Soest fe stint EE = = L ae Hh Y SS °.™ --s Wr "ie \ x rd ita a ey eatt nA Wi) ty iti 7 ie y u “al |" pale tee! i ‘N ee a “S vS,3° P THE DROWNED GIRL. 113 a7 ¥, PEEP AT OUR NEIGHBORS; THE SEQUEL TO THE WILLOW LANE BUDGET. With llustrations. BY UNCLE FRANK, AUTHOR OF THE “QUEER OLD MILLER,’ ETC, NEW YORK: CHARLES SCRIBNER, 145 NASSAU STREET. 1852. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1851, by CHARLES SCRIBNER, Clerk’s Office of the District Court of the United States for In the the Southern District ot New York. a Bi state Cc, W. BENEDICT, SreREOTYPER AND PRINTER, 201 William st., N. Y- CONTENTS. PAGE WHAT I AM GOING TO DO, ° : ° é 7 A GLANCE AT PARSON DALEY, ; ‘ , “* 16 DOCTOR WINDMAN AND HIS DOSES, . ‘ ° - ee HUNTING HENS’ NESTS, . ; : ‘ ° : 63 CLIMBING THE PEACH TREE, . ° ° ° i THE BALL FAMILY, 5 . ° ; e 96 CHIPS OF THE OLD BLOCK, . ; ; j . 108 THE DROWNED GIRL, ; ‘ e ‘ ° ‘ 113 THE YOUNG TRUTH-TELLER, i ‘ ‘ ‘ wee Vl CONTENTS. THE NEW. SKATES, ‘ ° ° ° ‘ ; 140 LAUGHING BILL, . : ‘ ° ° ° ° » 159 UNCLE FRANK'S LEAVE-TAKING, . ° ° ° 173 TT LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. THE DROWNED GIRL, -. -~— * : Frontispiece VIGNETTE TITLE-PAGE, ‘ : ° . ‘ 1 A PEEP AT WILLOW LANE, . ° ° ara 13 PARSON DALEY AND THE LITTLE GIRL, ; ‘ ; 26 HUNTING HENS’ NESTS, . ‘ ° . . . 65 JOE AND HIS VICTIM, . ; ‘ ‘ . . 108 AMANDA AT HER KNITTING WORK, > ag 119 “OH, DANIEL! FORGIVE ME ms . ; ° . 156 A PEEP AT OUR NEIGHBORS. CHAPTER I. WHAT I AM GOING TO DO. I suppose that my friends, the boys and girls, for whom I make this book, would like to know at the outset, what sort of a thing I have got for them, and how I came to make it. I will tell them, in as few words as possible. Not long ago, I spun some yarns, and wove them together, and sent them off to the little folks about the country, with 8 PEEP AT OUR NEIGHBORS. this label on them: “4 Budget of Willow Lane Stories.’”’ I had quite a liking for these stories myself. <‘ That’s natural enough, Uncle Frank’’—so I fancy I hear you say—‘‘ because you made them; and people are apt to like what they make.’ Yes, I know that well enough; and perhaps that is one reason why I took so kindly to these stories. But that was not the only rea- son. It was not the chief reason, I think. Willow Lane was the place where I was born, and where I spent the merriest days of my life. I said I liked these stories, and that I liked them because they had so much PEEP AT OUR NEIGHBORS. 9 to do with the bright, and green, and joyous days of my childhood. But when I sent the budget out, to be open- ed and read, I own I was in doubt whether my friends would be pleased with the budget or not. But they were pleased with it. They liked it. I sus- pect that the very neat and tasteful dress in which the book appeared, had some- thing to do with their liking it. It was beautifully printed, and the pictures in it were very fine. So that it is due to Uncle Frank’s publisher, Mr. Scribner, as much, perhaps, as to Uncle Frank himself, that the budget was so well thought of. 10 PEEP AT OUR NEIGHBORS. Let that be as it may, however—the stories about matters and things in Wil- low Lane were read so eagerly, that I made up my mind to set my thinking factory agoing again, and to spin and weave some more yarns from the same kind of stuff. ‘What! another entire budget, Uncle Frank ?”’ Yes, another budget. ‘¢But I have not opened the first one yet.” Haven’t you? Well, you can attend to that some other time. It will not make any difference which book you read first. If you do not read the other PEEP AT OUR NEIGHBORS. 11 at all—though I hope you will read it sometime or other—you can understand this one just as well. The stories in the first budget are not so woven into the stories in the second budget, that you will find it necessary to get hold of the thread at the very beginning, and to keep a tight hold of it till you get to the end. You can do so or not, just as you like, or just as you find it convenient. Let me see. What label shall I put upon the new budget? I have thought of calling it ‘4 Peep at our Neighbors.” I guess that name will be just the thing. While I am peeping at those neighbors, however, you will not expect me to peep 12 PEEP AT OUR NEIGHBORS. at nothing else. We must take some notice of things as well as of people. We cannot very well avoid doing 80, if we would; and I do not think it would be best to do so, if we could. I am more anxious to weave together a bundle of stories which will please you, and which will have something in them of real value to you, than I am to select just such facts and incidents, and only such, as will fit the name I give them. So you must not shake your head, if it seems to you that I do, once in a while, get away a few paces from the text I have taken. Ministers do not always stick very closely to their texts, Cage amd Se, Vie ase BIN er Gi ‘ LEE ee ‘ LA SY P ; A PEEP AT WILLOW LANE, 13 s * ‘-- 8 © ple att ovr seicHBoRs. #*- wy ‘wething clse. We must take sume~ petice of things as well as oof nawple. ‘We cannot very well . void doiag ao, if gwe would ; oa I do ; ot thine «@ would be best te eee so, if coud. . b am> more anxiews to weave other a bundle : of stories wrtiieh ith * ae -you, and hich: wes heer Seen dig jm then of geal weber fe FOR ee i win te select \ 4 wR gas pak eo isi eats ana only , ta wii At Ede ween t give them. “* ee a ay you aust n6t shake your head, if ‘ie ae fe t fo you. that T do, once im a. i # o- uot away % haenti aces mae the | { pada Gaia hone \ PEEP AT OUR NEIGHBORS. 15 you know. They wander a little some- times. I mean to take the same liberty. Some boys and girls, when they read the title of this book, may think, at first, before they read any of the stories, that Uncle Frank has turned tattler. But there is no tattling in the book; nothing of the kind. What I am going to do, or what I am going to try to do, may be expressed in a very few words, and I design to give you a little picture—a sort of daguerreotype miniature—of every- day life in our neighborhood at Willow Lane. CHAPTER II. A GLANCE AT PARSON DALEY. Our minister was one of the most de- voted and exemplary men it has ever been my lot to know. Everybody loved Parson Daley. It was not so easy, per- haps, to get acquainted with ministers when I was a little boy, as it -is now. There was something about them, which inspired us little folks with great reve- rence, amounting, at times, almost to PEEP AT OUR NEIGHBORS. 17 terror. ‘Their very dress had something of the awful about it to us. I have often heard my father tell what a time he used to have, in the days of his boyhood, when he met the minister who then preached in the old _ brick meeting-house. That was a little while after the revolutionary war; and as long ago. as that time the children must have been almost frightened, when they came across a real, live minister out of the pulpit, and had to look him in the face, and speak to him. My father said that when he was in the street, and saw the minister, though ever so far off, coming right toward him, jogging along leisurely 18 PEEP AT OUR NEIGHBORS. upon the back of his white mare, with his short clothes on, and his knee buckles so finely polished, he began to make preparations for his bow. His hat was off ina moment. He stopped still, as if he had been petrified, and waited for the great man to come up. When the meeting took place, the bow was got off as if the life of the bower depended on the character of his bow. There was not quite so much venera- tion for the minister when I was a boy, though there was much more than there is now. Now there may be too little— then there might have been too much. Parson Daley was not an old man, at PEEP AT OUR NEIGHBORS. 19 the time I am writing of. Still he was an old-fashioned man—so we boys thought. He wore short clothes and knee buckles; and his hair hung down behind, and was sometimes fastened in a cue. When he walked out, there was not a boy or girl in the street, that he did not stop to speak to. There was some stiff- ness about him—something which always seemed to me to warn me against coming too near him, until I was spoken to, and until he held out his hand toward me, as king Ahasuerus held out the golden scep- tre toward Esther. But I do not think he really courted such outward respect as = PEEP AT OUR NEIGHBORS. everybody paid him. He received it— expected it—would have been displeased at the absence of it—because it was cus- tomary for the flock to render it to the shepherd. But when the ceremony of receiving him was gone through with— when you had got through the crust of ministerial dignity, if I may say so, which covered the person of the min- ister from head to foot, and seemed to render him almost too sacred to be used except on Sundays, fast days, and thanksgiving days—when you got into the heart of the: man, you saw at a glance that he was one of the last per- sons in the wide world to be afraid of. PEEP AT OUR NEIGHBORS. 21 How often, when he reined his old sorrel horse up to our house, and hitched her to the fence near the door, and came in, slowly and gravely, with an air so dignified, have I wished I might ;haye leave to get into the farthest corner of,) the garret, and to remain there among: the rats and cobwebs, until that..great. man should remount his little pacers :and:; how often, too, after I, had spoken: to; my : good pastor, and ,he had ‘spoken: to me,;: and kindly patted::me on myhead, and; told me some nice..story, with a goody moral tacked to the end: of :it,: haves;E: wished, whenoi