Thomas Jefferson, a Character Sketch by Edward S. (Edward Sylvester) Ellis
page 65 of 162 (40%)
page 65 of 162 (40%)
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JEFFERSON'S BRIDAL JOURNEY.
Jefferson and his young bride, after the marriage ceremony, set out for their Monticello home. The road thither was a rough mountain track, upon which lay the snow to a depth of two feet. At sunset they reached the house of one of their neighbors eight miles distant from Monticello. They arrived at their destination late at night thoroughly chilled with the cold. They found the fires all out, not a light burning, not a morsel of food in the larder, and not a creature in the house. The servants had all gone to their cabins for the night, not expecting their master and mistress. But the young couple, all the world to each other, made merry of this sorry welcome to a bride and bridegroom, and laughed heartily over it. WOULD MAKE NO PROMISES FOR THE PRESIDENCY. While the Presidential election was taking place in the House of Representatives, amid scenes of great excitement, strife and intrigue, which was to decide whether Jefferson or Burr should be the chief magistrate of the nation, Jefferson was stopped one day, as he was coming out of the Senate chamber, by Gouverneur Morris, a prominent leader of the Federalists. |
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