. Harper's weekly. Cemetery, knoll in the back part of thea very extended and battle-field. The Ever-green Cemetery adjoining will he long rememberedbv our soldiers who fought so gallantly on tho uly. Cemetery. Each grave (known and umarked by a stone, and the name, ?jiment of the recognized will be sabneatly engraved thereon. TIPPOO He was heavyentirely ignorantof almost every thing a man should know. But at of my story deny, if you dare, that he was Winn \..|-ih ] joined the rebellion ambegan to raise troops, Mr. John Fernald got himself transformed into Captain J


. Harper's weekly. Cemetery, knoll in the back part of thea very extended and battle-field. The Ever-green Cemetery adjoining will he long rememberedbv our soldiers who fought so gallantly on tho uly. Cemetery. Each grave (known and umarked by a stone, and the name, ?jiment of the recognized will be sabneatly engraved thereon. TIPPOO He was heavyentirely ignorantof almost every thing a man should know. But at of my story deny, if you dare, that he was Winn \..|-ih ] joined the rebellion ambegan to raise troops, Mr. John Fernald got himself transformed into Captain John Fernald. Whenras requested to furnish one o ? Cer- I-land, he magnificently :tainly, and went home to consider how it was tobe done. For John Fernald, the needy heir of aspendthrift sire and grandsire, owned no lands savehis heavily-mortgaged plantation of Mossmoor, nostock save tho fine horse who was destined to bearhis master to the wars, a few cows and pigs, TippooSaib, his wife Marcy, their child Scipio Africauus(Mr. Fernald had a fine taste in nomenclature), andAphrodite, commonly called Frite, a girl upon whom V. hi). ?la! ? mestie cnielgemy, when she w assistance of Frite. The household was a meagre one, and its affairs ted upon Frite by her master with oaths, by her mis-tress with peevish complaints as to its necessity.


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Keywords: ., bookauthorcurtisgeorgewilliam18, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1850