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7. Good cotton can not be produced without constant care and attention up to the time of flowering. In India the mode of cultivation is very slovenly, and little or no care is bestowed on the plant; the consequence of which is, that the product is greatly inferior to that of the United States.

8. The operation of gathering the cotton requires much care. The gatherers, consisting chiefly of women and young people, go into the field with baskets or bags suspended from their shoulders for the reception of such portions of the wool as they find sufficiently ripe. The usual method is, to take away the seeds and cotton, leaving the empty husks.

9. The gathering is always performed in fine weather, after the morning dew has disappeared, as any moisture would make the cotton moldy, and cause the oil of the seed to spread over the wool. The cotton is more completely dried by exposure during several days to the heat of the sun, or of stoves, on a platform of tiles or wood, whereby the seeds are afterwards more easily separated. As the cotton does not all ripen at the same time, the gatherers have to go over the same plantation many times. If it is not gathered soon after the pods have burst, the heat of the sun injures its color, or it may be blown away by the wind, or spoiled by the rain or dew.

10. But the raising of the cotton-plant would never have become so important in this and other countries, had it not been for the invention of the cotton-gin by Eli Whitney. Mr. Whitney graduated from Yale College in 1792, and directly engaged with a Mr. B., from Georgia, to proceed to that State and reside in his employer's family as a private teacher.

11. On his way thither, he had as a traveling companion Mrs. Greene, widow of the eminent Revolutionary general, Nathaniel Greene, who was returning with her children to Savannah after spending the summer at the North. His health being infirm on his arrival at Savannah, Mrs. Greene

kindly invited him to the hospitalities of her residence until he should become fully restored. Short of money and in a land of strangers, he was now cooly informed by his employer that his services were not required, he (Mr. B.) having employed another teacher in his stead!

12. Mrs. Greene hereupon urged him to make her house his home so long as that should be desirable, and pursue under her roof the study of the law, which he then contemplated. He gratefully accepted the offer, and commenced the study accordingly. Mrs. Greene happened to be engaged in embroidering on a peculiar frame known as a tambour. It was badly constructed, so that it injured the fabric while it impeded its production. Mr. Whitney eagerly volunteered to make her a better one, and did so on a plan wholly new, to her great delight and that of her children.

13. A large party of Georgians, from Augusta and the plantations above, soon after paid Mrs. Greene a visit, several of them being officers who had served under her husband in the Revolutionary War. Among the topics discussed by them around her fireside, was the depressed state of agriculture, and the impossibility of profitably extending the culture of the green-seed cotton, because of the trouble and expense incurred in separating the seed from the fiber. These representations impelled Mrs. Greene to say: "Gentlemen, apply to my young friend, Mr. Whitney; he can make anything."

14. She thereupon took them into an adjacent room, where she showed them her tambour-frame and several ingenious toys which Mr. Whitney had made for the gratification of the children. She then introduced them to Whitney himself, extolling his genius and commending him to their confidence and friendship. In the conversation which ensued, he observed that he had never seen cotton nor cottonseed in his life. He promised nothing, and gave but little encouragement, but immediately went to work.

15. No cotton in the seed being at hand, he went to Savannah, and searched there among warehouses and boats until he found a small parcel. This he carried home and secluded with himself in a basement room, where he set himself to work to devise and construct the implement required. Tools being few and rude, he was constrained to make better ones, also drawing his own wire, because none could at that time be bought in the city.

16. Mrs. Greene and her next friend, Mr. Miller, whom she afterward married, were the only persons beside himself who were allowed to enter his workshop,-in fact, the only ones who clearly knew what he was about. His mysterious hammering and tinkering in that solitary cell were subjects of great curiosity, marvel, and ridicule among the younger members of the family. But he did not interfere with their merriment, nor allow them to interfere with his enterprise; and, before the close of the winter, his machine was so nearly completed that its success was no longer doubtful.

17. Mrs. Greene, too eager to realize and enjoy her friend's triumph, in view of the existing stagnation of Georgian industry, invited an assemblage at her house of leading gentlemen from various parts of the State, and, on the first day after their meeting, conducted them to a temporary building erected for the machine, in which they saw with astonishment and delight that one man, with Whitney's invention, could separate more cotton from the seed in a single day than he could without it by the labor of months.

18. Reports of the nature and value of Whitney's invention were widely and rapidly circulated, creating intense excitement. Multitudes hastened from all quarters to see his original machine; but, no patent having yet been secured, it was deemed unsafe to gratify their curiosity; so they broke open the building by night, and carried off the wonderful prize. Before he could complete his model and secure his patent, a number of imitations had been made and

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set to work, deviating in some respects from the original, in the hope of thus evading all penalty.

19. Mr. Whitney's patent expired in 1808, leaving him a poorer man, doubtless, than he would have been if he had never listened to the suggestions of his friend, Mrs. Greene, and undertaken the invention of a machine, by means of which the annual production of cotton in the Southern States has been augmented from some five or ten thousand bales in 1793, to over five millions of bales, or one million tons, in 1859; this amount being at least three-fourths in weight, and seven-eighths in value, of all the cotton produced on the globe. To say that this invention was worth one thousand millions of dollars to the Southern States of this country, is to place a very moderate estimate on its value. Horace Greeley.

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vo-ca'-tion, calling; profession; Beruf.

Lau'-re-ate (Poet-Laureate), in England an officer of the Crown,

who formerly had to compose an ode on the birthday of the sovereign; hofdichter.

tarn, a small lake among the mountains; Gebirgssee.

fell, a stony hill; ein felsiger Hügel.

1. "How does the water
Come down at Lodore?"
My little boy asked me
Thus once on a time;
And, moreover, he tasked me
To tell him in rhyme.

2. Anon at the word,

There first came one daughter,

And then came another,

To second and third

The request of their brother,
And to hear how the water
Comes down at Lodore,
With its rush and its roar,
As many a time

They had seen it before.

3. So I told them in rhyme,
For of rhymes I had store,
And 't was in my vocation
For their recreation
That so I should sing;
Because I was Laureate

To them and the King.

4. From its sources which well In the tarn on the fell; From its fountains

In the mountains,

Its rills and its gills;

Through moss and through brake,

It runs and it creeps

For awhile, till it sleeps

In its own little lake.

5. And thence at departing,
Awakening and starting,
It runs through the reeds,
And away it proceeds,
Through meadow and glade,
In sun and in shade,

And through the wood-shelter,
Among crags in its flurry,
Helter-skelter,

Hurry-skurry.

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