img The Wonderful Story of Washington  /  Chapter 3 A COMMUNITY PROUD OF ITS FAMILY HONOR | 8.82%
Download App
Reading History

Chapter 3 A COMMUNITY PROUD OF ITS FAMILY HONOR

Word Count: 708    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

s time at Mount Vernon. Lawrence had become quite an important man in the public estimation. He had what might well be calle

named Belvoir. This very honorable and high-minded gentleman was of an old aristocratic English

mes, he was inspired to draw up his famous code known as "Rules for Behavior in Company and Conversation." We can easily imagine that the visitors he met at Mount Vernon and Belvoir were the very well-bred ladies and chivalrous gentleman of a courtly English period, among whom were mingled numerous heroic captains from the West Indies, whos

ere sent aboard the man-of-war, but the mother could not say good-bye to her eldest son. She couldn't give him up and she didn't. It is hardly likely that the world, a hundred years later, could have known that there ever was such a person as George Washington, if his mother had not changed her

n the presence of ladies. A girl of his own age, who saw much of him when he was a boy, wrote in later

n anything about this beautiful lodestone that had drawn the heart out of him. He never described her or told who she was. It was probably merely a fancy ideal with which he clothed some one utterly impossible as a real friend or mate to him. Such queer freaks of interest have often happened to the emotions of a growing mind, and later, the victim wondered what was possible in the object to cause such

img

Contents

img
  /  1
img
Download App
icon APP STORE
icon GOOGLE PLAY