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    Chapter 11 - Page 2

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    removed the "firstly" of the edifice, and supplied its place with a
    more suitable addition that contained some of the offices, while it
    did not disfigure the building, a rare circumstance in an
    architectural after-thought.

    Internally, the Wigwam had gradually been undergoing improvements,
    ever since that period, which, in the way of the arts, if not in the
    way of chronology, might be termed the dark ages of Otsego. The great
    hall had long before lost its characteristic decoration of the
    severed arm of Wolf, a Gothic paper that was better adapted to the
    really respectable architecture of the room being its substitute; and
    even the urn that was thought to contain the ashes of Queen Dido,
    like the pitcher that goes often to the well, had been broken in a
    war of extermination that had been carried on against the cobwebs by
    a particularly notable housekeeper. Old Homer, too, had gone the way
    of all baked clay. Shakspeare, himself, had dissolved into dust,
    "leaving not a wreck behind;" and of Washington and Franklin, even,
    indigenous as they were, there remained no vestiges. Instead of these
    venerable memorials of the past, John Effingham, who retained a
    pleasing recollection of their beauties as they had presented
    themselves to his boyish eyes, had bought a few substitutes in a New-
    York shop, and _a_ Shakspeare, and _a_ Milton, and _a_ Cæsar, and _a_
    Dryden, and _a_ Locke, as the writers of heroic so beautifully
    express it, were now seated in tranquil dignity on the old medallions
    that had held their illustrious predecessors. Although time had, as
    yet, done little for this new collection in the way of colour, dust
    and neglect were already throwing around them the tint of antiquity.

    "The lady," to use the language of Mr. Bragg, who did the cooking of
    the Wigwam, having every thing in readiness, our party took their
    seats at the breakfast table, which was spread in the great hall, as
    soon as each had paid a little attention to the _toilette_. As the
    service was neither very scientific, nor sufficiently peculiar,
    either in the way of elegance or of its opposite quality, to be
    worthy of notice, we shall pass it over in silence.

    "One will not quite so much miss European architecture in this
    house," said Eve, as she took her seat at table, glancing an eye at

    the spacious and lofty room, in which they were assembled; "here is
    at least size and its comforts, if not elegance."

    "Had you lost all recollection of this building, my child?" inquired
    her father, kindly; "I was in hopes you would feel some of the
    happiness of returning home, when you again found yourself beneath
    its roof!"

    "I should greatly dislike to have
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