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CHAPTER III.

_Note 1._ An English church spire, evidently the prototype of this, and concerning which the same legend is told, is mentioned in the author's "English Mote-Books."

_Note 2._ Leicester Hospital, in Warwick, described in "Our Old Home," is the original of this charity.

_Note 3. Author's note_.--"The children find a gravestone with something like a footprint on it."

_Note 4. Author's note_.--"Put into the Doctor's character a continual enmity against somebody, breaking out in curses of which nobody can understand the application."

CHAPTER IV.

_Note 1._ The Doctor's propensity for cobwebs is amplified in the following note for an earlier and somewhat milder version of the character: "According to him, all science was to be renewed and established on a sure ground by no other means than cobwebs. The cobweb was the magic clue by which mankind was to be rescued from all its errors, and guided safely back to the right. And so he cherished spiders above all things, and kept them spinning, spinning away; the only textile factory that existed at that epoch in New England. He distinguished the production of each of his ugly friends, and assigned peculiar qualities to each; and he had been for years engaged in writing a work on this new discovery, in reference to which he had already compiled a great deal of folio manuscript, and had unguessed at resources still to come. With this suggestive subject he interwove all imaginable learning, collected from his own library, rich in works that few others had read, and from that of his beloved University, crabbed with Greek, rich with Latin, drawing into itself, like a whirlpool, all that men had thought hitherto, and combining them anew in such a way that it had all the charm of a racy originality. Then he had projects for the cultivation of cobwebs, to which end, in the good Doctor's opinion, it seemed desirable to devote a certain part of the national income; and not content with this, all public-spirited citizens would probably be induced to devote as much of their time and means as they could to the same end. According to him, there was no such beautiful festoon and drapery for the halls of princes as the spinning of this heretofore despised and hated insect; and by due encouragement it might be hoped that they would flourish, and hang and dangle and wave triumphant in the breeze, to an extent as yet generally undreamed of. And he lamented much the destruction that has heretofore been wrought upon this precious fabric by the housemaid's broom, and insisted upon by foolish women who claimed to be good housewives. Indeed, it was the general opinion that the Doctor's celibacy was in great measure due to the impossibility of finding a woman who would pledge herself to co- operate with him in this great ambition of his life,--that of reducing the world to a cobweb factory; or who would bind herself to let her own drawing-room be ornamented with this kind of tapestry. But there never was a wife precisely fitted for our friend the Doctor, unless it had been Arachne herself, to whom, if she could again have been restored to her female shape, he would doubtless have lost no time in paying his addresses. It was doubtless the having dwelt too long among the musty and dusty clutter and litter of things gone by, that made the Doctor almost a monomaniac on this subject. There were cobwebs in his own brain, and so he saw nothing valuable but cobwebs in the world around him; and deemed that the march of created things, up to this time, had been calculated by foreknowledge to produce them."

_Note 2. Author's note_.--"Ned must learn something of the characteristics of the Catechism, and simple cottage devotion."

CHAPTER V.

_Note 1. Author's note_.--"Make the following scene emblematic of the world's treatment of a dissenter."

_Note 2. Author's note_.--"Yankee characteristics should be shown in the schoolmaster's manners."

CHAPTER VI.

_Note 1. Author's note_.--"He had a sort of horror of violence, and of the strangeness that it should be done to him; this affected him more than the blow."

_Note 2. Author's note_.--"Jokes occasionally about the schoolmaster's thinness and lightness,--how he might suspend himself from the spider's web and swing, etc."

_Note 3. Author's note_.--"The Doctor and the Schoolmaster should have much talk about England."

_Note 4. Author's note_.--"The children were at play in the churchyard."

_Note 5. Author's note_.--"He mentions that he was probably buried in the churchyard there."

Page 58 of Doctor Grimshawe's Secret by Nathaniel Hawthorne

Next Page: CHAPTER VII.