Mary Baldwin College - Bluestocking Yearbook (Staunton, VA)

 - Class of 1893

Page 22 of 80

 

Mary Baldwin College - Bluestocking Yearbook (Staunton, VA) online collection, 1893 Edition, Page 22 of 80
Page 22 of 80



Mary Baldwin College - Bluestocking Yearbook (Staunton, VA) online collection, 1893 Edition, Page 21
Previous Page

Mary Baldwin College - Bluestocking Yearbook (Staunton, VA) online collection, 1893 Edition, Page 23
Next Page

Search for Classmates, Friends, and Family in one
of the Largest Collections of Online Yearbooks!



Your membership with e-Yearbook.com provides these benefits:
  • Instant access to millions of yearbook pictures
  • High-resolution, full color images available online
  • Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
  • View college, high school, and military yearbooks
  • Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
  • Support the schools in our program by subscribing
  • Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information

Page 22 text:

16 The Augusta Seminary Annual. fleece would weigh ; now listening to the stories Uncle Simon told of shearin ' times fo ' de war, when Mars James kep ' de long wool sheep ; and now straying off to gather violets, or to trun our hats with the hawthorn blossoms, to rob the bees of the honey in the poplar blooms, or to peep into the sparrow ' s nest, gently rocked in the swaying eglantine. Spring passes into summer and the busy harvest time has come. While the birds are still singing their morning song and the dew is still sparkling on the grass, the voice of the farmer is heard giving directions to the men. Some harness the horses to the binder, while others whet their cradles. Soon all is ready and they go forth to the field. Down on the low grounds the clatter- ing binder goes back and forth cutting the wheat, binding it into sheaves and tossing it to the little boys, who place it in heaps at short distances and convenient to the shocker. Up on the hill, too steep for the binder, the reapers, forming a long line, swing their cradles and sing their weu ' d, plaintive songs. Kow and then there is a lull in the music as the workers rest for a mo- ment and then begin again with redoubled energy. They are fol- lowed by women who, binding and shocking the grain, remind one of Kuth as she gleaned among the sheaves in the field of Boaz long ago. Now here, now there, the happy children chase the little rab- bits, driven from their beds by the reapers, or hunt for the par- tridge ' s nest full of the pretty white eggs, or, at last, tired of play, throw themselves on the grass beneath the shady old walnut tree. Harvest is past, and the farmer ' s eyes are now turned towards the vineyard. lie watches the grapes with care, as, from day to day, the blush becomes more rosy until it deepens into a red or purple. Then the merry laborers, carrying boxes and scissors, go to the sunny hillsides where the luscious fruit hangs in clusters from the trellised dnes. First each boy and girl chooses a row, and then the work begins in earnest. Clip, clip, clip, go the scis- sors until the boxes are full, and then they are carried home where, under the dense shade of the osage-orange and the locust, the busy workers, their broad-brimmed hats pushed back on their heads or thrown upon the grass beside them, form a picturesque group as they sit on benches, chairs, and stools in reach of the

Page 21 text:

The Augusta Seminary Annual. 15 keen, Immorous, penetrative, but softened by a halo of sympa- thetic love and real tenderness ; here he is not the cxmc. bnt the magician who wins us to his very self by showing us in a thousand artless ways all that is in his own great heart. M. L. Street. Pastoral Sketches — I. IN Piedmont Virginia, close to the Southwest Mountains and looking out upon the more distant Blue Ridge, lies my grand- father ' s farm — the farm whose every hill and vale and meadow, whose every stream and deep and shady wood is linked with recol- lections of my childhood. And as I now recall those days many a picture of the mind revives again, and again I watch the laborers at the various occupations on the farm. Now it is Ma ' time and they are busy with the sheep-shearing. The very words bring to my mind a bright spring morning and a grove of large old oaks, tall poplars and spreading chestnut trees — a grove which, from matchless depth of- shade, is chosen for the shearers ' covert from the sun. There the flock is driven into a pen around the sides of which are built rough plank tables, where the shearers stand. The sheep are tied down to the boards to pre- vent their struggles, and, though nnich frightened at first, they soon become quiet, only lifting their heads from time to time, and turning their soft eyes to the shearer, as if to ask, Must I wait much longer? The lambs outside of the pen for a while bleat piteously, but as they see the sheep set free one by one they seem to understand what is going on, and bound off to their play. Xear the shearing-pen is a large table on which the fleeces are spread, and around this the women and boys stand to pick the burrs out of the wool before it is weighed and packed into the large sack standing near. How many happy hours we children used to spend ; now lean- ing on the fence and watching the shears flash in and out of the snowy wool ; now helping to pick the burrs or guessing what the



Page 23 text:

The Augusta Seminary Annual. 17 boxes of fruit, for now the culling ])egins. As bunch after bunch is carofully held up by the stoiu so as not Xu injure the bloom in cutting oiF the imperfect grajjcs, the merrv chattering of the young folks mingles with the thoughts of wiser heads. And the little tuddlcr, who lias been spending the time in going from one to another with the ap})eal • peas div me some dwapes, claims the office of handing the empty baskets to the packers, whose deft lingers fly so rapidly that, though the cullers do all they can, ever and anon there comes the cry of more grapes. At a little distance the small boy, with an air of the greatest importance, is busily labeling the tops and putting them on the baskets ready for market. At last all is done, and as the wagon drives towards the station I often think how much more would be the pleasure of the purchaser if the grapes could tell their history ; how, in hours of weariness, he would owe to them sensations sweet if, in lonely rooms and ' mid the din of towns and cities, the grapes could carry with them a picture of the vineyard and the laborers. Elizabeth Xewmax. Pastoral Sketches — H. IT is an April morning on a Yii ' ginia farm, and all out of doors is astir. From the tield come the whistle and song of the corn planters ; from the meadows, the soft low of the cattle and the bleating of the »;hecp ; from the orchard, the hum of the busy bees, while the birds work and warble everywhere ; only the light smoke, as it rises lazily on the perfumed air, seems idle. The little ones of the home have caught unconsciously the inspiration and have formed their plans for a whole day ' s work. Who could refuse them as they stand anxiously awaiting an answer to their petition for gardens of their own ? Certainly father can not, and he yields with a smile that each of the little faces reflects, as the four children scamper away to take possession of the plots assigned them.

Suggestions in the Mary Baldwin College - Bluestocking Yearbook (Staunton, VA) collection:

Mary Baldwin College - Bluestocking Yearbook (Staunton, VA) online collection, 1891 Edition, Page 1

1891

Mary Baldwin College - Bluestocking Yearbook (Staunton, VA) online collection, 1892 Edition, Page 1

1892

Mary Baldwin College - Bluestocking Yearbook (Staunton, VA) online collection, 1894 Edition, Page 1

1894

Mary Baldwin College - Bluestocking Yearbook (Staunton, VA) online collection, 1895 Edition, Page 1

1895

Mary Baldwin College - Bluestocking Yearbook (Staunton, VA) online collection, 1896 Edition, Page 1

1896

Mary Baldwin College - Bluestocking Yearbook (Staunton, VA) online collection, 1897 Edition, Page 1

1897


Searching for more yearbooks in Virginia?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Virginia yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.