Page:A New England Tale.djvu/157

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146
A NEW-ENGLAND TALE.

by deferring her will to theirs, or suffering their wisdom to govern her childish inclinations. She grew up

"Fair as the form that, wove in fancy's loom,
Floats in light vision round the poet's head."

Most unhappily for her, there was a college in the town where she lived, and she very early became the favourite belle of the young collegians, whose attentions she received with delight, in spite of the remonstrances and entreaties of her guardians, who were well aware that a young and beautiful creature could not, with propriety or safety, receive the civilities of her superiors in station, attracted by her personal charms.

David Wilson, more artful, more unprincipled than any of his companions, addressed her with the most extravagant flattery, and lavished on her costly favours. Giddy and credulous, poor Mary was a victim to his libertinism. He soothed her with hopes and promises, till in consequence of the fear of detection in another transaction, where detection would have been dangerous, he left —— and returned to his mother's, without giving Mary the slightest intimation of his departure.

She took the desperate resolution of following him. She felt certain she should not survive her confinement, and hoped to secure the protection of Wilson for her infant. Her tenderness, we believe, more than her pride, induced her to conceal her miseries from her only true friends. She thought any thing would be easier for them to bear