The Three Brides, Love in a 
Cottage, and
by Francis A. 
Durivage 
 
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and 
Other Tales, by Francis A. Durivage This eBook is for the use of 
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Title: The Three Brides, Love in a Cottage, and Other Tales 
Author: Francis A. Durivage 
Release Date: February 3, 2006 [EBook #17669] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE 
THREE BRIDES, LOVE IN A *** 
 
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THE 
THREE BRIDES, 
LOVE IN A COTTAGE, 
AND 
OTHER TALES 
BY 
FRANCIS A. DURIVAGE. 
 
BOSTON: SANBORN, CARTER, BAZIN & CO., 25 & 29 
CORNHILL. 
 
Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1853, by 
F.A. DURIVAGE, 
In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the District of 
Massachusetts. 
 
TO 
MY MOTHER, 
THE FIRST TO ENCOURAGE MY EFFORTS, 
AND THE MOST INDULGENT OF MY CRITICS, 
THIS VOLUME
IS AFFECTIONATELY INSCRIBED. 
 
PREFACE. 
The volume here submitted to the public is composed of selections 
from my contributions to the columns of the American press. The 
stories and sketches were written, most of them, in the intervals of 
relaxation from more serious labor and the daily business of life; and 
they would be suffered to disappear in the Lethe that awaits old 
magazines and newspapers, had not their extensive circulation, and the 
partial judgment of friends,--for I must not omit the stereotyped plea of 
scribblers,--flattered me that their collection in a permanent form would 
not prove wholly unacceptable. Some of these articles were published 
anonymously, or under the signature of "The Old 'Un," and have 
enjoyed the honor of adoption by persons having no claim to their 
paternity; and it seems time to call home and assemble these vagabond 
children under the paternal wing. 
The materials for the tales were gathered from various sources: some 
are purely imaginative, some authentic, not a few jotted down from oral 
narrative, or derived from the vague remembrance of some old play or 
adventure; but the form at least is my own, and that is about all that a 
professional story-teller, gleaning his matter at random, can generally 
lay claim to. 
Some of these sketches were originally published in the Boston "Olive 
Branch," and many in Mr. Gleason's popular papers, the "Flag of Our 
Union," and the "Pictorial Drawing-Room Companion." Others have 
appeared in the "New York Mirror," the "American Monthly 
Magazine," the New York "Spirit of the Times," the "Symbol," and 
other magazines and papers. 
Should their perusal serve to beguile some hours of weariness and 
illness, as their composition has done, I shall feel that my labor has not 
been altogether vain; while the moderate success of this venture will 
stimulate me to attempt something more worthy the attention of the
public. 
FRANCIS A. DURIVAGE. 
 
TABLE OF CONTENTS. 
THE GOLDSMITH'S DAUGHTER. 
PHILETUS POTTS. 
THE GONDOLIER. 
THE SURRENDER OF CORNWALLIS. 
THE THREE BRIDES. 
CALIFORNIA SPECULATION. 
THE FRENCH GUARDSMAN. 
PERSONAL SATISFACTION. 
THE CASTLE ON THE RHINE. 
LOVE IN A COTTAGE. 
THE CAREER OF AN ARTIST. 
SOUVENIRS OF A RETIRED OYSTERMAN IN ILL HEALTH. 
THE NEW YEAR'S STOCKINGS. 
THE OBLIGING YOUNG MAN. 
EULALIE LASALLE. 
THE OLD CITY PUMP.
THE TWO PORTRAITS. 
UNCLE OBED. 
THE CASKET OF JEWELS. 
ACTING CHARADES. 
THE GREEN CHAMBER. 
HE WASN'T A HORSE JOCKEY. 
FUNERAL SHADOWS. 
THE LATE ELIAS MUGGS. 
THE SOLDIER'S WIFE. 
A KISS ON DEMAND. 
THE RIFLE SHOT. 
THE WATER CURE. 
THE COSSACK. 
MARRIED FOR MONEY. 
THE EMIGRANT SHIP. 
THE LAST OF THE STAGE COACHES. 
THE SEXTON OF ST. HUBERT'S. 
JACK WITHERS. 
THE SILVER HAMMER. 
THE CHRIST CHURCH CHIMES.
THE POLISH SLAVE. 
OBEYING ORDERS. 
THE DEACON'S HORSE. 
THE CONTRABANDISTA. 
THE STAGE-STRUCK GENTLEMAN. 
THE DIAMOND STAR. 
THE GAME OF CHANCE. 
THE SOLDIER'S SON. 
TAKING CHARGE OF A LADY. 
THE NEW YEAR'S BELLS. 
THE OLD YEAR AND THE NEW. 
 
THE GOLDSMITH'S DAUGHTER. 
A LEGEND OF MADRID. 
Many, many years ago, in those "good old times" so much bepraised by 
antiquaries and the laudatores temporis acti,--the good old times, that 
is to say, of the holy office, of those magnificent autos when the smell 
of roasted heretics was as sweet a savor in the nostrils of the faithful, as 
that of Quakers done remarkably brown was to our godly Puritan 
ancestors,--there dwelt in the royal city of Madrid a wealthy goldsmith 
by the name of Antonio Perez, whose family--having lost his 
wife--consisted of a lovely daughter, named Magdalena, and a less 
beautiful but still charming niece, Juanita. The housekeeping and the 
care of the girls were committed to a starched    
    
		
	
	
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