The Harvest of Years 
 
Project Gutenberg's The Harvest of Years, by Martha Lewis Beckwith 
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Title: The Harvest of Years 
Author: Martha Lewis Beckwith Newell 
Release Date: May 6, 2006 [EBook #18332] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE 
HARVEST OF YEARS *** 
 
Produced by Stacy Brown, Jason Isbell, Afra Ullah and the Online 
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net 
 
THE 
HARVEST OF YEARS 
BY
M.L.B. EWELL 
NEW YORK G.P. PUTNAM'S SONS 182 Fifth Avenue 1880 
 
Copyright by G.P. PUTNAM'S SONS 1880 
 
TO MY FAMILY 
THIS RECITAL OF MY LIFE IS AFFECTIONATELY 
DEDICATED. 
Old friends and other days have risen about me as I have written, 
recalling, through my pen, these treasured experiences; and the pictured 
characters are to me as real as earthly hands, whose touch we feel. I 
have written as the story runs, with no effort at adorning, and those 
who love me best will not bring to it the cold criticisms that may come 
from other readers. To illustrate the truth of "a little leaven's leavening 
the whole lump" has been my purpose, and if this purpose can be even 
partially achieved, I shall deem myself sufficiently rewarded. To those 
whom in previous years I have met in the field of my mission, whose 
heart-felt sympathy and interest became the tide which bore me on, as 
from public platform (as well as in private ways) I have, for truth's dear 
sake, been impelled to utterances, to these friends I may hope this 
volume will not come as a stranger, but that through it I may receive, as 
in the days gone by, the grasp of their friendly hands. 
M.L.B.E. 
New Haven, Conn., June, 1880. 
 
CONTENTS. 
CHAPTER PAGE
I.--Emily Did It 1 
II.--From Girlhood to Womanhood 5 
III.--Changes 11 
IV.--Our New Friend 18 
V.--Louis Robert 31 
VI.--A Question and a Problem 49 
VII.--Wilmur Benton 60 
VIII.--Fears and Hopes 71 
IX.--The New Faith 84 
X.--Matthias Jones 95 
XI.--The Teaching of Hosea Ballou 109 
XII.--A Remedy for Wrong-talking 123 
XIII.--Perplexities 137 
XIV.--Louis returns 150 
XV.--Emily finds peace 164 
XVI.--Mary Harris 177 
XVII.--Precious Thoughts 210 
XVIII.--Emily's Marriage 226 
XIX.--Married Life 240 
XX.--Life Pictures and Life Work 254
XXI.--John Jones 274 
XXII.--Clara leaves us 290 
XXIII.--Aunt Hildy's Legacy 317 
 
THE HARVEST OF YEARS 
CHAPTER I. 
"EMILY DID IT." 
Among my earliest recollections these three words have a place, 
coming to my ears as the presages of a reprimand. I had made a frantic 
effort to lift my baby-brother from his cradle, and had succeeded only 
in upsetting baby, pillows and all, waking my mother from her little 
nap, while brother Hal stood by and shouted, "Emily did it." I was only 
five years of age at that eventful period, and was as indignant at the 
scolding I received when trying to do a magnanimous act, take care of 
baby and let poor, tired mother sleep, as I have been many times since, 
when, unluckily, I had upset somebody's dish, and "Emily did it" has 
rung its hateful sound in my ears. To say I was unlucky was not enough; 
I was untimely, unwarranted and unwanted, I often felt, in early years 
in everything I attempted, and the naturally quick temper I possessed 
was only aggravated and tortured into more harassing activity, 
rendering me on the whole, perhaps, not very amiable. Interesting I 
could not be, since whatever I attempted I seemed fated to say or do 
something to hurt somebody's feelings, and, mortified at my failures, I 
would draw myself closer to myself, shrinking from others, and saying 
again and again, "Emily, why must you do it?" 
Introducing myself thus clouded to your sympathy, I cannot expect my 
reader would be interested in a rehearsal of all my early trials. 
You can imagine how it must have been as I marched along from 
childhood through girlhood into womanhood, while I still clung to my
strange ways and peculiar sayings; upsetting of inkstands at school, 
mud tracking over the carpet in the "best room" at home, unconscious 
betrayal of mischief plans, etc., etc., made up the full catalogue of my 
days and their experiences, and although I did have a few warm friends, 
I could not be as other girls were, generally happy and beloved. 
Mother was the only real friend I had; it seemed to me, as I grew older, 
she learned to know that I was too often blamed, where at heart I was 
wholly blameless, and when sometimes she stroked my hair, and said, 
"My dear    
    
		
	
	
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