Molly Brown's Orchard Home
of Kentucky to Miss Na
rth, Ke
arest
this "great adventure." That is what Mother and I call this undertaking: "Our great adventure." Mother says it sounds Henry Jamesy and I take her word
s, that makes it best for him to be on hand until the matter is settled. I remember how interested you were in the fact that oil was found on my mother's land and that she expected to realize an independent income from the sale of the land
y brother, Paul, that Aunt Clay has not a leg to stand on, but of course the law has to take its leisurely course, and in the meantime the money for Mother is not forthcoming until the wells are in operation. Aunt Clay is in her element, making everyone as uncomfortable as possible and engaged in a foolish lawsuit. She is always going to law
wer. Now that she sees it is worth more than all the rest put together, she is in such a rage with Mother that it is really absurd. She does not want us to go to Paris and is furious at the idea of Kent's "stopping work," as she calls it. She has got out this injunction just to keep us from going
take that much talked of and longed for course in Architecture at the Beaux Arts. In the meantime, he is very busy and, as he says, "making good with his boss." Mother refuses to
a slow boat to Antwerp. We think the long sea trip will be good for Mother, who is tired out with all this worry and the work of getting Chatsworth in condition to leave; and besides, the
eel bitter about. So she is, but then she is the only person who was ever mean to my beloved Mother. Maybe when
a shadow of a disagreement. Of course we occasionally got in a kind of penumbra. Once I remember when I was touchy because you calle
ille to hear your mother speak at the Equal Suffrage Convention. She was simply overpowering in her arguments, and converted Kent in five minutes. I wish Aunt Clay, who is such an ard
ed friend and r
y Br
Brown, Chatswo
lia Kean, Pa
rd St. Mic
ly
oor of a pension with not much more of an elevator than the tower of Babel had. Mamma and Papa brought me here and installed me and then s
s it will be wiser for us to keep house and not try to board. Of course you will come here first and we can take our time about getting settled for the winter. Mrs. Pace, the landlady, (but you had better not call her that to her face, as
certain Sally Bolling of Kentucky, who is now the Marquise d'Ochtè, a swell of the Faubourg St. Germain, with a chateau in Normandy, family
uch a sober person pacing the long galleries of the Louvre studying the wonderful paintings that no one would dream I am the harum-scarum I really am. Papa gave me a very serious talking to about how to cond
e hardly remembers I have any; and then when she recalls that she is supposed to be my chaperone, she feels called upon to tell me to do my hair differently, or she doe
y would obstruct, all she had in her power, but thank goodness, her power is limited and your mother will finally get the full amount of money for her oil lands that Papa thou
answer his letters unless he gets some thin paper to write on.
t you at the station. I wish I could go to Antwerp to be there when you arrive or even meet you halfway in Brus
devoted,
u
n of Wellington College to Miss Molly Br
gton C
r Miss
ther in Paris. It is my sabbatical year at Wellington, which means a fine long holiday, one much needed and looked forward to by all hard-worked professors. But just as I began to prepare for this delightful trip, I found that my sub
of in Paris! Miss Walker is deeply grateful to me for helping her out of this difficulty, and is doing all in her p
e I get my reward. I feel in a way that this is making up to the College for t
did not expect to be needed by me as housekeeper, so I am "baching" again;
throwing a copy of Rosetti at a forward miss the other day in class, when she attempted to read "The Blessed Damozel" an
ty is even richer and more glowing than formerly. She reminds me of October in the mountains, her own Kentucky mountains. Did you ever notice her eyes and the quality they
cher Miss Allfriend, whose long and arduous labors among the mountain folk have impaired her health. Melissa thinks she should take up the work and give her friend a rest. Noble girl! Dicky
I am not to be her cicerone for some of the sights of Paris. I am hoping that befor
lso, a box of crystallized ginger that is the very best thing for seas
w I am kicking at fate, but I am as mad as a schoolboy wh
n Gr