. Every young man of the many who haunted the old 
French mansion among its oaks and maples had to meet the scrutiny of 
those sharp, tack-like eyes. The least slip that one made was enough to 
prove his downfall. The old woman sifted them as surely as she sifted 
her meal, and branded them with an infallible instinct akin to that of a 
keen watchdog. Many a young man who passed that silent figure 
without a greeting, or spoke lightly of some one, unheeding her 
presence, wondered at his want of success and felt without knowing 
why that he was pulling against an unseen current. 
"We must drop him--he ain't a gent'man," she said of one. Of another: 
"Oh! Oh! honey, he won't do. He ain't our kind." Or, "Betty, let him go, 
my Lamb. De Frenches don't pick up dat kine o' stick." 
Happily for Cabell Graeme, he had the old woman's approval. In the 
first place, he was related to the Frenches, and this in her eyes was a 
patent of gentility. Then, he had always been kind to little Betty and 
particularly civil to herself. He not only never omitted to ask after her 
health, but also inquired as to her pet ailments of "misery in her foot" 
and "whirlin' in her head," with an interest which flattered her deeply. 
But it went further back than that Once, when Betty was a little girl, 
Cabell, then a well-grown boy of twelve, had found her and her 
mammy on the wrong side of a muddy road, and wading through, he 
had carried    
    
		
	
	
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