OCR Text |
Show MAY AND DECEMBER. General Cassias M. Clay's Wedding to His , F f$en-y ear-old Ward. The only witnesses to the marriage were McClelland Richardson and Dr. Cassius Clay Smith, the latter a physician physi-cian of Richmond, Ky. Dr. Smith refused re-fused to say anything about the wedding, wed-ding, explaining that he had promised General Clay not to do so. It was learned that the ceremony took place in the sitting room. The bride was not dressed as brides usually are. She wore a plain dark dress, was bareheaded, bare-headed, her long black tresses hanging in an almost disheveled mass down her back. She wore no gloves, had no orange blossoms and carried no bride's roses in her hand. It was a simple ceremony. cere-mony. The girl, who had remained sitting sit-ting until General Clay and the magistrate magis-trate arose, got up from the divan and took her place beside her white headed bridegroom. It was a touching scena The man who had led admiring thousands thou-sands in a crusade' for human liberty, who in his youth was a perfect Apollo Belvidere in appearance, if not a Napoleon Na-poleon in the cause of abolition, stood as meekly as a little child, with an expression ex-pression of unspeakable happiness upon his time worn but still fresh and almost youthful features, and by his side that simple, trusting country girl, as shy as a gazelle, knowing as little of the great world in which her venerable husband had played so conspicuous a part as th6 most untutored daughter of natura The ceremony was very brief, and when it was over the bashful child went back to the kitchen, and General Clay and his family physician sat talking by the large open fireplace, in which glowed two bushels of burning coals. And thus was celebrated one of the most remarkable weddings that ever took place in the United States. Louisville Lou-isville Courier- Journal. |