Sweet Briar College - Briar Patch Yearbook (Sweet Briar, VA)

 - Class of 1917

Page 21 of 298

 

Sweet Briar College - Briar Patch Yearbook (Sweet Briar, VA) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 21 of 298
Page 21 of 298



Sweet Briar College - Briar Patch Yearbook (Sweet Briar, VA) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 20
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Page 21 text:

BRIAR PATCH box of candy, and again, on March 13: Mamma and I walked out. We bought some taffy from Huyler ' s. I put my hair in papers to curl it last night. I think what Daisy enjoyed most in New York were the concerts she heard. On March 2 she writes: Mamma and 1 went to Chickering Hall to the first of Miss Maud Morgan ' s and Mr. Morgan ' s Harp and organ concerts. We enjoyed ourselves very much. She kept all the programs of these recitals, and sometimes marked a special number. Music evidently was a vital part of her life, and her harp seemed almost sacred to her. Whenever she mentions the word it is always spelled with a capita] letter, and in the back of her diary is copied this quotation: Observe a due proportion in all things; avoid excessive joy. as well as complaining grief, and seek to keep thy soul in tune and harmony like a well-toned ' Harp. ' Pythagoras. 530 15. C. One feels as if this were truly her philosophy. But all of Daisy ' s good times were not confined to concerts. On March J. ) she writes: Mamma and I went to Barnum ' s Circus in the afternoon. We had reserved seats. It was very interesting. We saw the Chinese dwarf, the Zulus, the wild men of Borneo, and other curiosities. There was a drove of l ' l elephants and a little baby elephant. In the back of her diary is jotted down a little note it propos of the deeds of a certain young lady of her own age. by name Estelle Smith, who paid the Williamses an unexpected visit: Broke slate. doll ' s head. heels of shoes. Easter egg. Lost key of paint box. Broke piano. Rubbed paint oft doll. Cut the- hair rii trois jours. This little memorandum shows thai however she sought for the unruffled, philo- sophic calm, like a normal child she resented the vandalism of her friend. On March 1 . she writes: A letter came from Uncle Sing | Mrs. Williams ' brother]. He says the daffodils .and apricots are in bloom. I wish I was there. She lined the country, and wanted to go home, so on April 21 Uncle Sing took her back to Sweet Briar. On the 20th she writes: Papa bought me a nice trunk, with Daisy W. on it. and a little Canary bird, which I have named Don Roderisjo 15

Page 20 text:

BRIAR PATCH Cfnrtp i rars 3go A I TREFOIS j ' etais jeune, alors j ' etais gai comme vuus. I was looking 2 through Daisy Williams ' trunk, and had opened her little French grammar at these words. It was only a model French sentence illustrating the use of the adverbs autrefois and alors, but it seemed as if the gentle child of long ago were speaking to me. Now she was at rest, but her short life had made it possible for many gay young people to be happy at her beloved Sweet Briar. Every one interested in our college of course wants to know about the Williams family, and especially about Daisy. The object of this article is not to give any connected story of the family, but only a few little incidents and anecdotes which may make the founders of our college seem real to us. My chief sources of informa- tion are Daisy ' s own diary, written in 1882, when she was fourteen years old. and Uncle Logan, an old negro who worked many years for the Williamses and was greatly loved by Daisy. Mr. and Mrs. Williams and Daisy were accustomed to spend the winters in New York, mucli to Daisy ' s sorrow, for she did not like to be away long from Sweet Briar. Daisy, in her diary on January 7. 1882, tells of one of these trips. Journeys to Amherst were not of trifling moment then. She says: We got up at 3 o ' clock and put on the kettle in our room to make the coffee. We ate some chicken and bread and butter in the tea room. We left the dishes on the table without washing them. We put out the fire with snow, and started at half past four. The carriage came riujht up to the steps. Mamma slipped getting in the carriage. Molly warmed some bricks, which kept our feet warm in the carriage. It was a long, disagreeable ride, which I never will forget. The snow was very dee]), the moon shone part of the time, the wagon went in front. We took five trunks. We reached the depot for the 6:23 train. The Harp went yesterday: the express was .$10. (SO. We traveled all day. I did not eat anything. We reached New York at quarter to ten. took a private carriage to the Fifth Avenue Hotel, and had supper. The next day she wrote: We sat in the parlors in the afternoon. They are very elegant; the furni- ture is pink satin. There are beautiful, large mirrors. Papa bought an illustrated London News. It had a colored picture. One hardly connects the quiet little girl of long ago with Hurler ' s candy, but on February 11 Daisy writes: ... we walked to Hurler ' s and sot a nice



Page 22 text:

BRIAR PATCH from The C ' id which I am reading. This trunk is still at Sweet Briar, and stands surrounded by huge wardrobe and innovation trunks, which make it look like a pigmy. One can well understand how people in those days traveled with five trunks. On the inside of the lid is a colored picture of Castle Bruen, and pasted on the top of the tray are pictures of charming Japanese ladies and luscious bunches of grapes which must have delighted the fourteen-year-old child. Perhaps the things Daisy loved most after her music were Mowers. Uncle Logan said that often and often Miss Daisy. on Bounce, her pony, had ridden with him to Kentucky Pasture, where he went to salt the cattle. She would spend the day gathering wild flowers, which she would take home and plant in the garden. Daisy had her way in almost everything. Logan said: I alius use ' to try to pacify her and Mrs. Williams. Mr. Williams dun tole me when he ' gaged me: ' Now, Logan, you do jest what they want. I don ' t ker what. One day Daisy came to the field where Logan was superintending the wheat cutting and said she wanted him to go with her to get some flowers. No sooner said than done; all the workers were dismissed, and Logan went with Miss Daisy to get flowers. Another time Mr. Williams scolded Logan sharply for making the ice pond so shallow. He thought it should he at .least six feet deep, but when he found that Daisy had ordered it three feet deep no more words were said about it. Every other Friday Daisy, mounted on Bounce, went with Logan to collect the rents from the tenants. Her father had had a pocket made in her saddle to hold the money. She loved to be with Logan, and enjoyed playing with his children and helping his daughter to milk the cows. Her chickens were very near her heart, and when a mink killed some of them it was a real sorrow to her. Logan said, with great pride, that none of the cattle had ever been lost in the mountains except a half dozen slice]), and then Miss Daisy cried and cried. Mrs. Williams was evidently a calm and self-contained woman, or. as Uncle Logan expressed it. If things went ' gainst her or fer her hit were all right. She was small, weighing, according to Daisy ' s diary. 187 pounds. She was often dressed in a dirt-colored silk. Mrs. Williams and her sister. Mrs. Mosby, were devoted to their father. Mr. Fletcher, and after his death made it a custom to go to the monu- ments to carry cake and wine to his grave, much as we would carry flowers now. Mr. Sidney Fletcher, Mrs. Williams ' brother, was very much loved by Daisy and the rest of the connection, hut her other brother, Lucian, seems to have been feared. He had had tough luck. Logan said, all of his belongings being burned 16

Suggestions in the Sweet Briar College - Briar Patch Yearbook (Sweet Briar, VA) collection:

Sweet Briar College - Briar Patch Yearbook (Sweet Briar, VA) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 1

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Sweet Briar College - Briar Patch Yearbook (Sweet Briar, VA) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 1

1915

Sweet Briar College - Briar Patch Yearbook (Sweet Briar, VA) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916

Sweet Briar College - Briar Patch Yearbook (Sweet Briar, VA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

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Sweet Briar College - Briar Patch Yearbook (Sweet Briar, VA) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 1

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Sweet Briar College - Briar Patch Yearbook (Sweet Briar, VA) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

1920


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