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162 the constant crowds of visitors during- the rest of the year leaving her very little time not engrossed by house-hold cares, arising from the duties of hospitality.

"During the years which she passed in Washington, she resumed many of her old occupations; her taste for flowers revived, and good music afforded her enjoyment, although she no longer played much herself after my grandfather's death. Her habits of reading she never lost, and she always began the day with some chapter of the New Testament. She was an early riser in summer and in winter. She liked an east window in her bedroom, because it enabled her to read in bed before the household were stirring. Every year she visited alternately my elder brother at his residence near Monticello, in the southwest mountains of Virginia, or my sister, Mrs. Joseph Coolidge, in Boston.

"In the spring of 1831 she was called on to make a painful sacrifice, such as mothers only can appreciate— she gave her consent to George's entering the navy. After passing a winter with her in Washington, he had entered a school near the University of Virginia, when a midshipman's warrant was procured for him. At his boarding-school in Massachusetts, his conduct had gained for him the respect, confidence, and good-will of all, teachers and associates; but he was yet a mere child, and his mother's heart sickened at the thought of his going forth alone to encounter the naval perils, as well as brave the hardships of a sea-faring life. She had, however, the fortitude to approve of what was judged