somewhat later, and was considered by Mr. Greeley
as "unequalled, especially in its pictures of the prairies
and of the sunnier aspects of pioneer life.” Convinced
of the literary ability of the writer, he gave ear to a
suggestion of Mrs. Greeley, and, in accordance with
her wishes and with his own judgment, extended to
Margaret the invitation already spoken of as accepted.
This invitation, and the arrangement to which it led,
admitted Margaret not only to the columns of the
Tribune, but also to the home of its editor, in which
she continued to reside during the period of her connection with the paper. This home was in a spacious,
old-fashioned house on the banks of the East River,
completely secluded by the adjacent trees and garden,
but within easy reach of New York by car and omnibus.
Margaret came there in December 1844, and was at
once struck with the beauty of the scene and charmed
with the aspect of the antiquated dwelling, which had
once, no doubt, been the villa of some magnate of old
New York.
If the outside world of the time troubled itself at all about the Greeley household, it must have considered it in the light of a happy family of eccentrics. Upon the personal peculiarities of Mr. Greeley we need not here enlarge. They were of little account in comparison with the character of the man, who himself deserved the name which he gave to his paper, and was at heart a tribune of the people. Mrs. Greeley was herself a woman of curious theories, and it is probable that Margaret, in her new surroundings, found herself obliged in a certain degree to represent the conventional side of life, which her host and hostess were inclined to disregard.
By Mr. Greeley's own account there were differences