n the
the house, Je
ly than her voice. I had hesitated a little before I finally closed the purch
sitting-room. I found her there before the open fire, on my return from New York. The ba
the baby, Jennie," said I. "I don
tling the precious bundle closer to her heart than before, as if in apprehe
noon. She wants to know if we won't take our letters to thi
I, for Jennie
y hired the house for the summer and might leave in the fall. But if you have bought it, John, and I am, oh! so glad you have and thank you so much"-one han
"It's in debt, and always behind hand. I am told
o bad," sa
ime for church affairs, and you-you have all you ca
rue," sai
yterian church and we
made no
lect. It was dear to me in its old homely attire as a Congregationalist meeting-house. It is dear to me in its new aristocratic attire as a Congregat
" said Jennie softly, "for y
are there, Jennie," c
oodsole we hardly
time will cure t
that I care to
ade no r
n argument-when she argues at all, which is very seldom. She accepted every consideration I had offered against uniting with the Wheathedge church, and yet I kn
ence they say means consent. But I knew that it did not
u say Jenni
end its prayer-meetings, or go to its Sabbath-school, or worship with its members on the Sabbath, or even mingle much with its members in social life. We have left it, and we ought to have though
ng-room, with the wife and baby it contained, was worth a thousand Tabernacles to me; and I managed to tell Jennie so, and e
hn, to be whether we mean to be ch
bers at all
arm fifty miles away from the body? Can they keep loving watch and care over us; or we over them? It is not a
ch for contributions, and holding fairs in summer, and tableaux and what not, in winter, and generally wa
your money." (I am not so sure of that. I am inclined to think that is Je
faith in the financial argument-"this is a Pre
Jennie soberly, "and we, I hope, are Ch
tter addressed to the clerk of the Broadway Tabernacle, asking for letters of dismission and re

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