Tarry at home travels . fore kings. But I chd not know that when Ifirst went there. I beheve I only mention it nowto say that the Hales of Maine are our sort ofHales; the Hales of New Hampshire are of thesort of the distinguished lady I have spoken of,and are also of our kind of Hales, the Haleswho do not have sugar in their coffee. TheHales of Vermont are of the Newbury Hales,which means Thomas the Glover, They also areadmirable people, and they have a Nathan Haleof their own who was a Captain Nathan Hale ofthe Revolution, and died a prisoner of war nearNew York and shall be spoken of hereaft
Tarry at home travels . fore kings. But I chd not know that when Ifirst went there. I beheve I only mention it nowto say that the Hales of Maine are our sort ofHales; the Hales of New Hampshire are of thesort of the distinguished lady I have spoken of,and are also of our kind of Hales, the Haleswho do not have sugar in their coffee. TheHales of Vermont are of the Newbury Hales,which means Thomas the Glover, They also areadmirable people, and they have a Nathan Haleof their own who was a Captain Nathan Hale ofthe Revolution, and died a prisoner of war nearNew York and shall be spoken of son Philip is an artist. He was in a NewYork gallery one day when it was what the artistscall varnishing day, and a lady, referring tohis picture, said, So you have come to NewYork to be hanged, Mr, Hale. Yes, said he;that is the way the Hales usually come. THE STATE OF MAINE 27 Perhaps it is as well to say that the Massa-chusetts Hales are some of them of one kind andsome of another, and yet a third belong to the. Samuel Longfellow. Rehoboth Hales. The Rhode Island Hales aremostly Rehoboth Hales. Besides the CoventryHales in Connecticut, of whom I am, and theAshford Hales, who are our cousins, are the 28 TARRY AT HOME TRAVELS Glastonbury Hales. They are the people who nowproduce peaches for the world, and are our cousinson another line from the Ashford Hales. It is my belief that in all these lines the Haleswere cousins of each other. Generally speaking,they are tall, with a tendency to black exception they love their country andtell the truth. So much for genealogy, to whichI may never refer, perhaps, again. No, I did not go to Maine to see my went there on my way to New Hampshire tosee, if you please, on those mountains the geo-logical order of its stratification. In the year 1841I was appointed as a junior member on the NewHampshire Geological Survey, under the emi-nent Charles Thomas Jackson, who is betterknown as one of the discoverers of the
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