Stories and Sketches, by Harriet 
S. Caswell 
 
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Title: Stories and Sketches 
Author: Harriet S. Caswell 
Release Date: January 31, 2007 [EBook #20493] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STORIES 
AND SKETCHES *** 
 
This text was produced from images generously made available by the 
Canadian Institute for Historical Microreproductions, Michael Lockey, 
Susan Skinner and the Online Distributed Proofreaders Europe at 
http://dp.rastko.net 
 
STORIES AND SKETCHES
BY 
H.S. CASWELL, 
AUTHOR OF ERNEST HARWOOD, CLARA ROSCOM, OR THE 
PATH OF DUTY, &C. 
MONTREAL: PRINTED BY JOHN LOVELL, ST. NICHOLAS 
STREET. 
1872 
 
CONTENTS. 
TERRY DOLAN 5 
THE FAITHFUL WIFE 15 
EMMA ASHTON 24 
THOUGHTS ON AUTUMN 47 
WANDERING DAVY 50 
LOOKING ON THE DARK SIDE 57 
EDWARD BARTON 62 
THE WEARY AT REST 71 
THE RAINY AFTERNOON 75 
THE STUDENT'S DREAM 85 
UNCLE EPHRAIM 88 
STORY OF A LOG CABIN 93
HAZEL-BROOK FARM 106 
OLD RUFUS 127 
THE DIAMOND RING 135 
THE UNFORTUNATE MAN 146 
THE OLD SCHOOLHOUSE 150 
ARTHUR SINCLAIR 154 
THE SNOW STORM 173 
THE NEW YEAR 177 
 
TERRY DOLAN. 
Some years since circumstances caused me to spend the summer 
months in a farming district, a few miles from the village of E., and it 
was there I met with Terry Dolan. He had a short time previous come 
over from Ireland, and was engaged as a sort of chore boy by Mr. L., in 
whose family I resided during my stay in the neighborhood. This Terry 
was the oddest being with whom I ever chanced to meet. Would that I 
could describe him!--but most of us, I believe, occasionally meet with 
people, whom we find to be indescribable, and Terry was one of those. 
He called himself sixteen years of age; but, excepting that he was low 
of stature, you would about as soon have taken him for sixty, as sixteen. 
His countenance looked anything but youthful, and there was altogether 
a sort of queer, ancient look about him which caused him to appear 
very remarkable. When he first came to reside with Mr. L. the boys in 
the neighborhood nicknamed him "The little Old Man," but they soon 
learned by experience that their wisest plan was to place a safe distance 
between Terry and themselves before applying that name to him, for 
the implied taunt regarding his peculiar appearance enraged him 
beyond measure. Whenever he entered the room, specially if he 
ventured a remark--and no matter how serious you might have been a
moment before--the laugh would come, do your best to repress it. 
When I first became an inmate with the family, I was too often inclined 
to laugh at the oddities of Terry--and I believe a much graver person 
than I was at that time would have done the same--but after a time, 
when I learned something of his past life, I regarded him with a feeling 
of pity, although to avoid laughing at him, at times, were next to 
impossible. 
One evening in midsummer I found him seated alone upon the piazza, 
with a most dejected countenance. Taking a seat by his side I enquired 
why he looked so sad;--his eyes filled with tears as he replied--"its of 
ould Ireland I'm thinkin' to-night, sure." I had never before seen Terry 
look sober, and I felt a deep sympathy for the homesick boy. I asked 
him how it happened that he left all his friends in Ireland and came to 
this country alone. From his reply I learned that his mother died when 
he was only ten years old, and, also, that his father soon after married a 
second wife, who, to use Terry's own words, "bate him unmercifully." 
"It's a wonder," said he, "that iver I lived to grow up, at all, at all, wid 
all the batins I got from that cruel woman, and all the times she sint me 
to bed widout iver a bite uv supper, bad luck to her and the like uv 
her!" He did live, however, but he certainly did not grow up to be very 
tall. "Times grew worse an' worse for me at home," continued he, "and 
a quare time I had of it till I was fourteen years of age, when one day 
says I to mesilf, 'flesh and blood can bear it no longer,' and I ran away 
to the city uv Dublin where an aunt by me mother's side lived. Me aunt 
was a poor woman, but she gave a warm welcim    
    
		
	
	
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