قراءة كتاب The Bishop of Cottontown: A Story of the Southern Cotton Mills

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‏اللغة: English
The Bishop of Cottontown: A Story of the Southern Cotton Mills

The Bishop of Cottontown: A Story of the Southern Cotton Mills

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 3

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Mrs. Westmore Takes a Hand 464 VIII. A Question Brought Home 473 IX. The Pedigree of Achievement 487 X. Married in God's Sight 493 XI. The Queen Is Dead 499 XII. In Thyself There Is Weakness 508 XIII. Himself Again 512 XIV. The Joy of the Morning 519 XV. The Touch of God 526 XVI. Mammy Maria 533 XVII. The Double That Died 545 XVIII. The Dying Lion 552 XIX. Face To Face With Death 564 XX. The Angel With the Flaming Sword 572 XXI. The Great Fire 581 XXII. A Conway Again 588 XXIII. Died for the Law 596 XXIV. The Atonement 611 XXV. The Shadows and the Clouds 624 XXVI. The Model Mill 633
Transcriber's Note: Obvious printer errors, have been silently corrected. For clarity, have added new paragraphs with respect to dialogue within paragraphs. The name Hillard and Hilliard have been uniformly changed to Hillard. Corrected incorrect usages of 'its' and 'it's.' All other inconsistencies (i. e. The inconsistent spellings—sombre/somber, gray/grey, hyphen/no hyphen) have been left as they were in the original.


PART FIRST—THE BLOOM


THE COTTON BLOSSOM

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The cotton blossom is the only flower that is born in the shuttle of a sunbeam and dies in a loom.

It is the most beautiful flower that grows, and needs only to become rare to be priceless—only to die to be idealized.

For the world worships that which it hopes to attain, and our ideals are those things just out of our reach.

Satiety has ten points and possession is nine of them.

If, in early August, the delicately green leaves of this most aristocratic of all plants, instead of covering acres of Southland shimmering under a throbbing sun, peeped daintily out, from among the well-kept beds of some noble garden, men would flock to see that plant, which, of all plants, looks most like a miniature tree.

A stout-hearted plant,—a tree, dwarfed, but losing not its dignity.

Then, one morning, with the earliest sunrise, and born of it, there emerges from the scalloped sea-shell of the bough an exquisite, pendulous, cream-white blossom, clasping in its center a golden yellow star, pinked with dawn points of light, and, setting high up under its sky of milk-white petals flanked with yellow stars, it seems to the little nestling field-wrens born beneath it to be the miniature arch of daybreak, ere the great eye of the morning star closes.

Later, when the sun rises and the sky above grows pink and purple, it, too, changes its color from pink to purple, copying the sky from zone to

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