Part 44 (1/2)

MRS. ALICE COALE SIMPERS.

Mrs. Alice Coale Simpers was born in the old brick mansion known as ”Traveler's Repose,” a short distance south of Harrisville, in the Sixth district of Cecil county, on the first day of December, 1843.

The Coale family of which Mrs. Simpers is a member, trace their descent from Sir Philip Blodgett, a distinguished Englishman, who settled in Baltimore shortly after its foundation, and are related to the Matthews, Worthingtons, Jewetts, and other leading families of Harford county. On her mother's side she is related to the Jacksons, Puseys, and other well-known Friends of Chester county, Pennsylvania, and Wilmington, Delaware.

Mrs. Simpers' early education was received at Waring's Friends' School, near the village of Colora, which was kept up by a few families of Friends in the neighborhood. She also attended the State Normal School in Baltimore, and qualified herself for teaching in the public schools of the State, in which she taught for about ten years in Cecil county, and also in Dorchester county. She also taught school in the State of Illinois with great acceptability and success.

When Mrs. Simpers was quite young her father removed his family to the banks of the romantic Octoraro, near Rowlandville, and within less than two miles of the birth-place of the two poetic Ewings and the late John Cooley, and the romantic spot where Mrs. Hall lived when she wrote the poems which are published in this volume. The soul-inspiring beauty of this romantic region seems to have had the same effect upon her mind as it had upon the other persons composing the ill.u.s.trious quintette, of which she is a distinguished member, and when only seventeen years of age she began to write poetry. At the solicitation of her friend, E.E.

Ewing, she sent the first poem she published to him, who gave it a place in _The Cecil Whig_, of which he was the editor and proprietor.

In 1875 Mrs. Simpers began to write for the New York _Mercury_, which then numbered among its contributors Ned Buntline, Harriet Prescott, George Marshall, George Arnold, Bayard Taylor, W. Scott Way, and many other distinguished writers with whom she ranked as an equal in many respects, and many of whom she excelled as a brilliant satirist and pathetic painter of the quaint and the beautiful.

For ten years she continued to contribute letters, essays, stories and poems to the _Mercury_, and to advocate the claims of her s.e.x to the right of suffrage, in which she still continues to be a firm believer.

Mrs. Simpers has also contributed largely to the _Woman's Journal_ and other periodicals.

Though possessed of a brilliant poetic genius, Mrs. Simpers is best known as a writer of prose; and, in addition to the large quant.i.ty of matter she has contributed to the newspaper press, is the author of a story of about two hundred pages ill.u.s.trative of the principles and practices and exemplifying the social life of the Friends, for which she received a prize of two hundred dollars. This story was highly spoken of by Dr. Shelton McKenzie, with whom she was on terms of intimacy for some years immediately before his death, and also by many other distinguished writers.

On the 22d of February, 1879, the subject of this sketch married Captain John G. Simpers, who served with distinction in the Second Regiment Delaware Volunteers in the war of the rebellion. They, at the time of writing this sketch, reside near the summit of Mount Pleasant, and within a short distance of the birth-place of Emma Alice Browne.

THE MILLER'S ROMANCE.

The miller leaned o'er the oaken door, Quaint shadows swung on the dusty floor, The spider toiled in the dust o'erhead, With restless haste, and noiseless speed, Like one who toils for sorest need-- Like one who toils for bread.

”Ha!” says the miller, ”does he pause to hark-- Hark! Hark! Hark!

To the voice of the waters, down in the dark-- Dark! Dark! Dark!

Turning the lumbering, mumbling wheel; Which moans and groans as tho't could feel?”

”Ha!” laughed the miller, ”he pauses not and why-- In the suns.h.i.+ne pausing and musing I?

When the spiteful waves seem to repeat-- Repeat! Repeat! Repeat!

The hateful word deceit-- Deceit! Deceit! Deceit”

”Nay,” mused the miller, ”their musical drip-- Drip! Drip! Drip!

Is like to naught but the trip-- Trip! Trip! Trip!

In the dance of her fairy feet, Or her rippling-laughter cool and sweet!”

Once more, The miller leans o'er the oaken door.

Still play the shadows upon the floor, Still toils the spider overhead; Like one who toils for daily bread-- ”Since the red lips unto me have lied The spell hath lost its power, For never a false heart brings my bride Whatever else her dower!”

And louder yet the waves repeat Their burthen old, deceit, deceit!

In flocks of brown, the leaves haste down, And floods, in the wild March weather; While the mill, the miller, and the miller's love dream, Have all grown old together!

THE LAST TIME.

We shall see the daylight breaking, Watch the rosy dawn awaking; We shall see the twilight fading-- Adown the path the elms are shading, For the last, last time.