summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-14 20:12:27 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-14 20:12:27 -0700
commit06aa97ef5452d30c1801ed8034bb59701ac2564f (patch)
tree4930db391657e364462d96f92e2f84675a88b9a6
initial commit of ebook 39323HEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--39323-8.txt8548
-rw-r--r--39323-8.zipbin0 -> 165754 bytes
-rw-r--r--39323-h.zipbin0 -> 447643 bytes
-rw-r--r--39323-h/39323-h.htm10856
-rw-r--r--39323-h/images/confess.jpgbin0 -> 48976 bytes
-rw-r--r--39323-h/images/cover.jpgbin0 -> 45015 bytes
-rw-r--r--39323-h/images/frontis.jpgbin0 -> 48769 bytes
-rw-r--r--39323-h/images/logo1.pngbin0 -> 11411 bytes
-rw-r--r--39323-h/images/logo2.pngbin0 -> 9209 bytes
-rw-r--r--39323-h/images/lookthere.jpgbin0 -> 57477 bytes
-rw-r--r--39323-h/images/splendid.jpgbin0 -> 55602 bytes
-rw-r--r--39323.txt8548
-rw-r--r--39323.zipbin0 -> 165718 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
16 files changed, 27968 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/39323-8.txt b/39323-8.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..11ee823
--- /dev/null
+++ b/39323-8.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,8548 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Pilgrim Maid, by Marion Ames Taggart
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: A Pilgrim Maid
+ A Story of Plymouth Colony in 1620
+
+Author: Marion Ames Taggart
+
+Illustrator: The Donaldsons
+
+Release Date: April 1, 2012 [EBook #39323]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A PILGRIM MAID ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank, Maria Grist and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A PILGRIM MAID
+
+A Story of Plymouth Colony in 1620
+
+[Illustration: "Constance opened the door, stepping back to let the
+bride precede her"]
+
+
+
+
+ A PILGRIM MAID
+
+ _A Story of Plymouth Colony in 1620_
+
+ BY
+ MARION AMES TAGGART
+
+ AUTHOR OF
+ "CAPTAIN SYLVIA," "THE DAUGHTERS OF THE
+ LITTLE GREY HOUSE," "THE LITTLE GREY
+ HOUSE," "HOLLYHOCK HOUSE," ETC.
+
+
+ ILLUSTRATED
+ BY
+ THE DONALDSONS
+
+
+ DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY
+ GARDEN CITY NEW YORK LONDON
+ 1920
+
+
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1920, BY
+ DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY
+ ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, INCLUDING THAT OF
+ TRANSLATION INTO FOREIGN LANGUAGES,
+ INCLUDING THE SCANDINAVIAN
+
+
+
+
+ DEDICATED
+ TO
+ YOU, MY DEAR
+ WHO SO WELL KNOW WHY
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+This story is like those we hear of our neighbours to-day: it is a
+mixture of fact and fancy.
+
+The aim in telling it has been to present Plymouth Colony as it was in
+its first three years of existence; to keep to possibilities, even while
+inventing incidents.
+
+Actual events have been transferred from a later to an earlier year when
+they could be made useful, to bring them within the story's compass, and
+to develop it.
+
+For instance, John Billington was lost for five days and died early, but
+not as early as in the story. Stephen Hopkins was fined for allowing
+his servants to play shovelboard, but this did not happen till some time
+later than 1622. Stephen Hopkins was twice married; records show that
+there was dissension; that the second wife tried to get an inheritance
+for her own children, to the injury of the son and daughter of the first
+wife. Facts of this sort are used, enlarged upon, construed to cause, or
+altered to suit, certain results.
+
+But there is fidelity to the general trend of events, above all to the
+spirit of Plymouth in its beginnings. As far as may be, the people who
+have been transferred into the story act in accordance with what is
+known of the actual bearers of these names.
+
+There was a Maid of Plymouth, Constance Hopkins, who came in the
+_Mayflower_, with her father Stephen; her stepmother, Eliza; her
+brother, Giles, and her little half-sister and brother, Damaris and
+Oceanus, and to whom the _Anne_, in 1623, brought her husband,
+Honourable Nicholas Snowe, afterward one of the founders of Eastham,
+Massachusetts.
+
+Undoubtedly the real Constance Hopkins was sweeter than the story can
+make her, as a living girl must be sweeter than one created of paper and
+ink. Yet it is hoped that this Plymouth Maid, Constance, of the story,
+may also find friends.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+CHAPTER PAGE
+
+I. With England's Shores Left Far Astern 3
+
+II. To Buffet Waves and Ride on Storms 15
+
+III. Weary Waiting at the Gates 31
+
+IV. The First Yuletide 45
+
+V. The New Year in the New Land 61
+
+VI. Stout Hearts and Sad Ones 76
+
+VII. The Persuasive Power of Justice
+and Violence 90
+
+VIII. Deep Love, Deep Wound 104
+
+IX. Seedtime of the First Spring 119
+
+X. Treaties 133
+
+XI. A Home Begun and a Home Undone 150
+
+XII. The Lost Lads 166
+
+XIII. Sundry Herbs and Simples 183
+
+XIV. Light-Minded Man, Heavy-Hearted Master 199
+
+XV. The "Fortune" That Sailed, First West,
+then East 216
+
+XVI. A Gallant Lad Withal 234
+
+XVII. The Well-Conned Lesson 251
+
+XVIII. Christmas Wins, Though Outlawed 267
+
+XIX. A Fault Confessed, Thereby Redressed 284
+
+XX. The Third Summer's Garnered Yield 302
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+"Constance opened the door, stepping back to let
+the bride precede her" _Frontispiece_
+(_See page 157_)
+
+ FACING PAGE
+
+"'Constantia; confess, confess--and do not try
+to shield thy wicked brother'" 52
+
+"'Look there,' said John Alden" 116
+
+"'You look splendid, my Knight of the Wilderness'" 244
+
+
+
+
+ A PILGRIM MAID
+
+ A Story of Plymouth Colony in 1620
+
+
+
+
+_A PILGRIM MAID_
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+With England's Shores Left Far Astern
+
+
+A young girl, brown-haired, blue-eyed, with a sweet seriousness that was
+neither joy nor sorrow upon her fair pale face, leaned against the mast
+on the _Mayflower's_ deck watching the bustle of the final preparations
+for setting sail westward.
+
+A boy somewhat older than she stood beside her whittling an arrow from a
+bit of beechwood, whistling through his teeth, his tongue pressed
+against them, a livelier air than a pilgrim boy from Leyden was supposed
+to know, and sullenly scorning to betray interest in the excitement
+ashore and aboard.
+
+A little girl clung to the pretty young girl's skirt; the unlikeness
+between them, though they were sisters, was explained by their being but
+half sisters. Little Damaris was like her mother, Constance's
+stepmother, while Constance herself reflected the delicate loveliness of
+her own and her brother Giles's mother, dead in early youth and lying
+now at rest in a green English churchyard while her children were
+setting forth into the unknown.
+
+Two boys--one older than Constance, Giles's age, the other younger than
+the girl--came rushing down the deck with such impetuosity, plus the
+younger lad's head used as a battering ram, that the men at work stowing
+away hampers and barrels, trying to clear a way for the start, gave
+place to the rough onslaught.
+
+Several looked after the pair in a way that suggested something more
+vigorous than a look had it not been that fear of the pilgrim leaders
+restrained swearing. Not a whit did the charging lads care for the wrath
+they aroused. The elder stopped himself by clutching the rope which
+Constance Hopkins idly swung, while the younger caught Giles around the
+waist and nearly pulled him over.
+
+"I'll teach you manners, you young savage, Francis Billington!" growled
+Giles, but he did not mean it, as Francis well knew.
+
+"If I'm a savage I'll be the only one of us at home in America,"
+chuckled the boy.
+
+"Getting ready an arrow for the savage?" he added.
+
+"It's all decided. There's been the greatest to-do ashore. Why didn't
+you come off the ship to see the last of 'em, Constance?" interrupted
+the older boy. Constance Hopkins shook her head, sadly.
+
+"Nay, then, John, I've had my fill of partings," she said. "Are they
+gone back, those we had to leave behind?"
+
+"That have they!" cried John Billington. "Some of them were sorry to
+miss the adventure, but if truth were told some were glad to be well out
+of it, and with no more disgrace in setting back than that the
+_Mayflower_ could not hold us all. Well, they've missed danger and maybe
+death, but I'd not be out of it for a king's ransom. Giles, what do you
+think is whispered? That the _Speedwell_ could make the voyage as well
+as the _Mayflower_, though she be smaller, if only she carried less
+sail, and that her leaking is--a greater leak in her master Reynolds's
+truth, and that she'd be seaworthy if he'd let her!"
+
+"Cur!" growled Giles Hopkins. "He knows he'd have to stay with his ship
+in the wilderness a year it might be and there's better comfort in
+England and Holland! We're well rid of him if he's that kind of a
+coward. I wondered myself if he was up to a trick when we put in the
+first time, at Dartmouth. This time when we made Plymouth I smelled a
+rat certain. Are we almost loaded?"
+
+"Yes. They've packed all the provisions from the _Speedwell_ into the
+_Mayflower_ that she will hold. We'll be off soon. Not too soon! The
+sixth day of September, and we a month dallying along the shore because
+of the _Speedwell's_ leaking! Constantia, you'll be cold before we make
+a fire in the New World I'm thinking!"
+
+John Billington chuckled as if the cold of winter in the wilderness were
+a merry jest.
+
+"Cold, and maybe hungry, and maybe ill of body and sick of heart, but
+never quite losing courage, I hope, John, comrade!" Constance said,
+looking up with a smile and a flush that warmed her white cheeks from
+which heavy thoughts had driven their usual soft colour.
+
+"No fear! You're the kind that says little and does much," said John
+Billington with surprising sharpness in a lad that never seemed to have
+a thought to spare for anything but madcap pranks.
+
+"Here come Father, and the captain, and dear John," said little Damaris.
+
+Stephen Hopkins was a strong-built man, with a fire in his eye, and an
+air of the world about him, in spite of his severe Puritan garb, that
+declared him different from most of his comrades of the Leyden community
+of English exiles.
+
+With all her likeness to her dead English girl-mother, who was gentle
+born and well bred, there was something in Constance as she stood now,
+head up and eyes bright, that was also like her father.
+
+Beside Mr. Hopkins walked a thick-set man, a soldier in every motion and
+look, with little of the Puritan in his air, and just behind them came a
+young man, far younger than either of the others, with an open, pleasant
+English face, and an expression at once shy and friendly.
+
+"Oh, dear John Alden!" cried little Damaris, and forsook Constance's
+skirt for John Alden's ready arms which raised her to his shoulder.
+
+Giles Hopkins's gloom lifted as he returned Captain Myles Standish's
+salute.
+
+"Yes, Captain; I'm ready enough to sail," he said, answering the
+captain's question.
+
+"Mistress Constantia?" suggested Myles Standish.
+
+"Is there doubt of it when we've twice put in from sea, and were ready
+to sail when we left Southampton a month ago?" asked Constance. "Sure we
+are ready, Captain Standish, as you well know. Where is Mistress Rose?"
+
+"In the women's cabin with Mistress Hopkins putting to rights their
+belongings as fast as they can before we weigh anchor, and get perhaps
+stood on our heads by winds and waves," Captain Standish smiled. "Though
+the wind is fine for us now." His face clouded. "Mistress Rose is a
+frail rose, Con! They will be coming on deck to see the start."
+
+"The voyage may give sweet Rose new strength, Captain Standish,"
+murmured Constance coming close to the captain and slipping her hand
+into his, for she was his prime favourite and his lovely, frail young
+wife's chosen friend, in spite of the ten years difference in their
+ages.
+
+"Ah, Con, my lass, God grant it, but I'm sore afraid for her! How can
+she buffet the exposure of a wilderness winter, and--hush! Here they
+are!" whispered Myles Standish.
+
+Mistress Eliza Hopkins was tall, bony, sinewy of build, with a dark,
+strong face, determination and temper in her eye. Rose Standish was her
+opposite--a slight, pale, drooping creature not more than five years
+above twenty; patience, suffering in her every motion, and clinging
+affection in every line of her gentle face.
+
+Constance ran to wind her arm around her as Rose came up and slipped one
+little hand into her husband's arm.
+
+Mrs. Hopkins frowned.
+
+"It likes me not to see you so forward with caresses, Constantia," she
+said, and her voice rasped like the ship's tackles as the sailors got up
+the canvas.
+
+"It is not becoming in the elect whose hearts are set upon heavenly
+things to fawn upon creatures, nor make unmaidenly displays."
+
+Giles kicked viciously at the rope which Constance had held. It was not
+hard to guess that the unnatural gloom, the sullenness that marked a boy
+meant by Nature to be pleasant, was due to bad blood between him and
+this aggressive stepmother, who plainly did not like him.
+
+"Oh, Mistress Hopkins," cried Constance, flushing, "why do you think it
+is wrong to be loving? Never can I believe God who made us with warm
+hearts, and gave us such darlings as Rose Standish, didn't want us to
+love and show our love."
+
+"You are much too free with your irreverence, Mistress Constantia; it
+becomes you not to proclaim your Maker's opinions and desires for his
+saints," said Mrs. Hopkins, frowning heavily.
+
+"'Sdeath, Eliza, will you never let the girl alone?" cried Stephen
+Hopkins, angrily.
+
+"As though we had nothing to think of in weighing anchor and leaving
+England for ever--and for what else besides, who knows--without carping
+at a little girl's loving natural ways to an older girl whom she loves?
+I agree with Connie; it's good to sweeten life with affection."
+
+"Connie, forsooth!" echoed Mrs. Hopkins, bitterly. "Are we to use
+meaningless titles for young women setting forth to found a kingdom? And
+do you still use the oaths of worldlings, as you did just now? Oh,
+Stephen Hopkins, may you not be found unworthy of your high calling and
+invoke the wrath of Heaven upon your family!"
+
+Stephen Hopkins looked ready to burst out into hot wrath, but Myles
+Standish gave him a humorous glance, and shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"What would you?" he seemed to say. "Old friend, bad temper seizes every
+opportunity to wreak itself, and we who have seen the world can afford
+to let the women fume. Jealousy is a worse vice than an oath of the
+Stuart reign."
+
+Stephen Hopkins harkened to this unspoken philosophy; Myles Standish had
+great influence over him. This, with the rapid gathering on deck of the
+rest of the pilgrims, served to avert what threatened to be an explosion
+of pardonable wrath. They came crowding up from the cabins, this
+courageous band of determined men and women, and gathered silently to
+look their last on home, and not merely on home, but on the comforts of
+the established life which to many among them were necessary to their
+existence.
+
+There were many children, sober little men and women, in unchildlike
+caricatures of their elders' garb and with solemn round faces looking
+scared by the gravity around them.
+
+Priscilla Mullins gathered the children together and led them over to
+join Constance Hopkins. She and Constance divided the love of the child
+pilgrims between them. Priscilla, round of face, smooth and rosy of
+cheek, wholesome and sensible, was good to look upon. It often happened
+that her duty brought her near to wherever John Alden might chance to
+be, but no one had ever suspected that John objected.
+
+John Alden had been taken on as cooper from Southampton when the
+_Mayflower_ first sailed. It was not certain that the pilgrims could
+keep him with them. Already they had learned to value him, and many a
+glance was now exchanged that told the hope that sunny little Priscilla
+might help to hold the young man on this hard expedition.
+
+The crew of the _Mayflower_ pulled up her sails, but without the usual
+sailor songs. Silently they pulled, working in unison to the sharp words
+of command uttered by their officers, till every shred of canvas, under
+which they were to set forth under a favouring wind, was strained into
+place and set.
+
+On the shore was gathered a crowd gazing, wondering, at this departure.
+Some there were who were to have been of the company in the lesser ship,
+the _Speedwell_, which had been remanded from the voyage as unfit for
+it. These lingered to see the setting forth for the New World which was
+not to be their world, after all.
+
+There were many who gazed, pityingly, awe-struck, but bewildered by the
+spirit that led these severe-looking people away from England first, and
+then from Holland, to try their fortunes where no fortune promised.
+
+Others there were who laughed merrily over the absurdity of the quest,
+and these called all sorts of jests and quips to the pilgrims on the
+ship, inviting to a contest of wit which the pilgrims utterly disdained.
+
+And then the by-standers on wharf and sands of old Plymouth became
+silent, for, as the _Mayflower_ began to move out from her dock, there
+arose the solemn chant of a psalm.
+
+The air was wailing, lugubrious, unmusical, but the words were awesome.
+
+"When Israel went out from Egypt, from the land of a strange people,"
+they were singing.
+
+"A strange people!" And these pilgrims were of English blood, and this
+was England which they were thus renouncing!
+
+What curious folk these were!
+
+But this psalm was followed by another: "The Lord is my shepherd."
+
+Ah, that was another matter! No one who heard them, however slight the
+sympathy felt for this unsympathetic band, but hoped that the Lord would
+shepherd them, "lead them beside still waters," for the sea might well
+be unquiet.
+
+"Oh, poor creatures, poor creatures," said a buxom woman, snuggling her
+baby's head into her deep shoulder, and wiping her own eyes with her
+apron. "I fain must pity 'em, that I must, though I'm none too lovin'
+myself toward their queer dourness. But I hope the Lord will shepherd
+'em; sore will they need it, I'm thinkin', yonder where there's no
+shepherds nor flocks, but only wild men to cut them down like we do haw
+for the church, as they all thinks is wicked!" she mourned, motherly
+yearning toward the people going out the harbour like babes in the wood,
+into no one would dare say what awful fate.
+
+The pilgrims stood with their faces set toward England, with England
+tugging at their heart strings, as the strong southeasterly wind filled
+the _Mayflower's_ canvas and pulled at her shrouds.
+
+And as they sailed away the monotonous chant of the psalms went on,
+floating back to England, a farewell and a prophecy.
+
+Rose Standish's tears were softly falling and her voice was silent, but
+Constance Hopkins chanted bravely, and the children joined her with
+Priscilla Mullins's strong contralto upholding them.
+
+Even Giles sang, and the two scamps of Billington boys looked serious
+for once, and helped the chant.
+
+Myles Standish raised his soldier's hat and turned to Stephen Hopkins,
+holding out his right hand.
+
+"We're fairly off this time, friend Stephen," he said. "God speed us."
+
+"Amen, Captain Myles, for else we'll speed not, returned Stephen
+Hopkins.
+
+"Oh, Daddy, we're together anyway!" cried Constance, with one of her
+sudden bursts of emotion which her stepmother so severely condemned, and
+she threw herself on her father's breast.
+
+Mr. Hopkins did not share his wife's view of his beloved little girl's
+demonstrativeness. He patted her head gently, tucking a stray wisp of
+hair under her Puritan cap.
+
+"There, there, my child, there, there, Connie! Surely we're together and
+shall be. So it can't be a wilderness for us, can it?" he said.
+
+An hour later, the wind still favouring, the _Mayflower_ dropped
+sunsetward, out of old Plymouth Harbour.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+To Buffet Waves and Ride on Storms
+
+
+The wind held fair, the golden September weather waited on each new day
+at its rising and sent it at its close, radiantly splendid, into the sea
+ahead of the _Mayflower_ as she swept westward.
+
+Full canvas hoisted she was able to sail at her best speed under the
+favouring conditions so that the hopeful young people whom she carried
+talked confidently of the houses they would build, the village they
+would found before heavy frosts. Captain Myles Standish, always
+impetuous as any of the boys, was one of those who let themselves forget
+there were such things as storms.
+
+"We'll be New Englishmen at this rate before we fully realize we've left
+home; what do you say, my lassies three?" he demanded, pausing in a
+rapid stride of the deck before Constance Hopkins and two young girls
+who were her own age, but seemed much younger, Humility Cooper and her
+cousin, Elizabeth Tilley.
+
+"What do you three mermaidens in this forward nook each morning?"
+Captain Standish went on without waiting for a reply to his first
+question, which indeed, he had not asked to have it answered.
+
+"Elizabeth's mother, Mistress John Tilley, is sick and declares that she
+shall die," said Constance, Humility and Elizabeth being shyly silent
+before the captain.
+
+"No one ever thought to live through sea-sickness, nor wanted to,"
+declared Captain Myles with his hearty laugh. "Yet no one dies of it,
+that is certain. And is Mistress Ann Tilley also lain down and left
+Humility to the mercy of the dolphins? And is your stepmother, too, Con,
+a victim? It's a calm sea we've been having by comparison. I've sailed
+from England into France when there _was_ a sea running, certes! But
+this--pooh!"
+
+"Humility's cousin, Mistress Ann Tilley, is not ill, nor my stepmother,
+Captain Standish, but they are attending to those who are, and to the
+children. Father says that when he sailed for Virginia, before my mother
+died, meaning to settle there, that the storm that wrecked them on
+Bermuda Island and kept us from being already these eleven years
+colonists in the New World, was a wind and sea that make this seem no
+more than the lake at the king's palace, where the swans float."
+
+Constance looked up smiling at the captain as she answered, but he noted
+that her eyes were swollen from tears.
+
+"Take a turn with me along the deck, child," Captain Myles said,
+gruffly, and held out a hand to steady Constance on her feet.
+
+"Now, what was it?" he asked, lightly touching the young girl's cheek
+when they had passed beyond the hearing of Constance's two demure little
+companions. "Homesick, my lass?"
+
+"Heartsick, rather, Captain Myles," said Constance, with a sob.
+"Mistress Hopkins hates me!"
+
+"Oh, fie, Connie, how could she?" asked the captain, lightly, but he
+scowled angrily. There was much sympathy between him and Stephen
+Hopkins, neither of whom agreed with the extreme severity of most of
+the pilgrims; they both had seen the world and looked at life from their
+wider experience.
+
+Captain Standish knew that Giles's and Constance's mother had been the
+daughter of an old and honourable family, with all the fine qualities of
+mind and soul that should be the inheritance of gentle breeding. He knew
+how it had come about that Stephen Hopkins had married a second time a
+woman greatly her inferior, whose jealousy of the first wife's children
+saddened their young lives and made his own course hard and unpleasant.
+Prone to speak his mind and fond of Giles and Constance, the impetuous
+captain often found it hard to keep his tongue between his teeth when
+Dame Eliza indulged in her favourite game of badgering, persecuting her
+stepchildren. Now, when he said: "Fie, how could she?" Constance looked
+up at him with a forlorn smile. She knew the captain was quite aware
+that her stepmother could, and did dislike her, and she caught the anger
+in his voice.
+
+"How could she not, dear Captain Myles?" she asked. Then, with her
+pent-up feeling overmastering her, she burst out sobbing.
+
+"Oh, you know she hates, she hates me, Captain!" she cried. "Nothing I
+can do is pleasing to her. I take care of Damaris--sure I love my little
+sister, and do not remember the half that is not my sister in her! And
+I wait on Mistress Hopkins, and sew, and do her bidding, and I do not
+answer her cruel taunts, nor do I go to my father complaining; but she
+hates me. Is it fair? Could I help it that my father loved my own
+mother, and married her, and that she was a lovely and accomplished
+lady?"
+
+"Do you want to help it, if by helping you mean altering, Connie?" asked
+Captain Myles, with a twinkle. "No, child, you surely cannot help all
+these things which come by no will of yours, but by the will of God. And
+I am your witness that you are ever patient and dutiful. Bear as best
+you can, sweet Constantia, and by and by the wrong will become right, as
+right in the end is ever strongest. I cannot endure to see your young
+eyes wet with tears called out by unkindness. There is enough and to
+spare of hard matters to endure for all of us on this adventure not to
+add to it what is not only unnecessary, but unjust. Cheer up, Con, my
+lass! It's a long lane--in England!--that has no turning, and it's a
+long voyage on the seas that ends in no safe harbour! And do you know,
+Connie girl, that there's soon to be a turn in this bright weather?
+There's a feeling of change and threatening in this soft wind."
+
+Constance wiped her eyes and smiled, knowing that the captain wished to
+lead her into other themes than her own troubles, the discussion of
+which was, after all, useless.
+
+"I don't know about the weather, except the weather I'm having," she
+said. "Ah, I don't want it to storm, not on the mid-seas, Captain
+Myles."
+
+"Aye, but it's the mid-seas of the year, Connie, when the days and
+nights are one in length, and at that time old wise men say a storm is
+usually forthcoming. We'll weather it, never fear! If we are bearing
+westward a great hope and mission as we all believe--not I in precisely
+the same fashion as these stricter saints, but in my own way no
+less--then we are sure to reach our goal, my dear," said the captain
+cheerfully.
+
+"Sometimes I lose faith; I think I am wicked," sighed Constance.
+
+"We are all poor miserable sinners! Even the English Church which we
+have cast off and consigned to perdition, puts that confession into our
+mouths," said Captain Myles, with another twinkle, and was gratified
+that Constance's laugh rang out in response to his thinly veiled
+mischief.
+
+Captain Standish proved to be a true prophet. On the second day after he
+had announced to Constance the coming change in weather it came. The
+_Mayflower_ ran into a violent storm, seas and wind were wild, the small
+ship tossed on the crest of billows and plunged down into the chasm
+between them as they reared high above her till it seemed impossible
+that she should hold together, far less hold her course.
+
+In truth she did not hold to her course, but fell off it before the
+storm, groaning in every beam as if with fearful grief at her own
+danger, and at the likelihood of destroying by her destruction the hope,
+the tremendous mission which she bore within her.
+
+The women and children cowered below in their crowded quarters--lacking
+air, space, every comfort--numb with the misery of sickness and the
+threat of imminent death.
+
+Constance Hopkins, young as she was, cheered and sustained her elders.
+Like a mettlesome horse that throws up his head and puts forth renewed
+strength when there rises before him a long steep mountain, Constance
+laughed at fear, sang and jested, tenderly helping the sick, gathering
+around her the children for story-telling and such quiet play as there
+was room for. Little Damaris was sick and cross, but Constance comforted
+her with unfailing patience, proving so motherly an elder sister than
+even Mistress Eliza's jealous dislike for the girl melted when she saw
+her so loving to the child.
+
+"You are proving yourself a good girl, Constantia," she said, with
+something like shame. "If I die you will look after Damaris and bring
+her up as I would have done? Promise me this, for I know that you will
+never break your word, and having it I can leave my child without
+anxiety for her future."
+
+"It needs no promise, Stepmother," said Constance. "Surely I would not
+fail to do my best for my little sister. But if you want my word fully,
+it is given you. I will try to be grown up and wise, and bring up
+Damaris carefully if you should leave her. But isn't this silly talk!
+You will not die. You will tell Damaris's little girls about your voyage
+in the _Mayflower_, and laugh with them over how you talked of dying
+when we were so tossed and tumbled, like a tennis ball struck by a
+strong hand holding a big racquet, but unskilled at the game!" Constance
+laughed but her stepmother frowned.
+
+"Never shall I talk of games to my daughter," she said, "nor shall you,
+if you take my place." Then she relented, recalling Constance's
+unselfish kindness all these dark hours.
+
+"But you have been a good girl, Constantia. Though I fear you are not
+chastised in spirit as becomes one of our company of saints, yet have
+you been patient and gentle in all ways, and a mother to Damaris and the
+other small ones. I can do no less than say this and remember it," she
+added.
+
+Constance was white from weariness and the fear that she fought down
+with merry chatter, but now a warm flush spread to her hair.
+
+"Oh, Mistress Hopkins, if you would not hate me, if you would but think
+me just a little worthy of kindly thoughts--for indeed I am not
+wicked--the hardship of this voyage would be a cheap price to pay for
+it! I would not be so unhappy as I am if, though you did not love me,
+you would at least not hate me, nor mind that my father loved me--me and
+Giles!" Constance cried passionately, trembling on the verge of tears.
+
+Then she dashed her hand across her eyes as Giles might have done, and
+laughed to choke down a sob.
+
+"Priscilla! Priscilla Mullins, come! I need your help," she called.
+
+"What to do, Constance?" asked Priscilla, edging her way from the other
+end of the crowded cabin to the younger girl.
+
+Priscilla looked blooming still, in spite of the conditions to dim her
+bright colour.
+
+Placid by nature, she did not fret over discomfort or danger. Trim and
+neat, she was a pleasant sight among the distressed, pallid faces about
+her, like a bit of English sky, a green English meadow, a warm English
+hearth in the waste of waters that led to the waste of wintry
+wilderness.
+
+"What am I do to for thee, Constance?" Priscilla asked in her deep, alto
+voice.
+
+"Help me get these children up into the air in a sheltered nook on
+deck," said Constance. "They are suffocating here."
+
+"No, no!" cried two or three mothers. "They will be washed away,
+Constantia."
+
+"Not where we have been taking them these three days past," said
+Priscilla. "Let me go first and get John Alden to prepare that nest of
+sails and ropes he made so cleverly for us two days ago."
+
+"What doesn't John Alden do cleverly?" murmured Constance, with a sly
+glance. "Go then, Pris dear, but don't forget to hasten back to tell me
+it is ready."
+
+Priscilla did not linger. John Alden had gotten two others to help him,
+and a safe shelter where the children could be packed to breathe the air
+they sorely needed was ready when Priscilla came to ask for it. So
+Priscilla hurried back and soon she and Constance had the little
+pilgrims safely stowed, made comfortable, though Damaris feared the
+great waves towering on every side and clung to Constance in desperate
+faith.
+
+"What is to do yonder?" asked Priscilla of John Alden, who after they
+were settled came to see that everything was right with them.
+
+"What are the men working upon?"
+
+"I suppose it's no harm telling you now," said John Alden, "since they
+are at work as you see, but the ship has been leaking badly, and one of
+her main beams bowed and cracked, directly amidships. There has been the
+next thing to mutiny among the sailors, who have no desire to go to the
+bottom, and wanted to turn back. We have been in consultation and they
+have growled and threatened, but we are half way over to the western
+world so may as safely go on as to return. At last we got them to agree
+to that and now they are mending the ship. We have aboard a great jack;
+one of the passengers brought it out of Holland, luckily. What they are
+doing yonder is jacking up that broken beam. The carpenter is going to
+set a post under it in the lower deck, and calk the leaky upper parts,
+and so we shall go on to America. The ship is staunch enough, we all
+agree, if only we can hold her where she is strained. But you had no
+idea of how near you were to going back, had you?"
+
+"Oh, no!" cried Priscilla. "Almost am I tempted to wish we had
+returned."
+
+"No, no, no!" cried Constance. "No turning back! Storms, and savages,
+and wilderness ahead, but no turning back!"
+
+Damaris fell asleep on Constance's shoulder, and slept so deeply that
+when Myles Standish, Stephen Hopkins, and John Alden came to help the
+girls to get the children safely down again into their cabin she did not
+waken, and Constance begged to be allowed to stay there with her,
+letting her sleep in the strong air, for the child had troubled her
+sister by her languor.
+
+Cramped and aching Constance kept her place, Damaris's dead weight upon
+her arm, till, after a long time, her father returned to her with a
+moved face.
+
+"Shift the child to my arm, Constance," he said, sitting beside her.
+"You must be weary with your long vigil over her, my patient, sweet
+Constance!"
+
+"Oh, Father-daddy," cried Constance, quick tears springing to her eyes,
+"what does it matter if you call me that? You will always love me, my
+father?"
+
+"Child, child, what aileth thee?" said Stephen Hopkins, gently. "Are you
+not the very core of my heart, so like your lovely young mother that you
+grip me at times with the pain of my joy in you and my sorrow for her.
+The pilgrim brethren would not approve of such expressions of love, my
+dear, yet I think God who gave me a father's heart and you a daughter's,
+and taught us our duty to Him by the figure of His own Fatherhood,
+cannot share that condemnation. All the world to me you shall be to the
+end of my life, my Constance. But I came to tell you a great piece of
+news. The _Mayflower_ has shipped another passenger, mid-seas though it
+is."
+
+Constance looked up questioningly.
+
+"I have another son, Constance. The angels given charge of little
+children saw him safely to us through the perils of the voyage. Do you
+not think, as I do, that this child is like a promise to us of success
+in the New World?"
+
+"Yes, Father," said Constance, softly, sweet gravity upon her face, and
+tears upon her lashes. "Will he be called Stephen?"
+
+"Your stepmother wishes him named Oceanus, because of his sea-birth. Do
+you like the name?" asked her father.
+
+Constance shook her head. "Not a whit," she said, "for it sounds like a
+heathen god, and that I do not like, though my stepmother is a stricter
+Puritan than are you and I. I would love another Stephen Hopkins. But if
+it must be Oceanus--well, I'll try to make it a smooth ocean for the
+little fellow, his life with us, I mean."
+
+"Shall we go below to see him? I will carry Damaris," said Mr. Hopkins,
+rising, and offering Constance his hand, at the same time shifting her
+burden to himself.
+
+Damaris whined and burrowed into her father's shoulder, half waking.
+Constance stumbled and fell laughing, to her knees, numb from long
+sitting with the child's weight upon them.
+
+At the door of the cabin they met Doctor Fuller, who paused to look long
+and steadily at Constance.
+
+"You have been saving me work, little mistress," he said, putting a hand
+on her shoulder. "Your blithe courage has done more than my physic to
+hold off serious trouble in yonder cabin, and your service of hands has
+been as helpful. When we get to our new home will you accept the
+position of physician's assistant? Will you be my cheerful little
+partner, and let us be Samuel Fuller and Company, physicians and
+surgeons to the worshipful company of pilgrims in the New World?"
+
+Constance dropped a curtsey as well as the narrow space allowed. She, as
+well as all the rest of the ship's company, loved and trusted this kind
+young doctor who had left his wife and child to follow him later, and
+was crossing the seas with the pilgrims as the minister to their
+suffering bodies.
+
+"Indeed, Doctor Fuller, I will accept the office, though it will make me
+so proud that I shall be turned out of the community as unfit to be part
+of it," she cried.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There followed after this long days of bleak endurance, the cold
+increasing, the storms raging. For days at a time the _Mayflower_ lay
+to, stripped of all sail, floating in currents, thrown up on high,
+driven nose down into an apparently bottomless pit, the least of man's
+work cut off from man's natural life, left to herself in the desert of
+waters, packed with the humanity that crowded her.
+
+Yet through it all the men and women she bore did not lose heart, but
+beneath the overwhelming misery of their condition kept alive the sense
+of God's sustaining providence and personal direction.
+
+Thus it was not strange that the little ship and her company proved
+stronger than the wintry storms, that she survived and, once more
+hoisting sail, kept on her westerly course.
+
+It was November; for two months and more the _Mayflower_ had sailed and
+drifted, but now there were signs that the hazardous voyage was nearly
+over.
+
+"Come on deck, Con! Come on deck!" shouted Giles Hopkins. "All hands on
+deck for the first glimpse of land! They think 'twill soon be seen."
+
+Pale, weak, but quivering with joy, the pilgrims gathered on the
+_Mayflower's_ decks.
+
+Rose Standish was but the shadow of her sweet self. Constance lingered
+to give the final touches to Rose's toilette; they were all striving to
+make some little festal appearance to their garments suitably to greet
+the New World.
+
+"I can hardly go up, dear Connie," murmured Rose. "The _Mayflower_ hath
+taken all the vigour from this poor rose."
+
+"When the mayflower goes, the rose blooms," said Constance. "Wait till
+we get ashore and you are in your own warm, cozy home!"
+
+Rose shook her head, but made an effort to greet Captain Myles brightly
+as he came to help her to the deck.
+
+"What land are we to see, Myles? Where are we?" she asked.
+
+"Gosnold's country of Cape Cod, rose of the world," said Captain Myles.
+"It lies just ahead. Have a care, Constance; don't trip. Here we are,
+then!"
+
+They took their places in a sheltered nook and waited. The Billington
+boys had clambered high aloft and no one reproved them. Though their
+pranks were always calling forth a reprimand from some one, this time no
+one blamed them, but rather envied them for getting where they could see
+land first of all.
+
+Sharply Francis Billington's boyish voice rang out:
+
+"Land! Land! Land!" he shouted.
+
+It was but an instant before the entire company of pilgrims were on
+their knees, sobbing, chanting, praising, each in his own way, the God
+who had brought their pilgrimage to this end.
+
+That night they tacked southward, looking for Hudson's river, but the
+sea was so rough, the shoals around the promontories southward so
+dangerous, that they gave over the quest and turned back.
+
+The next day the sun shone with the brilliant glory of winter upon the
+sea, and upon the low-lying coast, as the _Mayflower_ came into her
+harbour.
+
+"Father, it is the New World!" cried Constance, clasping her father's
+arm in spite of the tiny _Mayflower_ baby which she held.
+
+"The New World it is, friend Stephen. Now to conquer it!" said Myles
+Standish, clapping Mr. Hopkins on the shoulder and touching his sword
+hilt with the other hand.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+Weary Waiting at the Gates
+
+
+"Call Giles hither. I need help to strap these blankets to carry safely,
+Mr. Hopkins," said Dame Eliza Hopkins, bustling up to her husband two
+hours after the _Mayflower_ had made anchorage.
+
+"To carry whither, wife?" asked Mr. Hopkins, with the amused smile that
+always irritated his excitable wife by its detached calmness.
+
+"Will you not need the blankets at night? Truth to tell this Cape Cod
+air seems to me well fit for blankets."
+
+"And for what other use should they be carried ashore? Or would they
+keep us warm left on the ship?" demanded Mistress Eliza. "Truly, Stephen
+Hopkins, you are a test of the patience of a saint!"
+
+"Which needs no testing, since the patience of the saints has passed
+into a proverb," commented Stephen Hopkins. "But with all humility I
+would answer 'yes' to your question, _Eliza_: the blankets would surely
+keep you warmer when on the ship than if they were ashore, since it is
+on the ship that you are to remain."
+
+"Remain! On the ship? For how long, pray? And why? Do you not think that
+I have had enough and to spare of this ship after more than two months
+within her straitened cabin, and Oceanus crying, poor child, and wearing
+upon me as if he felt the hardship of his birthplace? Nor is Mistress
+White's baby, Peregrine, happier than my child in being born on this
+_Mayflower_. When one is not crying, the other is and oftener than not
+in concert. Why should I not go ashore with the others?" demanded
+Mistress Eliza, in quick anger.
+
+"Ah, wife, wife, my poor Eliza," sighed Mr. Hopkins, raising his hand to
+stem the torrent. "Leave not all the patience of the saints to those in
+paradise! You, with all the other women, will remain on the ship while
+certain of the men--the rest being left to guard you--go in the shallop
+to explore our new country and pick the fittest place for our
+settlement. How long we may be gone, I do not know. Rest assured it will
+not be an absence wilfully prolonged. You will be more comfortable here
+than ashore. It is likely that when you do go ashore to begin the new
+home you will look back regretfully at the straitened quarters of the
+little ship that has served us well, in spite of sundry weaknesses which
+she developed. Be that as it may, this delay is necessary, as reflection
+will show you, so let us not weary ourselves with useless discussion of
+it."
+
+Mistress Hopkins knew that when her husband spoke in this manner,
+discussion of his decision was indeed useless. She had an awe of his
+wisdom, his amused toleration of her, of his superior birth and
+education, and, though she ventured to goad him in small affairs, when
+it came to greater ones she dared not dispute him. So now she bit her
+lip, as angry and disappointed tears sprang to her eyes, but did not
+reply.
+
+Stephen Hopkins produced from his inner pocket an oblong packet sewn in
+an oilskin wrapper.
+
+"Here, Eliza," he said, "are papers of value to this expedition,
+together with some important only to ourselves, but to us sufficiently
+so to guard them carefully. The public papers were entrusted to me just
+before we sailed from Southampton by one interested in the welfare of
+this settlement. My own papers relate to the English inheritance that
+will be my children's should they care to claim it. These papers I must
+leave in your care now that I am to go on this exploring party ashore. I
+will not risk carrying them where savages might attack us, though I have
+kept them upon me throughout the voyage. Guard them well. Not for worlds
+would I lose the papers relating to the community, sorry as I should be
+to lose my own, for those were a trust, and personal loss would be
+nothing compared to the loss of them."
+
+He handed the packet to his wife as he spoke and she took it, turning it
+curiously over and about.
+
+"I hope the English inheritance will one day come to Damaris and
+Oceanus," she said, bitterly, her jealousy of the two children of her
+husband's first wife plain to be seen. "Here's Giles," she added,
+hastily thrusting the packet into her bosom with a violence that her
+husband noted and wondered at.
+
+"Father," said Giles, coming up, "take me with you."
+
+Gloom and discontent were upon his brow. Giles's face was fast growing
+into a settled expression of bitterness. His stepmother's dislike for
+him, and for his sister, Giles bore less well than Constance. The
+natural sweetness of the girl, her sunny hopefulness, led her
+ceaselessly to try to make things pleasant around her, to be always
+ready to forget and begin again, hoping that at last she might win her
+stepmother's kindness. But Giles never forgot, consequently never could
+hope that the bad situation would mend, and he returned Mistress Eliza's
+dislike with compound interest. He was a brave lad, capable of strong
+attachments, but the bitterness that he harboured, the unhappiness of
+his home life, were doing him irreparable harm. His father was keenly
+alive to this fact, and one of his motives in coming to the New World
+with the Puritans, with whose strict views he by no means fully
+sympathized, was to give Giles the opportunity to conquer the
+wilderness, and in conquering it to find a vent for his energy,
+happiness for himself.
+
+Mr. Hopkins turned to the boy now and sighed, seeing that he had heard
+his stepmother's expression of hope that _her_ children would receive
+their father's English patrimony. But he said only:
+
+"Take you with me where, Giles?"
+
+"Exploring the country. I am too old, too strong to stay here with the
+women and children. Besides, I want to go," said Giles, shortly.
+
+"But few of the men are to go, my son; you will not be reckoned among
+the weaklings in staying," said Mr. Hopkins, laying his hand upon the
+boy's shoulder with a smile that Giles did not return. "Enough have
+volunteered; Captain Standish has made up his company. You are best here
+and will find enough to do. Have you thought that you are my eldest, and
+that if we met with savages, or other fatal onslaught, that you must
+take my place? I cannot afford to risk both of us at once. You are my
+reliance and successor, Giles lad."
+
+The boy's sullen face broke into a piteous smile; he flushed and looked
+into his father's eyes with a glance that revealed for an instant the
+dominant passion of his life, his adoring love for his father.
+
+Then he dropped his lids, veiling the light that he himself was
+conscious shone in them.
+
+"Very well, If you want me to stay, stay it is. But I'd like to go. And
+if there is danger, why not let me take your place? I should not know as
+much as you, but I would obey the captain's orders, and I am as strong
+as you are. Better let me go if there's any chance of not returning," he
+said.
+
+"Your valuable young life for mine, my boy? Hardly that!" said Stephen
+Hopkins with a comradely arm thrown across the boy. "I shall always be a
+piece of drift from the old shore; you will grow from your youth into
+the New World's life. And what would my remnant of life be to me if my
+eldest born had purchased it?"
+
+"You are young enough, Father," began Giles, struggling not to show
+that the expression of his father's love moved him as it did.
+
+Mistress Eliza, who had been watching and listening to what was said
+with scornful impatience, broke in.
+
+"Let the lad go. He will not be helpful here, and your little children
+need your protection, not to speak of your wife, Mr. Hopkins."
+
+At the first syllable Giles had hastened away. Stephen Hopkins turned on
+her. "The boy is more precious than I am. It is settled; he is to stay.
+Take great care of the packet I have entrusted to you," he said.
+
+For four days the ship's carpenters had busied themselves in putting
+together and making ready the shallop which the _Mayflower_ had carried
+for the pilgrims to use in sailing the shallow waters of the bays and
+rivers of the new land, to discover the spot upon which they should
+decide to make their beginning.
+
+The small craft was ready now, and in the morning set out, taking a
+small band of the men who had crossed on the _Mayflower_, as much
+ammunition and provisions as her capacity allowed them, to proceed no
+one knew whither, to encounter no one knew what.
+
+Constance stood wistfully, anxiously, watching the prim white sail
+disappear.
+
+Humility Cooper and Elizabeth Tilley--the cousins, who, though
+Constance's age, seemed so much younger--and Priscilla Mullins--who
+though older, seemed but Constance's age--were close beside her, and,
+seated on a roll of woollen cloth, sat Rose Standish, drooping as now
+she always drooped, often coughing, watching with her unnaturally clear
+eyes, as the girls watched, the departure of the little craft that bore
+their beloved protectors away.
+
+The country that lay before them looked "wild and weather-beaten." All
+that they could see was woods and more woods, stretching westward to
+meet the bleak November sky, hiding who could say what dangers of wild
+beasts and yet more-savage men?
+
+Behind them lay the heaving ocean, dark under the scudding clouds, and
+which they had just sailed for two months of torture of body and mind.
+
+If the little shallop were but sailing toward one single friend, if
+there were but one friendly English-built house beside whose hearth the
+adventurers might warm themselves after a handclasp of welcome!
+Desolation and still more desolation behind and before them! What awful
+secrets did that low-lying, mysterious coast conceal? What could the
+future hold for this handful of pilgrims who were to grapple without
+human aid with the cruelties of a severe clime, of preying creatures,
+both beast and human?
+
+Rose Standish's head bent low as the tipmost point of the shallop's mast
+rounded a promontory, till it rested on her knees and her thin
+shoulders heaved. Instantly Constance was on her knees before her,
+gently forcing Rose's hands from her face and drawing her head upon her
+shoulder.
+
+"There, there!" Constance crooned as if to a baby. "There, there, sweet
+Rose! What is it, what is it?"
+
+"Oh, if I knew he would ever come back! Oh, if I knew how to go on, how,
+how to go on!" Rose sobbed.
+
+"Captain Myles come back!" cried Constance, with a laugh that she was
+delighted to hear sounded genuine.
+
+"Why, silly little Rose Standish, don't you know nothing could keep the
+captain from coming back? Wouldn't it be a sorry day for an Indian, or
+for any beast, when he attacked our right arm of the colony? No fear of
+him not coming back to us! And how to go on, is that it? In your own
+cozy little house, with Prissy and the rest of us to help you look after
+it till you are strong again, and then the fair spring sunshine, and the
+salt winds straight from home blowing upon you, and you will not need to
+know how to go on! It will be the rest of us who will have to learn how
+to keep up with you!"
+
+"Kind Constance," whispered Rose, stroking the girl's cheek and looking
+wistfully into her eyes as she dried her own. "You keep me up, though
+you are so young! Not for nothing were you named Constantia, for
+constant indeed you are! I will be good, and not trouble you. Usually I
+feel sure that I shall get well, but to-day--seeing Myles go----.
+Sometimes it comes over me with terrible certainty that it is not for me
+to see this wilderness bloom."
+
+"Just tiredness, dear one," said Constance, lovingly, and as if she were
+a whole college of learned physicians. "Have no fear."
+
+Mistress Hopkins came in search of them, carrying the baby Oceanus with
+manifest protest against his weight and wailing.
+
+"I have been looking for you, Constantia," she said, as if this were a
+severe accusation against the girl. "You are to take this child. Have I
+not enough to do and to put up with that I must be worn threadbare by
+his crying? And what a country! Your father has been tormenting me with
+his mending and preparation for this expedition so that I have not seen
+it as it is until just now. Look at it, only look at it! What a place to
+bring a decent woman to who has never wanted! Though I may not have been
+the fine lady that his first wife was, yet am I a comfortable farmer's
+daughter, and Stephen Hopkins should not have brought me to a coast more
+bleak and dismal than the barrens of Sahara. Woods, nothing but woods!
+And full of lions, and tigers, and who knows what other raving, raging
+wild vermin--who knows? What does thy father mean by bringing me to
+this?"
+
+Constance pressed her lips together hard, a burning crimson flooding her
+face as she took the baby violently thrust upon her and straightened his
+disordered wrappings, reminding herself that his mother was not his
+fault.
+
+"Why as to that, Mistress Hopkins," said Priscilla Mullins in her
+downright, sensible way, "Mr. Hopkins did not bring you. We all came
+willingly, and I make no doubt that all of us knew quite well that it
+was a wilderness to which we were bound."
+
+"There is knowing and knowing, Priscilla Mullins, and the knowing before
+seeing is a different thing from the knowing and seeing. Stephen Hopkins
+had been about the world; he even set sail for Virginia, which as I
+understand is somewhere not far from Cape Cod, though not near enough to
+give us neighbours for the borrowing of a salt rising, or the trade of a
+recipe, or the loan of a croup simple should my blessed babe turn
+suffocating as he is like to do in this wicked cold wind; and these
+things are the comforts of a woman's life, and her right--as all good
+women will tell thee before thou art old enough to know what the lack is
+in this desolation. So it is clear that Stephen Hopkins had no right to
+bring me here, innocent as I was of what it all stood for, and hard
+enough as it is to be married to a man whose first wife was of the
+gentry, and whose children that she left for my torment are like to her,
+headstrong and proud-stomached, and hating me, however I slave for them.
+And your father, Constantia Hopkins, has gone now, not content with
+bringing me here across that waste o' waters, and never is it likely
+will come back to me to look after that innocent babe that was born on
+the ocean and bears its name according, and came like the dove to the
+ark, bearing an olive branch across the deluge. But much your father
+cares for this, but has gone and left me, and it is no man's part to
+leave a weak woman to struggle alone to keep wild beasts and Indians
+from devouring her children; and so I tell you, and so I maintain. And
+never, never have I looked upon a scene so forsaken and unbearable as
+that gray woodland that the man who swore to cherish me has led me
+into."
+
+Constance quite well knew that this hysterical unreason in her
+stepmother would pass, and that it was not more worth heeding than the
+wind that whistled around the ship's stripped masts. Mistress Eliza had
+a vixenish temper, and a jealous one. She frequently lashed herself into
+a fury with one or another of the family for its object and felt the
+better for it, not regarding how it left the victim feeling.
+
+But though she knew this, Constance could not always act upon her
+knowledge, and disregard her. She was but a very young girl and now she
+was a very weary one, with every nerve quivering from tense anxiety in
+watching her father go into unknown danger.
+
+She sprang to her feet with a cry.
+
+"Oh, my father, my father! How dare you blame him, my patient, wise,
+forbearing father! Why did he bring you here, indeed! He--so fine, so
+noble, so hard-pressed with your tongue, Mistress Hopkins!--I will not
+hear you blame him. Oh, my father, my dear, dear, good father!" she
+sobbed, losing all sense of restraint in her grief.
+
+Suddenly on hearing this outburst, Mistress Hopkins, as is sometimes the
+way of such as she, became as self-controlled as she had, but a moment
+before, been beside herself. And in becoming quiet she became much more
+angry than she had been, and more vindictive.
+
+"You speak to me like this?--you dare to!" she said in a low, furious
+voice. "You will learn to your sorrow what it means to flout me. You
+will pay for this, Constantia Hopkins, and pay to the last penny, to
+your everlasting shame and misery."
+
+Constance was too frightened by this change, by this white fury, which
+she had never seen before in her stepmother, to answer; but before she
+could have answered, Doctor Fuller, who had strayed that way in time to
+hear the last of Dame Eliza's tirade, Constance's retort, and this final
+threat, took Constance by the arm and led her away.
+
+"Quiet, my dear, quiet and calm, you know! Don't let yourself forget
+what is due to your father's wife, to yourself, still more to your
+conscience," he warned her. "And remember that a soft answer turneth
+away wrath."
+
+"Oh, it doesn't, Doctor Fuller, indeed it doesn't!" sobbed Constance,
+utterly unstrung. "I've tried it, tried it again and again, and it only
+makes the wrath turn the harder upon me; it never turns it away! Indeed,
+indeed I've faithfully tried it."
+
+"It's a hard pilgrimage for you at times I fear, Constance, but never
+turn aside into wrong on your part," said the good doctor, gently.
+
+"Oh, I'm sorry I flared up, I am sorry I spoke angrily. But my father!
+To blame him when he is so patient, and has so much to endure! Must I
+beg his wife's pardon?" said Constance, humbly.
+
+Doctor Fuller concealed a smile. Sorry as he was for Constance, and
+indignant at her stepmother's unkindness, it amused him to note how
+completely in her thoughts Constance separated herself from the least
+connection with her.
+
+"I think it would be the better course, my dear, and I admire you for
+being the one to suggest it," he answered, with an encouraging pat on
+Constance's sleeve.
+
+"Well, I will. I mean to do what is right, and I will," Constance
+sighed. "But I truly think it will do no good," she added.
+
+"Nor I," Doctor Fuller agreed with her in his thoughts, but he took good
+care not to let this opinion reach his lips.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+The First Yuletide
+
+
+Constance had a tender conscience, quick to self-blame. She was unhappy
+if she could impute to herself a fault, ill at ease till she had done
+all that she could to repair wrong. Although her stepmother's dislike
+for her, still more her open expression of it, was cruelly unjust and
+prevented all possibility of love for her, still Constance deeply
+regretted having spoken to her with lack of respect.
+
+But when she made humble apology for the fault and begged Mrs. Hopkins's
+pardon with sweet sincerity, she was received in a manner that turned
+contrition into bitterness.
+
+Dame Eliza looked at her with a cold light in her steely blue eyes, and
+a scornful smile. Plainly she was too petty herself to understand
+generosity in others, and construed Constance's apology into a
+confession of fear of her.
+
+"Poor work spreading bad butter over a burnt crust," she commented.
+"There's no love lost between us, Constantia Hopkins; maybe none ever
+found, nor ever will be. I don't want your fair words, nor need you hope
+your father will not one day see you, and that sullen brother of yours,
+as do I. So waste no breath trying to get around me. Damaris is
+fretting; look after her."
+
+Poor Constance! She had been so honestly sorry for having been angry and
+having given vent to it, had gone to her stepmother with such sincerity,
+hoping against hope, for the unnumbered time, that she could make their
+relation pleasanter! It was not possible to help feeling a violent
+reaction from this reception, to keep her scorned sweetness from turning
+to bitterness in her heart.
+
+She told the story to Giles, and it made him furiously angry.
+
+"You young ninny to humble yourself to her," he cried, with flashing
+eyes. "Will you never learn to expect nothing but injustice from her? It
+isn't what we do, or say; it is jealousy. She will not let our father
+love us, she hates the children of our mother, and hates our mother's
+memory, that she was in every way Mistress Eliza's superior, as she
+guesses, knowing that she was better born, better bred, and surely
+better in character. I remember our mother, Con, if not clearly. I'm
+sorry you have not even so much recollection of her. You are like her,
+and may be thankful for it. I could trounce you for crawling to Mistress
+Hopkins! Learn your lesson for all time, and no more apologies! Con, I
+shall not stand it! No matter how it goes with this colony, I shall go
+back to England. I will not stay to be put upon, to see my father turned
+from me."
+
+"Oh, Giles, that could never be!" cried Constance. "Father will never
+turn from us."
+
+"I did not say from _us_; I said from _me_," retorted Giles. "You are
+different, a girl, and--and like Mother, and--several other reasons. But
+I often see that Father is not sure whether he shall approve me or not.
+It will not be so long till I am twenty-one, then I shall get out of
+reach of these things."
+
+Constance's troubled face brightened. To her natural hopefulness Giles's
+twenty-first birthday was far enough away to allow a great deal of good
+to come before it.
+
+"Oh, twenty-one, Giles! You'll be prospering and happy here before
+that," she cried.
+
+"But I must tell no more of troubles with my stepmother to Giles," she
+added mentally. "It will never do to pile fuel on his smouldering
+fires!"
+
+The next day when Constance was helping Mistress Hopkins with her
+mending, she noticed the oilskin-wrapped packet that her father had left
+with his wife for safe keeping, tossed carelessly upon the hammock which
+swung from the side of the berth which she and her stepmother shared,
+the bed devised by ingenuity for little Damaris.
+
+"Is not that packet in Damaris's hammock Father's packet of valuable
+papers?" Constance asked. "Is there not a risk in letting them lie
+about, so highly as he prizes them?"
+
+She made the suggestion timidly, for Dame Eliza did not take kindly to
+hints of this nature. To her surprise her stepmother received her remark
+not merely pleasantly, but almost eagerly, quick with self-reproach.
+
+"Indeed thou art right, Constantia, and I am wrong to leave it for an
+instant outside the strong chest, where I shall put it under lock and
+key," she said, nevertheless not moving to rescue it. "I have carried
+it tied around my neck by a silken cord and hidden in my bosom till this
+hour past. I dropped it there when I was trying to mend Damaris's
+hammock. Thanks to you for reminding me of it. What can ail that hammock
+defies me! I have tried in all ways to strengthen it, but it sags. Some
+night the child will take a bad fall from it. Try you what you can make
+of it, Constantia."
+
+"I am not skilful, Stepmother," smiled Constance. "Giles is just outside
+studying the chart of our voyage hither. Let me call him to repair the
+hammock. We would not have you fall at night and crack the pretty golden
+pate, would we, Damaris?" The child shook her "golden pate" hard.
+
+"That you would not, Connie, for you are good, good to me!" she cried.
+
+Mistress Hopkins looked on the little girl with somewhat of softening of
+her stern lips, yet she felt called upon to reprimand this lightness of
+speech.
+
+"Not 'Connie,' Damaris, as thou hast been often enough told. We do not
+hold with the ungodly manner of nicknames. Thy sister is Constantia, and
+so must thou call her. And you must not put into the child's head
+notions of its being pretty, Constantia. Beauty is a snare of the devil,
+and vanity is his weapon to ensnare the soul. Do not let me hear you
+again speak to a child of mine of her pretty golden pate. As to the
+hammock if you choose to call your brother to repair it for his
+half-sister I have nothing against the plan."
+
+Constance jumped up and ran out of the cabin.
+
+"Giles, Giles, will you come to try what you can do with Damaris's
+sleeping hammock?" she called.
+
+"What's wrong with it?" demanded Giles, rising reluctantly, but
+following Constance, nevertheless.
+
+"I don't know, but Mistress Hopkins says she cannot repair it and that
+the child is like to fall with its breaking some night," said Constance,
+entering again the small, close cabin of the women. "Here is Giles,
+Mistress Hopkins; he will try what he can do," she added.
+
+Giles examined the hammock in silence, bade Constance bring him cord,
+and at last let it swing back into place, and straightened himself. He
+had been bent over the canvas with it drawn forward against his breast.
+
+"I see nothing the matter with the hammock except a looseness of its
+cords, and perhaps weakness of one where I put in the new one. You could
+have mended it, Con," he said, ungraciously, and sensitive Constance
+flushed at the implication that her stepmother had not required his
+help, for she never could endure anything like a disagreeable atmosphere
+around her.
+
+"Giles says 'Con,'" observed Damaris, justifying herself for the use of
+nicknames.
+
+"Giles does many things that we do not approve; let us hope he will not
+lead his young sister and brother into evil ways," returned her mother,
+sourly. "But thou shouldst thank him when he does thee a service, not to
+be deficient on thy side in virtue."
+
+"You know Giles doesn't need thanks for what he does for small people,
+don't you, Hop-o-my-Thumb?" Giles said and departed, successful in both
+his aims, in pleasing the child by his name for her, and displeasing her
+mother.
+
+Two hours later Constance was sitting rolled up in heavy woollens like a
+cocoon well forward of the main mast, in a sheltered nook, reading to
+Rose Standish, who was also wrapped to her chin, and who when she was in
+the open, seemed to find relief from the oppression that made breathing
+so hard a matter to her.
+
+Mistress Hopkins came toward them in furious haste, her mouth open as if
+she were panting, one hand pressed against her breast.
+
+"Constantia, confess, confess, and do not try to shield thy wicked
+brother!" she cried.
+
+[Illustration: "'Constantia, confess--confess and do not try to shield
+thy wicked brother'"]
+
+"Confess! My wicked brother? Do you mean the baby, for you cannot mean
+Giles?" Constance said, springing to her feet.
+
+"That lamb of seven weeks! Indeed, you impudent girl, I mean no such
+thing, as well you know, but that dreadful, sin-enslaved, criminal,
+Gile----"
+
+"Hush!" cried Constance, "I will not hear you!"
+
+There was a fire in her eyes that made even Mistress Eliza halt in her
+speech.
+
+"Giles Hopkins has stolen your father's packet, the packet of papers
+which you saw in the hammock and reminded me to put away," she said,
+more quietly. "I shall leave him to be dealt with by your father who
+must soon return. But you, you! Can you clear yourself? Did you help him
+steal it? Nay, did you call him in for this purpose, warning him that he
+should find the packet there, and to take it? Is this a plan between
+you? For ever have I said that there was that in you two that curdled my
+blood with fear for you of what you should become. Not like your godly
+father are you two. From elsewhere have you drawn the blood that poisons
+you. Confess and I will ask your father to spare you."
+
+Constance stood with her thick wrappings falling from her as she threw
+up her hands in dumb appeal against this unbearable thing. She was white
+as the dead, but her blue eyes burned black in the whiteness, full of
+intense life.
+
+"Mistress Hopkins, oh, Mistress Hopkins, consider!" begged Rose
+Standish, also rising in great distress. "Think what it is that you are
+saying, and to whom! You cannot knowingly accuse this dear girl of
+connivance in a theft! You cannot accuse Giles of committing it! Why,
+Captain Myles is fonder of the lad than of any other in our company!
+Giles is upright and true, he says, and fearless. Pray, pray, take
+back these fearful words! You do not mean them, and when you will long
+to disown them they will cling to you and not forsake you, as does our
+mad injustice, to our lasting sorrow. What can be more foreign to our
+calling than harsh judgments, and angry accusations?"
+
+"I am not speaking rashly, Mistress Standish," insisted Dame Eliza.
+
+"Not yet three hours gone Constantia saw lying in Damaris's hammock a
+valuable packet of papers, left me in trust by her father. I asked her
+to mend the hammock, which was in disorder, but she called her brother
+to do the simple task. No one else hath entered the cabin at my end of
+it since. The packet is gone. Would you have more proof? Could there be
+more proof, unless you saw the theft committed, which is manifestly
+impossible?"
+
+"But why, good mistress, should the boy and girl steal these papers?
+What reason would there be for them to disturb their father's property?"
+asked Rose Standish.
+
+"I have heard my uncle say, who is a barrister at home, that one must
+search for the motive of a crime if it is to be established." She
+glanced with a slight smile at Constance's stony face, who neither
+looked at her, nor smiled, but stood gazing in wide-eyed horror at her
+stepmother.
+
+"Precisely!" triumphed Dame Eliza. "Two motives are clear, Mistress
+Standish, to those who are not too blinded by prejudice to see. Those
+Hopkins girl and boy hate me, fear and grudge my influence with their
+father. Would they not like to weaken it by the loss of papers entrusted
+to me, a loss that he would resent on his return? There is one motive.
+As to the other: you do not know, but I do, and so did they, that part
+of these papers related to an inheritance in England, from which they
+would want their half-brother and sister excluded. Needs it more?"
+
+"Yes, yes, yes!" cried Rose Standish, as Constance groaned. "To any one
+knowing Giles and Constance this is no more than if you said Fee, fi,
+fo, fum! They plotting to weaken you with their father! They stealing to
+keep the children from a share in their inheritance, so generous as they
+are, so good to the little ones! Fie, Mistress Hopkins! It is a grievous
+sin, you who are so strict in small matters, a grievous sin thus to
+judge another, still more those to whom you owe the obligation of one
+who has taken their dead mother's place."
+
+Constance began to tremble, and to struggle to speak. What she would
+have said, or what would have come of it, cannot be known, for at that
+moment the Billington boys, John and Francis, came hurtling down upon
+them, shouting:
+
+"The shallop, the shallop is back! It is almost upon us on the other
+side. Come see, come see! Dad is back, and all the rest, unless the
+savages have killed some of them," Francis added the final words in
+solo.
+
+The present trouble must be laid aside for the great business in hand of
+welcome.
+
+Poor Constance turned in a frozen way to follow Rose and her stepmother
+to the other side of the ship.
+
+Her father--her dear, dear, longed-for father--was come back. He might
+be bringing them news of a favoured site where they would go to begin
+their new home.
+
+At last they were to step upon land again, to live in some degree the
+life they knew of household task and tilling, walking the woods, drawing
+water, building fires--the life so long postponed, for which they all
+thirsted.
+
+But if she and Giles were to meet their father accused of theft! If they
+should see in those grave, kind, wise eyes a shadow of a doubt of his
+eldest children! Constance felt that she dared not see him come if such
+a thing were so much as possible.
+
+But when the shallop was made fast beside the _Mayflower_ and Constance
+saw her father boarding the ship among the others of the returning
+expedition, and she met the glad light in his eyes resting upon her, all
+fear was swallowed up in immense relief and joy.
+
+With a low cry she sprang to meet him and fell sobbing on his shoulder,
+forgetful of the stern on-lookers who would condemn such display of
+feeling.
+
+"Oh, father, father, if you had never come back!" she murmured.
+
+"But I have come, daughter!" Stephen Hopkins reminded her. "Surely you
+are not weeping that I have come! We have great things to tell you,
+attacks by savages, some hardships, but we have brought grain which we
+found hidden by the Indians, and we have found the right place to
+establish our dwelling."
+
+Constance raised her head and dried her eyes, still shaken by sobs. Her
+father looked keenly at the pale, drawn face, and knew that something
+more than ordinary lay behind the overwhelming emotion with which she
+had received him.
+
+"Poor child, poor motherless child!" he thought, and the pity of that
+moment went far in influencing his subsequent treatment of Constance
+when he learned what had ailed her on his arrival.
+
+Now he patted her shoulder and turned toward the middle of the ship's
+forward deck where his comrades of the expedition were relating their
+experiences, and displaying their trophies.
+
+Golden corn lay on the deck, spread upon a cloth, and the pilgrims who
+had remained with the ship were handling it as they listened to John
+Alden, who was made the narrator of this first report, having a ready
+tongue.
+
+"We found a pond of fresh water," he was saying, "and not far from it
+cleared ground with the stubble of a gathered harvest upon it. Judge
+whether or not the sight was pleasant to us, as promising of fertile
+lands when the forests were hewn. And we came upon planks of wood that
+had lately been a house, and a kettle, and heaps of sand, with handmarks
+upon it, not long since made, where the sand had been piled and pressed
+down, into which, digging rapidly, we penetrated and found the corn you
+see here. The part of it we took, but the rest we once more covered and
+left it. And see ye, brethren, there have we the seed for our own next
+season's harvest, the which we were in such doubt of obtaining from home
+in time. It is a story for night, when we have leisure, to tell you of
+how we saw a few men and a dog, who ran from us, and we pursuing, hoping
+to speak to them, but they escaped us. And how later on, we saw savages
+cutting up great fish of tremendous size along the coast, and how we
+were attacked by another savage band one night. But all this we reserve
+for another telling. We came at last into a harbour and found it deep
+enough for the _Mayflower_ on our sounding it. And landing we marched
+into the land and found fields, and brooks, and on the whole that it
+was a fit country for our beginning. For the rest it is as you shall
+decide in consultation, but of our party we are all in accord to urge
+you to accept this spot and hasten to take possession of it as the
+winter cometh on apace."
+
+"Let us thank God for that He hath led us into a land of corn, and
+guided us for so many weary days, over so many dreary miles," said
+William Brewster, the elder of the pilgrims.
+
+John Carver, who was chosen on the _Mayflower_ as their governor, arose
+and out of a full heart thanked God for His mercies, as Elder Brewster
+had recommended.
+
+The _Mayflower_ weighed anchor in the morning to carry her brave freight
+to their new home. The wind set hard against her, and it was the second
+day before she entered Plymouth harbour, as they resolved to name their
+new habitation, a name already bestowed by Captain Smith, and the name
+of their final port of embarkation in England.
+
+No sign of life met them as the pilgrims disembarked. Silently, with
+full realization of what lay before them, and how fraught with
+significance this beginning was, the pilgrims passed from the ship that
+had so long been their home, and set foot--men, women, and
+children--upon the soil of America.
+
+A deep murmur arose when the last person was landed, and it happened
+that Constance Hopkins was the last to step from the boat to the rock
+on which the landing was made, and to jump light-heartedly to the sand,
+amid the tall, dried weeds that waved on the shore.
+
+"Praise God from whom all blessings flow," said Elder Brewster,
+solemnly. The pilgrim band of colonists sang the doxology with bowed
+heads.
+
+Three days later the shores of the harbour echoed to the ring of axes,
+the sound of hammers, as the first house was begun, the community house,
+destined to shelter many families and to store their goods.
+
+"Merry Christmas, Father!" said Constance, coming up to her father in
+the cold of the early bleak December morning.
+
+"S-s-sh!" warned her father, finger upon lip. "Do you not know, my
+daughter, that the keeping of Christmas is abjured by us as savouring of
+popery, and that to wish one merry at yuletide would be reckoned as
+unrighteousness among us?"
+
+"Ah, but Father, you do not think so! You do not go with all these
+opinions, and can it be wrong to be merry on the day that gladdened the
+world?" Constance pleaded.
+
+"Not wrong, but praiseworthy, to be merry under our present condition,
+to my way of thinking," said Stephen Hopkins, glancing around at the
+drab emptiness of land and sky and harbour beyond. "Nay, child, I do
+not think it wrong to rejoice at Christmas, nor do I hold with the
+severity of most of our people, but because I believe that it will be
+good to begin anew in a land that is not oppressed, nor torn by
+king-made wars and sins, I have cast my lot, as has Myles Standish, who
+is of one mind with me, among this Plymouth band, and we must conform
+to custom. So wish me Merry Christmas, if you will, but let none hear
+you, and we will keep our heresies to ourselves."
+
+"Yet the first house in the New World is begun to-day!" laughed
+Constance. "We are getting a Christmas gift."
+
+"A happy portent to begin our common home on the day when the Prince of
+Peace came to dwell on earth! Let us hope it will bring us peace," said
+her father.
+
+"Peace!" cried Constance, with a swift and terrified remembrance of the
+accusation which her stepmother had threatened bringing against herself
+and Giles.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+The New Year in the New Land
+
+
+The new year came in bringing with it a driving storm from the Atlantic.
+The hoary pines threw up their rugged branches as if appealing to the
+heavens for mercy on the women and little children without shelter on
+the desolate coast. But the gray heavens did not relent; they poured
+snow and sleet down upon the infant colony, coating the creaking pines
+with ice that bent them low, and checked their intercession.
+
+As fast as willing hands could work, taking it in continuous shifts by
+night as well as day, the community house went up. But the storm was
+upon the colonists before the shelter was ready for them, and even when
+the roof covered them, the cold laughed it to scorn, entering to wreak
+its will upon them.
+
+Sickness seized one after another of the pilgrim band, men and women
+alike, and the little children fought croup and pneumonia, nursed by
+women hardly more fit for the task than were the little victims.
+
+Rose Standish, already weakened by the suffering of the voyage, was
+among the first to be prostrated. She coughed ceaselessly though each
+violent breath wracked her frail body with pain. A bright colour burned
+in her cheeks, her beautiful eyes were clear and dilated, she smiled
+hopefully when her companions in exile and suffering spoke to her, and
+assured them that she was "much, much better," speaking pantingly, by an
+effort.
+
+The discouragement with which she had looked upon the coast when the
+_Mayflower_ arrived, gave place to hope in her. She spoke confidently of
+"next spring," of the "house Captain Myles would build her," of all that
+she should do "when warm weather came."
+
+Constance, to whom she most confided her plans, often turned away to
+hide her tears. She knew that Doctor Fuller and the more experienced
+women thought that for this English rose there would be no springtime
+upon earth.
+
+Constance had other troubles to bear as well as the hardships and
+sorrows common to the sorely beset community. She seemed, to herself,
+hardly to be a young girl, so heavily weighted was she with the burden
+that she carried. She wondered to remember that if she had stayed in
+England she should have been laughing and singing like other girls of
+her age, skating now on the Sherbourne, if it were frozen over, as it
+well might be. Perhaps she might be dancing, if she were visiting her
+cousins in Warwickshire, her own birthplace, for the cousins were merry
+girls, and like all of Constance's mother's family, quite free from
+puritanical ideas, brought up in the English Church, so not debarred
+from the dance.
+
+Constance had no heart to regret her loss of youthful happiness; she was
+so far aloof from it, so sad, that she could not rise to the level of
+feeling its charm. Dame Eliza Hopkins had carried out her threat, had
+accused Giles of the theft of his father's papers, and Constance of
+being party to his wrong-doing, if not actually its instigator.
+
+It had only happened that morning; Constance heavily awaited
+developments. She jumped guiltily when she heard her father's voice
+speaking her name, and felt his hand upon her shoulder.
+
+She faced him, white and shaken, to meet his troubled eyes intently
+fastened upon her.
+
+"The storm is bad, Constance, but it is not warm within. Put on your
+coat and come with me. I must speak with you," he said.
+
+In silence Constance obeyed him. Pulling over her head a hood that, like
+a deep cowl, was attached to her coat, she followed her father into the
+storm, and walked beside him toward the marshy shore whither, without
+speaking to her, he strode.
+
+Arrived at the sedgy ocean line he halted, and turned upon her.
+
+"Constance," he began, sternly, "my wife tells me that valuable papers
+which I entrusted to her keeping have disappeared. She tells me further
+that she had dropped them--carelessly, as I have told her--into the
+hammock in which your little sister slept and that you saw them there,
+commenting upon it; that you soon called Giles to set right some slight
+matter in the hammock; and that shortly after you and he had left her,
+she discovered her loss. What do you know of this? Tell me all that you
+know, and tell me the truth."
+
+Constance's fear left her at this word. Throwing up her head she looked
+her father in the eyes, nearly on a level with her own as she stood upon
+a sandy hummock. "It needs not telling me to speak the truth, Father. I
+am your daughter and my mother's daughter; it runs not in my blood to
+lie," she said.
+
+Stephen Hopkins touched her arm lightly, a look of relief upon his face.
+
+"Thank you for that reminder, my girl," he said. "It is true, and Giles
+is of the same strain. Know you aught of this misfortune?"
+
+"Nothing, Father," said Constance. "And because I know nothing whatever
+about it, in answering you I have told you all that I have to tell."
+
+"And Giles----" began her father, but stopped.
+
+"Nor Giles," Constance repeated, amending his beginning. "Giles is
+headstrong, Father, and I fear for him often, but you know that he is
+honourable, truth-telling. Would your son _steal_ from you?"
+
+"But your stepmother says no one entered the cabin after you had left it
+before she discovered her loss," insisted Stephen Hopkins. "What am I to
+think? What do you think, Constance?"
+
+"I think that there is an explanation we do not know. I think that my
+stepmother hates Giles and me, especially him, as he has the first claim
+to the inheritance that she would have for her own children. I think
+that she has seized this opportunity to poison you against us," said
+Constance, with spirited daring. "Oh, Father, dear, dear Father, do not
+let her do this thing!"
+
+"Nay, child, you are unjust," said her father, gently. "I confess to
+Mistress Eliza's jealousy of you, and that there is not great love for
+you in her. But, Constance, do you love her, you or Giles? And that she
+is not so base as you suspect is shown by the fact that she has delayed
+until to-day to tell me of this loss, dreading, as she hath told me, to
+put you wrong in my eyes. Fie for shame, Constance, to suspect her of
+such outrageous wickedness, she who is, after all, a good woman, as she
+sees goodness."
+
+"Father, if the packet were lost through her carelessness, would you not
+blame her? Is it not likely that she would shield herself at our cost,
+even if she would not be glad to lower us, as I am sure she would be?"
+persisted Constance.
+
+"Well, well, this is idle talk!" Stephen Hopkins said, impatiently. "The
+truth must be sifted out, and suspicions are wrong, as well as useless.
+One word before I go to Giles. Upon your sacred honour, Constantia
+Hopkins, and by your mother's memory, can you assure me that you know
+absolutely nothing of the loss of this packet of papers?"
+
+"Upon my honour and by my mother's memory, I swear that I do not know so
+much as that the packet is lost, except as Mistress Hopkins says that it
+is," said Constance. Then with a swift change of tone she begged:
+
+"Oh, Father, Father, when you go to Giles, be careful, be kind, I pray
+you! Giles is unhappy. He is ill content under the injustice we both
+bear, but I with a girl's greater submission. He is ready to break all
+bounds and he will do so if he feels that you do not trust him, listen
+to his enemy's tales against him. Please, please, dear Father, be gentle
+with Giles. He loves you as well as I do, but where your distrust of me
+would kill me, because I love you, Giles's love for you will turn to
+bitterness, if you let him feel that you are half lost to him."
+
+"Nonsense, Constance," said her father, though kindly, "Giles is a boy
+and must be dealt with firmly. It will never do to coddle him, to give
+him his head. You are a girl, sensitive and easily wounded. A boy is
+another matter. I will not have him setting up his will against mine,
+nor opposing discipline for his good. It is for him to clear himself of
+what looks ill, not resent our seeing the looks of it."
+
+Constance almost wrung her hands.
+
+"Oh, Father, Father, do not go to Giles in that way! Sorrow will come of
+it. Think how you would feel to be thus suspected! A boy is not less
+sensitive than a girl; I fear he is more sensitive in his honour than
+are we. Oh, I am but a girl, but I know that I am right about Giles. I
+think we are given to understand as no man can how to deal with a proud,
+sullen boy like Giles, because God means us to be the mothers of boys
+some day! Be kind to Giles, dear Father; let him see that you trust him,
+as indeed, indeed you may!"
+
+"Let us go back out of the storm to such shelter as we have, Constance,"
+said Stephen Hopkins, smiling with masculine toleration for a foolish
+girl. "I have accepted your solemn assurance that you are ignorant of
+this theft, if theft it be. Be satisfied that I have done this, and
+leave me to deal with my son as I see fit. I will not be unjust to him,
+but he must meet me respectfully, submissively, and answer to the
+evidence against him. I have not been pleased of late with Giles's
+ill-concealed resistance."
+
+This time Constance did wring her hands, as she followed her father,
+close behind him. She attempted no further remonstrance, knowing that to
+do so would be not only to harm Giles's cause, but to arouse her
+father's quick anger against herself. But as she walked with bent head
+through the cutting, beating storm, she wondered why Giles should not be
+resistant to his life, and her heart ached with pitying apprehension for
+her brother.
+
+All that long day of darkening storm and anxiety Constance did not see
+Giles. That signified nothing, however, for Giles was at work with the
+men making winter preparations which could not be deferred, albeit the
+winter was already upon them, while Constance was occupied with the
+nursing for which the daily increase of sickness made more hands
+required than were able to perform it.
+
+Humility Cooper was dangerously ill, burning with fever, struggling for
+breath. Constance was fond of the little maid who seemed so childish
+beside her, and gladly volunteered to go again into the storm to fetch
+her the fresh water for which she implored.
+
+At the well which had been dug, and over which a pump from the ship had
+been placed and made effective, Constance came upon Giles, marching up
+and down impatiently, and with him was John Billington, his chosen
+comrade, the most unruly of all the younger pilgrims.
+
+"Well, at last, Con!" exclaimed Giles. "I've been here above an hour. I
+thought to meet you here. What has kept you so long?"
+
+"Why, Giles, I could not know that you were awaiting me," said
+Constance, reasonably. "Oh, they are so ill, our poor friends yonder! I
+am sure many of them will go on a longer pilgrimage and never see this
+colony established."
+
+"Lucky they!" said Giles, bitterly. "Why should they want to? Nobody
+wants to die, and of course I am sorry for them, but better be dead than
+alive here--if it is to be called alive!"
+
+"Oh, dear Giles, do you hate it so?" sighed Constance. "Nothing is
+wrong?" she added, glancing at John Billington, longing to ask her
+question more directly, but not wishing to betray to him the trouble
+upon her mind.
+
+"Never mind talking before John," said Giles, catching the glance. "He
+knows all about it; I have told him. Have you cleared yourself, Sis, or
+are you also under suspicion?"
+
+"Oh, dear Giles," said Constance again. "You are not--Didn't Father
+believe?--Isn't it all right?" She groped for the least offensive form
+for her question.
+
+"I don't know whether or not Father believed that I am a thief," burst
+out Giles, furiously. "Nor a whit do I care. I told him the word of a
+man of honour was enough, and I gave him mine that I knew nothing about
+his wife's lies. I told him it seemed to me clear enough that she had
+made away with the papers herself, to defraud us. And I told him I had
+no proof of my innocence to give him, but it was not necessary. I told
+him I wouldn't go into it further; that it had to end right there, that
+I was not called upon to accept, nor would I submit to such a rank
+insult from any man, and that his being my father made it worse, not
+better."
+
+"Oh, Giles, what did he say? Oh, Giles, what a misfortune!" cried
+Constance, clasping her hands.
+
+"What did he say?" echoed Giles. "What do you think would be said when
+two such tempers as my father's and mine clash? For, mark you, Con,
+Stephen Hopkins would not stoop to vindicate himself from the charge of
+stealing. _Stealing_, remember, not a crime worthy of a gentleman."
+
+"Oh, Giles, what crime is worthy of a gentleman?" Constance grieved. "Is
+there any dignity in sin, and any justice in varnishing some sins with
+the gloss of custom? But indeed, indeed, it is cruelly hard on you,
+Giles dear. Tell me what happened."
+
+"The only thing that could happen. My father forgets that I am not a
+child. He flew into that madness of anger that we know him capable of,
+railed at me for my impertinence, insisted on my proving myself innocent
+of this charge, and declared that until I did, with full apology for the
+way I had received him, I was no son of his. So--Good day, Mistress
+Constantia Hopkins, I hope that you are well? I once had a sister that
+was like you, but sister have I none now, since I am not the son of my
+reputed father," said Giles, with a sneer and a deep bow.
+
+Constance was in despair. The bitter mockery in Giles's young face, the
+bleak unhappiness in his eyes stabbed her heart. She knew him too well
+to doubt that this mood was dangerous.
+
+"My own dear brother!" she cried, throwing her arms around him. "Oh,
+don't steel yourself so bitterly! Father loves you so much that he is
+stern with you, but it will all come right; it must, once this hot
+anger that you both share is past. You are too alike, that is all! Beg
+his pardon, Giles, but repeat that your word is enough to prove you
+innocent of the accusation. Father will see that, and yield you that,
+when you have met him halfway by an apology for hard words."
+
+"See here, Con, why should I do that?" demanded Giles. "Is there
+anything in this desolation that I should want to stay here? I've had
+enough of Puritans; and Eliza is one of the strongest of them. Except
+for your sake, little Sis, why should I stay? And I will one day return
+for you. No, no, Con; I will sail for England when the ship returns, and
+make my own fortune, somewhere, somehow."
+
+"Dame Eliza is not what she is because she is a Puritan. She is what she
+is because she is Dame Eliza. Think of the others whom we all love and
+would fain be like," Constance reminded him. "We must all be true to the
+enterprise we have undertaken, and----"
+
+"Look here, sweet Con," John Billington interrupted her. "There is
+nothing to hold Giles to this dreary enterprise, nor to hold me, either.
+I am not in like plight to him. If any one accused me, suspected me as
+your father has him, and still more my father did it, I'd let these east
+winds blow over the space I'd have filled in this settlement. I'm for
+adventure as it is, though my father cares little what Francis and I
+do, being a reckless, daring man who surely belongs not in this
+psalm-singing company. Giles and I will strike out into the wilderness
+and try our fortunes. We will try the savages. They can be no worse than
+white men, nor half as outrageous as your stepmother. Why, Con, how can
+you want your brother tamely to sit down under such an insult? No man
+should be called upon to prove himself honest! Giles must be off. Let
+your father find out for himself who is to blame for the loss of the
+papers, and repent too late for lending ear to his wife's story."
+
+Constance stared for a moment at John, realizing how every word he said
+found a ready echo in Giles's burning heart, how potent would be this
+unruly boy's influence to draw her brother after him, now, when Giles
+was wounded in his two strongest feelings--his pride of honour, his love
+for his father--and she prayed in her heart for inspiration to deal
+wisely with this difficult situation.
+
+Suddenly the inspiration came to her. She found it in John's last words.
+
+"Nay, but Jack!" she cried, using Francis's name for his brother,
+disapproved by the elders who would have none of nicknames. "If needs be
+that Giles must leave this settlement, if he cannot be happy here, let
+him at least bide till he has cleared his name of a foul stain, for his
+honour's sake, for the sake of his dead mother, for my sake, who must
+abide here and cannot escape, being but a girl, young and helpless. Is
+it right that I should be pointed out till I am old as the sister of him
+who was accused of a great wrong and, cowardlike, ran away because he
+could not clear himself, nor meet the shame, and so admitted his guilt?
+No! Rather do you, John Billington, instead of urging him to run away,
+bend all your wit--of which you do not lack plenty!--to the ferreting
+out of this mystery. That would be the manly course, the kind course to
+me, and you have always called yourself my friend. Then prove it! Help
+my brother to clear himself and never say one more word to urge him away
+till he can go with a stainless name. Our father does not doubt Giles,
+of that I am certain. He is sore beset, and is a choleric man. What can
+any man do when his children are on the one hand, and his wife on the
+other? Be patient with our father, Giles, but in any case do not go away
+till this is cleared."
+
+"She talks like a lawyer!" cried John Billington with his boisterous
+laugh "Like----what was that play I once saw before I got, or Father
+got into this serious business of being a Puritan? Wrote by a fellow
+called Shakespeare? Ah, I have it! Merchant of Venison! In that the girl
+turns lawyer and cozzens the Jew. Connie is another pleader like that
+one. Well, what say you, Giles, my friend? Strikes me she is right."
+
+"It is not badly thought of, Constance," admitted Giles. "But can it be
+done? For if Mistress Hopkins has had a hand in spiriting away those
+papers for her own advantage and my undoing, then would it be hard to
+prove. What say you?"
+
+"Oh, no, no, no!" cried Constance. "Truth is mighty, good is stronger
+than evil! Patience, Giles, patience for a while, and let us three bind
+ourselves to clear our good name. Will you, will you promise, my
+brother? And John?"
+
+"Well, then, yes," said Giles, reluctantly; and Constance clasped her
+hands with a cry of joy. "For a time I will stay and see what can be
+done, but not for long. Mark you, Con, I do not promise long to abide in
+this unbearable life of mine."
+
+"Sure will I promise, Connie," assented John. "Why should I go? I would
+not go without Giles, and it was not for my sake first we were going."
+
+"Giles, dear Giles, thank you, thank you!" cried Constance. "I could not
+have borne it had you not yielded. Think of me thus left and be glad
+that you are willing to stand by your one own sister, Giles. And let us
+hope that in staying we shall come upon better days. Now I must take
+this ewer of water to poor Humility who is burned and miserable with
+thirst and pain. She will think I am never coming to relieve her! Oh,
+boys, it seems almost wicked to think of our good names, of any of our
+little trials, when half our company is so stricken!"
+
+"You are a good girl, Connie," said John Billington, awkwardly helping
+Constance to assume her pitcher, his sympathy betrayed by his
+awkwardness. "I hope you are not chilled standing here so long with us."
+
+"No, not I!" said Constance, bravely. "The New Year, and the New World
+are teaching me not to mind cold which must be long borne before the
+year grows old. They are teaching me much else, dear lads. So good-bye,
+and bless you!"
+
+"'Twould have been downright contemptible to have deserted her," said
+Giles and John in the same breath, and they laughed as they watched her
+depart.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+Stout Hearts and Sad Ones
+
+
+Constance turned away from the boys feeling that, till the trouble
+hanging over Giles was settled, waking or sleeping she could think of
+nothing else. When she reached the community house she forgot it, nor
+did it come to her as more than a deeper shadow on the universal
+darkness for weeks.
+
+She found that during her brief absence Edward Tilley's wife had died;
+she had known that she was desperately ill, but the end had come
+suddenly. Edward Tilley himself was almost through with his struggle,
+and this would leave Humility, herself a very sick child, quite alone,
+for she had come in her cousins' care. Constance bent over her to give
+her the cooling water which she had fetched her.
+
+"Elizabeth and I are alike now," whispered Humility, looking up at
+Constance with eyes dry of tears, but full of misery. "Cousin John
+Tilley was her father, and Cousin Edward and his wife but my guardians,
+yet they were all I had." Elizabeth Tilley had been orphaned two weeks
+before, and now John Tilley's brother, following him, would leave
+Humility Cooper, as she said, bereft as was Elizabeth.
+
+"Not all you had, dear Humility," Constance whispered in her ear, afraid
+to speak aloud for there were in the room many sick whom they might
+disturb.
+
+"My father will protect you, unless there is someone whom you would
+liefer have, and we will be sisters and meet the spring with hope and
+love for each other, together."
+
+"They will send for me to come home to England, my other cousins, of
+that I am sure. Elizabeth has no one on her side to claim her. But
+England is far, far away, and I am more like to join my cousins, John
+and Edward Tilley and their kind, dear wives where they are now than to
+live to make that fearful voyage again," moaned Humility, turning away
+her head despairingly.
+
+"Follow John and Edward Tilley! Yes, but not for many a day!" Constance
+reassured her, shaking up the girl's pillow, one deft arm beneath her
+head to raise it.
+
+"Sleep, Humility dear, and do not think. Or rather think of how sweetly
+the wind will blow through the pines when the spring sunshine calls you
+out into it, and we go, you and I, to seek what new flowers we may find
+in the New World."
+
+"No, no," Humility moved her head on the pillow in negation. "I will be
+good, Constance; I will not murmur. I will remember that I lie here in
+God's hand; but, oh Constance, I cannot think of pleasant things, I
+cannot hope. I will be patient, but I cannot hope. Dear, dear, sweet
+Constance, you are like my mother, and yet we are almost one age. What
+should we all do without you, Constance?"
+
+Constance turned away to meet Doctor Fuller's grave gaze looking down
+upon her. "I echo Humility's question, Constance Hopkins: What should we
+all do without you? What a blessed thing has come to you thus to comfort
+and help these pilgrims, who are sore stricken! Come with me a moment; I
+have something to say to you."
+
+Constance followed this beloved physician into the kitchen where her
+stepmother was busy preparing broth, her _Mayflower_ baby, Oceanus, tied
+in a chair on a pillow, Damaris sitting on the floor beside him in
+unnatural quiet.
+
+Dame Eliza looked up as the doctor and Constance entered, but instantly
+dropped her eyes, a dull red mounting in her face.
+
+She knew that the girl was ministering to the dying with skill and
+sympathy far beyond her years, and she remembered the patient sweetness
+with which Constance, during the voyage over, forgiving her injustice,
+had ministered to her when she was suffering--had tenderly cared for
+little Damaris.
+
+Dame Eliza had the grace to feel a passing shame, though not enough to
+move her to repentance, to reparation.
+
+"Constance," Doctor Fuller said, "I am going to lay upon you a charge
+too heavy for your youth, but unescapable. You know how many of us have
+been laid to rest out yonder, pilgrims indeed, their pilgrimage over.
+Many more are to follow them. Mistress Standish among the first, but
+there are many whose end I see at hand. I fear the spring will find us a
+small colony, but those who remain must make up in courage for those who
+have left them. I want you to undertake to be my right hand. Priscilla
+Mullins hath already lost her mother, and her father and her brother
+will not see the spring. Yet she keeps her steady heart. She will
+prepare me such remedies as I can command here. Truth to tell, the
+supply I brought with me is running low; I did not allow for the need of
+so many of one kind. Priscilla is reliable; steady in purpose, memory,
+and hand. She will see to the remedies. But you, brave Constance, will
+you be my medical student, visiting my patients, lingering to see that
+my orders are carried out, nursing, sustaining? In a word do what you
+have already done since we landed, but on a greater scale, as an
+established duty?"
+
+"If I can," said Constance, simply.
+
+"You can; there is no one else that I can count upon. The older men
+among us are dying, leaving the affairs of the colony to be carried on
+by the young ones. In like manner I must call upon so young a girl as
+you to be my assistant. The older women are doing, and must do, still
+more important work in preparing the nourishment on which these lives
+depend and which the young ones are not proficient to prepare."
+
+Doctor Fuller looked smilingly toward Dame Eliza as he said this, as if
+he feared her taking offence at Constance's promotion, and sought to
+placate her.
+
+Mistress Hopkins gave no sign of knowing that he had turned to her, but
+she said to Damaris, as if by chance: "This broth may do more than herb
+brews toward curing, though your mother is not a physician's aid," and
+Doctor Fuller knew that he had been right.
+
+A week later, though Humility Cooper was recovering, many more had
+fallen ill, and several had died.
+
+It was late in January; the winter was set in full of wrath against
+those who had dared array themselves to defy its power in the
+wilderness, but the sun shone brightly, though without warmth-giving
+mercy, upon Plymouth.
+
+There was an armed truce between Giles and his father. The boy would not
+beg his father's pardon for having defied him. His love for his father
+had been of the nature of hero-worship, and now, turned to bitterness,
+it increased the strength of his pride, smarting under false accusation,
+to resist his father.
+
+On the other hand Stephen Hopkins, high-tempered, strong of will, was
+angry and hurt that his son refused to justify himself, or to plead with
+him. So the elder and the younger, as Constance had said, too much
+alike, were at a deadlock of suffering and anger toward each other.
+
+Stephen Hopkins was beginning his house on what he had named Leyden
+Street, in memory of the pilgrims' refuge in Holland, though only by the
+eyes of faith could a street be discerned to bear the name. Like all
+else in Plymouth colony, Leyden Street was rather a matter of prophecy
+than actuality.
+
+Giles was helping to build the house. All day he worked in silence,
+bearing the cold without complaint, but in no wise evincing the
+slightest interest in what he did. At night, in spite of the stringent
+laws of the Puritan colony, Giles contrived often to slip away with John
+Billington into the woods. John Billington's father, who was as unruly
+as his boys, connived at these escapades. He was perpetually quarrelling
+with Myles Standish, whose duty it was to enforce the law, and who did
+that duty without relenting, although by all the colonists, except the
+Billingtons, he was loved as well as respected.
+
+Early one morning Constance hurried out of the community house, tears
+running down her cheeks, to meet Captain Myles coming toward it.
+
+"Why, pretty Constance, don't grieve, child!" said the Plymouth captain,
+heartily.
+
+"Giles hath come to no harm, I warrant you, though he has spent the
+night again with that harum-scarum Jack Billington, and this time
+Francis Billington, too."
+
+"Oh, Captain Standish, it is not Giles! I forgot Giles," gasped
+Constance.
+
+"Rose?" exclaimed the captain, sharply.
+
+Constance bent her head. "She is passing. I came to seek you," she said,
+and together she and the captain went to Rose's side.
+
+They found Doctor Fuller there holding Rose's hand as she lay with
+closed eyes, breathing lightly. In his other hand he held his watch
+measuring the brief moments left, in which Rose Standish should be a
+part of time. Mary Brewster, the elder's wife, held up a warning finger
+not to disturb Rose, but Doctor Fuller looked quietly toward Captain
+Standish.
+
+"It matters not now, Myles," he said. "You cannot harm her. There are
+but few moments left."
+
+Myles Standish sprang forward, fell upon his knees, and raised Rose in
+his arms.
+
+"Rose of the world, my English blossom, what have I done to bring thee
+here?" he sobbed, with a strong man's utter abandonment of grief, and
+with none of the Puritan habit of self-restraint.
+
+"Wherever thou hadst gone, I would have chosen, my husband! I loved
+thee, Myles, I loved thee Myles!" she said, so clearly that everyone
+heard her sweet voice echo to the farthest corner of the room, and for
+the last time.
+
+For with that supreme effort to comfort her husband, disarming his
+regret, Rose Standish died.
+
+They bore Rose's body, so light that it was scarce a burden to the two
+men who carried it as in a litter, forth to the spot upon the hillside
+whither they had already made so many similar processions, which was
+fast becoming as thickly populated as was that portion of the colony
+occupied by the living.
+
+But as the sun mounted higher, although the March winds cut on some
+days, then as now they do in March, yet, then as now, there were soft
+and dreamy days under the ascending sun's rays, made more effective by
+the moderating sea and flat sands.
+
+The devastating diseases of winter began to abate; the pale, weak
+remnants of the _Mayflower's_ passengers crept out to walk with a sort
+of wonder upon the earth which was new to them, and which they had so
+nearly quitted that nothing, even of those aspects of things that most
+recalled the home land, seemed to them familiar.
+
+The men began to break the soil for farming, and to bring forth and
+discuss the grain which they had found hidden by the savages--most
+fortunately, for without it there would have been starvation to look
+forward to after all that they had endured, since no supplies from
+England had yet come after them.
+
+There was talk of the _Mayflower's_ return; she had lain all winter in
+Plymouth harbour because the Pilgrims had required her shelter and
+assistance. Soon she was to depart, a severance those ashore dreaded,
+albeit there was well-grounded lack of confidence in the honesty of her
+captain, Jones, whom the more outspoken among the colonists denounced
+openly as a rascal.
+
+Little Damaris was fretful, as she so often was, one afternoon early in
+March; the child was not strong and consequently was peevish. Constance
+was trying to amuse her, sitting with the child, warmly wrapped from the
+keen wind, in the warmth of the sunshine behind the southern wall of the
+community house.
+
+"Tell me a story, Constance," begged Damaris, though it was not "a
+story," but several that Constance had already told her. "Make a fairy
+story. I won't tell Mother you did. Fairy stories are not lies, no
+matter what they say, are they, Connie? I know they are not true and you
+tell me they are not true, so why are they lies? Why does Mother say
+they are lies? Are they bad, are they, Connie? Tell me one, anyway; I
+won't tell her."
+
+"Ah, little Sister, I would rather not do things that we cannot tell
+your mother about," said Constance. "I do not think a fairy story is
+wrong, because we both know it is make-believe, that there are no
+fairies, but your mother thinks them wrong, and I do not want you to do
+what you will not tell her you do. Suppose you tell me a story, instead?
+That would be fairer; only think how many, many stories I have told you,
+and how long it is since you have told me the least little word of one!"
+
+"Well," agreed Damaris, but without enthusiasm. "What shall I tell you
+about? Not a Bible one."
+
+"No, perhaps not," Constance answered, looking lazily off to sea. Then,
+because she was looking seaward, she added:
+
+"Shall it be one about a sailor? That ought to be an interesting story."
+
+"A true sailor, or a made-up one?" asked Damaris, getting aroused to her
+task.
+
+"Do you know one about a real sailor?" Constance somewhat sleepily
+inquired.
+
+"Here is a true one," announced Damaris.
+
+"Once upon a time there was a sailor, and he sailed on a ship named the
+_Mayflower_. And he came in. And he said: How are you, little girl? And
+I said: I am pretty well, but my name is Damaris Hopkins. And he said:
+What a nice name. And I said: Yes, it is. And he said: Where is your
+folks? and I said: I don't know where my mother went out of the cabin
+just this minute. But my sister was around, and my brother Giles was
+here, fixing my hammock, 'cause it hung funny and let me roll over on
+myself and folded me hurt. And my other brother couldn't go nowheres
+'tall, because he was born when we was sailing here, and he can't walk.
+And the sailor man said: Yes, there were two babies on the ship when we
+came that we didn't have when we started, and show me your hammock. And
+I did, and he said it was a nice ham----Constance, what's the matter? I
+felt you jump, and you look scared. Is it Indians? Connie, Connie,
+don't let 'em get me!"
+
+"No, no, child, there aren't any Indians about," Constance tried to
+laugh. "Did I jump? Sometimes people do jump when they almost fall
+asleep, and I was just as sleepy as a fireside cat when you began to
+tell me the story. Now I am not one bit sleepy! That is the most
+interesting story I have heard almost--yes, I think quite--in all my
+life! And it is a true one?"
+
+"Yes, every bit true," said Damaris, proudly.
+
+"And the sailor went into the cabin, and saw your hammock, and said it
+was a nice one, did he? Well, so it is a nice one! Did your mother see
+the man?" asked Constance, trying to hide her impatience.
+
+"No," Damaris shook her head, decidedly. "Mother was coming, but the man
+just put his hand in and set my hammock swinging. Then he went out, and
+Mother was stopping and she didn't see him. And neither did I, not any
+more, ever again."
+
+"Did you tell your mother about this sailor?" Constance inquired.
+
+"Oh, no," sighed Damaris. "I didn't tell her. She doesn't like stories
+so much as we do. I tell you all my stories, and you tell me all yours,
+don't we, Constance? I didn't tell Mother. She says: 'That's Hopkins to
+like stories, and music, and art.' What's art, Connie? And she says:
+'You don't get those idle ways from my side, so don't let me hear any
+foolish talk, for you will be punished for idle talk.' What's that,
+Connie?"
+
+"Oh, idle talk is--idle talk is hard to explain to you, little Damaris!
+It is talk that has nothing to it, unless it may have something harmful
+to it. You'll understand when you are old enough to make what you do
+really matter. But this has not been idle talk to-day! Far, far from
+idle talk was that fine story you told me! Suppose we keep that story
+all to ourselves, not tell it to anyone at all, will you please, my
+darling little sister? Then, perhaps, some day, I will ask you to tell
+it to Father! Would not that be a great day for Damaris? But only if you
+don't tell it to any one till then, not to your mother, not to any one!"
+Constance insisted, hoping to impress the child to the point of secrecy,
+yet not to let her feel how much Constance herself set upon this
+request.
+
+"I won't! I won't tell it to any one; not to Mother, not to any one,"
+Damaris repeated the form of her vow. Then she looked up into
+Constance's face with a puzzled frown.
+
+"But you wouldn't tell a fairy story, because you said you didn't want
+things I couldn't tell mother! And now you say I mustn't tell her about
+my story!" she said.
+
+Constance burst out laughing, and hugged Damaris to her, hiding in the
+child's hood a merrier face than she had worn for many, many a day.
+
+"You have caught me, little Damaris!" she cried. "Caught me fairly! But
+that was a _fairy_ story, don't you see? This isn't, this is true. So
+this is not to be told, not now, do you see?"
+
+Damaris said "yes," slowly, with the frown in her smooth little brow
+deepening. It was puzzling; she did not really see, but since Constance
+expected her to see she said "yes," and felt curiously bewildered.
+However, what Constance said was to her small half-sister not merely
+law, but gospel. Constance was always right, always the most lovable,
+the most delightful person whom Damaris knew.
+
+"All right, Connie. I won't tell anyone my sailor-man story," she said
+at last, clearing up.
+
+"Just now," Constance supplemented her. "Some day you shall tell it,
+Damaris! Some day I shall want you to tell it! And now, little Sister,
+will you go into the house and tell Oceanus to hurry up and grow big
+enough to run about, because the world, our new world, is getting to be
+a lovely place in the spring sunshine, and he must grow big enough to
+enjoy it as fast as he can? I must find Giles; I have something
+beautiful, beautiful to tell him!"
+
+She kissed Damaris before setting her on her feet, and the child kissed
+her in return, clinging to her.
+
+"You are so funny, Constance!" she said, in great satisfaction with her
+sister's drollery in a world that had been filled with gloom and illness
+for what seemed to so young a child, almost all her life.
+
+"Ah, I want to be, Damaris! I want to be funny, and happy, and glad! Oh,
+I want to be!" cried Constance, and ran away at top speed with a rare
+relapse into her proper age and condition.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+The Persuasive Power of Justice and Violence
+
+
+John Billington had been forced reluctantly to work on the houses
+erecting in the Plymouth plantation.
+
+He was not lazy, but he was adventuresome, and steady employment held
+for him no attraction. Since Captain Standish and the others in
+authority would deal with him if he tried to shirk his share of daily
+work, John made it as bearable as possible by joining himself to Giles
+in the building of the Hopkins house. Constance knew that she should
+find the two boys building her future home, and thither she ran at her
+best speed, and Constance could run like a nymph.
+
+"Oh, Giles!" she panted, coming up to the two amateur carpenters, and
+rejoicing that they were alone.
+
+"Oh, Con!" Giles echoed, turning on his ladder to face her, half sitting
+on a rung. "What's forward? Hath the king sent messengers calling me
+home to be prime minister? Sorry to disappoint His Royal Highness, but I
+can't go. I'd liefer be a trapper!"
+
+"And that's what your appointment is!" triumphed Constance. "You're to
+trap big game, no less than a human rascal! Oh, Giles and Jack, do hear
+what I've got to tell you!"
+
+"But for us to hear, you must tell, Con!" John Billington reminded her.
+"I'll bet a golden doubloon you've got wind of the missing papers!"
+
+"We don't bet, Jack, but if we did you'd win your wager," Constance
+laughed. "Damaris told me 'a true story,' and now I'm going to tell it
+to you. Fancy that little person having this story tucked away in her
+brain all these weary days!"
+
+And Constance related Damaris's entertainment of her, to which John
+Billington listened with many running comments of tongue and whistled
+exclamations, but Giles in perfect silence, betraying no excitement.
+
+"Here's a merry chance, Giles!" John cried as soon as Constance ended.
+"What with savages likely to visit us and robbers for us to hunt, why
+life in the New World may be bearable after all!"
+
+Giles ignored his jubilant comment.
+
+"I shall go out to the _Mayflower_ and get the packet," he said. "It is
+too late to-day, but in the morning early I shall make it. I suppose you
+will go with me, Jack?"
+
+"Safe to suppose it," said John. "I'd swim after you if you started
+without me."
+
+"Won't you take Captain Standish? I mean won't you ask him to help you?"
+asked Constance, anxiously. "It is sufficient matter to engage him, and
+he is our protector in all dangers."
+
+"We need no protection, little Sis," said Giles, loftily. "It hath been
+my experience that a just cause is sufficient. We have suspected the
+master of the _Mayflower_ of trickery all along."
+
+Constance could not forbear a smile at her brother's worldly-wise air of
+deep knowledge of mankind, but nevertheless she wished that "the right
+arm of the colony" might be with the boys to strike for them if need
+were.
+
+It was with no misgiving as to their own ability, but with the highest
+glee, that Giles and John made their preparations to set forth just
+before dawn.
+
+They kept their own counsel strictly and warned Constance not to talk.
+
+There was not much to be done to make ready, merely to see that the
+small boat, built by the boys for their own use, was tight, and to tuck
+out of sight under her bow seat a heavy coat in case the east
+wind--which the pilgrims had soon learned was likely to come in upon
+them sharply on the warmest day--blew up chillingly.
+
+John Billington owned, by his father's reckless indulgence, a pistol
+that was his chief treasure; a heavy, clumsy thing, difficult to hold
+true, liable to do the unexpected, the awkward progenitor of the pretty
+modern revolver, but a pistol for all its defects, and the apple of
+John's eye. This he had named Bouncing Bully, invariably spoke of it as
+"he", and felt toward it and treated it not merely as his arms, but as
+his companion in arms.
+
+Bouncing Bully was to make the third member of the party; he accompanied
+John, hidden with difficulty because of his bulk, in the breast of his
+coat, when he crept out without disturbing his father and Francis, to
+join Giles at the spot on the shore where their flat-bottomed row boat
+was pulled up.
+
+He found Giles awaiting him, watching the sands in a crude hour glass
+which he had himself constructed.
+
+"I've been waiting an hour," Giles said as John came up. "I know you are
+not late, but all the same here I have stood while this glass ran out,
+with ten minutes more since I turned it again."
+
+"Well, I'm here now; take hold and run her out," said John, seizing the
+boat's bow and bracing to shove her.
+
+"Row out. I'll row back," commanded Giles as he and John swung over the
+side of the boat out of the waves into which they had waded.
+
+They did not talk as they advanced upon the _Mayflower_ which lay at
+anchor in the harbour. They had agreed upon boarding her with as little
+to announce their coming as possible. As it chanced, there being no need
+of guarding against surprise, there was no one on deck when the boys
+made their boat fast to the ship's cable, and clambered on deck--save
+one round-faced man who was swabbing the deck to the accompaniment of
+his droning a song, tuneless outside his own conception of it.
+
+"Lord bless and save us but you dafted me, young masters!" this man
+exclaimed when Giles and John appeared; he leaned against the rail with
+the air of a fine lady, funny to see in one so stoutly stalwart.
+
+"I didna know ye at sight; now I see 'tis Master Giles and Master John
+Billington, whose pranks was hard on us crossing."
+
+"You are not the man we want," said Giles, haughtily, trusting to
+assurance to win his end. "Fetch me that man who goes in and about the
+cabin at times, the one that stands well with Jones, the ship's master."
+
+This last was a gamble on chance, but Giles felt sure of his
+conclusions, that the captain was at the bottom of the loss of the
+papers, the actual thief his tool.
+
+"Aye, I know un," said the man, nodding sagely, proud of his quickness.
+"'Tis George Heaton, I make no doubt. The captain gives him what is
+another, better man's due. Master Jones gives him his ear and his
+favour. 'Tis George, slick George, you want, of that I'm certain." He
+nodded many times as he ended.
+
+"Likely thing," agreed Giles. "Fetch him."
+
+The deck cleaner departed in a heavy fashion, and returned shortly in
+company with a wiry, slender young man, having a handsome face, a quick
+roving eye, crafty, but clever.
+
+"Ah, George, do you remember me?" asked Giles. "Don't dare to offer me
+your hand, my man, for I'd not touch it."
+
+"I may be serving as a sailor, but I'm as good a gentleman born as you,"
+retorted Heaton, flushing angrily.
+
+"Decently born you may be; of that I know nothing. Pity is it that you
+have gone so far from your birthday," said Giles. "But as good a
+gentleman as I am you are not, nor as anyone, as this honest fellow
+here. For blood or no blood, a thief is far from a gentleman."
+
+George Heaton made a step forward with upraised fist, but Giles looked
+at him contemptuously, and did not fall back.
+
+"No play acting here. Give me the papers you stole out of my
+stepmother's care, out of my little sister's sleeping hammock, weeks
+agone," said Giles, coolly. "Your game is up. For some reason the child
+did not tell us of your act till now; now she hath spoken. Fortunately
+the ship hath lingered for you to be dealt with before she took you back
+to England. Hand over the papers, Heaton, if you ever hope to be nearer
+England than the arm of the tree from which you shall hang on the New
+England coast, unless you restore your booty."
+
+Heaton looked into Giles's angry eyes and quailed. The boy had grown up
+during the hard winter, and Heaton recognized his master; more than
+that, he had the cowardice that had made him the ready tool of Captain
+Jones--the cowardice of the man who lives by tricks, trusting them to
+carry him to success--who will not stand by his colours because he has
+no standard of loyalty.
+
+"I haven't got your father's papers, Giles Hopkins," he growled,
+dropping his eyes.
+
+"You could have said much that I would not have believed, but that I
+believe," said Giles. "Do you know what Master Jones did with them when
+you gave them over to him, you miserable cat's paw?"
+
+"How about giving the cat to the cat's paw, Giles?" suggested John,
+grinning in huge enjoyment of George Heaton's instant, sailor's
+appreciation of his joke and the offices of "the cat" with which sailors
+were lashed in punishment.
+
+"I hope it will not be necessary. If Captain Standish comes with a
+picked number of our men to get these papers, there will be worse beasts
+than the cat let loose on the _Mayflower_. Lead me to the captain,
+Heaton, and remember it will go hard with you if you let him lead you
+into denial of the crime you committed for him," said Giles, with such a
+dignity as filled rollicking John, who wanted to turn the adventure into
+a frolic, with admiration for his comrade.
+
+"Stand by you and Jones will deal with me. Stand by him and you threaten
+me with your men, led by that fighting Standish of yours. Between you
+where does George Heaton stand?" asked Heaton sullenly, turning,
+nevertheless, to do Giles's bidding.
+
+"You should have thought of this before," said Giles, coolly. "There
+never yet was wisdom and safety in rascality."
+
+Captain Jones, whose connection with the pilgrims was no more than that
+he had been hired by them to bring them to the New World, was a man
+whose honesty many of his passengers mistrusted, but against whom, as
+against the captain of the _Speedwell_ that had turned back, there was
+no proof.
+
+He was coming out of his cabin to his breakfast when Heaton brought the
+boys to him; he started visibly at the sight of Giles, but recovered
+himself instantly and greeted the lads affably.
+
+"Good morning, my erstwhile passengers and new colonists," he said. "I
+have wondered that at least the younger members of your community did
+not visit the ship. Welcome!" He held out his hand, but neither Giles
+nor John seemed to see it.
+
+"Master Jones," said Giles, "there is no use wasting time and phrases.
+This man, at your orders, stole out of the women's cabin on this ship
+the papers left by my father in his wife's care. He has given them up to
+you. The story has only now--yesterday--come to our knowledge. Give me
+those papers."
+
+"What right have you to accuse me, _me_, the master of this ship?"
+demanded Captain Jones, blustering. "Have a care that I don't throw you
+overboard. Take your boat and be gone before harm comes to you!"
+
+"You would throw more than us overboard if you dared to touch us,"
+returned Giles. "Nor is it either of us to whom harm threatens. Come,
+Master Jones, those papers! My father, none of the colony, knows of your
+crime. What do you think will befall you when they do know it? Hand us
+the papers, not one lacking, and we will let you go back to England free
+and safe. Refuse----Well, it's for you to choose, but I'd not hesitate
+in your place." Giles shrugged his shoulders, half turning away, as if
+after all the result of his mission did not concern him.
+
+John saw a telepathic message exchanged between the captain and his
+tool. The question wordlessly asked Heaton whether the theft of the
+papers, their possession by the captain, actually was known, and
+Heaton's eyes answering: "Yes!"
+
+Captain Jones swallowed hard, as if he were swallowing a great dose, as
+he surely was. After a moment's thought he spoke:
+
+"See here, Giles Hopkins, I always liked you, and now I father admire
+you for your courage in thus boarding my ship and bearding me. I admit
+that I hold the papers. But, as of course you can easily see, I am
+neither a thief nor a receiver of stolen goods. My reason for wanting
+those papers was no common one. I am willing to restore to you those
+which relate to your family inheritance, your father's personal papers,
+but those which relate to Plymouth colony I want. I can use them to my
+advantage in England. Take this division of the documents and go back
+with my congratulations on your conduct."
+
+"I would liefer your blame than your praise, sir," said Giles,
+haughtily, in profound disgust with the man. "It needs no saying that my
+father would part with any private advantage sooner than with what had
+been entrusted to him. First and most I demand the Plymouth colony
+documents. Get the papers, not one lacking, and let me go ashore. The
+wide harbour's winds are not strong enough for me to breathe on your
+ship. It sickens me."
+
+Captain Jones gave the boy a malevolent look.
+
+"A virtue of necessity," he muttered, turning to go.
+
+"And your sole virtue?" suggested Giles to his retreating back.
+
+Captain Jones was gone a long time. The boys fumed with impatience and
+feared harm to the papers, but George Heaton grinned at them with the
+utmost cheerfulness. He had completely sloughed off all share in the
+theft and plainly enjoyed his superior's discomfiture, being of that
+order of creatures whose malice revels in the mischances of others.
+
+It proved that the captain's delay was due to his reluctance to comply
+with Giles's demand. He came at last, slowly, bearing in his hand the
+packet enveloped in oilskin which Giles remembered having seen in his
+father's possession.
+
+"I must do your bidding, youngster," he said angrily, "for you can harm
+me otherwise. But what guarantee have I, if I hand these papers to you,
+that you will keep the secret?"
+
+"I never said that the secret would be kept; I said that you should
+suffer no harm. An innocent person is accused of this theft; the truth
+must be known. But I can and do promise you that you shall not be
+molested; I can answer for that. As to guarantee, you know my father,
+you know the Plymouth pilgrims, you know me. Is there any doubt that we
+are honourable, conscientious, God-fearing, the sort that faithfully
+keep their word?" demanded Giles.
+
+"No. I grant you that. Take your packet," said Captain Jones, yielding
+it.
+
+"By your leave I will examine it," said Giles unfastening its straps.
+
+"Do you doubt me?" blustered the captain.
+
+"Not a whit," laughed John with a great burst of mirth, before Giles
+could answer.
+
+"Why should we doubt you? Haven't you shown us exactly what you are?"
+
+Giles turned over the papers one by one. None was missing. He folded
+them and replaced them in their case, buckling its straps.
+
+"All the papers are here," he said. "John, we'll be off. This is our
+final visit to the _Mayflower_, Master Jones--unless I ship with you for
+England. Good voyage, as I hear they say in France. Hope you'll catch a
+bit of Puritan conscience before you leave the harbour."
+
+Captain Jones followed the boys to the side of the ship where they were
+to reëmbark in their rowboat. At every step he grew angrier, the veins
+swelled in his forehead which was only a shade less purple-red than his
+cheeks. His defeat was a sore thing, the disappointment of the plans
+which he had laid upon the possession of the stolen documents became
+more vividly realized with each moment, and the fact that two lads had
+thus conquered him and were going away with their prize infuriated him.
+
+Giles had swung himself down into the boat and was shipping the oars,
+but John halted for a moment in a stuffy corner to gloat over the
+captain's empurpled face and to dally with a temptation to add
+picturesqueness to their departure. The temptation got the upper hand of
+him, though John usually held out both hands to mischief.
+
+He drew Bouncing Bully from his breast and levelled it.
+
+"Stop! Gunpowder!" screamed the captain, choking with fear and rage, and
+pointing at a small keg that stood hard by.
+
+"I won't hit it," John grinned, delightedly. "Let's see how _my_
+gunpowder is." With a flourish the mad boy fired a shot into the wall of
+the tiny cabin, regardless of the fact that the likely explosion of the
+keg of gunpowder would have blown up the _Mayflower_ and him with her.
+
+The captain fell forward on his face, the men who were at work splicing
+ropes in the cubby-like cabin cowered speechless, their faces ashen.
+
+John whooped with joy and fled, leaping into the rowboat which he nearly
+upset.
+
+"What?" demanded Giles. "Who shot? Did he attack you, Jack?"
+
+"Who? No one attacked me. I shot. Zounds, they were scared! In that
+pocket of a cabin, with a keg of gunpowder sitting close," chuckled
+John.
+
+"What in the name of all that's sane did you do that for?" cried Giles.
+"Scared! I should say with reason! Why, Jack Billington, you might be
+blown to bits by this time, ship, men, yourself, and all!"
+
+"I might be," assented Jack, coolly. "I'm not. Giles, you should have
+seen your shipmaster Jones! Flat on his face and fair blubbering with
+fear and fury! He loves us not, my Giles! I doubt his days are dull on
+the _Mayflower_, so long at anchor. 'Twas but kind to stir up a lively
+moment. Here, give me an oar! Even though you said you would row back, I
+feel like helping you. Wait till I settle Bouncing Bully. He's digging
+me in the ribs, to remind me of the joke we played 'em, I've no doubt;
+but he hurts. That's better. Now for shore and your triumph, old Giles!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+Deep Love, Deep Wound
+
+
+Constance had escaped from Humility Cooper and Elizabeth Tilley who had
+affectionately joined her when she had appeared on her way to the beach
+to await Giles's return.
+
+Constance invented a question that must be asked Elder Brewster because
+she knew that the girls, though they revered him, feared him, and never
+willingly went where they must reply to his gravely kind attempts at
+conversation with them. "I surely feel like a wicked hypocrite," sighed
+Constance, watching her friends away as she turned toward the house that
+sheltered the elder.
+
+"What would dear little Humility say if she knew I had tried to get rid
+of her? Or Elizabeth either! But it isn't as though I had not wanted
+them for a less good reason. I do love them dearly! I must meet Giles
+and hear his news as soon as I can, and it can't be told before another.
+Mercy upon us, what _was_ it that I had thought of to ask Elder
+Brewster! I've forgotten every syllable of it! Well, mercy upon us! And
+suppose he sees me hesitating here! I know! I'll confess to him that I
+was wishing I was in Warwickshire hearing Eastertide alleluias sung in
+my cousins' church, and ask him if it was sinful. He loves to correct
+me, dear old saint!"
+
+Dimpling with mischief Constance turned her head away from a possible
+onlooker in the house to pull her face down into the proper expression
+for a youthful seeker for guidance. Then, quite demure and serious, with
+downcast eyes, she turned and went into the house.
+
+Elder William Brewster kept her some time. She was nervously anxious to
+escape, fearing to miss the boys' arrival. But Elder Brewster was
+deeply interested in pretty Constance Hopkins, in whom, in spite of her
+sweet docility and patient daily performance of her hard tasks, he
+discerned glimpses of girlish liveliness that made him anxious and which
+he felt must be corrected to bring the dear girl into perfection.
+
+Constance decided that she was expiating fully whatever fault there
+might have been in feigning an errand to Elder Brewster to get rid of
+the girls as she sat uneasily listening to that good man's exposition of
+the value of alleluias in the heart above those sung in church, and the
+baseness of allowing the mind to look back for a moment at the "shackles
+from which she was freed." Good Elder Brewster ended by reading from his
+roughened brown leather-covered Bible the story of Lot's wife to which
+Constance--who had heard it many times, it being an appropriate theme
+for the pilgrim band to ponder, sick in heart and body as they had been
+so long--did not harken.
+
+At last she was dismissed with a fatherly hand laid on her shining head,
+and a last warning to keep in mind how favoured above her English
+cousins she had been to be chosen a daughter in Israel to help found a
+kingdom of righteousness. Constance ran like the wind down the road,
+stump-bordered, the beginning of a street, and came down upon the beach
+just as the boys reached it and their boat bumped up on the sand under
+the last three hard pulls they had given the oars in unison.
+
+"Oh! Giles, oh, Giles, oh Jack!" cried Constance fairly dancing under
+her excitement.
+
+"Oh, Con, oh, Con! Oh, Constantia!" mocked John, hauling away on the
+painter and getting the boat up to her tying stake.
+
+"What happened you? Have you news?" Constance implored them.
+
+"We heard no especial news, Con," said Giles. "I'm not sure we asked for
+any. We have this instead; will that suffice you?"
+
+He took from his breast the packet of papers and offered it to her.
+
+"Oh, Giles!" sighed Constance, clasping her hands, tears of relief
+springing to her eyes. "All of them? Are they all safe? Thank Heaven!"
+she added as Giles nodded.
+
+"Did you have trouble getting them? Who held them? Tell me everything!"
+
+"Give me a chance Constantia Chatter," said Giles, using the name
+Constance had been dubbed when, a little tot, she ceaselessly used her
+new accomplishment of talking. "We had no trouble, no. We found the
+thief and made him confess what we already knew, that he was the
+master's cat's paw. Jones had to disgorge; he could not hold the papers
+without paying too heavy a penalty. So here they are. Why don't you take
+them?"
+
+"I take them?" puzzled Constance, accepting them as Giles thrust them
+into her hand. "Do you want me to put them away for you? Are you not
+coming to dinner? There is not enough time to go to work before noon.
+The sun was not two hours from our noon mark beside the house when I
+left it."
+
+"I suppose I am going to dinner," said Giles. "I am ready enough for it.
+No, I don't want you to put the papers away for me. You can do with them
+what you like. I should advise your giving them to Father, since they
+are his, but that is as you will. I give them into your hands."
+
+"Giles, Giles!" cried Constance, in distress, instantly guessing that
+this meant that Giles was intending to hold aloof from a part in
+rejoicing over the recovery.
+
+"Give them to Father yourself. How proud of you he will be that you
+ferreted out the thief and went so bravely, with only John, to demand
+them for him! It is not my honour, and I must not take it."
+
+"Oh, as to honour, you got the first clue from Damaris, if there's
+honour in it, but for that I do not care. I did the errand when you sent
+me on it, or opened my way. However it came about I will not give the
+papers to my father. In no wise will I stoop to set myself right in his
+eyes. Perhaps he will say that the whole story is false, that I did not
+get the papers on the ship, but had them hidden till fear and an uneasy
+conscience made me deliver them up, and that you are shielding your
+brother," said Giles, frowning as he turned from Constance.
+
+"And I thought now everything would be right!" groaned the girl--her
+lips quivering, tears running down her cheeks. "Giles, dear Giles;
+don't, don't be so bitter, so unforgiving! It is not just to Father, not
+just to yourself, to me. It isn't _right_. Giles! Will you hold this
+grudge against the father you so loved, and forget all the years that
+went before, for a miserable day when he half harboured doubt of you,
+and that when he was torn by influence, tormented till he was hardly
+himself?"
+
+"Now, Constance, there is no need of your turning preacher," Giles said,
+harshly.
+
+"If you like to swallow insult, well and good. It does not matter about
+a girl, but a man's honour is his chiefest possession. Take the papers,
+and prate no more to me. My father wanted them; there they are. He
+suspected me of stealing them; I found the thief. That's all there is
+about it. What is there to-day to eat? An early row makes a man hungry.
+Art ready, Jack? We will go to the house, by your leave, pretty Sis.
+Sorry to see your eyes reddening, but better that than other harm."
+
+Constance hesitated as Giles went up the beach, taking John with him.
+For a moment she debated seeking Captain Standish, giving him the
+papers, and asking him to be intermediary between her father and this
+headstrong boy, who talked so largely of himself as "a man," and behaved
+with such wrong-headed, childish obstinacy. But a second thought
+convinced her that she herself might serve Giles better than the
+captain, and she took her way after her brother, beginning to hope, true
+to herself, that her father's pleasure in recovering the papers, his
+desire to make amends to Giles, would express itself in such wise that
+they would be drawn together closer than before the trouble arose.
+
+It was turning into a balmy day, after a chilly morning. Though only the
+middle of March the air was full of spring. In the community house, as
+Constance entered, she found her stepmother, and Mrs. White--each with
+her _Mayflower_-born baby held in one arm--busily setting forth the
+dinner, while Priscilla and Humility and Elizabeth helped them, and the
+smaller children, headed by Damaris, attempted to help, were sharply
+rebuked for getting in the way, subsided, but quickly darted up again to
+take a dish, or hand a knife which their inconsistent elders found
+needed.
+
+Several men--Mr. Hopkins, Mr. White; Mr. Warren, whose wife had not yet
+come from England; Doctor Fuller, in like plight; John and Francis
+Billington's father, John Alden and Captain Myles Standish, as a matter
+of course--were discussing planting of corn while awaiting the finishing
+touches to their carefully rationed noonday meal.
+
+"If you follow my counsel," the captain was saying, "you will plant over
+the spot where we have laid so many of our company. Thus far we hardly
+are aware of our savage neighbours, but with the warm weather they will
+come forth from their woodlands, and who knows what may befall us from
+them? Better, say I, conceal from them that no more than half of those
+who sailed hither are here to-day. Better hide from their eyes beneath
+the tall maize the graves on yonder hillside."
+
+"Well said, good counsel, Captain Myles," said Stephen Hopkins. "God's
+acre, the folk of parts of Europe call the enclosure of their dead. We
+will make our acre God's acre, planting it doubly for our protection, in
+grain for our winter need, concealment of our devastation."
+
+Suddenly the air was rent with a piercing shriek, and little Love
+Brewster, the Elder's seven-year-old son, came tumbling into the house,
+shaking and inarticulate with terror.
+
+Priscilla Mullins caught him into her lap and tried to sooth him and
+discover the cause of his fright, but he only waved his little hands
+frantically and sobbed beyond all possibility of guessing what words
+were smothered beneath the sobs.
+
+"Elder Brewster promised to let the child pass the afternoon with
+Damaris," began Mrs. Hopkins, but before she got farther John Alden
+started up.
+
+"Look there," he said. "Is it wonderful that Love finds the sight beyond
+him?"
+
+[Illustration: "'Look there,' said John Alden"]
+
+Stalking toward the house in all the awful splendour of paint, feathers,
+beads, and gaudy blanket came a tall savage. He had, of course, seen the
+child and realized his fright and that he had run to alarm the pilgrims,
+but not a whit did it alter the steady pace at which he advanced,
+looking neither to left nor to right, his arms folded upon his breast,
+no sign apparent of whether he came in friendship or in enmity.
+
+The first instinct of the colonists, in this first encounter with an
+Indian near to the settlement was to be prepared in case he came in
+enmity.
+
+Several of the men reached for the guns which hung ready on the walls,
+and took them down, examining their horns and rods as they handled them.
+But the savage, standing in the doorway, made a gesture full of calm
+dignity which the pilgrims rightly construed to mean salutation, and
+uttered a throaty sound that plainly had the same import.
+
+"Welcome!" hazarded Myles Standish advancing with outstretched hand upon
+the new-comer, uncertain how to begin his acquaintance, but hoping this
+might be pleasing. "Yes," said the Indian in English, to the boundless
+surprise of the Englishmen. "Yes, welcome, friend!" He took Captain
+Standish's hand.
+
+"Chief?" he asked. "Samoset," he added, touching his own breast, and
+thus introducing himself.
+
+"How in the name of all that is wonderful did he learn English!" cried
+Stephen Hopkins.
+
+"Yes, Samoset know," the Indian turned upon him, understanding. "White
+men ships fish far, far sunrise," he pointed eastward, and they knew
+that he was telling them that English fishermen had been known to him,
+whose fishing grounds lay toward the east.
+
+"'Tis true; our men have been far east and north of here," said Myles
+Standish, turning toward Stephen Hopkins, as to one who had travelled.
+
+"Humphrey Gilbert, but many since then," nodded Mr. Hopkins.
+
+"Big chief Squanto been home long time white men, he talk more Samoset,"
+said Samoset. "Squanto come see----." He waved his hand comprehendingly
+over his audience, to indicate whom Squanto intended to visit.
+
+"Well, womenfolk, you must find something better than you give us, and
+set it forth for our guest," said Stephen Hopkins. "Get out our English
+beer; Captain Myles I'll undertake, will join me in foregoing our
+portion to-morrow for him. And the preserved fruits; I'm certain he will
+find them a novelty. And you must draw on our store of trinkets for
+gifts. Lads--Giles, John, Francis--help the girls open the chest and
+make selection."
+
+Samoset betrayed no understanding of these English words, maintaining a
+stolid indifference while preparations for his entertainment went on.
+But he did full justice to the best that the colonists had to set before
+him and accepted their subsequent gifts with a fine air of noble
+condescension, as a monarch accepting tribute.
+
+Later with pipes filled with the refreshing weed from Virginia, which
+had circuitously found its way back to the New World, via England, the
+Plymouth men sat down to talk to Samoset.
+
+Limited as was his vocabulary, broken as was his speech, yet they
+managed to understand much of what he told them, valuable information
+relating to their Indian neighbours near by, to the state of the
+country, to climate and soil, and to the people of the forests farther
+north.
+
+Samoset went away bearing his gifts, with which, penetrating his
+reserve, the colonists saw that he was greatly pleased. He promised a
+speedy return, and to bring to them Squanto, from whose friendship and
+better knowledge of their speech and race evidently Samoset thought they
+would gain much.
+
+The younger men--Doctor Fuller, John Alden and others, needless to say
+Giles, John, and Francis Billington, under the conduct of Myles
+Standish--accompanied Samoset for a few miles on his return.
+
+The sun was dropping westward, the night promising to be as warmly kind
+as the day had been, and Constance slipped her hand into her father's
+arm as he stood watching their important guest's departure, under his
+escort's guardianship.
+
+"A little tiny walk with me, Father dear?" she hinted. "I like to watch
+the sunset redden the sands, and it is so warm and fine. Besides, I have
+something most beautiful to tell you!"
+
+"Good news, Con? This seems to be a day of good things," said her
+father, as Constance nodded hard. "The coming of yonder Indian seems to
+me the happiest thing that could well have befallen us. Given the
+friendship of our neighbouring tribes we have little to fear from more
+distant ones, and the great threat to our colony's continuance is
+removed. Well, I will walk with you child, but not far nor long. There
+is scant time for dalliance in our lives, you know."
+
+They went out, Constance first running to snatch her cloak and pull its
+deep hood over her hair as a precaution against a cold that the warm day
+might betray her into, and which she had good reason to fear who had
+helped nurse the victims of the first months of the immigration.
+
+"The good news, Daughter?" hinted Mr. Hopkins after they had walked a
+short distance in silence.
+
+Constance laughed triumphantly, giving his arm a little shake. "I waited
+to see if you wouldn't ask!" she cried, "I knew you were just as
+curious, you men, as we poor women creatures--but of course in a big,
+manly way!" She pursed her lips and shook her head, lightly pinching her
+father to point her satire.
+
+"Have a care, Mistress Constantia!" her father warned her. "Curiosity is
+a weakness, even dangerous, but disrespect to your elders and betters,
+what is that?"
+
+"Great fun," retorted Constance.
+
+Her father laughed. He found his girl's playfulness, which she was
+recovering with the springtide and the relief from the heavy sorrow of
+the first weeks in Plymouth, refreshing amid the extreme seriousness of
+most of the people around him. "Proceed with your tidings, you saucy
+minx!" he said.
+
+"Very well then, Mr. Stephen Hopkins," Constance obeyed him, "what would
+you say if I were to tell you that there was news of your missing packet
+of papers?"
+
+Stephen Hopkins stopped short. "I should say thank God with all my
+heart, Constance, not merely because the loss was serious, but most of
+all because of Giles. Is it true?" he asked.
+
+"They are found!" cried Constance, jubilantly, "and it was Giles himself
+who faced the thief and forced him to give them up. It is a fine
+tale!" And she proceeded to tell it.
+
+Her father's relief, his pleasure, was evidently great, but to
+Constance's alarm as the story ended, his face settled into an
+expression of annoyance.
+
+"It is indeed good news, Constance, and I am grateful, relieved by it,"
+he said, having heard her to the end. "But why did not Giles tell me
+this himself, bring me the recovered packet? Would it not be natural to
+wish to confer upon me, himself, the happiness he had won for me, to
+hasten to me with his victory, still more that it clears him of the
+least doubt of complicity in the loss?"
+
+"Ah, no, Father! That is just the point of his not doing so!" cried
+Constance. "Giles is sore at heart that you felt there might be a doubt
+of him. He cannot endure it, nor seem to bring you proofs of his
+innocence. I suppose he does not feel like a boy, but like a man whose
+honour is questioned, and by--forgive me, Father, but I must make it
+clear--by one whose trust in him should be stronger than any other's."
+
+"Nonsense, Constantia!" Stephen Hopkins exploded, angrily. "What are we
+coming to if we cannot question our own children? Giles is not a man; he
+is a boy, and my boy, so I shall expect him to render me an account of
+his actions whenever, and however I demand it. I'll not stand for his
+pride, his assumption of injured dignity. Let him remember that! Thank
+God my son is an honest lad, as by all reason he should be. But though
+he is right as to the theft, he is wrong in his arrogance, and pride is
+as deadly a sin as stealing. I want no more of this nonsense."
+
+"Oh, Father dear," cried Constance, wringing her hands with her peculiar
+gesture when matters got too difficult for those small hands. "Please,
+please be kind to Giles! Oh, I thought everything would be all right now
+that the packet was recovered, and by him! Be patient with him, I beg
+you. He is not one that can be driven, but rather won by love to do your
+will. If you will convey to him that you regret having suspected him he
+will at once come back to be our own Giles."
+
+"Have a care, Constantia, that in your anxiety for your brother you do
+not fall into a share of his fault!" warned her father. "It is not for
+you to advise me in my dealing with my son. As to trying to placate him
+by anything like an apology: preposterous suggestion! That is not the
+way of discipline, my girl! Let Giles indicate to me his proper
+humility, his regret for taking the attitude that I am not in authority
+over him, free to demand of him any explanation, any evidence of his
+character I please. No, no, Constance! You mean well, but you are
+wrong."
+
+Thus saying, Mr. Hopkins turned on his heel to go back to the house, and
+Constance followed, no longer with her hand on her father's arm, but
+understanding the strong annoyance he felt toward Giles, and painfully
+conscious that her pleading for her brother had done less than no good.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+Seedtime of the First Spring
+
+
+Giles Hopkins and John and Francis Billington slept in the new house,
+now nearly finished, on Leyden Street. Therefore it happened that
+Stephen Hopkins did not see his son until the morning after the recovery
+of the papers.
+
+"Well, Giles," said his father, with a smile that Giles took to be
+mocking, but in which the father's hidden gratification really strove to
+escape, "so you played a man's part with the _Mayflower_ captain, at the
+same time proving yourself? I am glad to get my papers, boy, and glad
+that you have shown that you had no share in their loss, but only in
+their return. Henceforth be somewhat less insolent when appearances are
+against you; still better take care that appearances, facts as well, are
+in your favour."
+
+"Appearances are in the eye of the on-looker," said Giles, drawing
+himself up and flushing angrily, though, had he but seen it, love and
+pride in him shone in his father's eyes, though his tone and words were
+careless, gruff indeed.
+
+"If Dame Eliza is to be the glass through which you view me, then it
+matters not what course I follow, for you will not see it straight. Nor
+do I care to act to the end that you may not suspect me of being fit for
+hanging. A gentleman's honour needs no proving, or else is proved by his
+sword. And whatever you think of me, I can never defend myself thus
+against my father. A father may insult his son with impunity."
+
+"But a boy may not speak insultingly to his father with impunity, Master
+Giles Hopkins," said Stephen Hopkins, advancing close to the lad with
+his quick temper afire. "One word more of such nature as I just heard
+and I will have you publicly flogged, as you richly deserve, and as our
+community would applaud."
+
+Giles bowed, his face as angry as his father's, and passed on cutting
+the young sprouts along the road with a stick he carried. And thus the
+two burning hearts which loved each other--too similar to make
+allowances for each other when the way was open to their
+reconciliation--were further estranged than before.
+
+In the meantime Constance, Priscilla, and the younger girls, were
+starting out, tools in hand, baskets swinging on their arms, to prepare
+the first garden of the colony.
+
+"Thank--I mean I rejoice that we are not sent to work amid the graves on
+the hillside," said Priscilla, altering her form of expression to
+conform with the prescribed sobriety.
+
+"Oh, that is to be planted with the Indian corn, you know," said
+Constance. "It grows high, and will hide our graves. Why think of that,
+Prissy? I want to be happy." She began to hum a quaint air of her own
+making. She had by inheritance the gift of music, as the kindred gift of
+love and taste for all beauty, a gift that should never find expression
+in her new surroundings.
+
+Presently she found words for her small tune and sang them, swinging her
+basket in time with her singing and also swinging Humility Cooper's hand
+as she walked, not without some danger of dropping into a sort of dance
+step.
+
+This is what she sang:
+
+ Over seas lies England;
+ Still we find this wing-land;
+ Birds and bees and butterflies flit about us here.
+ Eastward lies our Mother,
+ Loved as is no other,
+ Yet here flowers blossom with the springing year.
+
+ We will plant a garden,
+ Eve-like, as the warden
+ Of the hope of men unborn, future of the race;
+ Tears that we were weeping,
+ Watering our keeping,
+ Till we make the New World joy's own dwelling place.
+
+Priscilla Mullins stopped short and looked with amazement on her younger
+companion.
+
+"Did you make that song, Constance?" she demanded, being used to the
+rhyming which Constance made to entertain the little ones.
+
+"It made itself, Pris," laughed Constance.
+
+"Well, I'm no judge of songs, and as to rhyming I could match cat and
+rat if it was put to me to do, but no more. Yet it seemeth me that is a
+pretty song, with exactly the truth for its burden, and it trippeth as
+sweetly as the robin whistles. Do you know, Constance, it seems to me to
+run more into smooth cadences than the Metrical Psalms themselves!"
+Priscilla dropped her voice as she said this, as if she hoped to be
+unheard by the vengeance which might swoop down on her.
+
+Constance's laugh rang out merrily, quite unafraid.
+
+"Oh, dear Prissy, the Metrical Version was not meant to run in smooth
+cadences!" she cried. "Do you see why we should not sing as the robin
+whistles, being young and God's creatures, surely not less than the
+birds? Priscilla Mullins, there is John Alden awaiting us in the very
+spot where we are to work! How did he happen there, when no other man is
+about?"
+
+"He spoke to me of helping us with the first heavy turning of the soil,"
+said Priscilla, exceedingly red and uncomfortable, but constrained to be
+truthful. "Oh, Constance, never look at me like that! Can I help it that
+Master Alden is so considerate of us?"
+
+"Sure-ly not!" declared Constance emphatically. "What about his
+returning home, Pris? He was hired but as cooper for the voyage, and
+would return. Will he go, think you?"
+
+"He seems not fully decided. He said somewhat to me of staying." Poor
+Priscilla looked more than miserable as she said this, yet was forced to
+laugh.
+
+"I will speak to my father and Captain Standish to get them to offer him
+work a-plenty this summer, so mayhap they can persuade him to let the
+_Mayflower_ sail without him--next week she goes. Or perhaps you could
+bring arguments to bear upon him, Priscilla! He never seems
+stiff-necked, nor unbiddable." Constance said this with a great effect
+of innocence, as if a new thought had struck her, and Priscilla had
+barely time to murmur:
+
+"Thou art a sad tease, Constance," before they came up with John Alden,
+who looked as embarrassed as Priscilla when he met Constance's dancing
+eyes.
+
+Nevertheless it was not long before John Alden and Priscilla Mullins
+were working together at a little distance apart from the rest, leaving
+Constance to dig and rake in company with Humility Cooper, Elizabeth
+Tilley, and the little girls. Thus at work they saw approaching from the
+end of the road that was lost in the woods beyond a small but imposing
+procession of tall figures, wrapped in gaudy colored blankets, their
+heads surmounted with banded feathers which streamed down their backs,
+softly waving in the light breeze.
+
+"Oh, dear, oh, dear, Connie, they are savages!" whispered Damaris
+looking about as if wishing that a hole had been dug big enough to hide
+her instead of the small peas which she was planting.
+
+"But they are friendly savages, small sister," said Constance. "See,
+they carry no bows and arrows. Do you know, girls, I believe this is the
+great chief Massasoit, of whom Samoset spoke, promising us his visit
+soon, and that with him may be Squanto, the Indian who speaks English!
+Don't you think we may be allowed to postpone the rest of the work to
+see the great conference which will take place if this is Massasoit?"
+
+"Indeed, Constance, my back calls me to cease louder than any savage,"
+said Humility, her hand on her waist, twisting her small body from side
+to side. "I have been wishing we might dare stop, but I couldn't bring
+myself to say so."
+
+"You have not recovered strength for this bending and straining work, my
+dear," said Constance in her grandmotherly way. "Priscilla, Priscilla!
+John Alden, see!" she called, and the distant pair faced her with a
+visible start.
+
+She pointed to the savages, and Priscilla and John hastened to her,
+thinking her afraid.
+
+"Do you suppose it may be Massasoit and Squanto?" Constance asked at
+once.
+
+"Let us hope so," said John Alden, looking with eager interest at the
+Indians. "We hope to make a treaty with Massasoit."
+
+"Before you sail?" inquired Constance, guilelessly.
+
+"Why, I am decided to cast my lot in with the colony, sweet Constance,"
+said John, trying, but failing, to keep from looking at Priscilla.
+
+"Pris?" cried Constance, and waited.
+
+Priscilla threw her arms around Constance and hid her face, crying on
+her shoulder.
+
+"My people are all dead, Connie, and I alone survive of us all on the
+_Mayflower_! Even my brother Joseph died; you know it, Connie! Do you
+blame me?" she sobbed.
+
+"Oh, Prissy, dear Prissy!" Constance laughed at this piteous appeal.
+"Just as though you did not find John Alden most likeable when we were
+sailing and no one had yet died! And just as though you had to explain
+liking him! As though we did not all hold him dear and long to keep him
+with us! John Alden, I never, never would sit quiet under such insult!
+You funny Priscilla! What are you crying for? Aren't you happy? tell me
+that!"
+
+"So happy I must cry," sobbed Priscilla, but drying her eyes
+nevertheless. "Do you suppose those savages see me?"
+
+"I am sure of it," declared Constance. "Likely they will refuse to make
+a treaty with white men whose women act so strangely! My father is going
+to be as glad of your treaty with Priscilla as of the savage chief's
+treaty, an it be made, Master Alden."
+
+"What is it? What's to do, dear John Alden?" clamoured Damaris, who
+never spoke to John without the caressing epithet.
+
+The young man swung her to his shoulder, and kissed the soil-stained
+hand which the child laid against his cheek.
+
+"I shall marry Priscilla and stay in Plymouth, not go back to England at
+all! Does that please you, little maid?" he cried, gaily.
+
+Damaris scowled at him, weighing the case.
+
+"If you like me best," she said doubtfully.
+
+"Of a certainty!" affirmed John Alden, for once disregarding scruples.
+"Could I swing up Priscilla on my shoulder like this, I ask you? Why,
+she's not even a little girl!"
+
+And confiding little Damaris was satisfied.
+
+By this time the band of savages had advanced to the point of the road
+nearest to where the girls and John Alden were working.
+
+"We must go to greet them lest they find us remiss. We do not know the
+workings of their minds," said John Alden, striding down toward them,
+followed by the somewhat timorous group of grown and little girls,
+Damaris clinging to him, with one hand on Constance, in fearful
+enjoyment of the wonderful sight.
+
+"Welcome!" said John Alden, coming across the undergrowth to where the
+savages awaited him. "If you come in friendship, as I see you do,
+welcome, my brothers."
+
+"Welcome," said an Indian, stepping somewhat in advance. "We come in
+friendship. I am Squanto who know your race. I have been in England; I
+have seen the king. I am bring you friendship. This is Massasoit, the
+great chief. You are not the great white chief. He is old a little. Take
+us there."
+
+"Gladly will I take you to our governor, who is, as you say, much older
+than I, and to our war chief, Myles Standish, and to the elders of our
+nation," said John Alden. "Follow me. You are most welcome, Massasoit,
+and Squanto, who can speak our tongue."
+
+The singular company, the girls in their deep bonnets to shade them from
+the sun, the Indians in their paint and gay nodding feathers, the
+children divided between keen enjoyment of the novelty and equally keen
+fear of what might happen next, with John Alden the only white man, came
+down into Plymouth settlement, not yet so built up as to suggest the
+name.
+
+Governor Carver was busied with William Bradford over the records of the
+colony, from which they were making extracts to dispatch to England in
+the near sailing of the _Mayflower_. John Alden turned to Elizabeth
+Tilley.
+
+"Run on, little maid, and tell the governor and elders whom we bring,"
+he said.
+
+Elizabeth darted into the house, earning a frown from the governor for
+her lack of manners, but instantly forgiven when she cried:
+
+"John Alden and we who were working in the field are bringing Your
+Excellency the Indian chief Massasoit, and Squanto, who talks to us in
+English wonderful to hear, when you look at his feathers and painted
+face! And John Alden sent me on to tell you. And, there are other
+Indians with them. And, oh, Governor Carver, shall I tell the women in
+the community house to cook meat for their dinner, or shall it be just
+our common dinner of porridge with, maybe, a smoked herring to sharpen
+us? For this the governor should order, should not he?"
+
+Governor Carver and William Bradford smiled. As a rule the younger
+members of the community over which these elder, grave men were set,
+feared them too much to say anything at which they could smile, but the
+greatness of this occasion swept Elizabeth beyond herself.
+
+"I think, Mistress Elizabeth Tilley, that the matrons will not need the
+governor's counsel as to the feeding of our guests," said Governor
+Carver kindly. "Tell Constantia Hopkins to bid her father hither at his
+earliest convenience. I shall ask him to make the treaty with Massasoit,
+together with Edward Winslow, if it be question of a treaty, as I hope."
+
+Elizabeth sped back and met the approaching guests. She dropped a
+frightened curtsy, not knowing the etiquette of meeting a band of
+friendly savages. But as they paid no attention to her, her manners did
+not matter, and realizing this with relief she joined Constance at the
+rear of the procession and delivered her message.
+
+"Porridge indeed!" exclaimed Mistress Hopkins when Elizabeth Tilley
+repeated to her the governor's comment on her own suggestion as to the
+dinner for the Indian guests. "Porridge is well enough for us, but we
+will set the savages down to no such fare, but to our best, lest they
+fall to and eat us all some night in the dark of the moon, when we are
+asleep and unprotected! Little I thought I should be cooking for wild
+red men in an American forest when I learned to make sausage in my
+father's house! But learn I did, and to make it fit for the king, so it
+should please the savages, though what they like is beyond my knowledge.
+Sausage shall they have, and whether or no they will take to griddle
+cakes I dare not say, but it's my opinion that men are men, civilized or
+wild, and never a man did I see that was not as keen set on griddle
+cakes as a fox on a chicken roost. It will be our part to feed these
+savages well, for, as I say, men are men, wild or English, and if you
+would have a man deal well by you make your terms after he hath well
+eaten. Thus may your father and Elder Brewster get a good treaty from
+these painted creatures. Get out the flour, Constantia, and stir up the
+batter. Humility and Elizabeth, fetch the jar of griddle fat. Priscilla
+Mullins, what aileth thee? Art sleep-walking? Call a boy to fetch wood
+for the hearth, and fill the kettle. Are you John-a-Dreams, and is this
+the time for dreaming?"
+
+"It's John-dream at least, is it not, Prissy?" whispered Constance,
+pinching the girl lightly as she passed her on her way to do her share
+of her step-mother's bidding.
+
+Later Constance went to summon the guests to the community house for
+their dinner. They came majestically, escorted by the governor, Elder
+Brewster, William Bradford, Stephen Hopkins, the weighty men of the
+colony, with Captain Standish in advance, representing the power of
+might. What the Indians thought of these Englishmen no one could tell;
+certainly they were not less appreciative of the counsel of the wise
+than of the force of arms, having reliance on their own part upon their
+medicine men and soothsayers.
+
+What they thought of the white women's cooking was soon perfectly
+apparent. It kept the women busy to serve them with cakes, to hold the
+glowing coals on the hearth at the right degree to keep the griddle
+heated to the point of perfect browning, never passing it to the burning
+point. The Indians devoured the cakes like a band of hungry boys, and
+Mistress Hopkins's boasted sausage was never better appreciated on an
+English farm table than here.
+
+The young girls served the guests, which the Indians accepted as the
+natural thing, being used to taking the first place with squaws, both
+young and old.
+
+The homebrewed beer which had come across seas in casks abundantly, also
+met with ultimate approval, though at first taste two or three of the
+Indians nearly betrayed aversion to its bitterness. There were "strong
+waters" too, made riper by long tossing in the _Mayflower's_ hold, which
+needed no persuading of the Indians' palates.
+
+After the guests had dined Giles, John, Francis, and the other older
+boys, came trooping to the community house for their dinner.
+
+When they discovered that Squanto spoke English fairly well they were
+agog to hear from him the many things that he could tell them.
+
+"Stay with us; they do not need you," they implored, but Squanto,
+mindful of his duties as interpreter, reluctantly left them presently.
+Massasoit and his other companions returned with the white men to the
+conclave house, which was the governor's and Elder Brewster's home.
+
+"I go but wish I might stay a little hour," said Squanto. He won
+Mistress Eliza's heart, with Mistress White's, by his evident
+friendliness and desire to stay with them.
+
+After this Damaris and the children could not fear him, and thus at his
+first introduction, Squanto, who was to become the friend and reliance
+of the colony, became what is even more, the friend of the little
+children.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+Treaties
+
+
+The girls of the plantation were gathered together in Stephen Hopkins's
+house. The logs on the hearth were ash-strewn to check their burning yet
+to hold them ready to burn when the hour for preparing supper was come
+and the ashes raked away.
+
+Dame Eliza Hopkins had betaken herself to William Bradford's house, the
+baby, Oceanus, seated astride her hip in her favourite manner of
+carrying him; she protested that she could not endure the gabble of the
+girls, but in truth she greatly desired to discuss with Mistress
+Bradford, of whom she stood somewhat in awe, the events portending. She
+was secretly elated with her husband's coming honour, and wanted to
+convey to Mistress Bradford that, as between their two spouses, Stephen
+Hopkins was the better man.
+
+Constance, sitting beside the smothered hearth fire, might be
+considered, since it was at her father's hearthstone the girls were
+gathered, as the hostess of the occasion, but the gathering was for
+work, not formalities, and, in any case, Constance was too preoccupied
+with her task to pay attention to aught else.
+
+Only the older girls were bidden, but little Damaris was there by right
+of tenancy. She sat at Constance's feet, worshipping her, as she turned
+and twisted their father's coat, skilfully furbishing it with new
+buttons and new binding.
+
+"May Mr. Hopkins wear velvet, Constance?" asked Humility Cooper,
+suddenly; she too had been watching Constance work. "Did not Elder
+Brewster exhort us to utmost plainness of clothing, as becomes the
+saints, who set more store upon heavenly raiment than earthly
+splendour?"
+
+Constance looked up laughingly, pushing out of her eyes her waving locks
+which had strayed from her cap; she used the back of the hand that held
+her needle, pulled at great length through a button which she was
+fastening upon her father's worn velvet coat.
+
+"Oh, Humility, splendour?" she laughed. "When I am trying hard to make
+this old coat passing decent? Isn't it necessary for us all to wear what
+we have, willy-nilly, since nothing else is obtainable, garments not yet
+growing on New World bushes? I do believe that some of the brethren
+discussed Stephen Hopkins's velvet coat, and decided for it, since it
+stood for economy. It stood for more; till a ship brings supplies from
+home, it's this, or no coat for my father. But since he has been
+selected, with Mr. Edward Winslow, to make the treaty with Massasoit, he
+should be clad suitably to his office, were there choice between velvet
+and homespun."
+
+"What does he make to treat Mass o' suet, Constance? What is Mass o'
+suet; pudding, Constance?" asked Damaris, anxiously, knitting her brow.
+
+Constance's laugh rang out, good to hear. She leaned forward impetuously
+and snatched off her little sister's decorous cap, rumpled her sleek
+fair hair with both hands pressing her head, and kissed her. Priscilla
+Mullins laughed with Constance, looking sympathetically at her, but some
+of the other girls looked a trifle shocked at this demonstration.
+
+"Massasoit is a great Indian chief, small lass; he is coming in a day or
+so, and Father and Mr. Winslow will make a treaty with him; that means
+that Massasoit will promise to be our friend and to protect us from
+other Indian tribes, he and his Indians, while we shall promise to be
+true friends to him. It is a great good to our colony, and we are proud,
+you and I--and I think your mother, too"--Constance glanced with
+amusement at Priscilla--"that our father is chosen for the colony's
+representative."
+
+"Do you suppose that the Indians know whether cloth or velvet is
+grander? Those we see like leather and paint and feathers," said
+Priscilla. "I hold that our men should overawe the savages, but----"
+
+"And I hold that brides should be bonny, let it be here, or in England,"
+Constance interrupted her. "What will you wear on the day of days,
+Priscilla, you darling?"
+
+"Well, I have consulted with Mistress Brewster," admitted Priscilla,
+regretfully. "I did think, being a woman, she would know better how a
+young maid feeleth as to her bridal gown than her godly husband. But she
+saith that it is least of all becoming on such a solemn occasion to let
+my mind consider my outward seeming. So I have that excellent wool
+skirt that Mistress White dyed for me a good brown, and that with my
+blue body----"
+
+"Blue fiddlesticks, Priscilla Mullins!" Constance again interrupted her,
+impatiently. "You'll wear nothing of the kind. I tell you it shall be
+white for you on your wedding day, with your comely face and your honest
+eyes shining over it! I have a sweet embroidered muslin, and I can
+fashion it for you with a little cleverness and a deep frill combined,
+for that you are taller than I, and more plump to take up its length,
+there's no denying, Prissy dear! We'll not stand by and see our
+plantation's one real romance end in dyed brown cloth and dreariness,
+will we, girls?"
+
+"No!" cried Humility Cooper who would have followed Constance's lead
+into worse danger than a pretty wedding gown for Priscilla.
+
+But Elizabeth Tilley, her cousin, looked doubtful. "It sounds nice," she
+admitted, "but I never can tell what is wrong and what is right,
+because, though we read our Bibles to learn our duty, the Bible does not
+condemn pleasure, and our teachers do. So it might be safer to wear dull
+garments when we are married, Constance, and not be light-minded."
+
+"You mean light-bodied; light-coloured bodies, Betsy!" Constance laughed
+at her, with a glint of mischievous appreciation of Elizabeth's
+unconscious humour that was like her father. "No, indeed, my sister
+pilgrim. A snowy gown for Pris, though I fashion it, who am not too
+skilful. Oh, Francis Billington, how you scared me!" she cried, jumping
+to her feet and upsetting Damaris who leaned upon her, as Francis
+Billington burst into the room, out of breath, but full of importance.
+
+"Nothing to fear with me about, girls," he assured the roomful. "But
+great news! Massasoit has come, marched in upon us before we expected
+him, and the treaty is to be made to-morrow. Squanto is as proud and
+delighted as----"
+
+Squanto himself appeared in the doorway at that moment, a smile mantling
+his high cheek bones and a gleam in his eyes that betrayed the
+importance that his pride tried to conceal.
+
+"Chief come, English girls," he announced. "No more you be fear Indian;
+Massasoit tell you be no more fear, he and Squanto fight for you, and he
+say true. No more fear, little English girl!" he laid his hand
+protectingly upon Damaris's head and the child smiled up at him,
+confidingly.
+
+Giles came fast upon Squanto's heels. His face was flushed, his eyes
+kindled; Constance saw with a leap of her heart that he looked like the
+lad she had loved in England and had lost in the New World.
+
+"Got Father's coat ready, Con?" he asked. "There's to be a counsel held,
+and my father is to preside over it on our side, arranging with
+Massasoit. My father is to settle with him for the colony--of course
+Mr. Winslow will have his say, also."
+
+"I meant to furbish the coat somewhat more, Giles, but the necessary
+repairs are made," said Constance yielding her brother the garment. "How
+proud of Father he is!" she thought, happily. "How truly he adores him,
+however awry matters go between them!"
+
+Giles hung the coat on his arm, carefully, to keep it from wrinkles, a
+most unusual thoughtfulness in him, and hastened away.
+
+"No more work to-day, girls, or at least of this sort," cried Constance
+gaily, her heart lightened by Giles's unmistakable pride in their
+father. "We shall be called upon to cook and serve. Many Indians come
+with Massasoit, Squanto?"
+
+"No, his chiefs," Squanto raised one hand and touched its fingers
+separately, then did the same with the other hand. "Ten," he announced
+after this illustration.
+
+"That means no less than thirty potatoes, and something less than twenty
+quarts of porridge," laughed Constance, but was called to account by her
+stepmother, who had come in from the rear.
+
+"Will you never speak the truth soberly, Constantia Hopkins?" she said.
+"We do not count on two quarts of porridge for every Indian we feed.
+Take this child; he is heavy for so long, and he hath kicked with both
+heels in my flesh every step of the way. Another Hopkins, I'll warrant,
+I've borne for my folly in marrying your father; a restless, headstrong
+brood are they, and Oceanus is already not content to sit quietly on his
+mother's hip, but will drive her, like a camel of the desert." She
+detached Oceanus's feet from her skirt and handed him over to Constance
+with a jerk. Constance received him, biting her lips to hold back
+laughter, and burying her face in the back of the baby neck that had
+been pitifully thin during the cruel winter, but which was beginning to
+wrinkle with plumpness now.
+
+Too late she concealed her face; Mistress Eliza caught a glimpse of it
+and was upon her.
+
+"It's not a matter for laughter that I should be pummelled by your
+brother, however young he may be," she cried; Dame Eliza had a way of
+underscoring her children's kinship to Constance whenever they were
+troublesome. "Though, indeed, I carry on my back the weight of your
+father's children, and my heart is worse bruised by the ingratitude of
+you and your brother Giles, than is my flesh with this child's heels.
+And Mistress Bradford is proud-hearted, and that I will maintain,
+Puritan or no Puritan, or whether she be one of the elect of this
+chosen company, or a sinner. For plain could I see this afternoon that
+she held her husband to be a better man, and higher in the colony, than
+my husband, nor would she give way one jot when I put it before
+her--though not so that she would see what I would be after--that
+Stephen Hopkins it was who was chosen with Mr. Winslow to make the
+treaty, and not William Bradford. Well, far be it from me to take pride
+in worldly things; I thank the good training that my mother gave me that
+I am humble-minded. Often and often would she say to me: Eliza, never
+plume yourself that you, and your people before you, are, as they are,
+better, more righteous people than are most other folks. For it is our
+part to bear ourselves humbly, not setting ourselves up for our virtue,
+but content to know that we have it and to see how others are lacking in
+it, making no traffic with sinners, but yet not boasting. And as to you,
+young women, it would be better if you betook yourselves to your proper
+homes, not lingering here to encourage Constantia Hopkins to idleness
+when I've my hands full, and more than full, to make ready for the
+Indian chiefs' supper, and I need her help."
+
+On this strong hint the Plymouth girls bade Constance good-bye and
+departed, leaving her to a bustle of hard work, accompanied by her
+stepmother's scolding; Dame Eliza had come back dissatisfied from her
+visit, and Constance paid the penalty.
+
+The next morning the men of Plymouth gathered at the house of Elder
+Brewster, attired in all the decorum of their Sunday garb, their faces
+gravely expressive of the importance of the event about to take place.
+
+Captain Myles Standish, indeed, felt some misgivings of the pervading
+gravity of clothing of the civilized participants in this treaty, that
+it might not sufficiently impress their savage allies. He had fastened a
+bright plume that had been poor Rose's, on the side of his hat, and a
+band of English red ribbon across his breast, while he carried arms
+burnished to their brightest, his sword unsheathed, that the sun might
+catch its gleam.
+
+Elder Brewster shook his head slightly at the sight of this display, but
+let it pass, partly because Captain Standish ill-liked interference in
+his affairs, partly because he understood its reason, and half believed
+that the doughty Myles was right.
+
+Not less solemn than the white men, but as gay with colours as the
+Puritans were sombre, the Indians, headed by Massasoit, marched to the
+rendezvous from the house which had been allotted to them for lodging.
+
+With perfect dignity Massasoit took his place at the head of the council
+room, and saluted Captain Standish and Elder Brewster, who advanced
+toward him, then retreated and gave place to Stephen Hopkins and Edward
+Winslow, who were to execute the treaty.
+
+Its terms had already been discussed, but the Indians listened
+attentively to Squanto's interpretation of Mr. Hopkins's reading of
+them. They promised, on the part of Massasoit, perfect safety to the
+settlers from danger of the Indians' harming them, and, on the part of
+the pilgrims, aid to Massasoit against his enemies; on the part of both
+savage and white men, that justice should be done upon any one who
+wronged his neighbour, savage or civilized.
+
+The gifts that bound both parties to this treaty were exchanged, and the
+treaty, that was so important to the struggling colony, was consummated.
+
+The women and children, even the youths, were excluded from the council;
+the women had enough to do to prepare the feast that was to celebrate
+the compact before Massasoit took up his march of forty miles to return
+to his village.
+
+But Giles leaned against the casement of the open door, unforbidden,
+glowing with pride in his father, for the first time in heart and soul a
+colonist, completely in sympathy with the event he was witnessing.
+
+Stephen Hopkins saw him there and made no sign of dismissal. Their eyes
+met with their old look of love; father and son were in that hour
+united, though separated. Suddenly there arose a tremendous racket, a
+volley of shots, a beating of pans, shouts, pandemonium.
+
+Captain Myles Standish turned angrily and saw John and Francis
+Billington, decorated with streamers of party-coloured rags, which made
+them look as if they had escaped from a madhouse, leaping and shouting,
+beating and shooting; John firing his clumsy "Bouncing Bully" in the air
+as fast as he could load it; Francis filling in the rest of the
+outrageous performance.
+
+But worst of all was that Stephen Hopkins, who saw what Captain Myles
+saw, saw also his own boy, whom but a moment before he had looked at
+lovingly, bent and swayed by laughter.
+
+Captain Standish strode out in a towering fury to deal with the
+Billingtons, with whom he was ceaselessly dealing in anger, as they were
+ceaselessly afflicting the little community with the pranks that shocked
+and outraged its decorum.
+
+Stephen Hopkins dashed out after him. Quick to anger, sure of his own
+judgments, he instantly leaped to the conclusion that Giles had been
+waiting at the door to enjoy this prank when it was enacted, and it was
+a prank that passed ordinary mischief. If the Indians recognized it for
+a prank, they would undoubtedly take it as an insult to them. Only the
+chance that they might consider it a serious celebration of the treaty,
+afforded hope that it might not annul the treaty at its birth, and put
+Plymouth in a worse plight than before it was made.
+
+Mr. Hopkins seized Giles by the shoulders and shook him.
+
+"You laugh? You laugh at this, you young wastrel?" he said, fiercely.
+"By heavens, I could deal with you for conniving at this, which may earn
+salt tears from us all, if the savages take it amiss and retaliate on
+us. Will you never learn sense? How, in heaven's name, can you help on
+with this, knowing what you know of the danger to your own sisters
+should the savages take offence at it? Angels above us, and but a moment
+agone I thought you were my son, and rejoicing in this important day!"
+
+Giles, white, with burning eyes, looked straight into his father's eyes,
+rage, wounded pride, the sudden revolt of a love that had just been
+enkindled anew in him, distorting his face.
+
+"You never consider justice, sir," he said, chokingly. "You never ask,
+nor want to hear facts, lest they might be in my favour. You welcome a
+chance to believe ill of me. It is Giles, therefore the worst must be
+true; that's your argument."
+
+He turned away, head up, no relenting in his air, but the boy's heart in
+him was longing to burst in bitter weeping.
+
+Stephen Hopkins stood still, a swift doubt of his accusation, of
+himself, keen sorrow if he had wronged his boy, seizing him.
+
+"Giles, stop. Giles, come back," he said.
+
+But Giles walked away the faster, and his father was forced to return to
+Massasoit, to discover whether he had taken amiss what had happened,
+and, if he had, to placate him, could it be done.
+
+To his inexpressible relief he found that their savage guests had not
+suspected that the boys' mischief had been other than a tribute to
+themselves, quite in the key of their own celebrations of joyous
+occasions.
+
+After the dinner in which all the women of the settlement showed their
+skill, the Indians departed as they had come, leaving Squanto to be the
+invaluable friend of their white allies.
+
+Giles kept out of his father's way; Stephen Hopkins was not able to find
+him to clear up what he began to hope had been an unfounded suspicion on
+his part. "Zounds!" said the kind, though irascible man. "Giles is
+almost grown. If I did wrong him, I am sorry and will say so. An apology
+will not harm me, and is his due--that is in case it _is_ due! I'll set
+the lad an example and ask his pardon if I misjudged him. He did not
+deny it, to be sure, but then Giles is too proud to deny an unjust
+accusation. And he looked innocent. Well, a good lad is Giles, in spite
+of his faults. I'll find him and get to the bottom of it."
+
+"Giles is all right, Stephen," said Myles Standish, to whom he was
+speaking. "Affairs that go wrong between you are usually partly your own
+fault. He needs guiding, but you lose your own head, and then how can
+you guide him? But those Billington boys, they are another matter! By
+Gog and Magog, there's got to be authority put into my hands to deal
+with them summarily! And their father's a madman, no less. I told them
+to-day they'd cool their heels in Plymouth jail; we'd build Plymouth
+jail expressly for that purpose. And I mean it. I'm the last man to be
+hard on mischief; heaven knows I was a harum-scarum in my time. But
+mischief that is overflowing spirits, and mischief that is harmful are
+two different matters. I've had all I'll stand of Jack Billington, his
+Bouncing Bully and himself!"
+
+"Here comes Connie. I wonder if she knows anything of her brother? If
+she does, she'll speak of it; if she doesn't, don't disturb her peace of
+mind, Myles. My pretty girl! She hurts me by her prettiness, here in the
+wilderness, far from her right to a sweet girl's dower of pleasure,
+admiration, dancing, and----"
+
+"Stephen, Stephen, for the love of all our discarded saints, forbear!"
+protested Captain Myles, interrupting his friend, laughing. "If our
+friends about here heard you lamenting such a list of lost joys for
+Constance, by my sword, they'd deal with you no gentler than I purpose
+dealing with the Billingtons! Ah, sweet Con, and no need to ask how the
+day of the treaty hath left you! You look abloom with youth and
+gladness, dear lass."
+
+"I am happy," said Constance, slipping her hand into her father's and
+smiling up into the faces of both the men, who loved her. "Wasn't it a
+great day, Father? Isn't it blessed to feel secure from invasion, and,
+more than that, secure of an ally, in case of unknown enemies coming?
+Oh, Father, Giles was so proud of you! It was funny, but beautiful, to
+see how his eyes shone, and how straight he carried himself, because his
+father was the man who made the treaty for us all! I love you, dearest,
+quite enough, and I am proud of you to bursting point, but Giles is
+almost a man, and he is proud of you as men are proud; meseems it is a
+deeper feeling than in us women, who are content to love, and care less
+for ambition."
+
+Stephen Hopkins winced; he saw that Constance did not know that anything
+was again amiss between the two who were dearest to her on earth, but he
+said:
+
+"'Us women,' indeed, Constantia! Do you reckon yourself a woman, who art
+still but my child-daughter?"
+
+"Not a child, Father," said the girl, truly enough, shaking her head
+hard. "No pilgrim maid can be a child at my age, having seen and shared
+what hath fallen to my lot. And to-morrow there is to be another treaty
+made of peace and alliance, which is much on my mind, because I am a
+woman and because I love Priscilla. To-morrow is Pris married, Father."
+
+"Of a truth, and so she is!" cried Stephen Hopkins, slapping his leg
+vigorously.
+
+"Well, my girl, and what is it? Do you want to deck her out, as will not
+be allowed? Or what is on your mind?"
+
+"Oh, I have made her a white gown, Father," said Constance. "Whatever
+they say, sweet Pris shall not go in dark clothing to her marriage! But,
+Father, Mr. Winslow is to marry her, as a magistrate, which he is. Is
+there no way to make it a little like a holy wedding, with church, and
+prayers, and religion?"
+
+"My dear, they have decided here that marriage is but a matter belonging
+to the state. You must check your scruples, child, and go along with
+arrangements as they are. There is much of your earliest training, of
+your sainted mother's training, in you yet, my Constance, and, please
+God, you will remain her daughter always. But you cannot alter the ways
+of Plymouth colony. So be content, sweet Con, to pray for our Pris all
+you will, and rest assured they receive blessings who seek them, however
+they be situate," said Stephen Hopkins, gently touching his girl's
+white-capped head.
+
+"Ah, well," sighed Constance, turning away in acquiescence.
+
+Captain Myles Standish and her father watched Constance away. Then they
+turned in the other direction with a sigh.
+
+"Hard to face westward all the time, my friend; even Con feels the tug
+of old ways, and the old home, on her heartstrings," said Captain Myles.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+A Home Begun and a Home Undone
+
+
+"Do you know aught of your brother, Constance?" asked Stephen Hopkins
+when he appeared in the great kitchen and common room of his home early
+the following morning.
+
+"He hath been away from home all night," Dame Eliza answered for
+Constance, her lips pulled down grimly.
+
+"Which I know quite well, wife," said her husband. "Constance, did Giles
+speak to you of whither he was going?"
+
+Constance looked up, meeting her father's troubled eyes, her own
+cloudless.
+
+"No, Father, but he must be with the other lads. Perhaps they are
+serving up some merry trick for the wedding. Nothing can have befallen
+him. Giles was the happiest lad yesterday, Father dear! I must hasten
+through the breakfast-getting!"
+
+Constance fluttered away in a visible state of pleasant excitement. Her
+father watched her without speaking, his eyes still gloomy; he knew that
+Constance lacked knowledge of his reason for being anxious over Giles's
+absence.
+
+"And why should you hasten the getting of breakfast, Constantia
+Hopkins?" demanded Dame Eliza. "It is to be no earlier than common. If
+you are thinking to see Priscilla Mullins made the wife of John Alden,
+it will not be till nine of the clock, and that is nearly three hours
+distant."
+
+"Ah, but I am going to dress the bride!" triumphed Constance. "I'm going
+to dress her from top to toe, and coil her wealth of glossy hair, to
+show best its masses! And to crown her dear pretty face with it brought
+around her brow, as only I can bend it, so Pris declares! My dear,
+winsome Pris!"
+
+"Will you let be such vanity and catering to sinful worldliness, Stephen
+Hopkins?" demanded that unfortunate man's wife, with asperity. "Why will
+you allow your daughter to divert Priscilla Mullins from the awfulness
+of the vows she will utter, filling her mind with thoughts that ill
+become a Puritan bride, and one to be a Puritan wife? I will say for
+your wife, sir, that she did not come to vow herself to you in such
+wise. And when Constantia herself becomes a matron of this plantation
+she will not deport herself becomingly if she spend her maidenhood
+fostering vanity in others. But there is no folly in which you will not
+uphold her! I pray that I may live to keep Damaris to the narrow path."
+
+"Aye, and my sweet Con hath lost Her mother!" burst out Stephen Hopkins,
+already too disturbed in mind to bear his wife's nagging.
+
+His allusion to Constance's mother, of whose memory his wife was
+vindictively jealous, would have brought forth a storm, but that
+Constance flew to her father, caught him by the arm, and drew him
+swiftly out of the door, saying:
+
+"Nay, nay, my dear one; what is the use? Let us be happy on Pris's
+wedding day. I feel as though if we were happy it would somehow bring
+good to her. Don't mind Mistress Eliza; let her rail. If it were not
+about this, it would be something else. Come down the grass a way, my
+father, and see how the sunshine sparkles on the sea. The day is smiling
+on Pris, at least, and is decked for her by God, so why should my
+stepmother mind that I shall make the girl herself as fair as I know
+how?"
+
+"You are a dear lass, Con, child, and I swear I don't know how I should
+bear my days without you," said Stephen Hopkins, something suspiciously
+like a quaver in his voice.
+
+He did not return to the house till Con had prepared the breakfast.
+Hastily she cleared it away, her stepmother purposely delaying the meal
+as long as possible. But Dame Eliza's utmost contrariness could not hold
+back Constance's swift work long enough to make the hour very late when
+it was done, the room set in order, and Constance herself, unadorned, in
+her plain Sunday garb, hastening over the young grass to where Priscilla
+awaited her.
+
+No one else had been allowed to help Constance in her loving labour.
+Beginning with Priscilla's sturdy shoes--there were no bridal slippers
+in Plymouth!--Constance, on her knees, laced Pris into the gear in which
+she would walk to meet John Alden, and followed this up, garment by
+garment, which she and Priscilla had sewn in their brief spare moments,
+until she reached the masses of shining brown hair, which was
+Priscilla's glory and Constance's affectionate pride.
+
+Brushing, and braiding, and coiling skilfully, Constance wound the fine,
+yet heavy locks around Priscilla's head.
+
+Then with deft fingers she pulled, and patted and fastened into curves
+above her brow sundry strands which she had left free for that purpose,
+and fell back to admire her results.
+
+"Well, my Prissy!" Constance cried, rapturously clapping her hands.
+"Wait till you are dressed, and I let you see this in the glass yonder.
+No, not now! Only when the bridal gown is donned! My word, Priscilla
+Mullins, but John Alden will think that he never saw, nor loved you
+until this day! Which is as we would wish him to feel. They may forbid
+us curling and waving our locks in this plantation, but no one ever yet,
+as I truly believe, could make laws to keep girls from increasing their
+charms! Your hair brought down and shaken loose thus around your face,
+my Pris, is far, far more lovely, and adorns you better than any curling
+tongs could do it. Because, after all, nature fits faces and hair
+together, and my waving hair would not be half so becoming to you as
+your own straight hair, thus crowning your brow. Constance Hopkins, my
+girl, I am proud of your skill as lady's maid!" And Constance kissed her
+own hand by way of her reward, as she went to the corner and gingerly
+lifted the white gown that waited there for her handling.
+
+It was a soft, fragile thing, made of white stuff from the East,
+embroidered all over with sprigs of small flowers. It had been
+Constance's mother's, and had come from England at the bottom of her own
+chest, safe hidden, together with other beautiful fabrics that had been
+Constance's mother's, from the condemnatory eyes of Stephen Hopkins's
+second wife.
+
+"It troubles me to wear this flimsy loveliness, Constance," said
+Priscilla, as the gown drifted down over her shoulders. "And to think it
+was thy mother's."
+
+"It will not harm it to lie over your true heart to-day, dearest Pris,
+when you vow to love John forever. It seems to me as though lifeless
+things drew something of value to themselves from contact with goodness
+and love. Pris, it is really most exquisite! And that deep ruffle that I
+sewed around it at the bottom makes it exactly long enough for you, yet
+it leaves it still right for me to wear, should I ever want to, only by
+ripping it off again! Oh, Priscilla, dear, you are lovely enough, and
+this embroidery is fine enough, for you to be a London bride!"
+
+Once more Constance fell back to admire at the same time Priscilla and
+her achievements.
+
+"I think, perhaps, it may be wrong, as they tell us it is, to care too
+much for outward adornment, Con dear. Not but that I like it, and love
+you for being so unselfish, so generous to me," said Priscilla, with her
+sweet gravity of manner.
+
+"Constance, if only my mother and father, and Joseph--but of course my
+parents I mourn more than my brother--were here to bless me to-day!"
+
+"Try to feel that they are here, Prissy," said Constance. "There be
+Christians in plenty who would tell you that they pray for you still."
+
+"Oh, but that is superstition!" protested Priscilla, shocked.
+
+Constance set her face into a sort of laughing and sweet contrariness.
+
+"There be Christians in plenty who believe it," she repeated. "And it
+seems a comforting and innocent enough thing to me. Art ready now,
+Priscilla? But before you go, kiss me here the kind of good-bye that we
+cannot take in public; my good-bye to dear Priscilla Mullins; your
+good-bye to Con, with whom, though dear friends we remain for aye,
+please God, you never again will be just the same close gossip that we
+have been as maids together, on ship-board and land, through sore grief
+and hardships, yet with abounding laughter when we had half a chance to
+smile."
+
+"Why, Con, don't make me cry!" begged Priscilla, holding Constance
+tight, her eyes filling with tears. "You speak sadly, and like one years
+older than yourself, who had learned the changes of our mortal life.
+I'll not love you less that I am married."
+
+"Yes, you will, Pris! Or, if not less, at least differently. For maids
+are one in simple interests, quick to share tears and laughter, while
+the young matron is occupied with graver matters, and there is not
+oneness between them. It is right so, but----Well, then, kiss me
+good-bye, Pris, my comrade, and bid Mistress John Alden, when you know
+her, love me well for your sweet sake," insisted Constance, not far from
+tears herself.
+
+Quietly the two girls stole out of the bedroom, into the common room of
+the new house which Doctor Fuller had built for the reception of his
+wife, whose coming from England he eagerly awaited. The widow White and
+Priscilla had been lodged there, helping the doctor to get it in order.
+
+"You look well, Priscilla," said Mrs. White. "Say what they will, there
+is something in the notion of a young maiden going in white to her
+marriage. Your friends are waiting you outside. I wish you well, my
+daughter, and may you be blessed in all your undertakings."
+
+Priscilla went to the door and Constance opened it for her, stepping
+back to let the bride precede her. Beyond it were waiting the young
+girls of the settlement; Humility Cooper and her cousin, Elizabeth
+Tilley, caught Priscilla by the hands.
+
+"How fair you are, dear!" cried Humility. "The children begged to be
+allowed to come to your wedding, and they are all waiting at Mr.
+Winslow's, for you were always their great friend, and there is scarce a
+limit to their love for John Alden."
+
+"Surely let the children come!" said Priscilla. "They are first of all
+of us, and will win blessings for John Alden and me."
+
+The girls fell into line ahead of her, and Priscilla walked down Leyden
+Street, the short distance that lay between the doctor's house and
+Edward Winslow's, her head bent, her eyes upon the ground, the colour
+faded from her fresh-tinted face. At the magistrate's house the elders
+of the little community were gathered, waiting. John Alden came out and
+met his bride on the narrow, sanded walk, and led her soberly into the
+house and up to Edward Winslow, who awaited them in his plain,
+close-buttoned coat, with its broad collar and cuffs of white linen
+newly and stiffly starched and ironed.
+
+It was a brief ceremony, divested of all but the necessary questions and
+replies, yet to all present it was not lacking in impressiveness, for
+the memory of recent suffering was vivid in every mind; the longing for
+the many who were dead was poignant, and the consciousness of the
+uncertainty of the future of the young people, who were thus beginning
+their life together, was acute, though no one would have allowed its
+expression, lest it imply a lack of faith.
+
+When Mr. Winslow had pronounced John and Priscilla man and wife, Elder
+William Brewster arose and, with extended hands, called down upon their
+heads the blessing of the God of Israel, and prayed for their welfare in
+this world, their reward in the world to come.
+
+Without any of the merriment which accompanied congratulations and
+salutations at a marriage in England, these serious men and women came
+up in turn and gravely kissed the bride upon her cheek, and shook John
+Alden's hand. Yet each one was fond of Priscilla and had grieved with
+her on her father's, mother's, and brother's deaths, and each one
+honoured and truly was attached to John Alden.
+
+But even in Plymouth colony youth had to be more or less youthful.
+
+"Come, now; we're taking you home!" cried Francis Billington. "Fall in,
+girls and boys, big and little, grown folks as well, if only you will,
+and let us see our bride and her man started in their new home! And who
+remembers a rousing chorus?"
+
+John Alden had been building his house with the help of the older boys;
+to it now he was taking Priscilla on her wedding journey, made on her
+own feet, a distance of a few hundred yards.
+
+"No rousing choruses here, sir," said Edward Winslow, sternly. "If you
+will escort our friends to their home--and to that there can be no
+objection--let it be to the sound of godly psalms, not to profane
+songs."
+
+"You offer us youngsters little inducement to marry when our time
+comes," muttered Francis, but he took good care that Mr. Winslow should
+not hear him, having no desire to run counter at that moment to Mr.
+Winslow's will, knowing that he and Jack were already in danger of being
+dealt with by the authorities. And where was Jack? He had not seen his
+brother since the previous day.
+
+Boys and young men in advance, girls and the younger women following,
+the bridal pair bringing up the rear, the little procession went up
+Leyden Street and drew up at the door of the exceedingly small house
+which John Alden had made for his wife. Francis, who had constituted
+himself master of ceremonies, made the escort divide into two lines and,
+between them, John and Priscilla walked into their house. And with that
+the wedding was over.
+
+For an instant the young people held their places, staring across the
+space that separated them, with the blank feeling that always follows
+after the end of an event long anticipated.
+
+Then Constance turned with a sigh, looking about her, wondering if she
+really were to resume her work-a-day tasks, first of all get dinner.
+
+She met her father's intent gaze and his look startled her. He beckoned
+her, and she stepped back out of the line and joined him.
+
+"Giles, Constance; where is he?" demanded Stephen Hopkins.
+
+"Father, I don't know! Isn't he here?" she cried.
+
+"He is not here, nor is John Billington," said her father. "No one has
+seen either of them since last night. Is it likely that they would
+absent themselves willingly from this wedding; Giles, who is so fond of
+John Alden; John Billington, who is so fond of anything whatever that
+breaks the monotony of the days?"
+
+Constance shook her head. "No, Father," she whispered.
+
+"No. And you have no clue to this disappearance, Constance?" her father
+insisted.
+
+"Father, Father, no; no, indeed!" protested Constance. "I did not so
+much as miss the boys from among us. But what could have befallen them?
+It can't be that they have come to harm?"
+
+"Constance," said her father with a visible effort, "Giles was deeply
+angry with me yesterday----"
+
+"Father, dear Father, you are quite wrong!" Constance interrupted him.
+"There was no mistaking how delighted Giles was with your making the
+treaty. Indeed I saw in him all the old-time love and pride in you that
+we used to make a jest--but how we liked it!--in the dear days across
+the water, when we were children."
+
+Stephen Hopkins let her have her say. Then he shook his head.
+
+"It may all be as you say, Constance," he said, sadly. "I also felt in
+Giles, saw in his face, the affection I have missed of late. But when
+the Billingtons came making that disturbance I went out--angry, Con; I
+admit it--and accused Giles of abetting them in what might have caused
+us serious trouble. And he, in turn, was furiously angry with me. He did
+not reply to my accusation, but spoke impertinently to me, and went
+away. I have not seen him since."
+
+"Oh, Father, Father!" gasped Constance, her lips trembling, her face
+pale.
+
+"I know, my daughter," said Stephen Hopkins, almost humbly. "But it was
+an outrageous thing to risk offending our new allies, and inviting the
+death of us all. And Giles did not deny having a hand in it, remember.
+But I confess that I should have first asked him whether he had, or
+not."
+
+"Poor Father," said Constance, gently. "It is hard enough to be anxious
+about your boy without being afraid that you wronged him. How I wish
+that Giles would not always stand upon his dignity, and scorn speech!
+How I wish, how I pray, that you may come to understand each other, to
+trust each other, and be as we were when you trotted Giles and me upon
+your knees, and I sometimes feared that you liked me less than you did
+your handsome boy, who was so like you."
+
+"Who _is_ so like me," her father corrected her. "You were right, Con,
+when you said that Giles and I were too alike to get on well together;
+the same quick temper, rash action, swift conclusions."
+
+"The same warm heart, high honour, complete loyalty," Constance amended,
+swiftly.
+
+"Father, if you could but once and for ever grasp that! Giles is you
+again in your best traits. He can be the reliance that you are, but if
+he turns wrong----"
+
+She paused and her father groaned.
+
+"Ah, Constance, you are partial to me, yet you stab me. If I have turned
+him wrong, is what you would say! How womanly you are grown, my
+daughter, and how like your dead mother! But, Con, this is no time to
+stand discussing traits, not even to adjust the blame of this wretched
+business. How shall I find the boy?"
+
+"Why, for that, Father, you know far better than I," said Constance,
+gently, taking her father's arm. "Let us go home, dear man. I should
+think a party to scour the woods beyond us? And Squanto would be our
+best help, he and Captain Standish, wouldn't they? But I am sure the
+boys will be in for supper. You know they are sharp young wolves, with a
+scent like the whole pack in one for supper! Giles is safe! And as to
+Jack Billington, tell me truly, Father, can you imagine anything able to
+harm him?" She laughed with an excellent reproduction of her own mirth
+when she possessed it, but it was far from hers now.
+
+Constance shared to the uttermost her father's apprehension. If her
+poor, hasty father had again accused Giles of that which he had not
+done, and this when he was aglow with a renewal of the old confidence
+between them, then it well might be that Giles, equally hot-headed, had
+done some desperate thing in his first sore rage. The fact that he had
+been absent from the wedding of John Alden, whom he cared for deeply;
+that he had missed his supper and breakfast; and that John Billington,
+reckless, adventurous Jack, was missing at the same time, left Constance
+little ground for hope that nothing was wrong.
+
+But nothing of this did she allow to escape in her manner of speech.
+
+She gaily told her father all about her morning: how cleverly she had
+lengthened Priscilla's gown, her own mother's gown, lent Pris; how
+becomingly she had arranged Pris's pretty hair; all the small feminine
+details which a man, especially a brave, manly man of Stephen Hopkins's
+kind, is supposed to scorn, but which Constance was instinctively
+sympathetic enough to know rested and amused her father; soothed him
+with its pretty femininity; relaxed him as proving that in a world of
+such pretty trifles tragedy could not exist.
+
+"My stepmother is not come back yet," Constance said, with a swift
+glance around, as she entered. "Father, when she comes in with the baby
+you must test his newly discovered powers; Oceanus is beginning to stand
+alone! Now I must go doff my Sunday best--Father, I never can learn to
+call it the Sabbath; please forgive me!--and put on my busy-maid
+clothes! What a brief time a marriage takes! I mean in the making!" She
+laughed and ran lightly away, up the steep stairs that wound in
+threatening semi-spiral, up under the steep lean-to roof.
+
+"Bless my sunshine!" said Stephen Hopkins, fervently, as he watched her
+skirt whisk around the door at the stairway foot.
+
+But upstairs, in the small room that she and Damaris shared, his
+"sunshine" was blurred by a swift rain of tears.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+The Lost Lads
+
+
+A gray evening of mist drifting in from the sea settled down upon
+Plymouth. It emphasized the silence and seemed to widen and deepen the
+vacuum created by the absence of Giles and John. For the supper hour, at
+which they were enthusiastically prompt to return to give their hearty
+appetites their due, came and passed without bringing back the boys.
+
+Stephen Hopkins pushed away his plate with its generous burden
+untouched, threw on his wide-brimmed hat, and strode out of the house
+without a word. Constance knew that he had gone to ask help from Myles
+Standish, to organize a search, and go out to find the lost.
+
+Damaris crept into her sister's lap and sat with her thin little hands
+in Constance's, mutely looking up into the white, sorrowing face above
+her.
+
+Even Dame Eliza was reluctantly moved to something like pity for the
+girl's silent misery, and expressed it in her way.
+
+"At least," she said, suddenly, out of the deep silence enveloping them,
+"here is one thing gone wrong without my sending. No one can say that I
+had a finger raised to push your brother out of the right course this
+time!"
+
+Constance tried to reply, but failed. Not directly had her stepmother
+had a share in this misfortune, but how great a share had she in the
+estrangement between father and son that was at the bottom of the
+present misunderstanding? Constance would not remind her stepmother of
+this, and no other reply was possible to her in her intense anxiety.
+
+The night wore away, the dawn came, lifting the fog as the sun shot up
+out of the sea. Stephen Hopkins came out of the principal bedroom on the
+ground floor of the house showing in his haggard face that he had not
+slept. Constance came slowly down the winding stairs, pale, with dark
+circles under her eyes which looked as though they had withdrawn from
+her face, retreated into the mind which dwelt on Giles since they could
+no longer see him, and the brain alone could fulfil their office.
+
+"There's no sort of use in getting out mourning till you're sure of
+having a corpse, so I say," said Mistress Eliza, impatiently. "Giles is
+certain to take care of himself. I've no manner of patience with people
+who borrow what they can't return, and how would you return trouble,
+borrowed from nothing and nobody?"
+
+Nevertheless she helped both Constance and her father to a generous
+bowlful of porridge, and set it before them with a snapped-out: "Eat
+that!" which Constance was grateful to feel concealed uneasiness on her
+stepmother's own part.
+
+Another day, and still another, wore themselves away. Constance fought
+to keep her mind occupied with all manner of tasks, hoping to tire
+herself till she must sleep at night, but nevertheless slept only
+brokenly, lying staring at the three stars which she could see through
+the tiny oblong window under the eaves, or into the blackness of the
+slanting roof, listening to Damaris's quiet breathing, and thinking
+that childhood was not more blessed in being happy than in its ability
+to forget.
+
+Stephen Hopkins had gone with Captain Standish, Francis Billington, and
+Squanto to scour the woods for miles, although labouring hands could ill
+be spared at that season. They returned at the close of their fourth day
+of absence, and no one ventured to question them; that they had not so
+much as a clue to the lost lads was clearly written on their faces.
+
+Constance drew her stool close to her father after supper was over, and
+wound her arms about him and laid her head on his breast, unrebuked by
+her stepmother.
+
+"Read the fifty-first psalm, my daughter; it was the penitential psalm
+in England in my beginnings," Stephen Hopkins said, and Constance read
+it in a low voice, which she dared not raise, lest it break.
+
+An hour later, an hour which had been passed in silence, broken only by
+Dame Eliza's taking Damaris up to bed, the sound of voices was heard
+coming down the quiet street. Stephen Hopkins's body tautened as he sat
+erect, and Constance sprang to her feet. No one ever went outside his
+house in the Plymouth plantation after the hour for family prayers,
+which was identical in every house. But someone was abroad now; it was
+not possible----?
+
+"It is Squanto," said Stephen Hopkins, catching the Indian's syllables
+of broken English.
+
+"And Francis Billington, and another Indian, talking in his own
+tongue!" added Constance, shaking with excitement.
+
+The door opened; Stephen Hopkins did not move to open it. There entered
+the three whom those within the house had recognized; Francis's face was
+crimson, his eyes flashing.
+
+"You come to tell me that my son is dead?" said Stephen Hopkins, raising
+his hand as if to ward off a blow.
+
+"No, we don't! Don't look like that, Mr. Hopkins, Con!" cried Francis.
+"Jack and Giles are all right----"
+
+"Massasoit send him," said Squanto, interrupting the boy, as if he
+wanted to save Stephen Hopkins from betraying the feeling that an Indian
+would scorn to betray, for Mr. Hopkins had closed his eyes and swayed
+slightly as he heard Francis's high boyish voice utter the words he had
+so hungered to hear.
+
+Squanto pointed to the Indian beside him as he spoke. "Massasoit sent
+him. Massasoit know where boys go. Nawsett. It not far; Massasoit more
+far. Nawsett Indians fight you when you come, not yet got Plymouth
+found. Nawsett. Both boys, both two." Squanto touched two fingers of his
+left hand. "Not dead, not sick, not hurt. You send, Massasoit say. Get
+boys you send Nawsett. Squanto go show Nawsett." Squanto looked proudly
+at his hearers, rejoicing in his good news.
+
+"Praise God from Whom all blessings flow," said Stephen Hopkins, bowing
+his head, and Constance burst into tears and seized him around the neck,
+while Francis drew his sleeves across his eyes, muttering something
+about: "Rather old Jack was all right."
+
+Dame Eliza came down the stairs, having heard voices, and recognized
+them as Indian, but had been unable to catch what was said. She stopped
+as she saw the scene before her, and her face crimsoned. She at once
+knew the purport, though not the details, of the message delivered
+through Squanto by Massasoit's messenger, and that the lost lads were
+safe. With a quick revulsion from the anxiety that she had felt, she
+instantly lost her temper.
+
+"Stephen Hopkins, what is this unseemingly exhibition? Will you allow
+your daughter to behave in this manner before a youth, and two savage
+men? Shame on you! Stand up, Constantia, and let your father alone. So
+Giles is safe, I suppose? Well, did I not tell you so? Bad sixpences are
+hard to lose; your son will give you plenty of the scant comfort you've
+already had from him. No fear of him not coming back to plague me, and
+to disgrace you," she scolded.
+
+"Oh, Stepmother, when we are so glad and thankful!" sighed Constance,
+lifting her tired, tear-worn face, over which the light of her gladness
+and gratitude was beginning to shine.
+
+There was nothing to be done that night but to try to adjust to the
+relief that had come, and to wait impatiently for morning to arrange to
+bring home the wanderers.
+
+Stephen Hopkins was ahead of the sun in beginning the next day, and as
+soon as he could decently do so, he set out to see Governor Bradford to
+ask his help.
+
+"I rejoice with you, my friend and brother," said dignified William
+Bradford, when he had heard Mr. Hopkins's story. "Like the woman in the
+Gospel you call in your neighbours to rejoice with you that the lost is
+found. I will at once send the shallop to sail down the coast and bring
+off our thorn-in-the-flesh, young John Billington, and your somewhat
+unruly lad with him. As your brother in our great enterprise and your
+true well-wisher, let me advise that you deal sternly with Giles when he
+is returned to us. He hath done exceeding wrong thus to afflict you, and
+with you, all of our community to a lesser extent, by anxiety over his
+safety. Furthermore, it is a time in which we need all our workers; he
+hath not only deprived us of his own services, but hath demanded the
+valuable hours of others in striving to rescue him. I doubt not that you
+will do your duty as a father, but let me remind you that your duty is
+not leniency, but sternness to the lad who is too nearly man to fail us
+all as he hath done."
+
+"It is true, William Bradford, and I will do my best though it hath
+afflicted me that I may have driven the lad from me by blaming him when
+it was not his desert, and that because of this he went away," said Mr.
+Hopkins.
+
+"If this were true, Stephen, yet would it not excuse Giles," said
+William Bradford, whose one child, a boy, had been left behind in
+England to follow his father to the New World later, and who was not
+versed in ways of fatherhood to highstrung youths of Giles's age. "It
+becometh not a son to resent his father's chastisements, which, properly
+borne, may result in benefit, whether or not their immediate occasion
+was a matter of justice or error. So deal with your son sternly, I warn
+you, nor let your natural pleasure in receiving him safe back again
+relax you toward him."
+
+The shallop was launched with sufficient men to navigate her, Squanto
+accompanying them to guide them southward to the tribe that held Giles
+and John, in a sense, their captives.
+
+On the third day after her departure the shallop came again in sight,
+nosing her way slowly up the harbour against a wind dead ahead and
+blowing strong. There was time, and to spare for any amount of
+preparation, and yet to get down on the sands to see the shallop come to
+anchor, and be ready to welcome those whom she bore. Nevertheless,
+Constance hurried her simple toilet till she was breathless, snarling
+the comb in her hair; tying her shoe laces into knots which her
+nervousness could hardly disentangle; chafing her delicate skin with the
+vigorous strokes she gave her face; stooping frequently to peer out of
+her bedroom window to see if, by an impossible mischance, the shallop
+had come up before she was dressed, although the one glimpse that she
+had managed to get of the small craft had shown that the shallop was an
+hour away down the harbour.
+
+At last her flustered mishaps were over, and Constance was neat and
+trim, ready to go down to the beach.
+
+"Damaris, little sister, come up and let me see that none of the dinner
+treacle is on the outside of your small mouth," Constance called gaily
+down the stairs.
+
+Damaris appeared, came half way, and stopped forlornly.
+
+"Mother says she will take me, Constance," the child said, mournfully.
+"She says that you will greet Giles with warm welcome, and that I must
+not help in it, for that Giles is wicked, and must be frowned upon. Is
+Giles wicked, Constance? He is good to me; I love him, not so much as
+you, but I do love Giles. Must I not be glad when he comes, Sister?"
+
+"Oh, Damaris, darling, your kind little heart tells you that you would
+want a welcome yourself if you were returning after an absence! And we
+know that the father of that bad son in the Gospel went out to meet
+him, and fell on his neck! But I must not teach you against your
+mother's teaching! You know, little lass, whether or not I think our big
+brother bad!" said poor Constance. "Where is your mother?"
+
+"She hath gone to fetch Oceanus back; he crawled out of the open door
+and went as fast as a spider down the street, crawling, Constance! He
+looked so funny!" and Damaris laughed.
+
+Constance laughed too, and cried gaily, with one of her sudden changes
+from sober to gay: "And so Oceanus is beginning to run off, too! What a
+time we shall have, Damaris, with our big brother marching away, and our
+baby brother crawling away, both of them caring not a button whether we
+are frightened about them, or not!"
+
+She flitted down the stairs with her lightness of movement that gave her
+the effect of a half-flight, caught Damaris to her and kissed her
+soundly, and set her down just in time to escape rebuke for her
+demonstrativeness from Dame Eliza, who returned with her face reddened,
+and Oceanus kicking under one arm, hung like a sack below it, and
+screaming with baffled rage and the desire of adventure. On the beach
+nearly everyone of the small community was gathered to see the arrival.
+
+Constance stole up behind Priscilla Alden, and touched her shoulder.
+
+"You are not the only happy girl here to-day, my bonny bride," she
+said.
+
+Priscilla turned and caught Constance by both hands.
+
+"Nor the only one glad for this cause, Constance," she retorted. "Indeed
+I rejoice beyond my powers of telling, that Giles is come to thee, and
+that thou art spared the bitter sorrow that we feared had fallen upon
+thee!"
+
+"Well do I know that, dear Pris," said Constance. "Where is my father?"
+
+"Yonder with William Bradford, Edward Winslow, Elder Brewster; do you
+not see?" Priscilla replied nodding toward the group that stood somewhat
+apart from the others. Constance crossed over to them, and curtseyed
+respectfully to the heads of this small portion of the king's subjects.
+
+"Will you not come with me, my father?" she said, hoping that Stephen
+Hopkins would stand with her on the edge of the sands to be the first
+whom Giles would see on arriving, identifying himself with her who,
+Giles would know, was watching for him with a heart leaping out toward
+him.
+
+"No, Daughter, I will remain here. I am to-day less Giles Hopkins's
+father than one of the representatives of this community, which he and
+John Billington have offended," replied Stephen Hopkins, but whether
+with his mind in complete accord with his decision, or stifling a
+longing to run to meet his son, like that other father of whom Constance
+had spoken to Damaris, the girl could not tell.
+
+She turned away, recognizing the futility of pleading when her father
+was flanked as he then was.
+
+The shallop was beached and the lost lads leaped out, John with a broad
+grin on his face, unmixed enjoyment of the situation visible in his
+every look; Giles with his eyes troubled, joy in getting back struggling
+with his misgivings as to what he might find awaiting him.
+
+The first thing that he found was Constance, and there was no admixture
+in the delight with which he seized his sister's hands--warmer greeting
+being impossible before a concourse which would rebuke it sternly--and
+replied fervently to her: "Oh, Giles, how glad I am to see you again!"
+
+"And I to see you, sweet sis! Ah, there is Pris! I missed her wedding.
+And there is John Alden!" said Giles, shading his eyes with his hand,
+but Constance saw the eyes searching for his father, and merely glancing
+at Priscilla and John.
+
+"Our father is with the other weighty men of our plantation, waiting for
+you, Giles. You and John must go to them," suggested Constance.
+
+Giles shrugged his shoulders. "Otherwise they will not know we are
+back?" he asked. "Very well; come, then, Jack. The sooner the better;
+then the gods are propitiated."
+
+The two wilful lads walked over to the grave men awaiting them.
+
+"We thank you, Governor Bradford, for sending the shallop after us,"
+said Giles.
+
+"Is this all that you have to say?" demanded William Bradford!
+
+"No, sir; we have had adventures. We wandered five days, subsisting on
+berries and roots; came upon an Indian village, called Manamet, which we
+reckon to be some twenty miles to the southward of Plymouth here. These
+Indians conveyed us on to Nawsett still further along, and there we
+rested until the shallop appeared to take us off. This is, in brief, the
+history of our trip, although I assure you, it was longer in the living
+than in the telling. Permit me to add, Governor, that those Indians
+among whom we tarried are coming to make a peace with us and seek
+satisfaction from those of our community who took their corn what time
+we were dallying at Cape Cod, when we arrived in the _Mayflower_. This
+is, perhaps, in a measure due to our visit to them, though we would not
+claim the full merit of it, since it may also be partly wrought by
+Massasoit's example."
+
+Giles spoke with an easy nonchalance that held no suggestion of
+contrition, and William Bradford, as well as Elder Brewster, and Mr.
+Winslow, frowned upon him, while his father flushed darkly under the
+bronze tint of his skin, and his eyes flashed. At every encounter this
+father and son mutually angered each other.
+
+"Inasmuch as you have done well, Giles Hopkins and John Billington, we
+applaud you," said Governor Bradford, slowly. "In sooth we are rejoiced
+that you are not dead, not harmed by your adventure. We rejoice, also,
+in the tidings of peace with yet another savage neighbour. But we demand
+of you recognition of your evil ways, repentance for the anxiety that
+you have caused those to whom you are dear, to all Christians, who, as
+is their profession, wish you well; for the injury you have done us in
+taking yourselves off, to the neglect of your seasonable labours, and
+the time which hath been wasted by able-bodied men searching for you.
+You have not asked your father to pardon you."
+
+Giles looked straight into his father's eyes. Unfortunately there was in
+them nothing of the look they had worn a few nights earlier when
+Constance had read to him the psalm of the stricken heart.
+
+"I am truly grieved for the suffering that I know my sister bore while
+my fate was uncertain, for I know well her love for me. And I regret
+being a charge upon this struggling plantation. As far as lies in my
+power I will repay that debt to it. But as to my father, his last words
+to me expressed his dislike for me, and his certainty that I was a
+wrong-doer. I cannot think that he has grieved for me," said poor Giles,
+speaking like a man to men until, at the last words, his voice quavered.
+
+"I have grieved for thee often and bitterly, Giles, and over thee, which
+is harder for a father than sorrow for a son. Show me that I am wrong in
+my judgment of thee, by humbling thyself to my just authority, and
+conducting thyself as I would have thee act, and with a great joy in my
+heart I will confess myself mistaken in thee, and thank Heaven for my
+error," said Stephen Hopkins.
+
+Giles's eyes wavered, he dropped his lids, and bit his lip. The simple
+manhood in his father's words moved him, yet he reflected that he had
+been justified in resenting an unfounded suspicion on this father's
+part, and he steeled himself against him. More than this, how could he
+reply to him when he was surrounded by the stern men who condemned
+youthful folly, and whom Giles resisted in thought and deed?
+
+Giles turned away without raising his eyes; he did not see a half
+movement that his father made to hold out his hand to detain him.
+
+"Time will right, or end everything," the boy muttered, and walked away.
+
+Constance, who had been watching the meeting between her two
+well-beloveds, crossed over to Myles Standish.
+
+"Captain Standish," she begged him, "come with me; I need you."
+
+"Faith, little Con, I need you always, but never have you! You show
+scant pity to a lonely man, that misses his little friend," retorted
+Captain Standish, turning on his heel, obedient to a gesture from
+Constance to walk with her.
+
+"It is about Giles, dear Captain," Constance began. "He is back, I am
+thankful for it, but this breach between him and my father is a wide
+one, and over such a foolish thing! And it came about just when
+everything was going well!"
+
+"Foolish trifles make the deepest breaches, Constance, hardest to bridge
+over," said Captain Myles. "I grant you that the case is serious,
+chiefly because the man and the boy love each other so greatly; that,
+and their likeness, is what balk them. What would you have me do?"
+
+"I don't know, but something!" cried Constance wringing-her hands. "I
+hoped you would have a plan by which you could bring them together."
+
+"Well, truth to tell, Con, I have a plan by which to separate them,"
+said the captain, adding, laughing--as Constance cried out: "Oh, not for
+all time!"--"But I think a time spent apart would bring them together
+in the end. Here is my plan: I am going exploring. There is that vast
+tract of country north of us which we have not seen, and tribes of
+savages, of which Squanto tries to tell us, but which he lacks of
+English to describe. I am going to take a company of men from here and
+explore to the nor'ard. I would take Giles among them. He will learn
+self-discipline, obedience to me--I am too much a soldier to be lax in
+exacting obedience from all who serve under me--and he will return here
+licked into shape by the tongue of experience, as an unruly cub is
+licked into his proper form by his dam. In the meantime your father will
+see Giles more calmly than at short range, and will not be irritated by
+his manly airs. When they come together again it will be on a new plane,
+as men, not as man and boy, and I foresee between them the sane
+enjoyment of their profound mutual affection. I had it in mind to ask
+Stephen Hopkins to lend me his boy; what say you, my Constance?"
+
+"I say: Bless you, and thrice over bless you, Captain Myles Standish!"
+cried Constance. "It is the very solution! Oh, I am thankful! I shall be
+anxious every hour till you return, but with all my heart I say: Take
+Giles with you and teach him sense. What should we ever do here without
+you, Captain, dear 'Arm-of-the-Colony'?"
+
+"I doubt you ever have a chance to try that dire lack, my Con," said
+Captain Myles, with a humorous look at her. "I think I'm chained here by
+the interest that has grown in me day by day, and that I shall die among
+you. Though, by my sword, it's a curious thing to think of Myles
+Standish dying among strict Puritans!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+Sundry Herbs and Simples
+
+
+Stephen Hopkins and his son drew no nearer together as the days went by.
+
+Hurt and angry, Giles would not bend his stiff young neck to humble
+himself, checking any impulse to do so by reminding himself that his
+father had been unjust to him.
+
+Yet Doctor Fuller, good, kind, and wise, had the right of it when he
+said to the lad one day, laying his arm across Giles's shoulders,
+caressingly:
+
+"Remember, lad, that who is right, or who is wrong in a quarrel, or an
+estrangement, matters little, since we are all insects of a day and our
+dignity at best a poor thing, measured by Infinite standards. But he is
+always right who ends a quarrel; ten thousand times right if he does it
+at the sacrifice of his own sense of injury, laying down his pride to
+lift a far greater possession. There may be a difference of opinion as
+to which is right when two have fallen out, but however that be, the
+situation is in itself wrong beyond dispute, and all the honour is his
+who ends it."
+
+Giles heard him with lowered head, and knit brows, but he did not resent
+the brief sermon. Doctor Fuller was a gentle spirit; all his days were
+given over to healing and helping; he was free from the condemnatory
+sternness of most of the colonists, and Giles, as all others did, loved
+him.
+
+Giles kicked at the pebbles in the way, the slow colour mounting in his
+face. Then he threw back his head and looked the good doctor squarely in
+the eyes.
+
+"Ah, well, Doctor Fuller," he said. "I'd welcome peace, but what would
+you? My father condemns me, sees no good in me, nor would he welcome
+back the old days when we were close friends. There will be a ship come
+here from home some time on which I can sail back to England. It will be
+better to rid my father of my hateful presence; yet should I hate to
+leave Sis--Constance."
+
+"May the ship never leave the runway that shall take you from us, Giles,
+lad," said the doctor. "You are blind not to see that it is too-great
+love for thee that ails thy father! It often works to cross purposes,
+our unreasonable human affection. But the case is by no means past
+curing when love awry is the disease. Do your part, Giles, and all will
+be well."
+
+But Giles did not alter his course, and when Captain Myles Standish said
+to Stephen Hopkins: "We set forth on the eighteenth of September to
+explore the Massachusetts. I shall take ten men of our colour, and three
+red men, two besides Squanto. Let me have your lad for one of my band,
+old friend. I think it will be his remedy." Stephen Hopkins welcomed the
+suggestion, as Giles himself did, and it was settled. The Plymouth
+company sailed away in their shallop on a beautiful, sunshiny morning
+when the sun had scarcely come up out of the sea.
+
+Giles and his father had shaken hands on parting, and Stephen Hopkins
+had given the boy his blessing; both were conscious that it might be a
+final parting, since no one could be sure what would befall the small
+band among untried savages.
+
+Yet there was no further reconciliation than this, no apology on the one
+side, nor proffered pardon on the other.
+
+Constance clung long around her brother's neck in the dusk in which she
+had risen to prepare his breakfast; she did not go down to see the
+start, being heavy hearted at Giles's going, and going without lifting
+the cloud completely between him and his father. She bade him good-bye
+in the long low room under the rear of the lean-to, where wood was piled
+and water buckets were set and storage made of supplies.
+
+"Oh, Giles, Giles, my dearest, may God keep you and bring you back!"
+Constance whispered, and then let her brother go.
+
+She went about her household tasks that morning with lagging step and
+unsmiling lips. Damaris followed her, wistfully, much depressed by the
+unusual dejection of Constance, who, in spite of her stepmother's
+disapproval of anything like merriment, ordinarily contrived to
+entertain Damaris to the top of her bent when the household tasks were
+getting done.
+
+"Will Giles never come home again, Connie?" the child asked at last, and
+Constance cried with a catch in her voice:
+
+"Yes, oh yes, little sister! We know he will, because we so want him!"
+
+"There must be a better ground for hope than our poor desires,
+Damaris," Dame Eliza was beginning, speaking over the child at
+Constance; when opportunely a shadow fell across the floor through the
+open door and Constance turned to see Doctor Fuller smiling at her.
+
+"Good morning, Mistress Hopkins; good morning little Damaris; and good
+morning to you, Constance lass!" he said. "Is this a day of especial
+business? Are you too busy for charity to your neighbours, beginning
+with me, and indirectly reaching out to our entire community?"
+
+Constance smiled at him with that swift brightening of her face that was
+one of her chief attractions; her expression was always playing between
+grave and gay.
+
+"It is not a day of especial business, Doctor Fuller," she said, "or at
+least all our days are especial ones where there is everything yet to be
+done. But I could give it over to charity better than some other days,
+and if it were charity to you--though I fear there is nothing for such
+as I to do for such as you--then how gladly would I do it, if only to
+pay a tittle of the debt we all owe to you."
+
+"Good child!" said the doctor. "I need help and comradeship in my herb
+gathering; it is to be done to-day, if you will be that helper. There is
+no wind, and there is that benignity of sun and sky that hath always
+seemed to me to impart special virtue to herbs gathered under it. So
+will you come with me? We will gather the morning long, and this
+afternoon I purpose distilling, in which necessary work your deft
+fingers will be of the greatest assistance to me."
+
+"Gladly will I go," cried Constance, flushing with pleasure. "I will
+fetch my basket and shears, put on my bonnet, and be ready in a trice.
+Shall I prepare a lunch, or shall I be at home again for dinner?"
+
+"Neither, Constance; there is yet another alternative." Doctor Fuller
+looked with great satisfaction at Constance's happier face as he spoke;
+she had been so melancholy when he had come. "I have arranged that you
+shall be my guest at dinner in my house, and after it we will to work in
+my substitute for a laboratory. Mistress Hopkins, Constance will be
+quite safe, be assured; and you, I trust, will not mind a quiet day with
+Damaris and Oceanus to bear you company?"
+
+"And if I did mind it, would that prevent it?" demanded Dame Eliza with
+a toss of her head. "Not even with a 'by your leave' does Constantia
+Hopkins arrange her goings and comings."
+
+"Which was wholly my fault in not first putting my question to you,
+instead of to Constance directly," said Doctor Fuller. "And surely there
+is no excuse for my blundering, I who am trained to feel pulses and look
+at tongues! But since it is thus happily concluded, and your stepmother
+is glad to let you have a sort of holiday, come then; hasten, Constance
+girl!"
+
+Constance ran upstairs to hide her laughing face. She came down almost
+at once with that face shaded by a deep bonnet, a basket hung on her
+arm, shears sticking up out of it, pulling on long-armed half-gloves as
+she came.
+
+As they walked down the narrow street Constance glanced up at Doctor
+Fuller, interrogatively.
+
+"And----?" the doctor hinted.
+
+"And I was wondering whether you were not treating me to-day as your
+patient?" Constance said. "A patient with a trouble of the mind, and
+also a heart complaint?"
+
+"Which means----?" The doctor again waited for Constance to fill out his
+question.
+
+"Which means that you knew I was sorely troubled about Giles; that he
+had gone without better drawing to his father; that I was anxious about
+him, even while wishing him to go; and that you gave me this day in the
+woods with you for my healing," Constance answered.
+
+"At least not for your harm, little maid," said the doctor. "It hath
+been my experience that the gatherer of herbs gets a healing of spirit
+that is not set down in our books among the beneficial qualities of the
+plants, but which may, under conditions, be their best attribute.
+Although the singing of brooks and birds, the sweetness of the winds,
+the solemn nobility of the trees, the vastness of the sky, the
+over-brooding presence of God in His creation are compounded with the
+herbs, and impart their powers to us with that of the plants."
+
+"That is true," said Constance. "I feel my vexations go from me as if my
+soul were bathed in a miraculous elixir, when I go troubled to the woods
+and sit in them awhile."
+
+"Of a certainty," agreed the doctor, bending his tall, thin figure to
+pick a small leaf which he held up to Constance. "See this, with its
+likeness to the halberd at its base? This is vervain, which is called
+'Simpler's Joy,' because of the good it yields to those who, like us
+to-day, are simplers, gatherers of simple herbs for mankind's benefit.
+Now let us hope that this single plant is a forerunner of many of its
+kind, for it hath been a sacred herb among the ancients, as among
+Christians, and it should be an augury of good to us to find it. Look
+you, Constance, I do not mind confessing it to you, for you are not only
+young, but of that happy sort who yield to imagination something of its
+due. I like my omens to be favourable, not in superstition, though our
+brethren would condemn me thus, but from a sense of harmony and the
+satisfaction of it."
+
+"How pleasant a hearing is that, Doctor Fuller!" laughed Constance. "I
+love to have the new moon aright, though well I know the moon and I have
+naught in common! And though I do not believe in fairies, yet do I like
+to make due allowance for them!"
+
+"It is the poetry of these things, and children like you and me, my
+dear, are not to be deprived of poetry by mere facts and common sense,"
+said the doctor, sticking in the band of his hat the sprig of blue
+vervain which his sharp eyes had discovered.
+
+"Yonder on the side of that sandy hill shall we find mints, pennyroyal,
+and the close cousin of it, which is blue curls. There is the prunelle,
+and welcome to it! Gather all you can of it, Constance. That is
+self-heal, and a sovereign remedy for quinsy. So is it a balm for wounds
+of iron and steel tools, and for both these sorts of afflictions, what
+with our winter climate as to quinsy and our hard labour as to wounds, I
+am like to need abundant self-heal."
+
+Thus pleasantly chatting Doctor Fuller led the way, first up the sandy
+hill where grew the pennyroyal, all along the border of the woods where
+self-heal abounded. They found many plants unexpectedly, which the
+doctor always hailed with the joy of one who loved them, rather more
+than of the medical man who required them, and Constance busily snipped
+the stems, listening to the doctor's wise and kindly talk, loving him
+for his goodness and kindness to her in making her heart light and
+giving her on this day, which had promised to be sad, of his own
+abundant peace.
+
+"Now, Constance, I shall lead you to a secret of my own," announced the
+doctor as the sun mounted high above them, and noon drew near. "Come
+with me. But do not forget to rejoice in this wealth of bloom, purple
+and blue, these asters along the wayside. They are the glory of our new
+country, and for them let us praise God who sets beauty so lavishly
+around us, having no use but to praise Him, for not to any other purpose
+are these asters here, and yet, though I cannot use them, am I humbly
+thankful for them. And for these plumes of golden and silver flowers
+beside them, which we did not know across the seas. Now, Constance, what
+say you to that?"
+
+He pointed triumphantly to a small group of plants with heart-shaped
+leaves, having small leaves at their base, and which twisted as they
+grew around their neighbouring plants, or climbed a short distance on
+small shrubs. Groups of drooping berries of brilliant, translucent
+scarlet lighted up the little plant settlement, hanging as gracefully as
+jewels set by a skilful goldsmith for a fair lady's adornment.
+
+"I think they are wonderfully beautiful. They are like ornaments for a
+beautiful lady! What are they?" cried Constance.
+
+"They are themselves the beautiful lady," Doctor Fuller said, with a
+pleased laugh. "That is their name--belladonna, which means 'beautiful
+lady.' They are _Atropa Belladonna_, to give them their full title. But
+their beauty is only in appearance. If they are a belle dame, then she
+is the _belle dame sans merci_, a cruel beauty if you cross her. You
+must never taste these berries, Constance. I myself planted these vines.
+I brought them with me, carefully set in soil. The beautiful lady can be
+cruel if you take liberties with her, but she is capable of kindness. I
+shall gather the belladonna now and distil it. In case any one among us
+ate of poisonous toadstools, and were seized with severe spasms of the
+nature of the effect of toadstools, belladonna alone would save them.
+Nightshade, we also call this plant. See, I will myself gather this, by
+your leave, my assistant, and place it in my own herb wallet."
+
+The doctor suited the action to the word, arose from his knees and
+carefully brushed them. "When Mistress Fuller comes, which is a weary
+day awaiting, I hope she may not find me fallen into untidiness," he
+said, whimsically. "Constance, the ship is due that will bring my wife
+and child, if my longing be a calendar!"
+
+"Indeed, dear Doctor Fuller, I often think of it," said Constance. "You
+who are so good to us all are lonely and heavy of heart, but none is
+made to feel it. The comfort is that Mistress Fuller and your little
+one are safe and you will yet see them, while so many of the women who
+came hither in our ship are not here now, and those who loved them will
+never see them in this world again."
+
+"Surely, my child. I am not repining, for, though I am opposed to the
+extreme strict views of some of our community, and they look askance
+upon me for it at times, yet do I not oppose the will of God," said the
+doctor, simply.
+
+"Who of them fulfils it as you do?" cried Constance. "You who go out to
+minister to the sick savages, not content to heal your own brethren?"
+
+"And are not the savages also our brothers?" asked the doctor, taking up
+his wallet. "Come then, child; we will go home, and this afternoon shall
+you learn something of distilling, as you have, I hope, this morning
+learned something of selecting herbs for remedies."
+
+Constance went along at the doctor's side, swinging her bonnet, not
+afraid of the hot September sun upon her face. It lighted up her
+disordered hair, and turned it into the semblance of burnished metal,
+upon which the doctor's eyes rested with the same satisfaction that had
+warmed them as he looked on the generous beauty of aster and goldenrod,
+and he saw with pleasure that Constance's face was also shining, its
+brightness returned, and he was well content with the effect of his
+prescription for this patient.
+
+Constance had a gift of forgetting herself in an ecstasy that seized her
+when the weight of her new surroundings was lifted. With Doctor Fuller
+she felt perfect sympathy, and her utter delight in this lovely day
+bubbled up and found expression.
+
+Doctor Fuller heard her singing one of her little improvised songs,
+softly, under her breath, to a crooning air that was less an air than a
+succession of sweet sounds. It was the sort of little song with which
+Constance often amused the children of the settlement, and Doctor
+Fuller, that childlike soul, listened to her with much of their pleasure
+in it.
+
+ "Blossom, and berry, and herb of grace;
+ Purple and blue and gold lighting each place;
+ Herbs for our body and bloom for our heart--
+ Beauty and healing, for each hath its part.
+ Under the sunshine and in the starlight,
+ Warp and woof weareth the pattern aright.
+ Shineth the fabric when summer's at end:
+ The garment scarce hiding the Heart of our Friend,"
+
+Constance sang, nor did the doctor interrupt her simple Te Deum by a
+word.
+
+At the doctor's house dinner awaited them, kept hot, for they were
+tardy. After it, and when Constance had helped to put away all signs of
+its having been, the doctor said to her:
+
+"Now for my laboratory, such as it is, and for our task, my apprentice
+in medicine!" He conducted Constance into a small room, at the rear of
+the house where he had set up tables of various sizes of his own
+manufacture, and where were ranged on the shelves running around three
+sides of the room at different heights, bowls, glasses of odd
+shapes--the uses of which were not known to Constance--and small,
+delicate tools, knives, weights, and piles of strips of linen, neatly
+rolled and placed in assorted widths in an accessible corner.
+
+"Mount this stool, Constance, and watch," the doctor bade her. "Pay
+strict attention to what I shall do and tell you. Take this paper and
+quill and note names, or special instructions. I am serious in wishing
+you to know something of my work. I need assistance; there is no man to
+be spared from man's work in the plantation, and, to speak the truth,
+your brain is quicker to apprehend me, as your hand is more skilful to
+execute for me in the matters upon which I engage than are those of any
+of the lads who are with us. So mount this high stool, my lass, and
+learn your lesson."
+
+Constance obeyed him. Breathlessly she watched the beginnings of the
+distillation of the belladonna which she had seen gathered.
+
+As the small drops fell slowly into the glass which the doctor had set
+for them, he began to teach Constance other things, while the
+distillation went on.
+
+"These are my phials, Constance," he said. "Commit to memory the names
+of their contents, and note their positions. See, on these shelves are
+my drugs. Do you see this dark phial? That is for my belladonna. Now
+note where it is to stand. In that line are poisons. Their phials are
+dark, to prevent mistaking them for less harmful drugs, which are on
+this other shelf, in white containers."
+
+The doctor taught, and Constance obediently repeated her lesson, till
+the sound of the horn that summoned the settlers to their homes for
+supper, and the level rays of the sun across the floor, warned the
+doctor and his pupil that their pleasant day was over.
+
+"But you must return, till you are letter perfect in your knowledge,
+Constance," the doctor said. "I have decided that there must be one
+person among us whom I could dispatch to bring me what I needed in case
+I were detained, and could not come myself."
+
+"I will gladly learn, Doctor Fuller," said Constance, her face
+confirming her assurance. "I have no words to tell you how happy it
+makes me to hope that I may one day be useful in such great matters."
+
+"As you will be," the doctor said. "But remember, my child, the lesson
+of the fields: It does not concern us whether great or small affairs are
+given us to do; the one thing is to do well what comes our way; to be
+content to fill the background of the picture, or to be a figure in the
+foreground, as we may be required. Aster, goldenrod, herb, all are doing
+their portion."
+
+"Indeed you have helped me to see that, dear Doctor Fuller," said
+Constance, gently. "It is not ambition, but the remembrance of last
+winter's hardships, when there was so little aid, that makes me wish I
+could one day help."
+
+"Yes, Constance; I know. Good-night, my child, and thank you for your
+patient attention, for your help; most of all for your sweet
+companionship," said the doctor.
+
+"Oh, as to that, I am grateful enough to you! You made to-day a happy
+girl out of a doleful one!" cried Constance. "Good-night, Doctor
+Fuller!"
+
+She ran down the street, singing softly:
+
+ "Flower, and berry, and herb of grace;"
+
+till she reached her home and silenced her song with a kiss on eager
+Damaris's cheek.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+Light-Minded Man, Heavy-Hearted Master
+
+
+Constance Hopkins sat at the side of the cave-like fireplace; opposite
+to where her father, engrossed in a heavy, much-rubbed, leather-bound
+book, toasted his feet beside the fire, as was his nightly wont.
+
+He was too deeply buried in his reading to heed her presence, but the
+girl felt keenly that her father was there and that she had him quite to
+herself. The consciousness of this made her heart sing softly in her
+breast, with a contentment that she voiced in the softest humming, not
+unlike the contented song of the kettle on the crane, and the purring of
+the cat, who sat with infolded paws between her human friends.
+
+Puck, the small spaniel, and Hecate, the powerful mastiff, who had come
+with the Hopkins family on the _Mayflower_, shared the hearth with Lady
+Fair, the cat, a right that their master insisted upon for them, but
+which Dame Eliza never ceased to inveigh against.
+
+However, Dame Eliza had gone to attend upon a sick neighbour that night,
+a fact which Hecate had approvingly noted, with her deep-grooved eyelids
+half-open, and in which Constance, no less than Puck and Hecate,
+rejoiced.
+
+There was the quintessence of domestic joy in thus sitting alone
+opposite her father, free from the sense of an unsympathetic element
+dividing them, in watching the charring of the tremendous back log, and
+the lovely colours in the salt-soaked small sticks under and over it
+which had been cast up by the sea and gathered on the beach for this
+consumption.
+
+Damaris and baby Oceanus were tucked away asleep for the night. It was
+as if once more Constance were a child in England with her widowed
+father, and no second marriage had ever clouded their perfect oneness.
+
+So Constance hummed softly, not to disturb the reader, the content that
+she felt not lessened by anxiety for Giles; there were hours in which
+she was assured of Giles's safe return, and this was one of them.
+
+Stephen Hopkins had been conscious of his girl's loving companionship,
+though not aware that he felt it, till, at last, the small tune that she
+hummed crept through his brain into his thought, and he laid down his
+book to look at her.
+
+She sat straight and prim by necessity. Her chair was narrow and
+erect--a carved, dark oaken chair, with a small round seat; it had been
+Constance's mother's, and had come out of her grandfather's Tudor
+mansion, wherein he had once entertained Queen Bess.
+
+Constance's dress was of dark homespun stuff, coming up close under her
+soft chin, falling straight around her feet, ornamented but with narrow
+bands of linen at her neck and around her wrists. Yet by its extreme
+severity the Puritan gown said: "See how lovely this young creature is!
+Only her fleckless skin, her gracious outlines, could triumph over my
+barrenness!"
+
+Obedient to her elders' demands upon her to curb its riotousness,
+Constance had brushed smooth and capped her lustrous hair, yet its
+tendrils escaped upon her brow; it glinted below the cap around her
+ears, and in the back of her neck, and shone in the firelight like
+precious metal.
+
+Stephen Hopkins's eyes brightened with delight in her charm, but, though
+he was not one of the strictest of Plymouth colonists, yet was he too
+imbued with their customs to express his pleasure in Constance's beauty.
+
+Instead he said, but his voice thrilled with what he left unsaid:
+
+"It's a great thing, my girl, to draw such a woman as Portia, here in
+this leathern book. She shines through it, and you see her clever eyes,
+her splendid presence, best of all her great power to love, to humble
+herself, to forget herself for the man she hath chosen! I would have you
+conversant with the women here met, Constance; they are worthy friends
+for you, in the wilderness where such noble ladies are rare."
+
+"Yet we have fine women and devoted ones here, Father," objected
+Constance, putting down the fine linen that she was hemstitching for her
+father's wearing. He noted the slender, supple hands, long-fingered,
+graceful, yet a womanly hand, made for loyalty.
+
+"Far be it from me to belittle them who recognized their hard and
+repulsive duty in the plague last winter, and performed it with utter
+self-renunciation," said Stephen Hopkins. "But, Constance, there is a
+something that, while it cannot transcend goodness, enhances it and
+places its possessor on a sort of dais all her life. Your mother had it,
+child. She was beautiful, charming, winsome, gracious, yet had she a
+lordly way with her; you see it in a fine-bred steed; I know not how to
+describe it. She was mettlesome, spirited. It was as if she did the
+right with a sort of inborn scorn for aught low; had made her choice at
+birth for true nobility and could but abide by it for aye, having made
+that choice. You have much of her, my lass, and I am daily thankful for
+it. A fine lady, was your exquisite young mother, and that says it,
+though the term is lowered by common usage. I would that you could have
+known her, my poor child! It was a loss hard to accept that you were
+deprived of her too soon, and never could have her direct impress upon
+you. And yet, thank Heaven, she hath left it upon you in mothering you,
+though the memory of her doth not bless you. And you sit here, upon a
+Plymouth hearthstone, far from the civilization that produced her, and
+to this I brought you!"
+
+"Oh, Father, Father, my darling!" cried Constance, flinging aside her
+work and dropping upon her knees beside him, for his voice quivered with
+an emotion that he never before had allowed to escape him, as he uttered
+a self-reproach that no one knew he harboured. "Oh, my father, dearest,
+don't you know that I am happy here? And are you not here with me?
+However fine a lady my sweet mother was--and for your sake I am glad
+indeed if you see anything of her in me!--yet was she no truer lady than
+you are a fine gentleman. And with you I need no better exemplar. As
+time goes on we shall receive from England much of the good we have left
+behind; our colony will grow and prosper; we shall not be crude,
+unlettered. And how truly noble are many of our company, not only you,
+but Governor Bradford, Mr. Brewster, Mr. Winslow; their wives; our Arm,
+Captain Myles; and--dearest of all, save you--Doctor Fuller! No maiden
+need lack of models who has these! But indeed, I want to be all that you
+would have me to be! I cannot say how glad I am if you see in me
+anything of my mother! Not for my sake; for yours, for yours!"
+
+"Portia after all!" Stephen Hopkins cried, stroking Constance's cheek.
+"That proves how well he knew, great Will of Warwickshire--which is our
+county also, my lass! Not for their own sake do true women value their
+charm, but for him they love. 'But only to stand high in your account I
+might in virtues, beauties, livings, friends, exceed!' So spake Portia;
+so, in effect, spake you just now. That was your mother's way; she,
+too, longed to have, but to give, her possessions, herself----"
+
+There came a knocking at the door and Constance sprang back to her
+chair, catching up her sewing, thrusting in her needle with shortened
+breath, not to be caught by her severe Plymouth neighbours in so
+unseemly a thing as betraying love for her father, leaning on his knee.
+
+Mr. Hopkins answered the summons, and there entered Francis Eaton, Mr.
+Allerton, and John Howland, who having come to Plymouth as the servant
+of Governor Carver, was now living in the colony with his articles of
+bondage annulled, and was inclined to exceed in severity the other
+Puritans, as one who had not long had authority even over himself.
+
+"Peace be to you, Mr. Hopkins," said John Howland, gravely. "Mistress
+Constantia, I wish you a good evening. Sir, we are come to consult you
+as to certain provisions to be made for the winter to come, as to care
+of the sick, should there be many----. Will that great beast bite? She
+seems not to like me, and I may say the feeling is mutual; I never could
+bear a beast."
+
+"She will not bite you, John; she is but deciding on your credentials as
+set forth in the odour of your clothing," said Mr. Hopkins, smiling.
+"Down, Hecate, good lass! While I am here you may leave it to me to see
+to your dwelling and fireside, old trusty!"
+
+Hecate wagged her whip like tail and instantly lay down, her nose on her
+extended paws, frowning at the callers.
+
+"But what is this, Stephen Hopkins?" demanded Francis Eaton, picking up
+the marred, leather-covered great volume which Stephen Hopkins had laid
+down when he had risen. "Shakespeare! Plays! Fie, fie upon you; sir! I
+wot you know this is godless matter, and that you are sinning to set the
+example of such reading to your child."
+
+Stephen Hopkins's quick temper blazed; he took a step in the speaker's
+direction, and Hecate was justified in growling at her master's lead.
+
+"Zounds! Eaton," he cried. "I know that an Englishman's house is his
+castle, on whichever side of the ocean he builds it, and that I will not
+brook your coming into it to tell me--_you_ to tell _me_,
+forsooth!--that I am sinning! Look to your own affairs, sir, but keep
+your hands off mine. If you are too ignorant to know more of Shakespeare
+than to think him harmful, well, then, sir, you confess to an ignorance
+that is in itself a sin against the Providence that gave us poets."
+
+"As to that, Francis Eaton," said Mr. Allerton, "Mr. Hopkins hath the
+best of it. We who strive after the highest virtue do not indulge in
+worldly reading, but there be those among us who would not condemn
+Shakespeare. But what is the noise I hear? Permit us to go yonder into
+your outer room, Mr. Hopkins, to satisfy ourselves that worse than
+play-reading is not carried on within this house."
+
+"Noise? I heard no noise till now, being too much occupied to note it,
+but it is easy to decide upon its cause from here, though if you desire
+to go yonder, or to share the play, I'll not prevent you," said Mr.
+Hopkins, his anger mounting.
+
+"Say, rather, as I seriously fear, that you are too accustomed to the
+sound to note it. I will pass over, as unworthy of you and of my
+profession, the insult you proffered me in suggesting that I would bear
+part in a wicked game," said Mr. Allerton, going toward the door.
+
+He threw it open with a magnificent gesture and stalked through it,
+followed close by the other two, and by Hecate's growl and Puck's sharp
+barking.
+
+Constance had dropped her work and sat rigidly regarding her father with
+amazed and frightened eyes.
+
+Stephen Hopkins went after them, purple with rage. What they saw was a
+table marked off at its farther end by lines drawn in chalk. At the
+nearer end sat Edward Doty and Edward Lister, the men whom Stephen
+Hopkins had brought over with him on the _Mayflower_ to serve him.
+Beside them sat tankards of home-made beer, and a small pile of coins
+lay, one at each man's right hand.
+
+Just as Francis Eaton threw open the door, Edward Lister leaned
+forward, balanced a coin carefully between his thumb and finger, and
+shot it forward over one of the lines at the other end.
+
+"Aimed, by St. George! Well shot, Ted!" cried Edward Doty.
+
+"See that thou beatest me not, Ned; thou art a better man than me at
+it," said Lister, and they both took a draught of beer, wiping their
+lips on their sleeve in high satisfaction with the flavour, the game,
+and each other.
+
+"Shovelboard!" "Shuffleboard!" cried Francis Eaton and John Howland
+together, differing on the pronunciation of the obnoxious sport, but one
+in the boundless horror in their voices.
+
+"Stephen Hopkins, I am profoundly shocked," said Mr. Allerton, turning
+with lowering brows upon their host. "A man of your standing among us! A
+man of your experience of the world! Well wot you that playing of games
+is forbid among us. That you should tolerate it is frightful to
+consider----"
+
+"See here, Isaac Allerton," said Stephen Hopkins, stepping so close to
+his neighbour that Mr. Allerton fell back uneasily, "it is a principle
+among us that every man is to follow his conscience. If we have thrown
+off the authority of our old days, an authority mind you, that had much
+to be said for it, and set up our own conscience as the sole guide of
+our actions, then how dare you come into my house to reproach me for
+what I consider no wrong-doing? Ted and Ned are good fellows, on whose
+hands leisure hangs heavily, since they do not read Shakespeare, as does
+their master, whom equally you condemn. To my mind shovelboard is
+innocent; I have permitted my men to play it. Go, if you will, and
+report to our governor this heinous crime of allowing innocent play. But
+on your peril read me no sermon, nor set up your opinion in mine own
+house, for, by my honour, I'll not abide it."
+
+"By no will of mine will I report you, my brother," said Isaac Allerton,
+but the gleam in his eye belied him; there was jealousy in this little
+community, as in all human communities. "You know that my duty will
+compel me to lay before Governor Bradford what I have seen. Since we
+have with our own eyes seen it, there needs no further witnesses."
+
+"Imply that I would deny the truth, were there never a witness, and
+Heaven help you, Plymouth or no Plymouth, brother or no brother! I'm not
+a liar," cried Stephen Hopkins, so fiercely that Mr. Allerton and his
+companions went swiftly out the side door, Mr. Allerton protesting:
+
+"Nay, then Brother and friend; thou art a choleric man, and lax as to
+this business, but no one would doubt your honour."
+
+After they had gone Mr. Hopkins went back to his chair by the fireside,
+leaving Ted and Ned staring open-mouthed at each other, stunned by the
+tempest aroused by their game.
+
+"Well, rather would I have held the psalm book the whole evening than
+got the master into trouble," said Ted.
+
+"Easy done, since thou couldst no more than hold it, reading being
+beyond thee," grinned Ned. "Yet am I one with thy meaning, which is
+clearer to me than is print."
+
+Constance dared not speak to her father when he returned to her. She
+glanced up at his angry face and went on with her stitchery in silence.
+
+At length he stretched himself out, his feet well toward the fire, and
+let his right hand fall on Hecate's insinuating head, his left on Puck's
+thrusting nose.
+
+"Good friends!" he said to the happy dogs. "I am ashamed, my Constance,
+so to have afflicted thee. Smile, child; thou dost look as though
+destruction awaited me."
+
+"I am so sorry, Father! In good sooth, is there not trouble coming to
+you from this night's business?" asked Constance, folding up her work.
+
+"Nothing serious, child; likely a fine. But indeed it will be worth it
+to have the chance it will buy me to speak my mind clearly to my fellow
+colonists on these matters. Ah, my girl, my girl, what sad fools we
+mortals be, as Shakespeare, whom also these grave and reverend seigniors
+condemn, hath said! We have come here to sail by the free wind of
+conscience, but look you, it must be the conscience of the few, greater
+thraldom than it was in the Old World! Ah, Constance, Constance, we came
+here to escape the thraldom of men, but to do that it needs that no men
+came! If authority we are to have, then let it be authoritative, say I;
+not the mere opinion of men. My child, have you ever noted how much
+human nature there is in a man?"
+
+But the next day, during which Stephen Hopkins was absent from his home,
+when he returned at night his philosophy had been sadly jostled.
+
+He had been called before the governor, reprimanded and fined, and his
+pride, his sense of justice, were both outraged when he actually had to
+meet the situation. Dame Eliza was in a state of mind that made matters
+worse. She had heard from one of those persons through whom ill news
+filters as naturally as water through a spring, that her husband had
+been, as she termed it, "disgraced before the world."
+
+"They can't disgrace him, Stepmother," protested Constance, though she
+knew that it was useless to try to stem the tide of Dame Eliza's
+grievance. "My father is in the right; they have the power to fine, but
+not to disgrace him who hath done no wrong."
+
+"Of course he hath done no wrong," snapped Dame Eliza. "Shovelboard was
+played in my father's kitchen when I was no age. Are these prating men
+better than my father? Answer me that! But your father has no right to
+risk getting into trouble for two ne'er-do-wells, like his two precious
+Edwards. They eat more than any four men I ever knew, and that will I
+maintain against all comers, and as to work they cannot so much as see
+it. Worthless! And for them will he risk our good name. For mark me,
+Constantia, shovelboard is a game, and gaming an abomination, and not to
+be mentioned in a virtuous household, yet would your father permit it
+played----"
+
+"But you just said it was harmless, and that your father had a table!"
+cried Constance.
+
+"My father was a good man, but not a Puritan," said Dame Eliza, somewhat
+confused to be called upon to harmonize her own statements. "In England
+shovelboard is one thing; in Plymouth a second thing, and two things are
+not the same as one thing. I am disgusted with your father, but what
+good does it do me to speak? Never am I heeded but rather am I flouted
+by the Hopkins brood, young and old, which is why I never speak, but eat
+my heart out in silence and patience, knowing that had I married as I
+might have married--aye, and that many times, I'd have you know--I'd
+not be here among sands and marshes and Indians and barrens, slaving for
+ungrateful people who think to show their better blood by treating me as
+they best know how! But it is a long lane that hath no turning, and
+justice must one day be my reward."
+
+When Stephen Hopkins came in Dame Eliza dared not air her grievances;
+his angry face compelled silence. Even Constance did not intrude upon
+his annoyance, but contented herself with conveying her sympathy by
+waiting upon him and talking blithely to Damaris, succeeding at last in
+winning a smile from her father by her amusing stories to the child.
+
+"There is a moon, Constance; is it too cold for you to walk with me? The
+sea is fair and silvery beneath the moon rays," said Mr. Hopkins after
+supper.
+
+"Not a whit too chill, Father, and I shall like to be out of doors,"
+cried Constance, disregarding her stepmother's frown, who disapproved of
+pleasure strolls.
+
+Constance drew her cloak about her, its deep hood over her head, and
+went out with her father. Stephen Hopkins placed her hand in his arm,
+and led her toward the beach. It was a deep, clear autumn night, the
+moon was brilliant; the sea, still as a mirror, gave its surface for the
+path that led from the earth to the moon, made by the moon rays.
+
+At last her father spoke to Constance.
+
+"Wise little woman," he said, patting the hand in his arm, "to keep
+silent till a man has conquered his humours. Your mother had that rare
+feminine wisdom. What a comrade was she, my dear! Seeing your profile
+thus half-concealed by your hood I have been letting myself feel that
+she had returned to me. And so she has, for you are part of her, her
+gift to me! Trouble no more over my annoyance, Constance; I have
+conquered it. I do not say that there is no soreness left in me, that I
+should be thus dealt with, but I am philosopher enough to see that Myles
+Standish was right when he once said to me that I was a fool for my
+pains; that living in Plymouth I must bear myself Plymouth-wise."
+
+"Father, have you had enough of impertinence in the day's doings, that
+your neighbours should dare to judge you, or will you tolerate a little
+more impertinence, and from your own daughter?" asked Constance.
+
+"Now what's in the wind?" demanded Stephen Hopkins, stopping short.
+
+"Nay, Father, let me speak freely!" Constance implored. "Indeed there is
+nothing in my heart that you would disapprove, could I bare it to your
+eyes. Does not this day's experience throw a light upon Giles?"
+
+"Giles! How? Why?" exclaimed her father.
+
+"Giles is as like you as are two peas in a pod, dear Father. He does not
+count himself a boy any longer. He hath felt that he was dealt with for
+offences that he had not done. He has been wounded, angry, sore,
+sad--and most of all because he half worships you. The governor, Mr.
+Winslow, no one is to you, nor can hurt you, as you can hurt Giles.
+Don't you feel to-day, Father, how hard it is for a young lad to bear
+injustice? When Giles comes home will you not show him that you trust
+him, love him, as I so well know you do, but as he cannot now be made to
+believe you do? And won't you construe him by what you have suffered
+this day, and comfort him? Forgive me, Father, my dearest, dearest! I do
+not mean wrong, and after all, it is only your Constance speaking her
+heart out to you," she pleaded.
+
+For upwards of ten minutes Stephen Hopkins was silent while Constance
+hung trembling on his arm.
+
+Then her father turned to her, and took her face in both his hands,
+tears in his eyes.
+
+"It is only my Constance speaking; only my dearest earthly treasure," he
+said. "And by all the gods, she hath spoken sweetly and truly, and I
+will heed her! Yes, my Constance, I will read my own bitterness in
+Giles's heart, and I will heal it, if but the lad comes back safe to
+us."
+
+With which promise, that sounded in Constance's ears like the carol of
+angels, her father kissed her thrice on brow, and lips, a most unusual
+caress from him. It was a thankful Constance that lay down beside
+Damaris that night, beneath the lean-to roof.
+
+"Now I know that Giles will come back, for this is what has been meant
+in all that hath lately come to us," was her last thought as she drifted
+into sleep.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+The "Fortune," that Sailed, First West, then East
+
+
+"There's a ship, there's a sail standing toward us!"
+
+It was Francis Billington's shrill boyish voice that aroused the Hopkins
+household with this tidings, early in the morning on one of those
+mid-November days when at that hour the air was chill and at noon the
+warmth of summer brooded over land and sea.
+
+Stephen Hopkins called from within: "Wait, wait, Francis, till I can
+come to thee."
+
+In a moment or two he came out of his door and looked in the direction
+in which the boy pointed, although a hillock on the Hopkins land, which
+lay between Leyden and Middle streets, cut off the sight of the sail.
+
+"She's coming up from the south'ard," cried Francis, excitedly. "Most
+like from the Cape, but she must have come from England first, say you
+not so, Mr. Hopkins?"
+
+"Surely," agreed Stephen Hopkins. "The savages build no vessels like
+ours, as you well know. Thank you, my boy, for warning me of her
+approach. Go on and spread your news broadcast; let our entire community
+be out to welcome whatever good the ship brings, or to resist
+harm--though that I fear not. I will myself be at the wharf when she
+gets in."
+
+"Oh, as to that, Mr. Hopkins, you have time to eat as big a breakfast as
+you can get and still be too early for the arrival," said Francis,
+grinning. "She's got a long way to cover and a deal to do to reach
+Plymouth wharf in this still air. She's not close in, by much. I hurried
+and yelled to get you up quick because--well, because you've got to
+hurry folks and yell when a ship comes in, haven't you?"
+
+Mr. Hopkins smiled sympathetically at the boy whose actions rarely got
+sympathy.
+
+"Till ships become a more common sight in our harbour, Francis, I would
+advise letting your excitement on the coming of one have vent a-plenty,"
+he said, turning to reënter the house as Francis Billington, acting on
+advice more promptly than was his wont, ran down Leyden Street, throwing
+up his cap and shouting: "A ship! A sail! A ship! A sail!" at the top of
+his vigorous lungs, not only unreproved for his disturbance of the
+peaceful morning, but hailed with answering excitement by the men,
+women, and children whom he aroused as he ran.
+
+The ship took as long to reach haven as Francis Billington had
+prophesied she would require. She proved to be a small ship with a
+figure-head of a woman, meant to represent Fortune, for she was
+blindfolded, but her battered paint indicated that she had in her own
+person encountered ill-fortune in her course.
+
+A number of people were gathered on her forward deck, looking eagerly
+for indications of the sort of place that they were approaching.
+
+"Mr. Weston, knowing that we depend upon him and his brother merchants,
+our friends across seas, for supplies, hath at last dispatched us the
+long-waited ship," said Mr. Winslow to Mr. Hopkins.
+
+"With someone, let us hope, authorized to carry back report of us here,
+and thus to get us, later on, what we sore need. Many new colonists, as
+well as nearly all things that human beings require for existence," said
+Stephen Hopkins, with something of the strain upon his endurance that he
+had suffered getting into his voice.
+
+The ship was the _Fortune_--her figure-head had announced as much. When
+she made anchor, and her small boat came to the wharf, the first person
+to step ashore was Mr. Robert Cushman, the English agent who had played
+so large a part in the embarkation of the pilgrims in the _Mayflower_.
+
+"Welcome, in all truth!" said Governor Bradford stepping forward to
+seize the hand of this man, from whose coming and subsequent reports at
+home so much might be hoped. "Now, at last, have we what we have so long
+needed, a representative who can speak of us as one who hath seen!"
+
+"I am glad to be here in a twofold sense, Mr. Bradford," returned Mr.
+Cushman.
+
+"Glad to meet with you, whom I knew under the distant sky of home, glad
+to be at the end of my voyage. I have brought you thirty-five additional
+members of your community. We came first to Cape Cod, and a more
+discouraged band of adventurers would be hard to find than were these
+men when they saw how barren of everything was the Cape. I assured them
+that they would find you in better condition here, at Plymouth, and we
+set sail hither. They have been scanning waves and sky for the first
+symptom of something like comfort at Plymouth, beginning their anxious
+outlook long before it was possible to satisfy it. I assure you that
+never was a wharf hailed so gladly as was this one that you have built,
+for these men argued that before you would build a wharf you must have
+made sure of greater essentials."
+
+"We are truly thankful for new strength added to us; we need it sore,"
+said William Bradford. "We make out to live, nor have we wanted
+seriously, thus far."
+
+"The men I have gathered together and brought to you are not provided;
+they will be a charge upon you for a while in food and raiment, but
+after a time their strength should more than recompense you in labour,"
+said Mr. Cushman. "Where is the governor? I have a letter here from Mr.
+Weston to Governor Carver; will you take me to him?"
+
+"That we may not do, Mr. Cushman," said Governor Bradford, sadly.
+"Governor Carver is at rest since last April, a half year agone. It was
+a day of summer heat and he was labouring in the field, from which he
+came out very sick, complaining greatly of his head. He lay down and in
+a few hours his senses failed, which never returned to him till his
+death, some days later. Bitterly have we mourned that just man. And but
+a month and somewhat more, passed when Mistress Carver, who was a weak
+woman, and sore beset by the sufferings of her coming here, and so
+ill-fitted to bear grief, followed her spouse to their reward, as none
+who knew them could doubt. I am chosen, unworthily, to succeed John
+Carver as governor of this colony."
+
+"Then is the letter thine, William Bradford, and the Plymouth men have
+wisely picked out thee to hold chief office over them," said Robert
+Cushman. "Yet your news is heavy hearing, and I hope there is not much
+of such tidings to be given me."
+
+"Half of us lie yonder on the hillside," said Governor Bradford. "But
+they died in the first months of our landing, when we lacked shelter and
+all else. It was a mortality that assailed us, a swift plague, but since
+it hath passed there is little sickness among us. Gather your men and
+let us go on to the village which we have built us, a habitation in the
+wilderness, like Israel of old. Like old Plymouth at home it is in name,
+but in naught else, yet it is not wholly without its pleasant comfort,
+and we are learning to hold it dear, as Providence hath wisely made man
+to cherish his home."
+
+Mr. Cushman marshalled his sorry-looking followers; they were destitute
+of bedding, household utensils, even scantily provided with clothes, so
+that they came off the _Fortune_ in the lightest marching order, and
+filled with dismay the Plymouth people who saw that their deficiencies
+would fall upon the first settlers to supply.
+
+"Well, Constantia, and so hath it ever been, and ever will be, world
+without end, that they who till and sow do not reap, but rather some
+idle blackbird that sits upon a stump whistling for the corn that grows
+for him, and not for his betters," scolded Dame Eliza who, like others
+of the women who were hard-working and economical, felt especially
+aggrieved by this invoice of destitution. "It is we, and such as we who
+may feed them, even to Damaris. Get a pan of dried beans, child, and
+shell 'em, for it is against our profession to see them starve, but why
+the agents sent, or Robert Cushman brought, beggars to us it would
+puzzle Solomon to say. Where will your warm cloak come from that you
+hoped for, think you, Constantia, with these people requiring our
+stores? Do they take Plymouth for Beggars' Bush?"
+
+"I came hither walking beside my father, who was talking with Mr.
+Winslow, Stepmother," said Constance, noting with amusement that her
+stepmother commiserated her probable sacrifice, swayed by her
+indignation to make common cause with Constance, whose desires she
+rarely noted. "They said that it would put a burden upon us to provide
+for these new-comers at first, but that they looked like able and
+hopeful subjects to requite us abundantly, and that soon. So never mind
+my cloak; I will darn and patch my old one, and at least there be none
+here who will not know why I go shabby, and be in similar stress."
+
+The door opened and Humility Cooper entered. She kissed Constance on the
+cheek, a manner of greeting not common among these Puritan maidens,
+especially when they met often, and slowly took the stool that Constance
+placed for her in the chimney corner, loosening her cape as she did so.
+
+"I have news, dear Constance," Humility said.
+
+"How strangely you look at me, Humility!" cried Constance. "Is your news
+good or ill? Your face would tell me it was both; your eyes shine, yet
+are ready to tears, and your lips droop, yet are smiling!"
+
+"My news is that same mixture, Constance," cried Humility. "I am sent
+for from England. The letter is come by the _Fortune_. She is to lie in
+our harbour barely two sen' nights, and then weigh anchor for home. And
+I----"
+
+"You go on her!" cried Constance. "Oh Humility!"
+
+"And so I do," said Humility. "I am glad to go home. It is a sad and
+heavy-hearted thing to be here alone, with only Elizabeth Tilley, my
+cousin, left me. To be sure her father and mother, and Edward Tilley and
+his wife, who brought me hither, were but my cousins, though one degree
+nearer than John Tilley's Betsy; yet was it kindred, and they were
+those who had me in charge. Since they died I have felt lone, kind
+though everyone hath been; you and Priscilla Mullins Alden and Elizabeth
+are like my sisters. But my heart yearns back to England. Yet when I
+think of seeing you for the last time, till we meet beyond all parting,
+since you will never go to the old land, nor I return to the new one,
+then it seems that it will break my heart to say farewell, and that I
+cannot go."
+
+"Why, Humility, dear lass, we cannot let you go!" cried Constance,
+putting her arms around the younger girl toward whom she felt as a
+protector, as well as comrade.
+
+"Tut, tut!" said Dame Eliza, yet not unkindly. "It is best for Humility
+to go. I have long been glad to know, what we did know, that her kindred
+at home would send for her."
+
+Humility stooped and gathered up Lady Fair, the cat, on her knee.
+
+"I am like her," she said. "The warmth I have holds me, and I like not
+to venture out into the chillsome wet of the dark and storm."
+
+"Lady Fair would scamper home fast enough if she were among strangers,
+in a new place, Humility," cried Constance, with one of her mercurial
+changes setting herself to cheer Humility on her unavoidable road. "It
+will be hard setting out, but you will be glad enough when you see the
+green line of shore that will be England awaiting you!"
+
+"I thought you would be sorry, Constance!" cried Humility, tears
+springing to her eyes and rolling down her smooth, pink cheeks.
+
+"And am I not, dear heart, just because I want to make it easier for
+you?" Constance reproached her. "How I shall miss you, dear little
+trusting Humility, I cannot tell you. But I am glad to know that we who
+remain are worse off than you who go, and that when you see home again
+there will be more than enough there to make up to you for Pris,
+Elizabeth, and me. There will be ships coming after this, so my father
+and Mr. Winslow were saying, and you will write us, and we will write
+you. And some day, when Oceanus, or Peregrine White, or one of the other
+small children here, is grown up to be a great portrait painter, like
+Mr. Holbein, whose portraits I was taken to see at Windsor when I was
+small, I will dispatch to you a great canvas of an old lady in flowing
+skirts, with white hair puffed and coifed and it will be painted across
+the bottom in readable letters: 'Portrait of Constantia Hopkins, aetat.
+86,' else will you never know it for me, the silly girl you left
+behind."
+
+"'Silly girl,' indeed! You will be the wife of some great gentleman who
+is now in England, but who will cross to the colony, and you will be the
+mother of those who will help in its growth," cried Humility the
+prophetess.
+
+"Cease your foolish babble, both of you!" Dame Eliza ordered them,
+impatiently. "It is poor business talking of serious matters lightly,
+but Humility is well-off, and needs not pity, to be returning to the
+land that we cast off, nor am I as Lot's wife saying it, for it is true,
+nor am I repining."
+
+Humility had made a correct announcement in saying that the _Fortune_
+would stay on the western shore but two weeks.
+
+For that time she lay in the waters of Plymouth harbour taking on a
+cargo of goods to the value of 500 pounds, or thereabout, which the
+Plymouth people rightly felt would put their enterprise in a new light
+when the ship arrived in England, especially that she had come hither
+unprepared for trade, expecting no such store here.
+
+Lumber they stowed upon the _Fortune_ to her utmost capacity to carry,
+and two hogsheads full of beaver and otter skins, taken in exchange for
+the little that the Englishmen had to offer for them, the idea of
+trading for furs being new to them, till Squanto showed them the value
+in a beaver skin.
+
+On the night of the thirteenth day of the _Fortune's_ lying at anchor
+Humility went aboard to be ready in case that the ship's master should
+suddenly resolve to take advantage of a favourable wind and sail
+unexpectedly.
+
+Stephen Hopkins offered to take the young girls, who had been Humility's
+companions on the _Mayflower_, out to the _Fortune_ early the next
+morning for the final parting. It was decided that the _Fortune_ was to
+set sail at the turn of the tide on the fourteenth day, and drop down to
+sea on the first of its ebb.
+
+Priscilla, Elizabeth Tilley, Desire Minter, who was also to return to
+England when summoned, and Constance, were rowed out to the ship when
+the reddening east threw a glory upon the _Fortune_ and covered her
+battered, blindfolded figure-head with the robes of an aurora.
+
+Humility was dressed, awaiting them. She threw herself into the arms of
+each of the girls in succession, and for once five young girls were
+silent, their chatter hushed by the solemn thought that never would
+their eyes rest again upon Humility's pleasant little face; that never
+again would Humility see the faces which had smiled her through her days
+of bereavement, see Constance who had nursed her back to life when she
+herself seemed likely to follow her protectors to the hillside, to their
+corn-hidden graves.
+
+"We cannot forget, so we will not ask each other to remember, Humility
+dear," whispered Constance, her lips against Humility's soft, brown
+hair.
+
+Humility shook her head, unable otherwise to reply.
+
+"I love you more than any one on earth, Con," she managed to say at
+last.
+
+"I am sorry to shorten your stay, daughters, sorry to compel you to
+leave Mistress Humility," said Mr. Cushman, coming down the deck to the
+plaintive group, "but we are sailing now, and there will be no time when
+the last good-bye is easy. You must go ashore."
+
+Not a word was spoken as Priscilla, Desire--though for her the parting
+was not final--Elizabeth and Constance kissed, clung to Humility, and
+for ever let her go. Stephen Hopkins, not a little moved himself--for he
+was fond of Humility, over whom he had kept ward since Edward Tilley had
+died--guided the tear-blinded girls down the ship's ladder, into his
+boat, and rowed them ashore.
+
+The _Fortune's_ sails creaked and her gear rattled as her men hauled up
+her canvas for her homeward voyage.
+
+She weighed anchor and slowly moved on her first tack, bright in the
+golden sunshine of a perfect Indian summer morning.
+
+"Be brave, and wave a gay farewell to the little lass," said Stephen
+Hopkins. "And may God fend her from harm on her way, and lead her over
+still waters all her days."
+
+"Oh, amen, amen, Father!" sobbed Constance. "She can't see we are crying
+while we wave to her so blithely. But it is the harder part to stay
+behind."
+
+"With me, my lass?" asked Stephen Hopkins, smiling tenderly down on his
+usually courageous little pioneer.
+
+"Oh, no; no indeed! Forgive me, Father! The one hard thing would be to
+stay anywhere without thee," cried Constance, smiling as brightly as she
+had just wept bitterly. The _Fortune_ leaned over slightly, and sailed
+at a good speed down the harbour, Humility's white signal of farewell
+hanging out over the boat's stern, discernable long after the girl's
+plump little figure and pink round face, all washed white with tears,
+had been blotted out by intervening space.
+
+Before the _Fortune_ had gone wholly out of sight Francis Billington
+came over the marsh grass that edged the sand, sometimes running for a
+few steps, sometimes lagging; his whole figure and air eloquent of
+catastrophe.
+
+"What can ail Francis Billington?" exclaimed Stephen Hopkins.
+
+"He looks ghastly," cried Constance. "Father, it can't be--Giles?" she
+whispered.
+
+"Bad news of him!" cried her father quickly, turning pale. "Nonsense,
+no; of course not."
+
+Nevertheless he strode toward the boy hastily and caught him by the arm.
+
+"What aileth thee; speak!" he ordered him.
+
+"Jack. Jack is--Jack----" Francis stammered.
+
+"Oh, is it Jack?" cried Stephen Hopkins, relieved, though he could have
+struck himself a moment later for the seeming heartlessness of his
+excusable mistake.
+
+"What has Jack done now? He is always getting into mischief, but I am
+sure you need have no fear for him. But now that I look at you----. Why,
+my poor lad, what is it? No harm hath befallen your brother?"
+
+"Jack is dead," said Francis.
+
+Constance uttered a cry, and her father fell back a step or two, shocked
+and sorry.
+
+"Forgive me, Francis; I had no notion of this. I never thought John
+Billington, the younger, could come to actual harm--so daring, so
+reckless, but so strong and able to take care of himself! Dead! Francis,
+it can't be. You are mistaken. Where is Doctor Fuller?"
+
+"With my father," said Francis, and they saw that he shook from head to
+foot.
+
+"He was with Jack; he did what he could. He couldn't do more," said
+Francis.
+
+"Poor lad," said Stephen Hopkins, laying his hand gently on the boy's
+shoulder.
+
+"Do you want to tell us? Was it an accident?"
+
+Francis nodded. "Bouncing Bully," he muttered.
+
+Stephen Hopkins glanced questioningly at Constance; he thought perhaps
+Francis was wandering in his mind.
+
+"That was poor Jack's great pistol that he took such pride in," cried
+Constance.
+
+"Oh, Francis, did that kill him?"
+
+"Burst," cried Francis, and said no more.
+
+"Come home with us, Francis," said Mr. Hopkins. "Indeed, my boy, I am
+heartily sorry for thee, and wish I could comfort thee. Be brave, and
+bear it in the way that thou hast been taught."
+
+"I liked Jack," said poor Francis, turning away. "I thank you, Mr.
+Hopkins, but I'd not care to go home with you. If Giles was back----.
+Not that I don't love you, Con, but Jack and Giles----. I'm
+going--somewhere. I guess I'll find Nimrod, my dog. Thank you, Mr.
+Hopkins, but I couldn't come. I forgot why I came here. Doctor Fuller
+told me to say he wanted you. It's about Jack--Jack's----. They'll bury
+him."
+
+The boy turned away, staggering, but in a moment Constance and her
+father, watching him, saw him break into a run and disappear.
+
+"Don't look so worried, my dear," said Stephen Hopkins. "It is a boy's
+instinct to hide his grief, and the dog will be a good comrade for
+Francis for awhile. Later we will get hold of him. Best leave him to
+himself awhile. That wild, unruly Jack! And he is dead! I'd rather a
+hundred pounds were lost than that I had spoken as I did to Francis at
+first, but how should I have dreamed it was more than another of the
+Billington scrapes? I tell thee, Connie, it will be a rare mercy if the
+father does not end badly one day. He is insubordinate, lawless,
+dangerous. Perhaps young John is saved a worse fate."
+
+"Nevertheless I am sad enough over the fate that has befallen him," said
+Constance. "He was a kindly boy, and loyal enough to me to make it right
+that I should mourn him. And I did like him. Poor Jack. Poor, young,
+heedless Jack! And how proud he was of that clumsy weapon that hath
+turned on him!"
+
+"And so did I like him, Connie, though he and Francis have been, from
+our first embarkation on the _Mayflower_, the torment and black sheep of
+our company. But I liked the boy. I like his father less, and fear he
+will one day force us to deal with him extremely." In which prophecy
+Stephen Hopkins was only too right.
+
+"To think that in one day we should bid a last farewell to two of our
+young fellow-exiles, Humility and Jack, both gone home, and for ever
+from us! Giles liked Jack; Jack stood by him when he needed help. Oh,
+Father, Father, if it were Giles!" cried Constance.
+
+"I know, I know, child," said her father, huskily. "I've been thinking
+that. I've been thinking that, and more. My son has been headstrong, but
+never wicked. He is stiffnecked, but hath no evil in his will, except
+that he resists me. But I have been thinking hard, my Constance. You
+were right; I would have done well to listen to your pleadings, to your
+wiser understanding of my boy. I have been hard on him, unjust to him; I
+should have admitted him to my confidence, given mine to him. I am wrong
+and humbly I confess it to you, Giles's advocate. When he comes back my
+boy shall find a better father awaiting him. I wounded him through his
+very love for me, and well I know how once he loved me."
+
+"Oh, Father; dear, good, great Father!" cried Constance, forgetful of
+all grief. "Only a great man can thus acknowledge a mistake. My dear,
+dear, beloved Father!" And in her heart she thought perhaps poor Jack
+had not died in vain if his death helped to show their father how dear
+Giles was to him, still, and after all.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+A Gallant Lad Withal
+
+
+There was a gray sky the day after young madcap John Billington was laid
+to rest in the grave that had been hard to think of as meant for him,
+dug by the younger colonists. Long rifted clouds lay piled upon one
+another from the line of one horizon to the other, and the wind blew
+steadily, keeping close to the ground and whistling around chimneys and
+rafters in a way that portended a storm driven in from the sea.
+
+"I think it's lost-and-lone to-day, Constance," said Damaris, coining
+her own term for the melancholy that seemed to envelop earth and sky. "I
+think it's a good day for a story, and I'd like much to sit in your lap
+in the chimney corner and hear your nicest ones."
+
+"Would you, my Cosset? But you said a story at first, and now you say my
+nicest _ones_! Do you mean one story, or several stories, Damaris?"
+Constance asked.
+
+"I mean one first, and many ones after that, if you could tell them,
+Constance," said the child. "Mother says we have no time to idle in
+story-telling, but to-day is so empty and lonesome! I'd like to have a
+story."
+
+"And so you shall, my little sis!" cried Constance gathering Damaris
+into her arms and dropping into the high-backed chair which Dame Eliza
+preëmpted for herself, when she was there; but now she was not at home.
+"Come, at least the fire is gay! Hark how it snaps and sings! And how
+gaily red and golden are the flames, and how the great log glows! Shall
+we play it is a red-coated soldier, fighting the chill for us?"
+
+"No, oh, no," shuddered Damaris. "Don't play about fighting and guns!"
+
+Constance cuddled her closer, drawing her head into the hollow of her
+shoulder. Sensitive, grave little Damaris had been greatly unnerved by
+the death of Jack, and especially that his own pistol had taken his
+life.
+
+"We'll play that the red glow is loving kindness, and that we have had
+our eyes touched with magic that makes us able to see love," cried
+Constance. "Fire is the emblem of love, warming our hearts toward all
+things, so our fancy will be at once make-believe and truth. Remember,
+my cosset lamb, that love is around us, whether we see it or not, and
+that there can be no dismal gray days if we have our eyes touched to see
+the glow of love warming us! Now what shall the story be? Here in the
+hearth corner, shall it be Cinderella? Or shall it be the story of the
+lucky bear, that found a house empty and a fire burning when he wanted a
+home, and wherein he set up housekeeping for himself, like the quality?"
+
+"All of them, Constance! But first tell me what we shall do when Giles
+comes home. I like that story best. I wish he would come soon!" sighed
+Damaris.
+
+"Ah, so do I! And so he will;" Constance corrected instantly the pain
+that she knew had escaped into her voice. "Captain Standish will not
+risk the coming of cold weather; he will bring them home soon. Well,
+what shall we do then, you want to hear? First of all, someone will
+come running, calling to us that the shallop hath appeared below in the
+harbour. Then we shall all make ourselves fine, and----"
+
+"Someone is coming now, Con, but not running," cried Damaris, sitting up
+and holding up a warning finger.
+
+"It is a man's step," began Constance, but, as the door opened she
+sprang to her feet with a cry, and stood for an instant of stunned joy
+holding Damaris clasped to her breast. Then she set the child on her
+feet and leaped into Giles's arms, with a great sob, repeating his name
+and clinging to him.
+
+"Steady, Constance! Steady, dear lass," cried Giles, himself in not much
+better state, while Damaris clung around his waist and frantically
+kissed the tops of his muddy boots.
+
+"Oh, how did you get here? When did you come? Are they all safely here?"
+cried Constance.
+
+"Every man of them; we had a fine expedition, not a misfortune, perfect
+weather, and we saw wonders of noble country: streams and hills and
+plains," said Giles, and instantly Constance felt a new manhood and
+self-confidence in him, steadier, less assertive than his boyish pride,
+the self-reliance that is won through encountering realities, in
+conquering self and hence things outside of self.
+
+"I cannot wait to hear the tale! Let me help you off with your heavy
+coat, your matchlock, and then sit you down in this warmest corner, and
+tell me everything," cried Constance, beginning to recover herself, the
+rich colour of her delight flooding her face as, the first shock of
+surprise over, she realized that it was indeed Giles come back to her
+and that her secret anxiety for him was past. "Art hungry, my own?" she
+added, fluttering around her brother, like a true woman, wanting first
+of all to feed him.
+
+"Well, Con, to be truthful I am always hungry," said Giles, smiling down
+on her.
+
+"But not in such strait now that I cannot wait till the next meal."
+
+"Here are our father and Mistress Hopkins, hastening hither," said
+Constance, looking out the door, hoping for this coming of her father.
+"You have not seen Father yet?"
+
+"No, Con; I came straight home, but the captain has met with him, I am
+sure. And, Con, I want to tell you before he comes in, that I have seen
+how wrong I was toward our good father, and that I hope to carry myself
+dutifully toward him henceforth."
+
+Constance clasped her hands, rapturously, but had not time to reply
+before the door was thrown wide open and Stephen Hopkins strode in, his
+face radiant.
+
+He went up to his tall son and clasped his shoulders in a grip that made
+Giles wince, and said through his closed teeth, trying to steady his
+voice:
+
+"My lad, my fine son, thank God I have you back! And by His mercy never
+again shall we be parted, nor sundered by the least sundering."
+
+Giles looked up, and Giles looked down. He hoped, yet hardly dared to
+think, that his father meant more than mere bodily separation.
+
+"I am glad enough to be here, yet we had glorious days, and have seen a
+country so worthy that we wish that we might go thither, leaving this
+less profitable country," said Giles. "We have seen land that by a
+little effort would be turned into gracious meadows. We have seen great
+bays and rivers, full of fish, capable of navigation and industry. We
+have seen a beautiful river, which we have named the Charles, for we
+think it to be that river which Captain John Smith thus named in his
+map. The Charles flows down to the sea, past three hills which top a
+noble harbour, and where we would dearly like to build a town. I will
+tell you of these things in order. Captain Myles will have a meeting of
+the Plymouth people to hear our tale; I would wait for that, else will
+it be stale hearing to you."
+
+"Nay, Giles, we shall never tire of it!" cried Constance. "A good story
+is the better for oft hearing, as you know well, do you not, little
+Damaris?"
+
+"Well, it hath made a man of thee, Giles Hopkins," said Dame Eliza who
+had silently watched the lad closely as he talked. "It was a lucky thing
+for thee that the Arm of the Colony, Captain Myles, took thee for one of
+his tools."
+
+"A lucky thing for him, too," interposed Giles's father proudly. "I have
+seen Myles; he hath told me how, when you and he were fallen behind your
+companions, investigating a deep ravine, he had slipped and would have
+been killed by his own matchlock as it struck against the rock, but that
+you, risking your life, threw yourself forward on a narrow ledge and
+struck up the muzzle of the gun. The colony is in your debt, my son,
+that your arm warded death from the man it calls, justly, its Arm."
+
+"Prithee, father!" expostulated Giles, turning crimson. "Who could do
+less for a lesser man? And who would not do far more for Myles Standish?
+I would be a fool to hesitate over risk to a life no more valuable than
+mine, if such as he were in danger. Besides which the captain
+exaggerates my danger. I don't want that prated here. Please help me
+silence Myles Standish."
+
+Stephen Hopkins nodded in satisfaction.
+
+"Right, Giles. A blast on one's own horn produces much the sound of the
+bray of an ass. Yet am I glad that I know of this," he said.
+
+Little Love Brewster, who was often a messenger from one Plymouth house
+to another, came running in at that moment.
+
+"My father sends me," he panted. "The men of Plymouth are to sit this
+afternoon at our house to hear the tale of the adventurers to the
+Massachusetts. You will come? Giles, did you bring us new kinds of
+arrows from the strange savages? My father saith that Squanto was the
+best guide and helper on this expedition that white men ever had."
+
+"So he was, Love. I brought no new arrows, but I have in my sack
+something for each little lad in the colony. And for the girls I have
+wondrous beads," added Giles, seeing Damaris's crestfallen face.
+
+"I will risk a reprimand; it can be no worse than disapproval from Elder
+Brewster, and belike they will spare me because of the occasion,"
+thought Constance in her own room, making ready to go to the assembly
+that was to gather to welcome the explorers, but which to her mind was
+gathered chiefly to honour Giles.
+
+Thus deliberately she violated the rule of the colony; let her beautiful
+hair curl around her flushed face; put on a collar of her mother's
+finest lace, tied in such wise by a knot of rose-coloured ribbon that it
+looked like a cluster of buds under her decided little chin. And,
+surveying herself in the glass, which was over small and hazy for her
+merits, that chin raised itself in a hitch of defiance.
+
+"Why should I not be young, and fair and happy?" Constance demanded of
+her unjust reflection. "At the worst, and if I am forced to remove it, I
+shall have been gay and bonny--a wee bit so!--for a little while."
+
+With which this unworthy pilgrim maid danced down the stairs, seized by
+the hand Damaris, who looked beside her like a small brown grub, and set
+out for Elder Brewster's house.
+
+Although the older women raised disapproving brows at Constance, and
+shook their heads over her rose-tinted knots of ribbon, no one openly
+reproved her, and she slid into her place less pleased with her
+ornamentation than she had been while anticipating a rebuke.
+
+Captain Myles Standish rose up in his place and gave the history of his
+explorations in a clear-cut, terse way, that omitted nothing, yet dwelt
+on nothing beyond the narration of necessary facts.
+
+It was a long story, however condensed, yet no one wearied of it, but
+listened enthralled to his account of the Squaw-Sachem of the tribe of
+the Massachusetts, who ruled in the place of her dead spouse, the chief
+Nanepashemet, and was feared by other Indians as a relentless foe, and
+of the great rock that ended a promontory far in on the bay, at the foot
+of the three hills which were so good a site for a settlement, a rock
+that was fashioned by Nature into the profile of an Indian's face, and
+which they called Squaw Rock, or Squantum Head. As the captain went on
+telling of their inland marches from these three hills and their bay,
+and of the fertile country of great beauty which they everywhere came
+upon, there arose outside a commotion of children crying, and the larger
+children who were in charge of the small ones, calling frantically.
+
+Squanto, admitted to the assembly as one who had borne an important part
+in the story that Myles Standish was relating, sprang to his feet and
+ran out of the house. He came back in a few moments, followed by another
+Indian--a tall, lithe, lean youth, with an unfriendly manner.
+
+"What is this?" demanded Governor Bradford, rising.
+
+"Narragansett, come tell you not friends to you," said Squanto.
+
+The Narragansett warrior, with a great air of contempt, threw upon the
+floor, in the middle of the assembly, a small bundle of arrows, tied
+around with a spotted snake skin. This done, he straightened himself,
+folded his arms, and looked disdainfully upon the white men.
+
+"Well, what has gone amiss with _his_ digestion!" exclaimed Giles,
+aloud.
+
+His father shook his head at him. "How do you construe this act and
+manner, Squanto? Surely it portendeth trouble."
+
+"It is war," said Squanto. "Arrows tied by snake skin means no friend;
+war."
+
+"Perhaps we would do well to let it lie; picking it up may mean
+acceptance of the challenge, as if it were a glove in a tourney. The
+customs of men run amazingly together, though race and education
+separate them," suggested Myles Standish.
+
+"Squanto, take this defiant youngster out of here, and treat him
+politely; see that he is fed and given a place to sleep. Tell him that
+we will answer him----By your approval, Governor and gentlemen?"
+
+"You have anticipated my own suggestion, Captain Standish," said William
+Bradford bowing, and Squanto, who understood more than he could put into
+words, spoke rapidly to the Narragansett messenger and led him away.
+
+"Shall we deliberate upon this, being conveniently assembled?" suggested
+Governor Bradford.
+
+"It needs small consideration, meseems," said Myles Standish,
+impatiently. "Dismiss this messenger at once; do not let him remain here
+over night. The less your foe knows of you, the more your mystery will
+increase his dread of you. In the morning send a messenger of our own to
+the Narragansetts, and tell them that if they want war, war be it. If
+they prefer war to peace, let them begin upon the war at once; that we
+no more fear them than we have wronged them, and as they choose, so
+would we deal with them, as friends worth keeping, or foes to fear."
+
+"Admirable advice," Stephen Hopkins applauded the captain, and the other
+Plymouth men echoed his applause.
+
+Then, with boyish impetuosity and with laughter lighting up his handsome
+face, Giles leaped to his feet.
+
+"Now do I know the answer!" he cried. "Let the words be as our captain
+hath spoken; no one could utter better! But there is a further answer!
+Empty their snakeskin of arrows and fill it round with bullets, and
+throw it down among them, as they threw their pretty toy down to us! And
+our stuffing of it will have a bad flavour to their palates, mark me. It
+will be like filling a Christmas goose with red peppers, and if it
+doesn't send the Narragansetts away from the table they were setting for
+us, then is not my name Giles Hopkins! And one more word, my elders and
+masters! Let me be your messenger to the Narragansetts, I beseech you!
+They sent a youth to us; send you this youth back to them. If it be
+hauteur against hauteur, pride for pride, I'll bear me like the lion and
+the unicorn fighting for the crown, both together, in one person. See
+whether or not I can strike the true defiant attitude!"
+
+With which, eyes sparkling with fun and excitement, head thrown back,
+Giles struck an attitude, folding his arms and spreading his feet,
+looking at once so boyish and so handsome that with difficulty
+Constance held her clasped hands from clapping him.
+
+"Truth, friend Stephen, your lad hath an idea!" said Myles Standish,
+delightedly.
+
+"It could not be better. Conceived in true harmony with the savages'
+message to us, and carrying conviction of our sincerity to them at the
+first glimpse of it! By all means let us do as Giles suggests."
+
+There was not a dissentient voice in the entire assembly; indeed
+everyone was highly delighted with the humour of it.
+
+There was some objection to allowing Giles to be the messenger, but here
+Captain Standish stood his friend, though Constance looked at him
+reproachfully for helping Giles into this risky business.
+
+"Let the lad go, good gentlemen," he said. "Giles hath been with me on
+these recent explorations, and hath borne himself with fortitude,
+courage, and prudence. He longs to play a man's part among us; let him
+have the office of messenger to the Narragansetts, and go thither in the
+early morning, at dawn. We will dismiss their youth at once, and follow
+him with our better message without loss of time."
+
+So it was decided, and in high feather Giles returned to his home,
+Damaris on his shoulder, Constance walking soberly at his side, half
+sharing his triumph in his mission, half frightened lest her brother had
+but returned from unknown dangers to encounter worse ones.
+
+"Oh, they'll not harm me, timorous Con!" Giles assured her. "They know
+that it is prudent to let lie the sleeping English bulldogs, of whom,
+trust me, they know by repute! Now, Sis, can you deck me out in some
+wise impressive to these savages, who will not see the dignity of our
+sober dress as we do?"
+
+"Feathers?" suggested Constance, abandoning her anxiety to enter into
+this phase of the mission. "I think feathers in your hat, Giles, and
+some sort of a bright sash across your breast, all stuck through with
+knives? I will get knives from Pris and some of the others. And--oh, I
+know, Giles! That crimson velvet cloak that was our mother's, hung
+backward from your shoulder! Splendid, Giles; splendid enough for Sir
+Walter Raleigh himself to wear at Elizabeth's court, or to spread for
+her to walk upon."
+
+"It promises well, Sis, in sound, at least," said Giles. "But by all
+that's wise, help me to carry this paraphernalia ready to don at a safe
+distance from Plymouth, and by no means betray to our solemn rulers how
+I shall be decked out!"
+
+The sun was still two hours below his rising when Giles started, the
+crimson velvet cloak in a bag, his matchlock, or rather Myles Standish's
+matchlock lent Giles for the expedition, slung across his shoulder, a
+sword at his side, and the plumes fastened into his hat by Constance's
+needle and thread, but covered with another hat which surmounted his
+own.
+
+Constance had arisen, also, and went with Giles a little way upon his
+journey. Stephen Hopkins had blessed him and bidden him farewell on the
+preceding night, not to make too much of his setting forth.
+
+At the boundary which they had agreed upon, Constance kissed her brother
+good-bye, removing his second hat, and dressing the plumes crushed below
+it.
+
+"Good-bye, my dear one," she said. "And hasten back to me, for I cannot
+endure delay of your return. And you look splendid, my Knight of the
+Wilderness, even without the crimson cloak. But see to it that you make
+it swing back gloriously, and wave it in the dazzled eyes of the
+Narragansetts!"
+
+[Illustration: "'You look splendid, my knight of the wilderness'"]
+
+Thus with another kiss, Constance turned back singing, to show to Giles
+how little she feared for him, and half laughing to herself, for she was
+still very young, and they had managed between them to give this
+important errand much of the effect of a boy-and-girl, masquerading
+frolic.
+
+Yet, always subject to sudden variations of spirits, Constance had not
+gone far before she sat down upon a rock and cried heartily. Then,
+having sung and wept over Giles, she went sedately homeward to await his
+return in a mood that savoured of both extremes with which she had
+parted from him.
+
+The waiting was tedious, but it was not long. Sooner than she had dared
+to hope for him, Giles came marching back to her, and as he sang as he
+came, at the top of a lusty voice, Plymouth knew before he could tell it
+that his errand had been successful.
+
+Giles went straight to Governor Bradford's house, whither those who had
+seen and heard him coming followed him.
+
+"There is our gift of war rejected," said Giles, throwing down the
+spotted snakeskin, still bulging with its bullets. "They would have
+naught of it, but picked it up and gave it back to me with much air of
+solicitude, and with many words, which I could not understand, but which
+I doubt not were full of the warmest love for us English. And I was glad
+to get back the stuffed snakeskin and our good bullets, for here, so far
+from supplies, bullets are bullets, and if any of our red neighbours did
+attack us we could not afford to have lessened our stock in object
+lessons. All's well that ends well--where have I heard that phrase?
+Father, isn't it in a book of yours?" Giles concluded, innocently
+unconscious that he was walking on thin ice in alluding to a play of
+Shakespeare's, and his father's possession of it.
+
+"You have done well, Giles Hopkins," said Governor Bradford, heartily,
+"both in your conception of this message, and in your bearing it to the
+Narragansetts. And so from them we have no more to fear?"
+
+"No more whatever," said Giles.
+
+"Nevertheless, from this day let us build a stockade around the town,
+and close our gates at night, appointing sentinels to take shifts of
+guarding us," said Myles Standish. "This incident hath shown me that the
+outlying savages are not securely to be trusted. I have long thought
+that we should organize into military form. I want four squadrons of our
+men, each squadron given a quarter of the town to guard; I want pickets
+planted around us, and at any alarm, as of danger from fire or foe, I
+want these Plymouth companies to be ready to fly to rescue."
+
+"It shall be as you suggest, Captain," said Governor Bradford. "These
+things are for you to order, and the wisdom of this is obvious."
+
+Constance and Giles walked home together, Constance hiding beneath her
+gown the plumes which she had first fastened into, then ripped out of
+Giles's hat.
+
+"It is a delight to see you thus bearing your part in the affairs of
+Plymouth, Giles, dearest," she said. "And what fun this errand must have
+been!"
+
+Giles turned on her a pain-drawn face.
+
+"So it was, Constance, and I did like it," he said. "But how I wish Jack
+Billington had been with me! He was a brave lad, Constance, and a true
+friend. He was unruly, but he was not wicked, and the strict ways here
+irked him. Oh, I wish he had been here to do this service instead of me!
+I miss him, miss him."
+
+Giles stopped abruptly, and Constance gently touched his arm. Giles had
+not spoken before of Jack's death, and she had not dared allude to it.
+
+"I am sorry, too, dear Giles," she whispered, and Giles acknowledged her
+sympathy by a touch upon her hand, while his other hand furtively wiped
+away the tears that manhood forbade the boy to let fall.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+The Well-Conned Lesson
+
+
+Giles took a new place in Plymouth after his embassy to the
+Narragansetts. No longer a boy among his fellow pilgrims, he fulfilled
+well and busily the offices that were his as one of the younger, yet
+mature men.
+
+He was given the discipline of the squadron, that, pursuant to Captain
+Standish's plan for guarding the settlement, was the largest and
+controlled the most important gate of the stockade which was rapidly put
+up around the boundary of Plymouth after the defiance of the
+Narragansetts. Though that had come to naught, it had warned the
+colonists that danger might arise at an unforeseen moment.
+
+There was scarcity of provisions for the winter, the thirty-five
+destitute persons left the colony by the _Fortune_ being a heavy
+additional drain upon its supplies. Everyone was put upon half rations,
+and it devolved upon Giles and John Alden to apportion each family's
+share. It was hard to subsist through the bitter weather upon half of
+what would, at best, have been a slender nourishment, yet the Plymouth
+people faced the outlook patiently, uncomplainingly, and Giles,
+naturally hot-headed, impatient, got more benefit than he gave when he
+handed out the rations and saw the quiet heroism of their acceptance.
+
+He grew to be a silent Giles, falling into the habit of thoughtfulness,
+with scant talk, that was the prevailing manner of the Plymouth men.
+Between his father and himself there was friendliness, the former
+opposition between them, mutual annoyance, and irritation, were gone.
+Yet there they halted, not resuming the intimacy of Giles's childhood
+days. It was as if there were a reserve, rather of embarrassment than of
+lack of love; as if something were needed to jostle them into closer
+intercourse.
+
+Constance saw this, and waited, convinced that it would come, glad in
+the perfect confidence that she felt existed between them.
+
+She was a busy Constance in these days. The warmth of September held
+through that November, brooding, slumberous, quiet in the sunshine that
+warmed like wine.
+
+Constance and her stepmother cut and strung the few vegetables which
+they had, and hung them in the sunny corner of the empty attic room.
+
+They spread out corn and pumpkins upon the floor, instructing the
+willing Lady Fair to see to it that mice did not steal them.
+
+Dame Eliza, also, had grown comparatively silent. Her long tirades were
+wanting; she showed no softening toward Constance, yet she let her
+alone. Constance thought that something was on her stepmother's mind,
+but she did not try to discover what--glad of the new sparing of her
+sharp tongue, having no expectation of anything better than this from
+her.
+
+Damaris had been sent with the other children to be instructed in the
+morning by Mrs. Brewster in sampler working and knitting; by her husband
+in the Westminster catechism, and the hornbook.
+
+In the afternoon Damaris was allowed to play quietly at keeping house,
+with Love Brewster, who was a quiet child and liked better to play at
+being a pilgrim, and making a house with Damaris, than to share in the
+boys' games.
+
+"Where do you go, lambkin?" Constance asked her. "For we must know where
+to find you, nor must it be far from the house."
+
+"It is just down by that little patch, Connie; it's as nice as it can
+be, and it is the safest place in Plymouth, I'm sure," Damaris assured
+her earnestly. "You see there is a woods, and a hollow, and a big, big,
+great tree, and its roots go all out, every way, and we live in them,
+because they are rooms already; don't you see? And it's nice and
+damp--but you don't get your feet wet!" Damaris anticipated the
+objection which she saw in Constance's eye. "It's only--only--soft,
+gentle damp; not wetness, and moss grows there, as green as green can
+be, and feathery! And on the tree are nice little yellow plates, with
+brown edges! Growing on it! And we play they are our best plates that we
+don't use every day, because they are soft-like, and we didn't care to
+touch them when we did it. But they make the prettiest best plates in
+the cupboard, for they grow, in rows, with their edges over the next
+one, just the way you set up our plates in the corner cupboard. So
+please don't think it isn't a nice place, Constance, because it is, and
+I'd feel terribly afflicted, and cast down, and as nothing, if I
+couldn't go there with Love."
+
+Constance smiled at the child's quoting of the phrases which she had
+heard in the long sermons that Elder Brewster read, or delivered to them
+twice on Sunday, there being no minister yet come to Plymouth.
+
+"You little echo!" Constance cried. "It surely would be a matter to move
+one's pity if you suffered so deeply as that in the loss of your
+playground! Well, dear, till the warmth breaks up I suppose you may keep
+your house with Love, but promise to leave it if you feel chilly there.
+We must trust you so far. Art going there now?"
+
+"Yes, dear Constance. You have a heart of compassion and I love you with
+all of mine," said Damaris, expressing herself again like a little
+Puritan, but hugging her sister with the natural heartiness of a loving
+child.
+
+Then she ran away, and Constance, taking her capacious darning bag on
+her arm, went to bear Priscilla Alden company at her mending, as she
+often did when no work about the house detained her.
+
+Giles came running down the road when the afternoon had half gone, his
+face white. "Con, come home!" he cried, bursting open the door. "Hasten!
+Damaris is strangely ill."
+
+Constance sprang up, throwing her work in all directions, and Priscilla
+sprang up with her. Without stopping to pick up a thread, the two girls
+went with Giles.
+
+"I don't know what it is," Giles said, in reply to Constance's
+questions. "Love Brewster came running to Dame Hopkins, crying that
+Damaris was sick and strange. She followed him to the children's
+playground, and carried the child home. She is like to die; convulsions
+and every sign of poison she has, but what it is, what to do, no one
+knows. The women are there, but Doctor Fuller, as you know, is gone to a
+squaw who is suffering sore, and we could not bring him, even if we knew
+where he was, till it was too late. They have done all that they can
+recall for such seizures, but the child grows worse."
+
+"Oh, Giles!" groaned Constance. "She hath eaten poison. What has Doctor
+Fuller told me of these things? If only I can remember! All I can think
+of is that he hath said different poisons require different treatment.
+Oh, Giles, Giles!"
+
+"Steady, Sister; it may be that you can help," said Giles. "It had not
+occurred to any one how much the doctor had told you of his methods.
+Perhaps Love will know what Damaris touched."
+
+"There is Love, sitting crouched in the corner of the garden plot, his
+head on his knees, poor little Love!"
+
+Constance broke into a run and knelt beside the little boy, who did not
+look up as she put her arms around him.
+
+"Love, Love, dear child, if you can tell me what Damaris ate perhaps God
+will help me cure her," she said. "Look up, and be brave and help me.
+Did you see Damaris eat anything that you did not eat with her?"
+
+"Little things that grow around the big tree where it is wetter, we
+picked for our furniture," Love said at once. "Damaris said you cooked
+them and they were good. So then she said we would play some of them was
+furniture, and some of them was our dinner. And I didn't eat them, for
+they were like thin leather, only soft, and I felt of them, and couldn't
+eat them. But Damaris did eat them."
+
+"Toadstools!" cried Constance with a gasp. "Toadstools, Love! Did they
+look like little tables? And did Damaris call them mushrooms?"
+
+"Yes, like little tables," Love nodded his head hard. "All full
+underneath with soft crimped----"
+
+But Constance waited for no more. With a cry she was on her feet and
+running like the wind, calling back over her shoulder to Giles:
+
+"I'll come quick! I know! I know! Tell Father I know!"
+
+"She hath gone to Doctor Fuller's house," said Priscilla, watching
+Constance's flying figure, her hair unbound and streaming like a
+burnished banner behind her as she ran to get her weapon to fight with
+Death. "No girl ever ran as she can. Come, Giles; obey her. Tell your
+father and Mistress Hopkins that mayhap Constance can save the child."
+
+They turned toward the house, and Constance sped on.
+
+"Nightshade! The belladonna!" she was saying to herself as she ran. "I
+know the phial; I know its place. O, God, give me time, and give me wit,
+and do Thou the rest!" Past power to explain, she swept aside with a
+vehement arm the woman who found needed shelter for herself in Doctor
+Fuller's house, and kept it for him till his wife should come to
+Plymouth.
+
+Into the crude laboratory and pharmacy--in which the doctor had allowed
+her to work with him, of the contents of which he had taught her so much
+for an emergency that she had little dreamed would so closely affect
+herself when it came--Constance flew, and turned to the shelf where
+stood, in their dark phials, the few poisons which the doctor kept ready
+to do beneficent work for him.
+
+"Belladonna, belladonna, the beautiful lady," Constance murmured, in the
+curious way that minds have of seizing words and dwelling on them with
+surface insistence, while the actual mind is intensely working on a
+vital matter.
+
+She took down the wrong phial first, and set it back impatiently.
+
+"There should be none other like belladonna," she said aloud, and took
+down the phial she sought. To be sure that she was right, though it was
+labelled in the doctor's almost illegible small writing, she withdrew
+the cork. She knew the sickening odour of the nightshade which she had
+helped distil, an odour that dimly recalled a tobacco that had come to
+her father in England in her childhood from some Spanish colony, as she
+had been told, and also a wine that her stepmother made from wild
+berries.
+
+Constance shuddered as she replaced the cork.
+
+"It sickens me, but if only it will restore little Damaris!" she
+thought.
+
+Holding the phial tight Constance hastened away, and, her breath still
+coming painfully, she broke into her swift race homeward, diminishing
+nothing of her speed in coming, her great purpose conquering the pain
+that oppressed her labouring breast.
+
+When she reached her home her father was watching for her in the
+doorway. He took her hands in both of his without a word, covering the
+phial which she clasped, and looking at her questioningly.
+
+"I hope so; oh, I hope so, Father!" she said. "The doctor told me."
+
+Stephen Hopkins led her into the house; Dame Eliza met her within.
+
+"Constance? Connie?" Thus Mistress Hopkins implored her to do her best,
+and to allow her to hope.
+
+"Yes, yes, Mother," Constance replied to the prayer, and neither noted
+that they spoke to each other by names that they had never used before.
+
+The first glimpse that Constance had of Damaris on the bed sent all the
+blood back against her heart with a pang that made her feel faint. It
+did not seem possible that she was in time, even should her knowledge be
+correct.
+
+The child lay rigid as Constance's eyes fell on her; her lips and cheeks
+were ghastly, her long hair heightening the awful effect of her deathly
+colour. Frequent convulsions shook her body, her struggling breathing
+alone broke the stillness of the room.
+
+"She is quieter, but it is not that she is better," whispered Dame
+Eliza.
+
+Priscilla Alden stood ready with a spoon and glass in one hand, water in
+a small ewer in the other, always the efficient, sensible girl when
+needed.
+
+Constance accepted the glass, took from it the spoon, gave the glass
+back to Priscilla and poured from the dark phial into the spoon the dose
+of belladonna that Doctor Fuller had explained to her would be proper to
+use in an extreme case of danger.
+
+"How wonderful that he should have told me particularly about toadstool
+poisoning, yet it is because of the children," Constance's dual mind was
+saying to her, even while she poured the remedy and prayed with all her
+might for its efficacy.
+
+"Open her mouth," she said to her father, and he obeyed her. Constance
+poured the belladonna down Damaris's throat.
+
+Even after the first dose the child's rigor relaxed before a long time
+had passed. The dose was repeated; the early dusk of the grayest month
+closed down upon the watchers in that room. The neighbours slipped away
+to their own homes and duties; night fell, and Stephen Hopkins, his
+wife, Giles, and Constance stood around that bed, feeling no want of
+food, watching, watching the gradual cessation of the wracking
+convulsions, the relaxation of the stiffened little limbs, the fall of
+the strained eyelids, the quieter breathing, the changing tint of the
+skin as the poison loosed its grip upon the poor little heart and the
+blood began to course languidly, but duly, through the congested veins.
+
+"Constance, she is safe!" Stephen Hopkins ventured at last to say as
+Damaris turned on her side with a long, refreshing breath.
+
+Giles went quickly from the room, and Constance turned to her father
+with sudden weakness that made her faint.
+
+Constance swayed as she stood and her father caught her in his arms,
+tenderly drawing her head down on his shoulder, as great rending sobs
+shook her from relief and the accumulated exhaustion of hunger, physical
+weariness, anxiety, and grief.
+
+"Brave little lass!" Stephen Hopkins whispered, kissing her again and
+again. "Brave, quick-witted, loving, wise little lass o' mine!"
+
+Dame Eliza spoke never a word, but on her knees, with her head buried in
+the bright patch bedspread, one of Damaris's cold little hands laid
+across her lips, she wept as Constance had never dreamed that her
+stepmother could weep.
+
+"Better look after her, Father," Constance whispered, alarmed. "She will
+do herself a mischief, poor soul! Mother, oh--she loves me not! Father,
+comfort her; I will rest, and then I shall be my old self."
+
+"You did not notice that Priscilla had come back," her father said. "She
+is in the kitchen, and the kettle is singing on the hob. Go, dear one,
+and Priscilla will give you food and warm drink. Let me help you there.
+My Constance, Damaris would be far beyond our love by now had you not
+saved her. You have saved her life, Constance! What do we not all owe to
+you?"
+
+"It was Doctor Fuller. He taught me. He is wise, and knew that children
+might take harm from toadstools, playing in the woods as ours do. It was
+not due to me that Damaris was saved," Constance said.
+
+She was not conscious of how heavily she leaned on her father's arm,
+which lovingly enfolded her, leading her to the big chair in the
+inglenook. The fire leaped and crackled; the steam from the singing
+kettle on the crane showed rosy red in the firelight; Hecate, Puck, and
+Lady Fair basked in the warmth, and Priscilla Alden knelt on the hearth
+stirring something savoury in the saucepan that sat among the raked-off
+ashes, while John Alden, who had brought Priscilla back to be useful to
+the worn-out household, sat on the settle, leaning forward, elbows on
+knees, the bellows between his hands, ready to pump up wind under a
+flame that might show a sign of flagging.
+
+"Dear me, how cosy it looks!" exclaimed Constance, involuntarily, her
+drooping muscles tautening to welcome the brightness waiting for her.
+"It does not seem as though there ever could come a sorrow to threaten a
+hearthstone so shut in, so well tended as this one!"
+
+"It did not come, my dear; it only looked in at the window, and when it
+saw the tended hearth, and how well-armed you were to grapple with it,
+off it went!" cried Priscilla, drawing Constance into the high-backed
+chair. "Feet on this stool, my pretty, and this napery over your knees!
+That's right! Now this bowl and spoon, and then your Pris will pour her
+hot posset into your bowl, and you must shift it into your sweet mouth,
+and we'll be as right as a trivet, instanter!"
+
+Priscilla acted as she chattered, and Constance gladly submitted to
+being taken care of, lying back smiling in weary, happy acquiescence.
+
+Priscilla's posset was a heartening thing, and Constance after it,
+munched blissfully on a biscuit and sipped the wine that had been made
+of elder too brief a time before, yet which was friendly to her,
+nevertheless.
+
+Constance's lids drooped in the warmth, her head nodded, her fingers
+relaxed. Priscilla caught her glass just in time as it was falling, and
+Constance slept beside the fire while John and Priscilla crept away, and
+Giles came to take their place, to keep up the blaze in case a kettle of
+hot water might be needed when Damaris wakened from her first restoring
+sleep.
+
+At dawn Doctor Fuller came in and Constance aroused to welcome him.
+
+"Child, what an experience you have borne!" the good man said, bending
+with a moved face to greet Constance. "To think that I should have been
+absent! Your practice was more successful than mine; the squaw is dead.
+And you remembered my teaching, and saved the child with the nightshade
+we gathered and distilled that fair day, more than two months ago! 'Twas
+a lesson well conned!"
+
+"'Twas a lesson well taught," Constance amended. "Sit here, Doctor
+Fuller, and let me call my father. You will see Damaris? And her mother
+is in need of a quieting draught, I think. The poor soul was utterly
+spent when last I saw her, though I've selfishly slept, nor known aught
+of what any one else might be bearing."
+
+Constance slipped softly through the door as she spoke, into the bedroom
+where Damaris lay. The little girl was sleeping, but her mother lay
+across her feet, her gloomy eyes staring at the wall, her face white and
+mournful.
+
+"Doctor Fuller is come, Stepmother," whispered Constance. "Shall he not
+see Damaris? And you, have you not slept?"
+
+"Not a wink," said Dame Eliza, rising heavily. "To me it is as if
+Damaris had died, and that that child there was another. I bore the
+agony of parting from her, and now must abide by it, meseems, for I
+cannot believe that she is here and safe. Constance, it is to you----."
+She stopped and began again. "I was ever fond of calling you your
+father's daughter, making plain that I had no part in you. It was true;
+none have I, nor ever can have. But in my child you have the right of
+sister, and the restorer of her life. Damaris's mother, and Damaris is
+your father's other daughter, is heavily in your debt. I do not
+know----." She paused. She had spoken slowly, with difficulty, as if she
+could not find the words, nor use them as she wished to when she had
+found them. Young as she was, Constance saw that her stepmother was
+labouring under the stress of profound emotion, that tore her almost
+like a physical agony.
+
+"Now, now, prithee, Mistress Hopkins!" cried Constance, purposely using
+her customary title for her stepmother, to avoid the effect of there
+being anything out of the ordinary between them. "Bethink thee that I
+have loved Damaris dearly all her short life, and that her loss would
+have wounded me hardly less than it would have you. What debt can there
+be where there is love? Would I not have sacrificed anything to keep the
+child, even for myself? And what have I done but remember what the
+doctor taught me, and give her drops? Do not, I pray thee, make of my
+selfishness and natural affection a matter of merit! And now the doctor
+is waiting. Will you not go to him and let him treat you, too?--for
+indeed you need it. And he will tell you how best to bring Damaris back
+to her strength. I am going out into the morning air, for my long sleep
+by the hot fire hath made me heavy. I will be back in a short time to
+help with breakfast, Stepmother!"
+
+Constance snatched her cloak and ran out by the other door to escape
+seeing the doctor again and hearing her stepmother dilate to him upon
+the night's events.
+
+The sun was rising, resplendent, but the air was cold.
+
+"And no wonder!" Constance thought, startled by her discovery. "Winter
+is upon us; to-day is December! Our warmth must leave us, and then will
+danger of poisoning be past, even in sheltered spots, such as that in
+which our little lass near found her death!"
+
+She spread her arms out to the sun rays, and let the crisp, sea wind
+cool her face.
+
+"What a world! What a world! How fair, how glad, how sweet! Oh, thank
+God that it is so to us all this morning! Never will I repine at
+hardships in kind Plymouth colony, nor at the cost of coming on this
+pilgrimage, for of all the world in Merry England there is none to-day
+happier or more grateful than is this pilgrim maid!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+Christmas Wins, Though Outlawed
+
+
+Little Damaris, who had so nearly made the last great pilgrimage upon
+which we must all go, having turned her face once more toward the world
+she had been quitting, resumed her place in it but languidly. Never a
+robust child, her slender strength was impaired by the poison which she
+had absorbed. Added to this was the sudden coming of winter upon
+Plymouth, not well prepared to resist it, and it set in with violence,
+as if to atone for dallying on its way, for allowing summer to overlap
+its domain. Without a word to each other both Dame Eliza and Constance
+entered into an alliance of self-denial, doing without part of the more
+nourishing food out of their scanty allowance to give it to Damaris, and
+to plot in other ways to bring her back to health.
+
+Constance scarcely knew her stepmother. Silent, where she had been prone
+to talk; patient, where she had been easily vexed; with something almost
+deprecatory in her manner where she always had been self-assertive, Dame
+Eliza went about her round of work like a person whom her husband's
+daughter had never known.
+
+Toward Constance most of all was she changed. Never by the most remote
+implication did she blame her, whereas heretofore everything that the
+girl did was wrong, and the subject of wearisome, scolding comment. She
+avoided unnecessary speech to Constance, seemed even to try not to look
+at her, but this without the effect of her old-time dislike; it was
+rather as if she felt humiliated before her, and could not bring herself
+to meet the girl's eyes.
+
+Constance, as she realized this, began to make little overtures toward
+her stepmother. Her sweetness of nature made her suffer discomfort when
+another was ill-at-ease, but so far her cautious attempts had met with
+failure.
+
+"We have been in Plymouth a year, lacking but a sen' Night, Stepmother,"
+Constance said one December day when the snow lay white on Plymouth and
+still thickened the air and veiled the sky. "And we have been in the New
+World past a year."
+
+"It is ordered that we remember it in special prayer and psalmody to the
+Lord, with thanksgiving on the anniversary of our landing; you heard
+that, Constantia?" her stepmother responded.
+
+"No, but that would be seemly, a natural course to follow," said
+Constance.
+
+"There is not one of us who is not reliving the voyage hither and the
+hard winter of a year ago, I'll warrant. And Christmas is nearing."
+
+"That is a word that may not be uttered here," said Dame Eliza with a
+gleam of humour in her eyes, though she did not lift them, and a
+flitting smile across her somewhat grimly set lips.
+
+"Oh, can it be harmful to keep the day on which, veiled in an infant's
+form, man first saw his redemption?" cried Constance. "There were
+sweetness and holiness in Christmas-keeping, meseems. If only we could
+cut out less violently! Stepmother, will you let me have my way?"
+
+"Your way is not in my guidance, Constantia," said Dame Eliza. "It is
+for your father to grant you, or refuse you; not me."
+
+"This is beyond my father's province," laughed Constance. "Will you let
+me make a doll--I have my box of paints, and you know that a gift for
+using paints and for painting human faces is mine. I will make a doll of
+white rags and dress her in our prettiest coloured ones, with fastenings
+upon her clothes, so that they may be taken off and changed, else would
+she be a trial to her little mother! And then I will paint her face with
+my best skill, big blue eyes, curling golden hair, rose-red cheeks and
+lips, and a fine, straight little nose. Oh, she shall be a lovely
+creature, upon my honour! And will you let me give her to Damaris on
+Christmas morning, saying naught of it to any one outside this house, so
+no one shall rebuke us, or fine my father again for letting his child
+have a Christmas baby, as they fined him for letting Ted and Ned play at
+a harmless game? Then I shall know that there is one happy child on the
+birthday of Him who was born that all children, of all ages, should be
+happy, and that it will be, of all the possible little ones, our dear
+little lass who is thus full of joy!"
+
+Mistress Hopkins did not reply for a moment. Then she raised the corner
+of her apron and wiped her eyes, muttering something about "strong
+mustard."
+
+"How fond you are of my little Damaris," she then said. "You know,
+Constantia, that I have no right to consent to your keeping Christmas,
+since our elders have set their faces dead against all practices of the
+Old Church. Yet are your reasons for wishing to do this, or so it seems
+to me in my ignorance, such as Heaven would approve, and it sorely is
+borne upon me that many worser sins may be wrought in Plymouth than
+making a delicate child happy on the birthday of the Lord. Go, then, and
+make your puppet, but do not tell any one that you first consulted me.
+If trouble comes of it they will blame you less, who are young and not
+so long removed from the age of dolls, than me, who am one of the
+Mothers in Israel."
+
+"Oh, thank you, thank you, Stepmother!" cried Constance jumping up and
+clapping her hands with greater delight than if she had herself received
+a Christmas gift.
+
+"I'll never betray you, never! None shall know that any but my wicked,
+light-minded self had a hand in this profanation of----. What does it
+profane, Stepmother?"
+
+"Plymouth and Plymouth pilgrimage," said Dame Eliza, and this time the
+smile that she had checked before had its way.
+
+Constance ran upstairs to look for the pieces which were to be
+transformed by fairy magic, through her means, from shapeless rags to a
+fair and rosy daughter for pale Damaris. She remembered, wondering, as
+she knelt before her chest, that she had clapped her hands and pranced,
+and that Dame Eliza had not reproved her.
+
+Constance was busy with her doll till Christmas morning, the more so
+that she must hide it from Damaris and there was not warmth anywhere to
+sit and sew except in the great living room where Damaris amused Oceanus
+most of the darksome days. But Damaris's mother connived with Constance
+to divert the child, and there were long evenings, for, to give
+Constance more time, Dame Eliza put Damaris early to bed, and Constance
+sat late at her sewing.
+
+Thus when Christmas day came there sat on the hearth, propped up against
+the back of Stephen Hopkins's big volume of Shakespeare, a doll with a
+painted face that had real claim to prettiness. She wore a gown of
+sprigged muslin that hung so full around the pointed stomacher of her
+waist that it was a scandal to sober Plymouth, and a dangerous example
+to Damaris, had she been inclined to vain light-mindedness. And--though
+this was a surprise also to Dame Eliza--there was a horse of brown
+woollen stuff, with a tail of fine-cut rags and a mane of ravelled rags,
+and legs which, though considerably curved as to shape and unreliable as
+to action, were undeniably legs, and four in number. There were bright,
+black buttons on the steed's head suggestive of eyes, and the red paint
+in two spots below them were all the fiery nostrils the animal required.
+This was Giles's contribution to the joy of his ailing baby brother.
+Oceanus was a frail child whose grasp on life had been taken at a time
+too severe for him to hold it long, nor indeed did he.
+
+"Come out and wander down the street, Con," Giles whispered to Constance
+under the cover of the shouts of the two children who had come
+downstairs to find the marvellous treasures, the doll and horse,
+awaiting them, and who went half mad with joy, just like modern children
+in old Plymouth, as if they had not been little pilgrims.
+
+"There will be amusement for thee; come out, but never say I bade you
+come. You can make an errand."
+
+"Oh, Giles, you are not plotting mischief?" Constance implored, seeing
+the fun in her brother's eyes and fearing an attempt at Christmas
+fooling.
+
+"No harm afoot, but we hope a little laughter," said Giles, nodding
+mysteriously as he left the house.
+
+Constance could not resist her curiosity. She wrapped herself in her
+cloak against the cold and tied a scarf over her hair, before drawing
+its hood over her head.
+
+"You look like a witch, like a sweet, lovely witch," cried Damaris,
+getting up from her knees on which she had seemed, and not unjustly, to
+be worshipping her doll, whom she had at once christened Connie, and
+running over to hug her sister, breathless. "Are you a witch, Constance,
+and made my Connie by magic? No, a fairy! A fairy you are! My fairy,
+darling, lovely sister!"
+
+"Be grateful to Constantia, as you should be, Damaris, but prate not of
+fairies. I will not let go undone all my duty as a Puritan and pilgrim
+mother. Constantia is a kind sister to you, which is better, than a
+fairy falsehood," said Dame Eliza, rallying something of her old spirit.
+
+Constance kissed Damaris and whispered something to her so softly that
+all the child caught was "Merry." Yet the lost word was not hard to
+guess.
+
+Then Constance went out and down the street, wondering what Giles had
+meant. She saw a small group of men before her, near the general
+storehouse for supplies, and easily made out that they were the younger
+men of the plantation, including those that had come on the _Fortune_,
+and that Giles and Francis Billington were to the fore.
+
+Up the street in his decorous raiment, but without additional marking of
+the day by his better cloak as on Sunday, came Governor Bradford with
+his unhastening pace not quickened, walking with his English thorn stick
+that seemed to give him extra, gubernatorial dignity, toward the group.
+The younger lads nudged one another, laughing, half afraid, but not
+Giles. He stood awaiting the governor as if he faced him for a serious
+cause, yet Constance saw that his eyes danced.
+
+"Good morning, my friends," said William Bradford. "Not at work? You are
+apportioned to the building of the stockade. It is late to begin your
+day, especially that the sun sets early at this season."
+
+"It is because of the season, though not of the sun's setting, that we
+are not at work," said Giles, chosen spokesman for this prank by his
+fellows, and now getting many nudges lest he neglect his office. "Hast
+forgotten, Mr. Bradford, what day this is? It offends our conscience to
+work on a day of such high reverence. This be a holy day, and we may not
+work without sin, as the inward voice tells us. We waited to explain to
+you what looked like idleness, but is rather prompted by high and lofty
+principles."
+
+The governor raised his eyebrows and bowed deeply, not without a slight
+twitching of his lips, as he heard this unexpected and solemn protest.
+
+"Indeed, Giles Hopkins! And is it so? You have in common with these,
+your fellow labourers, a case of scruples to which the balm of the
+opinions of your elders and betters, at least in experience and
+authority, does not apply? Far be it from me to interfere with your
+consciences! We have come to the New World, and braved no slight
+adversity for just this cause, that conscience unbridled, undriven,
+might guide us in virtue. Disperse, therefore, to your homes, and for
+the day let the work of protection wait. I bid you good morning,
+gentlemen, and pray you be always such faithful harkeners to the voice
+of conscience."
+
+The governor went on, having spoken, and the actors in the farce looked
+crestfallen at one another, the point of the jest somewhat blunted by
+the governor's complete approval. Indeed there were some among them who
+followed the governor. He turned back, hoping for this, and said:
+
+"This is not done to approve of Christmas-keeping but rather to spare
+you till you are better informed."
+
+"What will you do, Giles?" asked Constance, as her brother joined her,
+Francis also, not in the least one with those who relinquished the idea
+of a holiday.
+
+"Do? Why follow our consciences, as we were commended for doing!"
+shouted Francis tossing his hat in the air and catching it neatly on his
+head in the approved fashion of a mountebank at a fair in England.
+
+"Our consciences bid us play at games on Christmas," supplemented Giles.
+"Would you call the girls and watch us? Or we'll play some games that
+you can join in, such as catch-catch, or pussy-wants-a-corner."
+
+Constance shook her head. "Giles, be prudent," she warned. "You have
+won your first point, but if I know the governor's face there was
+something in it that betokened more to come. You know there'll be no
+putting up with games on any day here, least of all on this day, which
+would be taken as a return to abandoned ways. Yet it is comical!"
+Constance added, finding her rôle of mentor irksome when all her youth
+cried out for fun.
+
+"Good Con! You are no more ready for unbroken dulness than we are!"
+Francis approved her. "Come along, Giles; get the bar for throwing, and
+the ball, and who said pitch-and-toss? I have a set of rings I made, I
+and--someone else." Francis's face clouded. Pranks had lost much of
+their flavour since he lacked Jack.
+
+Seeing this, Giles raced Francis off, and the other conscientious youths
+who refused work, streamed after them.
+
+Constance continued her way to the Alden home. She thought that a timely
+visit to Priscilla would bring her home at such an hour as to let her
+see the end of the morning escapade.
+
+Elizabeth Tilley drifted into Priscilla's kitchen in an aimless way, not
+like her usual busy self, although she made the reason for her coming a
+recipe which she needed. Soon Desire Minter followed her, asking
+Priscilla if she would show her how to cut an apron from a worn-out
+skirt, but, like Elizabeth, Desire seemed listless and uncertain.
+
+"There's something wrong!" cried Desire at last, without connection.
+"There is a sense of there being Christmas in the world somewhere
+to-day, and not here! I am glad that I go back to England as soon as
+opportunity offers."
+
+"There is Christmas here, most conscientiously kept!" laughed Constance.
+"Hark to the tale of it!" And she told the girls what had happened that
+morning.
+
+"Come with me, bear me company home, and we shall, most probably, see
+the end of it, for I am sure that the governor is not done with those
+lads," she added.
+
+Desire and Elizabeth welcomed the suggestion, for they were, also, about
+to go home.
+
+"See yonder!" cried Constance, pointing.
+
+Down the street there was what, in Plymouth, constituted a crowd,
+gathered into two bands. With great shouting and noise one band was
+throwing a ball, which the other band did its utmost to prevent from
+entering a goal toward which the throwers directed it. Alone, one young
+man was throwing a heavy bar, taking pride in his muscles which balanced
+the bar and threw it a long distance with ease and grace.
+
+"To think that this is Plymouth, with merrymaking in its street on
+Christmas day!" exclaimed Desire, her eyes kindling with pleasure.
+
+"Ah, but see the governor is coming, leading back those men who went to
+work; he has himself helped to build the stockade. Now we shall see how
+he receives this queer idea of a holiday, which is foreign to us, though
+it comes from England," said Constance.
+
+Governor Bradford came toward the shouting and mirth-making with his
+dignified gait unvaried. The game slackened as he drew nearer, though
+some of the players did their best to keep it up at the same pace, not
+to seem to dread the governor's disapproval.
+
+Having gained the centre of the players, the governor halted, and looked
+from one to another.
+
+"Hand me that ball, and yonder bar, and all other implements of play
+which you have here," he said, sternly. "My friends," he added to the
+men who had been at work, "take from our idlers their toys."
+
+There was no resistance on the part of the players; they yielded up
+bats, ball, and bar, the stool-ball, goal sticks, and all else, without
+demur, curious to see what was in the wind.
+
+"Now, young men of Plymouth colony," said Governor Bradford, "this
+morning you told me that your consciences forbade you to work on
+Christmas day. Although I could not understand properly trained Puritan
+consciences going so astray, yet did I admit your plea, not being
+willing to force you to do that which there was a slender chance of your
+being honest in objecting to, for conscience sake. You have not worked
+with your neighbours for half of this day. Now doth my conscience
+arouse, nor will it allow me, as governor, to see so many lusty men at
+play, while others labour for our mutual benefit. Therefore I forbid the
+slightest attempt at game-playing on this day. If your consciences will
+not allow you to labour then will mine, though exempting you from work
+because of your sense of right, yet not allow you to play while others
+work. For the rest of this day, which is called Christmas, but which we
+consider but as the twenty-fifth day of this last month of the year, you
+will either go to work, or you will remain close within your various
+houses, on no account to appear beyond your thresholds. For either this
+is a work-a-day afternoon, or else is it holy, which we by no means
+admit. In either case play is forbidden you. See to it that you obey me,
+or I will deal with you as I am empowered to deal."
+
+The young men looked at one another, some inclined to resent this,
+others with a ready sense of humour, burst out laughing; among these
+latter was Giles, who cried:
+
+"Fairly caught, Governor Bradford! You have played a Christmas game this
+day yourself and have won out at it! For me, as a choice between staying
+close within the house and working, I will take to the stockade. By your
+leave, then, Governor, I will join you at the work, dinner being over."
+
+"You have my leave, Giles Hopkins," said William Bradford, and there was
+a twinkle in his eyes as he turned them, with no smile on his lips, upon
+Giles.
+
+Giles went home with Constance in perfect good humour, taking the end of
+his mischief in good part.
+
+"For look you," he said, summing up comments upon it to his sister. "I
+don't mind encountering defeat by clever outwitting of me. We tried a
+scheme and the governor had a better one. What I mind is unfairness;
+that was fair, and I like the governor better than I ever did before."
+
+Stephen Hopkins stood in the doorway of the house as the brother and
+sister came toward it. He was gazing at the skyline with eyes that saw
+nothing near to him, preoccupied, wistful, in a mood that was rare to
+him, and never betrayed to others. His eyes came back to earth slowly,
+and he looked at Giles and Constance as one looks who has difficulty in
+seeing realities, so occupied was he with his thoughts. He put out a
+hand and took one of Constance's hands, drawing it up close to his
+breast, and he laid his left hand heavily on Giles's shoulder.
+
+"Across that ocean it is Christmas day," he said, slowly. "In England
+people are sitting around their hearths mulling ale, roasting apples,
+singing old songs and carols. When I was young your mother and I rode
+miles across a dim forest, she on her pillion, I guiding a mettlesome
+beauty. But she had no fear with my hand on his bridle; we had been
+married but since Michaelmas. We went to visit your grandmother, her
+mother, Lady Constantia, who was a famous toast in her youth. You are
+very like your mother, Constance; I have often told you this. Strange,
+that one can inhabit the same body in such different places in a
+lifetime; stranger that, still in the same body, he can be such an
+altered man! Giles, my son, I have been thinking long thoughts to-day.
+There is something that I must say to you as your due; nay something,
+rather, that I want to say to you. I have been wrong, my son. I have
+loved you so well that a defect in you annoyed me, and I have been hard,
+impatient, offending against the charity in judgment that we owe all
+men, surely most those who are our nearest and dearest. I accused you
+unjustly, and gave you no opportunity to explain. Giles, as man to man,
+and as a father who failed you, I beg your pardon."
+
+"Oh, sir! Oh, dear, dear Father!" cried Giles in distress. "It needed
+not this! All I ask is your confidence. I have been an arrogant young
+upstart, denying you your right to deal with me. It is I who am wrong,
+wrongest in that I have never confessed the wrong, and asked your
+forgiveness. Surely it is for me to beg your pardon; not you mine!"
+
+"At least a good example is your due from me," said Stephen Hopkins,
+with a smile of wistful tenderness. "We are all upstarts, Giles lad,
+denying that we should receive correction, and this from a Greater than
+I. The least that we can do is to be willing to acknowledge our errors.
+With all my heart I forgive you, lad, and I ask you to try to love me,
+and let there be the perfect loving comradeship between us that, it hath
+seemed, we had left behind us on the other shore, just when it was most
+needed to sustain us in our venture on this one. You loved me well,
+Giles, as a child; love me as well as you can as a man."
+
+Giles caught his father's hand in both of his, and was not ashamed that
+tears were streaming down his cheeks.
+
+"Father, I never loved you till to-day!" he cried. "You have taught me
+true greatness, and--and--Oh, indeed I love and honour you, dear sir!"
+
+"The day of good will, and of peace to it! And of love that triumphs
+over wrongs," said Stephen Hopkins, turning toward the house, and
+whimsically touching with his finger-tips the happy tears that quivered
+on Constance's lashes.
+
+"We cannot keep it out of Plymouth colony, however we strive to erect
+barriers against the feast; Christmas wins, though outlawed!"
+
+ "God rest ye merry, gentlemen;
+ Let nothing you dismay,"
+
+Constance carolled as she hung up her cloak, her heart leaping in
+rapture of gratitude. Nor did Dame Eliza reprove her carol, but half
+smiled as Oceanus crowed and beat a pan wildly with his Christmas horse.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+A Fault Confessed, Thereby Redressed
+
+
+As the winter wore away, that second winter in Plymouth colony that
+proved so hard to endure, the new state of things in the Hopkins
+household continued. Constance could not understand her stepmother.
+Though the long habit of a lifetime could not be at once entirely
+abandoned, yet Dame Eliza scolded far less, and toward Constance herself
+maintained an attitude that was far from fault-finding. Indeed she
+managed to combine something like regretful deference that was not
+unlike liking, with a rigid keeping of her distance from the girl.
+Constance wondered what had come over Mistress Hopkins, but she was too
+thankful for the peace she enjoyed to disturb it by the least attempt to
+bridge the distance that Dame Eliza had established between them.
+
+Her father and Giles were a daily delight to Constance. The comradeship
+that they had been so happy in when Giles was a child was theirs again,
+increased and deepened by the understanding that years had enabled Giles
+and his father to share as one man with another. And added to that was
+wistful affection, as if the older man and the younger one longed to
+make up by strength of love for the wasted days when all had not been
+right between them.
+
+Constance watched them together with gladness shining upon her face.
+Dame Eliza also watched them, but with an expression that Constance
+could not construe. Certain it was that her stepmother was not happy,
+not sure of herself, as she had always been.
+
+Oceanus was not well; he did not grow strong and rosy as did the other
+_Mayflower_ baby, Peregrine White, though Oceanus was by this time
+walking and talking--a tall, thin, reed-like little baby, fashioned not
+unlike the long grasses that grew on Plymouth harbour shore. But Damaris
+had come back to health. She was Constance's charge; her mother yielded
+her to Constance and devoted herself to the baby, as if she had a
+presentiment of how brief a time she was to keep him.
+
+It was a cruelly hard winter; except that there was not a second
+epidemic of mortal disease it was harder to the exiles than the first
+winter in Plymouth.
+
+Hunger was upon them, not for a day, a week, or a month, but hourly and
+on all the days that rose and set upon the lonely little village,
+encompassed by nothing kinder than reaches of marsh, sand, and barrens
+that ended in forest; the monotonous sea that moaned against their coast
+and separated them from food and kin; and the winter sky that often
+smiled on them sunnily, it is true, but oftener was coldly gray, or
+hurling upon them bleak winds and driving snows.
+
+From England had come on the _Fortune_ more settlers to feed, but no
+food for them. Plymouth people were hungry, but they faithfully divided
+their scarcity with the new-comers and hoped that in the spring Mr.
+Weston, the agent in England who had promised them the greatest help and
+assured them of the liveliest interest in this heroic venture, would
+send them at least a fraction of the much he had pledged to its
+assistance.
+
+So when the spring, that second spring, came in and brought a small ship
+there was the greatest excitement of hope in her coming. But all she
+brought was letters, and seven more passengers to consume the food
+already so shortened, but not an ounce of addition to the supplies. One
+letter was from Mr. Weston, filled with fair words, but so discouraging
+in its smooth avoidance of actual help that Governor Bradford dared not
+make its contents known, lest it should discourage the people, already
+sufficiently downhearted, and with more than enough reason to be so.
+There was a letter on this ship for Constance from Humility, and
+Governor Bradford beckoned to John Howland, standing near and said to
+him:
+
+"Take this letter up to Mistress Constantia Hopkins, and ask her father
+to come to me, if it please him. Say to him that I wish to consult him."
+
+"I will willingly do your bidding, Mr. Bradford," said John Howland,
+accepting the letter which the governor held out to him and turning it
+to see in all lights its yellowed folder and the seal thrice impressed
+along its edge to insure that none other than she whose name appeared
+written in a fine, running hand on the obverse side, should first read
+the letter. "In fact I have long contemplated a visit to Mistress
+Constantia. It hath seemed to me that Stephen Hopkins's daughter was
+growing a woman and a comely woman. She is not so grave as I would want
+her to be, but allowance must be made for her youth, and her father is
+not so completely, nor profoundly set free from worldliness as are our
+truer saints; witness the affair of the shovelboard. But Constantia
+Hopkins, under the control and obedience of a righteous man, may be
+worthy of his hand."
+
+"Say you so!" exclaimed William Bradford, half amused, half annoyed, and
+wondering what his quick-tempered but honoured friend Stephen would say
+to this from John Howland--he who had a justifiable pride in his
+honourable descent and who held no mere man equal to his Constance, the
+apple of his eye. "I had not a suspicion that you were turning over in
+your mind thoughts of this nature. I would advise you to consult Mr.
+Hopkins before you let them take too strong hold upon your desire. But
+in as far as my errand runneth with your purpose to further your
+acquaintance with the maiden, in so far I will help you, good John, for
+I am anxious that Mr. Hopkins shall know as soon as possible what news
+the ship hath brought. Stay; here is another letter; for Mistress Eliza
+Hopkins this time. Take that, also, if you will and bid Mr. Hopkins
+hither."
+
+John Howland, missing entirely the hint of warning in the governor's
+voice and manner, took the two letters and went his way.
+
+He found Stephen Hopkins at his house, planning the planting of a garden
+with his son.
+
+"I will go at once; come thou with me, Giles. It sounds like ill news, I
+fear me, that hint of wishing to consult me. Somehow it seems that as
+'good wine needs no bush,' for which we have Shakespeare's authority, so
+good news needs little advice, or rarely seeks it, for its dealing."
+
+So saying Stephen Hopkins, straightening himself with a hand on his
+stiffened side went into the house, and, taking his hat, went
+immediately out of it again, with Giles. John Howland followed them into
+the house, but not out of it. Instead, he seated himself, unbidden, upon
+the fireside settle, and awaited their departure.
+
+Then he produced his two letters, and offered one to Constance.
+
+"I have brought you this, Mistress Constantia," he said, ponderously,
+"at the request of the governor, but no less have I brought it because
+it pleaseth me to do you a service, as I hope to do you many, even to
+the greatest, in time to come."
+
+"Thank you, John," said innocent Constance, having no idea of the
+weighty meaning underlying this statement, indeed scarce hearing it,
+being eager to get the letter which he held. "Oh, from Humility! It is
+from Humility! Look, little Damaris, a letter from England, writ by
+Humility Cooper! The _Fortune_ is safely in port, then! Come, my cosset,
+and I will read you what Humility hath to tell us of her voyage, of
+home, and all else! First of all shall you and I hear this: then we will
+hasten to Priscilla Alden and read it to her new little daughter, for
+she hath been so short a time in Plymouth that she must long for news
+from across the sea, do you not say so?"
+
+Damaris giggled in enjoyment of Constance's nonsense, which the serious
+little thing never failed to enter into and to enjoy, as unplayful
+people always enjoy those who can frolic. The big sister ran away, with
+the smaller one clinging to her skirt, and with never a backward glance
+nor thought for John Howland, meditating a great opportunity for
+Constance, as he sat on the fireside settle.
+
+"Mistress Hopkins, this is your letter," said John, completing his
+errand when Constance was out of sight.
+
+He offered Dame Eliza her letter. She looked at it and thrust it into
+her pocket with such a heightened colour and distressed look that even
+John Howland's preoccupation took note of it.
+
+"This present hour seems to be an opportunity that is a leading, and I
+will follow this leading, Mistress Hopkins, by your leave," John said.
+"It cannot be by chance that all obstacles to plain speaking to you are
+removed. I had thought first to speak to Stephen Hopkins, or perhaps to
+Constantia herself, but I see that it is better to engage a woman's good
+offices."
+
+Dame Eliza frowned at him, darkly; she was in no mood for dallying, and
+this preamble had a sound that she did not like.
+
+"Good offices for what? My good offices? Why?" she snapped. "Why should
+you speak to Mr. Hopkins, with whose Christian name better men than you
+in this colony make less free? And still more I would know why you
+should speak either first or last to Mistress Constantia? That hath a
+sound that I do not like, John Howland!"
+
+John Howland stared at her, aghast, a moment, then he said:
+
+"It is my intent, Mistress Eliza Hopkins, to offer to wed Mistress
+Constantia, and that cannot mislike you. Young though she be, and
+somewhat frivolous, yet do I hope much for her from marriage with a
+godly man, and I find her comely to look upon. Therefore----"
+
+"Therefore!" cried Dame Eliza who seemed to have lost her breath for a
+moment in sheer angry amazement. "Therefore you would make a fool of
+yourself, had not it been done for you at your birth! Art completely a
+numbskull, John Howland, that you speak as though it was a favour, and
+a matter for you to weigh heavily before coming to it, that you might
+make Stephen Hopkins's daughter your wife? Put the uneasiness that it
+gives you as to her light-mindedness out of your thoughts, nor dwell
+over-much upon her comeliness, for your own good! Comely is she, and a
+rare beauty, to give her partly her due. And what is more, is she a
+sweet and noble lass, graced with wit and goodness that far exceed your
+knowledge; not even her father can know as I do, with half my sore
+reason, her patience, her charity, her unfailing generosity to give, or
+to forgive. Marry Constance, forsooth! Why, man, there is not a man in
+this Plymouth settlement worthy of her latchets, nor in all England is
+there one too good for her, if half good enough! Your eyes will be awry
+and for ever weak from looking so high for your mate. But that you are
+the veriest ninny afoot I would deal with you, John Howland, for your
+impudence! Learn your place, man, and never let your conceit so run away
+with you that you dare to speak as if you were hesitant as to Mr.
+Hopkins's daughter to be your wife! Zounds! John, get out of my sight
+lest I be tempted to take my broom and clout ye! Constance Hopkins and
+you, forsooth! Oh, be gone, I tell ye! She's the pick and flower of
+maidens, in Plymouth or England, or where you will!"
+
+John Howland rose, slowly, stiffly, angry, but also ashamed, for he had
+not spirit, and he felt that he had stepped beyond bounds in aspiring
+to Constance since Dame Eliza with such vehemence set it before him.
+Then, too, it were a strong man who could emerge unscathed from an
+inundation of Dame Eliza's wrath.
+
+"I meant no harm, Mistress," he said, awkwardly. "No harm is done, for
+the maid herself knows naught of it, nor any one save the governor, and
+he but a hint. Let be no ill will between us for this. I suppose, since
+Mistress Constantia is not for me, I must e'en marry whom I can, and I
+think I must marry Elizabeth Tilley."
+
+"What does it matter to me who you marry?" said Dame Eliza, turning away
+with sudden weariness. "It's no concern of mine, beyond the point I've
+settled for good and all."
+
+John Howland went away. After he had gone Constance came around the
+house and entered by the rear door. Her eyes were full of moisture from
+suppressed laughter, yet her lips were tremulous and her eyes, dewy
+though they were, shone with happiness.
+
+"Hast heard?" demanded Dame Eliza.
+
+"I could not help it," said Constance. "I left Damaris at Priscilla's
+and ran back to ask you, for Priscilla, to lend her the pattern of the
+long wrapping cloak that you made for our baby when he was tiny. Pris's
+baby seems cold, she thinks. And as I entered I heard John. I near died
+of laughing! I had thought a lover always felt his beloved to be so
+fair and fine that he scarce dared look at her! Not so John! But after
+all, it is less that I am John's beloved than his careful--and doubtful
+choice. But for the rest, Mistress Hopkins--Stepmother--might I call you
+Mother?--what shall I say? I am ashamed, grateful but ashamed, that you
+praise me so! Yet how glad I am, never can I find words to tell you. I
+thought that you hated me, and it hath grieved me, for love is the air I
+breathe, and without it I shrivel up from chill and suffocation! I would
+that I could thank you, tell you----." Constance stopped.
+
+The expression on Dame Eliza's face, wholly beyond her understanding,
+silenced her.
+
+"You have thanked me," Dame Eliza said. "Damaris is alive only through
+you. However you love her, yet her life is her mother's debt to you.
+Much, much more do I owe you, Constantia Hopkins, and none knows it
+better than myself. Let be. Words are poor. There is something yet to be
+done. After it you may thank me, or deny me as you will, but between us
+there will be a new beginning, its shaping shall be as you will. Till
+that is done which I must do, let there be no more talk between us."
+
+Puzzled, but impressed by her stepmother's manner and manifest distress,
+Constance acquiesced. It was not many days before she understood.
+
+The people of Plymouth were summoned to a meeting at Elder William
+Brewster's house. It was generally understood that something of the
+nature of a court of justice, and at the same time of a religious
+character was to take place. Everyone came, drawn by curiosity and the
+dearth of interesting public events.
+
+Stephen Hopkins, Giles, and Constance came, the two little children with
+them, because there was no one at home to look after them. Not the least
+suspicion of what they were to hear entered the mind of these three, or
+it might never have been heard.
+
+Elder Brewster, William Bradford, Edward Winslow sat in utmost gravity
+at the end of the room. It crossed Stephen Hopkins's mind to wonder a
+little at his exclusion from this tribunal, for it had the effect of a
+tribunal, but it was only a passing thought, and instantly it was
+answered.
+
+Dame Eliza Hopkins entered the room, with Mistress Brewster, and seated
+herself before the three heads of the colony.
+
+"My brethren," said William Brewster, rising, "it hath been said on
+Authority which one may not dispute that a broken and contrite heart
+will not be despised. You have been called together this night for what
+purpose none but my colleagues and myself knew. It is to harken to the
+public acknowledgment of a grave fault, and by your hearing of a public
+confession to lend your part to the wiping out of this sin, which is
+surely forgiven, being repented of, yet which is thus atoned for. We
+have vainly endeavoured to persuade the person thus coming before you
+that this course was not necessary; since her fault affected no one but
+her family, to them alone need confession be made. As she insisted upon
+this course, needs must we consent to it. Dame Eliza Hopkins, we are
+ready to harken to you."
+
+He sat down, and Dame Eliza, rising, came forward. Stephen Hopkins's
+face was a study, and Giles and Constance, crimson with distress, looked
+appealingly at their father, but the situation was beyond his control.
+
+"Friends, neighbours, fellow pilgrims," began Dame Eliza, manifestly in
+real agony of shamed distress, yet half enjoying herself, through her
+love for drama and excitement, "I am a sinner. I cannot continue in your
+membership unless you know the truth, and admit me thereto. My anger, my
+wicked jealousy hath persecuted the innocent children of my husband,
+they whose mother died and whose place I should have tried in some
+measure to make good. But at all times, and in all ways have I used them
+ill, not with blows upon the body, but upon their hearts. Jealousy was
+my temptation, and I yielded to it. But, not content with sharp and
+cruel words, I did plot against them to turn their father from them,
+especially from his son, because I wanted for my son the inheritance in
+England which Stephen Hopkins hath power to distribute. I succeeded in
+sowing discord between the father and Giles, but not between my husband
+and his daughter. At last I used a signature which fell into my hands,
+and by forwarding it to England, set in train actions before the law
+which would defraud Giles Hopkins and benefit my own son. By the ship
+that lately came into our harbour I received a letter, sent to me by the
+governor, by the hand of John Howland, promising me success in my wicked
+endeavour. My brethren, my heart is sick unto death within me.
+Thankfully I say that all estrangement is past between Giles Hopkins and
+his father. In that my wicked success at the beginning was foiled. While
+I was doing these things against the children, Constantia Hopkins, by
+her sweetness, her goodness, her devotion, without a tinge of grudging,
+to her little half-sister and brother, and at last her saving of my
+child's life when no help but hers was near and the child was dying
+before me, hath broken my hard heart; and in slaying me--for I have died
+to my old self under it--hath made me to live. Therefore I publicly
+acknowledge my sin, and bid you, my fellow pilgrims, deal with me as you
+see fit, neither asking for mercy, nor in any wise claiming it as my
+desert."
+
+Stephen Hopkins had bent forward, his elbows on his knees, hiding his
+face in his hands. Giles stared straight before him, his brow dark red,
+frowning till his face was drawn out of likeness to itself, his nether
+lip held tight in his teeth.
+
+Poor Constance hid her misery in Oceanus's breast, holding the baby
+close up against her so that no one could see her face. Little Damaris,
+pale and quiet, too frightened to move or fully to breathe, clutched
+Constance's arm, not understanding what was going forward, but knowing
+that whatever it was it distressed everyone that constituted her little
+world, and suffering under this knowledge.
+
+"My friends," Elder Brewster resumed his office, "you have heard what
+Mistress Hopkins hath spoken. It is not for us to deny pardon to her.
+She hath done all, and more than was required of her, in publicly
+confessing her wrong. Let us take her by the hand, and let us pray that
+she may live long to shed peace and joy upon the young people whom she
+hath wronged, and might have wronged further, had not repentance found
+her."
+
+One by one these severely stern people of Plymouth arose and, passing
+before Mistress Hopkins, took her hand, and said:
+
+"Sister, we rejoice with you." Or some said: "Be of good consolation,
+and Heaven's blessing be upon you." A few merely shook her hand and
+passed on.
+
+Before many had thus filed past, Myles Standish leaped to his feet and
+cried: "Stephen, Stephen Hopkins, come! There's a wild cat somewhere!"
+
+Stephen Hopkins went out after him, thankful to escape.
+
+"Poor old comrade," said Captain Standish, putting his hand on the
+other's shoulder. "If only good and sincere people would consider what
+these scenes, which relieve their nerves, cost others! There is a wild
+cat somewhere; I did not lie for thee, Stephen, but in good sooth I've
+no mortal idea where it may be!"
+
+He laughed, and Stephen Hopkins smiled. "You are a good comrade, Myles,
+and we are as like as two peas in a pod. Certes, we find this Plymouth
+pod tight quarters, do we not, at least at times? I've no liking for
+airing private grievances in public: to my mind they belong between us
+and the Lord!--but plainly my wife sees this as the right way. What
+think you, Myles? Is it going to be better henceforward?" he said.
+
+"No doubt of that, no doubt whatever," asserted Myles, positively. "And
+my pet Con is the chief instrument of Dame Eliza's change of heart!
+Well, to speak openly, Stephen, I did not give thy wife credit for so
+much sense! Constance is sweet, and fair, and winsome enough to bring
+any one to her--his!--senses. Or drive him out of them! Better times
+are in store for thee, Stephen, old friend, and I am heartily thankful
+for it. So, now; take your family home, and do not mind the talk of
+Plymouth. For a few days they will discuss thee, thy wife, thy son, and
+thy daughter, but it will not be without praise for thee, and it will be
+a strange thing if Giles and I cannot stir up another event that will
+turn their attention from thee before thy patience quite gives out."
+
+Myles Standish laughed, and clapped his hand on his friend's shoulder by
+way of encouragement to him to face what any man, and especially a man
+of his sort, must dread to face--the comments and talk of his small
+world.
+
+The Hopkins family went home in silence, Stephen Hopkins gently leading
+his wife by her arm, for she was exhausted by the strain of her
+emotions.
+
+Giles and Constance, walking behind them with the children, were
+thinking hard, going back in their minds to their early childhood, to
+the beautiful old mansion which both remembered dimly, to the
+Warwickshire cousins, to their embittered days since their stepmother
+had reigned over them, and now this marvellous change in her, this
+strange acknowledgment from her before everyone--_their_ every-one--of
+wrong done, and greater wrong attempted and abandoned. They both shrank
+from the days to come, feeling that they could not treat their
+stepmother as they had done, yet still less could they come nearer to
+her, as would be their duty after this, without embarrassment. Giles
+went at once to his room to postpone the evil hour, but Constance could
+not escape it.
+
+She unfastened Damaris's cloak, trying to chatter to the child in her
+old way, and she glanced up at her stepmother, as she knelt before
+Damaris, to invite her to share their smiles. Dame Eliza was watching
+her with longing that was almost fear. "Constance," she said in a low
+voice. "Constance----?" She paused, extending her hands.
+
+Constance sprang up, forgetful of embarrassment, forgetful of old
+wrongs, remembering only to pity and to forgive, like the sweet girl
+that she was.
+
+"Ah, Mother, never mind! Love me now, and never mind that once you did
+not!" she cried.
+
+Dame Eliza leaned to her and kissed her cheek.
+
+"Dear lass," she murmured, "how could I grudge thee thy father's love,
+since needs must one love thee who knows thee?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+The Third Summer's Garnered Yield
+
+
+Side by side now, through the weary days of another year, Constance
+Hopkins and her stepmother bore and vanquished the cruel difficulties
+which those days brought.
+
+Dame Eliza had been sincere in her contrition as was proved by the one
+test of sincerity--her actions bore out her words.
+
+Toward Giles she held herself kindly, yet never showed him affection.
+But toward Constance her manner was what might be called eagerly
+affectionate, as if she so longed to prove her love for the girl that
+the limitations of speech and opportunity left her unsatisfied of
+expression.
+
+Hunger was the portion of everyone in Plymouth; conditions had grown
+harder with longer abiding there, except in the one--though that was
+important--matter of the frightful epidemic of the first winter.
+
+In spite of want Constance grew lovelier as she grew older. She was now
+a full-grown woman, tall with the slenderness of early youth. Her scant
+rations did not give her the gaunt look that most of the pilgrims, even
+the young ones, wore as they went on working hard and eating little.
+Instead, it etherealized and spiritualized Constance's beauty. Under her
+wonderful eyes, with their far-off look of a dreamer warmed and
+corrected by the light in them of love and sacrifice, were shadows that
+increased their brilliance. The pallor that had replaced the wild-rose
+colour in her cheeks did not lessen the exquisite fairness of her skin,
+and it set in sharp contrast to it the redness of her lips and
+emphasized their sweetness.
+
+Dame Eliza watched her with a sort of awe, and Damaris was growing old
+enough to offer to her sister's beauty the admiration that was apart
+from her adoring love for that sister.
+
+"Connie would set London afire, Stephen Hopkins," said Dame Eliza to her
+husband one day. "Why not send her over to her cousins in Warwickshire,
+to your first wife's noble kindred, and let her come into her own? It
+seems a sinful thing to keep her here to fade and wane where no eye can
+see her."
+
+"This from you, Eliza!" cried Stephen Hopkins, honestly surprised, but
+feigning to be shocked. "Nay but you and I have changed rôles! Never was
+I the Puritan you are, yet have I seen enough of the world to know that
+it hath little to offer my girl by way of peace and happiness, though it
+kneel before her offering her adulation on its salvers. Constance is
+safer here, and Plymouth needs her; she can give here, which is in very
+truth better than receiving; especially to receive the heartaches that
+the great world would be like to give one so lovely to attract its eye,
+so sensitive to its disillusionments. And as to wasted, wife, Con gives
+me joy, and you, too, and I think there is not one among us who does not
+drink in her loveliness like food, where actual food is short. Captain
+Myles and our doctor would be going lame and halt, and would feel blind,
+I make no doubt, did they not meet Constance Hopkins on their ways, like
+a flower of eglantine, fair and sweet, and for that matter look how she
+helps the doctor in his ministrations! Nay, nay, wife; we will keep our
+Plymouth maid, and I am certain there will come to her from across seas
+one day the romance and happiness that should be hers."
+
+"Ah, well; life is short and it fades us sore. What does it matter where
+it passes? I was a buxom lass myself, as you may remember, and look at
+me now! Not that I was the rare creature that your girl is," sighed Dame
+Eliza. "Is it true that Mr. Weston is coming hither?"
+
+"True that he is coming hither," assented her husband, "and to our
+house. He hath made us many promises, but kept none. He hath come over
+with fishermen, in disguise, hath been cast away and lost everything at
+the hands of savages. He is taking refuge with us and we shall outfit
+him and deal with him as a brother. I do not believe his protestations
+of good-will and the service he will do us in return, when he gets back
+to England. Yet we must deal generously, little as we have to spare,
+with a man in distress such as his."
+
+"Giles is coming now, adown the way with a stranger; is this Mr.
+Weston?" asked Dame Eliza.
+
+"I'll go out to greet and bring him in. Yes; this is the man," said Mr.
+Hopkins, going forth to welcome a man, whom in his heart he could not
+but dread. The guest stayed with the Hopkins family for a few days, till
+the colony should be won over to give him beaver skins, under his
+promise to repay them with generous interest, when he should have traded
+them, and was once more in England to send to Plymouth something of its
+requirements.
+
+On the final day of his stay Mr. Weston arose from the best seat in the
+inglenook, which had been yielded to him as his right, and strolled
+toward the door.
+
+"Come with me, my lad," he said to Giles. "I have somewhat to say to
+thee."
+
+"Why not say it here?" asked Giles, surlily, though he followed slowly
+after their guest.
+
+"Giles Hopkins, you like me not," said Weston, when they had passed out
+of earshot. "Why is it? Surely I not only use you well, but you are the
+one person in this plantation that hath all the qualities I like best in
+a man: brains, courage, youth, good birth, which makes for spirit, and
+good looks. Your sister is all this and more, yet is the 'more' because
+she is a maid, and that excludes her from my preference for my purposes.
+Giles Hopkins, are you the man I take you for?"
+
+"Faith, sir, that I cannot tell till you have shown me what form that
+taking bears," said Giles.
+
+"There you show yourself! Prudence added to my list of qualities!"
+applauded Weston, clapping Giles on the back with real, or pretended
+enthusiasm. "I take you for a man with resolution, courage to seize an
+opportunity to make your fortune, to put yourself among those men of
+consequence who are secure of place, and means to adorn it. Will you
+march with me upon the way I will open to you?"
+
+"'I dare do all that may become a man; who dares do more is none,'"
+replied Giles. "I don't know where I learned that, but it sounds like
+one of my father's beloved phrases, from his favourite poet. It seems
+well to fit the case."
+
+"Shakespeare is not a Puritan text book," observed Weston, dryly. "No
+Hopkins is ever fully atune with such a community as this. Therefore,
+Giles, will you welcome my offer, as a more canting Plymouth pilgrim
+might not. Not to waste more time: Will you collect, after I have gone,
+all the skins which you can obtain from these settlers? And will you
+hold them in a safe place together, assuring your neighbours that you
+are secured of a market for them at better prices than they have ever
+received? And will you then, after you have got together all the skins
+available, ship them to me by means which I will open to you as soon as
+I am sure of your coöperation? This will leave your Plymouth people
+stripped to the winds; their commodity of trade gone, and, scant of food
+as they are, they will come to heel like dogs behind him who will lead
+them to meat. This will be yourself. I will furnish you with the means
+to give them what they will require in order to be bound to you. You
+shall be a prince of the New World, holding your little kingdom under
+the great English throne; there shall be no end to your possible
+grandeur. I will send you men, commodities for trade, arms, fine cloth
+and raiment to fulfil the brightest fairy dreams of youth. And look you,
+Giles Hopkins, this is no idle boast; it is within my power to do
+exactly as I promise. Are you mine?"
+
+"Yours!" Giles spoke with difficulty, the blood mounting to his temples
+and knotting its veins, his hands clenching and unclenching as if it was
+almost beyond him to hold them from throttling his father's guest. "Am I
+a man or a cur? Cur? Nay, no cur is so low as you would make me. Betray
+Plymouth? Turn on these people with whom I've suffered and wrought? I
+would give my hand to kick you out into yonder harbour and drown you
+there as you deserve. I have but to turn you over to our governor, and
+short ways will you get with the good beaver skins which have been given
+to you by these people you want me to trick, scant though they are of
+everything, and that owing to you who have never sent them anything but
+your lying promises. Nay, turn not so white! You may keep your courage,
+as you keep your worthless life. Neither will I betray you to them. But
+see to it that this last day of your stay here is indeed the last one!
+Only till sunset do I give you to get out of Plymouth. If you are within
+our boundaries at moonrise I will deliver you over, and urge your
+hanging. And be sure these starved immigrants will be in a mood to hang
+you higher than Haman, when they hear of what you have laid before me,
+against them who are in such straits."
+
+Mr. Weston did not delay to test Giles's sincerity. There was no
+mistaking that he would do precisely as he promised, and Weston took his
+departure a good two hours before sundown.
+
+Giles stood with his hands in his pockets beside his father as Weston
+departed.
+
+"Giles, courtesy to a guest is a law that binds us all," suggested
+Stephen Hopkins.
+
+"Mercy, rather," said Giles, tersely. He nodded to Mr. Weston without
+removing his hands. "A last salute, Mr. Weston," he said. "I expect
+never to meet you again, neither in this, nor any other world."
+
+"Giles!" cried Constance, shocked.
+
+"Son, what do you know of this man that you dare insult him in
+departing?" said Mr. Hopkins.
+
+"That never will Plymouth receive one penny of value for the beaver
+skins he hath taken, nor gratitude for the kindness shown him when he
+was destitute," said Giles, turning on his heel shortly and leaving his
+father to look after Weston, troubled by this confirmation of the doubt
+that he had always felt of this false friend of Plymouth colony.
+
+The effect upon Giles of having put far from him temptation and stood
+fast by his fellow-colonists, though no one but himself knew of it, was
+to arouse in him greater zeal for the welfare of Plymouth than he had
+felt before, and greater effort to promote it.
+
+Plymouth had been working upon the community plan; all its population
+labouring together, sharing together the results of that labour, like
+one large family. And, though the plan was based upon the ideal of
+brotherhood, yet it worked badly; food was short, and the men not equal
+in honest effort, nor willing to see their womankind tilling the soil
+and bearing heavy burdens for others than their own families. So while
+some bore their share of the work, and more, others lay back and
+shirked. There must be a remedy found, and that at once, to secure the
+necessary harvest in the second year, and third summer of the life of
+the plantation.
+
+Giles Hopkins went swinging down the road after he had seen the last of
+Mr. Weston. He was bound for the governor's house, but he came up with
+William Bradford on the way and laid before him his thoughts.
+
+"Mr. Bradford," he said, "I've been considering. We shall starve to
+death, even though we get the ship that is promised us from home,
+bringing us all that for which we hope, unless we can raise better
+crops. I am one of the youngest men, but may I lay before you my
+suggestion?"
+
+"Surely, my son," said Governor Bradford. "Old age does not necessarily
+include wisdom, nor youth folly. What do you advise?"
+
+"Give every family its allotment of land and seed," said Giles. "Let
+each family go to work to raise what it shall need for itself, and abide
+by the result of its own industry, or indolence, always supposing that
+no misfortune excuses failure. I'll warrant we shall see new days--or
+new sacks filled, which is more to the point--than when we let the
+worthless profit by worth, or worth be discouraged by the leeches upon
+it."
+
+Governor Bradford regarded Giles smilingly. "Thou art an emphatic lad,
+Giles, but I like earnestness and strong convictions. Never yet was
+there any one who did not believe in his own panacea for whatever evil
+had set him to discovering it! It was Plato's conceit, and other
+ancients with him, that bringing into the community of a commonwealth
+all property, making it shared in common, was to make mankind happy and
+prosperous. But I am of your opinion that it has been found to breed
+much confusion and discontent, and that it is against the ordinance of
+God, who made it a law that a man should labour for his own nearest of
+kin, and transmit to them the fruit of his labours. So will I act upon
+your suggestion, which I had already considered, having seen how wrong
+was Plato's utopian plan, or at least how ill it was working here. With
+the approval of our councillors, I will distribute land, seed, and all
+else required, and establish individual production instead of our
+commonality."
+
+"It is time we tried a new method, Governor Bradford," said Giles.
+"Another year like these we've survived, and there would be no survival
+of them. I don't remember how it felt to have enough to eat!"
+
+"Poor lad," said the governor, kindly, though to the full he had shared
+the scarcity. "It is hard to be young and hungry, for at best youth is
+rarely satisfied, and it must be cruel to see every day at the worst!
+But I have good ground to hope that our winter is over and past, and
+that the voice of the turtle will soon be heard in our land. In other
+words, I think that a ship, or possibly more than one, will be here this
+summer, bringing us new courage in new helpers, and supplies in plenty."
+
+"It is to be hoped," said Giles, and went away.
+
+The new plan was adopted, and it infused new enthusiasm into the
+Plymouth people. Constance insisted upon having for her own one section
+of her father's garden. Indeed all the women of the colony went to work
+in the fields now, quite willingly, and without opposition from their
+men, since their work was for themselves.
+
+"It was wholly different from having their women slaving for strong men
+who were no kin to them, as they had done when the community plan
+prevailed," said the men of Plymouth. And so the women of Plymouth went
+to work willingly, even gaily.
+
+There was great hope of a large crop, early in May, when all the land
+was planted, and little green heads were everywhere popping up to
+announce the grain to come. Constance had planted nothing but peas; she
+said that she loved them because they climbed so bravely, and put out
+their plucky tendrils to help themselves up. Her peas were the pride of
+her heart, and all Plymouth was admiring them, when the long drouth set
+in.
+
+From the third week in May till the middle of July not a drop of rain
+fell upon the afflicted fields of Plymouth. The corn had been planted
+with fish, which for a time insured it moisture and helped it, but
+gradually the promising green growth drooped, wilted, browned, and on
+the drier plain, burned and died under the unshadowed sun.
+
+Constance saw her peas drying up, helpless to save them. She fell into
+the habit of sitting drooping like the grain, on the doorstep of the
+Leyden Street house, her bonnet pushed back, her chin in her hands,
+sorrowfully sharing the affliction of the soil.
+
+Elder Brewster, passing, found her thus, and stopped.
+
+"Not blithe Constantia like this?" he said.
+
+"Ah, yes, Mr. Brewster," said Constance, rising, "just like this. The
+drouth has parched my heart and dried up my courage. For nine weeks no
+rain, and our life hanging upon it! Oh, Elder Brewster, call for a day
+of fasting and prayer that we may be pitied by the Lord with the
+downfall of his merciful rain! Without it, without His intervention,
+starvation will be ours. But it needs not me to tell you this!"
+
+"My daughter, I will do as you say; indeed is it time, and I have been
+thinking so," replied the elder. "The day after to-morrow shall be set
+aside to implore Heaven's mercy on our brave plantation, which has borne
+and can offer the sacrifice of a long-suffering patience to supplement
+its prayers."
+
+The day of fast and prayer arose with the same metallic sky that had
+cloudlessly stretched over Plymouth for two months. Not a sign of mercy,
+nor of relenting was anywhere above them as the people of Plymouth, the
+less devout subdued to the same fearless eagerness to implore for mercy
+that the more devout ones felt, went silently along the dusty roads,
+heads bent beneath the scorching sun, without having tasted food,
+assembling in their meeting house to pray.
+
+In the rear of the bare little building stood the Indians who lived
+among the Englishmen, Squanto at their head, with folded arms watching
+and wondering what results should follow this appeal to the God of the
+white men, now to be tested for the first time in a great public way as
+to whether He was faithful to His promise, as these men said, and
+powerful to fulfil.
+
+All day long the prayer continued, with the coming and going of the
+people, taking turns to perform the necessary tasks of the small farms,
+and to continue in supplication.
+
+There had been no hotter day of all those so long trying these poor
+people, and no cloud appeared as the sun mounted and reached his height,
+then began to descend. Damaris took Constance's hand as they walked
+homeward, then dropped it.
+
+"It is too hot; it burns me," she said, fretfully.
+
+Constance raised her head and pushed back her hair with the backs of her
+burning hands. She folded her lips and snuffed the air, much as a fine
+dog stands to scent the birds. Constance was as sensitive to atmospheric
+conditions as a barometer.
+
+"Damaris, Damaris, rain!" she cried.
+
+And the "little cloud, no bigger than a man's hand," was rising on the
+horizon.
+
+Before bedtime the sky was overcast, and the blessed, the prayed-for
+rain began to fall. Without wind or lightning, quietly it fell, as if
+the angels of God were sent to open the phials of the delicious wetness
+and pour it steadily upon Plymouth. As the night went on the rain
+increased, one of the soft, steady, soaking rains that penetrate to the
+depths of the sun-baked earth, find the withered rootlets, and heal and
+revivify.
+
+Plymouth wakened to an earth refreshed and moistened by a downpour so
+steady, so generous, so calm that no rain could have seemed more like a
+direct visitation of Heaven's mercy than this, which the reverent and
+awe-stricken colony, even to the doubting Indians, so received. For by
+it Plymouth was saved.
+
+It was two weeks later that Doctor Fuller came hastily to Stephen
+Hopkins's door.
+
+"Friends," he said, with trembling voice, "the _Anne_ is coming up!
+Mistress Fuller and my child are aboard, as we have so often reminded
+one another. Constance, you promised to go with me to welcome this
+fateful ship."
+
+"Have I time to make a little, a very small toilette, doctor mine?"
+cried Constance, excitedly. "I want to look my prettiest to greet
+Mistress Fuller, and to tell her what I--what we all owe to you."
+
+"You have a full half hour, yet it is a pleasure to watch the ship
+approach. Hasten, then, vain little Eve of this desolate First Abiding
+Place!" the doctor gave her permission.
+
+Constance ran away and began to dress with her heart beating fast.
+
+"I wonder why the _Anne_ means so much to me, as if she were the
+greatest event of all my days here?" she thought.
+
+Her simple white gown slipped over her head and into place and out of
+its thin, soft folds her little throat rose like a calla, and her face,
+all flushed, like a wild rose.
+
+She pinned a lace neckerchief over her breast, and laid its ruffles into
+place with fluttering fingers, catching it with a delicate hoop of
+pearls that had been her mother's. For once she decided against her
+Puritan cap, binding her radiant hair with fillets of narrow blue velvet
+ribbon, around and over which its little tendrils rose, wilful and
+resisting its shackles.
+
+On her hands she drew long mitts of white lace, and she slipped her feet
+into white shoes, which had also once been worn by her mother in
+far-away days when she danced the May dances in Warwickshire.
+
+Constance's glass was too small, too high-hung, to give her the effect
+of her complete figure, but it showed her the face that scanned it, and
+what it showed her flushed that lovely face with innocent joy in its
+loveliness, and completed its perfection.
+
+She got the full effect of her appearance in the eyes of the four men in
+the colony whom, till this day, she had loved best, her father, Giles,
+Doctor Fuller, and Myles Standish, as she came down the winding stairway
+to them.
+
+They all uttered an involuntary exclamation, and took a step toward her.
+
+Her father took her hand and tucked it into his own.
+
+"You are attired like a bride, my wild rose," he said. "Who are you
+going to meet?"
+
+"Who knows!" cried Constance, gaily, with unconscious prophecy.
+"Mistress Fuller, but who can say whom else beside?"
+
+The _Anne_ came up with wide-spread canvas, free of the gentle easterly
+breeze. Her coming marked the end of the hardest days of Plymouth
+colony; she was bringing it much that it needed, some sixty colonists;
+the wives and children of many who had borne the brunt of the beginning
+and had come on the _Mayflower_; new colonists, some among Plymouth's
+best, some too bad to be allowed to stay, and stores and articles of
+trade abundantly.
+
+As the coming of the _Anne_ marked the close of Plymouth's worst days,
+so it meant to many who were already there the dawn of a new existence.
+
+Doctor Fuller took into his arms his beloved wife and his child, with
+grateful tears running down his face.
+
+He turned to present Mistress Fuller to Constance, but found, instead,
+Captain Myles Standish watching with a smile at once tender, melancholy,
+and glad another meeting. A young man, tall, browned, gallant, and
+fearless in bearing, with honest eyes and a kindly smile, had come off
+the _Anne_ and had stood a moment looking around him. His eyes fell upon
+Constance Hopkins on her father's arm, her lips parted, her eyes
+dilated, her cheeks flushed, a figure so exquisite that he fell back in
+thrilled wonder. Never again could he see another face, so completely
+were his eyes and heart filled by this first sight of Constance Hopkins,
+unconsciously waiting for him, her husband-to-be, upon the shore of the
+New World.
+
+Damaris was clinging to her hand; Giles and her step-mother were
+watching her with loving pride; it was easy to see that all those who
+had come ashore from the _Anne_ were admiring this slender blossom of
+Plymouth.
+
+But the young man went toward her, almost without knowing that he did
+so, drawn to her irresistibly, and Constance looked toward him, and saw
+him for the first time, her pulses answering the look in his eyes.
+
+Myles Standish joined them; he had learned the young man's name.
+
+"Welcome, Nicholas Snowe, to Plymouth," he said. "We have borne much,
+but we have won our fight; we have founded our kingdom. Nicholas Snowe,
+this is a Plymouth maid, Constance Hopkins."
+
+"I am glad you are come," said Constance; her voice was low and the hand
+that she extended trembled slightly.
+
+"I, too, am glad that you are here, Nicholas Snowe," added Stephen
+Hopkins. "Yes, this is Constance Hopkins, a Plymouth maid, and my
+dearest lass."
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS
+
+GARDEN CITY, N. Y.
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
+
+Small capital text has been replaced with all capitals.
+
+Page 36: "remanent" changed to "remnant" (what would my remnant of life
+be to me)
+
+Page 51: "so" changed to "no" (I mean no such thing, as well you know)
+
+Page 67: "senstive" changed to "sensitive" (a girl, sensitive and easily
+wounded)
+
+Page 83: "devasting" changed to "devastating" (The devastating diseases
+of winter)
+
+Page 106: "begining" changed to "beginning" (the beginning of a street)
+
+Page 140: "wordly" changed to "worldly" (to take pride in worldly things)
+
+Page 160: normalised "work-aday" (her work-a-day tasks)
+
+Page 180: changed case of "Come" to lower case (come with me; I need
+you)
+
+Page 192: "mercie" changed to "merci" (belle dame sans merci)
+
+Page 196: "be" changed to "he" (he began to teach Constance other
+things)
+
+Page 210 "Shakspeare" normalised to "Shakespeare" (we mortals be,
+as Shakespeare, whom)
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of A Pilgrim Maid, by Marion Ames Taggart
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A PILGRIM MAID ***
+
+***** This file should be named 39323-8.txt or 39323-8.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/3/9/3/2/39323/
+
+Produced by Roger Frank, Maria Grist and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/39323-8.zip b/39323-8.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1185b1c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/39323-8.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/39323-h.zip b/39323-h.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8d01fd0
--- /dev/null
+++ b/39323-h.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/39323-h/39323-h.htm b/39323-h/39323-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..bac61ac
--- /dev/null
+++ b/39323-h/39323-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,10856 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" />
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of A Pilgrim Maid, by Marion Ames Taggart.
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+
+body {
+ margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+}
+
+ h1,h2,h3 {
+ text-align: center; /* all headings centered */
+ clear: both;
+}
+
+p {
+ margin-top: .51em;
+ text-align: justify;
+ margin-bottom: .49em;
+}
+
+.p2 {margin-top: 2em;}
+.p4 {margin-top: 4em;}
+.large {font-size:large;}
+.x-large {font-size: x-large;}
+.small {font-size:small;}
+.image {display: block;
+ margin-left: auto;
+ margin-right: auto;
+margin-top:2px;
+margin-bottom: 0px;}
+
+.logo {display: block;
+ margin-left: auto;
+ margin-right: auto;
+margin-top:40px;
+margin-bottom: 40px;}
+
+.logo2 {display: block;
+ margin-left: auto;
+ margin-right: auto;
+margin-top:40px;
+margin-bottom: 0px;}
+
+table {
+ margin-left: auto;
+ margin-right: auto;
+}
+
+ .tdr {text-align: right;}
+ ul { list-style-type: none; }
+
+hr {
+ width: 33%;
+ margin-top: 2em;
+ margin-bottom: 2em;
+ margin-left: auto;
+ margin-right: auto;
+ clear: both;
+}
+
+.center {text-align: center;}
+
+.right {text-align: right;}
+
+.smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
+
+
+.caption {font-weight: bold;
+margin-top:0px;}
+
+
+/* Poetry */
+.poem {
+ margin-left:10%;
+ margin-right:10%;
+ text-align: left;
+}
+
+.poem br {display: none;}
+
+.poem .stanza {margin: 1em 0em 1em 0em;}
+
+.poem span.i0 {
+ display: block;
+ margin-left: 0em;
+ padding-left: 3em;
+ text-indent: -3em;
+}
+
+.poem span.i2 {
+ display: block;
+ margin-left: 2em;
+ padding-left: 3em;
+ text-indent: -3em;
+}
+
+
+/* Transcriber's notes */
+.transnote {background-color: #E6E6FA;
+ color: black;
+ font-size:smaller;
+ padding:0.5em;
+ margin-top:40px;
+ margin-bottom:5em;
+ font-family:sans-serif, serif; }
+ </style>
+ </head>
+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Pilgrim Maid, by Marion Ames Taggart
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: A Pilgrim Maid
+ A Story of Plymouth Colony in 1620
+
+Author: Marion Ames Taggart
+
+Illustrator: The Donaldsons
+
+Release Date: April 1, 2012 [EBook #39323]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A PILGRIM MAID ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank, Maria Grist and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+<p><img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="A Pilgrim Maid detail of book cover" title="A Pilgrim Maid detail of book cover" width="298" height="400" class="image" /></p>
+<h2 class="p4">A PILGRIM MAID</h2>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">A Story of Plymouth Colony in 1620</span>
+</p>
+<p class="center image"><a name="frontis" id="frontis"></a><img src="images/frontis.jpg" alt="Constance opened the door, stepping back to let the bride precede her" title="Constance opened the door, stepping back to let the bride precede her" width="322" height="500" /></p>
+
+<p class="center caption">"Constance opened the door, stepping back to let the
+bride precede her"</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h1 class="center p4"> A PILGRIM MAID</h1>
+
+<p class="center"> <i>A Story of Plymouth Colony in 1620</i></p>
+
+<p class="center p2"> BY
+ <br />
+ <span class="x-large">MARION AMES TAGGART</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"> AUTHOR OF<br />
+"CAPTAIN SYLVIA," "THE DAUGHTERS OF THE
+ LITTLE GREY HOUSE," "THE LITTLE GREY
+ HOUSE," "HOLLYHOCK HOUSE," ETC.</p>
+
+<p class="center logo"><img src="images/logo1.png" width="210" height="197" alt="Logo" title="Logo" /></p>
+<p class="center p2"> ILLUSTRATED
+ BY
+ THE DONALDSONS</p>
+
+
+<p class="center p4"> <span class="large">DOUBLEDAY, PAGE &amp; COMPANY</span><br />
+ GARDEN CITY NEW YORK LONDON
+ <br />
+1920 </p>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="center p4"> COPYRIGHT, 1920, BY
+ DOUBLEDAY, PAGE &amp; COMPANY
+ ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, INCLUDING THAT OF
+ TRANSLATION INTO FOREIGN LANGUAGES,
+ INCLUDING THE SCANDINAVIAN
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="center p4"> DEDICATED
+ <span class="smcap"><br />
+ TO</span>
+ <br />
+ <span class="x-large">YOU, MY DEAR</span><br /> <span class="smcap">
+ WHO SO WELL KNOW WHY</span>
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="p4">PREFACE</h2>
+
+
+<p>This story is like those we hear of our neighbours
+to-day: it is a mixture of fact and fancy.</p>
+
+<p>The aim in telling it has been to present Plymouth
+Colony as it was in its first three years of existence;
+to keep to possibilities, even while inventing incidents.</p>
+
+<p>Actual events have been transferred from a later
+to an earlier year when they could be made useful,
+to bring them within the story's compass, and to
+develop it.</p>
+
+<p>For instance, John Billington was lost for five days
+and died early, but not as early as in the story.
+Stephen Hopkins was fined for allowing his servants
+to play shovelboard, but this did not happen till
+some time later than 1622. Stephen Hopkins was
+twice married; records show that there was dissension;
+that the second wife tried to get an inheritance
+for her own children, to the injury of the son and
+daughter of the first wife. Facts of this sort are
+used, enlarged upon, construed to cause, or altered
+to suit, certain results.</p>
+
+<p>But there is fidelity to the general trend of events,
+above all to the spirit of Plymouth in its beginnings.
+As far as may be, the people who have been transferred
+into the story act in accordance with what is
+known of the actual bearers of these names.</p>
+
+<p>There was a Maid of Plymouth, Constance Hopkins,
+who came in the <i>Mayflower</i>, with her father
+Stephen; her stepmother, Eliza; her brother, Giles,
+and her little half-sister and brother, Damaris and
+Oceanus, and to whom the <i>Anne</i>, in 1623, brought
+her husband, Honourable Nicholas Snowe, afterward
+one of the founders of Eastham, Massachusetts.</p>
+
+<p>Undoubtedly the real Constance Hopkins was
+sweeter than the story can make her, as a living
+girl must be sweeter than one created of paper and
+ink. Yet it is hoped that this Plymouth Maid,
+Constance, of the story, may also find friends.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="p4">CONTENTS</h2><table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Contents">
+<tr>
+ <td class="small">CHAPTER</td>
+ <td class="small">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td><span class="small">PAGE</span></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">I.</a></td>
+ <td><span class="smcap">With England's Shores Left Far<br />
+ Astern</span></td><td class="tdr">3</td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">II.</a></td>
+ <td><span class="smcap">To Buffet Waves and Ride on Storms</span></td><td class="tdr">15</td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">III.</a></td>
+ <td><span class="smcap">Weary Waiting at the Gates</span></td><td class="tdr">31</td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">IV.</a></td>
+ <td><span class="smcap">The First Yuletide</span></td><td class="tdr">45</td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">V.</a></td>
+ <td><span class="smcap">The New Year in the New Land</span></td><td class="tdr">61</td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">VI.</a></td>
+ <td><span class="smcap">Stout Hearts and Sad Ones</span></td><td class="tdr">76</td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">VII.</a></td>
+ <td><span class="smcap">The Persuasive Power of Justice<br />
+ and Violence</span></td><td class="tdr">90</td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">VIII.</a></td>
+ <td><span class="smcap">Deep Love, Deep Wound</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr">104</td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">IX.</a></td>
+ <td><span class="smcap">Seedtime of the First Spring</span></td><td class="tdr">119</td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">X.</a></td>
+ <td><span class="smcap">Treaties</span></td><td class="tdr">133</td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">XI.</a></td>
+ <td><span class="smcap">A Home Begun and a Home Undone</span></td><td class="tdr">150</td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">XII.</a></td>
+ <td><span class="smcap">The Lost Lads</span></td><td class="tdr">166</td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">XIII.</a></td>
+ <td><span class="smcap">Sundry Herbs and Simples</span></td><td class="tdr">183</td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">XIV.</a></td>
+ <td><span class="smcap">Light-Minded Man, Heavy-Hearted<br />
+ Master</span></td><td class="tdr">199</td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">XV.</a></td>
+ <td><span class="smcap">The "Fortune" That Sailed, First West,<br />
+ then East</span></td><td class="tdr">216</td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">XVI.</a></td>
+ <td><span class="smcap">A Gallant Lad Withal</span></td><td class="tdr">234</td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">XVII.</a></td>
+ <td><span class="smcap">The Well-Conned Lesson</span></td><td class="tdr">251</td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">XVIII.</a></td>
+ <td><span class="smcap">Christmas Wins, Though Outlawed</span></td><td class="tdr">267</td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">XIX.</a></td>
+ <td><span class="smcap">A Fault Confessed, Thereby Redressed</span></td><td class="tdr">284</td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XX">XX.</a></td>
+ <td><span class="smcap">The Third Summer's Garnered Yield</span></td><td class="tdr">302</td></tr>
+</table>
+<h2 class="p4">LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="List of Illustrations">
+ <tr>
+ <td>&quot;Constance opened the door, stepping back<br />
+ to let the bride precede her&quot;</td>
+ <td><i><a href="#frontis">Frontispiece</a></i></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="small">(<i>See page 157</i>)</td>
+ <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="small">FACING PAGE</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>&quot;'Constantia; confess, confess&mdash;and do not try to shield<br />
+ thy wicked brother'&quot;</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#confess">52</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>&quot;'Look there,' said John Alden&quot; </td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#lookthere">116</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>&quot;'You look splendid, my Knight of the Wilderness'&quot;</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#splendid">244</a></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<p class="x-large p4 center">A PILGRIM MAID</p>
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">A Story of Plymouth Colony in 1620</span></p>
+<h1 class="p4"><i>A PILGRIM MAID</i></h1>
+<h2 class="p4"><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I</a></h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">With England's Shores Left Far Astern</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>A young girl, brown-haired, blue-eyed, with a
+sweet seriousness that was neither joy nor
+sorrow upon her fair pale face, leaned against the
+mast on the <i>Mayflower's</i> deck watching the bustle of
+the final preparations for setting sail westward.</p>
+
+<p>A boy somewhat older than she stood beside her
+whittling an arrow from a bit of beechwood, whistling
+through his teeth, his tongue pressed against them,
+a livelier air than a pilgrim boy from Leyden was
+supposed to know, and sullenly scorning to betray
+interest in the excitement ashore and aboard.</p>
+
+<p>A little girl clung to the pretty young girl's skirt;
+the unlikeness between them, though they were
+sisters, was explained by their being but half sisters.
+Little Damaris was like her mother, Constance's
+stepmother, while Constance herself reflected the
+delicate loveliness of her own and her brother Giles's
+mother, dead in early youth and lying now at rest in
+a green English churchyard while her children were
+setting forth into the unknown.</p>
+
+<p>Two boys&mdash;one older than Constance, Giles's age,
+the other younger than the girl&mdash;came rushing down
+the deck with such impetuosity, plus the younger
+lad's head used as a battering ram, that the men at
+work stowing away hampers and barrels, trying to
+clear a way for the start, gave place to the rough
+onslaught.</p>
+
+<p>Several looked after the pair in a way that suggested
+something more vigorous than a look had it
+not been that fear of the pilgrim leaders restrained
+swearing. Not a whit did the charging lads care for
+the wrath they aroused. The elder stopped himself
+by clutching the rope which Constance Hopkins idly
+swung, while the younger caught Giles around the
+waist and nearly pulled him over.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll teach you manners, you young savage,
+Francis Billington!" growled Giles, but he did not
+mean it, as Francis well knew.</p>
+
+<p>"If I'm a savage I'll be the only one of us at home
+in America," chuckled the boy.</p>
+
+<p>"Getting ready an arrow for the savage?" he
+added.</p>
+
+<p>"It's all decided. There's been the greatest to-do
+ashore. Why didn't you come off the ship to see the
+last of 'em, Constance?" interrupted the older boy.
+Constance Hopkins shook her head, sadly.</p>
+
+<p>"Nay, then, John, I've had my fill of partings,"
+she said. "Are they gone back, those we had to
+leave behind?"</p>
+
+<p>"That have they!" cried John Billington. "Some
+of them were sorry to miss the adventure, but if
+truth were told some were glad to be well out of it,
+and with no more disgrace in setting back than that
+the <i>Mayflower</i> could not hold us all. Well, they've
+missed danger and maybe death, but I'd not be out
+of it for a king's ransom. Giles, what do you think
+is whispered? That the <i>Speedwell</i> could make the
+voyage as well as the <i>Mayflower</i>, though she be
+smaller, if only she carried less sail, and that her
+leaking is&mdash;a greater leak in her master Reynolds's
+truth, and that she'd be seaworthy if he'd let her!"</p>
+
+<p>"Cur!" growled Giles Hopkins. "He knows he'd
+have to stay with his ship in the wilderness a year
+it might be and there's better comfort in England and
+Holland! We're well rid of him if he's that kind of a
+coward. I wondered myself if he was up to a trick
+when we put in the first time, at Dartmouth. This
+time when we made Plymouth I smelled a rat certain.
+Are we almost loaded?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. They've packed all the provisions from the
+<i>Speedwell</i> into the <i>Mayflower</i> that she will hold.
+We'll be off soon. Not too soon! The sixth day of
+September, and we a month dallying along the shore
+because of the <i>Speedwell's</i> leaking! Constantia,
+you'll be cold before we make a fire in the New
+World I'm thinking!"</p>
+
+<p>John Billington chuckled as if the cold of winter
+in the wilderness were a merry jest.</p>
+
+<p>"Cold, and maybe hungry, and maybe ill of body
+and sick of heart, but never quite losing courage, I
+hope, John, comrade!" Constance said, looking up
+with a smile and a flush that warmed her white cheeks
+from which heavy thoughts had driven their usual
+soft colour.</p>
+
+<p>"No fear! You're the kind that says little and
+does much," said John Billington with surprising
+sharpness in a lad that never seemed to have a
+thought to spare for anything but madcap pranks.</p>
+
+<p>"Here come Father, and the captain, and dear
+John," said little Damaris.</p>
+
+<p>Stephen Hopkins was a strong-built man, with a
+fire in his eye, and an air of the world about him, in
+spite of his severe Puritan garb, that declared him
+different from most of his comrades of the Leyden
+community of English exiles.</p>
+
+<p>With all her likeness to her dead English girl-mother,
+who was gentle born and well bred, there
+was something in Constance as she stood now,
+head up and eyes bright, that was also like her
+father.</p>
+
+<p>Beside Mr. Hopkins walked a thick-set man, a
+soldier in every motion and look, with little of the
+Puritan in his air, and just behind them came a young
+man, far younger than either of the others, with an
+open, pleasant English face, and an expression at
+once shy and friendly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, dear John Alden!" cried little Damaris, and
+forsook Constance's skirt for John Alden's ready
+arms which raised her to his shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>Giles Hopkins's gloom lifted as he returned Captain
+Myles Standish's salute.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Captain; I'm ready enough to sail," he said,
+answering the captain's question.</p>
+
+<p>"Mistress Constantia?" suggested Myles Standish.</p>
+
+<p>"Is there doubt of it when we've twice put in from
+sea, and were ready to sail when we left Southampton
+a month ago?" asked Constance. "Sure we are
+ready, Captain Standish, as you well know. Where
+is Mistress Rose?"</p>
+
+<p>"In the women's cabin with Mistress Hopkins
+putting to rights their belongings as fast as they can
+before we weigh anchor, and get perhaps stood on
+our heads by winds and waves," Captain Standish
+smiled. "Though the wind is fine for us now." His
+face clouded. "Mistress Rose is a frail rose, Con!
+They will be coming on deck to see the start."</p>
+
+<p>"The voyage may give sweet Rose new strength,
+Captain Standish," murmured Constance coming
+close to the captain and slipping her hand into his,
+for she was his prime favourite and his lovely, frail
+young wife's chosen friend, in spite of the ten years
+difference in their ages.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, Con, my lass, God grant it, but I'm sore
+afraid for her! How can she buffet the exposure of a
+wilderness winter, and&mdash;hush! Here they are!" whispered
+Myles Standish.</p>
+
+<p>Mistress Eliza Hopkins was tall, bony, sinewy of
+build, with a dark, strong face, determination and
+temper in her eye. Rose Standish was her opposite&mdash;a
+slight, pale, drooping creature not more than five
+years above twenty; patience, suffering in her every
+motion, and clinging affection in every line of her
+gentle face.</p>
+
+<p>Constance ran to wind her arm around her as Rose
+came up and slipped one little hand into her husband's
+arm.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Hopkins frowned.</p>
+
+<p>"It likes me not to see you so forward with caresses,
+Constantia," she said, and her voice rasped like
+the ship's tackles as the sailors got up the canvas.</p>
+
+<p>"It is not becoming in the elect whose hearts are
+set upon heavenly things to fawn upon creatures, nor
+make unmaidenly displays."</p>
+
+<p>Giles kicked viciously at the rope which Constance
+had held. It was not hard to guess that the
+unnatural gloom, the sullenness that marked a boy
+meant by Nature to be pleasant, was due to bad blood
+between him and this aggressive stepmother, who
+plainly did not like him.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Mistress Hopkins," cried Constance, flushing,
+"why do you think it is wrong to be loving? Never
+can I believe God who made us with warm hearts,
+and gave us such darlings as Rose Standish, didn't
+want us to love and show our love."</p>
+
+<p>"You are much too free with your irreverence,
+Mistress Constantia; it becomes you not to proclaim
+your Maker's opinions and desires for his
+saints," said Mrs. Hopkins, frowning heavily.</p>
+
+<p>"'Sdeath, Eliza, will you never let the girl alone?"
+cried Stephen Hopkins, angrily.</p>
+
+<p>"As though we had nothing to think of in weighing
+anchor and leaving England for ever&mdash;and for what
+else besides, who knows&mdash;without carping at a little
+girl's loving natural ways to an older girl whom she
+loves? I agree with Connie; it's good to sweeten
+life with affection."</p>
+
+<p>"Connie, forsooth!" echoed Mrs. Hopkins, bitterly.
+"Are we to use meaningless titles for young women
+setting forth to found a kingdom? And do you still
+use the oaths of worldlings, as you did just now?
+Oh, Stephen Hopkins, may you not be found unworthy
+of your high calling and invoke the wrath of
+Heaven upon your family!"</p>
+
+<p>Stephen Hopkins looked ready to burst out into
+hot wrath, but Myles Standish gave him a humorous
+glance, and shrugged his shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"What would you?" he seemed to say. "Old
+friend, bad temper seizes every opportunity to wreak
+itself, and we who have seen the world can afford to
+let the women fume. Jealousy is a worse vice than
+an oath of the Stuart reign."</p>
+
+<p>Stephen Hopkins harkened to this unspoken
+philosophy; Myles Standish had great influence over
+him. This, with the rapid gathering on deck of the
+rest of the pilgrims, served to avert what threatened
+to be an explosion of pardonable wrath. They came
+crowding up from the cabins, this courageous band of
+determined men and women, and gathered silently
+to look their last on home, and not merely on home,
+but on the comforts of the established life which to
+many among them were necessary to their existence.</p>
+
+<p>There were many children, sober little men and
+women, in unchildlike caricatures of their elders'
+garb and with solemn round faces looking scared by
+the gravity around them.</p>
+
+<p>Priscilla Mullins gathered the children together and
+led them over to join Constance Hopkins. She and
+Constance divided the love of the child pilgrims
+between them. Priscilla, round of face, smooth and
+rosy of cheek, wholesome and sensible, was good
+to look upon. It often happened that her duty
+brought her near to wherever John Alden might
+chance to be, but no one had ever suspected that
+John objected.</p>
+
+<p>John Alden had been taken on as cooper from
+Southampton when the <i>Mayflower</i> first sailed. It
+was not certain that the pilgrims could keep him with
+them. Already they had learned to value him, and
+many a glance was now exchanged that told the hope
+that sunny little Priscilla might help to hold the
+young man on this hard expedition.</p>
+
+<p>The crew of the <i>Mayflower</i> pulled up her sails, but
+without the usual sailor songs. Silently they pulled,
+working in unison to the sharp words of command
+uttered by their officers, till every shred of canvas,
+under which they were to set forth under a favouring
+wind, was strained into place and set.</p>
+
+<p>On the shore was gathered a crowd gazing, wondering,
+at this departure. Some there were who were to
+have been of the company in the lesser ship, the
+<i>Speedwell</i>, which had been remanded from the voyage
+as unfit for it. These lingered to see the setting forth
+for the New World which was not to be their world,
+after all.</p>
+
+<p>There were many who gazed, pityingly, awe-struck,
+but bewildered by the spirit that led these severe-looking
+people away from England first, and then
+from Holland, to try their fortunes where no fortune
+promised.</p>
+
+<p>Others there were who laughed merrily over the
+absurdity of the quest, and these called all sorts of
+jests and quips to the pilgrims on the ship, inviting
+to a contest of wit which the pilgrims utterly disdained.</p>
+
+<p>And then the by-standers on wharf and sands of
+old Plymouth became silent, for, as the <i>Mayflower</i> began
+to move out from her dock, there arose the
+solemn chant of a psalm.</p>
+
+<p>The air was wailing, lugubrious, unmusical, but the
+words were awesome.</p>
+
+<p>"When Israel went out from Egypt, from the land
+of a strange people," they were singing.</p>
+
+<p>"A strange people!" And these pilgrims were of
+English blood, and this was England which they
+were thus renouncing!</p>
+
+<p>What curious folk these were!</p>
+
+<p>But this psalm was followed by another: "The
+Lord is my shepherd."</p>
+
+<p>Ah, that was another matter! No one who heard
+them, however slight the sympathy felt for this unsympathetic
+band, but hoped that the Lord would
+shepherd them, "lead them beside still waters," for
+the sea might well be unquiet.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, poor creatures, poor creatures," said a buxom
+woman, snuggling her baby's head into her deep
+shoulder, and wiping her own eyes with her apron.
+"I fain must pity 'em, that I must, though I'm none
+too lovin' myself toward their queer dourness. But
+I hope the Lord will shepherd 'em; sore will they need
+it, I'm thinkin', yonder where there's no shepherds
+nor flocks, but only wild men to cut them down like we
+do haw for the church, as they all thinks is wicked!"
+she mourned, motherly yearning toward the people
+going out the harbour like babes in the wood, into
+no one would dare say what awful fate.</p>
+
+<p>The pilgrims stood with their faces set toward
+England, with England tugging at their heart strings,
+as the strong southeasterly wind filled the <i>Mayflower's</i>
+canvas and pulled at her shrouds.</p>
+
+<p>And as they sailed away the monotonous chant of
+the psalms went on, floating back to England, a
+farewell and a prophecy.</p>
+
+<p>Rose Standish's tears were softly falling and her
+voice was silent, but Constance Hopkins chanted
+bravely, and the children joined her with Priscilla
+Mullins's strong contralto upholding them.</p>
+
+<p>Even Giles sang, and the two scamps of Billington
+boys looked serious for once, and helped the chant.</p>
+
+<p>Myles Standish raised his soldier's hat and turned
+to Stephen Hopkins, holding out his right hand.</p>
+
+<p>"We're fairly off this time, friend Stephen," he
+said. "God speed us."</p>
+
+<p>"Amen, Captain Myles, for else we'll speed not,
+returned Stephen Hopkins.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Daddy, we're together anyway!" cried Constance,
+with one of her sudden bursts of emotion
+which her stepmother so severely condemned, and
+she threw herself on her father's breast.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Hopkins did not share his wife's view of his
+beloved little girl's demonstrativeness. He patted
+her head gently, tucking a stray wisp of hair under
+her Puritan cap.</p>
+
+<p>"There, there, my child, there, there, Connie!
+Surely we're together and shall be. So it can't be a
+wilderness for us, can it?" he said.</p>
+
+<p>An hour later, the wind still favouring, the <i>Mayflower</i>
+dropped sunsetward, out of old Plymouth
+Harbour.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="p4"><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II</a></h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">To Buffet Waves and Ride on Storms</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>The wind held fair, the golden September
+weather waited on each new day at its rising
+and sent it at its close, radiantly splendid, into the
+sea ahead of the <i>Mayflower</i> as she swept westward.</p>
+
+<p>Full canvas hoisted she was able to sail at her best
+speed under the favouring conditions so that the
+hopeful young people whom she carried talked
+confidently of the houses they would build, the village
+they would found before heavy frosts. Captain
+Myles Standish, always impetuous as any of the boys,
+was one of those who let themselves forget there
+were such things as storms.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll be New Englishmen at this rate before we
+fully realize we've left home; what do you say, my
+lassies three?" he demanded, pausing in a rapid
+stride of the deck before Constance Hopkins and two
+young girls who were her own age, but seemed much
+younger, Humility Cooper and her cousin, Elizabeth
+Tilley.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you three mermaidens in this forward
+nook each morning?" Captain Standish went on
+without waiting for a reply to his first question, which
+indeed, he had not asked to have it answered.</p>
+
+<p>"Elizabeth's mother, Mistress John Tilley, is sick
+and declares that she shall die," said Constance,
+Humility and Elizabeth being shyly silent before the
+captain.</p>
+
+<p>"No one ever thought to live through sea-sickness,
+nor wanted to," declared Captain Myles with his
+hearty laugh. "Yet no one dies of it, that is certain.
+And is Mistress Ann Tilley also lain down and left
+Humility to the mercy of the dolphins? And is your
+stepmother, too, Con, a victim? It's a calm sea
+we've been having by comparison. I've sailed from
+England into France when there <i>was</i> a sea running,
+certes! But this&mdash;pooh!"</p>
+
+<p>"Humility's cousin, Mistress Ann Tilley, is not ill,
+nor my stepmother, Captain Standish, but they are
+attending to those who are, and to the children.
+Father says that when he sailed for Virginia, before
+my mother died, meaning to settle there, that the
+storm that wrecked them on Bermuda Island and
+kept us from being already these eleven years colonists
+in the New World, was a wind and sea that make
+this seem no more than the lake at the king's palace,
+where the swans float."</p>
+
+<p>Constance looked up smiling at the captain as she
+answered, but he noted that her eyes were swollen
+from tears.</p>
+
+<p>"Take a turn with me along the deck, child,"
+Captain Myles said, gruffly, and held out a hand to
+steady Constance on her feet.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, what was it?" he asked, lightly touching the
+young girl's cheek when they had passed beyond the
+hearing of Constance's two demure little companions.
+"Homesick, my lass?"</p>
+
+<p>"Heartsick, rather, Captain Myles," said Constance,
+with a sob. "Mistress Hopkins hates me!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, fie, Connie, how could she?" asked the captain,
+lightly, but he scowled angrily. There was
+much sympathy between him and Stephen Hopkins,
+neither of whom agreed with the extreme severity of
+most of the pilgrims; they both had seen the world
+and looked at life from their wider experience.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Standish knew that Giles's and Constance's
+mother had been the daughter of an old and honourable
+family, with all the fine qualities of mind and
+soul that should be the inheritance of gentle breeding.
+He knew how it had come about that Stephen Hopkins
+had married a second time a woman greatly her
+inferior, whose jealousy of the first wife's children
+saddened their young lives and made his own course
+hard and unpleasant. Prone to speak his mind and
+fond of Giles and Constance, the impetuous captain
+often found it hard to keep his tongue between his
+teeth when Dame Eliza indulged in her favourite
+game of badgering, persecuting her stepchildren.
+Now, when he said: "Fie, how could she?" Constance
+looked up at him with a forlorn smile. She
+knew the captain was quite aware that her stepmother
+could, and did dislike her, and she caught
+the anger in his voice.</p>
+
+<p>"How could she not, dear Captain Myles?" she
+asked. Then, with her pent-up feeling overmastering
+her, she burst out sobbing.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you know she hates, she hates me, Captain!"
+she cried. "Nothing I can do is pleasing to her. I
+take care of Damaris&mdash;sure I love my little sister, and
+do not remember the half that is not my sister in her!
+And I wait on Mistress Hopkins, and sew, and do her
+bidding, and I do not answer her cruel taunts, nor do
+I go to my father complaining; but she hates me. Is
+it fair? Could I help it that my father loved my own
+mother, and married her, and that she was a lovely
+and accomplished lady?"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you want to help it, if by helping you mean
+altering, Connie?" asked Captain Myles, with a
+twinkle. "No, child, you surely cannot help all
+these things which come by no will of yours, but by
+the will of God. And I am your witness that you
+are ever patient and dutiful. Bear as best you can,
+sweet Constantia, and by and by the wrong will become
+right, as right in the end is ever strongest. I
+cannot endure to see your young eyes wet with tears
+called out by unkindness. There is enough and to
+spare of hard matters to endure for all of us on this
+adventure not to add to it what is not only unnecessary,
+but unjust. Cheer up, Con, my lass!
+It's a long lane&mdash;in England!&mdash;that has no turning,
+and it's a long voyage on the seas that ends in no
+safe harbour! And do you know, Connie girl, that
+there's soon to be a turn in this bright weather?
+There's a feeling of change and threatening in this
+soft wind."</p>
+
+<p>Constance wiped her eyes and smiled, knowing
+that the captain wished to lead her into other
+themes than her own troubles, the discussion of which
+was, after all, useless.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know about the weather, except the
+weather I'm having," she said. "Ah, I don't want
+it to storm, not on the mid-seas, Captain Myles."</p>
+
+<p>"Aye, but it's the mid-seas of the year, Connie,
+when the days and nights are one in length, and at
+that time old wise men say a storm is usually forthcoming.
+We'll weather it, never fear! If we are
+bearing westward a great hope and mission as we all
+believe&mdash;not I in precisely the same fashion as these
+stricter saints, but in my own way no less&mdash;then we
+are sure to reach our goal, my dear," said the captain
+cheerfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Sometimes I lose faith; I think I am wicked,"
+sighed Constance.</p>
+
+<p>"We are all poor miserable sinners! Even the
+English Church which we have cast off and consigned
+to perdition, puts that confession into our mouths,"
+said Captain Myles, with another twinkle, and was
+gratified that Constance's laugh rang out in response
+to his thinly veiled mischief.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Standish proved to be a true prophet. On
+the second day after he had announced to Constance
+the coming change in weather it came. The <i>Mayflower</i>
+ran into a violent storm, seas and wind were
+wild, the small ship tossed on the crest of billows
+and plunged down into the chasm between them as
+they reared high above her till it seemed impossible
+that she should hold together, far less hold her course.</p>
+
+<p>In truth she did not hold to her course, but fell off
+it before the storm, groaning in every beam as if with
+fearful grief at her own danger, and at the likelihood
+of destroying by her destruction the hope, the
+tremendous mission which she bore within her.</p>
+
+<p>The women and children cowered below in their
+crowded quarters&mdash;lacking air, space, every comfort&mdash;numb
+with the misery of sickness and the threat of
+imminent death.</p>
+
+<p>Constance Hopkins, young as she was, cheered and
+sustained her elders. Like a mettlesome horse that
+throws up his head and puts forth renewed strength
+when there rises before him a long steep mountain,
+Constance laughed at fear, sang and jested, tenderly
+helping the sick, gathering around her the children
+for story-telling and such quiet play as there was
+room for. Little Damaris was sick and cross, but
+Constance comforted her with unfailing patience,
+proving so motherly an elder sister than even Mistress
+Eliza's jealous dislike for the girl melted when
+she saw her so loving to the child.</p>
+
+<p>"You are proving yourself a good girl, Constantia,"
+she said, with something like shame. "If I die you
+will look after Damaris and bring her up as I would
+have done? Promise me this, for I know that you
+will never break your word, and having it I can
+leave my child without anxiety for her future."</p>
+
+<p>"It needs no promise, Stepmother," said Constance.
+"Surely I would not fail to do my best for
+my little sister. But if you want my word fully,
+it is given you. I will try to be grown up and wise,
+and bring up Damaris carefully if you should leave
+her. But isn't this silly talk! You will not die.
+You will tell Damaris's little girls about your voyage
+in the <i>Mayflower</i>, and laugh with them over how you
+talked of dying when we were so tossed and tumbled,
+like a tennis ball struck by a strong hand holding
+a big racquet, but unskilled at the game!" Constance
+laughed but her stepmother frowned.</p>
+
+<p>"Never shall I talk of games to my daughter," she
+said, "nor shall you, if you take my place." Then
+she relented, recalling Constance's unselfish kindness
+all these dark hours.</p>
+
+<p>"But you have been a good girl, Constantia.
+Though I fear you are not chastised in spirit as
+becomes one of our company of saints, yet have
+you been patient and gentle in all ways, and a
+mother to Damaris and the other small ones. I
+can do no less than say this and remember it," she
+added.</p>
+
+<p>Constance was white from weariness and the fear
+that she fought down with merry chatter, but now a
+warm flush spread to her hair.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Mistress Hopkins, if you would not hate me,
+if you would but think me just a little worthy of
+kindly thoughts&mdash;for indeed I am not wicked&mdash;the
+hardship of this voyage would be a cheap price to pay
+for it! I would not be so unhappy as I am if, though
+you did not love me, you would at least not hate me,
+nor mind that my father loved me&mdash;me and Giles!"
+Constance cried passionately, trembling on the verge
+of tears.</p>
+
+<p>Then she dashed her hand across her eyes as Giles
+might have done, and laughed to choke down a sob.</p>
+
+<p>"Priscilla! Priscilla Mullins, come! I need your
+help," she called.</p>
+
+<p>"What to do, Constance?" asked Priscilla, edging
+her way from the other end of the crowded cabin to
+the younger girl.</p>
+
+<p>Priscilla looked blooming still, in spite of the
+conditions to dim her bright colour.</p>
+
+<p>Placid by nature, she did not fret over discomfort
+or danger. Trim and neat, she was a pleasant sight
+among the distressed, pallid faces about her, like a bit
+of English sky, a green English meadow, a warm
+English hearth in the waste of waters that led to
+the waste of wintry wilderness.</p>
+
+<p>"What am I do to for thee, Constance?" Priscilla
+asked in her deep, alto voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Help me get these children up into the air in a
+sheltered nook on deck," said Constance. "They
+are suffocating here."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no!" cried two or three mothers. "They
+will be washed away, Constantia."</p>
+
+<p>"Not where we have been taking them these three
+days past," said Priscilla. "Let me go first and get
+John Alden to prepare that nest of sails and ropes he
+made so cleverly for us two days ago."</p>
+
+<p>"What doesn't John Alden do cleverly?" murmured
+Constance, with a sly glance. "Go then,
+Pris dear, but don't forget to hasten back to tell me
+it is ready."</p>
+
+<p>Priscilla did not linger. John Alden had gotten
+two others to help him, and a safe shelter where the
+children could be packed to breathe the air they
+sorely needed was ready when Priscilla came to ask
+for it. So Priscilla hurried back and soon she and
+Constance had the little pilgrims safely stowed,
+made comfortable, though Damaris feared the great
+waves towering on every side and clung to Constance
+in desperate faith.</p>
+
+<p>"What is to do yonder?" asked Priscilla of John
+Alden, who after they were settled came to see that
+everything was right with them.</p>
+
+<p>"What are the men working upon?"</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose it's no harm telling you now," said
+John Alden, "since they are at work as you see, but
+the ship has been leaking badly, and one of her main
+beams bowed and cracked, directly amidships.
+There has been the next thing to mutiny among the
+sailors, who have no desire to go to the bottom, and
+wanted to turn back. We have been in consultation
+and they have growled and threatened, but we are
+half way over to the western world so may as safely
+go on as to return. At last we got them to agree to
+that and now they are mending the ship. We have
+aboard a great jack; one of the passengers brought it
+out of Holland, luckily. What they are doing yonder
+is jacking up that broken beam. The carpenter is
+going to set a post under it in the lower deck, and
+calk the leaky upper parts, and so we shall go on to
+America. The ship is staunch enough, we all agree,
+if only we can hold her where she is strained. But
+you had no idea of how near you were to going back,
+had you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no!" cried Priscilla. "Almost am I tempted
+to wish we had returned."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, no!" cried Constance. "No turning
+back! Storms, and savages, and wilderness ahead,
+but no turning back!"</p>
+
+<p>Damaris fell asleep on Constance's shoulder, and
+slept so deeply that when Myles Standish, Stephen
+Hopkins, and John Alden came to help the girls to
+get the children safely down again into their cabin she
+did not waken, and Constance begged to be allowed to
+stay there with her, letting her sleep in the strong air,
+for the child had troubled her sister by her languor.</p>
+
+<p>Cramped and aching Constance kept her place,
+Damaris's dead weight upon her arm, till, after a long
+time, her father returned to her with a moved face.</p>
+
+<p>"Shift the child to my arm, Constance," he said,
+sitting beside her. "You must be weary with your
+long vigil over her, my patient, sweet Constance!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Father-daddy," cried Constance, quick tears
+springing to her eyes, "what does it matter if you
+call me that? You will always love me, my father?"</p>
+
+<p>"Child, child, what aileth thee?" said Stephen
+Hopkins, gently. "Are you not the very core of my
+heart, so like your lovely young mother that you
+grip me at times with the pain of my joy in you and
+my sorrow for her. The pilgrim brethren would not
+approve of such expressions of love, my dear, yet I
+think God who gave me a father's heart and you a
+daughter's, and taught us our duty to Him by the
+figure of His own Fatherhood, cannot share that
+condemnation. All the world to me you shall be to
+the end of my life, my Constance. But I came to tell
+you a great piece of news. The <i>Mayflower</i> has
+shipped another passenger, mid-seas though it is."</p>
+
+<p>Constance looked up questioningly.</p>
+
+<p>"I have another son, Constance. The angels
+given charge of little children saw him safely to us
+through the perils of the voyage. Do you not think,
+as I do, that this child is like a promise to us of
+success in the New World?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Father," said Constance, softly, sweet gravity
+upon her face, and tears upon her lashes. "Will
+he be called Stephen?"</p>
+
+<p>"Your stepmother wishes him named Oceanus,
+because of his sea-birth. Do you like the name?"
+asked her father.</p>
+
+<p>Constance shook her head. "Not a whit," she
+said, "for it sounds like a heathen god, and that I
+do not like, though my stepmother is a stricter
+Puritan than are you and I. I would love another
+Stephen Hopkins. But if it must be Oceanus&mdash;well,
+I'll try to make it a smooth ocean for the little fellow,
+his life with us, I mean."</p>
+
+<p>"Shall we go below to see him? I will carry
+Damaris," said Mr. Hopkins, rising, and offering
+Constance his hand, at the same time shifting her
+burden to himself.</p>
+
+<p>Damaris whined and burrowed into her father's
+shoulder, half waking. Constance stumbled and fell
+laughing, to her knees, numb from long sitting with
+the child's weight upon them.</p>
+
+<p>At the door of the cabin they met Doctor Fuller,
+who paused to look long and steadily at Constance.</p>
+
+<p>"You have been saving me work, little mistress,"
+he said, putting a hand on her shoulder. "Your
+blithe courage has done more than my physic to hold
+off serious trouble in yonder cabin, and your service
+of hands has been as helpful. When we get to our
+new home will you accept the position of physician's
+assistant? Will you be my cheerful little partner,
+and let us be Samuel Fuller and Company, physicians
+and surgeons to the worshipful company of pilgrims
+in the New World?"</p>
+
+<p>Constance dropped a curtsey as well as the
+narrow space allowed. She, as well as all the rest of
+the ship's company, loved and trusted this kind
+young doctor who had left his wife and child to follow
+him later, and was crossing the seas with the pilgrims
+as the minister to their suffering bodies.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, Doctor Fuller, I will accept the office,
+though it will make me so proud that I shall be turned
+out of the community as unfit to be part of it," she
+cried.</p>
+
+<hr/>
+
+<p>There followed after this long days of bleak endurance,
+the cold increasing, the storms raging. For
+days at a time the <i>Mayflower</i> lay to, stripped of all
+sail, floating in currents, thrown up on high, driven
+nose down into an apparently bottomless pit, the
+least of man's work cut off from man's natural life,
+left to herself in the desert of waters, packed with the
+humanity that crowded her.</p>
+
+<p>Yet through it all the men and women she bore did
+not lose heart, but beneath the overwhelming misery
+of their condition kept alive the sense of God's sustaining
+providence and personal direction.</p>
+
+<p>Thus it was not strange that the little ship and her
+company proved stronger than the wintry storms,
+that she survived and, once more hoisting sail, kept
+on her westerly course.</p>
+
+<p>It was November; for two months and more the
+<i>Mayflower</i> had sailed and drifted, but now there were
+signs that the hazardous voyage was nearly over.</p>
+
+<p>"Come on deck, Con! Come on deck!" shouted
+Giles Hopkins. "All hands on deck for the first
+glimpse of land! They think 'twill soon be seen."</p>
+
+<p>Pale, weak, but quivering with joy, the pilgrims
+gathered on the <i>Mayflower's</i> decks.</p>
+
+<p>Rose Standish was but the shadow of her sweet
+self. Constance lingered to give the final touches
+to Rose's toilette; they were all striving to make
+some little festal appearance to their garments
+suitably to greet the New World.</p>
+
+<p>"I can hardly go up, dear Connie," murmured
+Rose. "The <i>Mayflower</i> hath taken all the vigour
+from this poor rose."</p>
+
+<p>"When the mayflower goes, the rose blooms,"
+said Constance. "Wait till we get ashore and you
+are in your own warm, cozy home!"</p>
+
+<p>Rose shook her head, but made an effort to greet
+Captain Myles brightly as he came to help her to the
+deck.</p>
+
+<p>"What land are we to see, Myles? Where are we?"
+she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Gosnold's country of Cape Cod, rose of the
+world," said Captain Myles. "It lies just ahead.
+Have a care, Constance; don't trip. Here we are,
+then!"</p>
+
+<p>They took their places in a sheltered nook and
+waited. The Billington boys had clambered high
+aloft and no one reproved them. Though their
+pranks were always calling forth a reprimand from
+some one, this time no one blamed them, but rather
+envied them for getting where they could see land
+first of all.</p>
+
+<p>Sharply Francis Billington's boyish voice rang out:</p>
+
+<p>"Land! Land! Land!" he shouted.</p>
+
+<p>It was but an instant before the entire company
+of pilgrims were on their knees, sobbing, chanting,
+praising, each in his own way, the God who had
+brought their pilgrimage to this end.</p>
+
+<p>That night they tacked southward, looking for
+Hudson's river, but the sea was so rough, the shoals
+around the promontories southward so dangerous,
+that they gave over the quest and turned back.</p>
+
+<p>The next day the sun shone with the brilliant glory
+of winter upon the sea, and upon the low-lying coast,
+as the <i>Mayflower</i> came into her harbour.</p>
+
+<p>"Father, it is the New World!" cried Constance,
+clasping her father's arm in spite of the tiny <i>Mayflower</i>
+baby which she held.</p>
+
+<p>"The New World it is, friend Stephen. Now to
+conquer it!" said Myles Standish, clapping Mr. Hopkins
+on the shoulder and touching his sword hilt with
+the other hand.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="p4"><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III</a></h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Weary Waiting at the Gates</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>"Call Giles hither. I need help to strap these
+blankets to carry safely, Mr. Hopkins," said
+Dame Eliza Hopkins, bustling up to her husband two
+hours after the <i>Mayflower</i> had made anchorage.</p>
+
+<p>"To carry whither, wife?" asked Mr. Hopkins,
+with the amused smile that always irritated his
+excitable wife by its detached calmness.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you not need the blankets at night? Truth
+to tell this Cape Cod air seems to me well fit for
+blankets."</p>
+
+<p>"And for what other use should they be carried
+ashore? Or would they keep us warm left on the
+ship?" demanded Mistress Eliza. "Truly, Stephen
+Hopkins, you are a test of the patience of a saint!"</p>
+
+<p>"Which needs no testing, since the patience of the
+saints has passed into a proverb," commented
+Stephen Hopkins. "But with all humility I would
+answer 'yes' to your question, <i>Eliza</i>: the blankets
+would surely keep you warmer when on the ship than
+if they were ashore, since it is on the ship that you
+are to remain."</p>
+
+<p>"Remain! On the ship? For how long, pray?
+And why? Do you not think that I have had enough
+and to spare of this ship after more than two months
+within her straitened cabin, and Oceanus crying, poor
+child, and wearing upon me as if he felt the hardship
+of his birthplace? Nor is Mistress White's baby,
+Peregrine, happier than my child in being born on
+this <i>Mayflower</i>. When one is not crying, the other
+is and oftener than not in concert. Why should I
+not go ashore with the others?" demanded Mistress
+Eliza, in quick anger.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, wife, wife, my poor Eliza," sighed Mr. Hopkins,
+raising his hand to stem the torrent. "Leave
+not all the patience of the saints to those in paradise!
+You, with all the other women, will remain on the
+ship while certain of the men&mdash;the rest being left to
+guard you&mdash;go in the shallop to explore our new
+country and pick the fittest place for our settlement.
+How long we may be gone, I do not know. Rest
+assured it will not be an absence wilfully prolonged.
+You will be more comfortable here than ashore. It
+is likely that when you do go ashore to begin the new
+home you will look back regretfully at the straitened
+quarters of the little ship that has served us well, in
+spite of sundry weaknesses which she developed.
+Be that as it may, this delay is necessary, as reflection
+will show you, so let us not weary ourselves
+with useless discussion of it."</p>
+
+<p>Mistress Hopkins knew that when her husband
+spoke in this manner, discussion of his decision was
+indeed useless. She had an awe of his wisdom, his
+amused toleration of her, of his superior birth and
+education, and, though she ventured to goad him in
+small affairs, when it came to greater ones she dared
+not dispute him. So now she bit her lip, as angry and
+disappointed tears sprang to her eyes, but did not
+reply.</p>
+
+<p>Stephen Hopkins produced from his inner pocket
+an oblong packet sewn in an oilskin wrapper.</p>
+
+<p>"Here, Eliza," he said, "are papers of value to this
+expedition, together with some important only to
+ourselves, but to us sufficiently so to guard them
+carefully. The public papers were entrusted to me
+just before we sailed from Southampton by one interested
+in the welfare of this settlement. My own
+papers relate to the English inheritance that will be
+my children's should they care to claim it. These
+papers I must leave in your care now that I am to go
+on this exploring party ashore. I will not risk carrying
+them where savages might attack us, though I
+have kept them upon me throughout the voyage.
+Guard them well. Not for worlds would I lose the
+papers relating to the community, sorry as I should
+be to lose my own, for those were a trust, and personal
+loss would be nothing compared to the loss of
+them."</p>
+
+<p>He handed the packet to his wife as he spoke and
+she took it, turning it curiously over and about.</p>
+
+<p>"I hope the English inheritance will one day come
+to Damaris and Oceanus," she said, bitterly, her
+jealousy of the two children of her husband's first
+wife plain to be seen. "Here's Giles," she added,
+hastily thrusting the packet into her bosom with a
+violence that her husband noted and wondered at.</p>
+
+<p>"Father," said Giles, coming up, "take me with
+you."</p>
+
+<p>Gloom and discontent were upon his brow. Giles's
+face was fast growing into a settled expression of
+bitterness. His stepmother's dislike for him, and for
+his sister, Giles bore less well than Constance. The
+natural sweetness of the girl, her sunny hopefulness,
+led her ceaselessly to try to make things pleasant
+around her, to be always ready to forget and begin
+again, hoping that at last she might win her stepmother's
+kindness. But Giles never forgot, consequently
+never could hope that the bad situation
+would mend, and he returned Mistress Eliza's dislike
+with compound interest. He was a brave lad,
+capable of strong attachments, but the bitterness
+that he harboured, the unhappiness of his home life,
+were doing him irreparable harm. His father was
+keenly alive to this fact, and one of his motives in
+coming to the New World with the Puritans, with
+whose strict views he by no means fully sympathized,
+was to give Giles the opportunity to conquer the
+wilderness, and in conquering it to find a vent for his
+energy, happiness for himself.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Hopkins turned to the boy now and sighed,
+seeing that he had heard his stepmother's expression
+of hope that <i>her</i> children would receive their father's
+English patrimony. But he said only:</p>
+
+<p>"Take you with me where, Giles?"</p>
+
+<p>"Exploring the country. I am too old, too strong
+to stay here with the women and children. Besides,
+I want to go," said Giles, shortly.</p>
+
+<p>"But few of the men are to go, my son; you will
+not be reckoned among the weaklings in staying,"
+said Mr. Hopkins, laying his hand upon the boy's
+shoulder with a smile that Giles did not return.
+"Enough have volunteered; Captain Standish has
+made up his company. You are best here and will
+find enough to do. Have you thought that you are
+my eldest, and that if we met with savages, or other
+fatal onslaught, that you must take my place? I
+cannot afford to risk both of us at once. You are
+my reliance and successor, Giles lad."</p>
+
+<p>The boy's sullen face broke into a piteous smile;
+he flushed and looked into his father's eyes with a
+glance that revealed for an instant the dominant
+passion of his life, his adoring love for his father.</p>
+
+<p>Then he dropped his lids, veiling the light that he
+himself was conscious shone in them.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, If you want me to stay, stay it is.
+But I'd like to go. And if there is danger, why not
+let me take your place? I should not know as much
+as you, but I would obey the captain's orders, and I
+am as strong as you are. Better let me go if there's
+any chance of not returning," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Your valuable young life for mine, my boy?
+Hardly that!" said Stephen Hopkins with a comradely
+arm thrown across the boy. "I shall always
+be a piece of drift from the old shore; you will grow
+from your youth into the New World's life. And
+what would my remnant of life be to me if my eldest
+born had purchased it?"</p>
+
+<p>"You are young enough, Father," began Giles,
+struggling not to show that the expression of his
+father's love moved him as it did.</p>
+
+<p>Mistress Eliza, who had been watching and listening
+to what was said with scornful impatience, broke
+in.</p>
+
+<p>"Let the lad go. He will not be helpful here, and
+your little children need your protection, not to
+speak of your wife, Mr. Hopkins."</p>
+
+<p>At the first syllable Giles had hastened away.
+Stephen Hopkins turned on her. "The boy is more
+precious than I am. It is settled; he is to stay.
+Take great care of the packet I have entrusted to
+you," he said.</p>
+
+<p>For four days the ship's carpenters had busied
+themselves in putting together and making ready
+the shallop which the <i>Mayflower</i> had carried for the
+pilgrims to use in sailing the shallow waters of the
+bays and rivers of the new land, to discover the spot
+upon which they should decide to make their beginning.</p>
+
+<p>The small craft was ready now, and in the morning
+set out, taking a small band of the men who had
+crossed on the <i>Mayflower</i>, as much ammunition and
+provisions as her capacity allowed them, to proceed no
+one knew whither, to encounter no one knew what.</p>
+
+<p>Constance stood wistfully, anxiously, watching
+the prim white sail disappear.</p>
+
+<p>Humility Cooper and Elizabeth Tilley&mdash;the cousins,
+who, though Constance's age, seemed so much
+younger&mdash;and Priscilla Mullins&mdash;who though older,
+seemed but Constance's age&mdash;were close beside her,
+and, seated on a roll of woollen cloth, sat Rose Standish,
+drooping as now she always drooped, often coughing,
+watching with her unnaturally clear eyes, as the
+girls watched, the departure of the little craft that
+bore their beloved protectors away.</p>
+
+<p>The country that lay before them looked "wild and
+weather-beaten." All that they could see was woods
+and more woods, stretching westward to meet the
+bleak November sky, hiding who could say what
+dangers of wild beasts and yet more-savage men?</p>
+
+<p>Behind them lay the heaving ocean, dark under
+the scudding clouds, and which they had just sailed
+for two months of torture of body and mind.</p>
+
+<p>If the little shallop were but sailing toward one
+single friend, if there were but one friendly English-built
+house beside whose hearth the adventurers
+might warm themselves after a handclasp of welcome!
+Desolation and still more desolation behind and before
+them! What awful secrets did that low-lying,
+mysterious coast conceal? What could the future
+hold for this handful of pilgrims who were to grapple
+without human aid with the cruelties of a severe
+clime, of preying creatures, both beast and human?</p>
+
+<p>Rose Standish's head bent low as the tipmost
+point of the shallop's mast rounded a promontory,
+till it rested on her knees and her thin shoulders
+heaved. Instantly Constance was on her knees
+before her, gently forcing Rose's hands from her face
+and drawing her head upon her shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"There, there!" Constance crooned as if to a
+baby. "There, there, sweet Rose! What is it, what
+is it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, if I knew he would ever come back! Oh, if
+I knew how to go on, how, how to go on!" Rose
+sobbed.</p>
+
+<p>"Captain Myles come back!" cried Constance, with
+a laugh that she was delighted to hear sounded
+genuine.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, silly little Rose Standish, don't you know
+nothing could keep the captain from coming back?
+Wouldn't it be a sorry day for an Indian, or for any
+beast, when he attacked our right arm of the colony?
+No fear of him not coming back to us! And how to
+go on, is that it? In your own cozy little house, with
+Prissy and the rest of us to help you look after it till
+you are strong again, and then the fair spring sunshine,
+and the salt winds straight from home blowing
+upon you, and you will not need to know how to go
+on! It will be the rest of us who will have to learn
+how to keep up with you!"</p>
+
+<p>"Kind Constance," whispered Rose, stroking the
+girl's cheek and looking wistfully into her eyes as she
+dried her own. "You keep me up, though you are so
+young! Not for nothing were you named Constantia,
+for constant indeed you are! I will be good, and not
+trouble you. Usually I feel sure that I shall get well,
+but to-day&mdash;seeing Myles go&mdash;&mdash;. Sometimes it
+comes over me with terrible certainty that it is not for
+me to see this wilderness bloom."</p>
+
+<p>"Just tiredness, dear one," said Constance, lovingly,
+and as if she were a whole college of learned
+physicians. "Have no fear."</p>
+
+<p>Mistress Hopkins came in search of them, carrying
+the baby Oceanus with manifest protest against his
+weight and wailing.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been looking for you, Constantia," she
+said, as if this were a severe accusation against the
+girl. "You are to take this child. Have I not
+enough to do and to put up with that I must be worn
+threadbare by his crying? And what a country!
+Your father has been tormenting me with his
+mending and preparation for this expedition so that
+I have not seen it as it is until just now. Look at it,
+only look at it! What a place to bring a decent
+woman to who has never wanted! Though I may
+not have been the fine lady that his first wife was, yet
+am I a comfortable farmer's daughter, and Stephen
+Hopkins should not have brought me to a coast more
+bleak and dismal than the barrens of Sahara. Woods,
+nothing but woods! And full of lions, and tigers, and
+who knows what other raving, raging wild vermin&mdash;who
+knows? What does thy father mean by bringing
+me to this?"</p>
+
+<p>Constance pressed her lips together hard, a burning
+crimson flooding her face as she took the baby
+violently thrust upon her and straightened his disordered
+wrappings, reminding herself that his mother
+was not his fault.</p>
+
+<p>"Why as to that, Mistress Hopkins," said Priscilla
+Mullins in her downright, sensible way, "Mr. Hopkins
+did not bring you. We all came willingly, and
+I make no doubt that all of us knew quite well that
+it was a wilderness to which we were bound."</p>
+
+<p>"There is knowing and knowing, Priscilla Mullins,
+and the knowing before seeing is a different thing
+from the knowing and seeing. Stephen Hopkins had
+been about the world; he even set sail for Virginia,
+which as I understand is somewhere not far from
+Cape Cod, though not near enough to give us neighbours
+for the borrowing of a salt rising, or the trade of
+a recipe, or the loan of a croup simple should my
+blessed babe turn suffocating as he is like to do in
+this wicked cold wind; and these things are the comforts
+of a woman's life, and her right&mdash;as all good
+women will tell thee before thou art old enough to
+know what the lack is in this desolation. So it is
+clear that Stephen Hopkins had no right to bring
+me here, innocent as I was of what it all stood for,
+and hard enough as it is to be married to a man whose
+first wife was of the gentry, and whose children that
+she left for my torment are like to her, headstrong and
+proud-stomached, and hating me, however I slave
+for them. And your father, Constantia Hopkins,
+has gone now, not content with bringing me here
+across that waste o' waters, and never is it likely will
+come back to me to look after that innocent babe that
+was born on the ocean and bears its name according,
+and came like the dove to the ark, bearing an olive
+branch across the deluge. But much your father
+cares for this, but has gone and left me, and it is no
+man's part to leave a weak woman to struggle alone
+to keep wild beasts and Indians from devouring her
+children; and so I tell you, and so I maintain. And
+never, never have I looked upon a scene so forsaken
+and unbearable as that gray woodland that the man
+who swore to cherish me has led me into."</p>
+
+<p>Constance quite well knew that this hysterical unreason
+in her stepmother would pass, and that it was
+not more worth heeding than the wind that whistled
+around the ship's stripped masts. Mistress Eliza had
+a vixenish temper, and a jealous one. She frequently
+lashed herself into a fury with one or another of the
+family for its object and felt the better for it, not regarding
+how it left the victim feeling.</p>
+
+<p>But though she knew this, Constance could not
+always act upon her knowledge, and disregard her.
+She was but a very young girl and now she was a very
+weary one, with every nerve quivering from tense
+anxiety in watching her father go into unknown
+danger.</p>
+
+<p>She sprang to her feet with a cry.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, my father, my father! How dare you blame
+him, my patient, wise, forbearing father! Why did
+he bring you here, indeed! He&mdash;so fine, so noble, so
+hard-pressed with your tongue, Mistress Hopkins!&mdash;I
+will not hear you blame him. Oh, my father, my
+dear, dear, good father!" she sobbed, losing all sense
+of restraint in her grief.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly on hearing this outburst, Mistress Hopkins,
+as is sometimes the way of such as she, became
+as self-controlled as she had, but a moment before,
+been beside herself. And in becoming quiet she became
+much more angry than she had been, and more
+vindictive.</p>
+
+<p>"You speak to me like this?&mdash;you dare to!" she
+said in a low, furious voice. "You will learn to
+your sorrow what it means to flout me. You will
+pay for this, Constantia Hopkins, and pay to the
+last penny, to your everlasting shame and misery."</p>
+
+<p>Constance was too frightened by this change, by
+this white fury, which she had never seen before in
+her stepmother, to answer; but before she could have
+answered, Doctor Fuller, who had strayed that way
+in time to hear the last of Dame Eliza's tirade, Constance's
+retort, and this final threat, took Constance
+by the arm and led her away.</p>
+
+<p>"Quiet, my dear, quiet and calm, you know!
+Don't let yourself forget what is due to your father's
+wife, to yourself, still more to your conscience,"
+he warned her. "And remember that a soft answer
+turneth away wrath."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, it doesn't, Doctor Fuller, indeed it doesn't!"
+sobbed Constance, utterly unstrung. "I've tried it,
+tried it again and again, and it only makes the wrath
+turn the harder upon me; it never turns it away!
+Indeed, indeed I've faithfully tried it."</p>
+
+<p>"It's a hard pilgrimage for you at times I fear,
+Constance, but never turn aside into wrong on your
+part," said the good doctor, gently.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I'm sorry I flared up, I am sorry I spoke
+angrily. But my father! To blame him when he is
+so patient, and has so much to endure! Must I beg
+his wife's pardon?" said Constance, humbly.</p>
+
+<p>Doctor Fuller concealed a smile. Sorry as he was
+for Constance, and indignant at her stepmother's
+unkindness, it amused him to note how completely
+in her thoughts Constance separated herself from the
+least connection with her.</p>
+
+<p>"I think it would be the better course, my dear,
+and I admire you for being the one to suggest it," he
+answered, with an encouraging pat on Constance's
+sleeve.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I will. I mean to do what is right, and I
+will," Constance sighed. "But I truly think it will
+do no good," she added.</p>
+
+<p>"Nor I," Doctor Fuller agreed with her in his
+thoughts, but he took good care not to let this
+opinion reach his lips.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="p4"><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV</a></h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">The First Yuletide</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>Constance had a tender conscience, quick
+to self-blame. She was unhappy if she could
+impute to herself a fault, ill at ease till she had done
+all that she could to repair wrong. Although her
+stepmother's dislike for her, still more her open expression
+of it, was cruelly unjust and prevented all
+possibility of love for her, still Constance deeply
+regretted having spoken to her with lack of respect.</p>
+
+<p>But when she made humble apology for the fault
+and begged Mrs. Hopkins's pardon with sweet sincerity,
+she was received in a manner that turned
+contrition into bitterness.</p>
+
+<p>Dame Eliza looked at her with a cold light in her
+steely blue eyes, and a scornful smile. Plainly she
+was too petty herself to understand generosity in
+others, and construed Constance's apology into a
+confession of fear of her.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor work spreading bad butter over a burnt
+crust," she commented. "There's no love lost between
+us, Constantia Hopkins; maybe none ever found, nor
+ever will be. I don't want your fair words, nor need
+you hope your father will not one day see you, and
+that sullen brother of yours, as do I. So waste no
+breath trying to get around me. Damaris is fretting;
+look after her."</p>
+
+<p>Poor Constance! She had been so honestly sorry
+for having been angry and having given vent to
+it, had gone to her stepmother with such sincerity,
+hoping against hope, for the unnumbered time, that
+she could make their relation pleasanter! It was not
+possible to help feeling a violent reaction from this
+reception, to keep her scorned sweetness from turning
+to bitterness in her heart.</p>
+
+<p>She told the story to Giles, and it made him furiously
+angry.</p>
+
+<p>"You young ninny to humble yourself to her," he
+cried, with flashing eyes. "Will you never learn to
+expect nothing but injustice from her? It isn't
+what we do, or say; it is jealousy. She will not let
+our father love us, she hates the children of our
+mother, and hates our mother's memory, that she
+was in every way Mistress Eliza's superior, as she
+guesses, knowing that she was better born, better
+bred, and surely better in character. I remember
+our mother, Con, if not clearly. I'm sorry you have
+not even so much recollection of her. You are
+like her, and may be thankful for it. I could trounce
+you for crawling to Mistress Hopkins! Learn your
+lesson for all time, and no more apologies! Con, I
+shall not stand it! No matter how it goes with this
+colony, I shall go back to England. I will not stay
+to be put upon, to see my father turned from me."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Giles, that could never be!" cried Constance.
+"Father will never turn from us."</p>
+
+<p>"I did not say from <i>us</i>; I said from <i>me</i>," retorted
+Giles. "You are different, a girl, and&mdash;and like
+Mother, and&mdash;several other reasons. But I often see
+that Father is not sure whether he shall approve me
+or not. It will not be so long till I am twenty-one,
+then I shall get out of reach of these things."</p>
+
+<p>Constance's troubled face brightened. To her
+natural hopefulness Giles's twenty-first birthday was
+far enough away to allow a great deal of good to
+come before it.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, twenty-one, Giles! You'll be prospering and
+happy here before that," she cried.</p>
+
+<p>"But I must tell no more of troubles with my stepmother
+to Giles," she added mentally. "It will
+never do to pile fuel on his smouldering fires!"</p>
+
+<p>The next day when Constance was helping Mistress
+Hopkins with her mending, she noticed the
+oilskin-wrapped packet that her father had left with
+his wife for safe keeping, tossed carelessly upon the
+hammock which swung from the side of the berth
+which she and her stepmother shared, the bed devised
+by ingenuity for little Damaris.</p>
+
+<p>"Is not that packet in Damaris's hammock Father's
+packet of valuable papers?" Constance asked. "Is
+there not a risk in letting them lie about, so highly as
+he prizes them?"</p>
+
+<p>She made the suggestion timidly, for Dame Eliza
+did not take kindly to hints of this nature. To her
+surprise her stepmother received her remark not
+merely pleasantly, but almost eagerly, quick with
+self-reproach.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed thou art right, Constantia, and I am
+wrong to leave it for an instant outside the strong
+chest, where I shall put it under lock and key," she
+said, nevertheless not moving to rescue it. "I
+have carried it tied around my neck by a silken
+cord and hidden in my bosom till this hour past. I
+dropped it there when I was trying to mend Damaris's
+hammock. Thanks to you for reminding me of it.
+What can ail that hammock defies me! I have
+tried in all ways to strengthen it, but it sags. Some
+night the child will take a bad fall from it. Try you
+what you can make of it, Constantia."</p>
+
+<p>"I am not skilful, Stepmother," smiled Constance.
+"Giles is just outside studying the chart of our voyage
+hither. Let me call him to repair the hammock.
+We would not have you fall at night and crack the
+pretty golden pate, would we, Damaris?" The
+child shook her "golden pate" hard.</p>
+
+<p>"That you would not, Connie, for you are good,
+good to me!" she cried.</p>
+
+<p>Mistress Hopkins looked on the little girl with
+somewhat of softening of her stern lips, yet she felt
+called upon to reprimand this lightness of speech.</p>
+
+<p>"Not 'Connie,' Damaris, as thou hast been often
+enough told. We do not hold with the ungodly
+manner of nicknames. Thy sister is Constantia,
+and so must thou call her. And you must not put
+into the child's head notions of its being pretty, Constantia.
+Beauty is a snare of the devil, and vanity
+is his weapon to ensnare the soul. Do not let me
+hear you again speak to a child of mine of her pretty
+golden pate. As to the hammock if you choose to
+call your brother to repair it for his half-sister I
+have nothing against the plan."</p>
+
+<p>Constance jumped up and ran out of the cabin.</p>
+
+<p>"Giles, Giles, will you come to try what you can
+do with Damaris's sleeping hammock?" she called.</p>
+
+<p>"What's wrong with it?" demanded Giles, rising
+reluctantly, but following Constance, nevertheless.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know, but Mistress Hopkins says she
+cannot repair it and that the child is like to fall with
+its breaking some night," said Constance, entering
+again the small, close cabin of the women. "Here is
+Giles, Mistress Hopkins; he will try what he can do,"
+she added.</p>
+
+<p>Giles examined the hammock in silence, bade
+Constance bring him cord, and at last let it swing
+back into place, and straightened himself. He had
+been bent over the canvas with it drawn forward
+against his breast.</p>
+
+<p>"I see nothing the matter with the hammock except
+a looseness of its cords, and perhaps weakness of
+one where I put in the new one. You could have
+mended it, Con," he said, ungraciously, and sensitive
+Constance flushed at the implication that her stepmother
+had not required his help, for she never could
+endure anything like a disagreeable atmosphere
+around her.</p>
+
+<p>"Giles says 'Con,'" observed Damaris, justifying
+herself for the use of nicknames.</p>
+
+<p>"Giles does many things that we do not approve;
+let us hope he will not lead his young sister and
+brother into evil ways," returned her mother, sourly.
+"But thou shouldst thank him when he does thee a
+service, not to be deficient on thy side in virtue."</p>
+
+<p>"You know Giles doesn't need thanks for what he
+does for small people, don't you, Hop-o-my-Thumb?"
+Giles said and departed, successful in both his aims,
+in pleasing the child by his name for her, and displeasing
+her mother.</p>
+
+<p>Two hours later Constance was sitting rolled up in
+heavy woollens like a cocoon well forward of the main
+mast, in a sheltered nook, reading to Rose Standish,
+who was also wrapped to her chin, and who when she
+was in the open, seemed to find relief from the oppression
+that made breathing so hard a matter to her.</p>
+
+<p>Mistress Hopkins came toward them in furious
+haste, her mouth open as if she were panting, one
+hand pressed against her breast.</p>
+
+<p>"Constantia, confess, confess, and do not try to
+shield thy wicked brother!" she cried.</p>
+<p class="center image"><a name="confess" id="confess"></a><img src="images/confess.jpg" alt="Constantia, confess&mdash;confess and do not try to shield thy wicked brother" title="Constantia, confess&mdash;confess and do not try to shield thy wicked brother" width="325" height="500" /></p>
+<p class="caption center">"'Constantia, confess&mdash;confess and do not try to shield
+thy wicked brother'"</p>
+
+<p>"Confess! My wicked brother? Do you mean
+the baby, for you cannot mean Giles?" Constance
+said, springing to her feet.</p>
+
+<p>"That lamb of seven weeks! Indeed, you impudent
+girl, I mean no such thing, as well you know,
+but that dreadful, sin-enslaved, criminal, Gile&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hush!" cried Constance, "I will not hear you!"</p>
+
+<p>There was a fire in her eyes that made even Mistress
+Eliza halt in her speech.</p>
+
+<p>"Giles Hopkins has stolen your father's packet,
+the packet of papers which you saw in the hammock
+and reminded me to put away," she said, more quietly.
+"I shall leave him to be dealt with by your father
+who must soon return. But you, you! Can you
+clear yourself? Did you help him steal it? Nay, did
+you call him in for this purpose, warning him that he
+should find the packet there, and to take it? Is this
+a plan between you? For ever have I said that there
+was that in you two that curdled my blood with fear
+for you of what you should become. Not like your
+godly father are you two. From elsewhere have you
+drawn the blood that poisons you. Confess and I
+will ask your father to spare you."</p>
+
+<p>Constance stood with her thick wrappings falling
+from her as she threw up her hands in dumb appeal
+against this unbearable thing. She was white as the
+dead, but her blue eyes burned black in the whiteness,
+full of intense life.</p>
+
+<p>"Mistress Hopkins, oh, Mistress Hopkins, consider!"
+begged Rose Standish, also rising in great
+distress. "Think what it is that you are saying, and
+to whom! You cannot knowingly accuse this dear
+girl of connivance in a theft! You cannot accuse
+Giles of committing it! Why, Captain Myles is
+fonder of the lad than of any other in our company!
+Giles is upright and true, he says, and fearless. Pray,
+pray, take back these fearful words! You do not
+mean them, and when you will long to disown them
+they will cling to you and not forsake you, as does
+our mad injustice, to our lasting sorrow. What can
+be more foreign to our calling than harsh judgments,
+and angry accusations?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am not speaking rashly, Mistress Standish,"
+insisted Dame Eliza.</p>
+
+<p>"Not yet three hours gone Constantia saw lying
+in Damaris's hammock a valuable packet of papers,
+left me in trust by her father. I asked her to mend
+the hammock, which was in disorder, but she called
+her brother to do the simple task. No one else hath
+entered the cabin at my end of it since. The packet
+is gone. Would you have more proof? Could there
+be more proof, unless you saw the theft committed,
+which is manifestly impossible?"</p>
+
+<p>"But why, good mistress, should the boy and girl
+steal these papers? What reason would there be for
+them to disturb their father's property?" asked Rose
+Standish.</p>
+
+<p>"I have heard my uncle say, who is a barrister at
+home, that one must search for the motive of a crime
+if it is to be established." She glanced with a slight
+smile at Constance's stony face, who neither looked
+at her, nor smiled, but stood gazing in wide-eyed
+horror at her stepmother.</p>
+
+<p>"Precisely!" triumphed Dame Eliza. "Two motives
+are clear, Mistress Standish, to those who are
+not too blinded by prejudice to see. Those Hopkins
+girl and boy hate me, fear and grudge my influence
+with their father. Would they not like to weaken
+it by the loss of papers entrusted to me, a loss that he
+would resent on his return? There is one motive.
+As to the other: you do not know, but I do, and so
+did they, that part of these papers related to an inheritance
+in England, from which they would want
+their half-brother and sister excluded. Needs it
+more?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes, yes!" cried Rose Standish, as Constance
+groaned. "To any one knowing Giles and Constance
+this is no more than if you said Fee, fi, fo, fum!
+They plotting to weaken you with their father!
+They stealing to keep the children from a share in
+their inheritance, so generous as they are, so good to
+the little ones! Fie, Mistress Hopkins! It is a
+grievous sin, you who are so strict in small matters, a
+grievous sin thus to judge another, still more those to
+whom you owe the obligation of one who has taken
+their dead mother's place."</p>
+
+<p>Constance began to tremble, and to struggle to
+speak. What she would have said, or what would
+have come of it, cannot be known, for at that moment
+the Billington boys, John and Francis, came hurtling
+down upon them, shouting:</p>
+
+<p>"The shallop, the shallop is back! It is almost
+upon us on the other side. Come see, come see!
+Dad is back, and all the rest, unless the savages have
+killed some of them," Francis added the final words
+in solo.</p>
+
+<p>The present trouble must be laid aside for the
+great business in hand of welcome.</p>
+
+<p>Poor Constance turned in a frozen way to follow
+Rose and her stepmother to the other side of the ship.</p>
+
+<p>Her father&mdash;her dear, dear, longed-for father&mdash;was
+come back. He might be bringing them news of a
+favoured site where they would go to begin their
+new home.</p>
+
+<p>At last they were to step upon land again, to live
+in some degree the life they knew of household task
+and tilling, walking the woods, drawing water, building
+fires&mdash;the life so long postponed, for which they
+all thirsted.</p>
+
+<p>But if she and Giles were to meet their father
+accused of theft! If they should see in those grave,
+kind, wise eyes a shadow of a doubt of his eldest
+children! Constance felt that she dared not see him
+come if such a thing were so much as possible.</p>
+
+<p>But when the shallop was made fast beside the
+<i>Mayflower</i> and Constance saw her father boarding
+the ship among the others of the returning expedition,
+and she met the glad light in his eyes resting upon
+her, all fear was swallowed up in immense relief and
+joy.</p>
+
+<p>With a low cry she sprang to meet him and fell
+sobbing on his shoulder, forgetful of the stern on-lookers
+who would condemn such display of feeling.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, father, father, if you had never come back!"
+she murmured.</p>
+
+<p>"But I have come, daughter!" Stephen Hopkins
+reminded her. "Surely you are not weeping that I
+have come! We have great things to tell you,
+attacks by savages, some hardships, but we have
+brought grain which we found hidden by the Indians,
+and we have found the right place to establish our
+dwelling."</p>
+
+<p>Constance raised her head and dried her eyes,
+still shaken by sobs. Her father looked keenly at
+the pale, drawn face, and knew that something more
+than ordinary lay behind the overwhelming emotion
+with which she had received him.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor child, poor motherless child!" he thought,
+and the pity of that moment went far in influencing
+his subsequent treatment of Constance when he
+learned what had ailed her on his arrival.</p>
+
+<p>Now he patted her shoulder and turned toward the
+middle of the ship's forward deck where his comrades
+of the expedition were relating their experiences, and
+displaying their trophies.</p>
+
+<p>Golden corn lay on the deck, spread upon a cloth,
+and the pilgrims who had remained with the ship were
+handling it as they listened to John Alden, who was
+made the narrator of this first report, having a ready
+tongue.</p>
+
+<p>"We found a pond of fresh water," he was saying,
+"and not far from it cleared ground with the stubble
+of a gathered harvest upon it. Judge whether or not
+the sight was pleasant to us, as promising of fertile
+lands when the forests were hewn. And we came
+upon planks of wood that had lately been a house,
+and a kettle, and heaps of sand, with handmarks
+upon it, not long since made, where the sand had
+been piled and pressed down, into which, digging
+rapidly, we penetrated and found the corn you see
+here. The part of it we took, but the rest we once
+more covered and left it. And see ye, brethren,
+there have we the seed for our own next season's
+harvest, the which we were in such doubt of obtaining
+from home in time. It is a story for night, when
+we have leisure, to tell you of how we saw a few men
+and a dog, who ran from us, and we pursuing, hoping
+to speak to them, but they escaped us. And how
+later on, we saw savages cutting up great fish of
+tremendous size along the coast, and how we were
+attacked by another savage band one night. But
+all this we reserve for another telling. We came at
+last into a harbour and found it deep enough for the
+<i>Mayflower</i> on our sounding it. And landing we
+marched into the land and found fields, and brooks,
+and on the whole that it was a fit country for
+our beginning. For the rest it is as you shall decide
+in consultation, but of our party we are all in
+accord to urge you to accept this spot and hasten
+to take possession of it as the winter cometh on
+apace."</p>
+
+<p>"Let us thank God for that He hath led us into a
+land of corn, and guided us for so many weary days,
+over so many dreary miles," said William Brewster,
+the elder of the pilgrims.</p>
+
+<p>John Carver, who was chosen on the <i>Mayflower</i> as
+their governor, arose and out of a full heart thanked
+God for His mercies, as Elder Brewster had recommended.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Mayflower</i> weighed anchor in the morning to
+carry her brave freight to their new home. The
+wind set hard against her, and it was the second day
+before she entered Plymouth harbour, as they
+resolved to name their new habitation, a name already
+bestowed by Captain Smith, and the name of their
+final port of embarkation in England.</p>
+
+<p>No sign of life met them as the pilgrims disembarked.
+Silently, with full realization of what lay
+before them, and how fraught with significance this
+beginning was, the pilgrims passed from the ship
+that had so long been their home, and set foot&mdash;men,
+women, and children&mdash;upon the soil of America.</p>
+
+<p>A deep murmur arose when the last person was
+landed, and it happened that Constance Hopkins was
+the last to step from the boat to the rock on which the
+landing was made, and to jump light-heartedly to
+the sand, amid the tall, dried weeds that waved on the
+shore.</p>
+
+<p>"Praise God from whom all blessings flow," said
+Elder Brewster, solemnly. The pilgrim band of
+colonists sang the doxology with bowed heads.</p>
+
+<p>Three days later the shores of the harbour echoed
+to the ring of axes, the sound of hammers, as the
+first house was begun, the community house, destined
+to shelter many families and to store their
+goods.</p>
+
+<p>"Merry Christmas, Father!" said Constance,
+coming up to her father in the cold of the early
+bleak December morning.</p>
+
+<p>"S-s-sh!" warned her father, finger upon lip.
+"Do you not know, my daughter, that the keeping of
+Christmas is abjured by us as savouring of popery,
+and that to wish one merry at yuletide would be
+reckoned as unrighteousness among us?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but Father, you do not think so! You do not
+go with all these opinions, and can it be wrong to be
+merry on the day that gladdened the world?"
+Constance pleaded.</p>
+
+<p>"Not wrong, but praiseworthy, to be merry under
+our present condition, to my way of thinking,"
+said Stephen Hopkins, glancing around at the drab
+emptiness of land and sky and harbour beyond.
+"Nay, child, I do not think it wrong to rejoice at
+Christmas, nor do I hold with the severity of most of
+our people, but because I believe that it will be good
+to begin anew in a land that is not oppressed, nor
+torn by king-made wars and sins, I have cast my lot,
+as has Myles Standish, who is of one mind with me,
+among this Plymouth band, and we must conform to
+custom. So wish me Merry Christmas, if you will,
+but let none hear you, and we will keep our heresies to
+ourselves."</p>
+
+<p>"Yet the first house in the New World is begun
+to-day!" laughed Constance. "We are getting a
+Christmas gift."</p>
+
+<p>"A happy portent to begin our common home on
+the day when the Prince of Peace came to dwell on
+earth! Let us hope it will bring us peace," said her
+father.</p>
+
+<p>"Peace!" cried Constance, with a swift and terrified
+remembrance of the accusation which her stepmother
+had threatened bringing against herself and
+Giles.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="p4"><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V</a></h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">The New Year in the New Land</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>The new year came in bringing with it a driving
+storm from the Atlantic. The hoary pines
+threw up their rugged branches as if appealing to the
+heavens for mercy on the women and little children
+without shelter on the desolate coast. But the gray
+heavens did not relent; they poured snow and sleet
+down upon the infant colony, coating the creaking
+pines with ice that bent them low, and checked their
+intercession.</p>
+
+<p>As fast as willing hands could work, taking it in
+continuous shifts by night as well as day, the community
+house went up. But the storm was upon the
+colonists before the shelter was ready for them, and
+even when the roof covered them, the cold laughed
+it to scorn, entering to wreak its will upon them.</p>
+
+<p>Sickness seized one after another of the pilgrim
+band, men and women alike, and the little children
+fought croup and pneumonia, nursed by women
+hardly more fit for the task than were the little
+victims.</p>
+
+<p>Rose Standish, already weakened by the suffering
+of the voyage, was among the first to be prostrated.
+She coughed ceaselessly though each violent breath
+wracked her frail body with pain. A bright colour
+burned in her cheeks, her beautiful eyes were clear
+and dilated, she smiled hopefully when her companions
+in exile and suffering spoke to her, and
+assured them that she was "much, much better,"
+speaking pantingly, by an effort.</p>
+
+<p>The discouragement with which she had looked
+upon the coast when the <i>Mayflower</i> arrived, gave
+place to hope in her. She spoke confidently of
+"next spring," of the "house Captain Myles would
+build her," of all that she should do "when warm
+weather came."</p>
+
+<p>Constance, to whom she most confided her plans,
+often turned away to hide her tears. She knew that
+Doctor Fuller and the more experienced women
+thought that for this English rose there would be no
+springtime upon earth.</p>
+
+<p>Constance had other troubles to bear as well as the
+hardships and sorrows common to the sorely beset
+community. She seemed, to herself, hardly to be a
+young girl, so heavily weighted was she with the
+burden that she carried. She wondered to remember
+that if she had stayed in England she should have
+been laughing and singing like other girls of her age,
+skating now on the Sherbourne, if it were frozen over,
+as it well might be. Perhaps she might be dancing,
+if she were visiting her cousins in Warwickshire, her
+own birthplace, for the cousins were merry girls, and
+like all of Constance's mother's family, quite free
+from puritanical ideas, brought up in the English
+Church, so not debarred from the dance.</p>
+
+<p>Constance had no heart to regret her loss of
+youthful happiness; she was so far aloof from it, so
+sad, that she could not rise to the level of feeling its
+charm. Dame Eliza Hopkins had carried out her
+threat, had accused Giles of the theft of his father's
+papers, and Constance of being party to his wrong-doing,
+if not actually its instigator.</p>
+
+<p>It had only happened that morning; Constance
+heavily awaited developments. She jumped guiltily
+when she heard her father's voice speaking her name,
+and felt his hand upon her shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>She faced him, white and shaken, to meet his
+troubled eyes intently fastened upon her.</p>
+
+<p>"The storm is bad, Constance, but it is not warm
+within. Put on your coat and come with me. I
+must speak with you," he said.</p>
+
+<p>In silence Constance obeyed him. Pulling over
+her head a hood that, like a deep cowl, was attached
+to her coat, she followed her father into the storm,
+and walked beside him toward the marshy shore
+whither, without speaking to her, he strode.</p>
+
+<p>Arrived at the sedgy ocean line he halted, and
+turned upon her.</p>
+
+<p>"Constance," he began, sternly, "my wife tells
+me that valuable papers which I entrusted to her
+keeping have disappeared. She tells me further
+that she had dropped them&mdash;carelessly, as I have told
+her&mdash;into the hammock in which your little sister
+slept and that you saw them there, commenting upon
+it; that you soon called Giles to set right some
+slight matter in the hammock; and that shortly after
+you and he had left her, she discovered her loss.
+What do you know of this? Tell me all that you
+know, and tell me the truth."</p>
+
+<p>Constance's fear left her at this word. Throwing
+up her head she looked her father in the eyes, nearly
+on a level with her own as she stood upon a sandy
+hummock. "It needs not telling me to speak the
+truth, Father. I am your daughter and my mother's
+daughter; it runs not in my blood to lie," she said.</p>
+
+<p>Stephen Hopkins touched her arm lightly, a look
+of relief upon his face.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you for that reminder, my girl," he said.
+"It is true, and Giles is of the same strain. Know
+you aught of this misfortune?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing, Father," said Constance. "And because
+I know nothing whatever about it, in answering
+you I have told you all that I have to tell."</p>
+
+<p>"And Giles&mdash;&mdash;" began her father, but stopped.</p>
+
+<p>"Nor Giles," Constance repeated, amending his
+beginning. "Giles is headstrong, Father, and I fear
+for him often, but you know that he is honourable,
+truth-telling. Would your son <i>steal</i> from you?"</p>
+
+<p>"But your stepmother says no one entered the
+cabin after you had left it before she discovered her
+loss," insisted Stephen Hopkins. "What am I to
+think? What do you think, Constance?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think that there is an explanation we do not
+know. I think that my stepmother hates Giles and
+me, especially him, as he has the first claim to the
+inheritance that she would have for her own children.
+I think that she has seized this opportunity to poison
+you against us," said Constance, with spirited daring.
+"Oh, Father, dear, dear Father, do not let her do this
+thing!"</p>
+
+<p>"Nay, child, you are unjust," said her father,
+gently. "I confess to Mistress Eliza's jealousy of
+you, and that there is not great love for you in her.
+But, Constance, do you love her, you or Giles? And
+that she is not so base as you suspect is shown by the
+fact that she has delayed until to-day to tell me of
+this loss, dreading, as she hath told me, to put you
+wrong in my eyes. Fie for shame, Constance, to
+suspect her of such outrageous wickedness, she
+who is, after all, a good woman, as she sees goodness."</p>
+
+<p>"Father, if the packet were lost through her carelessness,
+would you not blame her? Is it not likely
+that she would shield herself at our cost, even if she
+would not be glad to lower us, as I am sure she would
+be?" persisted Constance.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, well, this is idle talk!" Stephen Hopkins
+said, impatiently. "The truth must be sifted out,
+and suspicions are wrong, as well as useless. One
+word before I go to Giles. Upon your sacred honour,
+Constantia Hopkins, and by your mother's memory,
+can you assure me that you know absolutely nothing
+of the loss of this packet of papers?"</p>
+
+<p>"Upon my honour and by my mother's memory,
+I swear that I do not know so much as that the packet
+is lost, except as Mistress Hopkins says that it is,"
+said Constance. Then with a swift change of tone
+she begged:</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Father, Father, when you go to Giles, be careful,
+be kind, I pray you! Giles is unhappy. He is
+ill content under the injustice we both bear, but I
+with a girl's greater submission. He is ready to
+break all bounds and he will do so if he feels that you
+do not trust him, listen to his enemy's tales against
+him. Please, please, dear Father, be gentle with
+Giles. He loves you as well as I do, but where your
+distrust of me would kill me, because I love you,
+Giles's love for you will turn to bitterness, if you let
+him feel that you are half lost to him."</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense, Constance," said her father, though
+kindly, "Giles is a boy and must be dealt with firmly.
+It will never do to coddle him, to give him his head.
+You are a girl, sensitive and easily wounded. A boy
+is another matter. I will not have him setting up
+his will against mine, nor opposing discipline for his
+good. It is for him to clear himself of what looks
+ill, not resent our seeing the looks of it."</p>
+
+<p>Constance almost wrung her hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Father, Father, do not go to Giles in that way!
+Sorrow will come of it. Think how you would feel
+to be thus suspected! A boy is not less sensitive than
+a girl; I fear he is more sensitive in his honour than
+are we. Oh, I am but a girl, but I know that I am
+right about Giles. I think we are given to understand
+as no man can how to deal with a proud, sullen
+boy like Giles, because God means us to be the
+mothers of boys some day! Be kind to Giles, dear
+Father; let him see that you trust him, as indeed,
+indeed you may!"</p>
+
+<p>"Let us go back out of the storm to such shelter as
+we have, Constance," said Stephen Hopkins, smiling
+with masculine toleration for a foolish girl. "I have
+accepted your solemn assurance that you are ignorant
+of this theft, if theft it be. Be satisfied that I
+have done this, and leave me to deal with my son as
+I see fit. I will not be unjust to him, but he must
+meet me respectfully, submissively, and answer to
+the evidence against him. I have not been pleased
+of late with Giles's ill-concealed resistance."</p>
+
+<p>This time Constance did wring her hands, as
+she followed her father, close behind him. She attempted
+no further remonstrance, knowing that to
+do so would be not only to harm Giles's cause, but to
+arouse her father's quick anger against herself. But
+as she walked with bent head through the cutting,
+beating storm, she wondered why Giles should not
+be resistant to his life, and her heart ached with pitying
+apprehension for her brother.</p>
+
+<p>All that long day of darkening storm and anxiety
+Constance did not see Giles. That signified nothing,
+however, for Giles was at work with the men making
+winter preparations which could not be deferred,
+albeit the winter was already upon them, while
+Constance was occupied with the nursing for which
+the daily increase of sickness made more hands required
+than were able to perform it.</p>
+
+<p>Humility Cooper was dangerously ill, burning with
+fever, struggling for breath. Constance was fond
+of the little maid who seemed so childish beside her,
+and gladly volunteered to go again into the storm
+to fetch her the fresh water for which she implored.</p>
+
+<p>At the well which had been dug, and over which a
+pump from the ship had been placed and made
+effective, Constance came upon Giles, marching up
+and down impatiently, and with him was John
+Billington, his chosen comrade, the most unruly of
+all the younger pilgrims.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, at last, Con!" exclaimed Giles. "I've
+been here above an hour. I thought to meet you
+here. What has kept you so long?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Giles, I could not know that you were
+awaiting me," said Constance, reasonably. "Oh,
+they are so ill, our poor friends yonder! I am sure
+many of them will go on a longer pilgrimage and
+never see this colony established."</p>
+
+<p>"Lucky they!" said Giles, bitterly. "Why should
+they want to? Nobody wants to die, and of course
+I am sorry for them, but better be dead than alive
+here&mdash;if it is to be called alive!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, dear Giles, do you hate it so?" sighed Constance.
+"Nothing is wrong?" she added, glancing
+at John Billington, longing to ask her question more
+directly, but not wishing to betray to him the trouble
+upon her mind.</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind talking before John," said Giles,
+catching the glance. "He knows all about it; I
+have told him. Have you cleared yourself, Sis, or
+are you also under suspicion?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, dear Giles," said Constance again. "You
+are not&mdash;Didn't Father believe?&mdash;Isn't it all right?"
+She groped for the least offensive form for her question.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know whether or not Father believed
+that I am a thief," burst out Giles, furiously. "Nor
+a whit do I care. I told him the word of a man of
+honour was enough, and I gave him mine that I knew
+nothing about his wife's lies. I told him it seemed to
+me clear enough that she had made away with the
+papers herself, to defraud us. And I told him I had
+no proof of my innocence to give him, but it was not
+necessary. I told him I wouldn't go into it further;
+that it had to end right there, that I was not called
+upon to accept, nor would I submit to such a rank
+insult from any man, and that his being my father
+made it worse, not better."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Giles, what did he say? Oh, Giles, what a
+misfortune!" cried Constance, clasping her hands.</p>
+
+<p>"What did he say?" echoed Giles. "What do you
+think would be said when two such tempers as my
+father's and mine clash? For, mark you, Con,
+Stephen Hopkins would not stoop to vindicate himself
+from the charge of stealing. <i>Stealing</i>, remember,
+not a crime worthy of a gentleman."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Giles, what crime is worthy of a gentleman?"
+Constance grieved. "Is there any dignity in sin,
+and any justice in varnishing some sins with the
+gloss of custom? But indeed, indeed, it is cruelly
+hard on you, Giles dear. Tell me what happened."</p>
+
+<p>"The only thing that could happen. My father
+forgets that I am not a child. He flew into that madness
+of anger that we know him capable of, railed at
+me for my impertinence, insisted on my proving
+myself innocent of this charge, and declared that
+until I did, with full apology for the way I had received
+him, I was no son of his. So&mdash;Good day, Mistress
+Constantia Hopkins, I hope that you are well?
+I once had a sister that was like you, but sister have
+I none now, since I am not the son of my reputed
+father," said Giles, with a sneer and a deep bow.</p>
+
+<p>Constance was in despair. The bitter mockery in
+Giles's young face, the bleak unhappiness in his eyes
+stabbed her heart. She knew him too well to doubt
+that this mood was dangerous.</p>
+
+<p>"My own dear brother!" she cried, throwing her
+arms around him. "Oh, don't steel yourself so
+bitterly! Father loves you so much that he is stern
+with you, but it will all come right; it must, once this
+hot anger that you both share is past. You are too
+alike, that is all! Beg his pardon, Giles, but repeat
+that your word is enough to prove you innocent of
+the accusation. Father will see that, and yield you
+that, when you have met him halfway by an apology
+for hard words."</p>
+
+<p>"See here, Con, why should I do that?" demanded
+Giles. "Is there anything in this desolation that I
+should want to stay here? I've had enough of
+Puritans; and Eliza is one of the strongest of them.
+Except for your sake, little Sis, why should I stay?
+And I will one day return for you. No, no, Con; I
+will sail for England when the ship returns, and make
+my own fortune, somewhere, somehow."</p>
+
+<p>"Dame Eliza is not what she is because she is a
+Puritan. She is what she is because she is Dame
+Eliza. Think of the others whom we all love and
+would fain be like," Constance reminded him. "We
+must all be true to the enterprise we have undertaken,
+and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Look here, sweet Con," John Billington interrupted
+her. "There is nothing to hold Giles to this
+dreary enterprise, nor to hold me, either. I am not
+in like plight to him. If any one accused me, suspected
+me as your father has him, and still more my father
+did it, I'd let these east winds blow over the space I'd
+have filled in this settlement. I'm for adventure as
+it is, though my father cares little what Francis and I
+do, being a reckless, daring man who surely belongs
+not in this psalm-singing company. Giles and I will
+strike out into the wilderness and try our fortunes.
+We will try the savages. They can be no worse than
+white men, nor half as outrageous as your stepmother.
+Why, Con, how can you want your brother tamely to
+sit down under such an insult? No man should be
+called upon to prove himself honest! Giles must be
+off. Let your father find out for himself who is to
+blame for the loss of the papers, and repent too late
+for lending ear to his wife's story."</p>
+
+<p>Constance stared for a moment at John, realizing
+how every word he said found a ready echo in Giles's
+burning heart, how potent would be this unruly
+boy's influence to draw her brother after him, now,
+when Giles was wounded in his two strongest feelings&mdash;his
+pride of honour, his love for his father&mdash;and she
+prayed in her heart for inspiration to deal wisely with
+this difficult situation.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly the inspiration came to her. She found
+it in John's last words.</p>
+
+<p>"Nay, but Jack!" she cried, using Francis's name
+for his brother, disapproved by the elders who would
+have none of nicknames. "If needs be that Giles
+must leave this settlement, if he cannot be happy
+here, let him at least bide till he has cleared his name
+of a foul stain, for his honour's sake, for the sake of
+his dead mother, for my sake, who must abide here
+and cannot escape, being but a girl, young and helpless.
+Is it right that I should be pointed out till I
+am old as the sister of him who was accused of a
+great wrong and, cowardlike, ran away because he
+could not clear himself, nor meet the shame, and so
+admitted his guilt? No! Rather do you, John
+Billington, instead of urging him to run away, bend
+all your wit&mdash;of which you do not lack plenty!&mdash;to
+the ferreting out of this mystery. That would be the
+manly course, the kind course to me, and you have
+always called yourself my friend. Then prove it!
+Help my brother to clear himself and never say one
+more word to urge him away till he can go with a
+stainless name. Our father does not doubt Giles,
+of that I am certain. He is sore beset, and is a
+choleric man. What can any man do when his
+children are on the one hand, and his wife on the
+other? Be patient with our father, Giles, but in any
+case do not go away till this is cleared."</p>
+
+<p>"She talks like a lawyer!" cried John Billington
+with his boisterous laugh "Like&mdash;&mdash;what was that
+play I once saw before I got, or Father got into this
+serious business of being a Puritan? Wrote by a
+fellow called Shakespeare? Ah, I have it! Merchant
+of Venison! In that the girl turns lawyer and
+cozzens the Jew. Connie is another pleader like
+that one. Well, what say you, Giles, my friend?
+Strikes me she is right."</p>
+
+<p>"It is not badly thought of, Constance," admitted
+Giles. "But can it be done? For if Mistress Hopkins
+has had a hand in spiriting away those papers
+for her own advantage and my undoing, then would
+it be hard to prove. What say you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no, no, no!" cried Constance. "Truth is
+mighty, good is stronger than evil! Patience,
+Giles, patience for a while, and let us three bind ourselves
+to clear our good name. Will you, will you
+promise, my brother? And John?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, yes," said Giles, reluctantly; and
+Constance clasped her hands with a cry of joy. "For
+a time I will stay and see what can be done, but not
+for long. Mark you, Con, I do not promise long to
+abide in this unbearable life of mine."</p>
+
+<p>"Sure will I promise, Connie," assented John.
+"Why should I go? I would not go without Giles,
+and it was not for my sake first we were going."</p>
+
+<p>"Giles, dear Giles, thank you, thank you!" cried
+Constance. "I could not have borne it had you not
+yielded. Think of me thus left and be glad that you
+are willing to stand by your one own sister, Giles.
+And let us hope that in staying we shall come upon
+better days. Now I must take this ewer of water to
+poor Humility who is burned and miserable with
+thirst and pain. She will think I am never coming to
+relieve her! Oh, boys, it seems almost wicked to
+think of our good names, of any of our little trials,
+when half our company is so stricken!"</p>
+
+<p>"You are a good girl, Connie," said John Billington,
+awkwardly helping Constance to assume her pitcher,
+his sympathy betrayed by his awkwardness. "I hope
+you are not chilled standing here so long with us."</p>
+
+<p>"No, not I!" said Constance, bravely. "The New
+Year, and the New World are teaching me not to
+mind cold which must be long borne before the year
+grows old. They are teaching me much else, dear
+lads. So good-bye, and bless you!"</p>
+
+<p>"'Twould have been downright contemptible to
+have deserted her," said Giles and John in the same
+breath, and they laughed as they watched her depart.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="p4"><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI</a></h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Stout Hearts and Sad Ones</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>Constance turned away from the boys feeling
+that, till the trouble hanging over Giles was
+settled, waking or sleeping she could think of nothing
+else. When she reached the community house she
+forgot it, nor did it come to her as more than a
+deeper shadow on the universal darkness for weeks.</p>
+
+<p>She found that during her brief absence Edward
+Tilley's wife had died; she had known that she was
+desperately ill, but the end had come suddenly.
+Edward Tilley himself was almost through with his
+struggle, and this would leave Humility, herself a
+very sick child, quite alone, for she had come in her
+cousins' care. Constance bent over her to give her
+the cooling water which she had fetched her.</p>
+
+<p>"Elizabeth and I are alike now," whispered
+Humility, looking up at Constance with eyes dry of
+tears, but full of misery. "Cousin John Tilley was
+her father, and Cousin Edward and his wife but my
+guardians, yet they were all I had." Elizabeth
+Tilley had been orphaned two weeks before, and
+now John Tilley's brother, following him, would
+leave Humility Cooper, as she said, bereft as was
+Elizabeth.</p>
+
+<p>"Not all you had, dear Humility," Constance
+whispered in her ear, afraid to speak aloud for there
+were in the room many sick whom they might disturb.</p>
+
+<p>"My father will protect you, unless there is someone
+whom you would liefer have, and we will be
+sisters and meet the spring with hope and love for
+each other, together."</p>
+
+<p>"They will send for me to come home to England,
+my other cousins, of that I am sure. Elizabeth has
+no one on her side to claim her. But England is far,
+far away, and I am more like to join my cousins,
+John and Edward Tilley and their kind, dear wives
+where they are now than to live to make that fearful
+voyage again," moaned Humility, turning away her
+head despairingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Follow John and Edward Tilley! Yes, but not
+for many a day!" Constance reassured her, shaking
+up the girl's pillow, one deft arm beneath her head to
+raise it.</p>
+
+<p>"Sleep, Humility dear, and do not think. Or
+rather think of how sweetly the wind will blow
+through the pines when the spring sunshine calls you
+out into it, and we go, you and I, to seek what new
+flowers we may find in the New World."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no," Humility moved her head on the
+pillow in negation. "I will be good, Constance; I
+will not murmur. I will remember that I lie here in
+God's hand; but, oh Constance, I cannot think of
+pleasant things, I cannot hope. I will be patient,
+but I cannot hope. Dear, dear, sweet Constance,
+you are like my mother, and yet we are almost one
+age. What should we all do without you, Constance?"</p>
+
+<p>Constance turned away to meet Doctor Fuller's
+grave gaze looking down upon her. "I echo Humility's
+question, Constance Hopkins: What should
+we all do without you? What a blessed thing has
+come to you thus to comfort and help these pilgrims,
+who are sore stricken! Come with me a moment;
+I have something to say to you."</p>
+
+<p>Constance followed this beloved physician into
+the kitchen where her stepmother was busy preparing
+broth, her <i>Mayflower</i> baby, Oceanus, tied in a chair
+on a pillow, Damaris sitting on the floor beside him
+in unnatural quiet.</p>
+
+<p>Dame Eliza looked up as the doctor and Constance
+entered, but instantly dropped her eyes, a dull red
+mounting in her face.</p>
+
+<p>She knew that the girl was ministering to the dying
+with skill and sympathy far beyond her years, and
+she remembered the patient sweetness with which
+Constance, during the voyage over, forgiving her
+injustice, had ministered to her when she was
+suffering&mdash;had tenderly cared for little Damaris.</p>
+
+<p>Dame Eliza had the grace to feel a passing shame,
+though not enough to move her to repentance, to reparation.</p>
+
+<p>"Constance," Doctor Fuller said, "I am going to
+lay upon you a charge too heavy for your youth, but
+unescapable. You know how many of us have been
+laid to rest out yonder, pilgrims indeed, their pilgrimage
+over. Many more are to follow them.
+Mistress Standish among the first, but there are
+many whose end I see at hand. I fear the spring will
+find us a small colony, but those who remain must
+make up in courage for those who have left them. I
+want you to undertake to be my right hand. Priscilla
+Mullins hath already lost her mother, and her father
+and her brother will not see the spring. Yet she keeps
+her steady heart. She will prepare me such remedies
+as I can command here. Truth to tell, the supply I
+brought with me is running low; I did not allow for
+the need of so many of one kind. Priscilla is reliable;
+steady in purpose, memory, and hand. She will see to
+the remedies. But you, brave Constance, will you be
+my medical student, visiting my patients, lingering to
+see that my orders are carried out, nursing, sustaining?
+In a word do what you have already done
+since we landed, but on a greater scale, as an established
+duty?"</p>
+
+<p>"If I can," said Constance, simply.</p>
+
+<p>"You can; there is no one else that I can count
+upon. The older men among us are dying, leaving
+the affairs of the colony to be carried on by the young
+ones. In like manner I must call upon so young a girl
+as you to be my assistant. The older women are doing,
+and must do, still more important work in preparing
+the nourishment on which these lives depend
+and which the young ones are not proficient to prepare."</p>
+
+<p>Doctor Fuller looked smilingly toward Dame Eliza
+as he said this, as if he feared her taking offence at
+Constance's promotion, and sought to placate her.</p>
+
+<p>Mistress Hopkins gave no sign of knowing that he
+had turned to her, but she said to Damaris, as if by
+chance: "This broth may do more than herb brews
+toward curing, though your mother is not a physician's
+aid," and Doctor Fuller knew that he had been
+right.</p>
+
+<p>A week later, though Humility Cooper was recovering,
+many more had fallen ill, and several had
+died.</p>
+
+<p>It was late in January; the winter was set in full of
+wrath against those who had dared array themselves
+to defy its power in the wilderness, but the sun shone
+brightly, though without warmth-giving mercy, upon
+Plymouth.</p>
+
+<p>There was an armed truce between Giles and his
+father. The boy would not beg his father's pardon
+for having defied him. His love for his father had
+been of the nature of hero-worship, and now, turned
+to bitterness, it increased the strength of his pride,
+smarting under false accusation, to resist his father.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand Stephen Hopkins, high-tempered,
+strong of will, was angry and hurt that his
+son refused to justify himself, or to plead with him.
+So the elder and the younger, as Constance had said,
+too much alike, were at a deadlock of suffering and
+anger toward each other.</p>
+
+<p>Stephen Hopkins was beginning his house on what
+he had named Leyden Street, in memory of the
+pilgrims' refuge in Holland, though only by the eyes
+of faith could a street be discerned to bear the name.
+Like all else in Plymouth colony, Leyden Street was
+rather a matter of prophecy than actuality.</p>
+
+<p>Giles was helping to build the house. All day he
+worked in silence, bearing the cold without complaint,
+but in no wise evincing the slightest interest in what
+he did. At night, in spite of the stringent laws of the
+Puritan colony, Giles contrived often to slip away
+with John Billington into the woods. John Billington's
+father, who was as unruly as his boys, connived
+at these escapades. He was perpetually quarrelling
+with Myles Standish, whose duty it was to enforce
+the law, and who did that duty without relenting,
+although by all the colonists, except the Billingtons,
+he was loved as well as respected.</p>
+
+<p>Early one morning Constance hurried out of the
+community house, tears running down her cheeks, to
+meet Captain Myles coming toward it.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, pretty Constance, don't grieve, child!"
+said the Plymouth captain, heartily.</p>
+
+<p>"Giles hath come to no harm, I warrant you,
+though he has spent the night again with that harum-scarum
+Jack Billington, and this time Francis
+Billington, too."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Captain Standish, it is not Giles! I forgot
+Giles," gasped Constance.</p>
+
+<p>"Rose?" exclaimed the captain, sharply.</p>
+
+<p>Constance bent her head. "She is passing. I
+came to seek you," she said, and together she and the
+captain went to Rose's side.</p>
+
+<p>They found Doctor Fuller there holding Rose's
+hand as she lay with closed eyes, breathing lightly.
+In his other hand he held his watch measuring the
+brief moments left, in which Rose Standish should be
+a part of time. Mary Brewster, the elder's wife,
+held up a warning finger not to disturb Rose, but
+Doctor Fuller looked quietly toward Captain Standish.</p>
+
+<p>"It matters not now, Myles," he said. "You
+cannot harm her. There are but few moments left."</p>
+
+<p>Myles Standish sprang forward, fell upon his knees,
+and raised Rose in his arms.</p>
+
+<p>"Rose of the world, my English blossom, what
+have I done to bring thee here?" he sobbed, with a
+strong man's utter abandonment of grief, and with
+none of the Puritan habit of self-restraint.</p>
+
+<p>"Wherever thou hadst gone, I would have chosen,
+my husband! I loved thee, Myles, I loved thee
+Myles!" she said, so clearly that everyone heard her
+sweet voice echo to the farthest corner of the room,
+and for the last time.</p>
+
+<p>For with that supreme effort to comfort her husband,
+disarming his regret, Rose Standish died.</p>
+
+<p>They bore Rose's body, so light that it was scarce
+a burden to the two men who carried it as in a litter,
+forth to the spot upon the hillside whither they had
+already made so many similar processions, which was
+fast becoming as thickly populated as was that portion
+of the colony occupied by the living.</p>
+
+<p>But as the sun mounted higher, although the
+March winds cut on some days, then as now they do
+in March, yet, then as now, there were soft and
+dreamy days under the ascending sun's rays, made
+more effective by the moderating sea and flat sands.</p>
+
+<p>The devastating diseases of winter began to abate;
+the pale, weak remnants of the <i>Mayflower's</i> passengers
+crept out to walk with a sort of wonder upon the
+earth which was new to them, and which they had so
+nearly quitted that nothing, even of those aspects of
+things that most recalled the home land, seemed to
+them familiar.</p>
+
+<p>The men began to break the soil for farming, and
+to bring forth and discuss the grain which they had
+found hidden by the savages&mdash;most fortunately,
+for without it there would have been starvation to
+look forward to after all that they had endured,
+since no supplies from England had yet come after
+them.</p>
+
+<p>There was talk of the <i>Mayflower's</i> return; she had
+lain all winter in Plymouth harbour because the
+Pilgrims had required her shelter and assistance.
+Soon she was to depart, a severance those ashore
+dreaded, albeit there was well-grounded lack of
+confidence in the honesty of her captain, Jones,
+whom the more outspoken among the colonists denounced
+openly as a rascal.</p>
+
+<p>Little Damaris was fretful, as she so often was,
+one afternoon early in March; the child was not
+strong and consequently was peevish. Constance
+was trying to amuse her, sitting with the child,
+warmly wrapped from the keen wind, in the warmth
+of the sunshine behind the southern wall of the community
+house.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me a story, Constance," begged Damaris,
+though it was not "a story," but several that Constance
+had already told her. "Make a fairy story.
+I won't tell Mother you did. Fairy stories are not
+lies, no matter what they say, are they, Connie? I
+know they are not true and you tell me they are not
+true, so why are they lies? Why does Mother say
+they are lies? Are they bad, are they, Connie? Tell
+me one, anyway; I won't tell her."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, little Sister, I would rather not do things that
+we cannot tell your mother about," said Constance.
+"I do not think a fairy story is wrong, because we
+both know it is make-believe, that there are no
+fairies, but your mother thinks them wrong, and I
+do not want you to do what you will not tell her you
+do. Suppose you tell me a story, instead? That
+would be fairer; only think how many, many stories
+I have told you, and how long it is since you have told
+me the least little word of one!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well," agreed Damaris, but without enthusiasm.
+"What shall I tell you about? Not a Bible one."</p>
+
+<p>"No, perhaps not," Constance answered, looking
+lazily off to sea. Then, because she was looking seaward,
+she added:</p>
+
+<p>"Shall it be one about a sailor? That ought to be
+an interesting story."</p>
+
+<p>"A true sailor, or a made-up one?" asked Damaris,
+getting aroused to her task.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know one about a real sailor?" Constance
+somewhat sleepily inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"Here is a true one," announced Damaris.</p>
+
+<p>"Once upon a time there was a sailor, and he sailed
+on a ship named the <i>Mayflower</i>. And he came in.
+And he said: How are you, little girl? And I said:
+I am pretty well, but my name is Damaris Hopkins.
+And he said: What a nice name. And I said: Yes, it
+is. And he said: Where is your folks? and I said:
+I don't know where my mother went out of the cabin
+just this minute. But my sister was around, and my
+brother Giles was here, fixing my hammock, 'cause
+it hung funny and let me roll over on myself and
+folded me hurt. And my other brother couldn't go
+nowheres 'tall, because he was born when we was
+sailing here, and he can't walk. And the sailor man
+said: Yes, there were two babies on the ship when we
+came that we didn't have when we started, and show
+me your hammock. And I did, and he said it was a
+nice ham&mdash;&mdash;Constance, what's the matter? I felt
+you jump, and you look scared. Is it Indians?
+Connie, Connie, don't let 'em get me!"</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, child, there aren't any Indians about,"
+Constance tried to laugh. "Did I jump? Sometimes
+people do jump when they almost fall asleep,
+and I was just as sleepy as a fireside cat when you began
+to tell me the story. Now I am not one bit
+sleepy! That is the most interesting story I have
+heard almost&mdash;yes, I think quite&mdash;in all my life!
+And it is a true one?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, every bit true," said Damaris, proudly.</p>
+
+<p>"And the sailor went into the cabin, and saw your
+hammock, and said it was a nice one, did he? Well,
+so it is a nice one! Did your mother see the man?"
+asked Constance, trying to hide her impatience.</p>
+
+<p>"No," Damaris shook her head, decidedly.
+"Mother was coming, but the man just put his hand
+in and set my hammock swinging. Then he went
+out, and Mother was stopping and she didn't see him.
+And neither did I, not any more, ever again."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you tell your mother about this sailor?"
+Constance inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no," sighed Damaris. "I didn't tell her.
+She doesn't like stories so much as we do. I tell you
+all my stories, and you tell me all yours, don't we,
+Constance? I didn't tell Mother. She says: 'That's
+Hopkins to like stories, and music, and art.' What's
+art, Connie? And she says: 'You don't get those
+idle ways from my side, so don't let me hear any foolish
+talk, for you will be punished for idle talk.'
+What's that, Connie?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, idle talk is&mdash;idle talk is hard to explain to you,
+little Damaris! It is talk that has nothing to it,
+unless it may have something harmful to it. You'll
+understand when you are old enough to make what
+you do really matter. But this has not been idle
+talk to-day! Far, far from idle talk was that fine
+story you told me! Suppose we keep that story all to
+ourselves, not tell it to anyone at all, will you please,
+my darling little sister? Then, perhaps, some day, I
+will ask you to tell it to Father! Would not that be a
+great day for Damaris? But only if you don't tell
+it to any one till then, not to your mother, not to
+any one!" Constance insisted, hoping to impress the
+child to the point of secrecy, yet not to let her feel
+how much Constance herself set upon this request.</p>
+
+<p>"I won't! I won't tell it to any one; not to Mother,
+not to any one," Damaris repeated the form of her
+vow. Then she looked up into Constance's face with
+a puzzled frown.</p>
+
+<p>"But you wouldn't tell a fairy story, because you
+said you didn't want things I couldn't tell mother!
+And now you say I mustn't tell her about my story!"
+she said.</p>
+
+<p>Constance burst out laughing, and hugged Damaris
+to her, hiding in the child's hood a merrier face than
+she had worn for many, many a day.</p>
+
+<p>"You have caught me, little Damaris!" she cried.
+"Caught me fairly! But that was a <i>fairy</i> story,
+don't you see? This isn't, this is true. So this is
+not to be told, not now, do you see?"</p>
+
+<p>Damaris said "yes," slowly, with the frown in her
+smooth little brow deepening. It was puzzling;
+she did not really see, but since Constance expected
+her to see she said "yes," and felt curiously bewildered.
+However, what Constance said was to her small half-sister
+not merely law, but gospel. Constance was
+always right, always the most lovable, the most delightful
+person whom Damaris knew.</p>
+
+<p>"All right, Connie. I won't tell anyone my sailor-man
+story," she said at last, clearing up.</p>
+
+<p>"Just now," Constance supplemented her. "Some
+day you shall tell it, Damaris! Some day I shall
+want you to tell it! And now, little Sister, will you go
+into the house and tell Oceanus to hurry up and grow
+big enough to run about, because the world, our new
+world, is getting to be a lovely place in the spring
+sunshine, and he must grow big enough to enjoy it as
+fast as he can? I must find Giles; I have something
+beautiful, beautiful to tell him!"</p>
+
+<p>She kissed Damaris before setting her on her feet,
+and the child kissed her in return, clinging to her.</p>
+
+<p>"You are so funny, Constance!" she said, in great
+satisfaction with her sister's drollery in a world that
+had been filled with gloom and illness for what seemed
+to so young a child, almost all her life.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, I want to be, Damaris! I want to be funny,
+and happy, and glad! Oh, I want to be!" cried
+Constance, and ran away at top speed with a rare
+relapse into her proper age and condition.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="p4"><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII</a></h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">The Persuasive Power of Justice and Violence</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>John Billington had been forced reluctantly
+to work on the houses erecting in the
+Plymouth plantation.</p>
+
+<p>He was not lazy, but he was adventuresome, and
+steady employment held for him no attraction.
+Since Captain Standish and the others in authority
+would deal with him if he tried to shirk his share of
+daily work, John made it as bearable as possible by
+joining himself to Giles in the building of the Hopkins
+house. Constance knew that she should find
+the two boys building her future home, and thither
+she ran at her best speed, and Constance could run
+like a nymph.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Giles!" she panted, coming up to the two
+amateur carpenters, and rejoicing that they were
+alone.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Con!" Giles echoed, turning on his ladder to
+face her, half sitting on a rung. "What's forward?
+Hath the king sent messengers calling me home to be
+prime minister? Sorry to disappoint His Royal
+Highness, but I can't go. I'd liefer be a trapper!"</p>
+
+<p>"And that's what your appointment is!" triumphed
+Constance. "You're to trap big game, no less than
+a human rascal! Oh, Giles and Jack, do hear what
+I've got to tell you!"</p>
+
+<p>"But for us to hear, you must tell, Con!" John
+Billington reminded her. "I'll bet a golden doubloon
+you've got wind of the missing papers!"</p>
+
+<p>"We don't bet, Jack, but if we did you'd win your
+wager," Constance laughed. "Damaris told me
+'a true story,' and now I'm going to tell it to you.
+Fancy that little person having this story tucked
+away in her brain all these weary days!"</p>
+
+<p>And Constance related Damaris's entertainment of
+her, to which John Billington listened with many
+running comments of tongue and whistled exclamations,
+but Giles in perfect silence, betraying no excitement.</p>
+
+<p>"Here's a merry chance, Giles!" John cried as
+soon as Constance ended. "What with savages
+likely to visit us and robbers for us to hunt, why life
+in the New World may be bearable after all!"</p>
+
+<p>Giles ignored his jubilant comment.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall go out to the <i>Mayflower</i> and get the
+packet," he said. "It is too late to-day, but in the
+morning early I shall make it. I suppose you will go
+with me, Jack?"</p>
+
+<p>"Safe to suppose it," said John. "I'd swim after
+you if you started without me."</p>
+
+<p>"Won't you take Captain Standish? I mean
+won't you ask him to help you?" asked Constance,
+anxiously. "It is sufficient matter to engage him,
+and he is our protector in all dangers."</p>
+
+<p>"We need no protection, little Sis," said Giles,
+loftily. "It hath been my experience that a just
+cause is sufficient. We have suspected the master
+of the <i>Mayflower</i> of trickery all along."</p>
+
+<p>Constance could not forbear a smile at her brother's
+worldly-wise air of deep knowledge of mankind, but
+nevertheless she wished that "the right arm of the
+colony" might be with the boys to strike for them if
+need were.</p>
+
+<p>It was with no misgiving as to their own ability,
+but with the highest glee, that Giles and John made
+their preparations to set forth just before dawn.</p>
+
+<p>They kept their own counsel strictly and warned
+Constance not to talk.</p>
+
+<p>There was not much to be done to make ready,
+merely to see that the small boat, built by the boys
+for their own use, was tight, and to tuck out of sight
+under her bow seat a heavy coat in case the east wind&mdash;which
+the pilgrims had soon learned was likely to
+come in upon them sharply on the warmest day&mdash;blew
+up chillingly.</p>
+
+<p>John Billington owned, by his father's reckless indulgence,
+a pistol that was his chief treasure; a heavy,
+clumsy thing, difficult to hold true, liable to do the
+unexpected, the awkward progenitor of the pretty
+modern revolver, but a pistol for all its defects, and
+the apple of John's eye. This he had named Bouncing
+Bully, invariably spoke of it as "he", and felt toward
+it and treated it not merely as his arms, but as
+his companion in arms.</p>
+
+<p>Bouncing Bully was to make the third member of
+the party; he accompanied John, hidden with difficulty
+because of his bulk, in the breast of his coat,
+when he crept out without disturbing his father and
+Francis, to join Giles at the spot on the shore where
+their flat-bottomed row boat was pulled up.</p>
+
+<p>He found Giles awaiting him, watching the sands
+in a crude hour glass which he had himself constructed.</p>
+
+<p>"I've been waiting an hour," Giles said as John
+came up. "I know you are not late, but all the same
+here I have stood while this glass ran out, with ten
+minutes more since I turned it again."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'm here now; take hold and run her out,"
+said John, seizing the boat's bow and bracing to shove
+her.</p>
+
+<p>"Row out. I'll row back," commanded Giles as
+he and John swung over the side of the boat out of
+the waves into which they had waded.</p>
+
+<p>They did not talk as they advanced upon the <i>Mayflower</i>
+which lay at anchor in the harbour. They had
+agreed upon boarding her with as little to announce
+their coming as possible. As it chanced, there being
+no need of guarding against surprise, there was no one
+on deck when the boys made their boat fast to the
+ship's cable, and clambered on deck&mdash;save one round-faced
+man who was swabbing the deck to the accompaniment
+of his droning a song, tuneless outside
+his own conception of it.</p>
+
+<p>"Lord bless and save us but you dafted me, young
+masters!" this man exclaimed when Giles and John
+appeared; he leaned against the rail with the air of a
+fine lady, funny to see in one so stoutly stalwart.</p>
+
+<p>"I didna know ye at sight; now I see 'tis Master
+Giles and Master John Billington, whose pranks was
+hard on us crossing."</p>
+
+<p>"You are not the man we want," said Giles, haughtily,
+trusting to assurance to win his end. "Fetch
+me that man who goes in and about the cabin at
+times, the one that stands well with Jones, the ship's
+master."</p>
+
+<p>This last was a gamble on chance, but Giles felt
+sure of his conclusions, that the captain was at the
+bottom of the loss of the papers, the actual thief his
+tool.</p>
+
+<p>"Aye, I know un," said the man, nodding sagely,
+proud of his quickness. "'Tis George Heaton, I
+make no doubt. The captain gives him what is another,
+better man's due. Master Jones gives him his
+ear and his favour. 'Tis George, slick George, you
+want, of that I'm certain." He nodded many times
+as he ended.</p>
+
+<p>"Likely thing," agreed Giles. "Fetch him."</p>
+
+<p>The deck cleaner departed in a heavy fashion, and
+returned shortly in company with a wiry, slender
+young man, having a handsome face, a quick roving
+eye, crafty, but clever.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, George, do you remember me?" asked Giles.
+"Don't dare to offer me your hand, my man, for I'd
+not touch it."</p>
+
+<p>"I may be serving as a sailor, but I'm as good a
+gentleman born as you," retorted Heaton, flushing
+angrily.</p>
+
+<p>"Decently born you may be; of that I know nothing.
+Pity is it that you have gone so far from your
+birthday," said Giles. "But as good a gentleman as
+I am you are not, nor as anyone, as this honest fellow
+here. For blood or no blood, a thief is far from a
+gentleman."</p>
+
+<p>George Heaton made a step forward with upraised
+fist, but Giles looked at him contemptuously, and did
+not fall back.</p>
+
+<p>"No play acting here. Give me the papers you
+stole out of my stepmother's care, out of my little
+sister's sleeping hammock, weeks agone," said Giles,
+coolly. "Your game is up. For some reason the
+child did not tell us of your act till now; now she hath
+spoken. Fortunately the ship hath lingered for you
+to be dealt with before she took you back to England.
+Hand over the papers, Heaton, if you ever hope to be
+nearer England than the arm of the tree from which
+you shall hang on the New England coast, unless you
+restore your booty."</p>
+
+<p>Heaton looked into Giles's angry eyes and quailed.
+The boy had grown up during the hard winter, and
+Heaton recognized his master; more than that, he had
+the cowardice that had made him the ready tool of
+Captain Jones&mdash;the cowardice of the man who lives by
+tricks, trusting them to carry him to success&mdash;who will
+not stand by his colours because he has no standard of
+loyalty.</p>
+
+<p>"I haven't got your father's papers, Giles Hopkins,"
+he growled, dropping his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"You could have said much that I would not have
+believed, but that I believe," said Giles. "Do you
+know what Master Jones did with them when you
+gave them over to him, you miserable cat's paw?"</p>
+
+<p>"How about giving the cat to the cat's paw, Giles?"
+suggested John, grinning in huge enjoyment of
+George Heaton's instant, sailor's appreciation of his
+joke and the offices of "the cat" with which sailors
+were lashed in punishment.</p>
+
+<p>"I hope it will not be necessary. If Captain
+Standish comes with a picked number of our men to
+get these papers, there will be worse beasts than the
+cat let loose on the <i>Mayflower</i>. Lead me to the
+captain, Heaton, and remember it will go hard with
+you if you let him lead you into denial of the crime you
+committed for him," said Giles, with such a dignity
+as filled rollicking John, who wanted to turn the adventure
+into a frolic, with admiration for his comrade.</p>
+
+<p>"Stand by you and Jones will deal with me.
+Stand by him and you threaten me with your men,
+led by that fighting Standish of yours. Between you
+where does George Heaton stand?" asked Heaton
+sullenly, turning, nevertheless, to do Giles's bidding.</p>
+
+<p>"You should have thought of this before," said
+Giles, coolly. "There never yet was wisdom and
+safety in rascality."</p>
+
+<p>Captain Jones, whose connection with the pilgrims
+was no more than that he had been hired by them to
+bring them to the New World, was a man whose
+honesty many of his passengers mistrusted, but
+against whom, as against the captain of the <i>Speedwell</i>
+that had turned back, there was no proof.</p>
+
+<p>He was coming out of his cabin to his breakfast
+when Heaton brought the boys to him; he started
+visibly at the sight of Giles, but recovered himself
+instantly and greeted the lads affably.</p>
+
+<p>"Good morning, my erstwhile passengers and new
+colonists," he said. "I have wondered that at least
+the younger members of your community did not
+visit the ship. Welcome!" He held out his hand,
+but neither Giles nor John seemed to see it.</p>
+
+<p>"Master Jones," said Giles, "there is no use wasting
+time and phrases. This man, at your orders,
+stole out of the women's cabin on this ship the papers
+left by my father in his wife's care. He has given
+them up to you. The story has only now&mdash;yesterday&mdash;come
+to our knowledge. Give me those papers."</p>
+
+<p>"What right have you to accuse me, <i>me</i>, the
+master of this ship?" demanded Captain Jones,
+blustering. "Have a care that I don't throw you
+overboard. Take your boat and be gone before harm
+comes to you!"</p>
+
+<p>"You would throw more than us overboard if you
+dared to touch us," returned Giles. "Nor is it
+either of us to whom harm threatens. Come, Master
+Jones, those papers! My father, none of the colony,
+knows of your crime. What do you think will befall
+you when they do know it? Hand us the papers, not
+one lacking, and we will let you go back to England
+free and safe. Refuse&mdash;&mdash;Well, it's for you to choose,
+but I'd not hesitate in your place." Giles shrugged
+his shoulders, half turning away, as if after all the
+result of his mission did not concern him.</p>
+
+<p>John saw a telepathic message exchanged between
+the captain and his tool. The question wordlessly
+asked Heaton whether the theft of the papers, their
+possession by the captain, actually was known, and
+Heaton's eyes answering: "Yes!"</p>
+
+<p>Captain Jones swallowed hard, as if he were
+swallowing a great dose, as he surely was. After a
+moment's thought he spoke:</p>
+
+<p>"See here, Giles Hopkins, I always liked you, and
+now I father admire you for your courage in thus
+boarding my ship and bearding me. I admit that I
+hold the papers. But, as of course you can easily
+see, I am neither a thief nor a receiver of stolen goods.
+My reason for wanting those papers was no common
+one. I am willing to restore to you those which relate
+to your family inheritance, your father's personal
+papers, but those which relate to Plymouth colony I
+want. I can use them to my advantage in England.
+Take this division of the documents and go back
+with my congratulations on your conduct."</p>
+
+<p>"I would liefer your blame than your praise, sir,"
+said Giles, haughtily, in profound disgust with the
+man. "It needs no saying that my father would
+part with any private advantage sooner than with
+what had been entrusted to him. First and most I
+demand the Plymouth colony documents. Get the
+papers, not one lacking, and let me go ashore. The
+wide harbour's winds are not strong enough for me to
+breathe on your ship. It sickens me."</p>
+
+<p>Captain Jones gave the boy a malevolent look.</p>
+
+<p>"A virtue of necessity," he muttered, turning to go.</p>
+
+<p>"And your sole virtue?" suggested Giles to his
+retreating back.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Jones was gone a long time. The boys
+fumed with impatience and feared harm to the papers,
+but George Heaton grinned at them with the utmost
+cheerfulness. He had completely sloughed off all
+share in the theft and plainly enjoyed his superior's
+discomfiture, being of that order of creatures whose
+malice revels in the mischances of others.</p>
+
+<p>It proved that the captain's delay was due to his
+reluctance to comply with Giles's demand. He came
+at last, slowly, bearing in his hand the packet enveloped
+in oilskin which Giles remembered having
+seen in his father's possession.</p>
+
+<p>"I must do your bidding, youngster," he said
+angrily, "for you can harm me otherwise. But what
+guarantee have I, if I hand these papers to you, that
+you will keep the secret?"</p>
+
+<p>"I never said that the secret would be kept; I said
+that you should suffer no harm. An innocent person
+is accused of this theft; the truth must be known.
+But I can and do promise you that you shall not be
+molested; I can answer for that. As to guarantee,
+you know my father, you know the Plymouth
+pilgrims, you know me. Is there any doubt that we
+are honourable, conscientious, God-fearing, the sort
+that faithfully keep their word?" demanded Giles.</p>
+
+<p>"No. I grant you that. Take your packet,"
+said Captain Jones, yielding it.</p>
+
+<p>"By your leave I will examine it," said Giles unfastening
+its straps.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you doubt me?" blustered the captain.</p>
+
+<p>"Not a whit," laughed John with a great burst of
+mirth, before Giles could answer.</p>
+
+<p>"Why should we doubt you? Haven't you shown
+us exactly what you are?"</p>
+
+<p>Giles turned over the papers one by one. None
+was missing. He folded them and replaced them in
+their case, buckling its straps.</p>
+
+<p>"All the papers are here," he said. "John, we'll
+be off. This is our final visit to the <i>Mayflower</i>,
+Master Jones&mdash;unless I ship with you for England.
+Good voyage, as I hear they say in France. Hope
+you'll catch a bit of Puritan conscience before you
+leave the harbour."</p>
+
+<p>Captain Jones followed the boys to the side of the
+ship where they were to re&euml;mbark in their rowboat.
+At every step he grew angrier, the veins swelled in his
+forehead which was only a shade less purple-red than
+his cheeks. His defeat was a sore thing, the disappointment
+of the plans which he had laid upon the
+possession of the stolen documents became more
+vividly realized with each moment, and the fact that
+two lads had thus conquered him and were going
+away with their prize infuriated him.</p>
+
+<p>Giles had swung himself down into the boat and
+was shipping the oars, but John halted for a moment
+in a stuffy corner to gloat over the captain's empurpled
+face and to dally with a temptation to add
+picturesqueness to their departure. The temptation
+got the upper hand of him, though John usually held
+out both hands to mischief.</p>
+
+<p>He drew Bouncing Bully from his breast and
+levelled it.</p>
+
+<p>"Stop! Gunpowder!" screamed the captain,
+choking with fear and rage, and pointing at a small
+keg that stood hard by.</p>
+
+<p>"I won't hit it," John grinned, delightedly. "Let's
+see how <i>my</i> gunpowder is." With a flourish the
+mad boy fired a shot into the wall of the tiny cabin,
+regardless of the fact that the likely explosion of
+the keg of gunpowder would have blown up the
+<i>Mayflower</i> and him with her.</p>
+
+<p>The captain fell forward on his face, the men who
+were at work splicing ropes in the cubby-like cabin
+cowered speechless, their faces ashen.</p>
+
+<p>John whooped with joy and fled, leaping into the
+rowboat which he nearly upset.</p>
+
+<p>"What?" demanded Giles. "Who shot? Did he
+attack you, Jack?"</p>
+
+<p>"Who? No one attacked me. I shot. Zounds,
+they were scared! In that pocket of a cabin, with a
+keg of gunpowder sitting close," chuckled John.</p>
+
+<p>"What in the name of all that's sane did you do
+that for?" cried Giles. "Scared! I should say with
+reason! Why, Jack Billington, you might be blown
+to bits by this time, ship, men, yourself, and all!"</p>
+
+<p>"I might be," assented Jack, coolly. "I'm not.
+Giles, you should have seen your shipmaster Jones!
+Flat on his face and fair blubbering with fear and
+fury! He loves us not, my Giles! I doubt his days
+are dull on the <i>Mayflower</i>, so long at anchor. 'Twas
+but kind to stir up a lively moment. Here, give me
+an oar! Even though you said you would row back,
+I feel like helping you. Wait till I settle Bouncing
+Bully. He's digging me in the ribs, to remind me of
+the joke we played 'em, I've no doubt; but he hurts.
+That's better. Now for shore and your triumph, old
+Giles!"</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="p4"><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII</a></h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Deep Love, Deep Wound</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>Constance had escaped from Humility
+Cooper and Elizabeth Tilley who had affectionately
+joined her when she had appeared on her
+way to the beach to await Giles's return.</p>
+
+<p>Constance invented a question that must be asked
+Elder Brewster because she knew that the girls,
+though they revered him, feared him, and never
+willingly went where they must reply to his gravely
+kind attempts at conversation with them. "I
+surely feel like a wicked hypocrite," sighed Constance,
+watching her friends away as she turned toward
+the house that sheltered the elder.</p>
+
+<p>"What would dear little Humility say if she knew I
+had tried to get rid of her? Or Elizabeth either!
+But it isn't as though I had not wanted them for a
+less good reason. I do love them dearly! I must
+meet Giles and hear his news as soon as I can, and
+it can't be told before another. Mercy upon us,
+what <i>was</i> it that I had thought of to ask Elder Brewster!
+I've forgotten every syllable of it! Well,
+mercy upon us! And suppose he sees me hesitating
+here! I know! I'll confess to him that I was wishing
+I was in Warwickshire hearing Eastertide
+alleluias sung in my cousins' church, and ask him if
+it was sinful. He loves to correct me, dear old saint!"</p>
+
+<p>Dimpling with mischief Constance turned her
+head away from a possible onlooker in the house to
+pull her face down into the proper expression for a
+youthful seeker for guidance. Then, quite demure
+and serious, with downcast eyes, she turned and
+went into the house.</p>
+
+<p>Elder William Brewster kept her some time. She
+was nervously anxious to escape, fearing to miss the
+boys' arrival. But Elder Brewster was deeply interested
+in pretty Constance Hopkins, in whom, in
+spite of her sweet docility and patient daily performance
+of her hard tasks, he discerned glimpses of
+girlish liveliness that made him anxious and which he
+felt must be corrected to bring the dear girl into
+perfection.</p>
+
+<p>Constance decided that she was expiating fully
+whatever fault there might have been in feigning an
+errand to Elder Brewster to get rid of the girls as she
+sat uneasily listening to that good man's exposition
+of the value of alleluias in the heart above those sung
+in church, and the baseness of allowing the mind to
+look back for a moment at the "shackles from which
+she was freed." Good Elder Brewster ended by
+reading from his roughened brown leather-covered
+Bible the story of Lot's wife to which Constance&mdash;who
+had heard it many times, it being an appropriate
+theme for the pilgrim band to ponder, sick in heart
+and body as they had been so long&mdash;did not harken.</p>
+
+<p>At last she was dismissed with a fatherly hand laid
+on her shining head, and a last warning to keep in
+mind how favoured above her English cousins she
+had been to be chosen a daughter in Israel to help
+found a kingdom of righteousness. Constance ran
+like the wind down the road, stump-bordered, the
+beginning of a street, and came down upon the beach
+just as the boys reached it and their boat bumped up
+on the sand under the last three hard pulls they had
+given the oars in unison.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! Giles, oh, Giles, oh Jack!" cried Constance
+fairly dancing under her excitement.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Con, oh, Con! Oh, Constantia!" mocked
+John, hauling away on the painter and getting the
+boat up to her tying stake.</p>
+
+<p>"What happened you? Have you news?" Constance
+implored them.</p>
+
+<p>"We heard no especial news, Con," said Giles.
+"I'm not sure we asked for any. We have this
+instead; will that suffice you?"</p>
+
+<p>He took from his breast the packet of papers and
+offered it to her.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Giles!" sighed Constance, clasping her hands,
+tears of relief springing to her eyes. "All of them?
+Are they all safe? Thank Heaven!" she added as
+Giles nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you have trouble getting them? Who held
+them? Tell me everything!"</p>
+
+<p>"Give me a chance Constantia Chatter," said
+Giles, using the name Constance had been dubbed
+when, a little tot, she ceaselessly used her new
+accomplishment of talking. "We had no trouble, no.
+We found the thief and made him confess what we
+already knew, that he was the master's cat's paw.
+Jones had to disgorge; he could not hold the papers
+without paying too heavy a penalty. So here they
+are. Why don't you take them?"</p>
+
+<p>"I take them?" puzzled Constance, accepting
+them as Giles thrust them into her hand. "Do you
+want me to put them away for you? Are you not
+coming to dinner? There is not enough time to go
+to work before noon. The sun was not two hours
+from our noon mark beside the house when I left
+it."</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose I am going to dinner," said Giles. "I
+am ready enough for it. No, I don't want you to
+put the papers away for me. You can do with them
+what you like. I should advise your giving them to
+Father, since they are his, but that is as you will. I
+give them into your hands."</p>
+
+<p>"Giles, Giles!" cried Constance, in distress, instantly
+guessing that this meant that Giles was
+intending to hold aloof from a part in rejoicing over
+the recovery.</p>
+
+<p>"Give them to Father yourself. How proud of
+you he will be that you ferreted out the thief and
+went so bravely, with only John, to demand them
+for him! It is not my honour, and I must not
+take it."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, as to honour, you got the first clue from
+Damaris, if there's honour in it, but for that I do not
+care. I did the errand when you sent me on it, or
+opened my way. However it came about I will not
+give the papers to my father. In no wise will I
+stoop to set myself right in his eyes. Perhaps he
+will say that the whole story is false, that I did not
+get the papers on the ship, but had them hidden till
+fear and an uneasy conscience made me deliver them
+up, and that you are shielding your brother," said
+Giles, frowning as he turned from Constance.</p>
+
+<p>"And I thought now everything would be right!"
+groaned the girl&mdash;her lips quivering, tears running
+down her cheeks. "Giles, dear Giles; don't, don't be
+so bitter, so unforgiving! It is not just to Father, not
+just to yourself, to me. It isn't <i>right</i>. Giles! Will
+you hold this grudge against the father you so loved,
+and forget all the years that went before, for a
+miserable day when he half harboured doubt of you,
+and that when he was torn by influence, tormented
+till he was hardly himself?"</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Constance, there is no need of your turning
+preacher," Giles said, harshly.</p>
+
+<p>"If you like to swallow insult, well and good. It
+does not matter about a girl, but a man's honour is
+his chiefest possession. Take the papers, and prate
+no more to me. My father wanted them; there they
+are. He suspected me of stealing them; I found the
+thief. That's all there is about it. What is there
+to-day to eat? An early row makes a man hungry.
+Art ready, Jack? We will go to the house, by your
+leave, pretty Sis. Sorry to see your eyes reddening,
+but better that than other harm."</p>
+
+<p>Constance hesitated as Giles went up the beach,
+taking John with him. For a moment she debated
+seeking Captain Standish, giving him the papers, and
+asking him to be intermediary between her father and
+this headstrong boy, who talked so largely of himself
+as "a man," and behaved with such wrong-headed,
+childish obstinacy. But a second thought convinced
+her that she herself might serve Giles better
+than the captain, and she took her way after her
+brother, beginning to hope, true to herself, that her
+father's pleasure in recovering the papers, his
+desire to make amends to Giles, would express itself
+in such wise that they would be drawn together
+closer than before the trouble arose.</p>
+
+<p>It was turning into a balmy day, after a chilly
+morning. Though only the middle of March the air
+was full of spring. In the community house, as
+Constance entered, she found her stepmother, and
+Mrs. White&mdash;each with her <i>Mayflower</i>-born baby
+held in one arm&mdash;busily setting forth the dinner,
+while Priscilla and Humility and Elizabeth helped
+them, and the smaller children, headed by Damaris,
+attempted to help, were sharply rebuked for getting
+in the way, subsided, but quickly darted up again to
+take a dish, or hand a knife which their inconsistent
+elders found needed.</p>
+
+<p>Several men&mdash;Mr. Hopkins, Mr. White; Mr.
+Warren, whose wife had not yet come from England;
+Doctor Fuller, in like plight; John and Francis
+Billington's father, John Alden and Captain Myles
+Standish, as a matter of course&mdash;were discussing
+planting of corn while awaiting the finishing touches
+to their carefully rationed noonday meal.</p>
+
+<p>"If you follow my counsel," the captain was saying,
+"you will plant over the spot where we have laid so
+many of our company. Thus far we hardly are
+aware of our savage neighbours, but with the warm
+weather they will come forth from their woodlands,
+and who knows what may befall us from them?
+Better, say I, conceal from them that no more than
+half of those who sailed hither are here to-day.
+Better hide from their eyes beneath the tall maize
+the graves on yonder hillside."</p>
+
+<p>"Well said, good counsel, Captain Myles," said
+Stephen Hopkins. "God's acre, the folk of parts of
+Europe call the enclosure of their dead. We will
+make our acre God's acre, planting it doubly for our
+protection, in grain for our winter need, concealment
+of our devastation."</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly the air was rent with a piercing shriek,
+and little Love Brewster, the Elder's seven-year-old
+son, came tumbling into the house, shaking and
+inarticulate with terror.</p>
+
+<p>Priscilla Mullins caught him into her lap and tried
+to sooth him and discover the cause of his fright, but
+he only waved his little hands frantically and sobbed
+beyond all possibility of guessing what words were
+smothered beneath the sobs.</p>
+
+<p>"Elder Brewster promised to let the child pass the
+afternoon with Damaris," began Mrs. Hopkins, but
+before she got farther John Alden started up.</p>
+
+<p>"Look there," he said. "Is it wonderful that
+Love finds the sight beyond him?"</p>
+<p class="center image"><a name="lookthere" id="lookthere"></a><img src="images/lookthere.jpg" alt="Look there, said John Alden" title="Look there, said John Alden" width="500" height="319" /></p>
+<p class="caption center">"'Look there,' said John Alden"</p>
+
+<p>Stalking toward the house in all the awful splendour
+of paint, feathers, beads, and gaudy blanket came
+a tall savage. He had, of course, seen the child and
+realized his fright and that he had run to alarm the
+pilgrims, but not a whit did it alter the steady pace
+at which he advanced, looking neither to left nor to
+right, his arms folded upon his breast, no sign apparent
+of whether he came in friendship or in enmity.</p>
+
+<p>The first instinct of the colonists, in this first encounter
+with an Indian near to the settlement was to
+be prepared in case he came in enmity.</p>
+
+<p>Several of the men reached for the guns which hung
+ready on the walls, and took them down, examining
+their horns and rods as they handled them. But the
+savage, standing in the doorway, made a gesture full
+of calm dignity which the pilgrims rightly construed
+to mean salutation, and uttered a throaty sound that
+plainly had the same import.</p>
+
+<p>"Welcome!" hazarded Myles Standish advancing
+with outstretched hand upon the new-comer, uncertain
+how to begin his acquaintance, but hoping this
+might be pleasing. "Yes," said the Indian in English,
+to the boundless surprise of the Englishmen.
+"Yes, welcome, friend!" He took Captain Standish's
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Chief?" he asked. "Samoset," he added, touching
+his own breast, and thus introducing himself.</p>
+
+<p>"How in the name of all that is wonderful did he
+learn English!" cried Stephen Hopkins.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Samoset know," the Indian turned upon him,
+understanding. "White men ships fish far, far sunrise,"
+he pointed eastward, and they knew that he was
+telling them that English fishermen had been known
+to him, whose fishing grounds lay toward the east.</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis true; our men have been far east and north
+of here," said Myles Standish, turning toward
+Stephen Hopkins, as to one who had travelled.</p>
+
+<p>"Humphrey Gilbert, but many since then,"
+nodded Mr. Hopkins.</p>
+
+<p>"Big chief Squanto been home long time white
+men, he talk more Samoset," said Samoset.
+"Squanto come see&mdash;&mdash;." He waved his hand comprehendingly
+over his audience, to indicate whom
+Squanto intended to visit.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, womenfolk, you must find something
+better than you give us, and set it forth for our
+guest," said Stephen Hopkins. "Get out our English
+beer; Captain Myles I'll undertake, will join me
+in foregoing our portion to-morrow for him. And
+the preserved fruits; I'm certain he will find them a
+novelty. And you must draw on our store of
+trinkets for gifts. Lads&mdash;Giles, John, Francis&mdash;help
+the girls open the chest and make selection."</p>
+
+<p>Samoset betrayed no understanding of these
+English words, maintaining a stolid indifference while
+preparations for his entertainment went on. But he
+did full justice to the best that the colonists had to set
+before him and accepted their subsequent gifts with
+a fine air of noble condescension, as a monarch accepting
+tribute.</p>
+
+<p>Later with pipes filled with the refreshing weed
+from Virginia, which had circuitously found its way
+back to the New World, via England, the Plymouth
+men sat down to talk to Samoset.</p>
+
+<p>Limited as was his vocabulary, broken as was his
+speech, yet they managed to understand much of
+what he told them, valuable information relating to
+their Indian neighbours near by, to the state of the
+country, to climate and soil, and to the people of the
+forests farther north.</p>
+
+<p>Samoset went away bearing his gifts, with which,
+penetrating his reserve, the colonists saw that he was
+greatly pleased. He promised a speedy return, and
+to bring to them Squanto, from whose friendship and
+better knowledge of their speech and race evidently
+Samoset thought they would gain much.</p>
+
+<p>The younger men&mdash;Doctor Fuller, John Alden and
+others, needless to say Giles, John, and Francis Billington,
+under the conduct of Myles Standish&mdash;accompanied
+Samoset for a few miles on his return.</p>
+
+<p>The sun was dropping westward, the night promising
+to be as warmly kind as the day had been, and
+Constance slipped her hand into her father's arm as
+he stood watching their important guest's departure,
+under his escort's guardianship.</p>
+
+<p>"A little tiny walk with me, Father dear?" she
+hinted. "I like to watch the sunset redden the
+sands, and it is so warm and fine. Besides, I have
+something most beautiful to tell you!"</p>
+
+<p>"Good news, Con? This seems to be a day of
+good things," said her father, as Constance nodded
+hard. "The coming of yonder Indian seems to me
+the happiest thing that could well have befallen us.
+Given the friendship of our neighbouring tribes we
+have little to fear from more distant ones, and the
+great threat to our colony's continuance is removed.
+Well, I will walk with you child, but not far nor long.
+There is scant time for dalliance in our lives, you
+know."</p>
+
+<p>They went out, Constance first running to snatch
+her cloak and pull its deep hood over her hair as a
+precaution against a cold that the warm day might
+betray her into, and which she had good reason to
+fear who had helped nurse the victims of the first
+months of the immigration.</p>
+
+<p>"The good news, Daughter?" hinted Mr. Hopkins
+after they had walked a short distance in silence.</p>
+
+<p>Constance laughed triumphantly, giving his arm a
+little shake. "I waited to see if you wouldn't ask!"
+she cried, "I knew you were just as curious, you
+men, as we poor women creatures&mdash;but of course in a
+big, manly way!" She pursed her lips and shook
+her head, lightly pinching her father to point her
+satire.</p>
+
+<p>"Have a care, Mistress Constantia!" her father
+warned her. "Curiosity is a weakness, even dangerous,
+but disrespect to your elders and betters, what
+is that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Great fun," retorted Constance.</p>
+
+<p>Her father laughed. He found his girl's playfulness,
+which she was recovering with the springtide
+and the relief from the heavy sorrow of the first weeks
+in Plymouth, refreshing amid the extreme seriousness
+of most of the people around him. "Proceed with
+your tidings, you saucy minx!" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well then, Mr. Stephen Hopkins," Constance
+obeyed him, "what would you say if I were to
+tell you that there was news of your missing packet of
+papers?"</p>
+
+<p>Stephen Hopkins stopped short. "I should say
+thank God with all my heart, Constance, not merely
+because the loss was serious, but most of all because
+of Giles. Is it true?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"They are found!" cried Constance, jubilantly,
+"and it was Giles himself who faced the thief and
+forced him to give them up. It is a fine tale!"
+And she proceeded to tell it.</p>
+
+<p>Her father's relief, his pleasure, was evidently
+great, but to Constance's alarm as the story ended,
+his face settled into an expression of annoyance.</p>
+
+<p>"It is indeed good news, Constance, and I am grateful,
+relieved by it," he said, having heard her to the
+end. "But why did not Giles tell me this himself,
+bring me the recovered packet? Would it not be
+natural to wish to confer upon me, himself, the
+happiness he had won for me, to hasten to me with
+his victory, still more that it clears him of the least
+doubt of complicity in the loss?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, no, Father! That is just the point of his not
+doing so!" cried Constance. "Giles is sore at heart
+that you felt there might be a doubt of him. He cannot
+endure it, nor seem to bring you proofs of his
+innocence. I suppose he does not feel like a boy,
+but like a man whose honour is questioned, and by&mdash;forgive
+me, Father, but I must make it clear&mdash;by one
+whose trust in him should be stronger than any
+other's."</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense, Constantia!" Stephen Hopkins exploded,
+angrily. "What are we coming to if we cannot
+question our own children? Giles is not a man;
+he is a boy, and my boy, so I shall expect him to
+render me an account of his actions whenever, and
+however I demand it. I'll not stand for his pride,
+his assumption of injured dignity. Let him remember
+that! Thank God my son is an honest lad,
+as by all reason he should be. But though he is
+right as to the theft, he is wrong in his arrogance,
+and pride is as deadly a sin as stealing. I want no
+more of this nonsense."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Father dear," cried Constance, wringing her
+hands with her peculiar gesture when matters got too
+difficult for those small hands. "Please, please be
+kind to Giles! Oh, I thought everything would be
+all right now that the packet was recovered, and by
+him! Be patient with him, I beg you. He is not one
+that can be driven, but rather won by love to do your
+will. If you will convey to him that you regret having
+suspected him he will at once come back to be our
+own Giles."</p>
+
+<p>"Have a care, Constantia, that in your anxiety for
+your brother you do not fall into a share of his fault!"
+warned her father. "It is not for you to advise me
+in my dealing with my son. As to trying to placate
+him by anything like an apology: preposterous
+suggestion! That is not the way of discipline, my
+girl! Let Giles indicate to me his proper humility,
+his regret for taking the attitude that I am not in
+authority over him, free to demand of him any explanation,
+any evidence of his character I please.
+No, no, Constance! You mean well, but you are
+wrong."</p>
+
+<p>Thus saying, Mr. Hopkins turned on his heel to go
+back to the house, and Constance followed, no longer
+with her hand on her father's arm, but understanding
+the strong annoyance he felt toward Giles, and painfully
+conscious that her pleading for her brother had
+done less than no good.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="p4"><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX</a></h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Seedtime of the First Spring</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>Giles Hopkins and John and Francis Billington
+slept in the new house, now nearly finished,
+on Leyden Street. Therefore it happened that Stephen
+Hopkins did not see his son until the morning
+after the recovery of the papers.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Giles," said his father, with a smile that Giles
+took to be mocking, but in which the father's hidden
+gratification really strove to escape, "so you played
+a man's part with the <i>Mayflower</i> captain, at the same
+time proving yourself? I am glad to get my papers,
+boy, and glad that you have shown that you had no
+share in their loss, but only in their return. Henceforth
+be somewhat less insolent when appearances are
+against you; still better take care that appearances,
+facts as well, are in your favour."</p>
+
+<p>"Appearances are in the eye of the on-looker,"
+said Giles, drawing himself up and flushing angrily,
+though, had he but seen it, love and pride in him shone
+in his father's eyes, though his tone and words were
+careless, gruff indeed.</p>
+
+<p>"If Dame Eliza is to be the glass through which
+you view me, then it matters not what course I
+follow, for you will not see it straight. Nor do I care
+to act to the end that you may not suspect me of
+being fit for hanging. A gentleman's honour needs
+no proving, or else is proved by his sword. And
+whatever you think of me, I can never defend myself
+thus against my father. A father may insult his son
+with impunity."</p>
+
+<p>"But a boy may not speak insultingly to his father
+with impunity, Master Giles Hopkins," said Stephen
+Hopkins, advancing close to the lad with his quick
+temper afire. "One word more of such nature as I
+just heard and I will have you publicly flogged, as you
+richly deserve, and as our community would applaud."</p>
+
+<p>Giles bowed, his face as angry as his father's, and
+passed on cutting the young sprouts along the road
+with a stick he carried. And thus the two burning
+hearts which loved each other&mdash;too similar to make
+allowances for each other when the way was open to
+their reconciliation&mdash;were further estranged than before.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime Constance, Priscilla, and the
+younger girls, were starting out, tools in hand, baskets
+swinging on their arms, to prepare the first garden
+of the colony.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank&mdash;I mean I rejoice that we are not sent to
+work amid the graves on the hillside," said Priscilla,
+altering her form of expression to conform with the
+prescribed sobriety.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, that is to be planted with the Indian corn,
+you know," said Constance. "It grows high, and
+will hide our graves. Why think of that, Prissy?
+I want to be happy." She began to hum a quaint
+air of her own making. She had by inheritance the
+gift of music, as the kindred gift of love and taste for
+all beauty, a gift that should never find expression in
+her new surroundings.</p>
+
+<p>Presently she found words for her small tune and
+sang them, swinging her basket in time with her
+singing and also swinging Humility Cooper's hand as
+she walked, not without some danger of dropping into
+a sort of dance step.</p>
+
+<p>This is what she sang:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Over seas lies England;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Still we find this wing-land;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Birds and bees and butterflies flit about us here.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Eastward lies our Mother,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Loved as is no other,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Yet here flowers blossom with the springing year.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">We will plant a garden,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Eve-like, as the warden<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of the hope of men unborn, future of the race;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Tears that we were weeping,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Watering our keeping,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Till we make the New World joy's own dwelling place.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Priscilla Mullins stopped short and looked with
+amazement on her younger companion.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you make that song, Constance?" she demanded,
+being used to the rhyming which Constance
+made to entertain the little ones.</p>
+
+<p>"It made itself, Pris," laughed Constance.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'm no judge of songs, and as to rhyming I
+could match cat and rat if it was put to me to do,
+but no more. Yet it seemeth me that is a pretty
+song, with exactly the truth for its burden, and it
+trippeth as sweetly as the robin whistles. Do you
+know, Constance, it seems to me to run more into
+smooth cadences than the Metrical Psalms themselves!"
+Priscilla dropped her voice as she said this,
+as if she hoped to be unheard by the vengeance which
+might swoop down on her.</p>
+
+<p>Constance's laugh rang out merrily, quite unafraid.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, dear Prissy, the Metrical Version was not
+meant to run in smooth cadences!" she cried. "Do
+you see why we should not sing as the robin whistles,
+being young and God's creatures, surely not less than
+the birds? Priscilla Mullins, there is John Alden
+awaiting us in the very spot where we are to work!
+How did he happen there, when no other man is
+about?"</p>
+
+<p>"He spoke to me of helping us with the first heavy
+turning of the soil," said Priscilla, exceedingly red and
+uncomfortable, but constrained to be truthful. "Oh,
+Constance, never look at me like that! Can I help
+it that Master Alden is so considerate of us?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure-ly not!" declared Constance emphatically.
+"What about his returning home, Pris? He was
+hired but as cooper for the voyage, and would return.
+Will he go, think you?"</p>
+
+<p>"He seems not fully decided. He said somewhat
+to me of staying." Poor Priscilla looked more than
+miserable as she said this, yet was forced to laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"I will speak to my father and Captain Standish
+to get them to offer him work a-plenty this summer,
+so mayhap they can persuade him to let the <i>Mayflower</i>
+sail without him&mdash;next week she goes. Or
+perhaps you could bring arguments to bear upon him,
+Priscilla! He never seems stiff-necked, nor unbiddable."
+Constance said this with a great effect of
+innocence, as if a new thought had struck her, and
+Priscilla had barely time to murmur:</p>
+
+<p>"Thou art a sad tease, Constance," before they
+came up with John Alden, who looked as embarrassed
+as Priscilla when he met Constance's dancing eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless it was not long before John Alden and
+Priscilla Mullins were working together at a little
+distance apart from the rest, leaving Constance to
+dig and rake in company with Humility Cooper,
+Elizabeth Tilley, and the little girls. Thus at work
+they saw approaching from the end of the road that
+was lost in the woods beyond a small but imposing
+procession of tall figures, wrapped in gaudy colored
+blankets, their heads surmounted with banded
+feathers which streamed down their backs, softly
+waving in the light breeze.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, dear, oh, dear, Connie, they are savages!"
+whispered Damaris looking about as if wishing that
+a hole had been dug big enough to hide her instead
+of the small peas which she was planting.</p>
+
+<p>"But they are friendly savages, small sister,"
+said Constance. "See, they carry no bows and
+arrows. Do you know, girls, I believe this is the
+great chief Massasoit, of whom Samoset spoke,
+promising us his visit soon, and that with him may be
+Squanto, the Indian who speaks English! Don't you
+think we may be allowed to postpone the rest of the
+work to see the great conference which will take place
+if this is Massasoit?"</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, Constance, my back calls me to cease
+louder than any savage," said Humility, her hand on
+her waist, twisting her small body from side to side.
+"I have been wishing we might dare stop, but I
+couldn't bring myself to say so."</p>
+
+<p>"You have not recovered strength for this bending
+and straining work, my dear," said Constance in her
+grandmotherly way. "Priscilla, Priscilla! John
+Alden, see!" she called, and the distant pair faced her
+with a visible start.</p>
+
+<p>She pointed to the savages, and Priscilla and
+John hastened to her, thinking her afraid.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you suppose it may be Massasoit and
+Squanto?" Constance asked at once.</p>
+
+<p>"Let us hope so," said John Alden, looking with
+eager interest at the Indians. "We hope to make a
+treaty with Massasoit."</p>
+
+<p>"Before you sail?" inquired Constance, guilelessly.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, I am decided to cast my lot in with the
+colony, sweet Constance," said John, trying, but
+failing, to keep from looking at Priscilla.</p>
+
+<p>"Pris?" cried Constance, and waited.</p>
+
+<p>Priscilla threw her arms around Constance and hid
+her face, crying on her shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"My people are all dead, Connie, and I alone survive
+of us all on the <i>Mayflower</i>! Even my brother
+Joseph died; you know it, Connie! Do you blame
+me?" she sobbed.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Prissy, dear Prissy!" Constance laughed at
+this piteous appeal. "Just as though you did not
+find John Alden most likeable when we were sailing
+and no one had yet died! And just as though you
+had to explain liking him! As though we did not all
+hold him dear and long to keep him with us! John
+Alden, I never, never would sit quiet under such
+insult! You funny Priscilla! What are you crying
+for? Aren't you happy? tell me that!"</p>
+
+<p>"So happy I must cry," sobbed Priscilla, but
+drying her eyes nevertheless. "Do you suppose
+those savages see me?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am sure of it," declared Constance. "Likely
+they will refuse to make a treaty with white men
+whose women act so strangely! My father is going
+to be as glad of your treaty with Priscilla as of the
+savage chief's treaty, an it be made, Master Alden."</p>
+
+<p>"What is it? What's to do, dear John Alden?"
+clamoured Damaris, who never spoke to John without
+the caressing epithet.</p>
+
+<p>The young man swung her to his shoulder, and
+kissed the soil-stained hand which the child laid
+against his cheek.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall marry Priscilla and stay in Plymouth,
+not go back to England at all! Does that please you,
+little maid?" he cried, gaily.</p>
+
+<p>Damaris scowled at him, weighing the case.</p>
+
+<p>"If you like me best," she said doubtfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Of a certainty!" affirmed John Alden, for once
+disregarding scruples. "Could I swing up Priscilla
+on my shoulder like this, I ask you? Why, she's not
+even a little girl!"</p>
+
+<p>And confiding little Damaris was satisfied.</p>
+
+<p>By this time the band of savages had advanced to
+the point of the road nearest to where the girls and
+John Alden were working.</p>
+
+<p>"We must go to greet them lest they find us remiss.
+We do not know the workings of their minds,"
+said John Alden, striding down toward them, followed
+by the somewhat timorous group of grown and little
+girls, Damaris clinging to him, with one hand on
+Constance, in fearful enjoyment of the wonderful
+sight.</p>
+
+<p>"Welcome!" said John Alden, coming across the
+undergrowth to where the savages awaited him.
+"If you come in friendship, as I see you do, welcome,
+my brothers."</p>
+
+<p>"Welcome," said an Indian, stepping somewhat in
+advance. "We come in friendship. I am Squanto
+who know your race. I have been in England;
+I have seen the king. I am bring you friendship.
+This is Massasoit, the great chief. You are not the
+great white chief. He is old a little. Take us
+there."</p>
+
+<p>"Gladly will I take you to our governor, who is, as
+you say, much older than I, and to our war chief,
+Myles Standish, and to the elders of our nation,"
+said John Alden. "Follow me. You are most welcome,
+Massasoit, and Squanto, who can speak our
+tongue."</p>
+
+<p>The singular company, the girls in their deep
+bonnets to shade them from the sun, the Indians
+in their paint and gay nodding feathers, the children
+divided between keen enjoyment of the novelty and
+equally keen fear of what might happen next, with
+John Alden the only white man, came down into
+Plymouth settlement, not yet so built up as to suggest
+the name.</p>
+
+<p>Governor Carver was busied with William Bradford
+over the records of the colony, from which they
+were making extracts to dispatch to England in the
+near sailing of the <i>Mayflower</i>. John Alden turned
+to Elizabeth Tilley.</p>
+
+<p>"Run on, little maid, and tell the governor and
+elders whom we bring," he said.</p>
+
+<p>Elizabeth darted into the house, earning a frown
+from the governor for her lack of manners, but instantly
+forgiven when she cried:</p>
+
+<p>"John Alden and we who were working in the
+field are bringing Your Excellency the Indian chief
+Massasoit, and Squanto, who talks to us in English
+wonderful to hear, when you look at his feathers and
+painted face! And John Alden sent me on to tell
+you. And, there are other Indians with them.
+And, oh, Governor Carver, shall I tell the women in
+the community house to cook meat for their dinner,
+or shall it be just our common dinner of porridge
+with, maybe, a smoked herring to sharpen us? For
+this the governor should order, should not he?"</p>
+
+<p>Governor Carver and William Bradford smiled.
+As a rule the younger members of the community
+over which these elder, grave men were set, feared
+them too much to say anything at which they could
+smile, but the greatness of this occasion swept
+Elizabeth beyond herself.</p>
+
+<p>"I think, Mistress Elizabeth Tilley, that the
+matrons will not need the governor's counsel as to the
+feeding of our guests," said Governor Carver kindly.
+"Tell Constantia Hopkins to bid her father hither at
+his earliest convenience. I shall ask him to make the
+treaty with Massasoit, together with Edward Winslow,
+if it be question of a treaty, as I hope."</p>
+
+<p>Elizabeth sped back and met the approaching
+guests. She dropped a frightened curtsy, not knowing
+the etiquette of meeting a band of friendly
+savages. But as they paid no attention to her, her
+manners did not matter, and realizing this with relief
+she joined Constance at the rear of the procession
+and delivered her message.</p>
+
+<p>"Porridge indeed!" exclaimed Mistress Hopkins
+when Elizabeth Tilley repeated to her the governor's
+comment on her own suggestion as to the dinner for
+the Indian guests. "Porridge is well enough for us,
+but we will set the savages down to no such fare, but
+to our best, lest they fall to and eat us all some night
+in the dark of the moon, when we are asleep and unprotected!
+Little I thought I should be cooking for
+wild red men in an American forest when I learned to
+make sausage in my father's house! But learn I
+did, and to make it fit for the king, so it should please
+the savages, though what they like is beyond my
+knowledge. Sausage shall they have, and whether or
+no they will take to griddle cakes I dare not say, but
+it's my opinion that men are men, civilized or wild,
+and never a man did I see that was not as keen set on
+griddle cakes as a fox on a chicken roost. It will be
+our part to feed these savages well, for, as I say, men
+are men, wild or English, and if you would have a
+man deal well by you make your terms after he hath
+well eaten. Thus may your father and Elder
+Brewster get a good treaty from these painted
+creatures. Get out the flour, Constantia, and stir
+up the batter. Humility and Elizabeth, fetch the
+jar of griddle fat. Priscilla Mullins, what aileth
+thee? Art sleep-walking? Call a boy to fetch wood
+for the hearth, and fill the kettle. Are you John-a-Dreams,
+and is this the time for dreaming?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's John-dream at least, is it not, Prissy?"
+whispered Constance, pinching the girl lightly as she
+passed her on her way to do her share of her step-mother's
+bidding.</p>
+
+<p>Later Constance went to summon the guests to the
+community house for their dinner. They came
+majestically, escorted by the governor, Elder Brewster,
+William Bradford, Stephen Hopkins, the weighty
+men of the colony, with Captain Standish in advance,
+representing the power of might. What the Indians
+thought of these Englishmen no one could tell;
+certainly they were not less appreciative of the
+counsel of the wise than of the force of arms, having
+reliance on their own part upon their medicine men
+and soothsayers.</p>
+
+<p>What they thought of the white women's cooking
+was soon perfectly apparent. It kept the women
+busy to serve them with cakes, to hold the glowing
+coals on the hearth at the right degree to keep the
+griddle heated to the point of perfect browning, never
+passing it to the burning point. The Indians
+devoured the cakes like a band of hungry boys, and
+Mistress Hopkins's boasted sausage was never better
+appreciated on an English farm table than here.</p>
+
+<p>The young girls served the guests, which the
+Indians accepted as the natural thing, being used to
+taking the first place with squaws, both young and old.</p>
+
+<p>The homebrewed beer which had come across
+seas in casks abundantly, also met with ultimate
+approval, though at first taste two or three of the
+Indians nearly betrayed aversion to its bitterness.
+There were "strong waters" too, made riper by long
+tossing in the <i>Mayflower's</i> hold, which needed no
+persuading of the Indians' palates.</p>
+
+<p>After the guests had dined Giles, John, Francis,
+and the other older boys, came trooping to the
+community house for their dinner.</p>
+
+<p>When they discovered that Squanto spoke English
+fairly well they were agog to hear from him the
+many things that he could tell them.</p>
+
+<p>"Stay with us; they do not need you," they implored,
+but Squanto, mindful of his duties as interpreter,
+reluctantly left them presently. Massasoit
+and his other companions returned with the white
+men to the conclave house, which was the governor's
+and Elder Brewster's home.</p>
+
+<p>"I go but wish I might stay a little hour," said
+Squanto. He won Mistress Eliza's heart, with
+Mistress White's, by his evident friendliness and
+desire to stay with them.</p>
+
+<p>After this Damaris and the children could not fear
+him, and thus at his first introduction, Squanto, who
+was to become the friend and reliance of the colony,
+became what is even more, the friend of the little
+children.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="p4"><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X</a></h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Treaties</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>The girls of the plantation were gathered together
+in Stephen Hopkins's house. The logs on
+the hearth were ash-strewn to check their burning
+yet to hold them ready to burn when the hour for
+preparing supper was come and the ashes raked
+away.</p>
+
+<p>Dame Eliza Hopkins had betaken herself to
+William Bradford's house, the baby, Oceanus,
+seated astride her hip in her favourite manner of
+carrying him; she protested that she could not endure
+the gabble of the girls, but in truth she greatly
+desired to discuss with Mistress Bradford, of whom
+she stood somewhat in awe, the events portending.
+She was secretly elated with her husband's coming
+honour, and wanted to convey to Mistress Bradford
+that, as between their two spouses, Stephen Hopkins
+was the better man.</p>
+
+<p>Constance, sitting beside the smothered hearth
+fire, might be considered, since it was at her father's
+hearthstone the girls were gathered, as the hostess of
+the occasion, but the gathering was for work, not
+formalities, and, in any case, Constance was too
+preoccupied with her task to pay attention to aught
+else.</p>
+
+<p>Only the older girls were bidden, but little Damaris
+was there by right of tenancy. She sat at Constance's
+feet, worshipping her, as she turned and
+twisted their father's coat, skilfully furbishing it with
+new buttons and new binding.</p>
+
+<p>"May Mr. Hopkins wear velvet, Constance?"
+asked Humility Cooper, suddenly; she too had been
+watching Constance work. "Did not Elder Brewster
+exhort us to utmost plainness of clothing, as
+becomes the saints, who set more store upon heavenly
+raiment than earthly splendour?"</p>
+
+<p>Constance looked up laughingly, pushing out of
+her eyes her waving locks which had strayed from her
+cap; she used the back of the hand that held her
+needle, pulled at great length through a button which
+she was fastening upon her father's worn velvet coat.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Humility, splendour?" she laughed. "When
+I am trying hard to make this old coat passing
+decent? Isn't it necessary for us all to wear what we
+have, willy-nilly, since nothing else is obtainable,
+garments not yet growing on New World bushes?
+I do believe that some of the brethren discussed
+Stephen Hopkins's velvet coat, and decided for it,
+since it stood for economy. It stood for more; till a
+ship brings supplies from home, it's this, or no coat
+for my father. But since he has been selected, with
+Mr. Edward Winslow, to make the treaty with
+Massasoit, he should be clad suitably to his office,
+were there choice between velvet and homespun."</p>
+
+<p>"What does he make to treat Mass o' suet, Constance?
+What is Mass o' suet; pudding, Constance?"
+asked Damaris, anxiously, knitting her
+brow.</p>
+
+<p>Constance's laugh rang out, good to hear. She
+leaned forward impetuously and snatched off her
+little sister's decorous cap, rumpled her sleek fair
+hair with both hands pressing her head, and kissed
+her. Priscilla Mullins laughed with Constance,
+looking sympathetically at her, but some of the other
+girls looked a trifle shocked at this demonstration.</p>
+
+<p>"Massasoit is a great Indian chief, small lass; he
+is coming in a day or so, and Father and Mr. Winslow
+will make a treaty with him; that means that Massasoit
+will promise to be our friend and to protect us
+from other Indian tribes, he and his Indians, while
+we shall promise to be true friends to him. It is a
+great good to our colony, and we are proud, you and
+I&mdash;and I think your mother, too"&mdash;Constance
+glanced with amusement at Priscilla&mdash;"that our
+father is chosen for the colony's representative."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you suppose that the Indians know whether
+cloth or velvet is grander? Those we see like
+leather and paint and feathers," said Priscilla. "I
+hold that our men should overawe the savages,
+but&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And I hold that brides should be bonny, let it be
+here, or in England," Constance interrupted her.
+"What will you wear on the day of days, Priscilla,
+you darling?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I have consulted with Mistress Brewster,"
+admitted Priscilla, regretfully. "I did think, being
+a woman, she would know better how a young maid
+feeleth as to her bridal gown than her godly husband.
+But she saith that it is least of all becoming on such
+a solemn occasion to let my mind consider my outward
+seeming. So I have that excellent wool skirt
+that Mistress White dyed for me a good brown, and
+that with my blue body&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Blue fiddlesticks, Priscilla Mullins!" Constance
+again interrupted her, impatiently. "You'll wear
+nothing of the kind. I tell you it shall be white for
+you on your wedding day, with your comely face and
+your honest eyes shining over it! I have a sweet
+embroidered muslin, and I can fashion it for you with
+a little cleverness and a deep frill combined, for that
+you are taller than I, and more plump to take up its
+length, there's no denying, Prissy dear! We'll not
+stand by and see our plantation's one real romance
+end in dyed brown cloth and dreariness, will we,
+girls?"</p>
+
+<p>"No!" cried Humility Cooper who would have
+followed Constance's lead into worse danger than a
+pretty wedding gown for Priscilla.</p>
+
+<p>But Elizabeth Tilley, her cousin, looked doubtful.
+"It sounds nice," she admitted, "but I never can
+tell what is wrong and what is right, because, though
+we read our Bibles to learn our duty, the Bible does
+not condemn pleasure, and our teachers do. So it
+might be safer to wear dull garments when we are
+married, Constance, and not be light-minded."</p>
+
+<p>"You mean light-bodied; light-coloured bodies,
+Betsy!" Constance laughed at her, with a glint of
+mischievous appreciation of Elizabeth's unconscious
+humour that was like her father. "No, indeed, my
+sister pilgrim. A snowy gown for Pris, though I
+fashion it, who am not too skilful. Oh, Francis
+Billington, how you scared me!" she cried, jumping
+to her feet and upsetting Damaris who leaned upon
+her, as Francis Billington burst into the room, out of
+breath, but full of importance.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing to fear with me about, girls," he assured
+the roomful. "But great news! Massasoit has
+come, marched in upon us before we expected him,
+and the treaty is to be made to-morrow. Squanto is
+as proud and delighted as&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Squanto himself appeared in the doorway at that
+moment, a smile mantling his high cheek bones and a
+gleam in his eyes that betrayed the importance that
+his pride tried to conceal.</p>
+
+<p>"Chief come, English girls," he announced. "No
+more you be fear Indian; Massasoit tell you be no
+more fear, he and Squanto fight for you, and he say
+true. No more fear, little English girl!" he laid his
+hand protectingly upon Damaris's head and the child
+smiled up at him, confidingly.</p>
+
+<p>Giles came fast upon Squanto's heels. His face
+was flushed, his eyes kindled; Constance saw with a
+leap of her heart that he looked like the lad she
+had loved in England and had lost in the New
+World.</p>
+
+<p>"Got Father's coat ready, Con?" he asked.
+"There's to be a counsel held, and my father is to
+preside over it on our side, arranging with Massasoit.
+My father is to settle with him for the colony&mdash;of
+course Mr. Winslow will have his say, also."</p>
+
+<p>"I meant to furbish the coat somewhat more,
+Giles, but the necessary repairs are made," said
+Constance yielding her brother the garment. "How
+proud of Father he is!" she thought, happily. "How
+truly he adores him, however awry matters go between
+them!"</p>
+
+<p>Giles hung the coat on his arm, carefully, to keep
+it from wrinkles, a most unusual thoughtfulness in
+him, and hastened away.</p>
+
+<p>"No more work to-day, girls, or at least of this
+sort," cried Constance gaily, her heart lightened by
+Giles's unmistakable pride in their father. "We
+shall be called upon to cook and serve. Many Indians
+come with Massasoit, Squanto?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, his chiefs," Squanto raised one hand and
+touched its fingers separately, then did the same with
+the other hand. "Ten," he announced after this
+illustration.</p>
+
+<p>"That means no less than thirty potatoes, and
+something less than twenty quarts of porridge,"
+laughed Constance, but was called to account by her
+stepmother, who had come in from the rear.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you never speak the truth soberly, Constantia
+Hopkins?" she said. "We do not count on
+two quarts of porridge for every Indian we feed.
+Take this child; he is heavy for so long, and he hath
+kicked with both heels in my flesh every step of the
+way. Another Hopkins, I'll warrant, I've borne for
+my folly in marrying your father; a restless, headstrong
+brood are they, and Oceanus is already not
+content to sit quietly on his mother's hip, but will
+drive her, like a camel of the desert." She detached
+Oceanus's feet from her skirt and handed him over to
+Constance with a jerk. Constance received him, biting
+her lips to hold back laughter, and burying her
+face in the back of the baby neck that had been pitifully
+thin during the cruel winter, but which was beginning
+to wrinkle with plumpness now.</p>
+
+<p>Too late she concealed her face; Mistress Eliza
+caught a glimpse of it and was upon her.</p>
+
+<p>"It's not a matter for laughter that I should be
+pummelled by your brother, however young he may
+be," she cried; Dame Eliza had a way of underscoring
+her children's kinship to Constance whenever
+they were troublesome. "Though, indeed, I carry
+on my back the weight of your father's children, and
+my heart is worse bruised by the ingratitude of you
+and your brother Giles, than is my flesh with this
+child's heels. And Mistress Bradford is proud-hearted,
+and that I will maintain, Puritan or no
+Puritan, or whether she be one of the elect of this
+chosen company, or a sinner. For plain could I see
+this afternoon that she held her husband to be a
+better man, and higher in the colony, than my
+husband, nor would she give way one jot when I put
+it before her&mdash;though not so that she would see what
+I would be after&mdash;that Stephen Hopkins it was who
+was chosen with Mr. Winslow to make the treaty, and
+not William Bradford. Well, far be it from me to
+take pride in worldly things; I thank the good training
+that my mother gave me that I am humble-minded.
+Often and often would she say to me: Eliza, never
+plume yourself that you, and your people before you,
+are, as they are, better, more righteous people than
+are most other folks. For it is our part to bear ourselves
+humbly, not setting ourselves up for our virtue,
+but content to know that we have it and to see how
+others are lacking in it, making no traffic with sinners,
+but yet not boasting. And as to you, young women,
+it would be better if you betook yourselves to your
+proper homes, not lingering here to encourage
+Constantia Hopkins to idleness when I've my hands
+full, and more than full, to make ready for the Indian
+chiefs' supper, and I need her help."</p>
+
+<p>On this strong hint the Plymouth girls bade
+Constance good-bye and departed, leaving her to a
+bustle of hard work, accompanied by her stepmother's
+scolding; Dame Eliza had come back dissatisfied from
+her visit, and Constance paid the penalty.</p>
+
+<p>The next morning the men of Plymouth gathered
+at the house of Elder Brewster, attired in all the
+decorum of their Sunday garb, their faces gravely
+expressive of the importance of the event about to
+take place.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Myles Standish, indeed, felt some misgivings
+of the pervading gravity of clothing of the
+civilized participants in this treaty, that it might not
+sufficiently impress their savage allies. He had
+fastened a bright plume that had been poor Rose's,
+on the side of his hat, and a band of English red ribbon
+across his breast, while he carried arms burnished
+to their brightest, his sword unsheathed, that the sun
+might catch its gleam.</p>
+
+<p>Elder Brewster shook his head slightly at the sight
+of this display, but let it pass, partly because Captain
+Standish ill-liked interference in his affairs, partly
+because he understood its reason, and half believed
+that the doughty Myles was right.</p>
+
+<p>Not less solemn than the white men, but as gay
+with colours as the Puritans were sombre, the Indians,
+headed by Massasoit, marched to the rendezvous from
+the house which had been allotted to them for lodging.</p>
+
+<p>With perfect dignity Massasoit took his place at the
+head of the council room, and saluted Captain Standish
+and Elder Brewster, who advanced toward him,
+then retreated and gave place to Stephen Hopkins and
+Edward Winslow, who were to execute the treaty.</p>
+
+<p>Its terms had already been discussed, but the
+Indians listened attentively to Squanto's interpretation
+of Mr. Hopkins's reading of them. They
+promised, on the part of Massasoit, perfect safety to
+the settlers from danger of the Indians' harming
+them, and, on the part of the pilgrims, aid to Massasoit
+against his enemies; on the part of both savage and
+white men, that justice should be done upon any one
+who wronged his neighbour, savage or civilized.</p>
+
+<p>The gifts that bound both parties to this treaty
+were exchanged, and the treaty, that was so important
+to the struggling colony, was consummated.</p>
+
+<p>The women and children, even the youths, were
+excluded from the council; the women had enough to
+do to prepare the feast that was to celebrate the
+compact before Massasoit took up his march of
+forty miles to return to his village.</p>
+
+<p>But Giles leaned against the casement of the open
+door, unforbidden, glowing with pride in his father,
+for the first time in heart and soul a colonist, completely
+in sympathy with the event he was witnessing.</p>
+
+<p>Stephen Hopkins saw him there and made no sign
+of dismissal. Their eyes met with their old look of
+love; father and son were in that hour united, though
+separated. Suddenly there arose a tremendous
+racket, a volley of shots, a beating of pans, shouts,
+pandemonium.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Myles Standish turned angrily and saw
+John and Francis Billington, decorated with
+streamers of party-coloured rags, which made them
+look as if they had escaped from a madhouse, leaping
+and shouting, beating and shooting; John firing his
+clumsy "Bouncing Bully" in the air as fast as he
+could load it; Francis filling in the rest of the outrageous
+performance.</p>
+
+<p>But worst of all was that Stephen Hopkins, who
+saw what Captain Myles saw, saw also his own boy,
+whom but a moment before he had looked at lovingly,
+bent and swayed by laughter.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Standish strode out in a towering fury to
+deal with the Billingtons, with whom he was ceaselessly
+dealing in anger, as they were ceaselessly
+afflicting the little community with the pranks that
+shocked and outraged its decorum.</p>
+
+<p>Stephen Hopkins dashed out after him. Quick to
+anger, sure of his own judgments, he instantly
+leaped to the conclusion that Giles had been waiting
+at the door to enjoy this prank when it was enacted,
+and it was a prank that passed ordinary mischief.
+If the Indians recognized it for a prank, they would
+undoubtedly take it as an insult to them. Only the
+chance that they might consider it a serious celebration
+of the treaty, afforded hope that it might not
+annul the treaty at its birth, and put Plymouth in a
+worse plight than before it was made.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Hopkins seized Giles by the shoulders and
+shook him.</p>
+
+<p>"You laugh? You laugh at this, you young
+wastrel?" he said, fiercely. "By heavens, I could
+deal with you for conniving at this, which may earn
+salt tears from us all, if the savages take it amiss and
+retaliate on us. Will you never learn sense? How,
+in heaven's name, can you help on with this, knowing
+what you know of the danger to your own sisters
+should the savages take offence at it? Angels above
+us, and but a moment agone I thought you were my
+son, and rejoicing in this important day!"</p>
+
+<p>Giles, white, with burning eyes, looked straight into
+his father's eyes, rage, wounded pride, the sudden
+revolt of a love that had just been enkindled anew in
+him, distorting his face.</p>
+
+<p>"You never consider justice, sir," he said, chokingly.
+"You never ask, nor want to hear facts, lest
+they might be in my favour. You welcome a chance
+to believe ill of me. It is Giles, therefore the worst
+must be true; that's your argument."</p>
+
+<p>He turned away, head up, no relenting in his air,
+but the boy's heart in him was longing to burst in
+bitter weeping.</p>
+
+<p>Stephen Hopkins stood still, a swift doubt of his
+accusation, of himself, keen sorrow if he had wronged
+his boy, seizing him.</p>
+
+<p>"Giles, stop. Giles, come back," he said.</p>
+
+<p>But Giles walked away the faster, and his father
+was forced to return to Massasoit, to discover
+whether he had taken amiss what had happened, and,
+if he had, to placate him, could it be done.</p>
+
+<p>To his inexpressible relief he found that their
+savage guests had not suspected that the boys' mischief
+had been other than a tribute to themselves,
+quite in the key of their own celebrations of joyous
+occasions.</p>
+
+<p>After the dinner in which all the women of the
+settlement showed their skill, the Indians departed
+as they had come, leaving Squanto to be the invaluable
+friend of their white allies.</p>
+
+<p>Giles kept out of his father's way; Stephen Hopkins
+was not able to find him to clear up what he began
+to hope had been an unfounded suspicion on his
+part. "Zounds!" said the kind, though irascible
+man. "Giles is almost grown. If I did wrong him,
+I am sorry and will say so. An apology will not
+harm me, and is his due&mdash;that is in case it <i>is</i> due!
+I'll set the lad an example and ask his pardon if I
+misjudged him. He did not deny it, to be sure, but
+then Giles is too proud to deny an unjust accusation.
+And he looked innocent. Well, a good lad is
+Giles, in spite of his faults. I'll find him and get to
+the bottom of it."</p>
+
+<p>"Giles is all right, Stephen," said Myles Standish,
+to whom he was speaking. "Affairs that go wrong
+between you are usually partly your own fault. He
+needs guiding, but you lose your own head, and then
+how can you guide him? But those Billington boys,
+they are another matter! By Gog and Magog, there's
+got to be authority put into my hands to deal with
+them summarily! And their father's a madman,
+no less. I told them to-day they'd cool their heels
+in Plymouth jail; we'd build Plymouth jail expressly
+for that purpose. And I mean it. I'm the last man
+to be hard on mischief; heaven knows I was a harum-scarum
+in my time. But mischief that is overflowing
+spirits, and mischief that is harmful are two different
+matters. I've had all I'll stand of Jack Billington,
+his Bouncing Bully and himself!"</p>
+
+<p>"Here comes Connie. I wonder if she knows anything
+of her brother? If she does, she'll speak of it;
+if she doesn't, don't disturb her peace of mind, Myles.
+My pretty girl! She hurts me by her prettiness, here
+in the wilderness, far from her right to a sweet girl's
+dower of pleasure, admiration, dancing, and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Stephen, Stephen, for the love of all our discarded
+saints, forbear!" protested Captain Myles, interrupting
+his friend, laughing. "If our friends about
+here heard you lamenting such a list of lost joys for
+Constance, by my sword, they'd deal with you no
+gentler than I purpose dealing with the Billingtons!
+Ah, sweet Con, and no need to ask how the day of
+the treaty hath left you! You look abloom with
+youth and gladness, dear lass."</p>
+
+<p>"I am happy," said Constance, slipping her hand
+into her father's and smiling up into the faces of both
+the men, who loved her. "Wasn't it a great day,
+Father? Isn't it blessed to feel secure from invasion,
+and, more than that, secure of an ally, in case
+of unknown enemies coming? Oh, Father, Giles was
+so proud of you! It was funny, but beautiful, to see
+how his eyes shone, and how straight he carried himself,
+because his father was the man who made the
+treaty for us all! I love you, dearest, quite enough,
+and I am proud of you to bursting point, but Giles is
+almost a man, and he is proud of you as men are
+proud; meseems it is a deeper feeling than in us
+women, who are content to love, and care less for
+ambition."</p>
+
+<p>Stephen Hopkins winced; he saw that Constance
+did not know that anything was again amiss between
+the two who were dearest to her on earth, but he
+said:</p>
+
+<p>"'Us women,' indeed, Constantia! Do you reckon
+yourself a woman, who art still but my child-daughter?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a child, Father," said the girl, truly enough,
+shaking her head hard. "No pilgrim maid can be a
+child at my age, having seen and shared what hath
+fallen to my lot. And to-morrow there is to be another
+treaty made of peace and alliance, which is
+much on my mind, because I am a woman and because
+I love Priscilla. To-morrow is Pris married,
+Father."</p>
+
+<p>"Of a truth, and so she is!" cried Stephen Hopkins,
+slapping his leg vigorously.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, my girl, and what is it? Do you want to
+deck her out, as will not be allowed? Or what is on
+your mind?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I have made her a white gown, Father," said
+Constance. "Whatever they say, sweet Pris shall
+not go in dark clothing to her marriage! But,
+Father, Mr. Winslow is to marry her, as a magistrate,
+which he is. Is there no way to make it a
+little like a holy wedding, with church, and prayers,
+and religion?"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear, they have decided here that marriage
+is but a matter belonging to the state. You must
+check your scruples, child, and go along with arrangements
+as they are. There is much of your
+earliest training, of your sainted mother's training,
+in you yet, my Constance, and, please God, you will
+remain her daughter always. But you cannot alter
+the ways of Plymouth colony. So be content, sweet
+Con, to pray for our Pris all you will, and rest assured
+they receive blessings who seek them, however
+they be situate," said Stephen Hopkins, gently
+touching his girl's white-capped head.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, well," sighed Constance, turning away in
+acquiescence.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Myles Standish and her father watched
+Constance away. Then they turned in the other
+direction with a sigh.</p>
+
+<p>"Hard to face westward all the time, my friend;
+even Con feels the tug of old ways, and the old home,
+on her heartstrings," said Captain Myles.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="p4"><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI</a></h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">A Home Begun and a Home Undone</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>"Do you know aught of your brother, Constance?"
+asked Stephen Hopkins when he appeared
+in the great kitchen and common room of his
+home early the following morning.</p>
+
+<p>"He hath been away from home all night," Dame
+Eliza answered for Constance, her lips pulled down
+grimly.</p>
+
+<p>"Which I know quite well, wife," said her husband.
+"Constance, did Giles speak to you of whither he
+was going?"</p>
+
+<p>Constance looked up, meeting her father's troubled
+eyes, her own cloudless.</p>
+
+<p>"No, Father, but he must be with the other
+lads. Perhaps they are serving up some merry
+trick for the wedding. Nothing can have befallen
+him. Giles was the happiest lad yesterday, Father
+dear! I must hasten through the breakfast-getting!"</p>
+
+<p>Constance fluttered away in a visible state of
+pleasant excitement. Her father watched her without
+speaking, his eyes still gloomy; he knew that
+Constance lacked knowledge of his reason for being
+anxious over Giles's absence.</p>
+
+<p>"And why should you hasten the getting of breakfast,
+Constantia Hopkins?" demanded Dame Eliza.
+"It is to be no earlier than common. If you are
+thinking to see Priscilla Mullins made the wife of
+John Alden, it will not be till nine of the clock, and
+that is nearly three hours distant."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but I am going to dress the bride!" triumphed
+Constance. "I'm going to dress her from top to
+toe, and coil her wealth of glossy hair, to show best
+its masses! And to crown her dear pretty face with
+it brought around her brow, as only I can bend it, so
+Pris declares! My dear, winsome Pris!"</p>
+
+<p>"Will you let be such vanity and catering to sinful
+worldliness, Stephen Hopkins?" demanded that unfortunate
+man's wife, with asperity. "Why will you
+allow your daughter to divert Priscilla Mullins from
+the awfulness of the vows she will utter, filling her
+mind with thoughts that ill become a Puritan bride,
+and one to be a Puritan wife? I will say for your
+wife, sir, that she did not come to vow herself to you
+in such wise. And when Constantia herself becomes
+a matron of this plantation she will not deport herself
+becomingly if she spend her maidenhood fostering
+vanity in others. But there is no folly in which you
+will not uphold her! I pray that I may live to keep
+Damaris to the narrow path."</p>
+
+<p>"Aye, and my sweet Con hath lost Her mother!"
+burst out Stephen Hopkins, already too disturbed
+in mind to bear his wife's nagging.</p>
+
+<p>His allusion to Constance's mother, of whose memory
+his wife was vindictively jealous, would have
+brought forth a storm, but that Constance flew to
+her father, caught him by the arm, and drew him
+swiftly out of the door, saying:</p>
+
+<p>"Nay, nay, my dear one; what is the use? Let us
+be happy on Pris's wedding day. I feel as though
+if we were happy it would somehow bring good to her.
+Don't mind Mistress Eliza; let her rail. If it were
+not about this, it would be something else. Come
+down the grass a way, my father, and see how the
+sunshine sparkles on the sea. The day is smiling
+on Pris, at least, and is decked for her by God, so why
+should my stepmother mind that I shall make the
+girl herself as fair as I know how?"</p>
+
+<p>"You are a dear lass, Con, child, and I swear I
+don't know how I should bear my days without you,"
+said Stephen Hopkins, something suspiciously like
+a quaver in his voice.</p>
+
+<p>He did not return to the house till Con had prepared
+the breakfast. Hastily she cleared it away, her
+stepmother purposely delaying the meal as long as
+possible. But Dame Eliza's utmost contrariness
+could not hold back Constance's swift work long
+enough to make the hour very late when it was done,
+the room set in order, and Constance herself, unadorned,
+in her plain Sunday garb, hastening over
+the young grass to where Priscilla awaited her.</p>
+
+<p>No one else had been allowed to help Constance
+in her loving labour. Beginning with Priscilla's
+sturdy shoes&mdash;there were no bridal slippers in Plymouth!&mdash;Constance,
+on her knees, laced Pris into
+the gear in which she would walk to meet John Alden,
+and followed this up, garment by garment, which she
+and Priscilla had sewn in their brief spare moments,
+until she reached the masses of shining brown hair,
+which was Priscilla's glory and Constance's affectionate
+pride.</p>
+
+<p>Brushing, and braiding, and coiling skilfully,
+Constance wound the fine, yet heavy locks around
+Priscilla's head.</p>
+
+<p>Then with deft fingers she pulled, and patted and
+fastened into curves above her brow sundry strands
+which she had left free for that purpose, and fell
+back to admire her results.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, my Prissy!" Constance cried, rapturously
+clapping her hands. "Wait till you are dressed,
+and I let you see this in the glass yonder. No, not
+now! Only when the bridal gown is donned! My
+word, Priscilla Mullins, but John Alden will think
+that he never saw, nor loved you until this day!
+Which is as we would wish him to feel. They may
+forbid us curling and waving our locks in this plantation,
+but no one ever yet, as I truly believe, could
+make laws to keep girls from increasing their charms!
+Your hair brought down and shaken loose thus
+around your face, my Pris, is far, far more lovely,
+and adorns you better than any curling tongs could
+do it. Because, after all, nature fits faces and hair
+together, and my waving hair would not be half so
+becoming to you as your own straight hair, thus
+crowning your brow. Constance Hopkins, my girl,
+I am proud of your skill as lady's maid!" And
+Constance kissed her own hand by way of her reward,
+as she went to the corner and gingerly lifted
+the white gown that waited there for her handling.</p>
+
+<p>It was a soft, fragile thing, made of white stuff
+from the East, embroidered all over with sprigs of
+small flowers. It had been Constance's mother's,
+and had come from England at the bottom of her
+own chest, safe hidden, together with other beautiful
+fabrics that had been Constance's mother's, from the
+condemnatory eyes of Stephen Hopkins's second wife.</p>
+
+<p>"It troubles me to wear this flimsy loveliness,
+Constance," said Priscilla, as the gown drifted down
+over her shoulders. "And to think it was thy
+mother's."</p>
+
+<p>"It will not harm it to lie over your true heart to-day,
+dearest Pris, when you vow to love John forever.
+It seems to me as though lifeless things drew something
+of value to themselves from contact with goodness
+and love. Pris, it is really most exquisite! And
+that deep ruffle that I sewed around it at the bottom
+makes it exactly long enough for you, yet it leaves it
+still right for me to wear, should I ever want to, only
+by ripping it off again! Oh, Priscilla, dear, you are
+lovely enough, and this embroidery is fine enough,
+for you to be a London bride!"</p>
+
+<p>Once more Constance fell back to admire at the
+same time Priscilla and her achievements.</p>
+
+<p>"I think, perhaps, it may be wrong, as they tell
+us it is, to care too much for outward adornment,
+Con dear. Not but that I like it, and love you for
+being so unselfish, so generous to me," said Priscilla,
+with her sweet gravity of manner.</p>
+
+<p>"Constance, if only my mother and father, and
+Joseph&mdash;but of course my parents I mourn more than
+my brother&mdash;were here to bless me to-day!"</p>
+
+<p>"Try to feel that they are here, Prissy," said Constance.
+"There be Christians in plenty who would
+tell you that they pray for you still."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but that is superstition!" protested Priscilla,
+shocked.</p>
+
+<p>Constance set her face into a sort of laughing and
+sweet contrariness.</p>
+
+<p>"There be Christians in plenty who believe it,"
+she repeated. "And it seems a comforting and innocent
+enough thing to me. Art ready now, Priscilla?
+But before you go, kiss me here the kind of
+good-bye that we cannot take in public; my good-bye
+to dear Priscilla Mullins; your good-bye to Con, with
+whom, though dear friends we remain for aye, please
+God, you never again will be just the same close
+gossip that we have been as maids together, on ship-board
+and land, through sore grief and hardships,
+yet with abounding laughter when we had half a
+chance to smile."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Con, don't make me cry!" begged Priscilla,
+holding Constance tight, her eyes filling with tears.
+"You speak sadly, and like one years older than yourself,
+who had learned the changes of our mortal life.
+I'll not love you less that I am married."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, you will, Pris! Or, if not less, at least
+differently. For maids are one in simple interests,
+quick to share tears and laughter, while the young
+matron is occupied with graver matters, and there is
+not oneness between them. It is right so, but&mdash;&mdash;Well,
+then, kiss me good-bye, Pris, my comrade, and
+bid Mistress John Alden, when you know her, love
+me well for your sweet sake," insisted Constance, not
+far from tears herself.</p>
+
+<p>Quietly the two girls stole out of the bedroom,
+into the common room of the new house which Doctor
+Fuller had built for the reception of his wife, whose
+coming from England he eagerly awaited. The
+widow White and Priscilla had been lodged there,
+helping the doctor to get it in order.</p>
+
+<p>"You look well, Priscilla," said Mrs. White. "Say
+what they will, there is something in the notion of a
+young maiden going in white to her marriage. Your
+friends are waiting you outside. I wish you well, my
+daughter, and may you be blessed in all your undertakings."</p>
+
+<p>Priscilla went to the door and Constance opened it
+for her, stepping back to let the bride precede her.
+Beyond it were waiting the young girls of the settlement;
+Humility Cooper and her cousin, Elizabeth
+Tilley, caught Priscilla by the hands.</p>
+
+<p>"How fair you are, dear!" cried Humility. "The
+children begged to be allowed to come to your wedding,
+and they are all waiting at Mr. Winslow's, for
+you were always their great friend, and there is
+scarce a limit to their love for John Alden."</p>
+
+<p>"Surely let the children come!" said Priscilla.
+"They are first of all of us, and will win blessings
+for John Alden and me."</p>
+
+<p>The girls fell into line ahead of her, and Priscilla
+walked down Leyden Street, the short distance that
+lay between the doctor's house and Edward Winslow's,
+her head bent, her eyes upon the ground, the colour
+faded from her fresh-tinted face. At the magistrate's
+house the elders of the little community were gathered,
+waiting. John Alden came out and met his
+bride on the narrow, sanded walk, and led her soberly
+into the house and up to Edward Winslow, who
+awaited them in his plain, close-buttoned coat, with
+its broad collar and cuffs of white linen newly and
+stiffly starched and ironed.</p>
+
+<p>It was a brief ceremony, divested of all but the
+necessary questions and replies, yet to all present
+it was not lacking in impressiveness, for the memory
+of recent suffering was vivid in every mind; the longing
+for the many who were dead was poignant, and
+the consciousness of the uncertainty of the future of
+the young people, who were thus beginning their
+life together, was acute, though no one would have
+allowed its expression, lest it imply a lack of faith.</p>
+
+<p>When Mr. Winslow had pronounced John and
+Priscilla man and wife, Elder William Brewster arose
+and, with extended hands, called down upon their
+heads the blessing of the God of Israel, and prayed
+for their welfare in this world, their reward in the
+world to come.</p>
+
+<p>Without any of the merriment which accompanied
+congratulations and salutations at a marriage in
+England, these serious men and women came up in
+turn and gravely kissed the bride upon her cheek,
+and shook John Alden's hand. Yet each one was
+fond of Priscilla and had grieved with her on her
+father's, mother's, and brother's deaths, and each one
+honoured and truly was attached to John Alden.</p>
+
+<p>But even in Plymouth colony youth had to be more
+or less youthful.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, now; we're taking you home!" cried
+Francis Billington. "Fall in, girls and boys, big
+and little, grown folks as well, if only you will, and
+let us see our bride and her man started in their new
+home! And who remembers a rousing chorus?"</p>
+
+<p>John Alden had been building his house with the
+help of the older boys; to it now he was taking Priscilla
+on her wedding journey, made on her own feet,
+a distance of a few hundred yards.</p>
+
+<p>"No rousing choruses here, sir," said Edward
+Winslow, sternly. "If you will escort our friends
+to their home&mdash;and to that there can be no objection&mdash;let
+it be to the sound of godly psalms, not to profane
+songs."</p>
+
+<p>"You offer us youngsters little inducement to
+marry when our time comes," muttered Francis,
+but he took good care that Mr. Winslow should not
+hear him, having no desire to run counter at that
+moment to Mr. Winslow's will, knowing that he and
+Jack were already in danger of being dealt with
+by the authorities. And where was Jack? He had
+not seen his brother since the previous day.</p>
+
+<p>Boys and young men in advance, girls and the
+younger women following, the bridal pair bringing
+up the rear, the little procession went up Leyden
+Street and drew up at the door of the exceedingly
+small house which John Alden had made for his wife.
+Francis, who had constituted himself master of
+ceremonies, made the escort divide into two lines
+and, between them, John and Priscilla walked into
+their house. And with that the wedding was
+over.</p>
+
+<p>For an instant the young people held their places,
+staring across the space that separated them, with
+the blank feeling that always follows after the end
+of an event long anticipated.</p>
+
+<p>Then Constance turned with a sigh, looking about
+her, wondering if she really were to resume her work-a-day
+tasks, first of all get dinner.</p>
+
+<p>She met her father's intent gaze and his look
+startled her. He beckoned her, and she stepped
+back out of the line and joined him.</p>
+
+<p>"Giles, Constance; where is he?" demanded
+Stephen Hopkins.</p>
+
+<p>"Father, I don't know! Isn't he here?" she cried.</p>
+
+<p>"He is not here, nor is John Billington," said her
+father. "No one has seen either of them since last
+night. Is it likely that they would absent themselves
+willingly from this wedding; Giles, who is so fond of
+John Alden; John Billington, who is so fond of anything
+whatever that breaks the monotony of the
+days?"</p>
+
+<p>Constance shook her head. "No, Father," she
+whispered.</p>
+
+<p>"No. And you have no clue to this disappearance,
+Constance?" her father insisted.</p>
+
+<p>"Father, Father, no; no, indeed!" protested Constance.
+"I did not so much as miss the boys from
+among us. But what could have befallen them? It
+can't be that they have come to harm?"</p>
+
+<p>"Constance," said her father with a visible effort,
+"Giles was deeply angry with me yesterday&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Father, dear Father, you are quite wrong!" Constance
+interrupted him. "There was no mistaking
+how delighted Giles was with your making the treaty.
+Indeed I saw in him all the old-time love and pride
+in you that we used to make a jest&mdash;but how we
+liked it!&mdash;in the dear days across the water, when we
+were children."</p>
+
+<p>Stephen Hopkins let her have her say. Then he
+shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"It may all be as you say, Constance," he said,
+sadly. "I also felt in Giles, saw in his face, the
+affection I have missed of late. But when the Billingtons
+came making that disturbance I went out&mdash;angry,
+Con; I admit it&mdash;and accused Giles of abetting
+them in what might have caused us serious trouble.
+And he, in turn, was furiously angry with me. He
+did not reply to my accusation, but spoke impertinently
+to me, and went away. I have not seen him
+since."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Father, Father!" gasped Constance, her lips
+trembling, her face pale.</p>
+
+<p>"I know, my daughter," said Stephen Hopkins,
+almost humbly. "But it was an outrageous thing
+to risk offending our new allies, and inviting the death
+of us all. And Giles did not deny having a hand in
+it, remember. But I confess that I should have first
+asked him whether he had, or not."</p>
+
+<p>"Poor Father," said Constance, gently. "It is
+hard enough to be anxious about your boy without
+being afraid that you wronged him. How I wish
+that Giles would not always stand upon his dignity,
+and scorn speech! How I wish, how I pray, that
+you may come to understand each other, to trust
+each other, and be as we were when you trotted
+Giles and me upon your knees, and I sometimes
+feared that you liked me less than you did your handsome
+boy, who was so like you."</p>
+
+<p>"Who <i>is</i> so like me," her father corrected her.
+"You were right, Con, when you said that Giles and
+I were too alike to get on well together; the same
+quick temper, rash action, swift conclusions."</p>
+
+<p>"The same warm heart, high honour, complete
+loyalty," Constance amended, swiftly.</p>
+
+<p>"Father, if you could but once and for ever grasp
+that! Giles is you again in your best traits. He can
+be the reliance that you are, but if he turns
+wrong&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>She paused and her father groaned.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, Constance, you are partial to me, yet you
+stab me. If I have turned him wrong, is what you
+would say! How womanly you are grown, my daughter,
+and how like your dead mother! But, Con, this
+is no time to stand discussing traits, not even to adjust
+the blame of this wretched business. How shall
+I find the boy?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, for that, Father, you know far better than
+I," said Constance, gently, taking her father's arm.
+"Let us go home, dear man. I should think a party
+to scour the woods beyond us? And Squanto would
+be our best help, he and Captain Standish, wouldn't
+they? But I am sure the boys will be in for supper.
+You know they are sharp young wolves, with a scent
+like the whole pack in one for supper! Giles is safe!
+And as to Jack Billington, tell me truly, Father,
+can you imagine anything able to harm him?" She
+laughed with an excellent reproduction of her own
+mirth when she possessed it, but it was far from hers
+now.</p>
+
+<p>Constance shared to the uttermost her father's apprehension.
+If her poor, hasty father had again
+accused Giles of that which he had not done, and this
+when he was aglow with a renewal of the old confidence
+between them, then it well might be that
+Giles, equally hot-headed, had done some desperate
+thing in his first sore rage. The fact that he had been
+absent from the wedding of John Alden, whom he
+cared for deeply; that he had missed his supper and
+breakfast; and that John Billington, reckless, adventurous
+Jack, was missing at the same time, left
+Constance little ground for hope that nothing was
+wrong.</p>
+
+<p>But nothing of this did she allow to escape in her
+manner of speech.</p>
+
+<p>She gaily told her father all about her morning: how
+cleverly she had lengthened Priscilla's gown, her own
+mother's gown, lent Pris; how becomingly she had
+arranged Pris's pretty hair; all the small feminine
+details which a man, especially a brave, manly man
+of Stephen Hopkins's kind, is supposed to scorn,
+but which Constance was instinctively sympathetic
+enough to know rested and amused her father;
+soothed him with its pretty femininity; relaxed him
+as proving that in a world of such pretty trifles
+tragedy could not exist.</p>
+
+<p>"My stepmother is not come back yet," Constance
+said, with a swift glance around, as she entered.
+"Father, when she comes in with the baby
+you must test his newly discovered powers; Oceanus
+is beginning to stand alone! Now I must go doff my
+Sunday best&mdash;Father, I never can learn to call it the
+Sabbath; please forgive me!&mdash;and put on my busy-maid
+clothes! What a brief time a marriage takes!
+I mean in the making!" She laughed and ran lightly
+away, up the steep stairs that wound in threatening
+semi-spiral, up under the steep lean-to roof.</p>
+
+<p>"Bless my sunshine!" said Stephen Hopkins,
+fervently, as he watched her skirt whisk around the
+door at the stairway foot.</p>
+
+<p>But upstairs, in the small room that she and
+Damaris shared, his "sunshine" was blurred by a
+swift rain of tears.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="p4"><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII</a></h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">The Lost Lads</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>A gray evening of mist drifting in from the sea
+settled down upon Plymouth. It emphasized
+the silence and seemed to widen and deepen the
+vacuum created by the absence of Giles and John.
+For the supper hour, at which they were enthusiastically
+prompt to return to give their hearty appetites
+their due, came and passed without bringing back the
+boys.</p>
+
+<p>Stephen Hopkins pushed away his plate with its
+generous burden untouched, threw on his wide-brimmed
+hat, and strode out of the house without a
+word. Constance knew that he had gone to ask help
+from Myles Standish, to organize a search, and go out
+to find the lost.</p>
+
+<p>Damaris crept into her sister's lap and sat with her
+thin little hands in Constance's, mutely looking up
+into the white, sorrowing face above her.</p>
+
+<p>Even Dame Eliza was reluctantly moved to something
+like pity for the girl's silent misery, and expressed
+it in her way.</p>
+
+<p>"At least," she said, suddenly, out of the deep
+silence enveloping them, "here is one thing gone
+wrong without my sending. No one can say that I
+had a finger raised to push your brother out of the
+right course this time!"</p>
+
+<p>Constance tried to reply, but failed. Not directly
+had her stepmother had a share in this misfortune,
+but how great a share had she in the estrangement
+between father and son that was at the bottom of the
+present misunderstanding? Constance would not
+remind her stepmother of this, and no other reply was
+possible to her in her intense anxiety.</p>
+
+<p>The night wore away, the dawn came, lifting the
+fog as the sun shot up out of the sea. Stephen
+Hopkins came out of the principal bedroom on the
+ground floor of the house showing in his haggard face
+that he had not slept. Constance came slowly down
+the winding stairs, pale, with dark circles under her
+eyes which looked as though they had withdrawn
+from her face, retreated into the mind which dwelt on
+Giles since they could no longer see him, and the
+brain alone could fulfil their office.</p>
+
+<p>"There's no sort of use in getting out mourning till
+you're sure of having a corpse, so I say," said Mistress
+Eliza, impatiently. "Giles is certain to take care of
+himself. I've no manner of patience with people
+who borrow what they can't return, and how would
+you return trouble, borrowed from nothing and nobody?"</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless she helped both Constance and her
+father to a generous bowlful of porridge, and set it
+before them with a snapped-out: "Eat that!" which
+Constance was grateful to feel concealed uneasiness
+on her stepmother's own part.</p>
+
+<p>Another day, and still another, wore themselves
+away. Constance fought to keep her mind occupied
+with all manner of tasks, hoping to tire herself till
+she must sleep at night, but nevertheless slept only
+brokenly, lying staring at the three stars which she
+could see through the tiny oblong window under the
+eaves, or into the blackness of the slanting roof,
+listening to Damaris's quiet breathing, and thinking
+that childhood was not more blessed in being happy
+than in its ability to forget.</p>
+
+<p>Stephen Hopkins had gone with Captain Standish,
+Francis Billington, and Squanto to scour the woods
+for miles, although labouring hands could ill be spared
+at that season. They returned at the close of their
+fourth day of absence, and no one ventured to question
+them; that they had not so much as a clue to the lost
+lads was clearly written on their faces.</p>
+
+<p>Constance drew her stool close to her father after
+supper was over, and wound her arms about him
+and laid her head on his breast, unrebuked by her
+stepmother.</p>
+
+<p>"Read the fifty-first psalm, my daughter; it was
+the penitential psalm in England in my beginnings,"
+Stephen Hopkins said, and Constance read it in a low
+voice, which she dared not raise, lest it break.</p>
+
+<p>An hour later, an hour which had been passed in
+silence, broken only by Dame Eliza's taking Damaris
+up to bed, the sound of voices was heard coming down
+the quiet street. Stephen Hopkins's body tautened
+as he sat erect, and Constance sprang to her feet.
+No one ever went outside his house in the Plymouth
+plantation after the hour for family prayers, which
+was identical in every house. But someone was
+abroad now; it was not possible&mdash;&mdash;?</p>
+
+<p>"It is Squanto," said Stephen Hopkins, catching
+the Indian's syllables of broken English.</p>
+
+<p>"And Francis Billington, and another Indian,
+talking in his own tongue!" added Constance, shaking
+with excitement.</p>
+
+<p>The door opened; Stephen Hopkins did not move
+to open it. There entered the three whom those
+within the house had recognized; Francis's face was
+crimson, his eyes flashing.</p>
+
+<p>"You come to tell me that my son is dead?" said
+Stephen Hopkins, raising his hand as if to ward off
+a blow.</p>
+
+<p>"No, we don't! Don't look like that, Mr. Hopkins,
+Con!" cried Francis. "Jack and Giles are all
+right&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Massasoit send him," said Squanto, interrupting
+the boy, as if he wanted to save Stephen Hopkins
+from betraying the feeling that an Indian would
+scorn to betray, for Mr. Hopkins had closed his eyes
+and swayed slightly as he heard Francis's high boyish
+voice utter the words he had so hungered to hear.</p>
+
+<p>Squanto pointed to the Indian beside him as he
+spoke. "Massasoit sent him. Massasoit know where
+boys go. Nawsett. It not far; Massasoit more far.
+Nawsett Indians fight you when you come, not yet got
+Plymouth found. Nawsett. Both boys, both two."
+Squanto touched two fingers of his left hand. "Not
+dead, not sick, not hurt. You send, Massasoit say.
+Get boys you send Nawsett. Squanto go show
+Nawsett." Squanto looked proudly at his hearers,
+rejoicing in his good news.</p>
+
+<p>"Praise God from Whom all blessings flow," said
+Stephen Hopkins, bowing his head, and Constance
+burst into tears and seized him around the neck,
+while Francis drew his sleeves across his eyes, muttering
+something about: "Rather old Jack was all right."</p>
+
+<p>Dame Eliza came down the stairs, having heard
+voices, and recognized them as Indian, but had been
+unable to catch what was said. She stopped as she
+saw the scene before her, and her face crimsoned.
+She at once knew the purport, though not the details,
+of the message delivered through Squanto by Massasoit's
+messenger, and that the lost lads were safe.
+With a quick revulsion from the anxiety that she
+had felt, she instantly lost her temper.</p>
+
+<p>"Stephen Hopkins, what is this unseemingly exhibition?
+Will you allow your daughter to behave in this
+manner before a youth, and two savage men? Shame
+on you! Stand up, Constantia, and let your father
+alone. So Giles is safe, I suppose? Well, did I not
+tell you so? Bad sixpences are hard to lose; your
+son will give you plenty of the scant comfort you've
+already had from him. No fear of him not coming
+back to plague me, and to disgrace you," she scolded.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Stepmother, when we are so glad and thankful!"
+sighed Constance, lifting her tired, tear-worn
+face, over which the light of her gladness and gratitude
+was beginning to shine.</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing to be done that night but to
+try to adjust to the relief that had come, and to wait
+impatiently for morning to arrange to bring home the
+wanderers.</p>
+
+<p>Stephen Hopkins was ahead of the sun in beginning
+the next day, and as soon as he could decently do so,
+he set out to see Governor Bradford to ask his help.</p>
+
+<p>"I rejoice with you, my friend and brother," said
+dignified William Bradford, when he had heard Mr.
+Hopkins's story. "Like the woman in the Gospel
+you call in your neighbours to rejoice with you that
+the lost is found. I will at once send the shallop to
+sail down the coast and bring off our thorn-in-the-flesh,
+young John Billington, and your somewhat
+unruly lad with him. As your brother in our great
+enterprise and your true well-wisher, let me advise
+that you deal sternly with Giles when he is returned
+to us. He hath done exceeding wrong thus to afflict
+you, and with you, all of our community to a lesser
+extent, by anxiety over his safety. Furthermore,
+it is a time in which we need all our workers; he hath
+not only deprived us of his own services, but hath
+demanded the valuable hours of others in striving to
+rescue him. I doubt not that you will do your duty
+as a father, but let me remind you that your duty is
+not leniency, but sternness to the lad who is too nearly
+man to fail us all as he hath done."</p>
+
+<p>"It is true, William Bradford, and I will do my best
+though it hath afflicted me that I may have driven
+the lad from me by blaming him when it was not his
+desert, and that because of this he went away," said
+Mr. Hopkins.</p>
+
+<p>"If this were true, Stephen, yet would it not excuse
+Giles," said William Bradford, whose one child, a boy,
+had been left behind in England to follow his father
+to the New World later, and who was not versed in
+ways of fatherhood to highstrung youths of Giles's
+age. "It becometh not a son to resent his father's
+chastisements, which, properly borne, may result in
+benefit, whether or not their immediate occasion was
+a matter of justice or error. So deal with your son
+sternly, I warn you, nor let your natural pleasure in
+receiving him safe back again relax you toward him."</p>
+
+<p>The shallop was launched with sufficient men to
+navigate her, Squanto accompanying them to guide
+them southward to the tribe that held Giles and John,
+in a sense, their captives.</p>
+
+<p>On the third day after her departure the shallop
+came again in sight, nosing her way slowly up the
+harbour against a wind dead ahead and blowing
+strong. There was time, and to spare for any
+amount of preparation, and yet to get down on the
+sands to see the shallop come to anchor, and be
+ready to welcome those whom she bore. Nevertheless,
+Constance hurried her simple toilet till she was
+breathless, snarling the comb in her hair; tying her
+shoe laces into knots which her nervousness could
+hardly disentangle; chafing her delicate skin with the
+vigorous strokes she gave her face; stooping frequently
+to peer out of her bedroom window to see if,
+by an impossible mischance, the shallop had come
+up before she was dressed, although the one glimpse
+that she had managed to get of the small craft had
+shown that the shallop was an hour away down the
+harbour.</p>
+
+<p>At last her flustered mishaps were over, and Constance
+was neat and trim, ready to go down to the
+beach.</p>
+
+<p>"Damaris, little sister, come up and let me see that
+none of the dinner treacle is on the outside of your
+small mouth," Constance called gaily down the stairs.</p>
+
+<p>Damaris appeared, came half way, and stopped
+forlornly.</p>
+
+<p>"Mother says she will take me, Constance," the
+child said, mournfully. "She says that you will
+greet Giles with warm welcome, and that I must not
+help in it, for that Giles is wicked, and must be
+frowned upon. Is Giles wicked, Constance? He is
+good to me; I love him, not so much as you, but I do
+love Giles. Must I not be glad when he comes,
+Sister?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Damaris, darling, your kind little heart tells
+you that you would want a welcome yourself if you
+were returning after an absence! And we know that
+the father of that bad son in the Gospel went out
+to meet him, and fell on his neck! But I must not
+teach you against your mother's teaching! You
+know, little lass, whether or not I think our big
+brother bad!" said poor Constance. "Where is your
+mother?"</p>
+
+<p>"She hath gone to fetch Oceanus back; he crawled
+out of the open door and went as fast as a spider
+down the street, crawling, Constance! He looked
+so funny!" and Damaris laughed.</p>
+
+<p>Constance laughed too, and cried gaily, with one of
+her sudden changes from sober to gay: "And so
+Oceanus is beginning to run off, too! What a time
+we shall have, Damaris, with our big brother marching
+away, and our baby brother crawling away, both
+of them caring not a button whether we are frightened
+about them, or not!"</p>
+
+<p>She flitted down the stairs with her lightness of
+movement that gave her the effect of a half-flight,
+caught Damaris to her and kissed her soundly, and
+set her down just in time to escape rebuke for her
+demonstrativeness from Dame Eliza, who returned
+with her face reddened, and Oceanus kicking under
+one arm, hung like a sack below it, and screaming
+with baffled rage and the desire of adventure. On
+the beach nearly everyone of the small community
+was gathered to see the arrival.</p>
+
+<p>Constance stole up behind Priscilla Alden, and
+touched her shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"You are not the only happy girl here to-day, my
+bonny bride," she said.</p>
+
+<p>Priscilla turned and caught Constance by both
+hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Nor the only one glad for this cause, Constance,"
+she retorted. "Indeed I rejoice beyond my powers
+of telling, that Giles is come to thee, and that thou
+art spared the bitter sorrow that we feared had fallen
+upon thee!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well do I know that, dear Pris," said Constance.
+"Where is my father?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yonder with William Bradford, Edward Winslow,
+Elder Brewster; do you not see?" Priscilla replied
+nodding toward the group that stood somewhat
+apart from the others. Constance crossed over to
+them, and curtseyed respectfully to the heads of this
+small portion of the king's subjects.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you not come with me, my father?" she said,
+hoping that Stephen Hopkins would stand with her
+on the edge of the sands to be the first whom Giles
+would see on arriving, identifying himself with her
+who, Giles would know, was watching for him with
+a heart leaping out toward him.</p>
+
+<p>"No, Daughter, I will remain here. I am to-day
+less Giles Hopkins's father than one of the representatives
+of this community, which he and John Billington
+have offended," replied Stephen Hopkins, but
+whether with his mind in complete accord with his
+decision, or stifling a longing to run to meet his son,
+like that other father of whom Constance had spoken
+to Damaris, the girl could not tell.</p>
+
+<p>She turned away, recognizing the futility of pleading
+when her father was flanked as he then was.</p>
+
+<p>The shallop was beached and the lost lads leaped
+out, John with a broad grin on his face, unmixed
+enjoyment of the situation visible in his every look;
+Giles with his eyes troubled, joy in getting back
+struggling with his misgivings as to what he might
+find awaiting him.</p>
+
+<p>The first thing that he found was Constance, and
+there was no admixture in the delight with which he
+seized his sister's hands&mdash;warmer greeting being
+impossible before a concourse which would rebuke it
+sternly&mdash;and replied fervently to her: "Oh, Giles,
+how glad I am to see you again!"</p>
+
+<p>"And I to see you, sweet sis! Ah, there is Pris!
+I missed her wedding. And there is John Alden!"
+said Giles, shading his eyes with his hand, but Constance
+saw the eyes searching for his father, and
+merely glancing at Priscilla and John.</p>
+
+<p>"Our father is with the other weighty men of our
+plantation, waiting for you, Giles. You and John
+must go to them," suggested Constance.</p>
+
+<p>Giles shrugged his shoulders. "Otherwise they
+will not know we are back?" he asked. "Very well;
+come, then, Jack. The sooner the better; then the
+gods are propitiated."</p>
+
+<p>The two wilful lads walked over to the grave men
+awaiting them.</p>
+
+<p>"We thank you, Governor Bradford, for sending
+the shallop after us," said Giles.</p>
+
+<p>"Is this all that you have to say?" demanded
+William Bradford!</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir; we have had adventures. We wandered
+five days, subsisting on berries and roots; came upon
+an Indian village, called Manamet, which we reckon
+to be some twenty miles to the southward of Plymouth
+here. These Indians conveyed us on to
+Nawsett still further along, and there we rested until
+the shallop appeared to take us off. This is, in
+brief, the history of our trip, although I assure you,
+it was longer in the living than in the telling. Permit
+me to add, Governor, that those Indians among whom
+we tarried are coming to make a peace with us and
+seek satisfaction from those of our community who
+took their corn what time we were dallying at Cape
+Cod, when we arrived in the <i>Mayflower</i>. This is,
+perhaps, in a measure due to our visit to them, though
+we would not claim the full merit of it, since it may
+also be partly wrought by Massasoit's example."</p>
+
+<p>Giles spoke with an easy nonchalance that held no
+suggestion of contrition, and William Bradford, as
+well as Elder Brewster, and Mr. Winslow, frowned
+upon him, while his father flushed darkly under the
+bronze tint of his skin, and his eyes flashed. At every
+encounter this father and son mutually angered each
+other.</p>
+
+<p>"Inasmuch as you have done well, Giles Hopkins
+and John Billington, we applaud you," said Governor
+Bradford, slowly. "In sooth we are rejoiced
+that you are not dead, not harmed by your adventure.
+We rejoice, also, in the tidings of peace with
+yet another savage neighbour. But we demand of
+you recognition of your evil ways, repentance for
+the anxiety that you have caused those to whom you
+are dear, to all Christians, who, as is their profession,
+wish you well; for the injury you have done us in
+taking yourselves off, to the neglect of your seasonable
+labours, and the time which hath been wasted
+by able-bodied men searching for you. You have
+not asked your father to pardon you."</p>
+
+<p>Giles looked straight into his father's eyes. Unfortunately
+there was in them nothing of the look
+they had worn a few nights earlier when Constance
+had read to him the psalm of the stricken heart.</p>
+
+<p>"I am truly grieved for the suffering that I know
+my sister bore while my fate was uncertain, for I
+know well her love for me. And I regret being a
+charge upon this struggling plantation. As far as
+lies in my power I will repay that debt to it. But
+as to my father, his last words to me expressed his
+dislike for me, and his certainty that I was a wrong-doer.
+I cannot think that he has grieved for me,"
+said poor Giles, speaking like a man to men until, at
+the last words, his voice quavered.</p>
+
+<p>"I have grieved for thee often and bitterly, Giles,
+and over thee, which is harder for a father than
+sorrow for a son. Show me that I am wrong in my
+judgment of thee, by humbling thyself to my just
+authority, and conducting thyself as I would have
+thee act, and with a great joy in my heart I will confess
+myself mistaken in thee, and thank Heaven for
+my error," said Stephen Hopkins.</p>
+
+<p>Giles's eyes wavered, he dropped his lids, and bit
+his lip. The simple manhood in his father's words
+moved him, yet he reflected that he had been justified
+in resenting an unfounded suspicion on this father's
+part, and he steeled himself against him. More
+than this, how could he reply to him when he was
+surrounded by the stern men who condemned youthful
+folly, and whom Giles resisted in thought and
+deed?</p>
+
+<p>Giles turned away without raising his eyes; he did
+not see a half movement that his father made to hold
+out his hand to detain him.</p>
+
+<p>"Time will right, or end everything," the boy
+muttered, and walked away.</p>
+
+<p>Constance, who had been watching the meeting
+between her two well-beloveds, crossed over to Myles
+Standish.</p>
+
+<p>"Captain Standish," she begged him, "come with
+me; I need you."</p>
+
+<p>"Faith, little Con, I need you always, but never
+have you! You show scant pity to a lonely man,
+that misses his little friend," retorted Captain Standish,
+turning on his heel, obedient to a gesture from
+Constance to walk with her.</p>
+
+<p>"It is about Giles, dear Captain," Constance
+began. "He is back, I am thankful for it, but this
+breach between him and my father is a wide one, and
+over such a foolish thing! And it came about just
+when everything was going well!"</p>
+
+<p>"Foolish trifles make the deepest breaches, Constance,
+hardest to bridge over," said Captain Myles.
+"I grant you that the case is serious, chiefly because
+the man and the boy love each other so greatly; that,
+and their likeness, is what balk them. What would
+you have me do?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know, but something!" cried Constance
+wringing-her hands. "I hoped you would have a
+plan by which you could bring them together."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, truth to tell, Con, I have a plan by which to
+separate them," said the captain, adding, laughing&mdash;as
+Constance cried out: "Oh, not for all time!"&mdash;"But
+I think a time spent apart would bring them together
+in the end. Here is my plan: I am going exploring.
+There is that vast tract of country north of us which
+we have not seen, and tribes of savages, of which
+Squanto tries to tell us, but which he lacks of English
+to describe. I am going to take a company of men
+from here and explore to the nor'ard. I would take
+Giles among them. He will learn self-discipline,
+obedience to me&mdash;I am too much a soldier to be lax
+in exacting obedience from all who serve under me&mdash;and
+he will return here licked into shape by the
+tongue of experience, as an unruly cub is licked into
+his proper form by his dam. In the meantime
+your father will see Giles more calmly than at short
+range, and will not be irritated by his manly airs.
+When they come together again it will be on a new
+plane, as men, not as man and boy, and I foresee
+between them the sane enjoyment of their profound
+mutual affection. I had it in mind to ask Stephen
+Hopkins to lend me his boy; what say you, my Constance?"</p>
+
+<p>"I say: Bless you, and thrice over bless you, Captain
+Myles Standish!" cried Constance. "It is the
+very solution! Oh, I am thankful! I shall be anxious
+every hour till you return, but with all my heart
+I say: Take Giles with you and teach him sense.
+What should we ever do here without you, Captain,
+dear 'Arm-of-the-Colony'?"</p>
+
+<p>"I doubt you ever have a chance to try that dire
+lack, my Con," said Captain Myles, with a humorous
+look at her. "I think I'm chained here by the
+interest that has grown in me day by day, and that I
+shall die among you. Though, by my sword, it's a
+curious thing to think of Myles Standish dying among
+strict Puritans!"</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="p4"><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII</a></h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Sundry Herbs and Simples</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>Stephen Hopkins and his son drew no nearer
+together as the days went by.</p>
+
+<p>Hurt and angry, Giles would not bend his stiff
+young neck to humble himself, checking any impulse
+to do so by reminding himself that his father had been
+unjust to him.</p>
+
+<p>Yet Doctor Fuller, good, kind, and wise, had the
+right of it when he said to the lad one day, laying
+his arm across Giles's shoulders, caressingly:</p>
+
+<p>"Remember, lad, that who is right, or who is
+wrong in a quarrel, or an estrangement, matters
+little, since we are all insects of a day and our dignity
+at best a poor thing, measured by Infinite standards.
+But he is always right who ends a quarrel; ten thousand
+times right if he does it at the sacrifice of his
+own sense of injury, laying down his pride to lift
+a far greater possession. There may be a difference
+of opinion as to which is right when two have fallen
+out, but however that be, the situation is in itself
+wrong beyond dispute, and all the honour is his who
+ends it."</p>
+
+<p>Giles heard him with lowered head, and knit brows,
+but he did not resent the brief sermon. Doctor
+Fuller was a gentle spirit; all his days were given
+over to healing and helping; he was free from the
+condemnatory sternness of most of the colonists,
+and Giles, as all others did, loved him.</p>
+
+<p>Giles kicked at the pebbles in the way, the slow
+colour mounting in his face. Then he threw back his
+head and looked the good doctor squarely in the eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, well, Doctor Fuller," he said. "I'd welcome
+peace, but what would you? My father condemns
+me, sees no good in me, nor would he welcome
+back the old days when we were close friends.
+There will be a ship come here from home some time
+on which I can sail back to England. It will be
+better to rid my father of my hateful presence; yet
+should I hate to leave Sis&mdash;Constance."</p>
+
+<p>"May the ship never leave the runway that shall
+take you from us, Giles, lad," said the doctor. "You
+are blind not to see that it is too-great love for thee
+that ails thy father! It often works to cross purposes,
+our unreasonable human affection. But the case
+is by no means past curing when love awry is the
+disease. Do your part, Giles, and all will be well."</p>
+
+<p>But Giles did not alter his course, and when
+Captain Myles Standish said to Stephen Hopkins:
+"We set forth on the eighteenth of September to
+explore the Massachusetts. I shall take ten men of
+our colour, and three red men, two besides Squanto.
+Let me have your lad for one of my band, old friend.
+I think it will be his remedy." Stephen Hopkins
+welcomed the suggestion, as Giles himself did, and
+it was settled. The Plymouth company sailed away
+in their shallop on a beautiful, sunshiny morning
+when the sun had scarcely come up out of the sea.</p>
+
+<p>Giles and his father had shaken hands on parting,
+and Stephen Hopkins had given the boy his blessing;
+both were conscious that it might be a final parting,
+since no one could be sure what would befall the
+small band among untried savages.</p>
+
+<p>Yet there was no further reconciliation than this,
+no apology on the one side, nor proffered pardon on
+the other.</p>
+
+<p>Constance clung long around her brother's neck
+in the dusk in which she had risen to prepare his
+breakfast; she did not go down to see the start, being
+heavy hearted at Giles's going, and going without
+lifting the cloud completely between him and his
+father. She bade him good-bye in the long low room
+under the rear of the lean-to, where wood was piled
+and water buckets were set and storage made of
+supplies.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Giles, Giles, my dearest, may God keep you
+and bring you back!" Constance whispered, and
+then let her brother go.</p>
+
+<p>She went about her household tasks that morning
+with lagging step and unsmiling lips. Damaris followed
+her, wistfully, much depressed by the unusual
+dejection of Constance, who, in spite of her stepmother's
+disapproval of anything like merriment,
+ordinarily contrived to entertain Damaris to the top
+of her bent when the household tasks were getting
+done.</p>
+
+<p>"Will Giles never come home again, Connie?"
+the child asked at last, and Constance cried with a
+catch in her voice:</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, oh yes, little sister! We know he will, because
+we so want him!"</p>
+
+<p>"There must be a better ground for hope than
+our poor desires, Damaris," Dame Eliza was beginning,
+speaking over the child at Constance; when
+opportunely a shadow fell across the floor through
+the open door and Constance turned to see Doctor
+Fuller smiling at her.</p>
+
+<p>"Good morning, Mistress Hopkins; good morning
+little Damaris; and good morning to you, Constance
+lass!" he said. "Is this a day of especial business?
+Are you too busy for charity to your neighbours,
+beginning with me, and indirectly reaching out to
+our entire community?"</p>
+
+<p>Constance smiled at him with that swift brightening
+of her face that was one of her chief attractions;
+her expression was always playing between grave
+and gay.</p>
+
+<p>"It is not a day of especial business, Doctor Fuller,"
+she said, "or at least all our days are especial
+ones where there is everything yet to be done. But
+I could give it over to charity better than some other
+days, and if it were charity to you&mdash;though I fear
+there is nothing for such as I to do for such as you&mdash;then
+how gladly would I do it, if only to pay a tittle
+of the debt we all owe to you."</p>
+
+<p>"Good child!" said the doctor. "I need help
+and comradeship in my herb gathering; it is to be
+done to-day, if you will be that helper. There is no
+wind, and there is that benignity of sun and sky that
+hath always seemed to me to impart special virtue
+to herbs gathered under it. So will you come with
+me? We will gather the morning long, and this afternoon
+I purpose distilling, in which necessary work
+your deft fingers will be of the greatest assistance to
+me."</p>
+
+<p>"Gladly will I go," cried Constance, flushing with
+pleasure. "I will fetch my basket and shears, put
+on my bonnet, and be ready in a trice. Shall I prepare
+a lunch, or shall I be at home again for dinner?"</p>
+
+<p>"Neither, Constance; there is yet another alternative."
+Doctor Fuller looked with great satisfaction
+at Constance's happier face as he spoke; she had
+been so melancholy when he had come. "I have
+arranged that you shall be my guest at dinner in
+my house, and after it we will to work in my substitute
+for a laboratory. Mistress Hopkins, Constance
+will be quite safe, be assured; and you, I trust, will
+not mind a quiet day with Damaris and Oceanus to
+bear you company?"</p>
+
+<p>"And if I did mind it, would that prevent it?"
+demanded Dame Eliza with a toss of her head. "Not
+even with a 'by your leave' does Constantia Hopkins
+arrange her goings and comings."</p>
+
+<p>"Which was wholly my fault in not first putting
+my question to you, instead of to Constance directly,"
+said Doctor Fuller. "And surely there is no
+excuse for my blundering, I who am trained to feel
+pulses and look at tongues! But since it is thus
+happily concluded, and your stepmother is glad to
+let you have a sort of holiday, come then; hasten,
+Constance girl!"</p>
+
+<p>Constance ran upstairs to hide her laughing face.
+She came down almost at once with that face shaded
+by a deep bonnet, a basket hung on her arm, shears
+sticking up out of it, pulling on long-armed half-gloves
+as she came.</p>
+
+<p>As they walked down the narrow street Constance
+glanced up at Doctor Fuller, interrogatively.</p>
+
+<p>"And&mdash;&mdash;?" the doctor hinted.</p>
+
+<p>"And I was wondering whether you were not
+treating me to-day as your patient?" Constance
+said. "A patient with a trouble of the mind, and
+also a heart complaint?"</p>
+
+<p>"Which means&mdash;&mdash;?" The doctor again waited
+for Constance to fill out his question.</p>
+
+<p>"Which means that you knew I was sorely troubled
+about Giles; that he had gone without better drawing
+to his father; that I was anxious about him, even
+while wishing him to go; and that you gave me this
+day in the woods with you for my healing," Constance
+answered.</p>
+
+<p>"At least not for your harm, little maid," said the
+doctor. "It hath been my experience that the
+gatherer of herbs gets a healing of spirit that is not
+set down in our books among the beneficial qualities
+of the plants, but which may, under conditions, be
+their best attribute. Although the singing of brooks
+and birds, the sweetness of the winds, the solemn
+nobility of the trees, the vastness of the sky, the
+over-brooding presence of God in His creation are
+compounded with the herbs, and impart their powers
+to us with that of the plants."</p>
+
+<p>"That is true," said Constance. "I feel my
+vexations go from me as if my soul were bathed in a
+miraculous elixir, when I go troubled to the woods
+and sit in them awhile."</p>
+
+<p>"Of a certainty," agreed the doctor, bending his
+tall, thin figure to pick a small leaf which he held
+up to Constance. "See this, with its likeness to the
+halberd at its base? This is vervain, which is called
+'Simpler's Joy,' because of the good it yields to those
+who, like us to-day, are simplers, gatherers of simple
+herbs for mankind's benefit. Now let us hope that
+this single plant is a forerunner of many of its kind,
+for it hath been a sacred herb among the ancients,
+as among Christians, and it should be an augury of
+good to us to find it. Look you, Constance, I do not
+mind confessing it to you, for you are not only
+young, but of that happy sort who yield to imagination
+something of its due. I like my omens to be
+favourable, not in superstition, though our brethren
+would condemn me thus, but from a sense of harmony
+and the satisfaction of it."</p>
+
+<p>"How pleasant a hearing is that, Doctor Fuller!"
+laughed Constance. "I love to have the new moon
+aright, though well I know the moon and I have
+naught in common! And though I do not believe
+in fairies, yet do I like to make due allowance for
+them!"</p>
+
+<p>"It is the poetry of these things, and children like
+you and me, my dear, are not to be deprived of poetry
+by mere facts and common sense," said the doctor,
+sticking in the band of his hat the sprig of blue vervain
+which his sharp eyes had discovered.</p>
+
+<p>"Yonder on the side of that sandy hill shall we find
+mints, pennyroyal, and the close cousin of it, which is
+blue curls. There is the prunelle, and welcome to
+it! Gather all you can of it, Constance. That is
+self-heal, and a sovereign remedy for quinsy. So
+is it a balm for wounds of iron and steel tools, and for
+both these sorts of afflictions, what with our winter
+climate as to quinsy and our hard labour as to wounds,
+I am like to need abundant self-heal."</p>
+
+<p>Thus pleasantly chatting Doctor Fuller led the
+way, first up the sandy hill where grew the pennyroyal,
+all along the border of the woods where
+self-heal abounded. They found many plants unexpectedly,
+which the doctor always hailed with the joy
+of one who loved them, rather more than of the medical
+man who required them, and Constance busily
+snipped the stems, listening to the doctor's wise and
+kindly talk, loving him for his goodness and kindness
+to her in making her heart light and giving her on
+this day, which had promised to be sad, of his own
+abundant peace.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Constance, I shall lead you to a secret of
+my own," announced the doctor as the sun mounted
+high above them, and noon drew near. "Come
+with me. But do not forget to rejoice in this wealth
+of bloom, purple and blue, these asters along the
+wayside. They are the glory of our new country,
+and for them let us praise God who sets beauty so
+lavishly around us, having no use but to praise Him,
+for not to any other purpose are these asters here,
+and yet, though I cannot use them, am I humbly
+thankful for them. And for these plumes of golden
+and silver flowers beside them, which we did not
+know across the seas. Now, Constance, what say
+you to that?"</p>
+
+<p>He pointed triumphantly to a small group of plants
+with heart-shaped leaves, having small leaves at their
+base, and which twisted as they grew around their
+neighbouring plants, or climbed a short distance on
+small shrubs. Groups of drooping berries of brilliant,
+translucent scarlet lighted up the little plant settlement,
+hanging as gracefully as jewels set by a skilful
+goldsmith for a fair lady's adornment.</p>
+
+<p>"I think they are wonderfully beautiful. They
+are like ornaments for a beautiful lady! What are
+they?" cried Constance.</p>
+
+<p>"They are themselves the beautiful lady," Doctor
+Fuller said, with a pleased laugh. "That is their
+name&mdash;belladonna, which means 'beautiful lady.'
+They are <i>Atropa Belladonna</i>, to give them their full
+title. But their beauty is only in appearance. If
+they are a belle dame, then she is the <i>belle dame sans
+merci</i>, a cruel beauty if you cross her. You must
+never taste these berries, Constance. I myself
+planted these vines. I brought them with me,
+carefully set in soil. The beautiful lady can be cruel
+if you take liberties with her, but she is capable of
+kindness. I shall gather the belladonna now and distil
+it. In case any one among us ate of poisonous
+toadstools, and were seized with severe spasms of
+the nature of the effect of toadstools, belladonna
+alone would save them. Nightshade, we also call
+this plant. See, I will myself gather this, by your
+leave, my assistant, and place it in my own herb
+wallet."</p>
+
+<p>The doctor suited the action to the word, arose
+from his knees and carefully brushed them. "When
+Mistress Fuller comes, which is a weary day awaiting,
+I hope she may not find me fallen into untidiness,"
+he said, whimsically. "Constance, the ship is due
+that will bring my wife and child, if my longing be a
+calendar!"</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, dear Doctor Fuller, I often think of it,"
+said Constance. "You who are so good to us all are
+lonely and heavy of heart, but none is made to feel
+it. The comfort is that Mistress Fuller and your
+little one are safe and you will yet see them, while so
+many of the women who came hither in our ship are
+not here now, and those who loved them will never
+see them in this world again."</p>
+
+<p>"Surely, my child. I am not repining, for, though
+I am opposed to the extreme strict views of some of
+our community, and they look askance upon me for it
+at times, yet do I not oppose the will of God," said
+the doctor, simply.</p>
+
+<p>"Who of them fulfils it as you do?" cried Constance.
+"You who go out to minister to the sick
+savages, not content to heal your own brethren?"</p>
+
+<p>"And are not the savages also our brothers?"
+asked the doctor, taking up his wallet. "Come then,
+child; we will go home, and this afternoon shall you
+learn something of distilling, as you have, I hope,
+this morning learned something of selecting herbs for
+remedies."</p>
+
+<p>Constance went along at the doctor's side, swinging
+her bonnet, not afraid of the hot September sun
+upon her face. It lighted up her disordered hair,
+and turned it into the semblance of burnished metal,
+upon which the doctor's eyes rested with the same
+satisfaction that had warmed them as he looked on
+the generous beauty of aster and goldenrod, and he
+saw with pleasure that Constance's face was also
+shining, its brightness returned, and he was well
+content with the effect of his prescription for this
+patient.</p>
+
+<p>Constance had a gift of forgetting herself in an
+ecstasy that seized her when the weight of her new
+surroundings was lifted. With Doctor Fuller she
+felt perfect sympathy, and her utter delight in this
+lovely day bubbled up and found expression.</p>
+
+<p>Doctor Fuller heard her singing one of her little
+improvised songs, softly, under her breath, to a
+crooning air that was less an air than a succession of
+sweet sounds. It was the sort of little song with
+which Constance often amused the children of the
+settlement, and Doctor Fuller, that childlike soul,
+listened to her with much of their pleasure in it.</p>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<span class="i0">"Blossom, and berry, and herb of grace;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Purple and blue and gold lighting each place;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Herbs for our body and bloom for our heart&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Beauty and healing, for each hath its part.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Under the sunshine and in the starlight,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Warp and woof weareth the pattern aright.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Shineth the fabric when summer's at end:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The garment scarce hiding the Heart of our Friend,"<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<p>Constance sang, nor did the doctor interrupt her
+simple Te Deum by a word.</p>
+
+<p>At the doctor's house dinner awaited them, kept
+hot, for they were tardy. After it, and when Constance
+had helped to put away all signs of its having
+been, the doctor said to her:</p>
+
+<p>"Now for my laboratory, such as it is, and for our
+task, my apprentice in medicine!" He conducted
+Constance into a small room, at the rear of the house
+where he had set up tables of various sizes of his own
+manufacture, and where were ranged on the shelves
+running around three sides of the room at different
+heights, bowls, glasses of odd shapes&mdash;the uses of
+which were not known to Constance&mdash;and small,
+delicate tools, knives, weights, and piles of strips of
+linen, neatly rolled and placed in assorted widths in
+an accessible corner.</p>
+
+<p>"Mount this stool, Constance, and watch," the
+doctor bade her. "Pay strict attention to what I
+shall do and tell you. Take this paper and quill
+and note names, or special instructions. I am serious
+in wishing you to know something of my work. I need
+assistance; there is no man to be spared from man's
+work in the plantation, and, to speak the truth,
+your brain is quicker to apprehend me, as your hand
+is more skilful to execute for me in the matters upon
+which I engage than are those of any of the lads who
+are with us. So mount this high stool, my lass, and
+learn your lesson."</p>
+
+<p>Constance obeyed him. Breathlessly she watched
+the beginnings of the distillation of the belladonna
+which she had seen gathered.</p>
+
+<p>As the small drops fell slowly into the glass which
+the doctor had set for them, he began to teach
+Constance other things, while the distillation went
+on.</p>
+
+<p>"These are my phials, Constance," he said.
+"Commit to memory the names of their contents,
+and note their positions. See, on these shelves are
+my drugs. Do you see this dark phial? That is for
+my belladonna. Now note where it is to stand. In
+that line are poisons. Their phials are dark, to
+prevent mistaking them for less harmful drugs,
+which are on this other shelf, in white containers."</p>
+
+<p>The doctor taught, and Constance obediently repeated
+her lesson, till the sound of the horn that
+summoned the settlers to their homes for supper, and
+the level rays of the sun across the floor, warned the
+doctor and his pupil that their pleasant day was
+over.</p>
+
+<p>"But you must return, till you are letter perfect
+in your knowledge, Constance," the doctor said. "I
+have decided that there must be one person among us
+whom I could dispatch to bring me what I needed in
+case I were detained, and could not come myself."</p>
+
+<p>"I will gladly learn, Doctor Fuller," said Constance,
+her face confirming her assurance. "I have no
+words to tell you how happy it makes me to hope
+that I may one day be useful in such great matters."</p>
+
+<p>"As you will be," the doctor said. "But remember,
+my child, the lesson of the fields: It does
+not concern us whether great or small affairs are
+given us to do; the one thing is to do well what comes
+our way; to be content to fill the background of
+the picture, or to be a figure in the foreground, as we
+may be required. Aster, goldenrod, herb, all are doing
+their portion."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed you have helped me to see that, dear
+Doctor Fuller," said Constance, gently. "It is not
+ambition, but the remembrance of last winter's
+hardships, when there was so little aid, that makes
+me wish I could one day help."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Constance; I know. Good-night, my child,
+and thank you for your patient attention, for your
+help; most of all for your sweet companionship,"
+said the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, as to that, I am grateful enough to you!
+You made to-day a happy girl out of a doleful one!"
+cried Constance. "Good-night, Doctor Fuller!"</p>
+
+<p>She ran down the street, singing softly:</p>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<span class="i0">"Flower, and berry, and herb of grace;"<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<p>till she reached her home and silenced her song
+with a kiss on eager Damaris's cheek.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="p4"><a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV</a></h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Light-Minded Man, Heavy-Hearted Master</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>Constance Hopkins sat at the side of the
+cave-like fireplace; opposite to where her father,
+engrossed in a heavy, much-rubbed, leather-bound
+book, toasted his feet beside the fire, as was his
+nightly wont.</p>
+
+<p>He was too deeply buried in his reading to heed her
+presence, but the girl felt keenly that her father was
+there and that she had him quite to herself. The
+consciousness of this made her heart sing softly in her
+breast, with a contentment that she voiced in the
+softest humming, not unlike the contented song of
+the kettle on the crane, and the purring of the cat,
+who sat with infolded paws between her human
+friends.</p>
+
+<p>Puck, the small spaniel, and Hecate, the powerful
+mastiff, who had come with the Hopkins family on
+the <i>Mayflower</i>, shared the hearth with Lady Fair, the
+cat, a right that their master insisted upon for them,
+but which Dame Eliza never ceased to inveigh
+against.</p>
+
+<p>However, Dame Eliza had gone to attend upon a
+sick neighbour that night, a fact which Hecate had
+approvingly noted, with her deep-grooved eyelids
+half-open, and in which Constance, no less than Puck
+and Hecate, rejoiced.</p>
+
+<p>There was the quintessence of domestic joy in thus
+sitting alone opposite her father, free from the
+sense of an unsympathetic element dividing them, in
+watching the charring of the tremendous back log,
+and the lovely colours in the salt-soaked small sticks
+under and over it which had been cast up by the sea
+and gathered on the beach for this consumption.</p>
+
+<p>Damaris and baby Oceanus were tucked away
+asleep for the night. It was as if once more Constance
+were a child in England with her widowed
+father, and no second marriage had ever clouded
+their perfect oneness.</p>
+
+<p>So Constance hummed softly, not to disturb the
+reader, the content that she felt not lessened by
+anxiety for Giles; there were hours in which she was
+assured of Giles's safe return, and this was one of
+them.</p>
+
+<p>Stephen Hopkins had been conscious of his girl's
+loving companionship, though not aware that he felt
+it, till, at last, the small tune that she hummed crept
+through his brain into his thought, and he laid down
+his book to look at her.</p>
+
+<p>She sat straight and prim by necessity. Her chair
+was narrow and erect&mdash;a carved, dark oaken chair,
+with a small round seat; it had been Constance's
+mother's, and had come out of her grandfather's
+Tudor mansion, wherein he had once entertained
+Queen Bess.</p>
+
+<p>Constance's dress was of dark homespun stuff,
+coming up close under her soft chin, falling straight
+around her feet, ornamented but with narrow bands
+of linen at her neck and around her wrists. Yet by
+its extreme severity the Puritan gown said: "See
+how lovely this young creature is! Only her fleckless
+skin, her gracious outlines, could triumph over my
+barrenness!"</p>
+
+<p>Obedient to her elders' demands upon her to curb
+its riotousness, Constance had brushed smooth and
+capped her lustrous hair, yet its tendrils escaped upon
+her brow; it glinted below the cap around her ears,
+and in the back of her neck, and shone in the firelight
+like precious metal.</p>
+
+<p>Stephen Hopkins's eyes brightened with delight in
+her charm, but, though he was not one of the strictest
+of Plymouth colonists, yet was he too imbued with
+their customs to express his pleasure in Constance's
+beauty.</p>
+
+<p>Instead he said, but his voice thrilled with what he
+left unsaid:</p>
+
+<p>"It's a great thing, my girl, to draw such a woman
+as Portia, here in this leathern book. She shines
+through it, and you see her clever eyes, her splendid
+presence, best of all her great power to love, to
+humble herself, to forget herself for the man she
+hath chosen! I would have you conversant with the
+women here met, Constance; they are worthy friends
+for you, in the wilderness where such noble ladies are
+rare."</p>
+
+<p>"Yet we have fine women and devoted ones here,
+Father," objected Constance, putting down the fine
+linen that she was hemstitching for her father's wearing.
+He noted the slender, supple hands, long-fingered,
+graceful, yet a womanly hand, made for
+loyalty.</p>
+
+<p>"Far be it from me to belittle them who recognized
+their hard and repulsive duty in the plague
+last winter, and performed it with utter self-renunciation,"
+said Stephen Hopkins. "But, Constance,
+there is a something that, while it cannot
+transcend goodness, enhances it and places its
+possessor on a sort of dais all her life. Your mother
+had it, child. She was beautiful, charming, winsome,
+gracious, yet had she a lordly way with her; you see it
+in a fine-bred steed; I know not how to describe
+it. She was mettlesome, spirited. It was as if she
+did the right with a sort of inborn scorn for aught low;
+had made her choice at birth for true nobility and
+could but abide by it for aye, having made that
+choice. You have much of her, my lass, and I am
+daily thankful for it. A fine lady, was your exquisite
+young mother, and that says it, though the
+term is lowered by common usage. I would that
+you could have known her, my poor child! It was a
+loss hard to accept that you were deprived of her too
+soon, and never could have her direct impress upon
+you. And yet, thank Heaven, she hath left it upon
+you in mothering you, though the memory of her
+doth not bless you. And you sit here, upon a Plymouth
+hearthstone, far from the civilization that
+produced her, and to this I brought you!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Father, Father, my darling!" cried Constance,
+flinging aside her work and dropping upon her
+knees beside him, for his voice quivered with an
+emotion that he never before had allowed to escape
+him, as he uttered a self-reproach that no one knew he
+harboured. "Oh, my father, dearest, don't you know
+that I am happy here? And are you not here with
+me? However fine a lady my sweet mother was&mdash;and
+for your sake I am glad indeed if you see anything
+of her in me!&mdash;yet was she no truer lady than
+you are a fine gentleman. And with you I need no
+better exemplar. As time goes on we shall receive
+from England much of the good we have left behind;
+our colony will grow and prosper; we shall not be
+crude, unlettered. And how truly noble are many of
+our company, not only you, but Governor Bradford,
+Mr. Brewster, Mr. Winslow; their wives; our Arm,
+Captain Myles; and&mdash;dearest of all, save you&mdash;Doctor Fuller!
+No maiden need lack of models who has
+these! But indeed, I want to be all that you would
+have me to be! I cannot say how glad I am if you
+see in me anything of my mother! Not for my sake;
+for yours, for yours!"</p>
+
+<p>"Portia after all!" Stephen Hopkins cried, stroking
+Constance's cheek. "That proves how well he
+knew, great Will of Warwickshire&mdash;which is our
+county also, my lass! Not for their own sake do
+true women value their charm, but for him they love.
+'But only to stand high in your account I might
+in virtues, beauties, livings, friends, exceed!'
+So spake Portia; so, in effect, spake you just now.
+That was your mother's way; she, too, longed to
+have, but to give, her possessions, herself&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>There came a knocking at the door and Constance
+sprang back to her chair, catching up her sewing,
+thrusting in her needle with shortened breath, not to
+be caught by her severe Plymouth neighbours in so
+unseemly a thing as betraying love for her father,
+leaning on his knee.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Hopkins answered the summons, and there
+entered Francis Eaton, Mr. Allerton, and John Howland,
+who having come to Plymouth as the servant of
+Governor Carver, was now living in the colony with
+his articles of bondage annulled, and was inclined to
+exceed in severity the other Puritans, as one who had
+not long had authority even over himself.</p>
+
+<p>"Peace be to you, Mr. Hopkins," said John
+Howland, gravely. "Mistress Constantia, I wish
+you a good evening. Sir, we are come to consult you
+as to certain provisions to be made for the winter to
+come, as to care of the sick, should there be many&mdash;&mdash;. Will
+that great beast bite? She seems not to like me,
+and I may say the feeling is mutual; I never could
+bear a beast."</p>
+
+<p>"She will not bite you, John; she is but deciding on
+your credentials as set forth in the odour of your
+clothing," said Mr. Hopkins, smiling. "Down,
+Hecate, good lass! While I am here you may leave
+it to me to see to your dwelling and fireside, old
+trusty!"</p>
+
+<p>Hecate wagged her whip like tail and instantly lay
+down, her nose on her extended paws, frowning at the
+callers.</p>
+
+<p>"But what is this, Stephen Hopkins?" demanded
+Francis Eaton, picking up the marred, leather-covered
+great volume which Stephen Hopkins had laid down
+when he had risen. "Shakespeare! Plays! Fie, fie
+upon you; sir! I wot you know this is godless matter,
+and that you are sinning to set the example of such
+reading to your child."</p>
+
+<p>Stephen Hopkins's quick temper blazed; he took a
+step in the speaker's direction, and Hecate was
+justified in growling at her master's lead.</p>
+
+<p>"Zounds! Eaton," he cried. "I know that an
+Englishman's house is his castle, on whichever side of
+the ocean he builds it, and that I will not brook your
+coming into it to tell me&mdash;<i>you</i> to tell <i>me</i>, forsooth!&mdash;that
+I am sinning! Look to your own affairs, sir, but
+keep your hands off mine. If you are too ignorant to
+know more of Shakespeare than to think him harmful,
+well, then, sir, you confess to an ignorance that is in
+itself a sin against the Providence that gave us
+poets."</p>
+
+<p>"As to that, Francis Eaton," said Mr. Allerton,
+"Mr. Hopkins hath the best of it. We who strive
+after the highest virtue do not indulge in worldly
+reading, but there be those among us who would not
+condemn Shakespeare. But what is the noise I hear?
+Permit us to go yonder into your outer room, Mr.
+Hopkins, to satisfy ourselves that worse than play-reading
+is not carried on within this house."</p>
+
+<p>"Noise? I heard no noise till now, being too much
+occupied to note it, but it is easy to decide upon its
+cause from here, though if you desire to go yonder, or
+to share the play, I'll not prevent you," said Mr.
+Hopkins, his anger mounting.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, rather, as I seriously fear, that you are too
+accustomed to the sound to note it. I will pass over,
+as unworthy of you and of my profession, the insult
+you proffered me in suggesting that I would bear part
+in a wicked game," said Mr. Allerton, going toward
+the door.</p>
+
+<p>He threw it open with a magnificent gesture and
+stalked through it, followed close by the other two,
+and by Hecate's growl and Puck's sharp barking.</p>
+
+<p>Constance had dropped her work and sat rigidly
+regarding her father with amazed and frightened eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Stephen Hopkins went after them, purple with
+rage. What they saw was a table marked off at its
+farther end by lines drawn in chalk. At the nearer
+end sat Edward Doty and Edward Lister, the men
+whom Stephen Hopkins had brought over with him
+on the <i>Mayflower</i> to serve him. Beside them sat
+tankards of home-made beer, and a small pile of
+coins lay, one at each man's right hand.</p>
+
+<p>Just as Francis Eaton threw open the door, Edward
+Lister leaned forward, balanced a coin carefully
+between his thumb and finger, and shot it forward
+over one of the lines at the other end.</p>
+
+<p>"Aimed, by St. George! Well shot, Ted!" cried
+Edward Doty.</p>
+
+<p>"See that thou beatest me not, Ned; thou art a
+better man than me at it," said Lister, and they both
+took a draught of beer, wiping their lips on their
+sleeve in high satisfaction with the flavour, the game,
+and each other.</p>
+
+<p>"Shovelboard!" "Shuffleboard!" cried Francis
+Eaton and John Howland together, differing on the
+pronunciation of the obnoxious sport, but one in the
+boundless horror in their voices.</p>
+
+<p>"Stephen Hopkins, I am profoundly shocked,"
+said Mr. Allerton, turning with lowering brows upon
+their host. "A man of your standing among us! A
+man of your experience of the world! Well wot you
+that playing of games is forbid among us. That you
+should tolerate it is frightful to consider&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"See here, Isaac Allerton," said Stephen Hopkins,
+stepping so close to his neighbour that Mr. Allerton
+fell back uneasily, "it is a principle among us that
+every man is to follow his conscience. If we have
+thrown off the authority of our old days, an authority
+mind you, that had much to be said for it, and set up
+our own conscience as the sole guide of our actions,
+then how dare you come into my house to reproach
+me for what I consider no wrong-doing? Ted and
+Ned are good fellows, on whose hands leisure hangs
+heavily, since they do not read Shakespeare, as does
+their master, whom equally you condemn. To my
+mind shovelboard is innocent; I have permitted my
+men to play it. Go, if you will, and report to our
+governor this heinous crime of allowing innocent play.
+But on your peril read me no sermon, nor set up your
+opinion in mine own house, for, by my honour, I'll
+not abide it."</p>
+
+<p>"By no will of mine will I report you, my brother,"
+said Isaac Allerton, but the gleam in his eye belied
+him; there was jealousy in this little community, as
+in all human communities. "You know that my
+duty will compel me to lay before Governor Bradford
+what I have seen. Since we have with our own eyes
+seen it, there needs no further witnesses."</p>
+
+<p>"Imply that I would deny the truth, were there
+never a witness, and Heaven help you, Plymouth or
+no Plymouth, brother or no brother! I'm not a liar,"
+cried Stephen Hopkins, so fiercely that Mr. Allerton
+and his companions went swiftly out the side door,
+Mr. Allerton protesting:</p>
+
+<p>"Nay, then Brother and friend; thou art a choleric
+man, and lax as to this business, but no one would
+doubt your honour."</p>
+
+<p>After they had gone Mr. Hopkins went back to his
+chair by the fireside, leaving Ted and Ned staring
+open-mouthed at each other, stunned by the tempest
+aroused by their game.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, rather would I have held the psalm book
+the whole evening than got the master into trouble,"
+said Ted.</p>
+
+<p>"Easy done, since thou couldst no more than hold
+it, reading being beyond thee," grinned Ned. "Yet
+am I one with thy meaning, which is clearer to me
+than is print."</p>
+
+<p>Constance dared not speak to her father when he
+returned to her. She glanced up at his angry face
+and went on with her stitchery in silence.</p>
+
+<p>At length he stretched himself out, his feet well
+toward the fire, and let his right hand fall on Hecate's
+insinuating head, his left on Puck's thrusting
+nose.</p>
+
+<p>"Good friends!" he said to the happy dogs. "I
+am ashamed, my Constance, so to have afflicted thee.
+Smile, child; thou dost look as though destruction
+awaited me."</p>
+
+<p>"I am so sorry, Father! In good sooth, is there not
+trouble coming to you from this night's business?"
+asked Constance, folding up her work.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing serious, child; likely a fine. But indeed
+it will be worth it to have the chance it will buy me to
+speak my mind clearly to my fellow colonists on
+these matters. Ah, my girl, my girl, what sad fools
+we mortals be, as Shakespeare, whom also these grave
+and reverend seigniors condemn, hath said! We
+have come here to sail by the free wind of conscience,
+but look you, it must be the conscience of the few,
+greater thraldom than it was in the Old World!
+Ah, Constance, Constance, we came here to escape
+the thraldom of men, but to do that it needs that no
+men came! If authority we are to have, then let it
+be authoritative, say I; not the mere opinion of men.
+My child, have you ever noted how much human
+nature there is in a man?"</p>
+
+<p>But the next day, during which Stephen Hopkins
+was absent from his home, when he returned at night
+his philosophy had been sadly jostled.</p>
+
+<p>He had been called before the governor, reprimanded
+and fined, and his pride, his sense of justice,
+were both outraged when he actually had to meet the
+situation. Dame Eliza was in a state of mind that
+made matters worse. She had heard from one of
+those persons through whom ill news filters as
+naturally as water through a spring, that her husband
+had been, as she termed it, "disgraced before the
+world."</p>
+
+<p>"They can't disgrace him, Stepmother," protested
+Constance, though she knew that it was useless to
+try to stem the tide of Dame Eliza's grievance.
+"My father is in the right; they have the power to
+fine, but not to disgrace him who hath done no
+wrong."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course he hath done no wrong," snapped
+Dame Eliza. "Shovelboard was played in my
+father's kitchen when I was no age. Are these
+prating men better than my father? Answer me
+that! But your father has no right to risk getting
+into trouble for two ne'er-do-wells, like his two
+precious Edwards. They eat more than any four
+men I ever knew, and that will I maintain against all
+comers, and as to work they cannot so much as see it.
+Worthless! And for them will he risk our good
+name. For mark me, Constantia, shovelboard is a
+game, and gaming an abomination, and not to be
+mentioned in a virtuous household, yet would your
+father permit it played&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+
+<p>"But you just said it was harmless, and that your
+father had a table!" cried Constance.</p>
+
+<p>"My father was a good man, but not a Puritan,"
+said Dame Eliza, somewhat confused to be called
+upon to harmonize her own statements. "In England
+shovelboard is one thing; in Plymouth a second
+thing, and two things are not the same as one thing.
+I am disgusted with your father, but what good does
+it do me to speak? Never am I heeded but rather
+am I flouted by the Hopkins brood, young and old,
+which is why I never speak, but eat my heart out in
+silence and patience, knowing that had I married as
+I might have married&mdash;aye, and that many times,
+I'd have you know&mdash;I'd not be here among sands and
+marshes and Indians and barrens, slaving for ungrateful
+people who think to show their better blood
+by treating me as they best know how! But it is a
+long lane that hath no turning, and justice must one
+day be my reward."</p>
+
+<p>When Stephen Hopkins came in Dame Eliza dared
+not air her grievances; his angry face compelled
+silence. Even Constance did not intrude upon his
+annoyance, but contented herself with conveying
+her sympathy by waiting upon him and talking
+blithely to Damaris, succeeding at last in winning
+a smile from her father by her amusing stories to the
+child.</p>
+
+<p>"There is a moon, Constance; is it too cold for you
+to walk with me? The sea is fair and silvery beneath
+the moon rays," said Mr. Hopkins after supper.</p>
+
+<p>"Not a whit too chill, Father, and I shall like to be
+out of doors," cried Constance, disregarding her stepmother's
+frown, who disapproved of pleasure strolls.</p>
+
+<p>Constance drew her cloak about her, its deep
+hood over her head, and went out with her father.
+Stephen Hopkins placed her hand in his arm, and led
+her toward the beach. It was a deep, clear autumn
+night, the moon was brilliant; the sea, still as a
+mirror, gave its surface for the path that led from
+the earth to the moon, made by the moon rays.</p>
+
+<p>At last her father spoke to Constance.</p>
+
+<p>"Wise little woman," he said, patting the hand in
+his arm, "to keep silent till a man has conquered his
+humours. Your mother had that rare feminine
+wisdom. What a comrade was she, my dear! Seeing
+your profile thus half-concealed by your hood I
+have been letting myself feel that she had returned to
+me. And so she has, for you are part of her, her gift
+to me! Trouble no more over my annoyance,
+Constance; I have conquered it. I do not say that
+there is no soreness left in me, that I should be thus
+dealt with, but I am philosopher enough to see
+that Myles Standish was right when he once said to
+me that I was a fool for my pains; that living in Plymouth
+I must bear myself Plymouth-wise."</p>
+
+<p>"Father, have you had enough of impertinence in
+the day's doings, that your neighbours should dare to
+judge you, or will you tolerate a little more impertinence,
+and from your own daughter?" asked
+Constance.</p>
+
+<p>"Now what's in the wind?" demanded Stephen
+Hopkins, stopping short.</p>
+
+<p>"Nay, Father, let me speak freely!" Constance
+implored. "Indeed there is nothing in my heart
+that you would disapprove, could I bare it to your
+eyes. Does not this day's experience throw a light
+upon Giles?"</p>
+
+<p>"Giles! How? Why?" exclaimed her father.</p>
+
+<p>"Giles is as like you as are two peas in a pod, dear
+Father. He does not count himself a boy any longer.
+He hath felt that he was dealt with for offences that
+he had not done. He has been wounded, angry,
+sore, sad&mdash;and most of all because he half worships
+you. The governor, Mr. Winslow, no one is to you,
+nor can hurt you, as you can hurt Giles. Don't
+you feel to-day, Father, how hard it is for a young lad
+to bear injustice? When Giles comes home will you
+not show him that you trust him, love him, as I so
+well know you do, but as he cannot now be made to
+believe you do? And won't you construe him by
+what you have suffered this day, and comfort him?
+Forgive me, Father, my dearest, dearest! I do not
+mean wrong, and after all, it is only your Constance
+speaking her heart out to you," she pleaded.</p>
+
+<p>For upwards of ten minutes Stephen Hopkins was
+silent while Constance hung trembling on his arm.</p>
+
+<p>Then her father turned to her, and took her face
+in both his hands, tears in his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"It is only my Constance speaking; only my dearest
+earthly treasure," he said. "And by all the gods,
+she hath spoken sweetly and truly, and I will heed
+her! Yes, my Constance, I will read my own bitterness
+in Giles's heart, and I will heal it, if but the lad
+comes back safe to us."</p>
+
+<p>With which promise, that sounded in Constance's
+ears like the carol of angels, her father kissed her
+thrice on brow, and lips, a most unusual caress from
+him. It was a thankful Constance that lay down
+beside Damaris that night, beneath the lean-to roof.</p>
+
+<p>"Now I know that Giles will come back, for this
+is what has been meant in all that hath lately come
+to us," was her last thought as she drifted into sleep.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="p4"><a name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV</a></h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">The "Fortune," that Sailed, First West, then
+East</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>"There's a ship, there's a sail standing toward
+us!"</p>
+
+<p>It was Francis Billington's shrill boyish voice that
+aroused the Hopkins household with this tidings,
+early in the morning on one of those mid-November
+days when at that hour the air was chill and at noon
+the warmth of summer brooded over land and sea.</p>
+
+<p>Stephen Hopkins called from within: "Wait, wait,
+Francis, till I can come to thee."</p>
+
+<p>In a moment or two he came out of his door and
+looked in the direction in which the boy pointed, although
+a hillock on the Hopkins land, which lay
+between Leyden and Middle streets, cut off the sight
+of the sail.</p>
+
+<p>"She's coming up from the south'ard," cried
+Francis, excitedly. "Most like from the Cape, but
+she must have come from England first, say you not
+so, Mr. Hopkins?"</p>
+
+<p>"Surely," agreed Stephen Hopkins. "The savages
+build no vessels like ours, as you well know.
+Thank you, my boy, for warning me of her approach.
+Go on and spread your news broadcast; let our entire
+community be out to welcome whatever good the
+ship brings, or to resist harm&mdash;though that I fear
+not. I will myself be at the wharf when she gets in."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, as to that, Mr. Hopkins, you have time to eat
+as big a breakfast as you can get and still be too early
+for the arrival," said Francis, grinning. "She's got a
+long way to cover and a deal to do to reach Plymouth
+wharf in this still air. She's not close in, by much.
+I hurried and yelled to get you up quick because&mdash;well,
+because you've got to hurry folks and yell when
+a ship comes in, haven't you?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Hopkins smiled sympathetically at the boy
+whose actions rarely got sympathy.</p>
+
+<p>"Till ships become a more common sight in our
+harbour, Francis, I would advise letting your excitement
+on the coming of one have vent a-plenty,"
+he said, turning to re&euml;nter the house as Francis
+Billington, acting on advice more promptly than was
+his wont, ran down Leyden Street, throwing up his
+cap and shouting: "A ship! A sail! A ship! A sail!"
+at the top of his vigorous lungs, not only unreproved
+for his disturbance of the peaceful morning, but
+hailed with answering excitement by the men, women,
+and children whom he aroused as he ran.</p>
+
+<p>The ship took as long to reach haven as Francis
+Billington had prophesied she would require. She
+proved to be a small ship with a figure-head of a
+woman, meant to represent Fortune, for she was
+blindfolded, but her battered paint indicated that
+she had in her own person encountered ill-fortune
+in her course.</p>
+
+<p>A number of people were gathered on her forward
+deck, looking eagerly for indications of the sort of
+place that they were approaching.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Weston, knowing that we depend upon him
+and his brother merchants, our friends across seas,
+for supplies, hath at last dispatched us the long-waited
+ship," said Mr. Winslow to Mr. Hopkins.</p>
+
+<p>"With someone, let us hope, authorized to carry
+back report of us here, and thus to get us, later on,
+what we sore need. Many new colonists, as well as
+nearly all things that human beings require for existence,"
+said Stephen Hopkins, with something of
+the strain upon his endurance that he had suffered
+getting into his voice.</p>
+
+<p>The ship was the <i>Fortune</i>&mdash;her figure-head had
+announced as much. When she made anchor, and
+her small boat came to the wharf, the first person
+to step ashore was Mr. Robert Cushman, the English
+agent who had played so large a part in the embarkation
+of the pilgrims in the <i>Mayflower</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Welcome, in all truth!" said Governor Bradford
+stepping forward to seize the hand of this man, from
+whose coming and subsequent reports at home so
+much might be hoped. "Now, at last, have we what
+we have so long needed, a representative who can
+speak of us as one who hath seen!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad to be here in a twofold sense, Mr.
+Bradford," returned Mr. Cushman.</p>
+
+<p>"Glad to meet with you, whom I knew under the
+distant sky of home, glad to be at the end of my voyage.
+I have brought you thirty-five additional members
+of your community. We came first to Cape
+Cod, and a more discouraged band of adventurers
+would be hard to find than were these men when they
+saw how barren of everything was the Cape. I assured
+them that they would find you in better condition
+here, at Plymouth, and we set sail hither. They
+have been scanning waves and sky for the first symptom
+of something like comfort at Plymouth, beginning
+their anxious outlook long before it was possible
+to satisfy it. I assure you that never was a wharf
+hailed so gladly as was this one that you have built,
+for these men argued that before you would build a
+wharf you must have made sure of greater essentials."</p>
+
+<p>"We are truly thankful for new strength added
+to us; we need it sore," said William Bradford. "We
+make out to live, nor have we wanted seriously, thus
+far."</p>
+
+<p>"The men I have gathered together and brought
+to you are not provided; they will be a charge upon
+you for a while in food and raiment, but after a time
+their strength should more than recompense you in
+labour," said Mr. Cushman. "Where is the governor?
+I have a letter here from Mr. Weston to
+Governor Carver; will you take me to him?"</p>
+
+<p>"That we may not do, Mr. Cushman," said Governor
+Bradford, sadly. "Governor Carver is at rest
+since last April, a half year agone. It was a day of
+summer heat and he was labouring in the field, from
+which he came out very sick, complaining greatly
+of his head. He lay down and in a few hours his
+senses failed, which never returned to him till his
+death, some days later. Bitterly have we mourned
+that just man. And but a month and somewhat
+more, passed when Mistress Carver, who was a weak
+woman, and sore beset by the sufferings of her coming
+here, and so ill-fitted to bear grief, followed her spouse
+to their reward, as none who knew them could doubt.
+I am chosen, unworthily, to succeed John Carver as
+governor of this colony."</p>
+
+<p>"Then is the letter thine, William Bradford, and
+the Plymouth men have wisely picked out thee to
+hold chief office over them," said Robert Cushman.
+"Yet your news is heavy hearing, and I hope there is
+not much of such tidings to be given me."</p>
+
+<p>"Half of us lie yonder on the hillside," said Governor
+Bradford. "But they died in the first months
+of our landing, when we lacked shelter and all else.
+It was a mortality that assailed us, a swift plague,
+but since it hath passed there is little sickness among
+us. Gather your men and let us go on to the village
+which we have built us, a habitation in the wilderness,
+like Israel of old. Like old Plymouth at home
+it is in name, but in naught else, yet it is not wholly
+without its pleasant comfort, and we are learning to
+hold it dear, as Providence hath wisely made man to
+cherish his home."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Cushman marshalled his sorry-looking followers;
+they were destitute of bedding, household
+utensils, even scantily provided with clothes, so that
+they came off the <i>Fortune</i> in the lightest marching
+order, and filled with dismay the Plymouth people
+who saw that their deficiencies would fall upon the
+first settlers to supply.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Constantia, and so hath it ever been, and
+ever will be, world without end, that they who till
+and sow do not reap, but rather some idle blackbird
+that sits upon a stump whistling for the corn that
+grows for him, and not for his betters," scolded
+Dame Eliza who, like others of the women who were
+hard-working and economical, felt especially aggrieved
+by this invoice of destitution. "It is we,
+and such as we who may feed them, even to Damaris.
+Get a pan of dried beans, child, and shell 'em, for it is
+against our profession to see them starve, but why
+the agents sent, or Robert Cushman brought, beggars
+to us it would puzzle Solomon to say. Where will
+your warm cloak come from that you hoped for, think
+you, Constantia, with these people requiring our
+stores? Do they take Plymouth for Beggars' Bush?"</p>
+
+<p>"I came hither walking beside my father, who was
+talking with Mr. Winslow, Stepmother," said Constance,
+noting with amusement that her stepmother
+commiserated her probable sacrifice, swayed by her
+indignation to make common cause with Constance,
+whose desires she rarely noted. "They said that it
+would put a burden upon us to provide for these new-comers
+at first, but that they looked like able and
+hopeful subjects to requite us abundantly, and that
+soon. So never mind my cloak; I will darn and patch
+my old one, and at least there be none here who
+will not know why I go shabby, and be in similar
+stress."</p>
+
+<p>The door opened and Humility Cooper entered.
+She kissed Constance on the cheek, a manner of
+greeting not common among these Puritan maidens,
+especially when they met often, and slowly took the
+stool that Constance placed for her in the chimney
+corner, loosening her cape as she did so.</p>
+
+<p>"I have news, dear Constance," Humility said.</p>
+
+<p>"How strangely you look at me, Humility!" cried
+Constance. "Is your news good or ill? Your face
+would tell me it was both; your eyes shine, yet are
+ready to tears, and your lips droop, yet are smiling!"</p>
+
+<p>"My news is that same mixture, Constance," cried
+Humility. "I am sent for from England. The
+letter is come by the <i>Fortune</i>. She is to lie in our
+harbour barely two sen' nights, and then weigh
+anchor for home. And I&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You go on her!" cried Constance. "Oh Humility!"</p>
+
+<p>"And so I do," said Humility. "I am glad to go
+home. It is a sad and heavy-hearted thing to be
+here alone, with only Elizabeth Tilley, my cousin,
+left me. To be sure her father and mother, and
+Edward Tilley and his wife, who brought me hither,
+were but my cousins, though one degree nearer than
+John Tilley's Betsy; yet was it kindred, and they were
+those who had me in charge. Since they died I
+have felt lone, kind though everyone hath been;
+you and Priscilla Mullins Alden and Elizabeth are
+like my sisters. But my heart yearns back to England.
+Yet when I think of seeing you for the last
+time, till we meet beyond all parting, since you will
+never go to the old land, nor I return to the new one,
+then it seems that it will break my heart to say farewell,
+and that I cannot go."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Humility, dear lass, we cannot let you go!"
+cried Constance, putting her arms around the
+younger girl toward whom she felt as a protector, as
+well as comrade.</p>
+
+<p>"Tut, tut!" said Dame Eliza, yet not unkindly.
+"It is best for Humility to go. I have long been glad
+to know, what we did know, that her kindred at home
+would send for her."</p>
+
+<p>Humility stooped and gathered up Lady Fair, the
+cat, on her knee.</p>
+
+<p>"I am like her," she said. "The warmth I have
+holds me, and I like not to venture out into the chillsome
+wet of the dark and storm."</p>
+
+<p>"Lady Fair would scamper home fast enough if she
+were among strangers, in a new place, Humility,"
+cried Constance, with one of her mercurial changes
+setting herself to cheer Humility on her unavoidable
+road. "It will be hard setting out, but you will be
+glad enough when you see the green line of shore that
+will be England awaiting you!"</p>
+
+<p>"I thought you would be sorry, Constance!" cried
+Humility, tears springing to her eyes and rolling down
+her smooth, pink cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>"And am I not, dear heart, just because I want to
+make it easier for you?" Constance reproached
+her. "How I shall miss you, dear little trusting
+Humility, I cannot tell you. But I am glad to know
+that we who remain are worse off than you who go,
+and that when you see home again there will be more
+than enough there to make up to you for Pris, Elizabeth,
+and me. There will be ships coming after this,
+so my father and Mr. Winslow were saying, and you
+will write us, and we will write you. And some day,
+when Oceanus, or Peregrine White, or one of the
+other small children here, is grown up to be a great
+portrait painter, like Mr. Holbein, whose portraits
+I was taken to see at Windsor when I was small, I
+will dispatch to you a great canvas of an old lady in
+flowing skirts, with white hair puffed and coifed
+and it will be painted across the bottom in readable
+letters: 'Portrait of Constantia Hopkins, aetat. 86,'
+else will you never know it for me, the silly girl you
+left behind."</p>
+
+<p>"'Silly girl,' indeed! You will be the wife of some
+great gentleman who is now in England, but who will
+cross to the colony, and you will be the mother of
+those who will help in its growth," cried Humility
+the prophetess.</p>
+
+<p>"Cease your foolish babble, both of you!" Dame
+Eliza ordered them, impatiently. "It is poor business
+talking of serious matters lightly, but Humility is
+well-off, and needs not pity, to be returning to the
+land that we cast off, nor am I as Lot's wife saying it,
+for it is true, nor am I repining."</p>
+
+<p>Humility had made a correct announcement in saying
+that the <i>Fortune</i> would stay on the western shore
+but two weeks.</p>
+
+<p>For that time she lay in the waters of Plymouth
+harbour taking on a cargo of goods to the value of
+500 pounds, or thereabout, which the Plymouth
+people rightly felt would put their enterprise in a
+new light when the ship arrived in England, especially
+that she had come hither unprepared for trade, expecting
+no such store here.</p>
+
+<p>Lumber they stowed upon the <i>Fortune</i> to her utmost
+capacity to carry, and two hogsheads full of
+beaver and otter skins, taken in exchange for the
+little that the Englishmen had to offer for them, the
+idea of trading for furs being new to them, till
+Squanto showed them the value in a beaver skin.</p>
+
+<p>On the night of the thirteenth day of the <i>Fortune's</i>
+lying at anchor Humility went aboard to be ready in
+case that the ship's master should suddenly resolve to
+take advantage of a favourable wind and sail unexpectedly.</p>
+
+<p>Stephen Hopkins offered to take the young girls,
+who had been Humility's companions on the <i>Mayflower</i>,
+out to the <i>Fortune</i> early the next morning for
+the final parting. It was decided that the <i>Fortune</i>
+was to set sail at the turn of the tide on the fourteenth
+day, and drop down to sea on the first of its ebb.</p>
+
+<p>Priscilla, Elizabeth Tilley, Desire Minter, who was
+also to return to England when summoned, and
+Constance, were rowed out to the ship when the reddening
+east threw a glory upon the <i>Fortune</i> and
+covered her battered, blindfolded figure-head with
+the robes of an aurora.</p>
+
+<p>Humility was dressed, awaiting them. She threw
+herself into the arms of each of the girls in succession,
+and for once five young girls were silent, their chatter
+hushed by the solemn thought that never would their
+eyes rest again upon Humility's pleasant little face;
+that never again would Humility see the faces which
+had smiled her through her days of bereavement, see
+Constance who had nursed her back to life when she
+herself seemed likely to follow her protectors to the
+hillside, to their corn-hidden graves.</p>
+
+<p>"We cannot forget, so we will not ask each other
+to remember, Humility dear," whispered Constance,
+her lips against Humility's soft, brown hair.</p>
+
+<p>Humility shook her head, unable otherwise to
+reply.</p>
+
+<p>"I love you more than any one on earth, Con," she
+managed to say at last.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry to shorten your stay, daughters, sorry
+to compel you to leave Mistress Humility," said Mr.
+Cushman, coming down the deck to the plaintive
+group, "but we are sailing now, and there will be
+no time when the last good-bye is easy. You must
+go ashore."</p>
+
+<p>Not a word was spoken as Priscilla, Desire&mdash;though
+for her the parting was not final&mdash;Elizabeth
+and Constance kissed, clung to Humility, and for ever
+let her go. Stephen Hopkins, not a little moved
+himself&mdash;for he was fond of Humility, over whom he
+had kept ward since Edward Tilley had died&mdash;guided
+the tear-blinded girls down the ship's ladder, into
+his boat, and rowed them ashore.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Fortune's</i> sails creaked and her gear rattled
+as her men hauled up her canvas for her homeward
+voyage.</p>
+
+<p>She weighed anchor and slowly moved on her first
+tack, bright in the golden sunshine of a perfect
+Indian summer morning.</p>
+
+<p>"Be brave, and wave a gay farewell to the little
+lass," said Stephen Hopkins. "And may God fend
+her from harm on her way, and lead her over still
+waters all her days."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, amen, amen, Father!" sobbed Constance.
+"She can't see we are crying while we wave to her
+so blithely. But it is the harder part to stay behind."</p>
+
+<p>"With me, my lass?" asked Stephen Hopkins,
+smiling tenderly down on his usually courageous
+little pioneer.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no; no indeed! Forgive me, Father! The
+one hard thing would be to stay anywhere without
+thee," cried Constance, smiling as brightly as she
+had just wept bitterly. The <i>Fortune</i> leaned over
+slightly, and sailed at a good speed down the harbour,
+Humility's white signal of farewell hanging out over
+the boat's stern, discernable long after the girl's plump
+little figure and pink round face, all washed white
+with tears, had been blotted out by intervening space.</p>
+
+<p>Before the <i>Fortune</i> had gone wholly out of sight
+Francis Billington came over the marsh grass that
+edged the sand, sometimes running for a few steps,
+sometimes lagging; his whole figure and air eloquent
+of catastrophe.</p>
+
+<p>"What can ail Francis Billington?" exclaimed
+Stephen Hopkins.</p>
+
+<p>"He looks ghastly," cried Constance. "Father,
+it can't be&mdash;Giles?" she whispered.</p>
+
+<p>"Bad news of him!" cried her father quickly,
+turning pale. "Nonsense, no; of course not."</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless he strode toward the boy hastily
+and caught him by the arm.</p>
+
+<p>"What aileth thee; speak!" he ordered him.</p>
+
+<p>"Jack. Jack is&mdash;Jack&mdash;&mdash;" Francis stammered.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, is it Jack?" cried Stephen Hopkins, relieved,
+though he could have struck himself a moment later
+for the seeming heartlessness of his excusable mistake.</p>
+
+<p>"What has Jack done now? He is always getting
+into mischief, but I am sure you need have no fear
+for him. But now that I look at you&mdash;&mdash;. Why, my
+poor lad, what is it? No harm hath befallen your
+brother?"</p>
+
+<p>"Jack is dead," said Francis.</p>
+
+<p>Constance uttered a cry, and her father fell back
+a step or two, shocked and sorry.</p>
+
+<p>"Forgive me, Francis; I had no notion of this. I
+never thought John Billington, the younger, could
+come to actual harm&mdash;so daring, so reckless, but so
+strong and able to take care of himself! Dead!
+Francis, it can't be. You are mistaken. Where is
+Doctor Fuller?"</p>
+
+<p>"With my father," said Francis, and they saw that
+he shook from head to foot.</p>
+
+<p>"He was with Jack; he did what he could. He
+couldn't do more," said Francis.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor lad," said Stephen Hopkins, laying his hand
+gently on the boy's shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you want to tell us? Was it an accident?"</p>
+
+<p>Francis nodded. "Bouncing Bully," he muttered.</p>
+
+<p>Stephen Hopkins glanced questioningly at Constance;
+he thought perhaps Francis was wandering
+in his mind.</p>
+
+<p>"That was poor Jack's great pistol that he took
+such pride in," cried Constance.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Francis, did that kill him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Burst," cried Francis, and said no more.</p>
+
+<p>"Come home with us, Francis," said Mr. Hopkins.
+"Indeed, my boy, I am heartily sorry for thee, and
+wish I could comfort thee. Be brave, and bear it in
+the way that thou hast been taught."</p>
+
+<p>"I liked Jack," said poor Francis, turning away.
+"I thank you, Mr. Hopkins, but I'd not care to go
+home with you. If Giles was back&mdash;&mdash;. Not that I
+don't love you, Con, but Jack and Giles&mdash;&mdash;. I'm going&mdash;somewhere.
+I guess I'll find Nimrod, my dog.
+Thank you, Mr. Hopkins, but I couldn't come. I
+forgot why I came here. Doctor Fuller told me to
+say he wanted you. It's about Jack&mdash;Jack's&mdash;&mdash;.
+They'll bury him."</p>
+
+<p>The boy turned away, staggering, but in a moment
+Constance and her father, watching him, saw him
+break into a run and disappear.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't look so worried, my dear," said Stephen
+Hopkins. "It is a boy's instinct to hide his grief,
+and the dog will be a good comrade for Francis for
+awhile. Later we will get hold of him. Best leave
+him to himself awhile. That wild, unruly Jack!
+And he is dead! I'd rather a hundred pounds were
+lost than that I had spoken as I did to Francis at
+first, but how should I have dreamed it was more
+than another of the Billington scrapes? I tell thee,
+Connie, it will be a rare mercy if the father does not
+end badly one day. He is insubordinate, lawless,
+dangerous. Perhaps young John is saved a worse
+fate."</p>
+
+<p>"Nevertheless I am sad enough over the fate that
+has befallen him," said Constance. "He was a kindly
+boy, and loyal enough to me to make it right that I
+should mourn him. And I did like him. Poor Jack.
+Poor, young, heedless Jack! And how proud he
+was of that clumsy weapon that hath turned on
+him!"</p>
+
+<p>"And so did I like him, Connie, though he and
+Francis have been, from our first embarkation on the
+<i>Mayflower</i>, the torment and black sheep of our company.
+But I liked the boy. I like his father less, and
+fear he will one day force us to deal with him extremely."
+In which prophecy Stephen Hopkins
+was only too right.</p>
+
+<p>"To think that in one day we should bid a last
+farewell to two of our young fellow-exiles, Humility
+and Jack, both gone home, and for ever from us!
+Giles liked Jack; Jack stood by him when he needed
+help. Oh, Father, Father, if it were Giles!" cried
+Constance.</p>
+
+<p>"I know, I know, child," said her father, huskily.
+"I've been thinking that. I've been thinking that,
+and more. My son has been headstrong, but never
+wicked. He is stiffnecked, but hath no evil in his
+will, except that he resists me. But I have been
+thinking hard, my Constance. You were right; I
+would have done well to listen to your pleadings, to
+your wiser understanding of my boy. I have been
+hard on him, unjust to him; I should have admitted
+him to my confidence, given mine to him. I am
+wrong and humbly I confess it to you, Giles's advocate.
+When he comes back my boy shall find a better
+father awaiting him. I wounded him through his
+very love for me, and well I know how once he loved
+me."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Father; dear, good, great Father!" cried
+Constance, forgetful of all grief. "Only a great man
+can thus acknowledge a mistake. My dear, dear,
+beloved Father!" And in her heart she thought
+perhaps poor Jack had not died in vain if his death
+helped to show their father how dear Giles was to
+him, still, and after all.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="p4"><a name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI</a></h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">A Gallant Lad Withal</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>There was a gray sky the day after young madcap
+John Billington was laid to rest in the grave
+that had been hard to think of as meant for him, dug
+by the younger colonists. Long rifted clouds lay
+piled upon one another from the line of one horizon
+to the other, and the wind blew steadily, keeping
+close to the ground and whistling around chimneys
+and rafters in a way that portended a storm driven
+in from the sea.</p>
+
+<p>"I think it's lost-and-lone to-day, Constance,"
+said Damaris, coining her own term for the melancholy
+that seemed to envelop earth and sky. "I
+think it's a good day for a story, and I'd like much
+to sit in your lap in the chimney corner and hear
+your nicest ones."</p>
+
+<p>"Would you, my Cosset? But you said a story
+at first, and now you say my nicest <i>ones</i>! Do you
+mean one story, or several stories, Damaris?" Constance
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I mean one first, and many ones after that, if
+you could tell them, Constance," said the child.
+"Mother says we have no time to idle in story-telling,
+but to-day is so empty and lonesome! I'd
+like to have a story."</p>
+
+<p>"And so you shall, my little sis!" cried Constance
+gathering Damaris into her arms and dropping into
+the high-backed chair which Dame Eliza pre&euml;mpted
+for herself, when she was there; but now she was not
+at home. "Come, at least the fire is gay! Hark
+how it snaps and sings! And how gaily red and
+golden are the flames, and how the great log glows!
+Shall we play it is a red-coated soldier, fighting the
+chill for us?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, oh, no," shuddered Damaris. "Don't play
+about fighting and guns!"</p>
+
+<p>Constance cuddled her closer, drawing her head
+into the hollow of her shoulder. Sensitive, grave
+little Damaris had been greatly unnerved by the
+death of Jack, and especially that his own pistol had
+taken his life.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll play that the red glow is loving kindness,
+and that we have had our eyes touched with magic
+that makes us able to see love," cried Constance.
+"Fire is the emblem of love, warming our hearts
+toward all things, so our fancy will be at once make-believe
+and truth. Remember, my cosset lamb,
+that love is around us, whether we see it or not, and
+that there can be no dismal gray days if we have our
+eyes touched to see the glow of love warming us!
+Now what shall the story be? Here in the hearth
+corner, shall it be Cinderella? Or shall it be the
+story of the lucky bear, that found a house empty and
+a fire burning when he wanted a home, and wherein
+he set up housekeeping for himself, like the quality?"</p>
+
+<p>"All of them, Constance! But first tell me what
+we shall do when Giles comes home. I like that
+story best. I wish he would come soon!" sighed
+Damaris.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, so do I! And so he will;" Constance corrected
+instantly the pain that she knew had escaped
+into her voice. "Captain Standish will not risk the
+coming of cold weather; he will bring them home
+soon. Well, what shall we do then, you want to
+hear? First of all, someone will come running, calling
+to us that the shallop hath appeared below in the
+harbour. Then we shall all make ourselves fine,
+and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Someone is coming now, Con, but not running,"
+cried Damaris, sitting up and holding up a warning
+finger.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a man's step," began Constance, but, as the
+door opened she sprang to her feet with a cry, and
+stood for an instant of stunned joy holding Damaris
+clasped to her breast. Then she set the child on her
+feet and leaped into Giles's arms, with a great sob,
+repeating his name and clinging to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Steady, Constance! Steady, dear lass," cried
+Giles, himself in not much better state, while Damaris
+clung around his waist and frantically kissed the
+tops of his muddy boots.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, how did you get here? When did you come?
+Are they all safely here?" cried Constance.</p>
+
+<p>"Every man of them; we had a fine expedition,
+not a misfortune, perfect weather, and we saw wonders
+of noble country: streams and hills and plains,"
+said Giles, and instantly Constance felt a new manhood
+and self-confidence in him, steadier, less assertive
+than his boyish pride, the self-reliance that is
+won through encountering realities, in conquering
+self and hence things outside of self.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot wait to hear the tale! Let me help
+you off with your heavy coat, your matchlock, and
+then sit you down in this warmest corner, and tell
+me everything," cried Constance, beginning to recover
+herself, the rich colour of her delight flooding
+her face as, the first shock of surprise over, she realized
+that it was indeed Giles come back to her and
+that her secret anxiety for him was past. "Art
+hungry, my own?" she added, fluttering around her
+brother, like a true woman, wanting first of all to
+feed him.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Con, to be truthful I am always hungry,"
+said Giles, smiling down on her.</p>
+
+<p>"But not in such strait now that I cannot wait till
+the next meal."</p>
+
+<p>"Here are our father and Mistress Hopkins, hastening
+hither," said Constance, looking out the door,
+hoping for this coming of her father. "You have
+not seen Father yet?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, Con; I came straight home, but the captain
+has met with him, I am sure. And, Con, I want to
+tell you before he comes in, that I have seen how
+wrong I was toward our good father, and that I hope
+to carry myself dutifully toward him henceforth."</p>
+
+<p>Constance clasped her hands, rapturously, but had
+not time to reply before the door was thrown wide
+open and Stephen Hopkins strode in, his face radiant.</p>
+
+<p>He went up to his tall son and clasped his shoulders
+in a grip that made Giles wince, and said through his
+closed teeth, trying to steady his voice:</p>
+
+<p>"My lad, my fine son, thank God I have you back!
+And by His mercy never again shall we be parted,
+nor sundered by the least sundering."</p>
+
+<p>Giles looked up, and Giles looked down. He
+hoped, yet hardly dared to think, that his father
+meant more than mere bodily separation.</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad enough to be here, yet we had glorious
+days, and have seen a country so worthy that we
+wish that we might go thither, leaving this less profitable
+country," said Giles. "We have seen land
+that by a little effort would be turned into gracious
+meadows. We have seen great bays and rivers,
+full of fish, capable of navigation and industry.
+We have seen a beautiful river, which we have
+named the Charles, for we think it to be that river
+which Captain John Smith thus named in his map.
+The Charles flows down to the sea, past three hills
+which top a noble harbour, and where we would
+dearly like to build a town. I will tell you of these
+things in order. Captain Myles will have a meeting
+of the Plymouth people to hear our tale; I would
+wait for that, else will it be stale hearing to you."</p>
+
+<p>"Nay, Giles, we shall never tire of it!" cried Constance.
+"A good story is the better for oft hearing,
+as you know well, do you not, little Damaris?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it hath made a man of thee, Giles Hopkins,"
+said Dame Eliza who had silently watched the lad
+closely as he talked. "It was a lucky thing for thee
+that the Arm of the Colony, Captain Myles, took
+thee for one of his tools."</p>
+
+<p>"A lucky thing for him, too," interposed Giles's
+father proudly. "I have seen Myles; he hath told
+me how, when you and he were fallen behind your
+companions, investigating a deep ravine, he had
+slipped and would have been killed by his own matchlock
+as it struck against the rock, but that you, risking
+your life, threw yourself forward on a narrow
+ledge and struck up the muzzle of the gun. The
+colony is in your debt, my son, that your arm warded
+death from the man it calls, justly, its Arm."</p>
+
+<p>"Prithee, father!" expostulated Giles, turning
+crimson. "Who could do less for a lesser man?
+And who would not do far more for Myles Standish?
+I would be a fool to hesitate over risk to a life no more
+valuable than mine, if such as he were in danger.
+Besides which the captain exaggerates my danger. I
+don't want that prated here. Please help me silence
+Myles Standish."</p>
+
+<p>Stephen Hopkins nodded in satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>"Right, Giles. A blast on one's own horn produces
+much the sound of the bray of an ass. Yet am I glad
+that I know of this," he said.</p>
+
+<p>Little Love Brewster, who was often a messenger
+from one Plymouth house to another, came running
+in at that moment.</p>
+
+<p>"My father sends me," he panted. "The men of
+Plymouth are to sit this afternoon at our house to
+hear the tale of the adventurers to the Massachusetts.
+You will come? Giles, did you bring us new kinds
+of arrows from the strange savages? My father saith
+that Squanto was the best guide and helper on this
+expedition that white men ever had."</p>
+
+<p>"So he was, Love. I brought no new arrows, but I
+have in my sack something for each little lad in the
+colony. And for the girls I have wondrous beads,"
+added Giles, seeing Damaris's crestfallen face.</p>
+
+<p>"I will risk a reprimand; it can be no worse than
+disapproval from Elder Brewster, and belike they
+will spare me because of the occasion," thought
+Constance in her own room, making ready to go to
+the assembly that was to gather to welcome the
+explorers, but which to her mind was gathered chiefly
+to honour Giles.</p>
+
+<p>Thus deliberately she violated the rule of the
+colony; let her beautiful hair curl around her flushed
+face; put on a collar of her mother's finest lace, tied
+in such wise by a knot of rose-coloured ribbon that it
+looked like a cluster of buds under her decided little
+chin. And, surveying herself in the glass, which was
+over small and hazy for her merits, that chin raised
+itself in a hitch of defiance.</p>
+
+<p>"Why should I not be young, and fair and happy?"
+Constance demanded of her unjust reflection. "At
+the worst, and if I am forced to remove it, I shall have
+been gay and bonny&mdash;a wee bit so!&mdash;for a little
+while."</p>
+
+<p>With which this unworthy pilgrim maid danced
+down the stairs, seized by the hand Damaris, who
+looked beside her like a small brown grub, and set
+out for Elder Brewster's house.</p>
+
+<p>Although the older women raised disapproving
+brows at Constance, and shook their heads over her
+rose-tinted knots of ribbon, no one openly reproved
+her, and she slid into her place less pleased with her
+ornamentation than she had been while anticipating
+a rebuke.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Myles Standish rose up in his place and
+gave the history of his explorations in a clear-cut,
+terse way, that omitted nothing, yet dwelt on nothing
+beyond the narration of necessary facts.</p>
+
+<p>It was a long story, however condensed, yet no one
+wearied of it, but listened enthralled to his account
+of the Squaw-Sachem of the tribe of the Massachusetts,
+who ruled in the place of her dead spouse, the
+chief Nanepashemet, and was feared by other Indians
+as a relentless foe, and of the great rock that ended a
+promontory far in on the bay, at the foot of the three
+hills which were so good a site for a settlement, a rock
+that was fashioned by Nature into the profile of an
+Indian's face, and which they called Squaw Rock, or
+Squantum Head. As the captain went on telling of
+their inland marches from these three hills and their
+bay, and of the fertile country of great beauty which
+they everywhere came upon, there arose outside a
+commotion of children crying, and the larger children
+who were in charge of the small ones, calling frantically.</p>
+
+<p>Squanto, admitted to the assembly as one who had
+borne an important part in the story that Myles
+Standish was relating, sprang to his feet and ran
+out of the house. He came back in a few moments,
+followed by another Indian&mdash;a tall, lithe, lean youth,
+with an unfriendly manner.</p>
+
+<p>"What is this?" demanded Governor Bradford,
+rising.</p>
+
+<p>"Narragansett, come tell you not friends to you,"
+said Squanto.</p>
+
+<p>The Narragansett warrior, with a great air of
+contempt, threw upon the floor, in the middle of the
+assembly, a small bundle of arrows, tied around with
+a spotted snake skin. This done, he straightened
+himself, folded his arms, and looked disdainfully upon
+the white men.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what has gone amiss with <i>his</i> digestion!"
+exclaimed Giles, aloud.</p>
+
+<p>His father shook his head at him. "How do you
+construe this act and manner, Squanto? Surely
+it portendeth trouble."</p>
+
+<p>"It is war," said Squanto. "Arrows tied by
+snake skin means no friend; war."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps we would do well to let it lie; picking it
+up may mean acceptance of the challenge, as if it
+were a glove in a tourney. The customs of men run
+amazingly together, though race and education
+separate them," suggested Myles Standish.</p>
+
+<p>"Squanto, take this defiant youngster out of
+here, and treat him politely; see that he is fed and
+given a place to sleep. Tell him that we will answer
+him&mdash;&mdash;By your approval, Governor and gentlemen?"</p>
+
+<p>"You have anticipated my own suggestion, Captain
+Standish," said William Bradford bowing, and
+Squanto, who understood more than he could put
+into words, spoke rapidly to the Narragansett messenger
+and led him away.</p>
+
+<p>"Shall we deliberate upon this, being conveniently
+assembled?" suggested Governor Bradford.</p>
+
+<p>"It needs small consideration, meseems," said
+Myles Standish, impatiently. "Dismiss this messenger
+at once; do not let him remain here over night.
+The less your foe knows of you, the more your mystery
+will increase his dread of you. In the morning
+send a messenger of our own to the Narragansetts,
+and tell them that if they want war, war be it. If they
+prefer war to peace, let them begin upon the war at
+once; that we no more fear them than we have
+wronged them, and as they choose, so would we deal
+with them, as friends worth keeping, or foes to fear."</p>
+
+<p>"Admirable advice," Stephen Hopkins applauded
+the captain, and the other Plymouth men echoed
+his applause.</p>
+
+<p>Then, with boyish impetuosity and with laughter
+lighting up his handsome face, Giles leaped to his
+feet.</p>
+
+<p>"Now do I know the answer!" he cried. "Let
+the words be as our captain hath spoken; no one
+could utter better! But there is a further answer!
+Empty their snakeskin of arrows and fill it round
+with bullets, and throw it down among them, as
+they threw their pretty toy down to us! And our
+stuffing of it will have a bad flavour to their palates,
+mark me. It will be like filling a Christmas goose
+with red peppers, and if it doesn't send the Narragansetts
+away from the table they were setting for
+us, then is not my name Giles Hopkins! And one
+more word, my elders and masters! Let me be your
+messenger to the Narragansetts, I beseech you!
+They sent a youth to us; send you this youth back to
+them. If it be hauteur against hauteur, pride for
+pride, I'll bear me like the lion and the unicorn fighting
+for the crown, both together, in one person. See
+whether or not I can strike the true defiant attitude!"</p>
+
+<p>With which, eyes sparkling with fun and excitement,
+head thrown back, Giles struck an attitude,
+folding his arms and spreading his feet, looking at
+once so boyish and so handsome that with difficulty
+Constance held her clasped hands from clapping
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"Truth, friend Stephen, your lad hath an idea!"
+said Myles Standish, delightedly.</p>
+
+<p>"It could not be better. Conceived in true harmony
+with the savages' message to us, and carrying
+conviction of our sincerity to them at the first glimpse
+of it! By all means let us do as Giles suggests."</p>
+
+<p>There was not a dissentient voice in the entire
+assembly; indeed everyone was highly delighted with
+the humour of it.</p>
+
+<p>There was some objection to allowing Giles to be
+the messenger, but here Captain Standish stood his
+friend, though Constance looked at him reproachfully
+for helping Giles into this risky business.</p>
+
+<p>"Let the lad go, good gentlemen," he said. "Giles
+hath been with me on these recent explorations, and
+hath borne himself with fortitude, courage, and prudence.
+He longs to play a man's part among us;
+let him have the office of messenger to the Narragansetts,
+and go thither in the early morning, at
+dawn. We will dismiss their youth at once, and follow
+him with our better message without loss of
+time."</p>
+
+<p>So it was decided, and in high feather Giles
+returned to his home, Damaris on his shoulder,
+Constance walking soberly at his side, half sharing
+his triumph in his mission, half frightened lest her
+brother had but returned from unknown dangers to
+encounter worse ones.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, they'll not harm me, timorous Con!" Giles
+assured her. "They know that it is prudent to let
+lie the sleeping English bulldogs, of whom, trust me,
+they know by repute! Now, Sis, can you deck me
+out in some wise impressive to these savages, who
+will not see the dignity of our sober dress as we do?"</p>
+
+<p>"Feathers?" suggested Constance, abandoning her
+anxiety to enter into this phase of the mission. "I
+think feathers in your hat, Giles, and some sort of a
+bright sash across your breast, all stuck through with
+knives? I will get knives from Pris and some of
+the others. And&mdash;oh, I know, Giles! That crimson
+velvet cloak that was our mother's, hung backward
+from your shoulder! Splendid, Giles; splendid enough
+for Sir Walter Raleigh himself to wear at Elizabeth's
+court, or to spread for her to walk upon."</p>
+
+<p>"It promises well, Sis, in sound, at least," said
+Giles. "But by all that's wise, help me to carry this
+paraphernalia ready to don at a safe distance from
+Plymouth, and by no means betray to our solemn
+rulers how I shall be decked out!"</p>
+
+<p>The sun was still two hours below his rising when
+Giles started, the crimson velvet cloak in a bag, his
+matchlock, or rather Myles Standish's matchlock
+lent Giles for the expedition, slung across his shoulder,
+a sword at his side, and the plumes fastened into
+his hat by Constance's needle and thread, but covered
+with another hat which surmounted his own.</p>
+
+<p>Constance had arisen, also, and went with Giles a
+little way upon his journey. Stephen Hopkins had
+blessed him and bidden him farewell on the preceding
+night, not to make too much of his setting forth.</p>
+
+<p>At the boundary which they had agreed upon,
+Constance kissed her brother good-bye, removing his
+second hat, and dressing the plumes crushed below it.</p>
+
+<p>"Good-bye, my dear one," she said. "And hasten
+back to me, for I cannot endure delay of your return.
+And you look splendid, my Knight of the Wilderness,
+even without the crimson cloak. But see to it that
+you make it swing back gloriously, and wave it in the
+dazzled eyes of the Narragansetts!"</p>
+<p class="center image"><a name="splendid" id="splendid"></a><img src="images/splendid.jpg" alt="You look splendid, my knight of the wilderness" title="You look splendid, my knight of the wilderness" width="321" height="500" /></p>
+<p class="caption center">"'You look splendid, my knight of the wilderness'"</p>
+
+<p>Thus with another kiss, Constance turned back
+singing, to show to Giles how little she feared for him,
+and half laughing to herself, for she was still very
+young, and they had managed between them to give
+this important errand much of the effect of a boy-and-girl,
+masquerading frolic.</p>
+
+<p>Yet, always subject to sudden variations of spirits,
+Constance had not gone far before she sat down upon
+a rock and cried heartily. Then, having sung and
+wept over Giles, she went sedately homeward to await
+his return in a mood that savoured of both extremes
+with which she had parted from him.</p>
+
+<p>The waiting was tedious, but it was not long.
+Sooner than she had dared to hope for him, Giles
+came marching back to her, and as he sang as he
+came, at the top of a lusty voice, Plymouth knew
+before he could tell it that his errand had been
+successful.</p>
+
+<p>Giles went straight to Governor Bradford's house,
+whither those who had seen and heard him coming
+followed him.</p>
+
+<p>"There is our gift of war rejected," said Giles,
+throwing down the spotted snakeskin, still bulging
+with its bullets. "They would have naught of it,
+but picked it up and gave it back to me with much
+air of solicitude, and with many words, which I could
+not understand, but which I doubt not were full of
+the warmest love for us English. And I was glad to
+get back the stuffed snakeskin and our good bullets,
+for here, so far from supplies, bullets are bullets, and
+if any of our red neighbours did attack us we could not
+afford to have lessened our stock in object lessons.
+All's well that ends well&mdash;where have I heard that
+phrase? Father, isn't it in a book of yours?" Giles
+concluded, innocently unconscious that he was walking
+on thin ice in alluding to a play of Shakespeare's,
+and his father's possession of it.</p>
+
+<p>"You have done well, Giles Hopkins," said Governor
+Bradford, heartily, "both in your conception of
+this message, and in your bearing it to the Narragansetts.
+And so from them we have no more to fear?"</p>
+
+<p>"No more whatever," said Giles.</p>
+
+<p>"Nevertheless, from this day let us build a stockade
+around the town, and close our gates at night,
+appointing sentinels to take shifts of guarding us,"
+said Myles Standish. "This incident hath shown me
+that the outlying savages are not securely to be
+trusted. I have long thought that we should organize
+into military form. I want four squadrons
+of our men, each squadron given a quarter of the town
+to guard; I want pickets planted around us, and at
+any alarm, as of danger from fire or foe, I want these
+Plymouth companies to be ready to fly to rescue."</p>
+
+<p>"It shall be as you suggest, Captain," said Governor
+Bradford. "These things are for you to order,
+and the wisdom of this is obvious."</p>
+
+<p>Constance and Giles walked home together, Constance
+hiding beneath her gown the plumes which she
+had first fastened into, then ripped out of Giles's hat.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a delight to see you thus bearing your part
+in the affairs of Plymouth, Giles, dearest," she said.
+"And what fun this errand must have been!"</p>
+
+<p>Giles turned on her a pain-drawn face.</p>
+
+<p>"So it was, Constance, and I did like it," he said.
+"But how I wish Jack Billington had been with me!
+He was a brave lad, Constance, and a true friend.
+He was unruly, but he was not wicked, and the strict
+ways here irked him. Oh, I wish he had been here to
+do this service instead of me! I miss him, miss him."</p>
+
+<p>Giles stopped abruptly, and Constance gently
+touched his arm. Giles had not spoken before of
+Jack's death, and she had not dared allude to it.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry, too, dear Giles," she whispered, and
+Giles acknowledged her sympathy by a touch upon
+her hand, while his other hand furtively wiped away
+the tears that manhood forbade the boy to let fall.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="p4"><a name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII</a></h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">The Well-Conned Lesson</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>Giles took a new place in Plymouth after his
+embassy to the Narragansetts. No longer a
+boy among his fellow pilgrims, he fulfilled well and
+busily the offices that were his as one of the younger,
+yet mature men.</p>
+
+<p>He was given the discipline of the squadron, that,
+pursuant to Captain Standish's plan for guarding the
+settlement, was the largest and controlled the most
+important gate of the stockade which was rapidly
+put up around the boundary of Plymouth after the
+defiance of the Narragansetts. Though that had
+come to naught, it had warned the colonists that
+danger might arise at an unforeseen moment.</p>
+
+<p>There was scarcity of provisions for the winter, the
+thirty-five destitute persons left the colony by the
+<i>Fortune</i> being a heavy additional drain upon its
+supplies. Everyone was put upon half rations, and it
+devolved upon Giles and John Alden to apportion
+each family's share. It was hard to subsist through
+the bitter weather upon half of what would, at best,
+have been a slender nourishment, yet the Plymouth
+people faced the outlook patiently, uncomplainingly,
+and Giles, naturally hot-headed, impatient, got more
+benefit than he gave when he handed out the rations
+and saw the quiet heroism of their acceptance.</p>
+
+<p>He grew to be a silent Giles, falling into the habit of
+thoughtfulness, with scant talk, that was the prevailing
+manner of the Plymouth men. Between his
+father and himself there was friendliness, the former
+opposition between them, mutual annoyance, and
+irritation, were gone. Yet there they halted, not resuming
+the intimacy of Giles's childhood days. It
+was as if there were a reserve, rather of embarrassment
+than of lack of love; as if something were needed
+to jostle them into closer intercourse.</p>
+
+<p>Constance saw this, and waited, convinced that it
+would come, glad in the perfect confidence that she
+felt existed between them.</p>
+
+<p>She was a busy Constance in these days. The
+warmth of September held through that November,
+brooding, slumberous, quiet in the sunshine that
+warmed like wine.</p>
+
+<p>Constance and her stepmother cut and strung the
+few vegetables which they had, and hung them in the
+sunny corner of the empty attic room.</p>
+
+<p>They spread out corn and pumpkins upon the
+floor, instructing the willing Lady Fair to see to it
+that mice did not steal them.</p>
+
+<p>Dame Eliza, also, had grown comparatively silent.
+Her long tirades were wanting; she showed no softening
+toward Constance, yet she let her alone.
+Constance thought that something was on her stepmother's
+mind, but she did not try to discover what&mdash;glad
+of the new sparing of her sharp tongue, having no
+expectation of anything better than this from her.</p>
+
+<p>Damaris had been sent with the other children to
+be instructed in the morning by Mrs. Brewster in
+sampler working and knitting; by her husband in the
+Westminster catechism, and the hornbook.</p>
+
+<p>In the afternoon Damaris was allowed to play
+quietly at keeping house, with Love Brewster, who
+was a quiet child and liked better to play at being a
+pilgrim, and making a house with Damaris, than to
+share in the boys' games.</p>
+
+<p>"Where do you go, lambkin?" Constance asked
+her. "For we must know where to find you, nor
+must it be far from the house."</p>
+
+<p>"It is just down by that little patch, Connie; it's
+as nice as it can be, and it is the safest place in Plymouth,
+I'm sure," Damaris assured her earnestly.
+"You see there is a woods, and a hollow, and a big,
+big, great tree, and its roots go all out, every way, and
+we live in them, because they are rooms already;
+don't you see? And it's nice and damp&mdash;but you
+don't get your feet wet!" Damaris anticipated the
+objection which she saw in Constance's eye. "It's
+only&mdash;only&mdash;soft, gentle damp; not wetness, and
+moss grows there, as green as green can be, and
+feathery! And on the tree are nice little yellow
+plates, with brown edges! Growing on it! And we
+play they are our best plates that we don't use every
+day, because they are soft-like, and we didn't care to
+touch them when we did it. But they make the
+prettiest best plates in the cupboard, for they grow, in
+rows, with their edges over the next one, just the way
+you set up our plates in the corner cupboard. So
+please don't think it isn't a nice place, Constance,
+because it is, and I'd feel terribly afflicted, and
+cast down, and as nothing, if I couldn't go there with
+Love."</p>
+
+<p>Constance smiled at the child's quoting of the
+phrases which she had heard in the long sermons that
+Elder Brewster read, or delivered to them twice on
+Sunday, there being no minister yet come to Plymouth.</p>
+
+<p>"You little echo!" Constance cried. "It surely
+would be a matter to move one's pity if you suffered
+so deeply as that in the loss of your playground!
+Well, dear, till the warmth breaks up I suppose you
+may keep your house with Love, but promise to
+leave it if you feel chilly there. We must trust you
+so far. Art going there now?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, dear Constance. You have a heart of compassion
+and I love you with all of mine," said Damaris,
+expressing herself again like a little Puritan,
+but hugging her sister with the natural heartiness of
+a loving child.</p>
+
+<p>Then she ran away, and Constance, taking her
+capacious darning bag on her arm, went to bear
+Priscilla Alden company at her mending, as she
+often did when no work about the house detained
+her.</p>
+
+<p>Giles came running down the road when the afternoon
+had half gone, his face white. "Con, come
+home!" he cried, bursting open the door. "Hasten!
+Damaris is strangely ill."</p>
+
+<p>Constance sprang up, throwing her work in all
+directions, and Priscilla sprang up with her. Without
+stopping to pick up a thread, the two girls went
+with Giles.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know what it is," Giles said, in reply to
+Constance's questions. "Love Brewster came running
+to Dame Hopkins, crying that Damaris was sick
+and strange. She followed him to the children's
+playground, and carried the child home. She is
+like to die; convulsions and every sign of poison she
+has, but what it is, what to do, no one knows. The
+women are there, but Doctor Fuller, as you know, is
+gone to a squaw who is suffering sore, and we could
+not bring him, even if we knew where he was, till it
+was too late. They have done all that they can recall
+for such seizures, but the child grows worse."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Giles!" groaned Constance. "She hath
+eaten poison. What has Doctor Fuller told me of
+these things? If only I can remember! All I can
+think of is that he hath said different poisons require
+different treatment. Oh, Giles, Giles!"</p>
+
+<p>"Steady, Sister; it may be that you can help,"
+said Giles. "It had not occurred to any one how
+much the doctor had told you of his methods. Perhaps
+Love will know what Damaris touched."</p>
+
+<p>"There is Love, sitting crouched in the corner of
+the garden plot, his head on his knees, poor little
+Love!"</p>
+
+<p>Constance broke into a run and knelt beside the
+little boy, who did not look up as she put her arms
+around him.</p>
+
+<p>"Love, Love, dear child, if you can tell me what
+Damaris ate perhaps God will help me cure her,"
+she said. "Look up, and be brave and help me.
+Did you see Damaris eat anything that you did not
+eat with her?"</p>
+
+<p>"Little things that grow around the big tree where
+it is wetter, we picked for our furniture," Love said at
+once. "Damaris said you cooked them and they
+were good. So then she said we would play some of
+them was furniture, and some of them was our dinner.
+And I didn't eat them, for they were like thin
+leather, only soft, and I felt of them, and couldn't
+eat them. But Damaris did eat them."</p>
+
+<p>"Toadstools!" cried Constance with a gasp.
+"Toadstools, Love! Did they look like little tables?
+And did Damaris call them mushrooms?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, like little tables," Love nodded his head
+hard. "All full underneath with soft crimped&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>But Constance waited for no more. With a cry
+she was on her feet and running like the wind, calling
+back over her shoulder to Giles:</p>
+
+<p>"I'll come quick! I know! I know! Tell Father
+I know!"</p>
+
+<p>"She hath gone to Doctor Fuller's house," said
+Priscilla, watching Constance's flying figure, her
+hair unbound and streaming like a burnished banner
+behind her as she ran to get her weapon to fight with
+Death. "No girl ever ran as she can. Come, Giles;
+obey her. Tell your father and Mistress Hopkins
+that mayhap Constance can save the child."</p>
+
+<p>They turned toward the house, and Constance sped
+on.</p>
+
+<p>"Nightshade! The belladonna!" she was saying
+to herself as she ran. "I know the phial; I know its
+place. O, God, give me time, and give me wit, and
+do Thou the rest!" Past power to explain, she swept
+aside with a vehement arm the woman who found
+needed shelter for herself in Doctor Fuller's house,
+and kept it for him till his wife should come to Plymouth.</p>
+
+<p>Into the crude laboratory and pharmacy&mdash;in which
+the doctor had allowed her to work with him, of the
+contents of which he had taught her so much for an
+emergency that she had little dreamed would so
+closely affect herself when it came&mdash;Constance flew,
+and turned to the shelf where stood, in their dark
+phials, the few poisons which the doctor kept ready to
+do beneficent work for him.</p>
+
+<p>"Belladonna, belladonna, the beautiful lady,"
+Constance murmured, in the curious way that minds
+have of seizing words and dwelling on them with
+surface insistence, while the actual mind is intensely
+working on a vital matter.</p>
+
+<p>She took down the wrong phial first, and set it back
+impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>"There should be none other like belladonna," she
+said aloud, and took down the phial she sought. To
+be sure that she was right, though it was labelled
+in the doctor's almost illegible small writing, she
+withdrew the cork. She knew the sickening odour
+of the nightshade which she had helped distil, an
+odour that dimly recalled a tobacco that had come to
+her father in England in her childhood from some
+Spanish colony, as she had been told, and also a wine
+that her stepmother made from wild berries.</p>
+
+<p>Constance shuddered as she replaced the cork.</p>
+
+<p>"It sickens me, but if only it will restore little
+Damaris!" she thought.</p>
+
+<p>Holding the phial tight Constance hastened away,
+and, her breath still coming painfully, she broke into
+her swift race homeward, diminishing nothing of her
+speed in coming, her great purpose conquering the
+pain that oppressed her labouring breast.</p>
+
+<p>When she reached her home her father was watching
+for her in the doorway. He took her hands in
+both of his without a word, covering the phial which
+she clasped, and looking at her questioningly.</p>
+
+<p>"I hope so; oh, I hope so, Father!" she said.
+"The doctor told me."</p>
+
+<p>Stephen Hopkins led her into the house; Dame
+Eliza met her within.</p>
+
+<p>"Constance? Connie?" Thus Mistress Hopkins
+implored her to do her best, and to allow her to hope.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes, Mother," Constance replied to the
+prayer, and neither noted that they spoke to each
+other by names that they had never used before.</p>
+
+<p>The first glimpse that Constance had of Damaris
+on the bed sent all the blood back against her heart
+with a pang that made her feel faint. It did not
+seem possible that she was in time, even should her
+knowledge be correct.</p>
+
+<p>The child lay rigid as Constance's eyes fell on her;
+her lips and cheeks were ghastly, her long hair heightening
+the awful effect of her deathly colour. Frequent
+convulsions shook her body, her struggling
+breathing alone broke the stillness of the room.</p>
+
+<p>"She is quieter, but it is not that she is better,"
+whispered Dame Eliza.</p>
+
+<p>Priscilla Alden stood ready with a spoon and glass
+in one hand, water in a small ewer in the other, always
+the efficient, sensible girl when needed.</p>
+
+<p>Constance accepted the glass, took from it the
+spoon, gave the glass back to Priscilla and poured
+from the dark phial into the spoon the dose of belladonna
+that Doctor Fuller had explained to her would
+be proper to use in an extreme case of danger.</p>
+
+<p>"How wonderful that he should have told me
+particularly about toadstool poisoning, yet it is
+because of the children," Constance's dual mind was
+saying to her, even while she poured the remedy and
+prayed with all her might for its efficacy.</p>
+
+<p>"Open her mouth," she said to her father, and he
+obeyed her. Constance poured the belladonna
+down Damaris's throat.</p>
+
+<p>Even after the first dose the child's rigor relaxed
+before a long time had passed. The dose was
+repeated; the early dusk of the grayest month closed
+down upon the watchers in that room. The neighbours
+slipped away to their own homes and duties;
+night fell, and Stephen Hopkins, his wife, Giles, and
+Constance stood around that bed, feeling no want of
+food, watching, watching the gradual cessation of the
+wracking convulsions, the relaxation of the stiffened
+little limbs, the fall of the strained eyelids, the
+quieter breathing, the changing tint of the skin as the
+poison loosed its grip upon the poor little heart and
+the blood began to course languidly, but duly,
+through the congested veins.</p>
+
+<p>"Constance, she is safe!" Stephen Hopkins ventured
+at last to say as Damaris turned on her side with a
+long, refreshing breath.</p>
+
+<p>Giles went quickly from the room, and Constance
+turned to her father with sudden weakness that made
+her faint.</p>
+
+<p>Constance swayed as she stood and her father
+caught her in his arms, tenderly drawing her head
+down on his shoulder, as great rending sobs shook
+her from relief and the accumulated exhaustion of
+hunger, physical weariness, anxiety, and grief.</p>
+
+<p>"Brave little lass!" Stephen Hopkins whispered,
+kissing her again and again. "Brave, quick-witted,
+loving, wise little lass o' mine!"</p>
+
+<p>Dame Eliza spoke never a word, but on her knees,
+with her head buried in the bright patch bedspread,
+one of Damaris's cold little hands laid across her lips,
+she wept as Constance had never dreamed that her
+stepmother could weep.</p>
+
+<p>"Better look after her, Father," Constance whispered,
+alarmed. "She will do herself a mischief,
+poor soul! Mother, oh&mdash;she loves me not! Father,
+comfort her; I will rest, and then I shall be my old
+self."</p>
+
+<p>"You did not notice that Priscilla had come back,"
+her father said. "She is in the kitchen, and the
+kettle is singing on the hob. Go, dear one, and
+Priscilla will give you food and warm drink. Let me
+help you there. My Constance, Damaris would be
+far beyond our love by now had you not saved her.
+You have saved her life, Constance! What do we
+not all owe to you?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was Doctor Fuller. He taught me. He is
+wise, and knew that children might take harm from
+toadstools, playing in the woods as ours do. It was
+not due to me that Damaris was saved," Constance
+said.</p>
+
+<p>She was not conscious of how heavily she leaned on
+her father's arm, which lovingly enfolded her, leading
+her to the big chair in the inglenook. The fire leaped
+and crackled; the steam from the singing kettle on
+the crane showed rosy red in the firelight; Hecate,
+Puck, and Lady Fair basked in the warmth, and
+Priscilla Alden knelt on the hearth stirring something
+savoury in the saucepan that sat among the raked-off
+ashes, while John Alden, who had brought Priscilla
+back to be useful to the worn-out household, sat on
+the settle, leaning forward, elbows on knees, the
+bellows between his hands, ready to pump up wind
+under a flame that might show a sign of flagging.</p>
+
+<p>"Dear me, how cosy it looks!" exclaimed Constance,
+involuntarily, her drooping muscles tautening
+to welcome the brightness waiting for her. "It does
+not seem as though there ever could come a sorrow to
+threaten a hearthstone so shut in, so well tended as
+this one!"</p>
+
+<p>"It did not come, my dear; it only looked in at the
+window, and when it saw the tended hearth, and
+how well-armed you were to grapple with it, off it
+went!" cried Priscilla, drawing Constance into the
+high-backed chair. "Feet on this stool, my pretty,
+and this napery over your knees! That's right!
+Now this bowl and spoon, and then your Pris will
+pour her hot posset into your bowl, and you must
+shift it into your sweet mouth, and we'll be as right
+as a trivet, instanter!"</p>
+
+<p>Priscilla acted as she chattered, and Constance
+gladly submitted to being taken care of, lying back
+smiling in weary, happy acquiescence.</p>
+
+<p>Priscilla's posset was a heartening thing, and
+Constance after it, munched blissfully on a biscuit
+and sipped the wine that had been made of elder too
+brief a time before, yet which was friendly to her,
+nevertheless.</p>
+
+<p>Constance's lids drooped in the warmth, her head
+nodded, her fingers relaxed. Priscilla caught her
+glass just in time as it was falling, and Constance
+slept beside the fire while John and Priscilla crept
+away, and Giles came to take their place, to keep up
+the blaze in case a kettle of hot water might be needed
+when Damaris wakened from her first restoring
+sleep.</p>
+
+<p>At dawn Doctor Fuller came in and Constance
+aroused to welcome him.</p>
+
+<p>"Child, what an experience you have borne!" the
+good man said, bending with a moved face to greet
+Constance. "To think that I should have been
+absent! Your practice was more successful than
+mine; the squaw is dead. And you remembered my
+teaching, and saved the child with the nightshade
+we gathered and distilled that fair day, more than
+two months ago! 'Twas a lesson well conned!"</p>
+
+<p>"'Twas a lesson well taught," Constance amended.
+"Sit here, Doctor Fuller, and let me call my father.
+You will see Damaris? And her mother is in need of
+a quieting draught, I think. The poor soul was utterly
+spent when last I saw her, though I've selfishly
+slept, nor known aught of what any one else might be
+bearing."</p>
+
+<p>Constance slipped softly through the door as she
+spoke, into the bedroom where Damaris lay. The
+little girl was sleeping, but her mother lay across her
+feet, her gloomy eyes staring at the wall, her face
+white and mournful.</p>
+
+<p>"Doctor Fuller is come, Stepmother," whispered
+Constance. "Shall he not see Damaris? And you,
+have you not slept?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a wink," said Dame Eliza, rising heavily.
+"To me it is as if Damaris had died, and that that
+child there was another. I bore the agony of parting
+from her, and now must abide by it, meseems, for I
+cannot believe that she is here and safe. Constance,
+it is to you&mdash;&mdash;." She stopped and began again. "I
+was ever fond of calling you your father's daughter,
+making plain that I had no part in you. It was true;
+none have I, nor ever can have. But in my child
+you have the right of sister, and the restorer of her
+life. Damaris's mother, and Damaris is your father's
+other daughter, is heavily in your debt. I do not
+know&mdash;&mdash;." She paused. She had spoken slowly,
+with difficulty, as if she could not find the words, nor
+use them as she wished to when she had found them.
+Young as she was, Constance saw that her stepmother
+was labouring under the stress of profound
+emotion, that tore her almost like a physical agony.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, now, prithee, Mistress Hopkins!" cried
+Constance, purposely using her customary title for
+her stepmother, to avoid the effect of there being
+anything out of the ordinary between them. "Bethink
+thee that I have loved Damaris dearly all her
+short life, and that her loss would have wounded me
+hardly less than it would have you. What debt can
+there be where there is love? Would I not have sacrificed
+anything to keep the child, even for myself?
+And what have I done but remember what the doctor
+taught me, and give her drops? Do not, I pray thee,
+make of my selfishness and natural affection a matter
+of merit! And now the doctor is waiting. Will you
+not go to him and let him treat you, too?&mdash;for indeed
+you need it. And he will tell you how best to bring
+Damaris back to her strength. I am going out into
+the morning air, for my long sleep by the hot fire
+hath made me heavy. I will be back in a short time
+to help with breakfast, Stepmother!"</p>
+
+<p>Constance snatched her cloak and ran out by the
+other door to escape seeing the doctor again and
+hearing her stepmother dilate to him upon the
+night's events.</p>
+
+<p>The sun was rising, resplendent, but the air was
+cold.</p>
+
+<p>"And no wonder!" Constance thought, startled by
+her discovery. "Winter is upon us; to-day is
+December! Our warmth must leave us, and then
+will danger of poisoning be past, even in sheltered
+spots, such as that in which our little lass near found
+her death!"</p>
+
+<p>She spread her arms out to the sun rays, and let the
+crisp, sea wind cool her face.</p>
+
+<p>"What a world! What a world! How fair, how
+glad, how sweet! Oh, thank God that it is so to us
+all this morning! Never will I repine at hardships
+in kind Plymouth colony, nor at the cost of coming
+on this pilgrimage, for of all the world in Merry
+England there is none to-day happier or more grateful
+than is this pilgrim maid!"</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="p4"><a name="CHAPTER_XVIII" id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII</a></h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">Christmas Wins, Though Outlawed</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>Little Damaris, who had so nearly made the
+last great pilgrimage upon which we must all
+go, having turned her face once more toward the
+world she had been quitting, resumed her place in it
+but languidly. Never a robust child, her slender
+strength was impaired by the poison which she had
+absorbed. Added to this was the sudden coming
+of winter upon Plymouth, not well prepared to resist
+it, and it set in with violence, as if to atone for dallying
+on its way, for allowing summer to overlap its
+domain. Without a word to each other both Dame
+Eliza and Constance entered into an alliance of self-denial,
+doing without part of the more nourishing
+food out of their scanty allowance to give it to Damaris,
+and to plot in other ways to bring her back to
+health.</p>
+
+<p>Constance scarcely knew her stepmother. Silent,
+where she had been prone to talk; patient, where she
+had been easily vexed; with something almost deprecatory
+in her manner where she always had been
+self-assertive, Dame Eliza went about her round of
+work like a person whom her husband's daughter had
+never known.</p>
+
+<p>Toward Constance most of all was she changed.
+Never by the most remote implication did she blame
+her, whereas heretofore everything that the girl did
+was wrong, and the subject of wearisome, scolding
+comment. She avoided unnecessary speech to Constance,
+seemed even to try not to look at her, but this
+without the effect of her old-time dislike; it was
+rather as if she felt humiliated before her, and could
+not bring herself to meet the girl's eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Constance, as she realized this, began to make
+little overtures toward her stepmother. Her sweetness
+of nature made her suffer discomfort when another
+was ill-at-ease, but so far her cautious attempts
+had met with failure.</p>
+
+<p>"We have been in Plymouth a year, lacking but a
+sen' Night, Stepmother," Constance said one December
+day when the snow lay white on Plymouth and
+still thickened the air and veiled the sky. "And we
+have been in the New World past a year."</p>
+
+<p>"It is ordered that we remember it in special
+prayer and psalmody to the Lord, with thanksgiving
+on the anniversary of our landing; you heard that,
+Constantia?" her stepmother responded.</p>
+
+<p>"No, but that would be seemly, a natural course
+to follow," said Constance.</p>
+
+<p>"There is not one of us who is not reliving the voyage
+hither and the hard winter of a year ago, I'll
+warrant. And Christmas is nearing."</p>
+
+<p>"That is a word that may not be uttered here,"
+said Dame Eliza with a gleam of humour in her eyes,
+though she did not lift them, and a flitting smile
+across her somewhat grimly set lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, can it be harmful to keep the day on which,
+veiled in an infant's form, man first saw his redemption?"
+cried Constance. "There were sweetness and
+holiness in Christmas-keeping, meseems. If only
+we could cut out less violently! Stepmother, will
+you let me have my way?"</p>
+
+<p>"Your way is not in my guidance, Constantia,"
+said Dame Eliza. "It is for your father to grant
+you, or refuse you; not me."</p>
+
+<p>"This is beyond my father's province," laughed
+Constance. "Will you let me make a doll&mdash;I have
+my box of paints, and you know that a gift for using
+paints and for painting human faces is mine. I will
+make a doll of white rags and dress her in our prettiest
+coloured ones, with fastenings upon her clothes,
+so that they may be taken off and changed, else would
+she be a trial to her little mother! And then I will
+paint her face with my best skill, big blue eyes, curling
+golden hair, rose-red cheeks and lips, and a fine,
+straight little nose. Oh, she shall be a lovely creature,
+upon my honour! And will you let me give her
+to Damaris on Christmas morning, saying naught of
+it to any one outside this house, so no one shall rebuke
+us, or fine my father again for letting his child
+have a Christmas baby, as they fined him for letting
+Ted and Ned play at a harmless game? Then I shall
+know that there is one happy child on the birthday
+of Him who was born that all children, of all ages,
+should be happy, and that it will be, of all the possible
+little ones, our dear little lass who is thus full of joy!"</p>
+
+<p>Mistress Hopkins did not reply for a moment.
+Then she raised the corner of her apron and wiped
+her eyes, muttering something about "strong mustard."</p>
+
+<p>"How fond you are of my little Damaris," she
+then said. "You know, Constantia, that I have no
+right to consent to your keeping Christmas, since our
+elders have set their faces dead against all practices
+of the Old Church. Yet are your reasons for wishing
+to do this, or so it seems to me in my ignorance, such
+as Heaven would approve, and it sorely is borne upon
+me that many worser sins may be wrought in Plymouth
+than making a delicate child happy on the
+birthday of the Lord. Go, then, and make your puppet,
+but do not tell any one that you first consulted
+me. If trouble comes of it they will blame you less,
+who are young and not so long removed from the
+age of dolls, than me, who am one of the Mothers in
+Israel."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, thank you, thank you, Stepmother!" cried
+Constance jumping up and clapping her hands with
+greater delight than if she had herself received a
+Christmas gift.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll never betray you, never! None shall know
+that any but my wicked, light-minded self had a hand
+in this profanation of&mdash;&mdash;. What does it profane,
+Stepmother?"</p>
+
+<p>"Plymouth and Plymouth pilgrimage," said Dame
+Eliza, and this time the smile that she had checked
+before had its way.</p>
+
+<p>Constance ran upstairs to look for the pieces which
+were to be transformed by fairy magic, through her
+means, from shapeless rags to a fair and rosy daughter
+for pale Damaris. She remembered, wondering, as
+she knelt before her chest, that she had clapped her
+hands and pranced, and that Dame Eliza had not
+reproved her.</p>
+
+<p>Constance was busy with her doll till Christmas
+morning, the more so that she must hide it from
+Damaris and there was not warmth anywhere to sit
+and sew except in the great living room where Damaris
+amused Oceanus most of the darksome days.
+But Damaris's mother connived with Constance to
+divert the child, and there were long evenings, for,
+to give Constance more time, Dame Eliza put Damaris
+early to bed, and Constance sat late at her
+sewing.</p>
+
+<p>Thus when Christmas day came there sat on the
+hearth, propped up against the back of Stephen
+Hopkins's big volume of Shakespeare, a doll with a
+painted face that had real claim to prettiness. She
+wore a gown of sprigged muslin that hung so full
+around the pointed stomacher of her waist that it
+was a scandal to sober Plymouth, and a dangerous
+example to Damaris, had she been inclined to vain
+light-mindedness. And&mdash;though this was a surprise
+also to Dame Eliza&mdash;there was a horse of brown
+woollen stuff, with a tail of fine-cut rags and a mane of
+ravelled rags, and legs which, though considerably
+curved as to shape and unreliable as to action, were undeniably
+legs, and four in number. There were bright,
+black buttons on the steed's head suggestive of eyes,
+and the red paint in two spots below them were all
+the fiery nostrils the animal required. This was
+Giles's contribution to the joy of his ailing baby
+brother. Oceanus was a frail child whose grasp on
+life had been taken at a time too severe for him to
+hold it long, nor indeed did he.</p>
+
+<p>"Come out and wander down the street, Con,"
+Giles whispered to Constance under the cover of the
+shouts of the two children who had come downstairs
+to find the marvellous treasures, the doll and horse,
+awaiting them, and who went half mad with joy, just
+like modern children in old Plymouth, as if they had
+not been little pilgrims.</p>
+
+<p>"There will be amusement for thee; come out,
+but never say I bade you come. You can make
+an errand."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Giles, you are not plotting mischief?" Constance
+implored, seeing the fun in her brother's eyes
+and fearing an attempt at Christmas fooling.</p>
+
+<p>"No harm afoot, but we hope a little laughter,"
+said Giles, nodding mysteriously as he left the house.</p>
+
+<p>Constance could not resist her curiosity. She
+wrapped herself in her cloak against the cold and
+tied a scarf over her hair, before drawing its hood
+over her head.</p>
+
+<p>"You look like a witch, like a sweet, lovely witch,"
+cried Damaris, getting up from her knees on which
+she had seemed, and not unjustly, to be worshipping
+her doll, whom she had at once christened Connie,
+and running over to hug her sister, breathless. "Are
+you a witch, Constance, and made my Connie by
+magic? No, a fairy! A fairy you are! My fairy,
+darling, lovely sister!"</p>
+
+<p>"Be grateful to Constantia, as you should be,
+Damaris, but prate not of fairies. I will not let go
+undone all my duty as a Puritan and pilgrim mother.
+Constantia is a kind sister to you, which is better,
+than a fairy falsehood," said Dame Eliza, rallying
+something of her old spirit.</p>
+
+<p>Constance kissed Damaris and whispered something
+to her so softly that all the child caught was
+"Merry." Yet the lost word was not hard to guess.</p>
+
+<p>Then Constance went out and down the street,
+wondering what Giles had meant. She saw a small
+group of men before her, near the general storehouse
+for supplies, and easily made out that they were the
+younger men of the plantation, including those that
+had come on the <i>Fortune</i>, and that Giles and Francis
+Billington were to the fore.</p>
+
+<p>Up the street in his decorous raiment, but without
+additional marking of the day by his better cloak
+as on Sunday, came Governor Bradford with his unhastening
+pace not quickened, walking with his
+English thorn stick that seemed to give him extra,
+gubernatorial dignity, toward the group. The
+younger lads nudged one another, laughing, half
+afraid, but not Giles. He stood awaiting the governor
+as if he faced him for a serious cause, yet Constance
+saw that his eyes danced.</p>
+
+<p>"Good morning, my friends," said William Bradford.
+"Not at work? You are apportioned to the
+building of the stockade. It is late to begin your
+day, especially that the sun sets early at this season."</p>
+
+<p>"It is because of the season, though not of the
+sun's setting, that we are not at work," said Giles,
+chosen spokesman for this prank by his fellows, and
+now getting many nudges lest he neglect his office.
+"Hast forgotten, Mr. Bradford, what day this is?
+It offends our conscience to work on a day of such
+high reverence. This be a holy day, and we may not
+work without sin, as the inward voice tells us. We
+waited to explain to you what looked like idleness,
+but is rather prompted by high and lofty principles."</p>
+
+<p>The governor raised his eyebrows and bowed
+deeply, not without a slight twitching of his lips, as
+he heard this unexpected and solemn protest.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, Giles Hopkins! And is it so? You have
+in common with these, your fellow labourers, a case
+of scruples to which the balm of the opinions of your
+elders and betters, at least in experience and authority,
+does not apply? Far be it from me to interfere
+with your consciences! We have come to the New
+World, and braved no slight adversity for just this
+cause, that conscience unbridled, undriven, might
+guide us in virtue. Disperse, therefore, to your
+homes, and for the day let the work of protection
+wait. I bid you good morning, gentlemen, and pray
+you be always such faithful harkeners to the voice of
+conscience."</p>
+
+<p>The governor went on, having spoken, and the
+actors in the farce looked crestfallen at one another,
+the point of the jest somewhat blunted by the
+governor's complete approval. Indeed there were
+some among them who followed the governor. He
+turned back, hoping for this, and said:</p>
+
+<p>"This is not done to approve of Christmas-keeping
+but rather to spare you till you are better informed."</p>
+
+<p>"What will you do, Giles?" asked Constance, as
+her brother joined her, Francis also, not in the least
+one with those who relinquished the idea of a holiday.</p>
+
+<p>"Do? Why follow our consciences, as we were commended
+for doing!" shouted Francis tossing his hat
+in the air and catching it neatly on his head in the approved
+fashion of a mountebank at a fair in England.</p>
+
+<p>"Our consciences bid us play at games on Christmas,"
+supplemented Giles. "Would you call the
+girls and watch us? Or we'll play some games that
+you can join in, such as catch-catch, or pussy-wants-a-corner."</p>
+
+<p>Constance shook her head. "Giles, be prudent,"
+she warned. "You have won your first point, but
+if I know the governor's face there was something in
+it that betokened more to come. You know there'll
+be no putting up with games on any day here, least of
+all on this day, which would be taken as a return to
+abandoned ways. Yet it is comical!" Constance
+added, finding her r&ocirc;le of mentor irksome when all
+her youth cried out for fun.</p>
+
+<p>"Good Con! You are no more ready for unbroken
+dulness than we are!" Francis approved her. "Come
+along, Giles; get the bar for throwing, and the ball,
+and who said pitch-and-toss? I have a set of rings
+I made, I and&mdash;someone else." Francis's face
+clouded. Pranks had lost much of their flavour since
+he lacked Jack.</p>
+
+<p>Seeing this, Giles raced Francis off, and the other
+conscientious youths who refused work, streamed
+after them.</p>
+
+<p>Constance continued her way to the Alden home.
+She thought that a timely visit to Priscilla would
+bring her home at such an hour as to let her see the
+end of the morning escapade.</p>
+
+<p>Elizabeth Tilley drifted into Priscilla's kitchen in
+an aimless way, not like her usual busy self, although
+she made the reason for her coming a recipe
+which she needed. Soon Desire Minter followed her,
+asking Priscilla if she would show her how to cut an
+apron from a worn-out skirt, but, like Elizabeth,
+Desire seemed listless and uncertain.</p>
+
+<p>"There's something wrong!" cried Desire at last,
+without connection. "There is a sense of there being
+Christmas in the world somewhere to-day, and not
+here! I am glad that I go back to England as soon
+as opportunity offers."</p>
+
+<p>"There is Christmas here, most conscientiously
+kept!" laughed Constance. "Hark to the tale of
+it!" And she told the girls what had happened that
+morning.</p>
+
+<p>"Come with me, bear me company home, and we
+shall, most probably, see the end of it, for I am sure
+that the governor is not done with those lads," she
+added.</p>
+
+<p>Desire and Elizabeth welcomed the suggestion,
+for they were, also, about to go home.</p>
+
+<p>"See yonder!" cried Constance, pointing.</p>
+
+<p>Down the street there was what, in Plymouth,
+constituted a crowd, gathered into two bands. With
+great shouting and noise one band was throwing a
+ball, which the other band did its utmost to prevent
+from entering a goal toward which the throwers
+directed it. Alone, one young man was throwing
+a heavy bar, taking pride in his muscles which balanced
+the bar and threw it a long distance with ease
+and grace.</p>
+
+<p>"To think that this is Plymouth, with merrymaking
+in its street on Christmas day!" exclaimed
+Desire, her eyes kindling with pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but see the governor is coming, leading back
+those men who went to work; he has himself helped
+to build the stockade. Now we shall see how he receives
+this queer idea of a holiday, which is foreign
+to us, though it comes from England," said Constance.</p>
+
+<p>Governor Bradford came toward the shouting and
+mirth-making with his dignified gait unvaried. The
+game slackened as he drew nearer, though some
+of the players did their best to keep it up at the same
+pace, not to seem to dread the governor's disapproval.</p>
+
+<p>Having gained the centre of the players, the governor
+halted, and looked from one to another.</p>
+
+<p>"Hand me that ball, and yonder bar, and all other
+implements of play which you have here," he said,
+sternly. "My friends," he added to the men who
+had been at work, "take from our idlers their
+toys."</p>
+
+<p>There was no resistance on the part of the players;
+they yielded up bats, ball, and bar, the stool-ball,
+goal sticks, and all else, without demur, curious to see
+what was in the wind.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, young men of Plymouth colony," said
+Governor Bradford, "this morning you told me that
+your consciences forbade you to work on Christmas
+day. Although I could not understand properly
+trained Puritan consciences going so astray, yet did
+I admit your plea, not being willing to force you to
+do that which there was a slender chance of your
+being honest in objecting to, for conscience sake.
+You have not worked with your neighbours for half
+of this day. Now doth my conscience arouse, nor
+will it allow me, as governor, to see so many lusty
+men at play, while others labour for our mutual
+benefit. Therefore I forbid the slightest attempt
+at game-playing on this day. If your consciences
+will not allow you to labour then will mine, though
+exempting you from work because of your sense of
+right, yet not allow you to play while others work.
+For the rest of this day, which is called Christmas,
+but which we consider but as the twenty-fifth day
+of this last month of the year, you will either go to
+work, or you will remain close within your various
+houses, on no account to appear beyond your thresholds.
+For either this is a work-a-day afternoon, or
+else is it holy, which we by no means admit. In
+either case play is forbidden you. See to it that you
+obey me, or I will deal with you as I am empowered
+to deal."</p>
+
+<p>The young men looked at one another, some inclined
+to resent this, others with a ready sense of
+humour, burst out laughing; among these latter was
+Giles, who cried:</p>
+
+<p>"Fairly caught, Governor Bradford! You have
+played a Christmas game this day yourself and have
+won out at it! For me, as a choice between staying
+close within the house and working, I will take to the
+stockade. By your leave, then, Governor, I will
+join you at the work, dinner being over."</p>
+
+<p>"You have my leave, Giles Hopkins," said William
+Bradford, and there was a twinkle in his eyes as he
+turned them, with no smile on his lips, upon Giles.</p>
+
+<p>Giles went home with Constance in perfect good
+humour, taking the end of his mischief in good
+part.</p>
+
+<p>"For look you," he said, summing up comments
+upon it to his sister. "I don't mind encountering defeat
+by clever outwitting of me. We tried a scheme
+and the governor had a better one. What I mind
+is unfairness; that was fair, and I like the governor
+better than I ever did before."</p>
+
+<p>Stephen Hopkins stood in the doorway of the house
+as the brother and sister came toward it. He was
+gazing at the skyline with eyes that saw nothing
+near to him, preoccupied, wistful, in a mood that was
+rare to him, and never betrayed to others. His eyes
+came back to earth slowly, and he looked at Giles and
+Constance as one looks who has difficulty in seeing
+realities, so occupied was he with his thoughts. He
+put out a hand and took one of Constance's hands,
+drawing it up close to his breast, and he laid his left
+hand heavily on Giles's shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"Across that ocean it is Christmas day," he said,
+slowly. "In England people are sitting around their
+hearths mulling ale, roasting apples, singing old
+songs and carols. When I was young your mother
+and I rode miles across a dim forest, she on her pillion,
+I guiding a mettlesome beauty. But she had no fear
+with my hand on his bridle; we had been married but
+since Michaelmas. We went to visit your grandmother,
+her mother, Lady Constantia, who was a
+famous toast in her youth. You are very like your
+mother, Constance; I have often told you this.
+Strange, that one can inhabit the same body in such
+different places in a lifetime; stranger that, still in
+the same body, he can be such an altered man! Giles,
+my son, I have been thinking long thoughts to-day.
+There is something that I must say to you as your
+due; nay something, rather, that I want to say to you.
+I have been wrong, my son. I have loved you so
+well that a defect in you annoyed me, and I have
+been hard, impatient, offending against the charity
+in judgment that we owe all men, surely most those
+who are our nearest and dearest. I accused you
+unjustly, and gave you no opportunity to explain.
+Giles, as man to man, and as a father who failed you,
+I beg your pardon."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, sir! Oh, dear, dear Father!" cried Giles in
+distress. "It needed not this! All I ask is your
+confidence. I have been an arrogant young upstart,
+denying you your right to deal with me. It is I who
+am wrong, wrongest in that I have never confessed
+the wrong, and asked your forgiveness. Surely it is
+for me to beg your pardon; not you mine!"</p>
+
+<p>"At least a good example is your due from me,"
+said Stephen Hopkins, with a smile of wistful
+tenderness. "We are all upstarts, Giles lad, denying
+that we should receive correction, and this from a
+Greater than I. The least that we can do is to be
+willing to acknowledge our errors. With all my
+heart I forgive you, lad, and I ask you to try to love
+me, and let there be the perfect loving comradeship
+between us that, it hath seemed, we had left behind
+us on the other shore, just when it was most needed
+to sustain us in our venture on this one. You loved
+me well, Giles, as a child; love me as well as you can
+as a man."</p>
+
+<p>Giles caught his father's hand in both of his, and
+was not ashamed that tears were streaming down his
+cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>"Father, I never loved you till to-day!" he cried.
+"You have taught me true greatness, and&mdash;and&mdash;Oh,
+indeed I love and honour you, dear sir!"</p>
+
+<p>"The day of good will, and of peace to it! And of
+love that triumphs over wrongs," said Stephen
+Hopkins, turning toward the house, and whimsically
+touching with his finger-tips the happy tears that
+quivered on Constance's lashes.</p>
+
+<p>"We cannot keep it out of Plymouth colony,
+however we strive to erect barriers against the feast;
+Christmas wins, though outlawed!"</p>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<span class="i2">"God rest ye merry, gentlemen;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Let nothing you dismay,"<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<p>Constance carolled as she hung up her cloak, her
+heart leaping in rapture of gratitude. Nor did
+Dame Eliza reprove her carol, but half smiled as
+Oceanus crowed and beat a pan wildly with his
+Christmas horse.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="p4"><a name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX</a></h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">A Fault Confessed, Thereby Redressed</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>As the winter wore away, that second winter in
+Plymouth colony that proved so hard to endure,
+the new state of things in the Hopkins household
+continued. Constance could not understand
+her stepmother. Though the long habit of a lifetime
+could not be at once entirely abandoned, yet
+Dame Eliza scolded far less, and toward Constance
+herself maintained an attitude that was far from
+fault-finding. Indeed she managed to combine
+something like regretful deference that was not
+unlike liking, with a rigid keeping of her distance
+from the girl. Constance wondered what had come
+over Mistress Hopkins, but she was too thankful for
+the peace she enjoyed to disturb it by the least
+attempt to bridge the distance that Dame Eliza had
+established between them.</p>
+
+<p>Her father and Giles were a daily delight to Constance.
+The comradeship that they had been so
+happy in when Giles was a child was theirs again,
+increased and deepened by the understanding that
+years had enabled Giles and his father to share as
+one man with another. And added to that was
+wistful affection, as if the older man and the younger
+one longed to make up by strength of love for the
+wasted days when all had not been right between
+them.</p>
+
+<p>Constance watched them together with gladness
+shining upon her face. Dame Eliza also watched
+them, but with an expression that Constance could
+not construe. Certain it was that her stepmother
+was not happy, not sure of herself, as she had always
+been.</p>
+
+<p>Oceanus was not well; he did not grow strong and
+rosy as did the other <i>Mayflower</i> baby, Peregrine
+White, though Oceanus was by this time walking and
+talking&mdash;a tall, thin, reed-like little baby, fashioned
+not unlike the long grasses that grew on Plymouth
+harbour shore. But Damaris had come back to
+health. She was Constance's charge; her mother
+yielded her to Constance and devoted herself to the
+baby, as if she had a presentiment of how brief a time
+she was to keep him.</p>
+
+<p>It was a cruelly hard winter; except that there was
+not a second epidemic of mortal disease it was
+harder to the exiles than the first winter in Plymouth.</p>
+
+<p>Hunger was upon them, not for a day, a week, or a
+month, but hourly and on all the days that rose and
+set upon the lonely little village, encompassed by
+nothing kinder than reaches of marsh, sand, and
+barrens that ended in forest; the monotonous sea
+that moaned against their coast and separated them
+from food and kin; and the winter sky that often
+smiled on them sunnily, it is true, but oftener was
+coldly gray, or hurling upon them bleak winds and
+driving snows.</p>
+
+<p>From England had come on the <i>Fortune</i> more
+settlers to feed, but no food for them. Plymouth
+people were hungry, but they faithfully divided their
+scarcity with the new-comers and hoped that in the
+spring Mr. Weston, the agent in England who had
+promised them the greatest help and assured them of
+the liveliest interest in this heroic venture, would send
+them at least a fraction of the much he had pledged
+to its assistance.</p>
+
+<p>So when the spring, that second spring, came in
+and brought a small ship there was the greatest excitement
+of hope in her coming. But all she brought
+was letters, and seven more passengers to consume
+the food already so shortened, but not an ounce of
+addition to the supplies. One letter was from Mr.
+Weston, filled with fair words, but so discouraging
+in its smooth avoidance of actual help that Governor
+Bradford dared not make its contents known, lest it
+should discourage the people, already sufficiently
+downhearted, and with more than enough reason to
+be so. There was a letter on this ship for Constance
+from Humility, and Governor Bradford
+beckoned to John Howland, standing near and said to
+him:</p>
+
+<p>"Take this letter up to Mistress Constantia
+Hopkins, and ask her father to come to me, if it
+please him. Say to him that I wish to consult
+him."</p>
+
+<p>"I will willingly do your bidding, Mr. Bradford,"
+said John Howland, accepting the letter which the
+governor held out to him and turning it to see in all
+lights its yellowed folder and the seal thrice impressed
+along its edge to insure that none other than
+she whose name appeared written in a fine, running
+hand on the obverse side, should first read the letter.
+"In fact I have long contemplated a visit to
+Mistress Constantia. It hath seemed to me that
+Stephen Hopkins's daughter was growing a woman
+and a comely woman. She is not so grave as I would
+want her to be, but allowance must be made for her
+youth, and her father is not so completely, nor profoundly
+set free from worldliness as are our truer
+saints; witness the affair of the shovelboard. But
+Constantia Hopkins, under the control and obedience
+of a righteous man, may be worthy of his hand."</p>
+
+<p>"Say you so!" exclaimed William Bradford, half
+amused, half annoyed, and wondering what his
+quick-tempered but honoured friend Stephen would
+say to this from John Howland&mdash;he who had a justifiable
+pride in his honourable descent and who held
+no mere man equal to his Constance, the apple of his
+eye. "I had not a suspicion that you were turning
+over in your mind thoughts of this nature. I would
+advise you to consult Mr. Hopkins before you let
+them take too strong hold upon your desire. But
+in as far as my errand runneth with your purpose to
+further your acquaintance with the maiden, in so far
+I will help you, good John, for I am anxious that Mr.
+Hopkins shall know as soon as possible what news
+the ship hath brought. Stay; here is another letter;
+for Mistress Eliza Hopkins this time. Take that,
+also, if you will and bid Mr. Hopkins hither."</p>
+
+<p>John Howland, missing entirely the hint of warning
+in the governor's voice and manner, took the two
+letters and went his way.</p>
+
+<p>He found Stephen Hopkins at his house, planning
+the planting of a garden with his son.</p>
+
+<p>"I will go at once; come thou with me, Giles. It
+sounds like ill news, I fear me, that hint of wishing to
+consult me. Somehow it seems that as 'good wine
+needs no bush,' for which we have Shakespeare's
+authority, so good news needs little advice, or rarely
+seeks it, for its dealing."</p>
+
+<p>So saying Stephen Hopkins, straightening himself
+with a hand on his stiffened side went into the house,
+and, taking his hat, went immediately out of it again,
+with Giles. John Howland followed them into the
+house, but not out of it. Instead, he seated himself,
+unbidden, upon the fireside settle, and awaited their
+departure.</p>
+
+<p>Then he produced his two letters, and offered one
+to Constance.</p>
+
+<p>"I have brought you this, Mistress Constantia,"
+he said, ponderously, "at the request of the governor,
+but no less have I brought it because it pleaseth me
+to do you a service, as I hope to do you many, even
+to the greatest, in time to come."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, John," said innocent Constance,
+having no idea of the weighty meaning underlying
+this statement, indeed scarce hearing it, being eager
+to get the letter which he held. "Oh, from Humility!
+It is from Humility! Look, little Damaris, a letter
+from England, writ by Humility Cooper! The
+<i>Fortune</i> is safely in port, then! Come, my cosset,
+and I will read you what Humility hath to tell us of
+her voyage, of home, and all else! First of all shall
+you and I hear this: then we will hasten to Priscilla
+Alden and read it to her new little daughter, for she
+hath been so short a time in Plymouth that she must
+long for news from across the sea, do you not say so?"</p>
+
+<p>Damaris giggled in enjoyment of Constance's
+nonsense, which the serious little thing never failed to
+enter into and to enjoy, as unplayful people always
+enjoy those who can frolic. The big sister ran away,
+with the smaller one clinging to her skirt, and with
+never a backward glance nor thought for John
+Howland, meditating a great opportunity for
+Constance, as he sat on the fireside settle.</p>
+
+<p>"Mistress Hopkins, this is your letter," said John,
+completing his errand when Constance was out of
+sight.</p>
+
+<p>He offered Dame Eliza her letter. She looked at
+it and thrust it into her pocket with such a heightened
+colour and distressed look that even John Howland's
+preoccupation took note of it.</p>
+
+<p>"This present hour seems to be an opportunity that
+is a leading, and I will follow this leading, Mistress
+Hopkins, by your leave," John said. "It cannot be
+by chance that all obstacles to plain speaking to you
+are removed. I had thought first to speak to Stephen
+Hopkins, or perhaps to Constantia herself, but I see
+that it is better to engage a woman's good offices."</p>
+
+<p>Dame Eliza frowned at him, darkly; she was in no
+mood for dallying, and this preamble had a sound
+that she did not like.</p>
+
+<p>"Good offices for what? My good offices?
+Why?" she snapped. "Why should you speak to
+Mr. Hopkins, with whose Christian name better men
+than you in this colony make less free? And still
+more I would know why you should speak either
+first or last to Mistress Constantia? That hath a
+sound that I do not like, John Howland!"</p>
+
+<p>John Howland stared at her, aghast, a moment,
+then he said:</p>
+
+<p>"It is my intent, Mistress Eliza Hopkins, to offer
+to wed Mistress Constantia, and that cannot mislike
+you. Young though she be, and somewhat frivolous,
+yet do I hope much for her from marriage with a
+godly man, and I find her comely to look upon.
+Therefore&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Therefore!" cried Dame Eliza who seemed to
+have lost her breath for a moment in sheer angry
+amazement. "Therefore you would make a fool of
+yourself, had not it been done for you at your birth!
+Art completely a numbskull, John Howland, that
+you speak as though it was a favour, and a matter
+for you to weigh heavily before coming to it, that
+you might make Stephen Hopkins's daughter your
+wife? Put the uneasiness that it gives you as to her
+light-mindedness out of your thoughts, nor dwell
+over-much upon her comeliness, for your own good!
+Comely is she, and a rare beauty, to give her partly
+her due. And what is more, is she a sweet and noble
+lass, graced with wit and goodness that far exceed
+your knowledge; not even her father can know as I
+do, with half my sore reason, her patience, her
+charity, her unfailing generosity to give, or to forgive.
+Marry Constance, forsooth! Why, man,
+there is not a man in this Plymouth settlement
+worthy of her latchets, nor in all England is there one
+too good for her, if half good enough! Your eyes
+will be awry and for ever weak from looking so high
+for your mate. But that you are the veriest ninny
+afoot I would deal with you, John Howland, for your
+impudence! Learn your place, man, and never let
+your conceit so run away with you that you dare to
+speak as if you were hesitant as to Mr. Hopkins's
+daughter to be your wife! Zounds! John, get out of
+my sight lest I be tempted to take my broom and
+clout ye! Constance Hopkins and you, forsooth!
+Oh, be gone, I tell ye! She's the pick and flower of
+maidens, in Plymouth or England, or where you will!"</p>
+
+<p>John Howland rose, slowly, stiffly, angry, but also
+ashamed, for he had not spirit, and he felt that he had
+stepped beyond bounds in aspiring to Constance
+since Dame Eliza with such vehemence set it before
+him. Then, too, it were a strong man who could
+emerge unscathed from an inundation of Dame
+Eliza's wrath.</p>
+
+<p>"I meant no harm, Mistress," he said, awkwardly.
+"No harm is done, for the maid herself knows
+naught of it, nor any one save the governor, and he
+but a hint. Let be no ill will between us for this. I
+suppose, since Mistress Constantia is not for me, I
+must e'en marry whom I can, and I think I must
+marry Elizabeth Tilley."</p>
+
+<p>"What does it matter to me who you marry?" said
+Dame Eliza, turning away with sudden weariness.
+"It's no concern of mine, beyond the point I've
+settled for good and all."</p>
+
+<p>John Howland went away. After he had gone
+Constance came around the house and entered by
+the rear door. Her eyes were full of moisture from
+suppressed laughter, yet her lips were tremulous and
+her eyes, dewy though they were, shone with happiness.</p>
+
+<p>"Hast heard?" demanded Dame Eliza.</p>
+
+<p>"I could not help it," said Constance. "I left
+Damaris at Priscilla's and ran back to ask you, for
+Priscilla, to lend her the pattern of the long wrapping
+cloak that you made for our baby when he was tiny.
+Pris's baby seems cold, she thinks. And as I entered
+I heard John. I near died of laughing! I had
+thought a lover always felt his beloved to be so fair
+and fine that he scarce dared look at her! Not so
+John! But after all, it is less that I am John's beloved
+than his careful&mdash;and doubtful choice. But for the
+rest, Mistress Hopkins&mdash;Stepmother&mdash;might I call
+you Mother?&mdash;what shall I say? I am ashamed,
+grateful but ashamed, that you praise me so! Yet
+how glad I am, never can I find words to tell you. I
+thought that you hated me, and it hath grieved me,
+for love is the air I breathe, and without it I shrivel
+up from chill and suffocation! I would that I could
+thank you, tell you&mdash;&mdash;." Constance stopped.</p>
+
+<p>The expression on Dame Eliza's face, wholly
+beyond her understanding, silenced her.</p>
+
+<p>"You have thanked me," Dame Eliza said.
+"Damaris is alive only through you. However you
+love her, yet her life is her mother's debt to you.
+Much, much more do I owe you, Constantia Hopkins,
+and none knows it better than myself. Let be. Words
+are poor. There is something yet to be done. After
+it you may thank me, or deny me as you will, but
+between us there will be a new beginning, its shaping
+shall be as you will. Till that is done which I must
+do, let there be no more talk between us."</p>
+
+<p>Puzzled, but impressed by her stepmother's
+manner and manifest distress, Constance acquiesced.
+It was not many days before she understood.</p>
+
+<p>The people of Plymouth were summoned to a
+meeting at Elder William Brewster's house. It was
+generally understood that something of the nature of a
+court of justice, and at the same time of a religious
+character was to take place. Everyone came, drawn
+by curiosity and the dearth of interesting public
+events.</p>
+
+<p>Stephen Hopkins, Giles, and Constance came, the
+two little children with them, because there was no
+one at home to look after them. Not the least
+suspicion of what they were to hear entered the
+mind of these three, or it might never have been
+heard.</p>
+
+<p>Elder Brewster, William Bradford, Edward Winslow
+sat in utmost gravity at the end of the room. It
+crossed Stephen Hopkins's mind to wonder a little at
+his exclusion from this tribunal, for it had the effect
+of a tribunal, but it was only a passing thought, and
+instantly it was answered.</p>
+
+<p>Dame Eliza Hopkins entered the room, with
+Mistress Brewster, and seated herself before the three
+heads of the colony.</p>
+
+<p>"My brethren," said William Brewster, rising, "it
+hath been said on Authority which one may not
+dispute that a broken and contrite heart will not be
+despised. You have been called together this night
+for what purpose none but my colleagues and myself
+knew. It is to harken to the public acknowledgment
+of a grave fault, and by your hearing of a public confession
+to lend your part to the wiping out of this sin,
+which is surely forgiven, being repented of, yet
+which is thus atoned for. We have vainly endeavoured
+to persuade the person thus coming before
+you that this course was not necessary; since her
+fault affected no one but her family, to them alone
+need confession be made. As she insisted upon this
+course, needs must we consent to it. Dame Eliza
+Hopkins, we are ready to harken to you."</p>
+
+<p>He sat down, and Dame Eliza, rising, came forward.
+Stephen Hopkins's face was a study, and
+Giles and Constance, crimson with distress, looked
+appealingly at their father, but the situation was
+beyond his control.</p>
+
+<p>"Friends, neighbours, fellow pilgrims," began
+Dame Eliza, manifestly in real agony of shamed
+distress, yet half enjoying herself, through her love
+for drama and excitement, "I am a sinner. I cannot
+continue in your membership unless you know the
+truth, and admit me thereto. My anger, my wicked
+jealousy hath persecuted the innocent children of my
+husband, they whose mother died and whose place I
+should have tried in some measure to make good.
+But at all times, and in all ways have I used them ill,
+not with blows upon the body, but upon their hearts.
+Jealousy was my temptation, and I yielded to it. But,
+not content with sharp and cruel words, I did plot
+against them to turn their father from them, especially
+from his son, because I wanted for my son the
+inheritance in England which Stephen Hopkins hath
+power to distribute. I succeeded in sowing discord
+between the father and Giles, but not between my
+husband and his daughter. At last I used a signature
+which fell into my hands, and by forwarding it to
+England, set in train actions before the law which
+would defraud Giles Hopkins and benefit my own
+son. By the ship that lately came into our harbour
+I received a letter, sent to me by the governor, by
+the hand of John Howland, promising me success in
+my wicked endeavour. My brethren, my heart is
+sick unto death within me. Thankfully I say that
+all estrangement is past between Giles Hopkins and
+his father. In that my wicked success at the beginning
+was foiled. While I was doing these things
+against the children, Constantia Hopkins, by her
+sweetness, her goodness, her devotion, without a
+tinge of grudging, to her little half-sister and brother,
+and at last her saving of my child's life when no help
+but hers was near and the child was dying before me,
+hath broken my hard heart; and in slaying me&mdash;for I
+have died to my old self under it&mdash;hath made me to
+live. Therefore I publicly acknowledge my sin, and
+bid you, my fellow pilgrims, deal with me as you see
+fit, neither asking for mercy, nor in any wise claiming
+it as my desert."</p>
+
+<p>Stephen Hopkins had bent forward, his elbows on
+his knees, hiding his face in his hands. Giles stared
+straight before him, his brow dark red, frowning till
+his face was drawn out of likeness to itself, his nether
+lip held tight in his teeth.</p>
+
+<p>Poor Constance hid her misery in Oceanus's breast,
+holding the baby close up against her so that no one
+could see her face. Little Damaris, pale and quiet,
+too frightened to move or fully to breathe, clutched
+Constance's arm, not understanding what was going
+forward, but knowing that whatever it was it distressed
+everyone that constituted her little world,
+and suffering under this knowledge.</p>
+
+<p>"My friends," Elder Brewster resumed his office,
+"you have heard what Mistress Hopkins hath
+spoken. It is not for us to deny pardon to her. She
+hath done all, and more than was required of her, in
+publicly confessing her wrong. Let us take her by
+the hand, and let us pray that she may live long to
+shed peace and joy upon the young people whom
+she hath wronged, and might have wronged further,
+had not repentance found her."</p>
+
+<p>One by one these severely stern people of Plymouth
+arose and, passing before Mistress Hopkins,
+took her hand, and said:</p>
+
+<p>"Sister, we rejoice with you." Or some said:
+"Be of good consolation, and Heaven's blessing be
+upon you." A few merely shook her hand and
+passed on.</p>
+
+<p>Before many had thus filed past, Myles Standish
+leaped to his feet and cried: "Stephen, Stephen
+Hopkins, come! There's a wild cat somewhere!"</p>
+
+<p>Stephen Hopkins went out after him, thankful to
+escape.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor old comrade," said Captain Standish,
+putting his hand on the other's shoulder. "If only
+good and sincere people would consider what these
+scenes, which relieve their nerves, cost others!
+There is a wild cat somewhere; I did not lie for thee,
+Stephen, but in good sooth I've no mortal idea where
+it may be!"</p>
+
+<p>He laughed, and Stephen Hopkins smiled. "You
+are a good comrade, Myles, and we are as like as two
+peas in a pod. Certes, we find this Plymouth pod
+tight quarters, do we not, at least at times? I've no
+liking for airing private grievances in public: to my
+mind they belong between us and the Lord!&mdash;but
+plainly my wife sees this as the right way. What
+think you, Myles? Is it going to be better henceforward?"
+he said.</p>
+
+<p>"No doubt of that, no doubt whatever," asserted
+Myles, positively. "And my pet Con is the chief
+instrument of Dame Eliza's change of heart! Well,
+to speak openly, Stephen, I did not give thy wife
+credit for so much sense! Constance is sweet, and
+fair, and winsome enough to bring any one to her&mdash;his!&mdash;senses.
+Or drive him out of them! Better
+times are in store for thee, Stephen, old friend, and I
+am heartily thankful for it. So, now; take your
+family home, and do not mind the talk of Plymouth.
+For a few days they will discuss thee, thy wife, thy
+son, and thy daughter, but it will not be without
+praise for thee, and it will be a strange thing if Giles
+and I cannot stir up another event that will turn
+their attention from thee before thy patience quite
+gives out."</p>
+
+<p>Myles Standish laughed, and clapped his hand on
+his friend's shoulder by way of encouragement to him
+to face what any man, and especially a man of his sort,
+must dread to face&mdash;the comments and talk of his
+small world.</p>
+
+<p>The Hopkins family went home in silence, Stephen
+Hopkins gently leading his wife by her arm, for she
+was exhausted by the strain of her emotions.</p>
+
+<p>Giles and Constance, walking behind them with
+the children, were thinking hard, going back in their
+minds to their early childhood, to the beautiful old
+mansion which both remembered dimly, to the
+Warwickshire cousins, to their embittered days since
+their stepmother had reigned over them, and now
+this marvellous change in her, this strange acknowledgment
+from her before everyone&mdash;<i>their</i> every-one&mdash;of
+wrong done, and greater wrong attempted
+and abandoned. They both shrank from the days
+to come, feeling that they could not treat their stepmother
+as they had done, yet still less could they
+come nearer to her, as would be their duty after this,
+without embarrassment. Giles went at once to his
+room to postpone the evil hour, but Constance could
+not escape it.</p>
+
+<p>She unfastened Damaris's cloak, trying to chatter
+to the child in her old way, and she glanced up at her
+stepmother, as she knelt before Damaris, to invite
+her to share their smiles. Dame Eliza was watching
+her with longing that was almost fear. "Constance,"
+she said in a low voice. "Constance&mdash;&mdash;?"
+She paused, extending her hands.</p>
+
+<p>Constance sprang up, forgetful of embarrassment,
+forgetful of old wrongs, remembering only to pity
+and to forgive, like the sweet girl that she was.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, Mother, never mind! Love me now, and
+never mind that once you did not!" she cried.</p>
+
+<p>Dame Eliza leaned to her and kissed her cheek.</p>
+
+<p>"Dear lass," she murmured, "how could I grudge
+thee thy father's love, since needs must one love thee
+who knows thee?"</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="p4"><a name="CHAPTER_XX" id="CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX</a></h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">The Third Summer's Garnered Yield</span></h3>
+
+
+<p>Side by side now, through the weary days of another
+year, Constance Hopkins and her stepmother
+bore and vanquished the cruel difficulties
+which those days brought.</p>
+
+<p>Dame Eliza had been sincere in her contrition as
+was proved by the one test of sincerity&mdash;her actions
+bore out her words.</p>
+
+<p>Toward Giles she held herself kindly, yet never
+showed him affection. But toward Constance her
+manner was what might be called eagerly affectionate,
+as if she so longed to prove her love for the girl
+that the limitations of speech and opportunity left
+her unsatisfied of expression.</p>
+
+<p>Hunger was the portion of everyone in Plymouth;
+conditions had grown harder with longer abiding
+there, except in the one&mdash;though that was important&mdash;matter
+of the frightful epidemic of the first winter.</p>
+
+<p>In spite of want Constance grew lovelier as she
+grew older. She was now a full-grown woman, tall
+with the slenderness of early youth. Her scant
+rations did not give her the gaunt look that most of
+the pilgrims, even the young ones, wore as they went
+on working hard and eating little. Instead, it
+etherealized and spiritualized Constance's beauty.
+Under her wonderful eyes, with their far-off look of a
+dreamer warmed and corrected by the light in them of
+love and sacrifice, were shadows that increased their
+brilliance. The pallor that had replaced the wild-rose
+colour in her cheeks did not lessen the exquisite fairness
+of her skin, and it set in sharp contrast to it the
+redness of her lips and emphasized their sweetness.</p>
+
+<p>Dame Eliza watched her with a sort of awe, and
+Damaris was growing old enough to offer to her
+sister's beauty the admiration that was apart from
+her adoring love for that sister.</p>
+
+<p>"Connie would set London afire, Stephen Hopkins,"
+said Dame Eliza to her husband one day. "Why
+not send her over to her cousins in Warwickshire, to
+your first wife's noble kindred, and let her come into
+her own? It seems a sinful thing to keep her here to
+fade and wane where no eye can see her."</p>
+
+<p>"This from you, Eliza!" cried Stephen Hopkins,
+honestly surprised, but feigning to be shocked. "Nay
+but you and I have changed r&ocirc;les! Never was I the
+Puritan you are, yet have I seen enough of the world
+to know that it hath little to offer my girl by way of
+peace and happiness, though it kneel before her offering
+her adulation on its salvers. Constance is safer
+here, and Plymouth needs her; she can give here,
+which is in very truth better than receiving; especially
+to receive the heartaches that the great world would
+be like to give one so lovely to attract its eye, so sensitive
+to its disillusionments. And as to wasted, wife,
+Con gives me joy, and you, too, and I think there is
+not one among us who does not drink in her loveliness
+like food, where actual food is short. Captain
+Myles and our doctor would be going lame and halt,
+and would feel blind, I make no doubt, did they not
+meet Constance Hopkins on their ways, like a flower
+of eglantine, fair and sweet, and for that matter look
+how she helps the doctor in his ministrations! Nay,
+nay, wife; we will keep our Plymouth maid, and I am
+certain there will come to her from across seas one
+day the romance and happiness that should be hers."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, well; life is short and it fades us sore. What
+does it matter where it passes? I was a buxom lass
+myself, as you may remember, and look at me now!
+Not that I was the rare creature that your girl is,"
+sighed Dame Eliza. "Is it true that Mr. Weston
+is coming hither?"</p>
+
+<p>"True that he is coming hither," assented her
+husband, "and to our house. He hath made us many
+promises, but kept none. He hath come over with
+fishermen, in disguise, hath been cast away and lost
+everything at the hands of savages. He is taking
+refuge with us and we shall outfit him and deal with
+him as a brother. I do not believe his protestations
+of good-will and the service he will do us in return,
+when he gets back to England. Yet we must deal
+generously, little as we have to spare, with a man in
+distress such as his."</p>
+
+<p>"Giles is coming now, adown the way with a
+stranger; is this Mr. Weston?" asked Dame Eliza.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll go out to greet and bring him in. Yes; this
+is the man," said Mr. Hopkins, going forth to welcome
+a man, whom in his heart he could not but dread.
+The guest stayed with the Hopkins family for a
+few days, till the colony should be won over to give
+him beaver skins, under his promise to repay them
+with generous interest, when he should have traded
+them, and was once more in England to send to Plymouth
+something of its requirements.</p>
+
+<p>On the final day of his stay Mr. Weston arose from
+the best seat in the inglenook, which had been yielded
+to him as his right, and strolled toward the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Come with me, my lad," he said to Giles. "I
+have somewhat to say to thee."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not say it here?" asked Giles, surlily, though
+he followed slowly after their guest.</p>
+
+<p>"Giles Hopkins, you like me not," said Weston,
+when they had passed out of earshot. "Why is it?
+Surely I not only use you well, but you are the one
+person in this plantation that hath all the qualities I
+like best in a man: brains, courage, youth, good birth,
+which makes for spirit, and good looks. Your sister
+is all this and more, yet is the 'more' because she
+is a maid, and that excludes her from my preference
+for my purposes. Giles Hopkins, are you the man
+I take you for?"</p>
+
+<p>"Faith, sir, that I cannot tell till you have shown
+me what form that taking bears," said Giles.</p>
+
+<p>"There you show yourself! Prudence added to my
+list of qualities!" applauded Weston, clapping Giles
+on the back with real, or pretended enthusiasm.
+"I take you for a man with resolution, courage
+to seize an opportunity to make your fortune, to
+put yourself among those men of consequence who
+are secure of place, and means to adorn it. Will
+you march with me upon the way I will open to you?"</p>
+
+<p>"'I dare do all that may become a man; who dares
+do more is none,'" replied Giles. "I don't know
+where I learned that, but it sounds like one of my
+father's beloved phrases, from his favourite poet. It
+seems well to fit the case."</p>
+
+<p>"Shakespeare is not a Puritan text book," observed
+Weston, dryly. "No Hopkins is ever fully
+atune with such a community as this. Therefore,
+Giles, will you welcome my offer, as a more canting
+Plymouth pilgrim might not. Not to waste more
+time: Will you collect, after I have gone, all the
+skins which you can obtain from these settlers? And
+will you hold them in a safe place together, assuring
+your neighbours that you are secured of a market for
+them at better prices than they have ever received?
+And will you then, after you have got together all
+the skins available, ship them to me by means which
+I will open to you as soon as I am sure of your co&ouml;peration?
+This will leave your Plymouth people stripped
+to the winds; their commodity of trade gone, and,
+scant of food as they are, they will come to heel like
+dogs behind him who will lead them to meat. This
+will be yourself. I will furnish you with the means
+to give them what they will require in order to be
+bound to you. You shall be a prince of the New
+World, holding your little kingdom under the great
+English throne; there shall be no end to your possible
+grandeur. I will send you men, commodities for
+trade, arms, fine cloth and raiment to fulfil the
+brightest fairy dreams of youth. And look you,
+Giles Hopkins, this is no idle boast; it is within my
+power to do exactly as I promise. Are you mine?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yours!" Giles spoke with difficulty, the blood
+mounting to his temples and knotting its veins, his
+hands clenching and unclenching as if it was almost
+beyond him to hold them from throttling his father's
+guest. "Am I a man or a cur? Cur? Nay, no cur
+is so low as you would make me. Betray Plymouth?
+Turn on these people with whom I've suffered and
+wrought? I would give my hand to kick you out
+into yonder harbour and drown you there as you
+deserve. I have but to turn you over to our governor,
+and short ways will you get with the good beaver
+skins which have been given to you by these people
+you want me to trick, scant though they are of everything,
+and that owing to you who have never sent
+them anything but your lying promises. Nay, turn
+not so white! You may keep your courage, as you
+keep your worthless life. Neither will I betray you
+to them. But see to it that this last day of your stay
+here is indeed the last one! Only till sunset do I
+give you to get out of Plymouth. If you are within
+our boundaries at moonrise I will deliver you over,
+and urge your hanging. And be sure these starved
+immigrants will be in a mood to hang you higher than
+Haman, when they hear of what you have laid before
+me, against them who are in such straits."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Weston did not delay to test Giles's sincerity.
+There was no mistaking that he would do precisely as
+he promised, and Weston took his departure a good
+two hours before sundown.</p>
+
+<p>Giles stood with his hands in his pockets beside
+his father as Weston departed.</p>
+
+<p>"Giles, courtesy to a guest is a law that binds us
+all," suggested Stephen Hopkins.</p>
+
+<p>"Mercy, rather," said Giles, tersely. He nodded
+to Mr. Weston without removing his hands. "A
+last salute, Mr. Weston," he said. "I expect never
+to meet you again, neither in this, nor any other
+world."</p>
+
+<p>"Giles!" cried Constance, shocked.</p>
+
+<p>"Son, what do you know of this man that you
+dare insult him in departing?" said Mr. Hopkins.</p>
+
+<p>"That never will Plymouth receive one penny of
+value for the beaver skins he hath taken, nor gratitude
+for the kindness shown him when he was
+destitute," said Giles, turning on his heel shortly and
+leaving his father to look after Weston, troubled by
+this confirmation of the doubt that he had always
+felt of this false friend of Plymouth colony.</p>
+
+<p>The effect upon Giles of having put far from him
+temptation and stood fast by his fellow-colonists,
+though no one but himself knew of it, was to arouse
+in him greater zeal for the welfare of Plymouth than
+he had felt before, and greater effort to promote it.</p>
+
+<p>Plymouth had been working upon the community
+plan; all its population labouring together, sharing
+together the results of that labour, like one large
+family. And, though the plan was based upon the
+ideal of brotherhood, yet it worked badly; food was
+short, and the men not equal in honest effort, nor
+willing to see their womankind tilling the soil and
+bearing heavy burdens for others than their own
+families. So while some bore their share of the work,
+and more, others lay back and shirked. There must
+be a remedy found, and that at once, to secure the
+necessary harvest in the second year, and third
+summer of the life of the plantation.</p>
+
+<p>Giles Hopkins went swinging down the road after
+he had seen the last of Mr. Weston. He was bound
+for the governor's house, but he came up with
+William Bradford on the way and laid before him his
+thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Bradford," he said, "I've been considering.
+We shall starve to death, even though we get the
+ship that is promised us from home, bringing us all
+that for which we hope, unless we can raise better
+crops. I am one of the youngest men, but may I lay
+before you my suggestion?"</p>
+
+<p>"Surely, my son," said Governor Bradford. "Old
+age does not necessarily include wisdom, nor youth
+folly. What do you advise?"</p>
+
+<p>"Give every family its allotment of land and seed,"
+said Giles. "Let each family go to work to raise
+what it shall need for itself, and abide by the result of
+its own industry, or indolence, always supposing
+that no misfortune excuses failure. I'll warrant we
+shall see new days&mdash;or new sacks filled, which is
+more to the point&mdash;than when we let the worthless
+profit by worth, or worth be discouraged by the
+leeches upon it."</p>
+
+<p>Governor Bradford regarded Giles smilingly.
+"Thou art an emphatic lad, Giles, but I like earnestness
+and strong convictions. Never yet was there
+any one who did not believe in his own panacea for
+whatever evil had set him to discovering it! It was
+Plato's conceit, and other ancients with him, that
+bringing into the community of a commonwealth all
+property, making it shared in common, was to make
+mankind happy and prosperous. But I am of your
+opinion that it has been found to breed much confusion
+and discontent, and that it is against the
+ordinance of God, who made it a law that a man
+should labour for his own nearest of kin, and transmit
+to them the fruit of his labours. So will I act
+upon your suggestion, which I had already considered,
+having seen how wrong was Plato's utopian plan, or
+at least how ill it was working here. With the approval
+of our councillors, I will distribute land, seed,
+and all else required, and establish individual production
+instead of our commonality."</p>
+
+<p>"It is time we tried a new method, Governor
+Bradford," said Giles. "Another year like these
+we've survived, and there would be no survival of
+them. I don't remember how it felt to have enough
+to eat!"</p>
+
+<p>"Poor lad," said the governor, kindly, though to
+the full he had shared the scarcity. "It is hard to
+be young and hungry, for at best youth is rarely
+satisfied, and it must be cruel to see every day at the
+worst! But I have good ground to hope that our
+winter is over and past, and that the voice of the
+turtle will soon be heard in our land. In other
+words, I think that a ship, or possibly more than one,
+will be here this summer, bringing us new courage in
+new helpers, and supplies in plenty."</p>
+
+<p>"It is to be hoped," said Giles, and went away.</p>
+
+<p>The new plan was adopted, and it infused new
+enthusiasm into the Plymouth people. Constance
+insisted upon having for her own one section of her
+father's garden. Indeed all the women of the
+colony went to work in the fields now, quite willingly,
+and without opposition from their men, since their
+work was for themselves.</p>
+
+<p>"It was wholly different from having their women
+slaving for strong men who were no kin to them, as
+they had done when the community plan prevailed,"
+said the men of Plymouth. And so the women of
+Plymouth went to work willingly, even gaily.</p>
+
+<p>There was great hope of a large crop, early in May,
+when all the land was planted, and little green heads
+were everywhere popping up to announce the grain
+to come. Constance had planted nothing but peas;
+she said that she loved them because they climbed so
+bravely, and put out their plucky tendrils to help
+themselves up. Her peas were the pride of her
+heart, and all Plymouth was admiring them, when
+the long drouth set in.</p>
+
+<p>From the third week in May till the middle of
+July not a drop of rain fell upon the afflicted fields of
+Plymouth. The corn had been planted with fish,
+which for a time insured it moisture and helped it,
+but gradually the promising green growth drooped,
+wilted, browned, and on the drier plain, burned and
+died under the unshadowed sun.</p>
+
+<p>Constance saw her peas drying up, helpless to save
+them. She fell into the habit of sitting drooping
+like the grain, on the doorstep of the Leyden Street
+house, her bonnet pushed back, her chin in her hands,
+sorrowfully sharing the affliction of the soil.</p>
+
+<p>Elder Brewster, passing, found her thus, and
+stopped.</p>
+
+<p>"Not blithe Constantia like this?" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, yes, Mr. Brewster," said Constance, rising,
+"just like this. The drouth has parched my heart
+and dried up my courage. For nine weeks no rain,
+and our life hanging upon it! Oh, Elder Brewster,
+call for a day of fasting and prayer that we may be
+pitied by the Lord with the downfall of his merciful
+rain! Without it, without His intervention, starvation
+will be ours. But it needs not me to tell you
+this!"</p>
+
+<p>"My daughter, I will do as you say; indeed is it
+time, and I have been thinking so," replied the elder.
+"The day after to-morrow shall be set aside to implore
+Heaven's mercy on our brave plantation, which
+has borne and can offer the sacrifice of a long-suffering
+patience to supplement its prayers."</p>
+
+<p>The day of fast and prayer arose with the same
+metallic sky that had cloudlessly stretched over
+Plymouth for two months. Not a sign of mercy, nor
+of relenting was anywhere above them as the people
+of Plymouth, the less devout subdued to the same
+fearless eagerness to implore for mercy that the more
+devout ones felt, went silently along the dusty roads,
+heads bent beneath the scorching sun, without having
+tasted food, assembling in their meeting house
+to pray.</p>
+
+<p>In the rear of the bare little building stood the
+Indians who lived among the Englishmen, Squanto
+at their head, with folded arms watching and wondering
+what results should follow this appeal to the God
+of the white men, now to be tested for the first time
+in a great public way as to whether He was faithful
+to His promise, as these men said, and powerful
+to fulfil.</p>
+
+<p>All day long the prayer continued, with the coming
+and going of the people, taking turns to perform the
+necessary tasks of the small farms, and to continue
+in supplication.</p>
+
+<p>There had been no hotter day of all those so long
+trying these poor people, and no cloud appeared as
+the sun mounted and reached his height, then began
+to descend. Damaris took Constance's hand as they
+walked homeward, then dropped it.</p>
+
+<p>"It is too hot; it burns me," she said, fretfully.</p>
+
+<p>Constance raised her head and pushed back her
+hair with the backs of her burning hands. She
+folded her lips and snuffed the air, much as a fine
+dog stands to scent the birds. Constance was
+as sensitive to atmospheric conditions as a barometer.</p>
+
+<p>"Damaris, Damaris, rain!" she cried.</p>
+
+<p>And the "little cloud, no bigger than a man's
+hand," was rising on the horizon.</p>
+
+<p>Before bedtime the sky was overcast, and the
+blessed, the prayed-for rain began to fall. Without
+wind or lightning, quietly it fell, as if the angels of
+God were sent to open the phials of the delicious wetness
+and pour it steadily upon Plymouth. As the
+night went on the rain increased, one of the soft,
+steady, soaking rains that penetrate to the depths of
+the sun-baked earth, find the withered rootlets, and
+heal and revivify.</p>
+
+<p>Plymouth wakened to an earth refreshed and moistened
+by a downpour so steady, so generous, so calm
+that no rain could have seemed more like a direct
+visitation of Heaven's mercy than this, which the
+reverent and awe-stricken colony, even to the doubting
+Indians, so received. For by it Plymouth was
+saved.</p>
+
+<p>It was two weeks later that Doctor Fuller came
+hastily to Stephen Hopkins's door.</p>
+
+<p>"Friends," he said, with trembling voice, "the
+<i>Anne</i> is coming up! Mistress Fuller and my child
+are aboard, as we have so often reminded one another.
+Constance, you promised to go with me to
+welcome this fateful ship."</p>
+
+<p>"Have I time to make a little, a very small toilette,
+doctor mine?" cried Constance, excitedly. "I want
+to look my prettiest to greet Mistress Fuller, and to
+tell her what I&mdash;what we all owe to you."</p>
+
+<p>"You have a full half hour, yet it is a pleasure to
+watch the ship approach. Hasten, then, vain little
+Eve of this desolate First Abiding Place!" the doctor
+gave her permission.</p>
+
+<p>Constance ran away and began to dress with her
+heart beating fast.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder why the <i>Anne</i> means so much to me,
+as if she were the greatest event of all my days here?"
+she thought.</p>
+
+<p>Her simple white gown slipped over her head and
+into place and out of its thin, soft folds her little
+throat rose like a calla, and her face, all flushed, like
+a wild rose.</p>
+
+<p>She pinned a lace neckerchief over her breast, and
+laid its ruffles into place with fluttering fingers, catching
+it with a delicate hoop of pearls that had been
+her mother's. For once she decided against her
+Puritan cap, binding her radiant hair with fillets of
+narrow blue velvet ribbon, around and over which its
+little tendrils rose, wilful and resisting its shackles.</p>
+
+<p>On her hands she drew long mitts of white lace,
+and she slipped her feet into white shoes, which had
+also once been worn by her mother in far-away days
+when she danced the May dances in Warwickshire.</p>
+
+<p>Constance's glass was too small, too high-hung, to
+give her the effect of her complete figure, but it
+showed her the face that scanned it, and what it
+showed her flushed that lovely face with innocent
+joy in its loveliness, and completed its perfection.</p>
+
+<p>She got the full effect of her appearance in the eyes
+of the four men in the colony whom, till this day, she
+had loved best, her father, Giles, Doctor Fuller, and
+Myles Standish, as she came down the winding stairway
+to them.</p>
+
+<p>They all uttered an involuntary exclamation, and
+took a step toward her.</p>
+
+<p>Her father took her hand and tucked it into his
+own.</p>
+
+<p>"You are attired like a bride, my wild rose," he
+said. "Who are you going to meet?"</p>
+
+<p>"Who knows!" cried Constance, gaily, with unconscious
+prophecy. "Mistress Fuller, but who can
+say whom else beside?"</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Anne</i> came up with wide-spread canvas, free
+of the gentle easterly breeze. Her coming marked
+the end of the hardest days of Plymouth colony; she
+was bringing it much that it needed, some sixty
+colonists; the wives and children of many who had
+borne the brunt of the beginning and had come on the
+<i>Mayflower</i>; new colonists, some among Plymouth's
+best, some too bad to be allowed to stay, and stores
+and articles of trade abundantly.</p>
+
+<p>As the coming of the <i>Anne</i> marked the close of
+Plymouth's worst days, so it meant to many who
+were already there the dawn of a new existence.</p>
+
+<p>Doctor Fuller took into his arms his beloved wife
+and his child, with grateful tears running down his
+face.</p>
+
+<p>He turned to present Mistress Fuller to Constance,
+but found, instead, Captain Myles Standish watching
+with a smile at once tender, melancholy, and glad
+another meeting. A young man, tall, browned,
+gallant, and fearless in bearing, with honest eyes and
+a kindly smile, had come off the <i>Anne</i> and had stood
+a moment looking around him. His eyes fell upon
+Constance Hopkins on her father's arm, her lips
+parted, her eyes dilated, her cheeks flushed, a figure
+so exquisite that he fell back in thrilled wonder.
+Never again could he see another face, so completely
+were his eyes and heart filled by this first sight of
+Constance Hopkins, unconsciously waiting for him,
+her husband-to-be, upon the shore of the New World.</p>
+
+<p>Damaris was clinging to her hand; Giles and her step-mother
+were watching her with loving pride; it was
+easy to see that all those who had come ashore from
+the <i>Anne</i> were admiring this slender blossom of Plymouth.</p>
+
+<p>But the young man went toward her, almost without
+knowing that he did so, drawn to her irresistibly,
+and Constance looked toward him, and saw him for
+the first time, her pulses answering the look in his
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Myles Standish joined them; he had learned the
+young man's name.</p>
+
+<p>"Welcome, Nicholas Snowe, to Plymouth," he
+said. "We have borne much, but we have won our
+fight; we have founded our kingdom. Nicholas
+Snowe, this is a Plymouth maid, Constance Hopkins."</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad you are come," said Constance; her
+voice was low and the hand that she extended
+trembled slightly.</p>
+
+<p>"I, too, am glad that you are here, Nicholas
+Snowe," added Stephen Hopkins. "Yes, this is
+Constance Hopkins, a Plymouth maid, and my
+dearest lass."</p>
+
+
+<p class="small center">THE END</p>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="logo2 center"><img src="images/logo2.png" width="214" height="200" alt="Logo" /></p>
+
+<p class="center small">THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS<br />
+GARDEN CITY, N. Y.</p>
+<div class="transnote">
+ <div class="center">Transcriber's Notes:</div>
+
+<div> <ul>
+ <li>Page 36: "remanent" changed to "remnant" (what would my remnant of life be to me)</li>
+ <li>Page 51: "so" changed to "no" (I mean no such thing, as well you know)</li>
+ <li>Page 67: "senstive" changed to "sensitive" (a girl, sensitive and easily wounded)</li>
+ <li>Page 83: "devasting" changed to "devastating" (The devastating diseases of winter)</li>
+ <li>Page 106: "begining" changed to "beginning" (the beginning of a street)</li>
+ <li>Page 140: "wordly" changed to "worldly" (to take pride in worldly things)</li>
+ <li>Page 160: normalised "work-aday" (her work-a-day tasks)</li>
+ <li>Page 180: changed case of "Come" to lower case (come with me; I need you)</li>
+ <li>Page 192: "mercie" changed to "merci" (belle dame sans merci)</li>
+ <li>Page 196: "be" changed to "he" (he began to teach Constance other things)</li>
+ <li>Page 210 "Shakspeare" normalised to "Shakespeare" (we mortals be, as Shakespeare, whom)</li>
+ </ul>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of A Pilgrim Maid, by Marion Ames Taggart
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A PILGRIM MAID ***
+
+***** This file should be named 39323-h.htm or 39323-h.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/3/9/3/2/39323/
+
+Produced by Roger Frank, Maria Grist and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+
+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
diff --git a/39323-h/images/confess.jpg b/39323-h/images/confess.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0e36e92
--- /dev/null
+++ b/39323-h/images/confess.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/39323-h/images/cover.jpg b/39323-h/images/cover.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b953de7
--- /dev/null
+++ b/39323-h/images/cover.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/39323-h/images/frontis.jpg b/39323-h/images/frontis.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..681094f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/39323-h/images/frontis.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/39323-h/images/logo1.png b/39323-h/images/logo1.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3fbfd14
--- /dev/null
+++ b/39323-h/images/logo1.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/39323-h/images/logo2.png b/39323-h/images/logo2.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b2b989f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/39323-h/images/logo2.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/39323-h/images/lookthere.jpg b/39323-h/images/lookthere.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..19780ca
--- /dev/null
+++ b/39323-h/images/lookthere.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/39323-h/images/splendid.jpg b/39323-h/images/splendid.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f25ee8e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/39323-h/images/splendid.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/39323.txt b/39323.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c736d99
--- /dev/null
+++ b/39323.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,8548 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Pilgrim Maid, by Marion Ames Taggart
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: A Pilgrim Maid
+ A Story of Plymouth Colony in 1620
+
+Author: Marion Ames Taggart
+
+Illustrator: The Donaldsons
+
+Release Date: April 1, 2012 [EBook #39323]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A PILGRIM MAID ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank, Maria Grist and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A PILGRIM MAID
+
+A Story of Plymouth Colony in 1620
+
+[Illustration: "Constance opened the door, stepping back to let the
+bride precede her"]
+
+
+
+
+ A PILGRIM MAID
+
+ _A Story of Plymouth Colony in 1620_
+
+ BY
+ MARION AMES TAGGART
+
+ AUTHOR OF
+ "CAPTAIN SYLVIA," "THE DAUGHTERS OF THE
+ LITTLE GREY HOUSE," "THE LITTLE GREY
+ HOUSE," "HOLLYHOCK HOUSE," ETC.
+
+
+ ILLUSTRATED
+ BY
+ THE DONALDSONS
+
+
+ DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY
+ GARDEN CITY NEW YORK LONDON
+ 1920
+
+
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1920, BY
+ DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY
+ ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, INCLUDING THAT OF
+ TRANSLATION INTO FOREIGN LANGUAGES,
+ INCLUDING THE SCANDINAVIAN
+
+
+
+
+ DEDICATED
+ TO
+ YOU, MY DEAR
+ WHO SO WELL KNOW WHY
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+This story is like those we hear of our neighbours to-day: it is a
+mixture of fact and fancy.
+
+The aim in telling it has been to present Plymouth Colony as it was in
+its first three years of existence; to keep to possibilities, even while
+inventing incidents.
+
+Actual events have been transferred from a later to an earlier year when
+they could be made useful, to bring them within the story's compass, and
+to develop it.
+
+For instance, John Billington was lost for five days and died early, but
+not as early as in the story. Stephen Hopkins was fined for allowing
+his servants to play shovelboard, but this did not happen till some time
+later than 1622. Stephen Hopkins was twice married; records show that
+there was dissension; that the second wife tried to get an inheritance
+for her own children, to the injury of the son and daughter of the first
+wife. Facts of this sort are used, enlarged upon, construed to cause, or
+altered to suit, certain results.
+
+But there is fidelity to the general trend of events, above all to the
+spirit of Plymouth in its beginnings. As far as may be, the people who
+have been transferred into the story act in accordance with what is
+known of the actual bearers of these names.
+
+There was a Maid of Plymouth, Constance Hopkins, who came in the
+_Mayflower_, with her father Stephen; her stepmother, Eliza; her
+brother, Giles, and her little half-sister and brother, Damaris and
+Oceanus, and to whom the _Anne_, in 1623, brought her husband,
+Honourable Nicholas Snowe, afterward one of the founders of Eastham,
+Massachusetts.
+
+Undoubtedly the real Constance Hopkins was sweeter than the story can
+make her, as a living girl must be sweeter than one created of paper and
+ink. Yet it is hoped that this Plymouth Maid, Constance, of the story,
+may also find friends.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+CHAPTER PAGE
+
+I. With England's Shores Left Far Astern 3
+
+II. To Buffet Waves and Ride on Storms 15
+
+III. Weary Waiting at the Gates 31
+
+IV. The First Yuletide 45
+
+V. The New Year in the New Land 61
+
+VI. Stout Hearts and Sad Ones 76
+
+VII. The Persuasive Power of Justice
+and Violence 90
+
+VIII. Deep Love, Deep Wound 104
+
+IX. Seedtime of the First Spring 119
+
+X. Treaties 133
+
+XI. A Home Begun and a Home Undone 150
+
+XII. The Lost Lads 166
+
+XIII. Sundry Herbs and Simples 183
+
+XIV. Light-Minded Man, Heavy-Hearted Master 199
+
+XV. The "Fortune" That Sailed, First West,
+then East 216
+
+XVI. A Gallant Lad Withal 234
+
+XVII. The Well-Conned Lesson 251
+
+XVIII. Christmas Wins, Though Outlawed 267
+
+XIX. A Fault Confessed, Thereby Redressed 284
+
+XX. The Third Summer's Garnered Yield 302
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+"Constance opened the door, stepping back to let
+the bride precede her" _Frontispiece_
+(_See page 157_)
+
+ FACING PAGE
+
+"'Constantia; confess, confess--and do not try
+to shield thy wicked brother'" 52
+
+"'Look there,' said John Alden" 116
+
+"'You look splendid, my Knight of the Wilderness'" 244
+
+
+
+
+ A PILGRIM MAID
+
+ A Story of Plymouth Colony in 1620
+
+
+
+
+_A PILGRIM MAID_
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+With England's Shores Left Far Astern
+
+
+A young girl, brown-haired, blue-eyed, with a sweet seriousness that was
+neither joy nor sorrow upon her fair pale face, leaned against the mast
+on the _Mayflower's_ deck watching the bustle of the final preparations
+for setting sail westward.
+
+A boy somewhat older than she stood beside her whittling an arrow from a
+bit of beechwood, whistling through his teeth, his tongue pressed
+against them, a livelier air than a pilgrim boy from Leyden was supposed
+to know, and sullenly scorning to betray interest in the excitement
+ashore and aboard.
+
+A little girl clung to the pretty young girl's skirt; the unlikeness
+between them, though they were sisters, was explained by their being but
+half sisters. Little Damaris was like her mother, Constance's
+stepmother, while Constance herself reflected the delicate loveliness of
+her own and her brother Giles's mother, dead in early youth and lying
+now at rest in a green English churchyard while her children were
+setting forth into the unknown.
+
+Two boys--one older than Constance, Giles's age, the other younger than
+the girl--came rushing down the deck with such impetuosity, plus the
+younger lad's head used as a battering ram, that the men at work stowing
+away hampers and barrels, trying to clear a way for the start, gave
+place to the rough onslaught.
+
+Several looked after the pair in a way that suggested something more
+vigorous than a look had it not been that fear of the pilgrim leaders
+restrained swearing. Not a whit did the charging lads care for the wrath
+they aroused. The elder stopped himself by clutching the rope which
+Constance Hopkins idly swung, while the younger caught Giles around the
+waist and nearly pulled him over.
+
+"I'll teach you manners, you young savage, Francis Billington!" growled
+Giles, but he did not mean it, as Francis well knew.
+
+"If I'm a savage I'll be the only one of us at home in America,"
+chuckled the boy.
+
+"Getting ready an arrow for the savage?" he added.
+
+"It's all decided. There's been the greatest to-do ashore. Why didn't
+you come off the ship to see the last of 'em, Constance?" interrupted
+the older boy. Constance Hopkins shook her head, sadly.
+
+"Nay, then, John, I've had my fill of partings," she said. "Are they
+gone back, those we had to leave behind?"
+
+"That have they!" cried John Billington. "Some of them were sorry to
+miss the adventure, but if truth were told some were glad to be well out
+of it, and with no more disgrace in setting back than that the
+_Mayflower_ could not hold us all. Well, they've missed danger and maybe
+death, but I'd not be out of it for a king's ransom. Giles, what do you
+think is whispered? That the _Speedwell_ could make the voyage as well
+as the _Mayflower_, though she be smaller, if only she carried less
+sail, and that her leaking is--a greater leak in her master Reynolds's
+truth, and that she'd be seaworthy if he'd let her!"
+
+"Cur!" growled Giles Hopkins. "He knows he'd have to stay with his ship
+in the wilderness a year it might be and there's better comfort in
+England and Holland! We're well rid of him if he's that kind of a
+coward. I wondered myself if he was up to a trick when we put in the
+first time, at Dartmouth. This time when we made Plymouth I smelled a
+rat certain. Are we almost loaded?"
+
+"Yes. They've packed all the provisions from the _Speedwell_ into the
+_Mayflower_ that she will hold. We'll be off soon. Not too soon! The
+sixth day of September, and we a month dallying along the shore because
+of the _Speedwell's_ leaking! Constantia, you'll be cold before we make
+a fire in the New World I'm thinking!"
+
+John Billington chuckled as if the cold of winter in the wilderness were
+a merry jest.
+
+"Cold, and maybe hungry, and maybe ill of body and sick of heart, but
+never quite losing courage, I hope, John, comrade!" Constance said,
+looking up with a smile and a flush that warmed her white cheeks from
+which heavy thoughts had driven their usual soft colour.
+
+"No fear! You're the kind that says little and does much," said John
+Billington with surprising sharpness in a lad that never seemed to have
+a thought to spare for anything but madcap pranks.
+
+"Here come Father, and the captain, and dear John," said little Damaris.
+
+Stephen Hopkins was a strong-built man, with a fire in his eye, and an
+air of the world about him, in spite of his severe Puritan garb, that
+declared him different from most of his comrades of the Leyden community
+of English exiles.
+
+With all her likeness to her dead English girl-mother, who was gentle
+born and well bred, there was something in Constance as she stood now,
+head up and eyes bright, that was also like her father.
+
+Beside Mr. Hopkins walked a thick-set man, a soldier in every motion and
+look, with little of the Puritan in his air, and just behind them came a
+young man, far younger than either of the others, with an open, pleasant
+English face, and an expression at once shy and friendly.
+
+"Oh, dear John Alden!" cried little Damaris, and forsook Constance's
+skirt for John Alden's ready arms which raised her to his shoulder.
+
+Giles Hopkins's gloom lifted as he returned Captain Myles Standish's
+salute.
+
+"Yes, Captain; I'm ready enough to sail," he said, answering the
+captain's question.
+
+"Mistress Constantia?" suggested Myles Standish.
+
+"Is there doubt of it when we've twice put in from sea, and were ready
+to sail when we left Southampton a month ago?" asked Constance. "Sure we
+are ready, Captain Standish, as you well know. Where is Mistress Rose?"
+
+"In the women's cabin with Mistress Hopkins putting to rights their
+belongings as fast as they can before we weigh anchor, and get perhaps
+stood on our heads by winds and waves," Captain Standish smiled. "Though
+the wind is fine for us now." His face clouded. "Mistress Rose is a
+frail rose, Con! They will be coming on deck to see the start."
+
+"The voyage may give sweet Rose new strength, Captain Standish,"
+murmured Constance coming close to the captain and slipping her hand
+into his, for she was his prime favourite and his lovely, frail young
+wife's chosen friend, in spite of the ten years difference in their
+ages.
+
+"Ah, Con, my lass, God grant it, but I'm sore afraid for her! How can
+she buffet the exposure of a wilderness winter, and--hush! Here they
+are!" whispered Myles Standish.
+
+Mistress Eliza Hopkins was tall, bony, sinewy of build, with a dark,
+strong face, determination and temper in her eye. Rose Standish was her
+opposite--a slight, pale, drooping creature not more than five years
+above twenty; patience, suffering in her every motion, and clinging
+affection in every line of her gentle face.
+
+Constance ran to wind her arm around her as Rose came up and slipped one
+little hand into her husband's arm.
+
+Mrs. Hopkins frowned.
+
+"It likes me not to see you so forward with caresses, Constantia," she
+said, and her voice rasped like the ship's tackles as the sailors got up
+the canvas.
+
+"It is not becoming in the elect whose hearts are set upon heavenly
+things to fawn upon creatures, nor make unmaidenly displays."
+
+Giles kicked viciously at the rope which Constance had held. It was not
+hard to guess that the unnatural gloom, the sullenness that marked a boy
+meant by Nature to be pleasant, was due to bad blood between him and
+this aggressive stepmother, who plainly did not like him.
+
+"Oh, Mistress Hopkins," cried Constance, flushing, "why do you think it
+is wrong to be loving? Never can I believe God who made us with warm
+hearts, and gave us such darlings as Rose Standish, didn't want us to
+love and show our love."
+
+"You are much too free with your irreverence, Mistress Constantia; it
+becomes you not to proclaim your Maker's opinions and desires for his
+saints," said Mrs. Hopkins, frowning heavily.
+
+"'Sdeath, Eliza, will you never let the girl alone?" cried Stephen
+Hopkins, angrily.
+
+"As though we had nothing to think of in weighing anchor and leaving
+England for ever--and for what else besides, who knows--without carping
+at a little girl's loving natural ways to an older girl whom she loves?
+I agree with Connie; it's good to sweeten life with affection."
+
+"Connie, forsooth!" echoed Mrs. Hopkins, bitterly. "Are we to use
+meaningless titles for young women setting forth to found a kingdom? And
+do you still use the oaths of worldlings, as you did just now? Oh,
+Stephen Hopkins, may you not be found unworthy of your high calling and
+invoke the wrath of Heaven upon your family!"
+
+Stephen Hopkins looked ready to burst out into hot wrath, but Myles
+Standish gave him a humorous glance, and shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"What would you?" he seemed to say. "Old friend, bad temper seizes every
+opportunity to wreak itself, and we who have seen the world can afford
+to let the women fume. Jealousy is a worse vice than an oath of the
+Stuart reign."
+
+Stephen Hopkins harkened to this unspoken philosophy; Myles Standish had
+great influence over him. This, with the rapid gathering on deck of the
+rest of the pilgrims, served to avert what threatened to be an explosion
+of pardonable wrath. They came crowding up from the cabins, this
+courageous band of determined men and women, and gathered silently to
+look their last on home, and not merely on home, but on the comforts of
+the established life which to many among them were necessary to their
+existence.
+
+There were many children, sober little men and women, in unchildlike
+caricatures of their elders' garb and with solemn round faces looking
+scared by the gravity around them.
+
+Priscilla Mullins gathered the children together and led them over to
+join Constance Hopkins. She and Constance divided the love of the child
+pilgrims between them. Priscilla, round of face, smooth and rosy of
+cheek, wholesome and sensible, was good to look upon. It often happened
+that her duty brought her near to wherever John Alden might chance to
+be, but no one had ever suspected that John objected.
+
+John Alden had been taken on as cooper from Southampton when the
+_Mayflower_ first sailed. It was not certain that the pilgrims could
+keep him with them. Already they had learned to value him, and many a
+glance was now exchanged that told the hope that sunny little Priscilla
+might help to hold the young man on this hard expedition.
+
+The crew of the _Mayflower_ pulled up her sails, but without the usual
+sailor songs. Silently they pulled, working in unison to the sharp words
+of command uttered by their officers, till every shred of canvas, under
+which they were to set forth under a favouring wind, was strained into
+place and set.
+
+On the shore was gathered a crowd gazing, wondering, at this departure.
+Some there were who were to have been of the company in the lesser ship,
+the _Speedwell_, which had been remanded from the voyage as unfit for
+it. These lingered to see the setting forth for the New World which was
+not to be their world, after all.
+
+There were many who gazed, pityingly, awe-struck, but bewildered by the
+spirit that led these severe-looking people away from England first, and
+then from Holland, to try their fortunes where no fortune promised.
+
+Others there were who laughed merrily over the absurdity of the quest,
+and these called all sorts of jests and quips to the pilgrims on the
+ship, inviting to a contest of wit which the pilgrims utterly disdained.
+
+And then the by-standers on wharf and sands of old Plymouth became
+silent, for, as the _Mayflower_ began to move out from her dock, there
+arose the solemn chant of a psalm.
+
+The air was wailing, lugubrious, unmusical, but the words were awesome.
+
+"When Israel went out from Egypt, from the land of a strange people,"
+they were singing.
+
+"A strange people!" And these pilgrims were of English blood, and this
+was England which they were thus renouncing!
+
+What curious folk these were!
+
+But this psalm was followed by another: "The Lord is my shepherd."
+
+Ah, that was another matter! No one who heard them, however slight the
+sympathy felt for this unsympathetic band, but hoped that the Lord would
+shepherd them, "lead them beside still waters," for the sea might well
+be unquiet.
+
+"Oh, poor creatures, poor creatures," said a buxom woman, snuggling her
+baby's head into her deep shoulder, and wiping her own eyes with her
+apron. "I fain must pity 'em, that I must, though I'm none too lovin'
+myself toward their queer dourness. But I hope the Lord will shepherd
+'em; sore will they need it, I'm thinkin', yonder where there's no
+shepherds nor flocks, but only wild men to cut them down like we do haw
+for the church, as they all thinks is wicked!" she mourned, motherly
+yearning toward the people going out the harbour like babes in the wood,
+into no one would dare say what awful fate.
+
+The pilgrims stood with their faces set toward England, with England
+tugging at their heart strings, as the strong southeasterly wind filled
+the _Mayflower's_ canvas and pulled at her shrouds.
+
+And as they sailed away the monotonous chant of the psalms went on,
+floating back to England, a farewell and a prophecy.
+
+Rose Standish's tears were softly falling and her voice was silent, but
+Constance Hopkins chanted bravely, and the children joined her with
+Priscilla Mullins's strong contralto upholding them.
+
+Even Giles sang, and the two scamps of Billington boys looked serious
+for once, and helped the chant.
+
+Myles Standish raised his soldier's hat and turned to Stephen Hopkins,
+holding out his right hand.
+
+"We're fairly off this time, friend Stephen," he said. "God speed us."
+
+"Amen, Captain Myles, for else we'll speed not, returned Stephen
+Hopkins.
+
+"Oh, Daddy, we're together anyway!" cried Constance, with one of her
+sudden bursts of emotion which her stepmother so severely condemned, and
+she threw herself on her father's breast.
+
+Mr. Hopkins did not share his wife's view of his beloved little girl's
+demonstrativeness. He patted her head gently, tucking a stray wisp of
+hair under her Puritan cap.
+
+"There, there, my child, there, there, Connie! Surely we're together and
+shall be. So it can't be a wilderness for us, can it?" he said.
+
+An hour later, the wind still favouring, the _Mayflower_ dropped
+sunsetward, out of old Plymouth Harbour.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+To Buffet Waves and Ride on Storms
+
+
+The wind held fair, the golden September weather waited on each new day
+at its rising and sent it at its close, radiantly splendid, into the sea
+ahead of the _Mayflower_ as she swept westward.
+
+Full canvas hoisted she was able to sail at her best speed under the
+favouring conditions so that the hopeful young people whom she carried
+talked confidently of the houses they would build, the village they
+would found before heavy frosts. Captain Myles Standish, always
+impetuous as any of the boys, was one of those who let themselves forget
+there were such things as storms.
+
+"We'll be New Englishmen at this rate before we fully realize we've left
+home; what do you say, my lassies three?" he demanded, pausing in a
+rapid stride of the deck before Constance Hopkins and two young girls
+who were her own age, but seemed much younger, Humility Cooper and her
+cousin, Elizabeth Tilley.
+
+"What do you three mermaidens in this forward nook each morning?"
+Captain Standish went on without waiting for a reply to his first
+question, which indeed, he had not asked to have it answered.
+
+"Elizabeth's mother, Mistress John Tilley, is sick and declares that she
+shall die," said Constance, Humility and Elizabeth being shyly silent
+before the captain.
+
+"No one ever thought to live through sea-sickness, nor wanted to,"
+declared Captain Myles with his hearty laugh. "Yet no one dies of it,
+that is certain. And is Mistress Ann Tilley also lain down and left
+Humility to the mercy of the dolphins? And is your stepmother, too, Con,
+a victim? It's a calm sea we've been having by comparison. I've sailed
+from England into France when there _was_ a sea running, certes! But
+this--pooh!"
+
+"Humility's cousin, Mistress Ann Tilley, is not ill, nor my stepmother,
+Captain Standish, but they are attending to those who are, and to the
+children. Father says that when he sailed for Virginia, before my mother
+died, meaning to settle there, that the storm that wrecked them on
+Bermuda Island and kept us from being already these eleven years
+colonists in the New World, was a wind and sea that make this seem no
+more than the lake at the king's palace, where the swans float."
+
+Constance looked up smiling at the captain as she answered, but he noted
+that her eyes were swollen from tears.
+
+"Take a turn with me along the deck, child," Captain Myles said,
+gruffly, and held out a hand to steady Constance on her feet.
+
+"Now, what was it?" he asked, lightly touching the young girl's cheek
+when they had passed beyond the hearing of Constance's two demure little
+companions. "Homesick, my lass?"
+
+"Heartsick, rather, Captain Myles," said Constance, with a sob.
+"Mistress Hopkins hates me!"
+
+"Oh, fie, Connie, how could she?" asked the captain, lightly, but he
+scowled angrily. There was much sympathy between him and Stephen
+Hopkins, neither of whom agreed with the extreme severity of most of
+the pilgrims; they both had seen the world and looked at life from their
+wider experience.
+
+Captain Standish knew that Giles's and Constance's mother had been the
+daughter of an old and honourable family, with all the fine qualities of
+mind and soul that should be the inheritance of gentle breeding. He knew
+how it had come about that Stephen Hopkins had married a second time a
+woman greatly her inferior, whose jealousy of the first wife's children
+saddened their young lives and made his own course hard and unpleasant.
+Prone to speak his mind and fond of Giles and Constance, the impetuous
+captain often found it hard to keep his tongue between his teeth when
+Dame Eliza indulged in her favourite game of badgering, persecuting her
+stepchildren. Now, when he said: "Fie, how could she?" Constance looked
+up at him with a forlorn smile. She knew the captain was quite aware
+that her stepmother could, and did dislike her, and she caught the anger
+in his voice.
+
+"How could she not, dear Captain Myles?" she asked. Then, with her
+pent-up feeling overmastering her, she burst out sobbing.
+
+"Oh, you know she hates, she hates me, Captain!" she cried. "Nothing I
+can do is pleasing to her. I take care of Damaris--sure I love my little
+sister, and do not remember the half that is not my sister in her! And
+I wait on Mistress Hopkins, and sew, and do her bidding, and I do not
+answer her cruel taunts, nor do I go to my father complaining; but she
+hates me. Is it fair? Could I help it that my father loved my own
+mother, and married her, and that she was a lovely and accomplished
+lady?"
+
+"Do you want to help it, if by helping you mean altering, Connie?" asked
+Captain Myles, with a twinkle. "No, child, you surely cannot help all
+these things which come by no will of yours, but by the will of God. And
+I am your witness that you are ever patient and dutiful. Bear as best
+you can, sweet Constantia, and by and by the wrong will become right, as
+right in the end is ever strongest. I cannot endure to see your young
+eyes wet with tears called out by unkindness. There is enough and to
+spare of hard matters to endure for all of us on this adventure not to
+add to it what is not only unnecessary, but unjust. Cheer up, Con, my
+lass! It's a long lane--in England!--that has no turning, and it's a
+long voyage on the seas that ends in no safe harbour! And do you know,
+Connie girl, that there's soon to be a turn in this bright weather?
+There's a feeling of change and threatening in this soft wind."
+
+Constance wiped her eyes and smiled, knowing that the captain wished to
+lead her into other themes than her own troubles, the discussion of
+which was, after all, useless.
+
+"I don't know about the weather, except the weather I'm having," she
+said. "Ah, I don't want it to storm, not on the mid-seas, Captain
+Myles."
+
+"Aye, but it's the mid-seas of the year, Connie, when the days and
+nights are one in length, and at that time old wise men say a storm is
+usually forthcoming. We'll weather it, never fear! If we are bearing
+westward a great hope and mission as we all believe--not I in precisely
+the same fashion as these stricter saints, but in my own way no
+less--then we are sure to reach our goal, my dear," said the captain
+cheerfully.
+
+"Sometimes I lose faith; I think I am wicked," sighed Constance.
+
+"We are all poor miserable sinners! Even the English Church which we
+have cast off and consigned to perdition, puts that confession into our
+mouths," said Captain Myles, with another twinkle, and was gratified
+that Constance's laugh rang out in response to his thinly veiled
+mischief.
+
+Captain Standish proved to be a true prophet. On the second day after he
+had announced to Constance the coming change in weather it came. The
+_Mayflower_ ran into a violent storm, seas and wind were wild, the small
+ship tossed on the crest of billows and plunged down into the chasm
+between them as they reared high above her till it seemed impossible
+that she should hold together, far less hold her course.
+
+In truth she did not hold to her course, but fell off it before the
+storm, groaning in every beam as if with fearful grief at her own
+danger, and at the likelihood of destroying by her destruction the hope,
+the tremendous mission which she bore within her.
+
+The women and children cowered below in their crowded quarters--lacking
+air, space, every comfort--numb with the misery of sickness and the
+threat of imminent death.
+
+Constance Hopkins, young as she was, cheered and sustained her elders.
+Like a mettlesome horse that throws up his head and puts forth renewed
+strength when there rises before him a long steep mountain, Constance
+laughed at fear, sang and jested, tenderly helping the sick, gathering
+around her the children for story-telling and such quiet play as there
+was room for. Little Damaris was sick and cross, but Constance comforted
+her with unfailing patience, proving so motherly an elder sister than
+even Mistress Eliza's jealous dislike for the girl melted when she saw
+her so loving to the child.
+
+"You are proving yourself a good girl, Constantia," she said, with
+something like shame. "If I die you will look after Damaris and bring
+her up as I would have done? Promise me this, for I know that you will
+never break your word, and having it I can leave my child without
+anxiety for her future."
+
+"It needs no promise, Stepmother," said Constance. "Surely I would not
+fail to do my best for my little sister. But if you want my word fully,
+it is given you. I will try to be grown up and wise, and bring up
+Damaris carefully if you should leave her. But isn't this silly talk!
+You will not die. You will tell Damaris's little girls about your voyage
+in the _Mayflower_, and laugh with them over how you talked of dying
+when we were so tossed and tumbled, like a tennis ball struck by a
+strong hand holding a big racquet, but unskilled at the game!" Constance
+laughed but her stepmother frowned.
+
+"Never shall I talk of games to my daughter," she said, "nor shall you,
+if you take my place." Then she relented, recalling Constance's
+unselfish kindness all these dark hours.
+
+"But you have been a good girl, Constantia. Though I fear you are not
+chastised in spirit as becomes one of our company of saints, yet have
+you been patient and gentle in all ways, and a mother to Damaris and the
+other small ones. I can do no less than say this and remember it," she
+added.
+
+Constance was white from weariness and the fear that she fought down
+with merry chatter, but now a warm flush spread to her hair.
+
+"Oh, Mistress Hopkins, if you would not hate me, if you would but think
+me just a little worthy of kindly thoughts--for indeed I am not
+wicked--the hardship of this voyage would be a cheap price to pay for
+it! I would not be so unhappy as I am if, though you did not love me,
+you would at least not hate me, nor mind that my father loved me--me and
+Giles!" Constance cried passionately, trembling on the verge of tears.
+
+Then she dashed her hand across her eyes as Giles might have done, and
+laughed to choke down a sob.
+
+"Priscilla! Priscilla Mullins, come! I need your help," she called.
+
+"What to do, Constance?" asked Priscilla, edging her way from the other
+end of the crowded cabin to the younger girl.
+
+Priscilla looked blooming still, in spite of the conditions to dim her
+bright colour.
+
+Placid by nature, she did not fret over discomfort or danger. Trim and
+neat, she was a pleasant sight among the distressed, pallid faces about
+her, like a bit of English sky, a green English meadow, a warm English
+hearth in the waste of waters that led to the waste of wintry
+wilderness.
+
+"What am I do to for thee, Constance?" Priscilla asked in her deep, alto
+voice.
+
+"Help me get these children up into the air in a sheltered nook on
+deck," said Constance. "They are suffocating here."
+
+"No, no!" cried two or three mothers. "They will be washed away,
+Constantia."
+
+"Not where we have been taking them these three days past," said
+Priscilla. "Let me go first and get John Alden to prepare that nest of
+sails and ropes he made so cleverly for us two days ago."
+
+"What doesn't John Alden do cleverly?" murmured Constance, with a sly
+glance. "Go then, Pris dear, but don't forget to hasten back to tell me
+it is ready."
+
+Priscilla did not linger. John Alden had gotten two others to help him,
+and a safe shelter where the children could be packed to breathe the air
+they sorely needed was ready when Priscilla came to ask for it. So
+Priscilla hurried back and soon she and Constance had the little
+pilgrims safely stowed, made comfortable, though Damaris feared the
+great waves towering on every side and clung to Constance in desperate
+faith.
+
+"What is to do yonder?" asked Priscilla of John Alden, who after they
+were settled came to see that everything was right with them.
+
+"What are the men working upon?"
+
+"I suppose it's no harm telling you now," said John Alden, "since they
+are at work as you see, but the ship has been leaking badly, and one of
+her main beams bowed and cracked, directly amidships. There has been the
+next thing to mutiny among the sailors, who have no desire to go to the
+bottom, and wanted to turn back. We have been in consultation and they
+have growled and threatened, but we are half way over to the western
+world so may as safely go on as to return. At last we got them to agree
+to that and now they are mending the ship. We have aboard a great jack;
+one of the passengers brought it out of Holland, luckily. What they are
+doing yonder is jacking up that broken beam. The carpenter is going to
+set a post under it in the lower deck, and calk the leaky upper parts,
+and so we shall go on to America. The ship is staunch enough, we all
+agree, if only we can hold her where she is strained. But you had no
+idea of how near you were to going back, had you?"
+
+"Oh, no!" cried Priscilla. "Almost am I tempted to wish we had
+returned."
+
+"No, no, no!" cried Constance. "No turning back! Storms, and savages,
+and wilderness ahead, but no turning back!"
+
+Damaris fell asleep on Constance's shoulder, and slept so deeply that
+when Myles Standish, Stephen Hopkins, and John Alden came to help the
+girls to get the children safely down again into their cabin she did not
+waken, and Constance begged to be allowed to stay there with her,
+letting her sleep in the strong air, for the child had troubled her
+sister by her languor.
+
+Cramped and aching Constance kept her place, Damaris's dead weight upon
+her arm, till, after a long time, her father returned to her with a
+moved face.
+
+"Shift the child to my arm, Constance," he said, sitting beside her.
+"You must be weary with your long vigil over her, my patient, sweet
+Constance!"
+
+"Oh, Father-daddy," cried Constance, quick tears springing to her eyes,
+"what does it matter if you call me that? You will always love me, my
+father?"
+
+"Child, child, what aileth thee?" said Stephen Hopkins, gently. "Are you
+not the very core of my heart, so like your lovely young mother that you
+grip me at times with the pain of my joy in you and my sorrow for her.
+The pilgrim brethren would not approve of such expressions of love, my
+dear, yet I think God who gave me a father's heart and you a daughter's,
+and taught us our duty to Him by the figure of His own Fatherhood,
+cannot share that condemnation. All the world to me you shall be to the
+end of my life, my Constance. But I came to tell you a great piece of
+news. The _Mayflower_ has shipped another passenger, mid-seas though it
+is."
+
+Constance looked up questioningly.
+
+"I have another son, Constance. The angels given charge of little
+children saw him safely to us through the perils of the voyage. Do you
+not think, as I do, that this child is like a promise to us of success
+in the New World?"
+
+"Yes, Father," said Constance, softly, sweet gravity upon her face, and
+tears upon her lashes. "Will he be called Stephen?"
+
+"Your stepmother wishes him named Oceanus, because of his sea-birth. Do
+you like the name?" asked her father.
+
+Constance shook her head. "Not a whit," she said, "for it sounds like a
+heathen god, and that I do not like, though my stepmother is a stricter
+Puritan than are you and I. I would love another Stephen Hopkins. But if
+it must be Oceanus--well, I'll try to make it a smooth ocean for the
+little fellow, his life with us, I mean."
+
+"Shall we go below to see him? I will carry Damaris," said Mr. Hopkins,
+rising, and offering Constance his hand, at the same time shifting her
+burden to himself.
+
+Damaris whined and burrowed into her father's shoulder, half waking.
+Constance stumbled and fell laughing, to her knees, numb from long
+sitting with the child's weight upon them.
+
+At the door of the cabin they met Doctor Fuller, who paused to look long
+and steadily at Constance.
+
+"You have been saving me work, little mistress," he said, putting a hand
+on her shoulder. "Your blithe courage has done more than my physic to
+hold off serious trouble in yonder cabin, and your service of hands has
+been as helpful. When we get to our new home will you accept the
+position of physician's assistant? Will you be my cheerful little
+partner, and let us be Samuel Fuller and Company, physicians and
+surgeons to the worshipful company of pilgrims in the New World?"
+
+Constance dropped a curtsey as well as the narrow space allowed. She, as
+well as all the rest of the ship's company, loved and trusted this kind
+young doctor who had left his wife and child to follow him later, and
+was crossing the seas with the pilgrims as the minister to their
+suffering bodies.
+
+"Indeed, Doctor Fuller, I will accept the office, though it will make me
+so proud that I shall be turned out of the community as unfit to be part
+of it," she cried.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There followed after this long days of bleak endurance, the cold
+increasing, the storms raging. For days at a time the _Mayflower_ lay
+to, stripped of all sail, floating in currents, thrown up on high,
+driven nose down into an apparently bottomless pit, the least of man's
+work cut off from man's natural life, left to herself in the desert of
+waters, packed with the humanity that crowded her.
+
+Yet through it all the men and women she bore did not lose heart, but
+beneath the overwhelming misery of their condition kept alive the sense
+of God's sustaining providence and personal direction.
+
+Thus it was not strange that the little ship and her company proved
+stronger than the wintry storms, that she survived and, once more
+hoisting sail, kept on her westerly course.
+
+It was November; for two months and more the _Mayflower_ had sailed and
+drifted, but now there were signs that the hazardous voyage was nearly
+over.
+
+"Come on deck, Con! Come on deck!" shouted Giles Hopkins. "All hands on
+deck for the first glimpse of land! They think 'twill soon be seen."
+
+Pale, weak, but quivering with joy, the pilgrims gathered on the
+_Mayflower's_ decks.
+
+Rose Standish was but the shadow of her sweet self. Constance lingered
+to give the final touches to Rose's toilette; they were all striving to
+make some little festal appearance to their garments suitably to greet
+the New World.
+
+"I can hardly go up, dear Connie," murmured Rose. "The _Mayflower_ hath
+taken all the vigour from this poor rose."
+
+"When the mayflower goes, the rose blooms," said Constance. "Wait till
+we get ashore and you are in your own warm, cozy home!"
+
+Rose shook her head, but made an effort to greet Captain Myles brightly
+as he came to help her to the deck.
+
+"What land are we to see, Myles? Where are we?" she asked.
+
+"Gosnold's country of Cape Cod, rose of the world," said Captain Myles.
+"It lies just ahead. Have a care, Constance; don't trip. Here we are,
+then!"
+
+They took their places in a sheltered nook and waited. The Billington
+boys had clambered high aloft and no one reproved them. Though their
+pranks were always calling forth a reprimand from some one, this time no
+one blamed them, but rather envied them for getting where they could see
+land first of all.
+
+Sharply Francis Billington's boyish voice rang out:
+
+"Land! Land! Land!" he shouted.
+
+It was but an instant before the entire company of pilgrims were on
+their knees, sobbing, chanting, praising, each in his own way, the God
+who had brought their pilgrimage to this end.
+
+That night they tacked southward, looking for Hudson's river, but the
+sea was so rough, the shoals around the promontories southward so
+dangerous, that they gave over the quest and turned back.
+
+The next day the sun shone with the brilliant glory of winter upon the
+sea, and upon the low-lying coast, as the _Mayflower_ came into her
+harbour.
+
+"Father, it is the New World!" cried Constance, clasping her father's
+arm in spite of the tiny _Mayflower_ baby which she held.
+
+"The New World it is, friend Stephen. Now to conquer it!" said Myles
+Standish, clapping Mr. Hopkins on the shoulder and touching his sword
+hilt with the other hand.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+Weary Waiting at the Gates
+
+
+"Call Giles hither. I need help to strap these blankets to carry safely,
+Mr. Hopkins," said Dame Eliza Hopkins, bustling up to her husband two
+hours after the _Mayflower_ had made anchorage.
+
+"To carry whither, wife?" asked Mr. Hopkins, with the amused smile that
+always irritated his excitable wife by its detached calmness.
+
+"Will you not need the blankets at night? Truth to tell this Cape Cod
+air seems to me well fit for blankets."
+
+"And for what other use should they be carried ashore? Or would they
+keep us warm left on the ship?" demanded Mistress Eliza. "Truly, Stephen
+Hopkins, you are a test of the patience of a saint!"
+
+"Which needs no testing, since the patience of the saints has passed
+into a proverb," commented Stephen Hopkins. "But with all humility I
+would answer 'yes' to your question, _Eliza_: the blankets would surely
+keep you warmer when on the ship than if they were ashore, since it is
+on the ship that you are to remain."
+
+"Remain! On the ship? For how long, pray? And why? Do you not think that
+I have had enough and to spare of this ship after more than two months
+within her straitened cabin, and Oceanus crying, poor child, and wearing
+upon me as if he felt the hardship of his birthplace? Nor is Mistress
+White's baby, Peregrine, happier than my child in being born on this
+_Mayflower_. When one is not crying, the other is and oftener than not
+in concert. Why should I not go ashore with the others?" demanded
+Mistress Eliza, in quick anger.
+
+"Ah, wife, wife, my poor Eliza," sighed Mr. Hopkins, raising his hand to
+stem the torrent. "Leave not all the patience of the saints to those in
+paradise! You, with all the other women, will remain on the ship while
+certain of the men--the rest being left to guard you--go in the shallop
+to explore our new country and pick the fittest place for our
+settlement. How long we may be gone, I do not know. Rest assured it will
+not be an absence wilfully prolonged. You will be more comfortable here
+than ashore. It is likely that when you do go ashore to begin the new
+home you will look back regretfully at the straitened quarters of the
+little ship that has served us well, in spite of sundry weaknesses which
+she developed. Be that as it may, this delay is necessary, as reflection
+will show you, so let us not weary ourselves with useless discussion of
+it."
+
+Mistress Hopkins knew that when her husband spoke in this manner,
+discussion of his decision was indeed useless. She had an awe of his
+wisdom, his amused toleration of her, of his superior birth and
+education, and, though she ventured to goad him in small affairs, when
+it came to greater ones she dared not dispute him. So now she bit her
+lip, as angry and disappointed tears sprang to her eyes, but did not
+reply.
+
+Stephen Hopkins produced from his inner pocket an oblong packet sewn in
+an oilskin wrapper.
+
+"Here, Eliza," he said, "are papers of value to this expedition,
+together with some important only to ourselves, but to us sufficiently
+so to guard them carefully. The public papers were entrusted to me just
+before we sailed from Southampton by one interested in the welfare of
+this settlement. My own papers relate to the English inheritance that
+will be my children's should they care to claim it. These papers I must
+leave in your care now that I am to go on this exploring party ashore. I
+will not risk carrying them where savages might attack us, though I have
+kept them upon me throughout the voyage. Guard them well. Not for worlds
+would I lose the papers relating to the community, sorry as I should be
+to lose my own, for those were a trust, and personal loss would be
+nothing compared to the loss of them."
+
+He handed the packet to his wife as he spoke and she took it, turning it
+curiously over and about.
+
+"I hope the English inheritance will one day come to Damaris and
+Oceanus," she said, bitterly, her jealousy of the two children of her
+husband's first wife plain to be seen. "Here's Giles," she added,
+hastily thrusting the packet into her bosom with a violence that her
+husband noted and wondered at.
+
+"Father," said Giles, coming up, "take me with you."
+
+Gloom and discontent were upon his brow. Giles's face was fast growing
+into a settled expression of bitterness. His stepmother's dislike for
+him, and for his sister, Giles bore less well than Constance. The
+natural sweetness of the girl, her sunny hopefulness, led her
+ceaselessly to try to make things pleasant around her, to be always
+ready to forget and begin again, hoping that at last she might win her
+stepmother's kindness. But Giles never forgot, consequently never could
+hope that the bad situation would mend, and he returned Mistress Eliza's
+dislike with compound interest. He was a brave lad, capable of strong
+attachments, but the bitterness that he harboured, the unhappiness of
+his home life, were doing him irreparable harm. His father was keenly
+alive to this fact, and one of his motives in coming to the New World
+with the Puritans, with whose strict views he by no means fully
+sympathized, was to give Giles the opportunity to conquer the
+wilderness, and in conquering it to find a vent for his energy,
+happiness for himself.
+
+Mr. Hopkins turned to the boy now and sighed, seeing that he had heard
+his stepmother's expression of hope that _her_ children would receive
+their father's English patrimony. But he said only:
+
+"Take you with me where, Giles?"
+
+"Exploring the country. I am too old, too strong to stay here with the
+women and children. Besides, I want to go," said Giles, shortly.
+
+"But few of the men are to go, my son; you will not be reckoned among
+the weaklings in staying," said Mr. Hopkins, laying his hand upon the
+boy's shoulder with a smile that Giles did not return. "Enough have
+volunteered; Captain Standish has made up his company. You are best here
+and will find enough to do. Have you thought that you are my eldest, and
+that if we met with savages, or other fatal onslaught, that you must
+take my place? I cannot afford to risk both of us at once. You are my
+reliance and successor, Giles lad."
+
+The boy's sullen face broke into a piteous smile; he flushed and looked
+into his father's eyes with a glance that revealed for an instant the
+dominant passion of his life, his adoring love for his father.
+
+Then he dropped his lids, veiling the light that he himself was
+conscious shone in them.
+
+"Very well, If you want me to stay, stay it is. But I'd like to go. And
+if there is danger, why not let me take your place? I should not know as
+much as you, but I would obey the captain's orders, and I am as strong
+as you are. Better let me go if there's any chance of not returning," he
+said.
+
+"Your valuable young life for mine, my boy? Hardly that!" said Stephen
+Hopkins with a comradely arm thrown across the boy. "I shall always be a
+piece of drift from the old shore; you will grow from your youth into
+the New World's life. And what would my remnant of life be to me if my
+eldest born had purchased it?"
+
+"You are young enough, Father," began Giles, struggling not to show
+that the expression of his father's love moved him as it did.
+
+Mistress Eliza, who had been watching and listening to what was said
+with scornful impatience, broke in.
+
+"Let the lad go. He will not be helpful here, and your little children
+need your protection, not to speak of your wife, Mr. Hopkins."
+
+At the first syllable Giles had hastened away. Stephen Hopkins turned on
+her. "The boy is more precious than I am. It is settled; he is to stay.
+Take great care of the packet I have entrusted to you," he said.
+
+For four days the ship's carpenters had busied themselves in putting
+together and making ready the shallop which the _Mayflower_ had carried
+for the pilgrims to use in sailing the shallow waters of the bays and
+rivers of the new land, to discover the spot upon which they should
+decide to make their beginning.
+
+The small craft was ready now, and in the morning set out, taking a
+small band of the men who had crossed on the _Mayflower_, as much
+ammunition and provisions as her capacity allowed them, to proceed no
+one knew whither, to encounter no one knew what.
+
+Constance stood wistfully, anxiously, watching the prim white sail
+disappear.
+
+Humility Cooper and Elizabeth Tilley--the cousins, who, though
+Constance's age, seemed so much younger--and Priscilla Mullins--who
+though older, seemed but Constance's age--were close beside her, and,
+seated on a roll of woollen cloth, sat Rose Standish, drooping as now
+she always drooped, often coughing, watching with her unnaturally clear
+eyes, as the girls watched, the departure of the little craft that bore
+their beloved protectors away.
+
+The country that lay before them looked "wild and weather-beaten." All
+that they could see was woods and more woods, stretching westward to
+meet the bleak November sky, hiding who could say what dangers of wild
+beasts and yet more-savage men?
+
+Behind them lay the heaving ocean, dark under the scudding clouds, and
+which they had just sailed for two months of torture of body and mind.
+
+If the little shallop were but sailing toward one single friend, if
+there were but one friendly English-built house beside whose hearth the
+adventurers might warm themselves after a handclasp of welcome!
+Desolation and still more desolation behind and before them! What awful
+secrets did that low-lying, mysterious coast conceal? What could the
+future hold for this handful of pilgrims who were to grapple without
+human aid with the cruelties of a severe clime, of preying creatures,
+both beast and human?
+
+Rose Standish's head bent low as the tipmost point of the shallop's mast
+rounded a promontory, till it rested on her knees and her thin
+shoulders heaved. Instantly Constance was on her knees before her,
+gently forcing Rose's hands from her face and drawing her head upon her
+shoulder.
+
+"There, there!" Constance crooned as if to a baby. "There, there, sweet
+Rose! What is it, what is it?"
+
+"Oh, if I knew he would ever come back! Oh, if I knew how to go on, how,
+how to go on!" Rose sobbed.
+
+"Captain Myles come back!" cried Constance, with a laugh that she was
+delighted to hear sounded genuine.
+
+"Why, silly little Rose Standish, don't you know nothing could keep the
+captain from coming back? Wouldn't it be a sorry day for an Indian, or
+for any beast, when he attacked our right arm of the colony? No fear of
+him not coming back to us! And how to go on, is that it? In your own
+cozy little house, with Prissy and the rest of us to help you look after
+it till you are strong again, and then the fair spring sunshine, and the
+salt winds straight from home blowing upon you, and you will not need to
+know how to go on! It will be the rest of us who will have to learn how
+to keep up with you!"
+
+"Kind Constance," whispered Rose, stroking the girl's cheek and looking
+wistfully into her eyes as she dried her own. "You keep me up, though
+you are so young! Not for nothing were you named Constantia, for
+constant indeed you are! I will be good, and not trouble you. Usually I
+feel sure that I shall get well, but to-day--seeing Myles go----.
+Sometimes it comes over me with terrible certainty that it is not for me
+to see this wilderness bloom."
+
+"Just tiredness, dear one," said Constance, lovingly, and as if she were
+a whole college of learned physicians. "Have no fear."
+
+Mistress Hopkins came in search of them, carrying the baby Oceanus with
+manifest protest against his weight and wailing.
+
+"I have been looking for you, Constantia," she said, as if this were a
+severe accusation against the girl. "You are to take this child. Have I
+not enough to do and to put up with that I must be worn threadbare by
+his crying? And what a country! Your father has been tormenting me with
+his mending and preparation for this expedition so that I have not seen
+it as it is until just now. Look at it, only look at it! What a place to
+bring a decent woman to who has never wanted! Though I may not have been
+the fine lady that his first wife was, yet am I a comfortable farmer's
+daughter, and Stephen Hopkins should not have brought me to a coast more
+bleak and dismal than the barrens of Sahara. Woods, nothing but woods!
+And full of lions, and tigers, and who knows what other raving, raging
+wild vermin--who knows? What does thy father mean by bringing me to
+this?"
+
+Constance pressed her lips together hard, a burning crimson flooding her
+face as she took the baby violently thrust upon her and straightened his
+disordered wrappings, reminding herself that his mother was not his
+fault.
+
+"Why as to that, Mistress Hopkins," said Priscilla Mullins in her
+downright, sensible way, "Mr. Hopkins did not bring you. We all came
+willingly, and I make no doubt that all of us knew quite well that it
+was a wilderness to which we were bound."
+
+"There is knowing and knowing, Priscilla Mullins, and the knowing before
+seeing is a different thing from the knowing and seeing. Stephen Hopkins
+had been about the world; he even set sail for Virginia, which as I
+understand is somewhere not far from Cape Cod, though not near enough to
+give us neighbours for the borrowing of a salt rising, or the trade of a
+recipe, or the loan of a croup simple should my blessed babe turn
+suffocating as he is like to do in this wicked cold wind; and these
+things are the comforts of a woman's life, and her right--as all good
+women will tell thee before thou art old enough to know what the lack is
+in this desolation. So it is clear that Stephen Hopkins had no right to
+bring me here, innocent as I was of what it all stood for, and hard
+enough as it is to be married to a man whose first wife was of the
+gentry, and whose children that she left for my torment are like to her,
+headstrong and proud-stomached, and hating me, however I slave for them.
+And your father, Constantia Hopkins, has gone now, not content with
+bringing me here across that waste o' waters, and never is it likely
+will come back to me to look after that innocent babe that was born on
+the ocean and bears its name according, and came like the dove to the
+ark, bearing an olive branch across the deluge. But much your father
+cares for this, but has gone and left me, and it is no man's part to
+leave a weak woman to struggle alone to keep wild beasts and Indians
+from devouring her children; and so I tell you, and so I maintain. And
+never, never have I looked upon a scene so forsaken and unbearable as
+that gray woodland that the man who swore to cherish me has led me
+into."
+
+Constance quite well knew that this hysterical unreason in her
+stepmother would pass, and that it was not more worth heeding than the
+wind that whistled around the ship's stripped masts. Mistress Eliza had
+a vixenish temper, and a jealous one. She frequently lashed herself into
+a fury with one or another of the family for its object and felt the
+better for it, not regarding how it left the victim feeling.
+
+But though she knew this, Constance could not always act upon her
+knowledge, and disregard her. She was but a very young girl and now she
+was a very weary one, with every nerve quivering from tense anxiety in
+watching her father go into unknown danger.
+
+She sprang to her feet with a cry.
+
+"Oh, my father, my father! How dare you blame him, my patient, wise,
+forbearing father! Why did he bring you here, indeed! He--so fine, so
+noble, so hard-pressed with your tongue, Mistress Hopkins!--I will not
+hear you blame him. Oh, my father, my dear, dear, good father!" she
+sobbed, losing all sense of restraint in her grief.
+
+Suddenly on hearing this outburst, Mistress Hopkins, as is sometimes the
+way of such as she, became as self-controlled as she had, but a moment
+before, been beside herself. And in becoming quiet she became much more
+angry than she had been, and more vindictive.
+
+"You speak to me like this?--you dare to!" she said in a low, furious
+voice. "You will learn to your sorrow what it means to flout me. You
+will pay for this, Constantia Hopkins, and pay to the last penny, to
+your everlasting shame and misery."
+
+Constance was too frightened by this change, by this white fury, which
+she had never seen before in her stepmother, to answer; but before she
+could have answered, Doctor Fuller, who had strayed that way in time to
+hear the last of Dame Eliza's tirade, Constance's retort, and this final
+threat, took Constance by the arm and led her away.
+
+"Quiet, my dear, quiet and calm, you know! Don't let yourself forget
+what is due to your father's wife, to yourself, still more to your
+conscience," he warned her. "And remember that a soft answer turneth
+away wrath."
+
+"Oh, it doesn't, Doctor Fuller, indeed it doesn't!" sobbed Constance,
+utterly unstrung. "I've tried it, tried it again and again, and it only
+makes the wrath turn the harder upon me; it never turns it away! Indeed,
+indeed I've faithfully tried it."
+
+"It's a hard pilgrimage for you at times I fear, Constance, but never
+turn aside into wrong on your part," said the good doctor, gently.
+
+"Oh, I'm sorry I flared up, I am sorry I spoke angrily. But my father!
+To blame him when he is so patient, and has so much to endure! Must I
+beg his wife's pardon?" said Constance, humbly.
+
+Doctor Fuller concealed a smile. Sorry as he was for Constance, and
+indignant at her stepmother's unkindness, it amused him to note how
+completely in her thoughts Constance separated herself from the least
+connection with her.
+
+"I think it would be the better course, my dear, and I admire you for
+being the one to suggest it," he answered, with an encouraging pat on
+Constance's sleeve.
+
+"Well, I will. I mean to do what is right, and I will," Constance
+sighed. "But I truly think it will do no good," she added.
+
+"Nor I," Doctor Fuller agreed with her in his thoughts, but he took good
+care not to let this opinion reach his lips.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+The First Yuletide
+
+
+Constance had a tender conscience, quick to self-blame. She was unhappy
+if she could impute to herself a fault, ill at ease till she had done
+all that she could to repair wrong. Although her stepmother's dislike
+for her, still more her open expression of it, was cruelly unjust and
+prevented all possibility of love for her, still Constance deeply
+regretted having spoken to her with lack of respect.
+
+But when she made humble apology for the fault and begged Mrs. Hopkins's
+pardon with sweet sincerity, she was received in a manner that turned
+contrition into bitterness.
+
+Dame Eliza looked at her with a cold light in her steely blue eyes, and
+a scornful smile. Plainly she was too petty herself to understand
+generosity in others, and construed Constance's apology into a
+confession of fear of her.
+
+"Poor work spreading bad butter over a burnt crust," she commented.
+"There's no love lost between us, Constantia Hopkins; maybe none ever
+found, nor ever will be. I don't want your fair words, nor need you hope
+your father will not one day see you, and that sullen brother of yours,
+as do I. So waste no breath trying to get around me. Damaris is
+fretting; look after her."
+
+Poor Constance! She had been so honestly sorry for having been angry and
+having given vent to it, had gone to her stepmother with such sincerity,
+hoping against hope, for the unnumbered time, that she could make their
+relation pleasanter! It was not possible to help feeling a violent
+reaction from this reception, to keep her scorned sweetness from turning
+to bitterness in her heart.
+
+She told the story to Giles, and it made him furiously angry.
+
+"You young ninny to humble yourself to her," he cried, with flashing
+eyes. "Will you never learn to expect nothing but injustice from her? It
+isn't what we do, or say; it is jealousy. She will not let our father
+love us, she hates the children of our mother, and hates our mother's
+memory, that she was in every way Mistress Eliza's superior, as she
+guesses, knowing that she was better born, better bred, and surely
+better in character. I remember our mother, Con, if not clearly. I'm
+sorry you have not even so much recollection of her. You are like her,
+and may be thankful for it. I could trounce you for crawling to Mistress
+Hopkins! Learn your lesson for all time, and no more apologies! Con, I
+shall not stand it! No matter how it goes with this colony, I shall go
+back to England. I will not stay to be put upon, to see my father turned
+from me."
+
+"Oh, Giles, that could never be!" cried Constance. "Father will never
+turn from us."
+
+"I did not say from _us_; I said from _me_," retorted Giles. "You are
+different, a girl, and--and like Mother, and--several other reasons. But
+I often see that Father is not sure whether he shall approve me or not.
+It will not be so long till I am twenty-one, then I shall get out of
+reach of these things."
+
+Constance's troubled face brightened. To her natural hopefulness Giles's
+twenty-first birthday was far enough away to allow a great deal of good
+to come before it.
+
+"Oh, twenty-one, Giles! You'll be prospering and happy here before
+that," she cried.
+
+"But I must tell no more of troubles with my stepmother to Giles," she
+added mentally. "It will never do to pile fuel on his smouldering
+fires!"
+
+The next day when Constance was helping Mistress Hopkins with her
+mending, she noticed the oilskin-wrapped packet that her father had left
+with his wife for safe keeping, tossed carelessly upon the hammock which
+swung from the side of the berth which she and her stepmother shared,
+the bed devised by ingenuity for little Damaris.
+
+"Is not that packet in Damaris's hammock Father's packet of valuable
+papers?" Constance asked. "Is there not a risk in letting them lie
+about, so highly as he prizes them?"
+
+She made the suggestion timidly, for Dame Eliza did not take kindly to
+hints of this nature. To her surprise her stepmother received her remark
+not merely pleasantly, but almost eagerly, quick with self-reproach.
+
+"Indeed thou art right, Constantia, and I am wrong to leave it for an
+instant outside the strong chest, where I shall put it under lock and
+key," she said, nevertheless not moving to rescue it. "I have carried
+it tied around my neck by a silken cord and hidden in my bosom till this
+hour past. I dropped it there when I was trying to mend Damaris's
+hammock. Thanks to you for reminding me of it. What can ail that hammock
+defies me! I have tried in all ways to strengthen it, but it sags. Some
+night the child will take a bad fall from it. Try you what you can make
+of it, Constantia."
+
+"I am not skilful, Stepmother," smiled Constance. "Giles is just outside
+studying the chart of our voyage hither. Let me call him to repair the
+hammock. We would not have you fall at night and crack the pretty golden
+pate, would we, Damaris?" The child shook her "golden pate" hard.
+
+"That you would not, Connie, for you are good, good to me!" she cried.
+
+Mistress Hopkins looked on the little girl with somewhat of softening of
+her stern lips, yet she felt called upon to reprimand this lightness of
+speech.
+
+"Not 'Connie,' Damaris, as thou hast been often enough told. We do not
+hold with the ungodly manner of nicknames. Thy sister is Constantia, and
+so must thou call her. And you must not put into the child's head
+notions of its being pretty, Constantia. Beauty is a snare of the devil,
+and vanity is his weapon to ensnare the soul. Do not let me hear you
+again speak to a child of mine of her pretty golden pate. As to the
+hammock if you choose to call your brother to repair it for his
+half-sister I have nothing against the plan."
+
+Constance jumped up and ran out of the cabin.
+
+"Giles, Giles, will you come to try what you can do with Damaris's
+sleeping hammock?" she called.
+
+"What's wrong with it?" demanded Giles, rising reluctantly, but
+following Constance, nevertheless.
+
+"I don't know, but Mistress Hopkins says she cannot repair it and that
+the child is like to fall with its breaking some night," said Constance,
+entering again the small, close cabin of the women. "Here is Giles,
+Mistress Hopkins; he will try what he can do," she added.
+
+Giles examined the hammock in silence, bade Constance bring him cord,
+and at last let it swing back into place, and straightened himself. He
+had been bent over the canvas with it drawn forward against his breast.
+
+"I see nothing the matter with the hammock except a looseness of its
+cords, and perhaps weakness of one where I put in the new one. You could
+have mended it, Con," he said, ungraciously, and sensitive Constance
+flushed at the implication that her stepmother had not required his
+help, for she never could endure anything like a disagreeable atmosphere
+around her.
+
+"Giles says 'Con,'" observed Damaris, justifying herself for the use of
+nicknames.
+
+"Giles does many things that we do not approve; let us hope he will not
+lead his young sister and brother into evil ways," returned her mother,
+sourly. "But thou shouldst thank him when he does thee a service, not to
+be deficient on thy side in virtue."
+
+"You know Giles doesn't need thanks for what he does for small people,
+don't you, Hop-o-my-Thumb?" Giles said and departed, successful in both
+his aims, in pleasing the child by his name for her, and displeasing her
+mother.
+
+Two hours later Constance was sitting rolled up in heavy woollens like a
+cocoon well forward of the main mast, in a sheltered nook, reading to
+Rose Standish, who was also wrapped to her chin, and who when she was in
+the open, seemed to find relief from the oppression that made breathing
+so hard a matter to her.
+
+Mistress Hopkins came toward them in furious haste, her mouth open as if
+she were panting, one hand pressed against her breast.
+
+"Constantia, confess, confess, and do not try to shield thy wicked
+brother!" she cried.
+
+[Illustration: "'Constantia, confess--confess and do not try to shield
+thy wicked brother'"]
+
+"Confess! My wicked brother? Do you mean the baby, for you cannot mean
+Giles?" Constance said, springing to her feet.
+
+"That lamb of seven weeks! Indeed, you impudent girl, I mean no such
+thing, as well you know, but that dreadful, sin-enslaved, criminal,
+Gile----"
+
+"Hush!" cried Constance, "I will not hear you!"
+
+There was a fire in her eyes that made even Mistress Eliza halt in her
+speech.
+
+"Giles Hopkins has stolen your father's packet, the packet of papers
+which you saw in the hammock and reminded me to put away," she said,
+more quietly. "I shall leave him to be dealt with by your father who
+must soon return. But you, you! Can you clear yourself? Did you help him
+steal it? Nay, did you call him in for this purpose, warning him that he
+should find the packet there, and to take it? Is this a plan between
+you? For ever have I said that there was that in you two that curdled my
+blood with fear for you of what you should become. Not like your godly
+father are you two. From elsewhere have you drawn the blood that poisons
+you. Confess and I will ask your father to spare you."
+
+Constance stood with her thick wrappings falling from her as she threw
+up her hands in dumb appeal against this unbearable thing. She was white
+as the dead, but her blue eyes burned black in the whiteness, full of
+intense life.
+
+"Mistress Hopkins, oh, Mistress Hopkins, consider!" begged Rose
+Standish, also rising in great distress. "Think what it is that you are
+saying, and to whom! You cannot knowingly accuse this dear girl of
+connivance in a theft! You cannot accuse Giles of committing it! Why,
+Captain Myles is fonder of the lad than of any other in our company!
+Giles is upright and true, he says, and fearless. Pray, pray, take
+back these fearful words! You do not mean them, and when you will long
+to disown them they will cling to you and not forsake you, as does our
+mad injustice, to our lasting sorrow. What can be more foreign to our
+calling than harsh judgments, and angry accusations?"
+
+"I am not speaking rashly, Mistress Standish," insisted Dame Eliza.
+
+"Not yet three hours gone Constantia saw lying in Damaris's hammock a
+valuable packet of papers, left me in trust by her father. I asked her
+to mend the hammock, which was in disorder, but she called her brother
+to do the simple task. No one else hath entered the cabin at my end of
+it since. The packet is gone. Would you have more proof? Could there be
+more proof, unless you saw the theft committed, which is manifestly
+impossible?"
+
+"But why, good mistress, should the boy and girl steal these papers?
+What reason would there be for them to disturb their father's property?"
+asked Rose Standish.
+
+"I have heard my uncle say, who is a barrister at home, that one must
+search for the motive of a crime if it is to be established." She
+glanced with a slight smile at Constance's stony face, who neither
+looked at her, nor smiled, but stood gazing in wide-eyed horror at her
+stepmother.
+
+"Precisely!" triumphed Dame Eliza. "Two motives are clear, Mistress
+Standish, to those who are not too blinded by prejudice to see. Those
+Hopkins girl and boy hate me, fear and grudge my influence with their
+father. Would they not like to weaken it by the loss of papers entrusted
+to me, a loss that he would resent on his return? There is one motive.
+As to the other: you do not know, but I do, and so did they, that part
+of these papers related to an inheritance in England, from which they
+would want their half-brother and sister excluded. Needs it more?"
+
+"Yes, yes, yes!" cried Rose Standish, as Constance groaned. "To any one
+knowing Giles and Constance this is no more than if you said Fee, fi,
+fo, fum! They plotting to weaken you with their father! They stealing to
+keep the children from a share in their inheritance, so generous as they
+are, so good to the little ones! Fie, Mistress Hopkins! It is a grievous
+sin, you who are so strict in small matters, a grievous sin thus to
+judge another, still more those to whom you owe the obligation of one
+who has taken their dead mother's place."
+
+Constance began to tremble, and to struggle to speak. What she would
+have said, or what would have come of it, cannot be known, for at that
+moment the Billington boys, John and Francis, came hurtling down upon
+them, shouting:
+
+"The shallop, the shallop is back! It is almost upon us on the other
+side. Come see, come see! Dad is back, and all the rest, unless the
+savages have killed some of them," Francis added the final words in
+solo.
+
+The present trouble must be laid aside for the great business in hand of
+welcome.
+
+Poor Constance turned in a frozen way to follow Rose and her stepmother
+to the other side of the ship.
+
+Her father--her dear, dear, longed-for father--was come back. He might
+be bringing them news of a favoured site where they would go to begin
+their new home.
+
+At last they were to step upon land again, to live in some degree the
+life they knew of household task and tilling, walking the woods, drawing
+water, building fires--the life so long postponed, for which they all
+thirsted.
+
+But if she and Giles were to meet their father accused of theft! If they
+should see in those grave, kind, wise eyes a shadow of a doubt of his
+eldest children! Constance felt that she dared not see him come if such
+a thing were so much as possible.
+
+But when the shallop was made fast beside the _Mayflower_ and Constance
+saw her father boarding the ship among the others of the returning
+expedition, and she met the glad light in his eyes resting upon her, all
+fear was swallowed up in immense relief and joy.
+
+With a low cry she sprang to meet him and fell sobbing on his shoulder,
+forgetful of the stern on-lookers who would condemn such display of
+feeling.
+
+"Oh, father, father, if you had never come back!" she murmured.
+
+"But I have come, daughter!" Stephen Hopkins reminded her. "Surely you
+are not weeping that I have come! We have great things to tell you,
+attacks by savages, some hardships, but we have brought grain which we
+found hidden by the Indians, and we have found the right place to
+establish our dwelling."
+
+Constance raised her head and dried her eyes, still shaken by sobs. Her
+father looked keenly at the pale, drawn face, and knew that something
+more than ordinary lay behind the overwhelming emotion with which she
+had received him.
+
+"Poor child, poor motherless child!" he thought, and the pity of that
+moment went far in influencing his subsequent treatment of Constance
+when he learned what had ailed her on his arrival.
+
+Now he patted her shoulder and turned toward the middle of the ship's
+forward deck where his comrades of the expedition were relating their
+experiences, and displaying their trophies.
+
+Golden corn lay on the deck, spread upon a cloth, and the pilgrims who
+had remained with the ship were handling it as they listened to John
+Alden, who was made the narrator of this first report, having a ready
+tongue.
+
+"We found a pond of fresh water," he was saying, "and not far from it
+cleared ground with the stubble of a gathered harvest upon it. Judge
+whether or not the sight was pleasant to us, as promising of fertile
+lands when the forests were hewn. And we came upon planks of wood that
+had lately been a house, and a kettle, and heaps of sand, with handmarks
+upon it, not long since made, where the sand had been piled and pressed
+down, into which, digging rapidly, we penetrated and found the corn you
+see here. The part of it we took, but the rest we once more covered and
+left it. And see ye, brethren, there have we the seed for our own next
+season's harvest, the which we were in such doubt of obtaining from home
+in time. It is a story for night, when we have leisure, to tell you of
+how we saw a few men and a dog, who ran from us, and we pursuing, hoping
+to speak to them, but they escaped us. And how later on, we saw savages
+cutting up great fish of tremendous size along the coast, and how we
+were attacked by another savage band one night. But all this we reserve
+for another telling. We came at last into a harbour and found it deep
+enough for the _Mayflower_ on our sounding it. And landing we marched
+into the land and found fields, and brooks, and on the whole that it
+was a fit country for our beginning. For the rest it is as you shall
+decide in consultation, but of our party we are all in accord to urge
+you to accept this spot and hasten to take possession of it as the
+winter cometh on apace."
+
+"Let us thank God for that He hath led us into a land of corn, and
+guided us for so many weary days, over so many dreary miles," said
+William Brewster, the elder of the pilgrims.
+
+John Carver, who was chosen on the _Mayflower_ as their governor, arose
+and out of a full heart thanked God for His mercies, as Elder Brewster
+had recommended.
+
+The _Mayflower_ weighed anchor in the morning to carry her brave freight
+to their new home. The wind set hard against her, and it was the second
+day before she entered Plymouth harbour, as they resolved to name their
+new habitation, a name already bestowed by Captain Smith, and the name
+of their final port of embarkation in England.
+
+No sign of life met them as the pilgrims disembarked. Silently, with
+full realization of what lay before them, and how fraught with
+significance this beginning was, the pilgrims passed from the ship that
+had so long been their home, and set foot--men, women, and
+children--upon the soil of America.
+
+A deep murmur arose when the last person was landed, and it happened
+that Constance Hopkins was the last to step from the boat to the rock
+on which the landing was made, and to jump light-heartedly to the sand,
+amid the tall, dried weeds that waved on the shore.
+
+"Praise God from whom all blessings flow," said Elder Brewster,
+solemnly. The pilgrim band of colonists sang the doxology with bowed
+heads.
+
+Three days later the shores of the harbour echoed to the ring of axes,
+the sound of hammers, as the first house was begun, the community house,
+destined to shelter many families and to store their goods.
+
+"Merry Christmas, Father!" said Constance, coming up to her father in
+the cold of the early bleak December morning.
+
+"S-s-sh!" warned her father, finger upon lip. "Do you not know, my
+daughter, that the keeping of Christmas is abjured by us as savouring of
+popery, and that to wish one merry at yuletide would be reckoned as
+unrighteousness among us?"
+
+"Ah, but Father, you do not think so! You do not go with all these
+opinions, and can it be wrong to be merry on the day that gladdened the
+world?" Constance pleaded.
+
+"Not wrong, but praiseworthy, to be merry under our present condition,
+to my way of thinking," said Stephen Hopkins, glancing around at the
+drab emptiness of land and sky and harbour beyond. "Nay, child, I do
+not think it wrong to rejoice at Christmas, nor do I hold with the
+severity of most of our people, but because I believe that it will be
+good to begin anew in a land that is not oppressed, nor torn by
+king-made wars and sins, I have cast my lot, as has Myles Standish, who
+is of one mind with me, among this Plymouth band, and we must conform
+to custom. So wish me Merry Christmas, if you will, but let none hear
+you, and we will keep our heresies to ourselves."
+
+"Yet the first house in the New World is begun to-day!" laughed
+Constance. "We are getting a Christmas gift."
+
+"A happy portent to begin our common home on the day when the Prince of
+Peace came to dwell on earth! Let us hope it will bring us peace," said
+her father.
+
+"Peace!" cried Constance, with a swift and terrified remembrance of the
+accusation which her stepmother had threatened bringing against herself
+and Giles.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+The New Year in the New Land
+
+
+The new year came in bringing with it a driving storm from the Atlantic.
+The hoary pines threw up their rugged branches as if appealing to the
+heavens for mercy on the women and little children without shelter on
+the desolate coast. But the gray heavens did not relent; they poured
+snow and sleet down upon the infant colony, coating the creaking pines
+with ice that bent them low, and checked their intercession.
+
+As fast as willing hands could work, taking it in continuous shifts by
+night as well as day, the community house went up. But the storm was
+upon the colonists before the shelter was ready for them, and even when
+the roof covered them, the cold laughed it to scorn, entering to wreak
+its will upon them.
+
+Sickness seized one after another of the pilgrim band, men and women
+alike, and the little children fought croup and pneumonia, nursed by
+women hardly more fit for the task than were the little victims.
+
+Rose Standish, already weakened by the suffering of the voyage, was
+among the first to be prostrated. She coughed ceaselessly though each
+violent breath wracked her frail body with pain. A bright colour burned
+in her cheeks, her beautiful eyes were clear and dilated, she smiled
+hopefully when her companions in exile and suffering spoke to her, and
+assured them that she was "much, much better," speaking pantingly, by an
+effort.
+
+The discouragement with which she had looked upon the coast when the
+_Mayflower_ arrived, gave place to hope in her. She spoke confidently of
+"next spring," of the "house Captain Myles would build her," of all that
+she should do "when warm weather came."
+
+Constance, to whom she most confided her plans, often turned away to
+hide her tears. She knew that Doctor Fuller and the more experienced
+women thought that for this English rose there would be no springtime
+upon earth.
+
+Constance had other troubles to bear as well as the hardships and
+sorrows common to the sorely beset community. She seemed, to herself,
+hardly to be a young girl, so heavily weighted was she with the burden
+that she carried. She wondered to remember that if she had stayed in
+England she should have been laughing and singing like other girls of
+her age, skating now on the Sherbourne, if it were frozen over, as it
+well might be. Perhaps she might be dancing, if she were visiting her
+cousins in Warwickshire, her own birthplace, for the cousins were merry
+girls, and like all of Constance's mother's family, quite free from
+puritanical ideas, brought up in the English Church, so not debarred
+from the dance.
+
+Constance had no heart to regret her loss of youthful happiness; she was
+so far aloof from it, so sad, that she could not rise to the level of
+feeling its charm. Dame Eliza Hopkins had carried out her threat, had
+accused Giles of the theft of his father's papers, and Constance of
+being party to his wrong-doing, if not actually its instigator.
+
+It had only happened that morning; Constance heavily awaited
+developments. She jumped guiltily when she heard her father's voice
+speaking her name, and felt his hand upon her shoulder.
+
+She faced him, white and shaken, to meet his troubled eyes intently
+fastened upon her.
+
+"The storm is bad, Constance, but it is not warm within. Put on your
+coat and come with me. I must speak with you," he said.
+
+In silence Constance obeyed him. Pulling over her head a hood that, like
+a deep cowl, was attached to her coat, she followed her father into the
+storm, and walked beside him toward the marshy shore whither, without
+speaking to her, he strode.
+
+Arrived at the sedgy ocean line he halted, and turned upon her.
+
+"Constance," he began, sternly, "my wife tells me that valuable papers
+which I entrusted to her keeping have disappeared. She tells me further
+that she had dropped them--carelessly, as I have told her--into the
+hammock in which your little sister slept and that you saw them there,
+commenting upon it; that you soon called Giles to set right some slight
+matter in the hammock; and that shortly after you and he had left her,
+she discovered her loss. What do you know of this? Tell me all that you
+know, and tell me the truth."
+
+Constance's fear left her at this word. Throwing up her head she looked
+her father in the eyes, nearly on a level with her own as she stood upon
+a sandy hummock. "It needs not telling me to speak the truth, Father. I
+am your daughter and my mother's daughter; it runs not in my blood to
+lie," she said.
+
+Stephen Hopkins touched her arm lightly, a look of relief upon his face.
+
+"Thank you for that reminder, my girl," he said. "It is true, and Giles
+is of the same strain. Know you aught of this misfortune?"
+
+"Nothing, Father," said Constance. "And because I know nothing whatever
+about it, in answering you I have told you all that I have to tell."
+
+"And Giles----" began her father, but stopped.
+
+"Nor Giles," Constance repeated, amending his beginning. "Giles is
+headstrong, Father, and I fear for him often, but you know that he is
+honourable, truth-telling. Would your son _steal_ from you?"
+
+"But your stepmother says no one entered the cabin after you had left it
+before she discovered her loss," insisted Stephen Hopkins. "What am I to
+think? What do you think, Constance?"
+
+"I think that there is an explanation we do not know. I think that my
+stepmother hates Giles and me, especially him, as he has the first claim
+to the inheritance that she would have for her own children. I think
+that she has seized this opportunity to poison you against us," said
+Constance, with spirited daring. "Oh, Father, dear, dear Father, do not
+let her do this thing!"
+
+"Nay, child, you are unjust," said her father, gently. "I confess to
+Mistress Eliza's jealousy of you, and that there is not great love for
+you in her. But, Constance, do you love her, you or Giles? And that she
+is not so base as you suspect is shown by the fact that she has delayed
+until to-day to tell me of this loss, dreading, as she hath told me, to
+put you wrong in my eyes. Fie for shame, Constance, to suspect her of
+such outrageous wickedness, she who is, after all, a good woman, as she
+sees goodness."
+
+"Father, if the packet were lost through her carelessness, would you not
+blame her? Is it not likely that she would shield herself at our cost,
+even if she would not be glad to lower us, as I am sure she would be?"
+persisted Constance.
+
+"Well, well, this is idle talk!" Stephen Hopkins said, impatiently. "The
+truth must be sifted out, and suspicions are wrong, as well as useless.
+One word before I go to Giles. Upon your sacred honour, Constantia
+Hopkins, and by your mother's memory, can you assure me that you know
+absolutely nothing of the loss of this packet of papers?"
+
+"Upon my honour and by my mother's memory, I swear that I do not know so
+much as that the packet is lost, except as Mistress Hopkins says that it
+is," said Constance. Then with a swift change of tone she begged:
+
+"Oh, Father, Father, when you go to Giles, be careful, be kind, I pray
+you! Giles is unhappy. He is ill content under the injustice we both
+bear, but I with a girl's greater submission. He is ready to break all
+bounds and he will do so if he feels that you do not trust him, listen
+to his enemy's tales against him. Please, please, dear Father, be gentle
+with Giles. He loves you as well as I do, but where your distrust of me
+would kill me, because I love you, Giles's love for you will turn to
+bitterness, if you let him feel that you are half lost to him."
+
+"Nonsense, Constance," said her father, though kindly, "Giles is a boy
+and must be dealt with firmly. It will never do to coddle him, to give
+him his head. You are a girl, sensitive and easily wounded. A boy is
+another matter. I will not have him setting up his will against mine,
+nor opposing discipline for his good. It is for him to clear himself of
+what looks ill, not resent our seeing the looks of it."
+
+Constance almost wrung her hands.
+
+"Oh, Father, Father, do not go to Giles in that way! Sorrow will come of
+it. Think how you would feel to be thus suspected! A boy is not less
+sensitive than a girl; I fear he is more sensitive in his honour than
+are we. Oh, I am but a girl, but I know that I am right about Giles. I
+think we are given to understand as no man can how to deal with a proud,
+sullen boy like Giles, because God means us to be the mothers of boys
+some day! Be kind to Giles, dear Father; let him see that you trust him,
+as indeed, indeed you may!"
+
+"Let us go back out of the storm to such shelter as we have, Constance,"
+said Stephen Hopkins, smiling with masculine toleration for a foolish
+girl. "I have accepted your solemn assurance that you are ignorant of
+this theft, if theft it be. Be satisfied that I have done this, and
+leave me to deal with my son as I see fit. I will not be unjust to him,
+but he must meet me respectfully, submissively, and answer to the
+evidence against him. I have not been pleased of late with Giles's
+ill-concealed resistance."
+
+This time Constance did wring her hands, as she followed her father,
+close behind him. She attempted no further remonstrance, knowing that to
+do so would be not only to harm Giles's cause, but to arouse her
+father's quick anger against herself. But as she walked with bent head
+through the cutting, beating storm, she wondered why Giles should not be
+resistant to his life, and her heart ached with pitying apprehension for
+her brother.
+
+All that long day of darkening storm and anxiety Constance did not see
+Giles. That signified nothing, however, for Giles was at work with the
+men making winter preparations which could not be deferred, albeit the
+winter was already upon them, while Constance was occupied with the
+nursing for which the daily increase of sickness made more hands
+required than were able to perform it.
+
+Humility Cooper was dangerously ill, burning with fever, struggling for
+breath. Constance was fond of the little maid who seemed so childish
+beside her, and gladly volunteered to go again into the storm to fetch
+her the fresh water for which she implored.
+
+At the well which had been dug, and over which a pump from the ship had
+been placed and made effective, Constance came upon Giles, marching up
+and down impatiently, and with him was John Billington, his chosen
+comrade, the most unruly of all the younger pilgrims.
+
+"Well, at last, Con!" exclaimed Giles. "I've been here above an hour. I
+thought to meet you here. What has kept you so long?"
+
+"Why, Giles, I could not know that you were awaiting me," said
+Constance, reasonably. "Oh, they are so ill, our poor friends yonder! I
+am sure many of them will go on a longer pilgrimage and never see this
+colony established."
+
+"Lucky they!" said Giles, bitterly. "Why should they want to? Nobody
+wants to die, and of course I am sorry for them, but better be dead than
+alive here--if it is to be called alive!"
+
+"Oh, dear Giles, do you hate it so?" sighed Constance. "Nothing is
+wrong?" she added, glancing at John Billington, longing to ask her
+question more directly, but not wishing to betray to him the trouble
+upon her mind.
+
+"Never mind talking before John," said Giles, catching the glance. "He
+knows all about it; I have told him. Have you cleared yourself, Sis, or
+are you also under suspicion?"
+
+"Oh, dear Giles," said Constance again. "You are not--Didn't Father
+believe?--Isn't it all right?" She groped for the least offensive form
+for her question.
+
+"I don't know whether or not Father believed that I am a thief," burst
+out Giles, furiously. "Nor a whit do I care. I told him the word of a
+man of honour was enough, and I gave him mine that I knew nothing about
+his wife's lies. I told him it seemed to me clear enough that she had
+made away with the papers herself, to defraud us. And I told him I had
+no proof of my innocence to give him, but it was not necessary. I told
+him I wouldn't go into it further; that it had to end right there, that
+I was not called upon to accept, nor would I submit to such a rank
+insult from any man, and that his being my father made it worse, not
+better."
+
+"Oh, Giles, what did he say? Oh, Giles, what a misfortune!" cried
+Constance, clasping her hands.
+
+"What did he say?" echoed Giles. "What do you think would be said when
+two such tempers as my father's and mine clash? For, mark you, Con,
+Stephen Hopkins would not stoop to vindicate himself from the charge of
+stealing. _Stealing_, remember, not a crime worthy of a gentleman."
+
+"Oh, Giles, what crime is worthy of a gentleman?" Constance grieved. "Is
+there any dignity in sin, and any justice in varnishing some sins with
+the gloss of custom? But indeed, indeed, it is cruelly hard on you,
+Giles dear. Tell me what happened."
+
+"The only thing that could happen. My father forgets that I am not a
+child. He flew into that madness of anger that we know him capable of,
+railed at me for my impertinence, insisted on my proving myself innocent
+of this charge, and declared that until I did, with full apology for the
+way I had received him, I was no son of his. So--Good day, Mistress
+Constantia Hopkins, I hope that you are well? I once had a sister that
+was like you, but sister have I none now, since I am not the son of my
+reputed father," said Giles, with a sneer and a deep bow.
+
+Constance was in despair. The bitter mockery in Giles's young face, the
+bleak unhappiness in his eyes stabbed her heart. She knew him too well
+to doubt that this mood was dangerous.
+
+"My own dear brother!" she cried, throwing her arms around him. "Oh,
+don't steel yourself so bitterly! Father loves you so much that he is
+stern with you, but it will all come right; it must, once this hot
+anger that you both share is past. You are too alike, that is all! Beg
+his pardon, Giles, but repeat that your word is enough to prove you
+innocent of the accusation. Father will see that, and yield you that,
+when you have met him halfway by an apology for hard words."
+
+"See here, Con, why should I do that?" demanded Giles. "Is there
+anything in this desolation that I should want to stay here? I've had
+enough of Puritans; and Eliza is one of the strongest of them. Except
+for your sake, little Sis, why should I stay? And I will one day return
+for you. No, no, Con; I will sail for England when the ship returns, and
+make my own fortune, somewhere, somehow."
+
+"Dame Eliza is not what she is because she is a Puritan. She is what she
+is because she is Dame Eliza. Think of the others whom we all love and
+would fain be like," Constance reminded him. "We must all be true to the
+enterprise we have undertaken, and----"
+
+"Look here, sweet Con," John Billington interrupted her. "There is
+nothing to hold Giles to this dreary enterprise, nor to hold me, either.
+I am not in like plight to him. If any one accused me, suspected me as
+your father has him, and still more my father did it, I'd let these east
+winds blow over the space I'd have filled in this settlement. I'm for
+adventure as it is, though my father cares little what Francis and I
+do, being a reckless, daring man who surely belongs not in this
+psalm-singing company. Giles and I will strike out into the wilderness
+and try our fortunes. We will try the savages. They can be no worse than
+white men, nor half as outrageous as your stepmother. Why, Con, how can
+you want your brother tamely to sit down under such an insult? No man
+should be called upon to prove himself honest! Giles must be off. Let
+your father find out for himself who is to blame for the loss of the
+papers, and repent too late for lending ear to his wife's story."
+
+Constance stared for a moment at John, realizing how every word he said
+found a ready echo in Giles's burning heart, how potent would be this
+unruly boy's influence to draw her brother after him, now, when Giles
+was wounded in his two strongest feelings--his pride of honour, his love
+for his father--and she prayed in her heart for inspiration to deal
+wisely with this difficult situation.
+
+Suddenly the inspiration came to her. She found it in John's last words.
+
+"Nay, but Jack!" she cried, using Francis's name for his brother,
+disapproved by the elders who would have none of nicknames. "If needs be
+that Giles must leave this settlement, if he cannot be happy here, let
+him at least bide till he has cleared his name of a foul stain, for his
+honour's sake, for the sake of his dead mother, for my sake, who must
+abide here and cannot escape, being but a girl, young and helpless. Is
+it right that I should be pointed out till I am old as the sister of him
+who was accused of a great wrong and, cowardlike, ran away because he
+could not clear himself, nor meet the shame, and so admitted his guilt?
+No! Rather do you, John Billington, instead of urging him to run away,
+bend all your wit--of which you do not lack plenty!--to the ferreting
+out of this mystery. That would be the manly course, the kind course to
+me, and you have always called yourself my friend. Then prove it! Help
+my brother to clear himself and never say one more word to urge him away
+till he can go with a stainless name. Our father does not doubt Giles,
+of that I am certain. He is sore beset, and is a choleric man. What can
+any man do when his children are on the one hand, and his wife on the
+other? Be patient with our father, Giles, but in any case do not go away
+till this is cleared."
+
+"She talks like a lawyer!" cried John Billington with his boisterous
+laugh "Like----what was that play I once saw before I got, or Father
+got into this serious business of being a Puritan? Wrote by a fellow
+called Shakespeare? Ah, I have it! Merchant of Venison! In that the girl
+turns lawyer and cozzens the Jew. Connie is another pleader like that
+one. Well, what say you, Giles, my friend? Strikes me she is right."
+
+"It is not badly thought of, Constance," admitted Giles. "But can it be
+done? For if Mistress Hopkins has had a hand in spiriting away those
+papers for her own advantage and my undoing, then would it be hard to
+prove. What say you?"
+
+"Oh, no, no, no!" cried Constance. "Truth is mighty, good is stronger
+than evil! Patience, Giles, patience for a while, and let us three bind
+ourselves to clear our good name. Will you, will you promise, my
+brother? And John?"
+
+"Well, then, yes," said Giles, reluctantly; and Constance clasped her
+hands with a cry of joy. "For a time I will stay and see what can be
+done, but not for long. Mark you, Con, I do not promise long to abide in
+this unbearable life of mine."
+
+"Sure will I promise, Connie," assented John. "Why should I go? I would
+not go without Giles, and it was not for my sake first we were going."
+
+"Giles, dear Giles, thank you, thank you!" cried Constance. "I could not
+have borne it had you not yielded. Think of me thus left and be glad
+that you are willing to stand by your one own sister, Giles. And let us
+hope that in staying we shall come upon better days. Now I must take
+this ewer of water to poor Humility who is burned and miserable with
+thirst and pain. She will think I am never coming to relieve her! Oh,
+boys, it seems almost wicked to think of our good names, of any of our
+little trials, when half our company is so stricken!"
+
+"You are a good girl, Connie," said John Billington, awkwardly helping
+Constance to assume her pitcher, his sympathy betrayed by his
+awkwardness. "I hope you are not chilled standing here so long with us."
+
+"No, not I!" said Constance, bravely. "The New Year, and the New World
+are teaching me not to mind cold which must be long borne before the
+year grows old. They are teaching me much else, dear lads. So good-bye,
+and bless you!"
+
+"'Twould have been downright contemptible to have deserted her," said
+Giles and John in the same breath, and they laughed as they watched her
+depart.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+Stout Hearts and Sad Ones
+
+
+Constance turned away from the boys feeling that, till the trouble
+hanging over Giles was settled, waking or sleeping she could think of
+nothing else. When she reached the community house she forgot it, nor
+did it come to her as more than a deeper shadow on the universal
+darkness for weeks.
+
+She found that during her brief absence Edward Tilley's wife had died;
+she had known that she was desperately ill, but the end had come
+suddenly. Edward Tilley himself was almost through with his struggle,
+and this would leave Humility, herself a very sick child, quite alone,
+for she had come in her cousins' care. Constance bent over her to give
+her the cooling water which she had fetched her.
+
+"Elizabeth and I are alike now," whispered Humility, looking up at
+Constance with eyes dry of tears, but full of misery. "Cousin John
+Tilley was her father, and Cousin Edward and his wife but my guardians,
+yet they were all I had." Elizabeth Tilley had been orphaned two weeks
+before, and now John Tilley's brother, following him, would leave
+Humility Cooper, as she said, bereft as was Elizabeth.
+
+"Not all you had, dear Humility," Constance whispered in her ear, afraid
+to speak aloud for there were in the room many sick whom they might
+disturb.
+
+"My father will protect you, unless there is someone whom you would
+liefer have, and we will be sisters and meet the spring with hope and
+love for each other, together."
+
+"They will send for me to come home to England, my other cousins, of
+that I am sure. Elizabeth has no one on her side to claim her. But
+England is far, far away, and I am more like to join my cousins, John
+and Edward Tilley and their kind, dear wives where they are now than to
+live to make that fearful voyage again," moaned Humility, turning away
+her head despairingly.
+
+"Follow John and Edward Tilley! Yes, but not for many a day!" Constance
+reassured her, shaking up the girl's pillow, one deft arm beneath her
+head to raise it.
+
+"Sleep, Humility dear, and do not think. Or rather think of how sweetly
+the wind will blow through the pines when the spring sunshine calls you
+out into it, and we go, you and I, to seek what new flowers we may find
+in the New World."
+
+"No, no," Humility moved her head on the pillow in negation. "I will be
+good, Constance; I will not murmur. I will remember that I lie here in
+God's hand; but, oh Constance, I cannot think of pleasant things, I
+cannot hope. I will be patient, but I cannot hope. Dear, dear, sweet
+Constance, you are like my mother, and yet we are almost one age. What
+should we all do without you, Constance?"
+
+Constance turned away to meet Doctor Fuller's grave gaze looking down
+upon her. "I echo Humility's question, Constance Hopkins: What should we
+all do without you? What a blessed thing has come to you thus to comfort
+and help these pilgrims, who are sore stricken! Come with me a moment; I
+have something to say to you."
+
+Constance followed this beloved physician into the kitchen where her
+stepmother was busy preparing broth, her _Mayflower_ baby, Oceanus, tied
+in a chair on a pillow, Damaris sitting on the floor beside him in
+unnatural quiet.
+
+Dame Eliza looked up as the doctor and Constance entered, but instantly
+dropped her eyes, a dull red mounting in her face.
+
+She knew that the girl was ministering to the dying with skill and
+sympathy far beyond her years, and she remembered the patient sweetness
+with which Constance, during the voyage over, forgiving her injustice,
+had ministered to her when she was suffering--had tenderly cared for
+little Damaris.
+
+Dame Eliza had the grace to feel a passing shame, though not enough to
+move her to repentance, to reparation.
+
+"Constance," Doctor Fuller said, "I am going to lay upon you a charge
+too heavy for your youth, but unescapable. You know how many of us have
+been laid to rest out yonder, pilgrims indeed, their pilgrimage over.
+Many more are to follow them. Mistress Standish among the first, but
+there are many whose end I see at hand. I fear the spring will find us a
+small colony, but those who remain must make up in courage for those who
+have left them. I want you to undertake to be my right hand. Priscilla
+Mullins hath already lost her mother, and her father and her brother
+will not see the spring. Yet she keeps her steady heart. She will
+prepare me such remedies as I can command here. Truth to tell, the
+supply I brought with me is running low; I did not allow for the need of
+so many of one kind. Priscilla is reliable; steady in purpose, memory,
+and hand. She will see to the remedies. But you, brave Constance, will
+you be my medical student, visiting my patients, lingering to see that
+my orders are carried out, nursing, sustaining? In a word do what you
+have already done since we landed, but on a greater scale, as an
+established duty?"
+
+"If I can," said Constance, simply.
+
+"You can; there is no one else that I can count upon. The older men
+among us are dying, leaving the affairs of the colony to be carried on
+by the young ones. In like manner I must call upon so young a girl as
+you to be my assistant. The older women are doing, and must do, still
+more important work in preparing the nourishment on which these lives
+depend and which the young ones are not proficient to prepare."
+
+Doctor Fuller looked smilingly toward Dame Eliza as he said this, as if
+he feared her taking offence at Constance's promotion, and sought to
+placate her.
+
+Mistress Hopkins gave no sign of knowing that he had turned to her, but
+she said to Damaris, as if by chance: "This broth may do more than herb
+brews toward curing, though your mother is not a physician's aid," and
+Doctor Fuller knew that he had been right.
+
+A week later, though Humility Cooper was recovering, many more had
+fallen ill, and several had died.
+
+It was late in January; the winter was set in full of wrath against
+those who had dared array themselves to defy its power in the
+wilderness, but the sun shone brightly, though without warmth-giving
+mercy, upon Plymouth.
+
+There was an armed truce between Giles and his father. The boy would not
+beg his father's pardon for having defied him. His love for his father
+had been of the nature of hero-worship, and now, turned to bitterness,
+it increased the strength of his pride, smarting under false accusation,
+to resist his father.
+
+On the other hand Stephen Hopkins, high-tempered, strong of will, was
+angry and hurt that his son refused to justify himself, or to plead with
+him. So the elder and the younger, as Constance had said, too much
+alike, were at a deadlock of suffering and anger toward each other.
+
+Stephen Hopkins was beginning his house on what he had named Leyden
+Street, in memory of the pilgrims' refuge in Holland, though only by the
+eyes of faith could a street be discerned to bear the name. Like all
+else in Plymouth colony, Leyden Street was rather a matter of prophecy
+than actuality.
+
+Giles was helping to build the house. All day he worked in silence,
+bearing the cold without complaint, but in no wise evincing the
+slightest interest in what he did. At night, in spite of the stringent
+laws of the Puritan colony, Giles contrived often to slip away with John
+Billington into the woods. John Billington's father, who was as unruly
+as his boys, connived at these escapades. He was perpetually quarrelling
+with Myles Standish, whose duty it was to enforce the law, and who did
+that duty without relenting, although by all the colonists, except the
+Billingtons, he was loved as well as respected.
+
+Early one morning Constance hurried out of the community house, tears
+running down her cheeks, to meet Captain Myles coming toward it.
+
+"Why, pretty Constance, don't grieve, child!" said the Plymouth captain,
+heartily.
+
+"Giles hath come to no harm, I warrant you, though he has spent the
+night again with that harum-scarum Jack Billington, and this time
+Francis Billington, too."
+
+"Oh, Captain Standish, it is not Giles! I forgot Giles," gasped
+Constance.
+
+"Rose?" exclaimed the captain, sharply.
+
+Constance bent her head. "She is passing. I came to seek you," she said,
+and together she and the captain went to Rose's side.
+
+They found Doctor Fuller there holding Rose's hand as she lay with
+closed eyes, breathing lightly. In his other hand he held his watch
+measuring the brief moments left, in which Rose Standish should be a
+part of time. Mary Brewster, the elder's wife, held up a warning finger
+not to disturb Rose, but Doctor Fuller looked quietly toward Captain
+Standish.
+
+"It matters not now, Myles," he said. "You cannot harm her. There are
+but few moments left."
+
+Myles Standish sprang forward, fell upon his knees, and raised Rose in
+his arms.
+
+"Rose of the world, my English blossom, what have I done to bring thee
+here?" he sobbed, with a strong man's utter abandonment of grief, and
+with none of the Puritan habit of self-restraint.
+
+"Wherever thou hadst gone, I would have chosen, my husband! I loved
+thee, Myles, I loved thee Myles!" she said, so clearly that everyone
+heard her sweet voice echo to the farthest corner of the room, and for
+the last time.
+
+For with that supreme effort to comfort her husband, disarming his
+regret, Rose Standish died.
+
+They bore Rose's body, so light that it was scarce a burden to the two
+men who carried it as in a litter, forth to the spot upon the hillside
+whither they had already made so many similar processions, which was
+fast becoming as thickly populated as was that portion of the colony
+occupied by the living.
+
+But as the sun mounted higher, although the March winds cut on some
+days, then as now they do in March, yet, then as now, there were soft
+and dreamy days under the ascending sun's rays, made more effective by
+the moderating sea and flat sands.
+
+The devastating diseases of winter began to abate; the pale, weak
+remnants of the _Mayflower's_ passengers crept out to walk with a sort
+of wonder upon the earth which was new to them, and which they had so
+nearly quitted that nothing, even of those aspects of things that most
+recalled the home land, seemed to them familiar.
+
+The men began to break the soil for farming, and to bring forth and
+discuss the grain which they had found hidden by the savages--most
+fortunately, for without it there would have been starvation to look
+forward to after all that they had endured, since no supplies from
+England had yet come after them.
+
+There was talk of the _Mayflower's_ return; she had lain all winter in
+Plymouth harbour because the Pilgrims had required her shelter and
+assistance. Soon she was to depart, a severance those ashore dreaded,
+albeit there was well-grounded lack of confidence in the honesty of her
+captain, Jones, whom the more outspoken among the colonists denounced
+openly as a rascal.
+
+Little Damaris was fretful, as she so often was, one afternoon early in
+March; the child was not strong and consequently was peevish. Constance
+was trying to amuse her, sitting with the child, warmly wrapped from the
+keen wind, in the warmth of the sunshine behind the southern wall of the
+community house.
+
+"Tell me a story, Constance," begged Damaris, though it was not "a
+story," but several that Constance had already told her. "Make a fairy
+story. I won't tell Mother you did. Fairy stories are not lies, no
+matter what they say, are they, Connie? I know they are not true and you
+tell me they are not true, so why are they lies? Why does Mother say
+they are lies? Are they bad, are they, Connie? Tell me one, anyway; I
+won't tell her."
+
+"Ah, little Sister, I would rather not do things that we cannot tell
+your mother about," said Constance. "I do not think a fairy story is
+wrong, because we both know it is make-believe, that there are no
+fairies, but your mother thinks them wrong, and I do not want you to do
+what you will not tell her you do. Suppose you tell me a story, instead?
+That would be fairer; only think how many, many stories I have told you,
+and how long it is since you have told me the least little word of one!"
+
+"Well," agreed Damaris, but without enthusiasm. "What shall I tell you
+about? Not a Bible one."
+
+"No, perhaps not," Constance answered, looking lazily off to sea. Then,
+because she was looking seaward, she added:
+
+"Shall it be one about a sailor? That ought to be an interesting story."
+
+"A true sailor, or a made-up one?" asked Damaris, getting aroused to her
+task.
+
+"Do you know one about a real sailor?" Constance somewhat sleepily
+inquired.
+
+"Here is a true one," announced Damaris.
+
+"Once upon a time there was a sailor, and he sailed on a ship named the
+_Mayflower_. And he came in. And he said: How are you, little girl? And
+I said: I am pretty well, but my name is Damaris Hopkins. And he said:
+What a nice name. And I said: Yes, it is. And he said: Where is your
+folks? and I said: I don't know where my mother went out of the cabin
+just this minute. But my sister was around, and my brother Giles was
+here, fixing my hammock, 'cause it hung funny and let me roll over on
+myself and folded me hurt. And my other brother couldn't go nowheres
+'tall, because he was born when we was sailing here, and he can't walk.
+And the sailor man said: Yes, there were two babies on the ship when we
+came that we didn't have when we started, and show me your hammock. And
+I did, and he said it was a nice ham----Constance, what's the matter? I
+felt you jump, and you look scared. Is it Indians? Connie, Connie,
+don't let 'em get me!"
+
+"No, no, child, there aren't any Indians about," Constance tried to
+laugh. "Did I jump? Sometimes people do jump when they almost fall
+asleep, and I was just as sleepy as a fireside cat when you began to
+tell me the story. Now I am not one bit sleepy! That is the most
+interesting story I have heard almost--yes, I think quite--in all my
+life! And it is a true one?"
+
+"Yes, every bit true," said Damaris, proudly.
+
+"And the sailor went into the cabin, and saw your hammock, and said it
+was a nice one, did he? Well, so it is a nice one! Did your mother see
+the man?" asked Constance, trying to hide her impatience.
+
+"No," Damaris shook her head, decidedly. "Mother was coming, but the man
+just put his hand in and set my hammock swinging. Then he went out, and
+Mother was stopping and she didn't see him. And neither did I, not any
+more, ever again."
+
+"Did you tell your mother about this sailor?" Constance inquired.
+
+"Oh, no," sighed Damaris. "I didn't tell her. She doesn't like stories
+so much as we do. I tell you all my stories, and you tell me all yours,
+don't we, Constance? I didn't tell Mother. She says: 'That's Hopkins to
+like stories, and music, and art.' What's art, Connie? And she says:
+'You don't get those idle ways from my side, so don't let me hear any
+foolish talk, for you will be punished for idle talk.' What's that,
+Connie?"
+
+"Oh, idle talk is--idle talk is hard to explain to you, little Damaris!
+It is talk that has nothing to it, unless it may have something harmful
+to it. You'll understand when you are old enough to make what you do
+really matter. But this has not been idle talk to-day! Far, far from
+idle talk was that fine story you told me! Suppose we keep that story
+all to ourselves, not tell it to anyone at all, will you please, my
+darling little sister? Then, perhaps, some day, I will ask you to tell
+it to Father! Would not that be a great day for Damaris? But only if you
+don't tell it to any one till then, not to your mother, not to any one!"
+Constance insisted, hoping to impress the child to the point of secrecy,
+yet not to let her feel how much Constance herself set upon this
+request.
+
+"I won't! I won't tell it to any one; not to Mother, not to any one,"
+Damaris repeated the form of her vow. Then she looked up into
+Constance's face with a puzzled frown.
+
+"But you wouldn't tell a fairy story, because you said you didn't want
+things I couldn't tell mother! And now you say I mustn't tell her about
+my story!" she said.
+
+Constance burst out laughing, and hugged Damaris to her, hiding in the
+child's hood a merrier face than she had worn for many, many a day.
+
+"You have caught me, little Damaris!" she cried. "Caught me fairly! But
+that was a _fairy_ story, don't you see? This isn't, this is true. So
+this is not to be told, not now, do you see?"
+
+Damaris said "yes," slowly, with the frown in her smooth little brow
+deepening. It was puzzling; she did not really see, but since Constance
+expected her to see she said "yes," and felt curiously bewildered.
+However, what Constance said was to her small half-sister not merely
+law, but gospel. Constance was always right, always the most lovable,
+the most delightful person whom Damaris knew.
+
+"All right, Connie. I won't tell anyone my sailor-man story," she said
+at last, clearing up.
+
+"Just now," Constance supplemented her. "Some day you shall tell it,
+Damaris! Some day I shall want you to tell it! And now, little Sister,
+will you go into the house and tell Oceanus to hurry up and grow big
+enough to run about, because the world, our new world, is getting to be
+a lovely place in the spring sunshine, and he must grow big enough to
+enjoy it as fast as he can? I must find Giles; I have something
+beautiful, beautiful to tell him!"
+
+She kissed Damaris before setting her on her feet, and the child kissed
+her in return, clinging to her.
+
+"You are so funny, Constance!" she said, in great satisfaction with her
+sister's drollery in a world that had been filled with gloom and illness
+for what seemed to so young a child, almost all her life.
+
+"Ah, I want to be, Damaris! I want to be funny, and happy, and glad! Oh,
+I want to be!" cried Constance, and ran away at top speed with a rare
+relapse into her proper age and condition.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+The Persuasive Power of Justice and Violence
+
+
+John Billington had been forced reluctantly to work on the houses
+erecting in the Plymouth plantation.
+
+He was not lazy, but he was adventuresome, and steady employment held
+for him no attraction. Since Captain Standish and the others in
+authority would deal with him if he tried to shirk his share of daily
+work, John made it as bearable as possible by joining himself to Giles
+in the building of the Hopkins house. Constance knew that she should
+find the two boys building her future home, and thither she ran at her
+best speed, and Constance could run like a nymph.
+
+"Oh, Giles!" she panted, coming up to the two amateur carpenters, and
+rejoicing that they were alone.
+
+"Oh, Con!" Giles echoed, turning on his ladder to face her, half sitting
+on a rung. "What's forward? Hath the king sent messengers calling me
+home to be prime minister? Sorry to disappoint His Royal Highness, but I
+can't go. I'd liefer be a trapper!"
+
+"And that's what your appointment is!" triumphed Constance. "You're to
+trap big game, no less than a human rascal! Oh, Giles and Jack, do hear
+what I've got to tell you!"
+
+"But for us to hear, you must tell, Con!" John Billington reminded her.
+"I'll bet a golden doubloon you've got wind of the missing papers!"
+
+"We don't bet, Jack, but if we did you'd win your wager," Constance
+laughed. "Damaris told me 'a true story,' and now I'm going to tell it
+to you. Fancy that little person having this story tucked away in her
+brain all these weary days!"
+
+And Constance related Damaris's entertainment of her, to which John
+Billington listened with many running comments of tongue and whistled
+exclamations, but Giles in perfect silence, betraying no excitement.
+
+"Here's a merry chance, Giles!" John cried as soon as Constance ended.
+"What with savages likely to visit us and robbers for us to hunt, why
+life in the New World may be bearable after all!"
+
+Giles ignored his jubilant comment.
+
+"I shall go out to the _Mayflower_ and get the packet," he said. "It is
+too late to-day, but in the morning early I shall make it. I suppose you
+will go with me, Jack?"
+
+"Safe to suppose it," said John. "I'd swim after you if you started
+without me."
+
+"Won't you take Captain Standish? I mean won't you ask him to help you?"
+asked Constance, anxiously. "It is sufficient matter to engage him, and
+he is our protector in all dangers."
+
+"We need no protection, little Sis," said Giles, loftily. "It hath been
+my experience that a just cause is sufficient. We have suspected the
+master of the _Mayflower_ of trickery all along."
+
+Constance could not forbear a smile at her brother's worldly-wise air of
+deep knowledge of mankind, but nevertheless she wished that "the right
+arm of the colony" might be with the boys to strike for them if need
+were.
+
+It was with no misgiving as to their own ability, but with the highest
+glee, that Giles and John made their preparations to set forth just
+before dawn.
+
+They kept their own counsel strictly and warned Constance not to talk.
+
+There was not much to be done to make ready, merely to see that the
+small boat, built by the boys for their own use, was tight, and to tuck
+out of sight under her bow seat a heavy coat in case the east
+wind--which the pilgrims had soon learned was likely to come in upon
+them sharply on the warmest day--blew up chillingly.
+
+John Billington owned, by his father's reckless indulgence, a pistol
+that was his chief treasure; a heavy, clumsy thing, difficult to hold
+true, liable to do the unexpected, the awkward progenitor of the pretty
+modern revolver, but a pistol for all its defects, and the apple of
+John's eye. This he had named Bouncing Bully, invariably spoke of it as
+"he", and felt toward it and treated it not merely as his arms, but as
+his companion in arms.
+
+Bouncing Bully was to make the third member of the party; he accompanied
+John, hidden with difficulty because of his bulk, in the breast of his
+coat, when he crept out without disturbing his father and Francis, to
+join Giles at the spot on the shore where their flat-bottomed row boat
+was pulled up.
+
+He found Giles awaiting him, watching the sands in a crude hour glass
+which he had himself constructed.
+
+"I've been waiting an hour," Giles said as John came up. "I know you are
+not late, but all the same here I have stood while this glass ran out,
+with ten minutes more since I turned it again."
+
+"Well, I'm here now; take hold and run her out," said John, seizing the
+boat's bow and bracing to shove her.
+
+"Row out. I'll row back," commanded Giles as he and John swung over the
+side of the boat out of the waves into which they had waded.
+
+They did not talk as they advanced upon the _Mayflower_ which lay at
+anchor in the harbour. They had agreed upon boarding her with as little
+to announce their coming as possible. As it chanced, there being no need
+of guarding against surprise, there was no one on deck when the boys
+made their boat fast to the ship's cable, and clambered on deck--save
+one round-faced man who was swabbing the deck to the accompaniment of
+his droning a song, tuneless outside his own conception of it.
+
+"Lord bless and save us but you dafted me, young masters!" this man
+exclaimed when Giles and John appeared; he leaned against the rail with
+the air of a fine lady, funny to see in one so stoutly stalwart.
+
+"I didna know ye at sight; now I see 'tis Master Giles and Master John
+Billington, whose pranks was hard on us crossing."
+
+"You are not the man we want," said Giles, haughtily, trusting to
+assurance to win his end. "Fetch me that man who goes in and about the
+cabin at times, the one that stands well with Jones, the ship's master."
+
+This last was a gamble on chance, but Giles felt sure of his
+conclusions, that the captain was at the bottom of the loss of the
+papers, the actual thief his tool.
+
+"Aye, I know un," said the man, nodding sagely, proud of his quickness.
+"'Tis George Heaton, I make no doubt. The captain gives him what is
+another, better man's due. Master Jones gives him his ear and his
+favour. 'Tis George, slick George, you want, of that I'm certain." He
+nodded many times as he ended.
+
+"Likely thing," agreed Giles. "Fetch him."
+
+The deck cleaner departed in a heavy fashion, and returned shortly in
+company with a wiry, slender young man, having a handsome face, a quick
+roving eye, crafty, but clever.
+
+"Ah, George, do you remember me?" asked Giles. "Don't dare to offer me
+your hand, my man, for I'd not touch it."
+
+"I may be serving as a sailor, but I'm as good a gentleman born as you,"
+retorted Heaton, flushing angrily.
+
+"Decently born you may be; of that I know nothing. Pity is it that you
+have gone so far from your birthday," said Giles. "But as good a
+gentleman as I am you are not, nor as anyone, as this honest fellow
+here. For blood or no blood, a thief is far from a gentleman."
+
+George Heaton made a step forward with upraised fist, but Giles looked
+at him contemptuously, and did not fall back.
+
+"No play acting here. Give me the papers you stole out of my
+stepmother's care, out of my little sister's sleeping hammock, weeks
+agone," said Giles, coolly. "Your game is up. For some reason the child
+did not tell us of your act till now; now she hath spoken. Fortunately
+the ship hath lingered for you to be dealt with before she took you back
+to England. Hand over the papers, Heaton, if you ever hope to be nearer
+England than the arm of the tree from which you shall hang on the New
+England coast, unless you restore your booty."
+
+Heaton looked into Giles's angry eyes and quailed. The boy had grown up
+during the hard winter, and Heaton recognized his master; more than
+that, he had the cowardice that had made him the ready tool of Captain
+Jones--the cowardice of the man who lives by tricks, trusting them to
+carry him to success--who will not stand by his colours because he has
+no standard of loyalty.
+
+"I haven't got your father's papers, Giles Hopkins," he growled,
+dropping his eyes.
+
+"You could have said much that I would not have believed, but that I
+believe," said Giles. "Do you know what Master Jones did with them when
+you gave them over to him, you miserable cat's paw?"
+
+"How about giving the cat to the cat's paw, Giles?" suggested John,
+grinning in huge enjoyment of George Heaton's instant, sailor's
+appreciation of his joke and the offices of "the cat" with which sailors
+were lashed in punishment.
+
+"I hope it will not be necessary. If Captain Standish comes with a
+picked number of our men to get these papers, there will be worse beasts
+than the cat let loose on the _Mayflower_. Lead me to the captain,
+Heaton, and remember it will go hard with you if you let him lead you
+into denial of the crime you committed for him," said Giles, with such a
+dignity as filled rollicking John, who wanted to turn the adventure into
+a frolic, with admiration for his comrade.
+
+"Stand by you and Jones will deal with me. Stand by him and you threaten
+me with your men, led by that fighting Standish of yours. Between you
+where does George Heaton stand?" asked Heaton sullenly, turning,
+nevertheless, to do Giles's bidding.
+
+"You should have thought of this before," said Giles, coolly. "There
+never yet was wisdom and safety in rascality."
+
+Captain Jones, whose connection with the pilgrims was no more than that
+he had been hired by them to bring them to the New World, was a man
+whose honesty many of his passengers mistrusted, but against whom, as
+against the captain of the _Speedwell_ that had turned back, there was
+no proof.
+
+He was coming out of his cabin to his breakfast when Heaton brought the
+boys to him; he started visibly at the sight of Giles, but recovered
+himself instantly and greeted the lads affably.
+
+"Good morning, my erstwhile passengers and new colonists," he said. "I
+have wondered that at least the younger members of your community did
+not visit the ship. Welcome!" He held out his hand, but neither Giles
+nor John seemed to see it.
+
+"Master Jones," said Giles, "there is no use wasting time and phrases.
+This man, at your orders, stole out of the women's cabin on this ship
+the papers left by my father in his wife's care. He has given them up to
+you. The story has only now--yesterday--come to our knowledge. Give me
+those papers."
+
+"What right have you to accuse me, _me_, the master of this ship?"
+demanded Captain Jones, blustering. "Have a care that I don't throw you
+overboard. Take your boat and be gone before harm comes to you!"
+
+"You would throw more than us overboard if you dared to touch us,"
+returned Giles. "Nor is it either of us to whom harm threatens. Come,
+Master Jones, those papers! My father, none of the colony, knows of your
+crime. What do you think will befall you when they do know it? Hand us
+the papers, not one lacking, and we will let you go back to England free
+and safe. Refuse----Well, it's for you to choose, but I'd not hesitate
+in your place." Giles shrugged his shoulders, half turning away, as if
+after all the result of his mission did not concern him.
+
+John saw a telepathic message exchanged between the captain and his
+tool. The question wordlessly asked Heaton whether the theft of the
+papers, their possession by the captain, actually was known, and
+Heaton's eyes answering: "Yes!"
+
+Captain Jones swallowed hard, as if he were swallowing a great dose, as
+he surely was. After a moment's thought he spoke:
+
+"See here, Giles Hopkins, I always liked you, and now I father admire
+you for your courage in thus boarding my ship and bearding me. I admit
+that I hold the papers. But, as of course you can easily see, I am
+neither a thief nor a receiver of stolen goods. My reason for wanting
+those papers was no common one. I am willing to restore to you those
+which relate to your family inheritance, your father's personal papers,
+but those which relate to Plymouth colony I want. I can use them to my
+advantage in England. Take this division of the documents and go back
+with my congratulations on your conduct."
+
+"I would liefer your blame than your praise, sir," said Giles,
+haughtily, in profound disgust with the man. "It needs no saying that my
+father would part with any private advantage sooner than with what had
+been entrusted to him. First and most I demand the Plymouth colony
+documents. Get the papers, not one lacking, and let me go ashore. The
+wide harbour's winds are not strong enough for me to breathe on your
+ship. It sickens me."
+
+Captain Jones gave the boy a malevolent look.
+
+"A virtue of necessity," he muttered, turning to go.
+
+"And your sole virtue?" suggested Giles to his retreating back.
+
+Captain Jones was gone a long time. The boys fumed with impatience and
+feared harm to the papers, but George Heaton grinned at them with the
+utmost cheerfulness. He had completely sloughed off all share in the
+theft and plainly enjoyed his superior's discomfiture, being of that
+order of creatures whose malice revels in the mischances of others.
+
+It proved that the captain's delay was due to his reluctance to comply
+with Giles's demand. He came at last, slowly, bearing in his hand the
+packet enveloped in oilskin which Giles remembered having seen in his
+father's possession.
+
+"I must do your bidding, youngster," he said angrily, "for you can harm
+me otherwise. But what guarantee have I, if I hand these papers to you,
+that you will keep the secret?"
+
+"I never said that the secret would be kept; I said that you should
+suffer no harm. An innocent person is accused of this theft; the truth
+must be known. But I can and do promise you that you shall not be
+molested; I can answer for that. As to guarantee, you know my father,
+you know the Plymouth pilgrims, you know me. Is there any doubt that we
+are honourable, conscientious, God-fearing, the sort that faithfully
+keep their word?" demanded Giles.
+
+"No. I grant you that. Take your packet," said Captain Jones, yielding
+it.
+
+"By your leave I will examine it," said Giles unfastening its straps.
+
+"Do you doubt me?" blustered the captain.
+
+"Not a whit," laughed John with a great burst of mirth, before Giles
+could answer.
+
+"Why should we doubt you? Haven't you shown us exactly what you are?"
+
+Giles turned over the papers one by one. None was missing. He folded
+them and replaced them in their case, buckling its straps.
+
+"All the papers are here," he said. "John, we'll be off. This is our
+final visit to the _Mayflower_, Master Jones--unless I ship with you for
+England. Good voyage, as I hear they say in France. Hope you'll catch a
+bit of Puritan conscience before you leave the harbour."
+
+Captain Jones followed the boys to the side of the ship where they were
+to reembark in their rowboat. At every step he grew angrier, the veins
+swelled in his forehead which was only a shade less purple-red than his
+cheeks. His defeat was a sore thing, the disappointment of the plans
+which he had laid upon the possession of the stolen documents became
+more vividly realized with each moment, and the fact that two lads had
+thus conquered him and were going away with their prize infuriated him.
+
+Giles had swung himself down into the boat and was shipping the oars,
+but John halted for a moment in a stuffy corner to gloat over the
+captain's empurpled face and to dally with a temptation to add
+picturesqueness to their departure. The temptation got the upper hand of
+him, though John usually held out both hands to mischief.
+
+He drew Bouncing Bully from his breast and levelled it.
+
+"Stop! Gunpowder!" screamed the captain, choking with fear and rage, and
+pointing at a small keg that stood hard by.
+
+"I won't hit it," John grinned, delightedly. "Let's see how _my_
+gunpowder is." With a flourish the mad boy fired a shot into the wall of
+the tiny cabin, regardless of the fact that the likely explosion of the
+keg of gunpowder would have blown up the _Mayflower_ and him with her.
+
+The captain fell forward on his face, the men who were at work splicing
+ropes in the cubby-like cabin cowered speechless, their faces ashen.
+
+John whooped with joy and fled, leaping into the rowboat which he nearly
+upset.
+
+"What?" demanded Giles. "Who shot? Did he attack you, Jack?"
+
+"Who? No one attacked me. I shot. Zounds, they were scared! In that
+pocket of a cabin, with a keg of gunpowder sitting close," chuckled
+John.
+
+"What in the name of all that's sane did you do that for?" cried Giles.
+"Scared! I should say with reason! Why, Jack Billington, you might be
+blown to bits by this time, ship, men, yourself, and all!"
+
+"I might be," assented Jack, coolly. "I'm not. Giles, you should have
+seen your shipmaster Jones! Flat on his face and fair blubbering with
+fear and fury! He loves us not, my Giles! I doubt his days are dull on
+the _Mayflower_, so long at anchor. 'Twas but kind to stir up a lively
+moment. Here, give me an oar! Even though you said you would row back, I
+feel like helping you. Wait till I settle Bouncing Bully. He's digging
+me in the ribs, to remind me of the joke we played 'em, I've no doubt;
+but he hurts. That's better. Now for shore and your triumph, old Giles!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+Deep Love, Deep Wound
+
+
+Constance had escaped from Humility Cooper and Elizabeth Tilley who had
+affectionately joined her when she had appeared on her way to the beach
+to await Giles's return.
+
+Constance invented a question that must be asked Elder Brewster because
+she knew that the girls, though they revered him, feared him, and never
+willingly went where they must reply to his gravely kind attempts at
+conversation with them. "I surely feel like a wicked hypocrite," sighed
+Constance, watching her friends away as she turned toward the house that
+sheltered the elder.
+
+"What would dear little Humility say if she knew I had tried to get rid
+of her? Or Elizabeth either! But it isn't as though I had not wanted
+them for a less good reason. I do love them dearly! I must meet Giles
+and hear his news as soon as I can, and it can't be told before another.
+Mercy upon us, what _was_ it that I had thought of to ask Elder
+Brewster! I've forgotten every syllable of it! Well, mercy upon us! And
+suppose he sees me hesitating here! I know! I'll confess to him that I
+was wishing I was in Warwickshire hearing Eastertide alleluias sung in
+my cousins' church, and ask him if it was sinful. He loves to correct
+me, dear old saint!"
+
+Dimpling with mischief Constance turned her head away from a possible
+onlooker in the house to pull her face down into the proper expression
+for a youthful seeker for guidance. Then, quite demure and serious, with
+downcast eyes, she turned and went into the house.
+
+Elder William Brewster kept her some time. She was nervously anxious to
+escape, fearing to miss the boys' arrival. But Elder Brewster was
+deeply interested in pretty Constance Hopkins, in whom, in spite of her
+sweet docility and patient daily performance of her hard tasks, he
+discerned glimpses of girlish liveliness that made him anxious and which
+he felt must be corrected to bring the dear girl into perfection.
+
+Constance decided that she was expiating fully whatever fault there
+might have been in feigning an errand to Elder Brewster to get rid of
+the girls as she sat uneasily listening to that good man's exposition of
+the value of alleluias in the heart above those sung in church, and the
+baseness of allowing the mind to look back for a moment at the "shackles
+from which she was freed." Good Elder Brewster ended by reading from his
+roughened brown leather-covered Bible the story of Lot's wife to which
+Constance--who had heard it many times, it being an appropriate theme
+for the pilgrim band to ponder, sick in heart and body as they had been
+so long--did not harken.
+
+At last she was dismissed with a fatherly hand laid on her shining head,
+and a last warning to keep in mind how favoured above her English
+cousins she had been to be chosen a daughter in Israel to help found a
+kingdom of righteousness. Constance ran like the wind down the road,
+stump-bordered, the beginning of a street, and came down upon the beach
+just as the boys reached it and their boat bumped up on the sand under
+the last three hard pulls they had given the oars in unison.
+
+"Oh! Giles, oh, Giles, oh Jack!" cried Constance fairly dancing under
+her excitement.
+
+"Oh, Con, oh, Con! Oh, Constantia!" mocked John, hauling away on the
+painter and getting the boat up to her tying stake.
+
+"What happened you? Have you news?" Constance implored them.
+
+"We heard no especial news, Con," said Giles. "I'm not sure we asked for
+any. We have this instead; will that suffice you?"
+
+He took from his breast the packet of papers and offered it to her.
+
+"Oh, Giles!" sighed Constance, clasping her hands, tears of relief
+springing to her eyes. "All of them? Are they all safe? Thank Heaven!"
+she added as Giles nodded.
+
+"Did you have trouble getting them? Who held them? Tell me everything!"
+
+"Give me a chance Constantia Chatter," said Giles, using the name
+Constance had been dubbed when, a little tot, she ceaselessly used her
+new accomplishment of talking. "We had no trouble, no. We found the
+thief and made him confess what we already knew, that he was the
+master's cat's paw. Jones had to disgorge; he could not hold the papers
+without paying too heavy a penalty. So here they are. Why don't you take
+them?"
+
+"I take them?" puzzled Constance, accepting them as Giles thrust them
+into her hand. "Do you want me to put them away for you? Are you not
+coming to dinner? There is not enough time to go to work before noon.
+The sun was not two hours from our noon mark beside the house when I
+left it."
+
+"I suppose I am going to dinner," said Giles. "I am ready enough for it.
+No, I don't want you to put the papers away for me. You can do with them
+what you like. I should advise your giving them to Father, since they
+are his, but that is as you will. I give them into your hands."
+
+"Giles, Giles!" cried Constance, in distress, instantly guessing that
+this meant that Giles was intending to hold aloof from a part in
+rejoicing over the recovery.
+
+"Give them to Father yourself. How proud of you he will be that you
+ferreted out the thief and went so bravely, with only John, to demand
+them for him! It is not my honour, and I must not take it."
+
+"Oh, as to honour, you got the first clue from Damaris, if there's
+honour in it, but for that I do not care. I did the errand when you sent
+me on it, or opened my way. However it came about I will not give the
+papers to my father. In no wise will I stoop to set myself right in his
+eyes. Perhaps he will say that the whole story is false, that I did not
+get the papers on the ship, but had them hidden till fear and an uneasy
+conscience made me deliver them up, and that you are shielding your
+brother," said Giles, frowning as he turned from Constance.
+
+"And I thought now everything would be right!" groaned the girl--her
+lips quivering, tears running down her cheeks. "Giles, dear Giles;
+don't, don't be so bitter, so unforgiving! It is not just to Father, not
+just to yourself, to me. It isn't _right_. Giles! Will you hold this
+grudge against the father you so loved, and forget all the years that
+went before, for a miserable day when he half harboured doubt of you,
+and that when he was torn by influence, tormented till he was hardly
+himself?"
+
+"Now, Constance, there is no need of your turning preacher," Giles said,
+harshly.
+
+"If you like to swallow insult, well and good. It does not matter about
+a girl, but a man's honour is his chiefest possession. Take the papers,
+and prate no more to me. My father wanted them; there they are. He
+suspected me of stealing them; I found the thief. That's all there is
+about it. What is there to-day to eat? An early row makes a man hungry.
+Art ready, Jack? We will go to the house, by your leave, pretty Sis.
+Sorry to see your eyes reddening, but better that than other harm."
+
+Constance hesitated as Giles went up the beach, taking John with him.
+For a moment she debated seeking Captain Standish, giving him the
+papers, and asking him to be intermediary between her father and this
+headstrong boy, who talked so largely of himself as "a man," and behaved
+with such wrong-headed, childish obstinacy. But a second thought
+convinced her that she herself might serve Giles better than the
+captain, and she took her way after her brother, beginning to hope, true
+to herself, that her father's pleasure in recovering the papers, his
+desire to make amends to Giles, would express itself in such wise that
+they would be drawn together closer than before the trouble arose.
+
+It was turning into a balmy day, after a chilly morning. Though only the
+middle of March the air was full of spring. In the community house, as
+Constance entered, she found her stepmother, and Mrs. White--each with
+her _Mayflower_-born baby held in one arm--busily setting forth the
+dinner, while Priscilla and Humility and Elizabeth helped them, and the
+smaller children, headed by Damaris, attempted to help, were sharply
+rebuked for getting in the way, subsided, but quickly darted up again to
+take a dish, or hand a knife which their inconsistent elders found
+needed.
+
+Several men--Mr. Hopkins, Mr. White; Mr. Warren, whose wife had not yet
+come from England; Doctor Fuller, in like plight; John and Francis
+Billington's father, John Alden and Captain Myles Standish, as a matter
+of course--were discussing planting of corn while awaiting the finishing
+touches to their carefully rationed noonday meal.
+
+"If you follow my counsel," the captain was saying, "you will plant over
+the spot where we have laid so many of our company. Thus far we hardly
+are aware of our savage neighbours, but with the warm weather they will
+come forth from their woodlands, and who knows what may befall us from
+them? Better, say I, conceal from them that no more than half of those
+who sailed hither are here to-day. Better hide from their eyes beneath
+the tall maize the graves on yonder hillside."
+
+"Well said, good counsel, Captain Myles," said Stephen Hopkins. "God's
+acre, the folk of parts of Europe call the enclosure of their dead. We
+will make our acre God's acre, planting it doubly for our protection, in
+grain for our winter need, concealment of our devastation."
+
+Suddenly the air was rent with a piercing shriek, and little Love
+Brewster, the Elder's seven-year-old son, came tumbling into the house,
+shaking and inarticulate with terror.
+
+Priscilla Mullins caught him into her lap and tried to sooth him and
+discover the cause of his fright, but he only waved his little hands
+frantically and sobbed beyond all possibility of guessing what words
+were smothered beneath the sobs.
+
+"Elder Brewster promised to let the child pass the afternoon with
+Damaris," began Mrs. Hopkins, but before she got farther John Alden
+started up.
+
+"Look there," he said. "Is it wonderful that Love finds the sight beyond
+him?"
+
+[Illustration: "'Look there,' said John Alden"]
+
+Stalking toward the house in all the awful splendour of paint, feathers,
+beads, and gaudy blanket came a tall savage. He had, of course, seen the
+child and realized his fright and that he had run to alarm the pilgrims,
+but not a whit did it alter the steady pace at which he advanced,
+looking neither to left nor to right, his arms folded upon his breast,
+no sign apparent of whether he came in friendship or in enmity.
+
+The first instinct of the colonists, in this first encounter with an
+Indian near to the settlement was to be prepared in case he came in
+enmity.
+
+Several of the men reached for the guns which hung ready on the walls,
+and took them down, examining their horns and rods as they handled them.
+But the savage, standing in the doorway, made a gesture full of calm
+dignity which the pilgrims rightly construed to mean salutation, and
+uttered a throaty sound that plainly had the same import.
+
+"Welcome!" hazarded Myles Standish advancing with outstretched hand upon
+the new-comer, uncertain how to begin his acquaintance, but hoping this
+might be pleasing. "Yes," said the Indian in English, to the boundless
+surprise of the Englishmen. "Yes, welcome, friend!" He took Captain
+Standish's hand.
+
+"Chief?" he asked. "Samoset," he added, touching his own breast, and
+thus introducing himself.
+
+"How in the name of all that is wonderful did he learn English!" cried
+Stephen Hopkins.
+
+"Yes, Samoset know," the Indian turned upon him, understanding. "White
+men ships fish far, far sunrise," he pointed eastward, and they knew
+that he was telling them that English fishermen had been known to him,
+whose fishing grounds lay toward the east.
+
+"'Tis true; our men have been far east and north of here," said Myles
+Standish, turning toward Stephen Hopkins, as to one who had travelled.
+
+"Humphrey Gilbert, but many since then," nodded Mr. Hopkins.
+
+"Big chief Squanto been home long time white men, he talk more Samoset,"
+said Samoset. "Squanto come see----." He waved his hand comprehendingly
+over his audience, to indicate whom Squanto intended to visit.
+
+"Well, womenfolk, you must find something better than you give us, and
+set it forth for our guest," said Stephen Hopkins. "Get out our English
+beer; Captain Myles I'll undertake, will join me in foregoing our
+portion to-morrow for him. And the preserved fruits; I'm certain he will
+find them a novelty. And you must draw on our store of trinkets for
+gifts. Lads--Giles, John, Francis--help the girls open the chest and
+make selection."
+
+Samoset betrayed no understanding of these English words, maintaining a
+stolid indifference while preparations for his entertainment went on.
+But he did full justice to the best that the colonists had to set before
+him and accepted their subsequent gifts with a fine air of noble
+condescension, as a monarch accepting tribute.
+
+Later with pipes filled with the refreshing weed from Virginia, which
+had circuitously found its way back to the New World, via England, the
+Plymouth men sat down to talk to Samoset.
+
+Limited as was his vocabulary, broken as was his speech, yet they
+managed to understand much of what he told them, valuable information
+relating to their Indian neighbours near by, to the state of the
+country, to climate and soil, and to the people of the forests farther
+north.
+
+Samoset went away bearing his gifts, with which, penetrating his
+reserve, the colonists saw that he was greatly pleased. He promised a
+speedy return, and to bring to them Squanto, from whose friendship and
+better knowledge of their speech and race evidently Samoset thought they
+would gain much.
+
+The younger men--Doctor Fuller, John Alden and others, needless to say
+Giles, John, and Francis Billington, under the conduct of Myles
+Standish--accompanied Samoset for a few miles on his return.
+
+The sun was dropping westward, the night promising to be as warmly kind
+as the day had been, and Constance slipped her hand into her father's
+arm as he stood watching their important guest's departure, under his
+escort's guardianship.
+
+"A little tiny walk with me, Father dear?" she hinted. "I like to watch
+the sunset redden the sands, and it is so warm and fine. Besides, I have
+something most beautiful to tell you!"
+
+"Good news, Con? This seems to be a day of good things," said her
+father, as Constance nodded hard. "The coming of yonder Indian seems to
+me the happiest thing that could well have befallen us. Given the
+friendship of our neighbouring tribes we have little to fear from more
+distant ones, and the great threat to our colony's continuance is
+removed. Well, I will walk with you child, but not far nor long. There
+is scant time for dalliance in our lives, you know."
+
+They went out, Constance first running to snatch her cloak and pull its
+deep hood over her hair as a precaution against a cold that the warm day
+might betray her into, and which she had good reason to fear who had
+helped nurse the victims of the first months of the immigration.
+
+"The good news, Daughter?" hinted Mr. Hopkins after they had walked a
+short distance in silence.
+
+Constance laughed triumphantly, giving his arm a little shake. "I waited
+to see if you wouldn't ask!" she cried, "I knew you were just as
+curious, you men, as we poor women creatures--but of course in a big,
+manly way!" She pursed her lips and shook her head, lightly pinching her
+father to point her satire.
+
+"Have a care, Mistress Constantia!" her father warned her. "Curiosity is
+a weakness, even dangerous, but disrespect to your elders and betters,
+what is that?"
+
+"Great fun," retorted Constance.
+
+Her father laughed. He found his girl's playfulness, which she was
+recovering with the springtide and the relief from the heavy sorrow of
+the first weeks in Plymouth, refreshing amid the extreme seriousness of
+most of the people around him. "Proceed with your tidings, you saucy
+minx!" he said.
+
+"Very well then, Mr. Stephen Hopkins," Constance obeyed him, "what would
+you say if I were to tell you that there was news of your missing packet
+of papers?"
+
+Stephen Hopkins stopped short. "I should say thank God with all my
+heart, Constance, not merely because the loss was serious, but most of
+all because of Giles. Is it true?" he asked.
+
+"They are found!" cried Constance, jubilantly, "and it was Giles himself
+who faced the thief and forced him to give them up. It is a fine
+tale!" And she proceeded to tell it.
+
+Her father's relief, his pleasure, was evidently great, but to
+Constance's alarm as the story ended, his face settled into an
+expression of annoyance.
+
+"It is indeed good news, Constance, and I am grateful, relieved by it,"
+he said, having heard her to the end. "But why did not Giles tell me
+this himself, bring me the recovered packet? Would it not be natural to
+wish to confer upon me, himself, the happiness he had won for me, to
+hasten to me with his victory, still more that it clears him of the
+least doubt of complicity in the loss?"
+
+"Ah, no, Father! That is just the point of his not doing so!" cried
+Constance. "Giles is sore at heart that you felt there might be a doubt
+of him. He cannot endure it, nor seem to bring you proofs of his
+innocence. I suppose he does not feel like a boy, but like a man whose
+honour is questioned, and by--forgive me, Father, but I must make it
+clear--by one whose trust in him should be stronger than any other's."
+
+"Nonsense, Constantia!" Stephen Hopkins exploded, angrily. "What are we
+coming to if we cannot question our own children? Giles is not a man; he
+is a boy, and my boy, so I shall expect him to render me an account of
+his actions whenever, and however I demand it. I'll not stand for his
+pride, his assumption of injured dignity. Let him remember that! Thank
+God my son is an honest lad, as by all reason he should be. But though
+he is right as to the theft, he is wrong in his arrogance, and pride is
+as deadly a sin as stealing. I want no more of this nonsense."
+
+"Oh, Father dear," cried Constance, wringing her hands with her peculiar
+gesture when matters got too difficult for those small hands. "Please,
+please be kind to Giles! Oh, I thought everything would be all right now
+that the packet was recovered, and by him! Be patient with him, I beg
+you. He is not one that can be driven, but rather won by love to do your
+will. If you will convey to him that you regret having suspected him he
+will at once come back to be our own Giles."
+
+"Have a care, Constantia, that in your anxiety for your brother you do
+not fall into a share of his fault!" warned her father. "It is not for
+you to advise me in my dealing with my son. As to trying to placate him
+by anything like an apology: preposterous suggestion! That is not the
+way of discipline, my girl! Let Giles indicate to me his proper
+humility, his regret for taking the attitude that I am not in authority
+over him, free to demand of him any explanation, any evidence of his
+character I please. No, no, Constance! You mean well, but you are
+wrong."
+
+Thus saying, Mr. Hopkins turned on his heel to go back to the house, and
+Constance followed, no longer with her hand on her father's arm, but
+understanding the strong annoyance he felt toward Giles, and painfully
+conscious that her pleading for her brother had done less than no good.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+Seedtime of the First Spring
+
+
+Giles Hopkins and John and Francis Billington slept in the new house,
+now nearly finished, on Leyden Street. Therefore it happened that
+Stephen Hopkins did not see his son until the morning after the recovery
+of the papers.
+
+"Well, Giles," said his father, with a smile that Giles took to be
+mocking, but in which the father's hidden gratification really strove to
+escape, "so you played a man's part with the _Mayflower_ captain, at the
+same time proving yourself? I am glad to get my papers, boy, and glad
+that you have shown that you had no share in their loss, but only in
+their return. Henceforth be somewhat less insolent when appearances are
+against you; still better take care that appearances, facts as well, are
+in your favour."
+
+"Appearances are in the eye of the on-looker," said Giles, drawing
+himself up and flushing angrily, though, had he but seen it, love and
+pride in him shone in his father's eyes, though his tone and words were
+careless, gruff indeed.
+
+"If Dame Eliza is to be the glass through which you view me, then it
+matters not what course I follow, for you will not see it straight. Nor
+do I care to act to the end that you may not suspect me of being fit for
+hanging. A gentleman's honour needs no proving, or else is proved by his
+sword. And whatever you think of me, I can never defend myself thus
+against my father. A father may insult his son with impunity."
+
+"But a boy may not speak insultingly to his father with impunity, Master
+Giles Hopkins," said Stephen Hopkins, advancing close to the lad with
+his quick temper afire. "One word more of such nature as I just heard
+and I will have you publicly flogged, as you richly deserve, and as our
+community would applaud."
+
+Giles bowed, his face as angry as his father's, and passed on cutting
+the young sprouts along the road with a stick he carried. And thus the
+two burning hearts which loved each other--too similar to make
+allowances for each other when the way was open to their
+reconciliation--were further estranged than before.
+
+In the meantime Constance, Priscilla, and the younger girls, were
+starting out, tools in hand, baskets swinging on their arms, to prepare
+the first garden of the colony.
+
+"Thank--I mean I rejoice that we are not sent to work amid the graves on
+the hillside," said Priscilla, altering her form of expression to
+conform with the prescribed sobriety.
+
+"Oh, that is to be planted with the Indian corn, you know," said
+Constance. "It grows high, and will hide our graves. Why think of that,
+Prissy? I want to be happy." She began to hum a quaint air of her own
+making. She had by inheritance the gift of music, as the kindred gift of
+love and taste for all beauty, a gift that should never find expression
+in her new surroundings.
+
+Presently she found words for her small tune and sang them, swinging her
+basket in time with her singing and also swinging Humility Cooper's hand
+as she walked, not without some danger of dropping into a sort of dance
+step.
+
+This is what she sang:
+
+ Over seas lies England;
+ Still we find this wing-land;
+ Birds and bees and butterflies flit about us here.
+ Eastward lies our Mother,
+ Loved as is no other,
+ Yet here flowers blossom with the springing year.
+
+ We will plant a garden,
+ Eve-like, as the warden
+ Of the hope of men unborn, future of the race;
+ Tears that we were weeping,
+ Watering our keeping,
+ Till we make the New World joy's own dwelling place.
+
+Priscilla Mullins stopped short and looked with amazement on her younger
+companion.
+
+"Did you make that song, Constance?" she demanded, being used to the
+rhyming which Constance made to entertain the little ones.
+
+"It made itself, Pris," laughed Constance.
+
+"Well, I'm no judge of songs, and as to rhyming I could match cat and
+rat if it was put to me to do, but no more. Yet it seemeth me that is a
+pretty song, with exactly the truth for its burden, and it trippeth as
+sweetly as the robin whistles. Do you know, Constance, it seems to me to
+run more into smooth cadences than the Metrical Psalms themselves!"
+Priscilla dropped her voice as she said this, as if she hoped to be
+unheard by the vengeance which might swoop down on her.
+
+Constance's laugh rang out merrily, quite unafraid.
+
+"Oh, dear Prissy, the Metrical Version was not meant to run in smooth
+cadences!" she cried. "Do you see why we should not sing as the robin
+whistles, being young and God's creatures, surely not less than the
+birds? Priscilla Mullins, there is John Alden awaiting us in the very
+spot where we are to work! How did he happen there, when no other man is
+about?"
+
+"He spoke to me of helping us with the first heavy turning of the soil,"
+said Priscilla, exceedingly red and uncomfortable, but constrained to be
+truthful. "Oh, Constance, never look at me like that! Can I help it that
+Master Alden is so considerate of us?"
+
+"Sure-ly not!" declared Constance emphatically. "What about his
+returning home, Pris? He was hired but as cooper for the voyage, and
+would return. Will he go, think you?"
+
+"He seems not fully decided. He said somewhat to me of staying." Poor
+Priscilla looked more than miserable as she said this, yet was forced to
+laugh.
+
+"I will speak to my father and Captain Standish to get them to offer him
+work a-plenty this summer, so mayhap they can persuade him to let the
+_Mayflower_ sail without him--next week she goes. Or perhaps you could
+bring arguments to bear upon him, Priscilla! He never seems
+stiff-necked, nor unbiddable." Constance said this with a great effect
+of innocence, as if a new thought had struck her, and Priscilla had
+barely time to murmur:
+
+"Thou art a sad tease, Constance," before they came up with John Alden,
+who looked as embarrassed as Priscilla when he met Constance's dancing
+eyes.
+
+Nevertheless it was not long before John Alden and Priscilla Mullins
+were working together at a little distance apart from the rest, leaving
+Constance to dig and rake in company with Humility Cooper, Elizabeth
+Tilley, and the little girls. Thus at work they saw approaching from the
+end of the road that was lost in the woods beyond a small but imposing
+procession of tall figures, wrapped in gaudy colored blankets, their
+heads surmounted with banded feathers which streamed down their backs,
+softly waving in the light breeze.
+
+"Oh, dear, oh, dear, Connie, they are savages!" whispered Damaris
+looking about as if wishing that a hole had been dug big enough to hide
+her instead of the small peas which she was planting.
+
+"But they are friendly savages, small sister," said Constance. "See,
+they carry no bows and arrows. Do you know, girls, I believe this is the
+great chief Massasoit, of whom Samoset spoke, promising us his visit
+soon, and that with him may be Squanto, the Indian who speaks English!
+Don't you think we may be allowed to postpone the rest of the work to
+see the great conference which will take place if this is Massasoit?"
+
+"Indeed, Constance, my back calls me to cease louder than any savage,"
+said Humility, her hand on her waist, twisting her small body from side
+to side. "I have been wishing we might dare stop, but I couldn't bring
+myself to say so."
+
+"You have not recovered strength for this bending and straining work, my
+dear," said Constance in her grandmotherly way. "Priscilla, Priscilla!
+John Alden, see!" she called, and the distant pair faced her with a
+visible start.
+
+She pointed to the savages, and Priscilla and John hastened to her,
+thinking her afraid.
+
+"Do you suppose it may be Massasoit and Squanto?" Constance asked at
+once.
+
+"Let us hope so," said John Alden, looking with eager interest at the
+Indians. "We hope to make a treaty with Massasoit."
+
+"Before you sail?" inquired Constance, guilelessly.
+
+"Why, I am decided to cast my lot in with the colony, sweet Constance,"
+said John, trying, but failing, to keep from looking at Priscilla.
+
+"Pris?" cried Constance, and waited.
+
+Priscilla threw her arms around Constance and hid her face, crying on
+her shoulder.
+
+"My people are all dead, Connie, and I alone survive of us all on the
+_Mayflower_! Even my brother Joseph died; you know it, Connie! Do you
+blame me?" she sobbed.
+
+"Oh, Prissy, dear Prissy!" Constance laughed at this piteous appeal.
+"Just as though you did not find John Alden most likeable when we were
+sailing and no one had yet died! And just as though you had to explain
+liking him! As though we did not all hold him dear and long to keep him
+with us! John Alden, I never, never would sit quiet under such insult!
+You funny Priscilla! What are you crying for? Aren't you happy? tell me
+that!"
+
+"So happy I must cry," sobbed Priscilla, but drying her eyes
+nevertheless. "Do you suppose those savages see me?"
+
+"I am sure of it," declared Constance. "Likely they will refuse to make
+a treaty with white men whose women act so strangely! My father is going
+to be as glad of your treaty with Priscilla as of the savage chief's
+treaty, an it be made, Master Alden."
+
+"What is it? What's to do, dear John Alden?" clamoured Damaris, who
+never spoke to John without the caressing epithet.
+
+The young man swung her to his shoulder, and kissed the soil-stained
+hand which the child laid against his cheek.
+
+"I shall marry Priscilla and stay in Plymouth, not go back to England at
+all! Does that please you, little maid?" he cried, gaily.
+
+Damaris scowled at him, weighing the case.
+
+"If you like me best," she said doubtfully.
+
+"Of a certainty!" affirmed John Alden, for once disregarding scruples.
+"Could I swing up Priscilla on my shoulder like this, I ask you? Why,
+she's not even a little girl!"
+
+And confiding little Damaris was satisfied.
+
+By this time the band of savages had advanced to the point of the road
+nearest to where the girls and John Alden were working.
+
+"We must go to greet them lest they find us remiss. We do not know the
+workings of their minds," said John Alden, striding down toward them,
+followed by the somewhat timorous group of grown and little girls,
+Damaris clinging to him, with one hand on Constance, in fearful
+enjoyment of the wonderful sight.
+
+"Welcome!" said John Alden, coming across the undergrowth to where the
+savages awaited him. "If you come in friendship, as I see you do,
+welcome, my brothers."
+
+"Welcome," said an Indian, stepping somewhat in advance. "We come in
+friendship. I am Squanto who know your race. I have been in England; I
+have seen the king. I am bring you friendship. This is Massasoit, the
+great chief. You are not the great white chief. He is old a little. Take
+us there."
+
+"Gladly will I take you to our governor, who is, as you say, much older
+than I, and to our war chief, Myles Standish, and to the elders of our
+nation," said John Alden. "Follow me. You are most welcome, Massasoit,
+and Squanto, who can speak our tongue."
+
+The singular company, the girls in their deep bonnets to shade them from
+the sun, the Indians in their paint and gay nodding feathers, the
+children divided between keen enjoyment of the novelty and equally keen
+fear of what might happen next, with John Alden the only white man, came
+down into Plymouth settlement, not yet so built up as to suggest the
+name.
+
+Governor Carver was busied with William Bradford over the records of the
+colony, from which they were making extracts to dispatch to England in
+the near sailing of the _Mayflower_. John Alden turned to Elizabeth
+Tilley.
+
+"Run on, little maid, and tell the governor and elders whom we bring,"
+he said.
+
+Elizabeth darted into the house, earning a frown from the governor for
+her lack of manners, but instantly forgiven when she cried:
+
+"John Alden and we who were working in the field are bringing Your
+Excellency the Indian chief Massasoit, and Squanto, who talks to us in
+English wonderful to hear, when you look at his feathers and painted
+face! And John Alden sent me on to tell you. And, there are other
+Indians with them. And, oh, Governor Carver, shall I tell the women in
+the community house to cook meat for their dinner, or shall it be just
+our common dinner of porridge with, maybe, a smoked herring to sharpen
+us? For this the governor should order, should not he?"
+
+Governor Carver and William Bradford smiled. As a rule the younger
+members of the community over which these elder, grave men were set,
+feared them too much to say anything at which they could smile, but the
+greatness of this occasion swept Elizabeth beyond herself.
+
+"I think, Mistress Elizabeth Tilley, that the matrons will not need the
+governor's counsel as to the feeding of our guests," said Governor
+Carver kindly. "Tell Constantia Hopkins to bid her father hither at his
+earliest convenience. I shall ask him to make the treaty with Massasoit,
+together with Edward Winslow, if it be question of a treaty, as I hope."
+
+Elizabeth sped back and met the approaching guests. She dropped a
+frightened curtsy, not knowing the etiquette of meeting a band of
+friendly savages. But as they paid no attention to her, her manners did
+not matter, and realizing this with relief she joined Constance at the
+rear of the procession and delivered her message.
+
+"Porridge indeed!" exclaimed Mistress Hopkins when Elizabeth Tilley
+repeated to her the governor's comment on her own suggestion as to the
+dinner for the Indian guests. "Porridge is well enough for us, but we
+will set the savages down to no such fare, but to our best, lest they
+fall to and eat us all some night in the dark of the moon, when we are
+asleep and unprotected! Little I thought I should be cooking for wild
+red men in an American forest when I learned to make sausage in my
+father's house! But learn I did, and to make it fit for the king, so it
+should please the savages, though what they like is beyond my knowledge.
+Sausage shall they have, and whether or no they will take to griddle
+cakes I dare not say, but it's my opinion that men are men, civilized or
+wild, and never a man did I see that was not as keen set on griddle
+cakes as a fox on a chicken roost. It will be our part to feed these
+savages well, for, as I say, men are men, wild or English, and if you
+would have a man deal well by you make your terms after he hath well
+eaten. Thus may your father and Elder Brewster get a good treaty from
+these painted creatures. Get out the flour, Constantia, and stir up the
+batter. Humility and Elizabeth, fetch the jar of griddle fat. Priscilla
+Mullins, what aileth thee? Art sleep-walking? Call a boy to fetch wood
+for the hearth, and fill the kettle. Are you John-a-Dreams, and is this
+the time for dreaming?"
+
+"It's John-dream at least, is it not, Prissy?" whispered Constance,
+pinching the girl lightly as she passed her on her way to do her share
+of her step-mother's bidding.
+
+Later Constance went to summon the guests to the community house for
+their dinner. They came majestically, escorted by the governor, Elder
+Brewster, William Bradford, Stephen Hopkins, the weighty men of the
+colony, with Captain Standish in advance, representing the power of
+might. What the Indians thought of these Englishmen no one could tell;
+certainly they were not less appreciative of the counsel of the wise
+than of the force of arms, having reliance on their own part upon their
+medicine men and soothsayers.
+
+What they thought of the white women's cooking was soon perfectly
+apparent. It kept the women busy to serve them with cakes, to hold the
+glowing coals on the hearth at the right degree to keep the griddle
+heated to the point of perfect browning, never passing it to the burning
+point. The Indians devoured the cakes like a band of hungry boys, and
+Mistress Hopkins's boasted sausage was never better appreciated on an
+English farm table than here.
+
+The young girls served the guests, which the Indians accepted as the
+natural thing, being used to taking the first place with squaws, both
+young and old.
+
+The homebrewed beer which had come across seas in casks abundantly, also
+met with ultimate approval, though at first taste two or three of the
+Indians nearly betrayed aversion to its bitterness. There were "strong
+waters" too, made riper by long tossing in the _Mayflower's_ hold, which
+needed no persuading of the Indians' palates.
+
+After the guests had dined Giles, John, Francis, and the other older
+boys, came trooping to the community house for their dinner.
+
+When they discovered that Squanto spoke English fairly well they were
+agog to hear from him the many things that he could tell them.
+
+"Stay with us; they do not need you," they implored, but Squanto,
+mindful of his duties as interpreter, reluctantly left them presently.
+Massasoit and his other companions returned with the white men to the
+conclave house, which was the governor's and Elder Brewster's home.
+
+"I go but wish I might stay a little hour," said Squanto. He won
+Mistress Eliza's heart, with Mistress White's, by his evident
+friendliness and desire to stay with them.
+
+After this Damaris and the children could not fear him, and thus at his
+first introduction, Squanto, who was to become the friend and reliance
+of the colony, became what is even more, the friend of the little
+children.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+Treaties
+
+
+The girls of the plantation were gathered together in Stephen Hopkins's
+house. The logs on the hearth were ash-strewn to check their burning yet
+to hold them ready to burn when the hour for preparing supper was come
+and the ashes raked away.
+
+Dame Eliza Hopkins had betaken herself to William Bradford's house, the
+baby, Oceanus, seated astride her hip in her favourite manner of
+carrying him; she protested that she could not endure the gabble of the
+girls, but in truth she greatly desired to discuss with Mistress
+Bradford, of whom she stood somewhat in awe, the events portending. She
+was secretly elated with her husband's coming honour, and wanted to
+convey to Mistress Bradford that, as between their two spouses, Stephen
+Hopkins was the better man.
+
+Constance, sitting beside the smothered hearth fire, might be
+considered, since it was at her father's hearthstone the girls were
+gathered, as the hostess of the occasion, but the gathering was for
+work, not formalities, and, in any case, Constance was too preoccupied
+with her task to pay attention to aught else.
+
+Only the older girls were bidden, but little Damaris was there by right
+of tenancy. She sat at Constance's feet, worshipping her, as she turned
+and twisted their father's coat, skilfully furbishing it with new
+buttons and new binding.
+
+"May Mr. Hopkins wear velvet, Constance?" asked Humility Cooper,
+suddenly; she too had been watching Constance work. "Did not Elder
+Brewster exhort us to utmost plainness of clothing, as becomes the
+saints, who set more store upon heavenly raiment than earthly
+splendour?"
+
+Constance looked up laughingly, pushing out of her eyes her waving locks
+which had strayed from her cap; she used the back of the hand that held
+her needle, pulled at great length through a button which she was
+fastening upon her father's worn velvet coat.
+
+"Oh, Humility, splendour?" she laughed. "When I am trying hard to make
+this old coat passing decent? Isn't it necessary for us all to wear what
+we have, willy-nilly, since nothing else is obtainable, garments not yet
+growing on New World bushes? I do believe that some of the brethren
+discussed Stephen Hopkins's velvet coat, and decided for it, since it
+stood for economy. It stood for more; till a ship brings supplies from
+home, it's this, or no coat for my father. But since he has been
+selected, with Mr. Edward Winslow, to make the treaty with Massasoit, he
+should be clad suitably to his office, were there choice between velvet
+and homespun."
+
+"What does he make to treat Mass o' suet, Constance? What is Mass o'
+suet; pudding, Constance?" asked Damaris, anxiously, knitting her brow.
+
+Constance's laugh rang out, good to hear. She leaned forward impetuously
+and snatched off her little sister's decorous cap, rumpled her sleek
+fair hair with both hands pressing her head, and kissed her. Priscilla
+Mullins laughed with Constance, looking sympathetically at her, but some
+of the other girls looked a trifle shocked at this demonstration.
+
+"Massasoit is a great Indian chief, small lass; he is coming in a day or
+so, and Father and Mr. Winslow will make a treaty with him; that means
+that Massasoit will promise to be our friend and to protect us from
+other Indian tribes, he and his Indians, while we shall promise to be
+true friends to him. It is a great good to our colony, and we are proud,
+you and I--and I think your mother, too"--Constance glanced with
+amusement at Priscilla--"that our father is chosen for the colony's
+representative."
+
+"Do you suppose that the Indians know whether cloth or velvet is
+grander? Those we see like leather and paint and feathers," said
+Priscilla. "I hold that our men should overawe the savages, but----"
+
+"And I hold that brides should be bonny, let it be here, or in England,"
+Constance interrupted her. "What will you wear on the day of days,
+Priscilla, you darling?"
+
+"Well, I have consulted with Mistress Brewster," admitted Priscilla,
+regretfully. "I did think, being a woman, she would know better how a
+young maid feeleth as to her bridal gown than her godly husband. But she
+saith that it is least of all becoming on such a solemn occasion to let
+my mind consider my outward seeming. So I have that excellent wool
+skirt that Mistress White dyed for me a good brown, and that with my
+blue body----"
+
+"Blue fiddlesticks, Priscilla Mullins!" Constance again interrupted her,
+impatiently. "You'll wear nothing of the kind. I tell you it shall be
+white for you on your wedding day, with your comely face and your honest
+eyes shining over it! I have a sweet embroidered muslin, and I can
+fashion it for you with a little cleverness and a deep frill combined,
+for that you are taller than I, and more plump to take up its length,
+there's no denying, Prissy dear! We'll not stand by and see our
+plantation's one real romance end in dyed brown cloth and dreariness,
+will we, girls?"
+
+"No!" cried Humility Cooper who would have followed Constance's lead
+into worse danger than a pretty wedding gown for Priscilla.
+
+But Elizabeth Tilley, her cousin, looked doubtful. "It sounds nice," she
+admitted, "but I never can tell what is wrong and what is right,
+because, though we read our Bibles to learn our duty, the Bible does not
+condemn pleasure, and our teachers do. So it might be safer to wear dull
+garments when we are married, Constance, and not be light-minded."
+
+"You mean light-bodied; light-coloured bodies, Betsy!" Constance laughed
+at her, with a glint of mischievous appreciation of Elizabeth's
+unconscious humour that was like her father. "No, indeed, my sister
+pilgrim. A snowy gown for Pris, though I fashion it, who am not too
+skilful. Oh, Francis Billington, how you scared me!" she cried, jumping
+to her feet and upsetting Damaris who leaned upon her, as Francis
+Billington burst into the room, out of breath, but full of importance.
+
+"Nothing to fear with me about, girls," he assured the roomful. "But
+great news! Massasoit has come, marched in upon us before we expected
+him, and the treaty is to be made to-morrow. Squanto is as proud and
+delighted as----"
+
+Squanto himself appeared in the doorway at that moment, a smile mantling
+his high cheek bones and a gleam in his eyes that betrayed the
+importance that his pride tried to conceal.
+
+"Chief come, English girls," he announced. "No more you be fear Indian;
+Massasoit tell you be no more fear, he and Squanto fight for you, and he
+say true. No more fear, little English girl!" he laid his hand
+protectingly upon Damaris's head and the child smiled up at him,
+confidingly.
+
+Giles came fast upon Squanto's heels. His face was flushed, his eyes
+kindled; Constance saw with a leap of her heart that he looked like the
+lad she had loved in England and had lost in the New World.
+
+"Got Father's coat ready, Con?" he asked. "There's to be a counsel held,
+and my father is to preside over it on our side, arranging with
+Massasoit. My father is to settle with him for the colony--of course
+Mr. Winslow will have his say, also."
+
+"I meant to furbish the coat somewhat more, Giles, but the necessary
+repairs are made," said Constance yielding her brother the garment. "How
+proud of Father he is!" she thought, happily. "How truly he adores him,
+however awry matters go between them!"
+
+Giles hung the coat on his arm, carefully, to keep it from wrinkles, a
+most unusual thoughtfulness in him, and hastened away.
+
+"No more work to-day, girls, or at least of this sort," cried Constance
+gaily, her heart lightened by Giles's unmistakable pride in their
+father. "We shall be called upon to cook and serve. Many Indians come
+with Massasoit, Squanto?"
+
+"No, his chiefs," Squanto raised one hand and touched its fingers
+separately, then did the same with the other hand. "Ten," he announced
+after this illustration.
+
+"That means no less than thirty potatoes, and something less than twenty
+quarts of porridge," laughed Constance, but was called to account by her
+stepmother, who had come in from the rear.
+
+"Will you never speak the truth soberly, Constantia Hopkins?" she said.
+"We do not count on two quarts of porridge for every Indian we feed.
+Take this child; he is heavy for so long, and he hath kicked with both
+heels in my flesh every step of the way. Another Hopkins, I'll warrant,
+I've borne for my folly in marrying your father; a restless, headstrong
+brood are they, and Oceanus is already not content to sit quietly on his
+mother's hip, but will drive her, like a camel of the desert." She
+detached Oceanus's feet from her skirt and handed him over to Constance
+with a jerk. Constance received him, biting her lips to hold back
+laughter, and burying her face in the back of the baby neck that had
+been pitifully thin during the cruel winter, but which was beginning to
+wrinkle with plumpness now.
+
+Too late she concealed her face; Mistress Eliza caught a glimpse of it
+and was upon her.
+
+"It's not a matter for laughter that I should be pummelled by your
+brother, however young he may be," she cried; Dame Eliza had a way of
+underscoring her children's kinship to Constance whenever they were
+troublesome. "Though, indeed, I carry on my back the weight of your
+father's children, and my heart is worse bruised by the ingratitude of
+you and your brother Giles, than is my flesh with this child's heels.
+And Mistress Bradford is proud-hearted, and that I will maintain,
+Puritan or no Puritan, or whether she be one of the elect of this
+chosen company, or a sinner. For plain could I see this afternoon that
+she held her husband to be a better man, and higher in the colony, than
+my husband, nor would she give way one jot when I put it before
+her--though not so that she would see what I would be after--that
+Stephen Hopkins it was who was chosen with Mr. Winslow to make the
+treaty, and not William Bradford. Well, far be it from me to take pride
+in worldly things; I thank the good training that my mother gave me that
+I am humble-minded. Often and often would she say to me: Eliza, never
+plume yourself that you, and your people before you, are, as they are,
+better, more righteous people than are most other folks. For it is our
+part to bear ourselves humbly, not setting ourselves up for our virtue,
+but content to know that we have it and to see how others are lacking in
+it, making no traffic with sinners, but yet not boasting. And as to you,
+young women, it would be better if you betook yourselves to your proper
+homes, not lingering here to encourage Constantia Hopkins to idleness
+when I've my hands full, and more than full, to make ready for the
+Indian chiefs' supper, and I need her help."
+
+On this strong hint the Plymouth girls bade Constance good-bye and
+departed, leaving her to a bustle of hard work, accompanied by her
+stepmother's scolding; Dame Eliza had come back dissatisfied from her
+visit, and Constance paid the penalty.
+
+The next morning the men of Plymouth gathered at the house of Elder
+Brewster, attired in all the decorum of their Sunday garb, their faces
+gravely expressive of the importance of the event about to take place.
+
+Captain Myles Standish, indeed, felt some misgivings of the pervading
+gravity of clothing of the civilized participants in this treaty, that
+it might not sufficiently impress their savage allies. He had fastened a
+bright plume that had been poor Rose's, on the side of his hat, and a
+band of English red ribbon across his breast, while he carried arms
+burnished to their brightest, his sword unsheathed, that the sun might
+catch its gleam.
+
+Elder Brewster shook his head slightly at the sight of this display, but
+let it pass, partly because Captain Standish ill-liked interference in
+his affairs, partly because he understood its reason, and half believed
+that the doughty Myles was right.
+
+Not less solemn than the white men, but as gay with colours as the
+Puritans were sombre, the Indians, headed by Massasoit, marched to the
+rendezvous from the house which had been allotted to them for lodging.
+
+With perfect dignity Massasoit took his place at the head of the council
+room, and saluted Captain Standish and Elder Brewster, who advanced
+toward him, then retreated and gave place to Stephen Hopkins and Edward
+Winslow, who were to execute the treaty.
+
+Its terms had already been discussed, but the Indians listened
+attentively to Squanto's interpretation of Mr. Hopkins's reading of
+them. They promised, on the part of Massasoit, perfect safety to the
+settlers from danger of the Indians' harming them, and, on the part of
+the pilgrims, aid to Massasoit against his enemies; on the part of both
+savage and white men, that justice should be done upon any one who
+wronged his neighbour, savage or civilized.
+
+The gifts that bound both parties to this treaty were exchanged, and the
+treaty, that was so important to the struggling colony, was consummated.
+
+The women and children, even the youths, were excluded from the council;
+the women had enough to do to prepare the feast that was to celebrate
+the compact before Massasoit took up his march of forty miles to return
+to his village.
+
+But Giles leaned against the casement of the open door, unforbidden,
+glowing with pride in his father, for the first time in heart and soul a
+colonist, completely in sympathy with the event he was witnessing.
+
+Stephen Hopkins saw him there and made no sign of dismissal. Their eyes
+met with their old look of love; father and son were in that hour
+united, though separated. Suddenly there arose a tremendous racket, a
+volley of shots, a beating of pans, shouts, pandemonium.
+
+Captain Myles Standish turned angrily and saw John and Francis
+Billington, decorated with streamers of party-coloured rags, which made
+them look as if they had escaped from a madhouse, leaping and shouting,
+beating and shooting; John firing his clumsy "Bouncing Bully" in the air
+as fast as he could load it; Francis filling in the rest of the
+outrageous performance.
+
+But worst of all was that Stephen Hopkins, who saw what Captain Myles
+saw, saw also his own boy, whom but a moment before he had looked at
+lovingly, bent and swayed by laughter.
+
+Captain Standish strode out in a towering fury to deal with the
+Billingtons, with whom he was ceaselessly dealing in anger, as they were
+ceaselessly afflicting the little community with the pranks that shocked
+and outraged its decorum.
+
+Stephen Hopkins dashed out after him. Quick to anger, sure of his own
+judgments, he instantly leaped to the conclusion that Giles had been
+waiting at the door to enjoy this prank when it was enacted, and it was
+a prank that passed ordinary mischief. If the Indians recognized it for
+a prank, they would undoubtedly take it as an insult to them. Only the
+chance that they might consider it a serious celebration of the treaty,
+afforded hope that it might not annul the treaty at its birth, and put
+Plymouth in a worse plight than before it was made.
+
+Mr. Hopkins seized Giles by the shoulders and shook him.
+
+"You laugh? You laugh at this, you young wastrel?" he said, fiercely.
+"By heavens, I could deal with you for conniving at this, which may earn
+salt tears from us all, if the savages take it amiss and retaliate on
+us. Will you never learn sense? How, in heaven's name, can you help on
+with this, knowing what you know of the danger to your own sisters
+should the savages take offence at it? Angels above us, and but a moment
+agone I thought you were my son, and rejoicing in this important day!"
+
+Giles, white, with burning eyes, looked straight into his father's eyes,
+rage, wounded pride, the sudden revolt of a love that had just been
+enkindled anew in him, distorting his face.
+
+"You never consider justice, sir," he said, chokingly. "You never ask,
+nor want to hear facts, lest they might be in my favour. You welcome a
+chance to believe ill of me. It is Giles, therefore the worst must be
+true; that's your argument."
+
+He turned away, head up, no relenting in his air, but the boy's heart in
+him was longing to burst in bitter weeping.
+
+Stephen Hopkins stood still, a swift doubt of his accusation, of
+himself, keen sorrow if he had wronged his boy, seizing him.
+
+"Giles, stop. Giles, come back," he said.
+
+But Giles walked away the faster, and his father was forced to return to
+Massasoit, to discover whether he had taken amiss what had happened,
+and, if he had, to placate him, could it be done.
+
+To his inexpressible relief he found that their savage guests had not
+suspected that the boys' mischief had been other than a tribute to
+themselves, quite in the key of their own celebrations of joyous
+occasions.
+
+After the dinner in which all the women of the settlement showed their
+skill, the Indians departed as they had come, leaving Squanto to be the
+invaluable friend of their white allies.
+
+Giles kept out of his father's way; Stephen Hopkins was not able to find
+him to clear up what he began to hope had been an unfounded suspicion on
+his part. "Zounds!" said the kind, though irascible man. "Giles is
+almost grown. If I did wrong him, I am sorry and will say so. An apology
+will not harm me, and is his due--that is in case it _is_ due! I'll set
+the lad an example and ask his pardon if I misjudged him. He did not
+deny it, to be sure, but then Giles is too proud to deny an unjust
+accusation. And he looked innocent. Well, a good lad is Giles, in spite
+of his faults. I'll find him and get to the bottom of it."
+
+"Giles is all right, Stephen," said Myles Standish, to whom he was
+speaking. "Affairs that go wrong between you are usually partly your own
+fault. He needs guiding, but you lose your own head, and then how can
+you guide him? But those Billington boys, they are another matter! By
+Gog and Magog, there's got to be authority put into my hands to deal
+with them summarily! And their father's a madman, no less. I told them
+to-day they'd cool their heels in Plymouth jail; we'd build Plymouth
+jail expressly for that purpose. And I mean it. I'm the last man to be
+hard on mischief; heaven knows I was a harum-scarum in my time. But
+mischief that is overflowing spirits, and mischief that is harmful are
+two different matters. I've had all I'll stand of Jack Billington, his
+Bouncing Bully and himself!"
+
+"Here comes Connie. I wonder if she knows anything of her brother? If
+she does, she'll speak of it; if she doesn't, don't disturb her peace of
+mind, Myles. My pretty girl! She hurts me by her prettiness, here in the
+wilderness, far from her right to a sweet girl's dower of pleasure,
+admiration, dancing, and----"
+
+"Stephen, Stephen, for the love of all our discarded saints, forbear!"
+protested Captain Myles, interrupting his friend, laughing. "If our
+friends about here heard you lamenting such a list of lost joys for
+Constance, by my sword, they'd deal with you no gentler than I purpose
+dealing with the Billingtons! Ah, sweet Con, and no need to ask how the
+day of the treaty hath left you! You look abloom with youth and
+gladness, dear lass."
+
+"I am happy," said Constance, slipping her hand into her father's and
+smiling up into the faces of both the men, who loved her. "Wasn't it a
+great day, Father? Isn't it blessed to feel secure from invasion, and,
+more than that, secure of an ally, in case of unknown enemies coming?
+Oh, Father, Giles was so proud of you! It was funny, but beautiful, to
+see how his eyes shone, and how straight he carried himself, because his
+father was the man who made the treaty for us all! I love you, dearest,
+quite enough, and I am proud of you to bursting point, but Giles is
+almost a man, and he is proud of you as men are proud; meseems it is a
+deeper feeling than in us women, who are content to love, and care less
+for ambition."
+
+Stephen Hopkins winced; he saw that Constance did not know that anything
+was again amiss between the two who were dearest to her on earth, but he
+said:
+
+"'Us women,' indeed, Constantia! Do you reckon yourself a woman, who art
+still but my child-daughter?"
+
+"Not a child, Father," said the girl, truly enough, shaking her head
+hard. "No pilgrim maid can be a child at my age, having seen and shared
+what hath fallen to my lot. And to-morrow there is to be another treaty
+made of peace and alliance, which is much on my mind, because I am a
+woman and because I love Priscilla. To-morrow is Pris married, Father."
+
+"Of a truth, and so she is!" cried Stephen Hopkins, slapping his leg
+vigorously.
+
+"Well, my girl, and what is it? Do you want to deck her out, as will not
+be allowed? Or what is on your mind?"
+
+"Oh, I have made her a white gown, Father," said Constance. "Whatever
+they say, sweet Pris shall not go in dark clothing to her marriage! But,
+Father, Mr. Winslow is to marry her, as a magistrate, which he is. Is
+there no way to make it a little like a holy wedding, with church, and
+prayers, and religion?"
+
+"My dear, they have decided here that marriage is but a matter belonging
+to the state. You must check your scruples, child, and go along with
+arrangements as they are. There is much of your earliest training, of
+your sainted mother's training, in you yet, my Constance, and, please
+God, you will remain her daughter always. But you cannot alter the ways
+of Plymouth colony. So be content, sweet Con, to pray for our Pris all
+you will, and rest assured they receive blessings who seek them, however
+they be situate," said Stephen Hopkins, gently touching his girl's
+white-capped head.
+
+"Ah, well," sighed Constance, turning away in acquiescence.
+
+Captain Myles Standish and her father watched Constance away. Then they
+turned in the other direction with a sigh.
+
+"Hard to face westward all the time, my friend; even Con feels the tug
+of old ways, and the old home, on her heartstrings," said Captain Myles.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+A Home Begun and a Home Undone
+
+
+"Do you know aught of your brother, Constance?" asked Stephen Hopkins
+when he appeared in the great kitchen and common room of his home early
+the following morning.
+
+"He hath been away from home all night," Dame Eliza answered for
+Constance, her lips pulled down grimly.
+
+"Which I know quite well, wife," said her husband. "Constance, did Giles
+speak to you of whither he was going?"
+
+Constance looked up, meeting her father's troubled eyes, her own
+cloudless.
+
+"No, Father, but he must be with the other lads. Perhaps they are
+serving up some merry trick for the wedding. Nothing can have befallen
+him. Giles was the happiest lad yesterday, Father dear! I must hasten
+through the breakfast-getting!"
+
+Constance fluttered away in a visible state of pleasant excitement. Her
+father watched her without speaking, his eyes still gloomy; he knew that
+Constance lacked knowledge of his reason for being anxious over Giles's
+absence.
+
+"And why should you hasten the getting of breakfast, Constantia
+Hopkins?" demanded Dame Eliza. "It is to be no earlier than common. If
+you are thinking to see Priscilla Mullins made the wife of John Alden,
+it will not be till nine of the clock, and that is nearly three hours
+distant."
+
+"Ah, but I am going to dress the bride!" triumphed Constance. "I'm going
+to dress her from top to toe, and coil her wealth of glossy hair, to
+show best its masses! And to crown her dear pretty face with it brought
+around her brow, as only I can bend it, so Pris declares! My dear,
+winsome Pris!"
+
+"Will you let be such vanity and catering to sinful worldliness, Stephen
+Hopkins?" demanded that unfortunate man's wife, with asperity. "Why will
+you allow your daughter to divert Priscilla Mullins from the awfulness
+of the vows she will utter, filling her mind with thoughts that ill
+become a Puritan bride, and one to be a Puritan wife? I will say for
+your wife, sir, that she did not come to vow herself to you in such
+wise. And when Constantia herself becomes a matron of this plantation
+she will not deport herself becomingly if she spend her maidenhood
+fostering vanity in others. But there is no folly in which you will not
+uphold her! I pray that I may live to keep Damaris to the narrow path."
+
+"Aye, and my sweet Con hath lost Her mother!" burst out Stephen Hopkins,
+already too disturbed in mind to bear his wife's nagging.
+
+His allusion to Constance's mother, of whose memory his wife was
+vindictively jealous, would have brought forth a storm, but that
+Constance flew to her father, caught him by the arm, and drew him
+swiftly out of the door, saying:
+
+"Nay, nay, my dear one; what is the use? Let us be happy on Pris's
+wedding day. I feel as though if we were happy it would somehow bring
+good to her. Don't mind Mistress Eliza; let her rail. If it were not
+about this, it would be something else. Come down the grass a way, my
+father, and see how the sunshine sparkles on the sea. The day is smiling
+on Pris, at least, and is decked for her by God, so why should my
+stepmother mind that I shall make the girl herself as fair as I know
+how?"
+
+"You are a dear lass, Con, child, and I swear I don't know how I should
+bear my days without you," said Stephen Hopkins, something suspiciously
+like a quaver in his voice.
+
+He did not return to the house till Con had prepared the breakfast.
+Hastily she cleared it away, her stepmother purposely delaying the meal
+as long as possible. But Dame Eliza's utmost contrariness could not hold
+back Constance's swift work long enough to make the hour very late when
+it was done, the room set in order, and Constance herself, unadorned, in
+her plain Sunday garb, hastening over the young grass to where Priscilla
+awaited her.
+
+No one else had been allowed to help Constance in her loving labour.
+Beginning with Priscilla's sturdy shoes--there were no bridal slippers
+in Plymouth!--Constance, on her knees, laced Pris into the gear in which
+she would walk to meet John Alden, and followed this up, garment by
+garment, which she and Priscilla had sewn in their brief spare moments,
+until she reached the masses of shining brown hair, which was
+Priscilla's glory and Constance's affectionate pride.
+
+Brushing, and braiding, and coiling skilfully, Constance wound the fine,
+yet heavy locks around Priscilla's head.
+
+Then with deft fingers she pulled, and patted and fastened into curves
+above her brow sundry strands which she had left free for that purpose,
+and fell back to admire her results.
+
+"Well, my Prissy!" Constance cried, rapturously clapping her hands.
+"Wait till you are dressed, and I let you see this in the glass yonder.
+No, not now! Only when the bridal gown is donned! My word, Priscilla
+Mullins, but John Alden will think that he never saw, nor loved you
+until this day! Which is as we would wish him to feel. They may forbid
+us curling and waving our locks in this plantation, but no one ever yet,
+as I truly believe, could make laws to keep girls from increasing their
+charms! Your hair brought down and shaken loose thus around your face,
+my Pris, is far, far more lovely, and adorns you better than any curling
+tongs could do it. Because, after all, nature fits faces and hair
+together, and my waving hair would not be half so becoming to you as
+your own straight hair, thus crowning your brow. Constance Hopkins, my
+girl, I am proud of your skill as lady's maid!" And Constance kissed her
+own hand by way of her reward, as she went to the corner and gingerly
+lifted the white gown that waited there for her handling.
+
+It was a soft, fragile thing, made of white stuff from the East,
+embroidered all over with sprigs of small flowers. It had been
+Constance's mother's, and had come from England at the bottom of her own
+chest, safe hidden, together with other beautiful fabrics that had been
+Constance's mother's, from the condemnatory eyes of Stephen Hopkins's
+second wife.
+
+"It troubles me to wear this flimsy loveliness, Constance," said
+Priscilla, as the gown drifted down over her shoulders. "And to think it
+was thy mother's."
+
+"It will not harm it to lie over your true heart to-day, dearest Pris,
+when you vow to love John forever. It seems to me as though lifeless
+things drew something of value to themselves from contact with goodness
+and love. Pris, it is really most exquisite! And that deep ruffle that I
+sewed around it at the bottom makes it exactly long enough for you, yet
+it leaves it still right for me to wear, should I ever want to, only by
+ripping it off again! Oh, Priscilla, dear, you are lovely enough, and
+this embroidery is fine enough, for you to be a London bride!"
+
+Once more Constance fell back to admire at the same time Priscilla and
+her achievements.
+
+"I think, perhaps, it may be wrong, as they tell us it is, to care too
+much for outward adornment, Con dear. Not but that I like it, and love
+you for being so unselfish, so generous to me," said Priscilla, with her
+sweet gravity of manner.
+
+"Constance, if only my mother and father, and Joseph--but of course my
+parents I mourn more than my brother--were here to bless me to-day!"
+
+"Try to feel that they are here, Prissy," said Constance. "There be
+Christians in plenty who would tell you that they pray for you still."
+
+"Oh, but that is superstition!" protested Priscilla, shocked.
+
+Constance set her face into a sort of laughing and sweet contrariness.
+
+"There be Christians in plenty who believe it," she repeated. "And it
+seems a comforting and innocent enough thing to me. Art ready now,
+Priscilla? But before you go, kiss me here the kind of good-bye that we
+cannot take in public; my good-bye to dear Priscilla Mullins; your
+good-bye to Con, with whom, though dear friends we remain for aye,
+please God, you never again will be just the same close gossip that we
+have been as maids together, on ship-board and land, through sore grief
+and hardships, yet with abounding laughter when we had half a chance to
+smile."
+
+"Why, Con, don't make me cry!" begged Priscilla, holding Constance
+tight, her eyes filling with tears. "You speak sadly, and like one years
+older than yourself, who had learned the changes of our mortal life.
+I'll not love you less that I am married."
+
+"Yes, you will, Pris! Or, if not less, at least differently. For maids
+are one in simple interests, quick to share tears and laughter, while
+the young matron is occupied with graver matters, and there is not
+oneness between them. It is right so, but----Well, then, kiss me
+good-bye, Pris, my comrade, and bid Mistress John Alden, when you know
+her, love me well for your sweet sake," insisted Constance, not far from
+tears herself.
+
+Quietly the two girls stole out of the bedroom, into the common room of
+the new house which Doctor Fuller had built for the reception of his
+wife, whose coming from England he eagerly awaited. The widow White and
+Priscilla had been lodged there, helping the doctor to get it in order.
+
+"You look well, Priscilla," said Mrs. White. "Say what they will, there
+is something in the notion of a young maiden going in white to her
+marriage. Your friends are waiting you outside. I wish you well, my
+daughter, and may you be blessed in all your undertakings."
+
+Priscilla went to the door and Constance opened it for her, stepping
+back to let the bride precede her. Beyond it were waiting the young
+girls of the settlement; Humility Cooper and her cousin, Elizabeth
+Tilley, caught Priscilla by the hands.
+
+"How fair you are, dear!" cried Humility. "The children begged to be
+allowed to come to your wedding, and they are all waiting at Mr.
+Winslow's, for you were always their great friend, and there is scarce a
+limit to their love for John Alden."
+
+"Surely let the children come!" said Priscilla. "They are first of all
+of us, and will win blessings for John Alden and me."
+
+The girls fell into line ahead of her, and Priscilla walked down Leyden
+Street, the short distance that lay between the doctor's house and
+Edward Winslow's, her head bent, her eyes upon the ground, the colour
+faded from her fresh-tinted face. At the magistrate's house the elders
+of the little community were gathered, waiting. John Alden came out and
+met his bride on the narrow, sanded walk, and led her soberly into the
+house and up to Edward Winslow, who awaited them in his plain,
+close-buttoned coat, with its broad collar and cuffs of white linen
+newly and stiffly starched and ironed.
+
+It was a brief ceremony, divested of all but the necessary questions and
+replies, yet to all present it was not lacking in impressiveness, for
+the memory of recent suffering was vivid in every mind; the longing for
+the many who were dead was poignant, and the consciousness of the
+uncertainty of the future of the young people, who were thus beginning
+their life together, was acute, though no one would have allowed its
+expression, lest it imply a lack of faith.
+
+When Mr. Winslow had pronounced John and Priscilla man and wife, Elder
+William Brewster arose and, with extended hands, called down upon their
+heads the blessing of the God of Israel, and prayed for their welfare in
+this world, their reward in the world to come.
+
+Without any of the merriment which accompanied congratulations and
+salutations at a marriage in England, these serious men and women came
+up in turn and gravely kissed the bride upon her cheek, and shook John
+Alden's hand. Yet each one was fond of Priscilla and had grieved with
+her on her father's, mother's, and brother's deaths, and each one
+honoured and truly was attached to John Alden.
+
+But even in Plymouth colony youth had to be more or less youthful.
+
+"Come, now; we're taking you home!" cried Francis Billington. "Fall in,
+girls and boys, big and little, grown folks as well, if only you will,
+and let us see our bride and her man started in their new home! And who
+remembers a rousing chorus?"
+
+John Alden had been building his house with the help of the older boys;
+to it now he was taking Priscilla on her wedding journey, made on her
+own feet, a distance of a few hundred yards.
+
+"No rousing choruses here, sir," said Edward Winslow, sternly. "If you
+will escort our friends to their home--and to that there can be no
+objection--let it be to the sound of godly psalms, not to profane
+songs."
+
+"You offer us youngsters little inducement to marry when our time
+comes," muttered Francis, but he took good care that Mr. Winslow should
+not hear him, having no desire to run counter at that moment to Mr.
+Winslow's will, knowing that he and Jack were already in danger of being
+dealt with by the authorities. And where was Jack? He had not seen his
+brother since the previous day.
+
+Boys and young men in advance, girls and the younger women following,
+the bridal pair bringing up the rear, the little procession went up
+Leyden Street and drew up at the door of the exceedingly small house
+which John Alden had made for his wife. Francis, who had constituted
+himself master of ceremonies, made the escort divide into two lines and,
+between them, John and Priscilla walked into their house. And with that
+the wedding was over.
+
+For an instant the young people held their places, staring across the
+space that separated them, with the blank feeling that always follows
+after the end of an event long anticipated.
+
+Then Constance turned with a sigh, looking about her, wondering if she
+really were to resume her work-a-day tasks, first of all get dinner.
+
+She met her father's intent gaze and his look startled her. He beckoned
+her, and she stepped back out of the line and joined him.
+
+"Giles, Constance; where is he?" demanded Stephen Hopkins.
+
+"Father, I don't know! Isn't he here?" she cried.
+
+"He is not here, nor is John Billington," said her father. "No one has
+seen either of them since last night. Is it likely that they would
+absent themselves willingly from this wedding; Giles, who is so fond of
+John Alden; John Billington, who is so fond of anything whatever that
+breaks the monotony of the days?"
+
+Constance shook her head. "No, Father," she whispered.
+
+"No. And you have no clue to this disappearance, Constance?" her father
+insisted.
+
+"Father, Father, no; no, indeed!" protested Constance. "I did not so
+much as miss the boys from among us. But what could have befallen them?
+It can't be that they have come to harm?"
+
+"Constance," said her father with a visible effort, "Giles was deeply
+angry with me yesterday----"
+
+"Father, dear Father, you are quite wrong!" Constance interrupted him.
+"There was no mistaking how delighted Giles was with your making the
+treaty. Indeed I saw in him all the old-time love and pride in you that
+we used to make a jest--but how we liked it!--in the dear days across
+the water, when we were children."
+
+Stephen Hopkins let her have her say. Then he shook his head.
+
+"It may all be as you say, Constance," he said, sadly. "I also felt in
+Giles, saw in his face, the affection I have missed of late. But when
+the Billingtons came making that disturbance I went out--angry, Con; I
+admit it--and accused Giles of abetting them in what might have caused
+us serious trouble. And he, in turn, was furiously angry with me. He did
+not reply to my accusation, but spoke impertinently to me, and went
+away. I have not seen him since."
+
+"Oh, Father, Father!" gasped Constance, her lips trembling, her face
+pale.
+
+"I know, my daughter," said Stephen Hopkins, almost humbly. "But it was
+an outrageous thing to risk offending our new allies, and inviting the
+death of us all. And Giles did not deny having a hand in it, remember.
+But I confess that I should have first asked him whether he had, or
+not."
+
+"Poor Father," said Constance, gently. "It is hard enough to be anxious
+about your boy without being afraid that you wronged him. How I wish
+that Giles would not always stand upon his dignity, and scorn speech!
+How I wish, how I pray, that you may come to understand each other, to
+trust each other, and be as we were when you trotted Giles and me upon
+your knees, and I sometimes feared that you liked me less than you did
+your handsome boy, who was so like you."
+
+"Who _is_ so like me," her father corrected her. "You were right, Con,
+when you said that Giles and I were too alike to get on well together;
+the same quick temper, rash action, swift conclusions."
+
+"The same warm heart, high honour, complete loyalty," Constance amended,
+swiftly.
+
+"Father, if you could but once and for ever grasp that! Giles is you
+again in your best traits. He can be the reliance that you are, but if
+he turns wrong----"
+
+She paused and her father groaned.
+
+"Ah, Constance, you are partial to me, yet you stab me. If I have turned
+him wrong, is what you would say! How womanly you are grown, my
+daughter, and how like your dead mother! But, Con, this is no time to
+stand discussing traits, not even to adjust the blame of this wretched
+business. How shall I find the boy?"
+
+"Why, for that, Father, you know far better than I," said Constance,
+gently, taking her father's arm. "Let us go home, dear man. I should
+think a party to scour the woods beyond us? And Squanto would be our
+best help, he and Captain Standish, wouldn't they? But I am sure the
+boys will be in for supper. You know they are sharp young wolves, with a
+scent like the whole pack in one for supper! Giles is safe! And as to
+Jack Billington, tell me truly, Father, can you imagine anything able to
+harm him?" She laughed with an excellent reproduction of her own mirth
+when she possessed it, but it was far from hers now.
+
+Constance shared to the uttermost her father's apprehension. If her
+poor, hasty father had again accused Giles of that which he had not
+done, and this when he was aglow with a renewal of the old confidence
+between them, then it well might be that Giles, equally hot-headed, had
+done some desperate thing in his first sore rage. The fact that he had
+been absent from the wedding of John Alden, whom he cared for deeply;
+that he had missed his supper and breakfast; and that John Billington,
+reckless, adventurous Jack, was missing at the same time, left Constance
+little ground for hope that nothing was wrong.
+
+But nothing of this did she allow to escape in her manner of speech.
+
+She gaily told her father all about her morning: how cleverly she had
+lengthened Priscilla's gown, her own mother's gown, lent Pris; how
+becomingly she had arranged Pris's pretty hair; all the small feminine
+details which a man, especially a brave, manly man of Stephen Hopkins's
+kind, is supposed to scorn, but which Constance was instinctively
+sympathetic enough to know rested and amused her father; soothed him
+with its pretty femininity; relaxed him as proving that in a world of
+such pretty trifles tragedy could not exist.
+
+"My stepmother is not come back yet," Constance said, with a swift
+glance around, as she entered. "Father, when she comes in with the baby
+you must test his newly discovered powers; Oceanus is beginning to stand
+alone! Now I must go doff my Sunday best--Father, I never can learn to
+call it the Sabbath; please forgive me!--and put on my busy-maid
+clothes! What a brief time a marriage takes! I mean in the making!" She
+laughed and ran lightly away, up the steep stairs that wound in
+threatening semi-spiral, up under the steep lean-to roof.
+
+"Bless my sunshine!" said Stephen Hopkins, fervently, as he watched her
+skirt whisk around the door at the stairway foot.
+
+But upstairs, in the small room that she and Damaris shared, his
+"sunshine" was blurred by a swift rain of tears.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+The Lost Lads
+
+
+A gray evening of mist drifting in from the sea settled down upon
+Plymouth. It emphasized the silence and seemed to widen and deepen the
+vacuum created by the absence of Giles and John. For the supper hour, at
+which they were enthusiastically prompt to return to give their hearty
+appetites their due, came and passed without bringing back the boys.
+
+Stephen Hopkins pushed away his plate with its generous burden
+untouched, threw on his wide-brimmed hat, and strode out of the house
+without a word. Constance knew that he had gone to ask help from Myles
+Standish, to organize a search, and go out to find the lost.
+
+Damaris crept into her sister's lap and sat with her thin little hands
+in Constance's, mutely looking up into the white, sorrowing face above
+her.
+
+Even Dame Eliza was reluctantly moved to something like pity for the
+girl's silent misery, and expressed it in her way.
+
+"At least," she said, suddenly, out of the deep silence enveloping them,
+"here is one thing gone wrong without my sending. No one can say that I
+had a finger raised to push your brother out of the right course this
+time!"
+
+Constance tried to reply, but failed. Not directly had her stepmother
+had a share in this misfortune, but how great a share had she in the
+estrangement between father and son that was at the bottom of the
+present misunderstanding? Constance would not remind her stepmother of
+this, and no other reply was possible to her in her intense anxiety.
+
+The night wore away, the dawn came, lifting the fog as the sun shot up
+out of the sea. Stephen Hopkins came out of the principal bedroom on the
+ground floor of the house showing in his haggard face that he had not
+slept. Constance came slowly down the winding stairs, pale, with dark
+circles under her eyes which looked as though they had withdrawn from
+her face, retreated into the mind which dwelt on Giles since they could
+no longer see him, and the brain alone could fulfil their office.
+
+"There's no sort of use in getting out mourning till you're sure of
+having a corpse, so I say," said Mistress Eliza, impatiently. "Giles is
+certain to take care of himself. I've no manner of patience with people
+who borrow what they can't return, and how would you return trouble,
+borrowed from nothing and nobody?"
+
+Nevertheless she helped both Constance and her father to a generous
+bowlful of porridge, and set it before them with a snapped-out: "Eat
+that!" which Constance was grateful to feel concealed uneasiness on her
+stepmother's own part.
+
+Another day, and still another, wore themselves away. Constance fought
+to keep her mind occupied with all manner of tasks, hoping to tire
+herself till she must sleep at night, but nevertheless slept only
+brokenly, lying staring at the three stars which she could see through
+the tiny oblong window under the eaves, or into the blackness of the
+slanting roof, listening to Damaris's quiet breathing, and thinking
+that childhood was not more blessed in being happy than in its ability
+to forget.
+
+Stephen Hopkins had gone with Captain Standish, Francis Billington, and
+Squanto to scour the woods for miles, although labouring hands could ill
+be spared at that season. They returned at the close of their fourth day
+of absence, and no one ventured to question them; that they had not so
+much as a clue to the lost lads was clearly written on their faces.
+
+Constance drew her stool close to her father after supper was over, and
+wound her arms about him and laid her head on his breast, unrebuked by
+her stepmother.
+
+"Read the fifty-first psalm, my daughter; it was the penitential psalm
+in England in my beginnings," Stephen Hopkins said, and Constance read
+it in a low voice, which she dared not raise, lest it break.
+
+An hour later, an hour which had been passed in silence, broken only by
+Dame Eliza's taking Damaris up to bed, the sound of voices was heard
+coming down the quiet street. Stephen Hopkins's body tautened as he sat
+erect, and Constance sprang to her feet. No one ever went outside his
+house in the Plymouth plantation after the hour for family prayers,
+which was identical in every house. But someone was abroad now; it was
+not possible----?
+
+"It is Squanto," said Stephen Hopkins, catching the Indian's syllables
+of broken English.
+
+"And Francis Billington, and another Indian, talking in his own
+tongue!" added Constance, shaking with excitement.
+
+The door opened; Stephen Hopkins did not move to open it. There entered
+the three whom those within the house had recognized; Francis's face was
+crimson, his eyes flashing.
+
+"You come to tell me that my son is dead?" said Stephen Hopkins, raising
+his hand as if to ward off a blow.
+
+"No, we don't! Don't look like that, Mr. Hopkins, Con!" cried Francis.
+"Jack and Giles are all right----"
+
+"Massasoit send him," said Squanto, interrupting the boy, as if he
+wanted to save Stephen Hopkins from betraying the feeling that an Indian
+would scorn to betray, for Mr. Hopkins had closed his eyes and swayed
+slightly as he heard Francis's high boyish voice utter the words he had
+so hungered to hear.
+
+Squanto pointed to the Indian beside him as he spoke. "Massasoit sent
+him. Massasoit know where boys go. Nawsett. It not far; Massasoit more
+far. Nawsett Indians fight you when you come, not yet got Plymouth
+found. Nawsett. Both boys, both two." Squanto touched two fingers of his
+left hand. "Not dead, not sick, not hurt. You send, Massasoit say. Get
+boys you send Nawsett. Squanto go show Nawsett." Squanto looked proudly
+at his hearers, rejoicing in his good news.
+
+"Praise God from Whom all blessings flow," said Stephen Hopkins, bowing
+his head, and Constance burst into tears and seized him around the neck,
+while Francis drew his sleeves across his eyes, muttering something
+about: "Rather old Jack was all right."
+
+Dame Eliza came down the stairs, having heard voices, and recognized
+them as Indian, but had been unable to catch what was said. She stopped
+as she saw the scene before her, and her face crimsoned. She at once
+knew the purport, though not the details, of the message delivered
+through Squanto by Massasoit's messenger, and that the lost lads were
+safe. With a quick revulsion from the anxiety that she had felt, she
+instantly lost her temper.
+
+"Stephen Hopkins, what is this unseemingly exhibition? Will you allow
+your daughter to behave in this manner before a youth, and two savage
+men? Shame on you! Stand up, Constantia, and let your father alone. So
+Giles is safe, I suppose? Well, did I not tell you so? Bad sixpences are
+hard to lose; your son will give you plenty of the scant comfort you've
+already had from him. No fear of him not coming back to plague me, and
+to disgrace you," she scolded.
+
+"Oh, Stepmother, when we are so glad and thankful!" sighed Constance,
+lifting her tired, tear-worn face, over which the light of her gladness
+and gratitude was beginning to shine.
+
+There was nothing to be done that night but to try to adjust to the
+relief that had come, and to wait impatiently for morning to arrange to
+bring home the wanderers.
+
+Stephen Hopkins was ahead of the sun in beginning the next day, and as
+soon as he could decently do so, he set out to see Governor Bradford to
+ask his help.
+
+"I rejoice with you, my friend and brother," said dignified William
+Bradford, when he had heard Mr. Hopkins's story. "Like the woman in the
+Gospel you call in your neighbours to rejoice with you that the lost is
+found. I will at once send the shallop to sail down the coast and bring
+off our thorn-in-the-flesh, young John Billington, and your somewhat
+unruly lad with him. As your brother in our great enterprise and your
+true well-wisher, let me advise that you deal sternly with Giles when he
+is returned to us. He hath done exceeding wrong thus to afflict you, and
+with you, all of our community to a lesser extent, by anxiety over his
+safety. Furthermore, it is a time in which we need all our workers; he
+hath not only deprived us of his own services, but hath demanded the
+valuable hours of others in striving to rescue him. I doubt not that you
+will do your duty as a father, but let me remind you that your duty is
+not leniency, but sternness to the lad who is too nearly man to fail us
+all as he hath done."
+
+"It is true, William Bradford, and I will do my best though it hath
+afflicted me that I may have driven the lad from me by blaming him when
+it was not his desert, and that because of this he went away," said Mr.
+Hopkins.
+
+"If this were true, Stephen, yet would it not excuse Giles," said
+William Bradford, whose one child, a boy, had been left behind in
+England to follow his father to the New World later, and who was not
+versed in ways of fatherhood to highstrung youths of Giles's age. "It
+becometh not a son to resent his father's chastisements, which, properly
+borne, may result in benefit, whether or not their immediate occasion
+was a matter of justice or error. So deal with your son sternly, I warn
+you, nor let your natural pleasure in receiving him safe back again
+relax you toward him."
+
+The shallop was launched with sufficient men to navigate her, Squanto
+accompanying them to guide them southward to the tribe that held Giles
+and John, in a sense, their captives.
+
+On the third day after her departure the shallop came again in sight,
+nosing her way slowly up the harbour against a wind dead ahead and
+blowing strong. There was time, and to spare for any amount of
+preparation, and yet to get down on the sands to see the shallop come to
+anchor, and be ready to welcome those whom she bore. Nevertheless,
+Constance hurried her simple toilet till she was breathless, snarling
+the comb in her hair; tying her shoe laces into knots which her
+nervousness could hardly disentangle; chafing her delicate skin with the
+vigorous strokes she gave her face; stooping frequently to peer out of
+her bedroom window to see if, by an impossible mischance, the shallop
+had come up before she was dressed, although the one glimpse that she
+had managed to get of the small craft had shown that the shallop was an
+hour away down the harbour.
+
+At last her flustered mishaps were over, and Constance was neat and
+trim, ready to go down to the beach.
+
+"Damaris, little sister, come up and let me see that none of the dinner
+treacle is on the outside of your small mouth," Constance called gaily
+down the stairs.
+
+Damaris appeared, came half way, and stopped forlornly.
+
+"Mother says she will take me, Constance," the child said, mournfully.
+"She says that you will greet Giles with warm welcome, and that I must
+not help in it, for that Giles is wicked, and must be frowned upon. Is
+Giles wicked, Constance? He is good to me; I love him, not so much as
+you, but I do love Giles. Must I not be glad when he comes, Sister?"
+
+"Oh, Damaris, darling, your kind little heart tells you that you would
+want a welcome yourself if you were returning after an absence! And we
+know that the father of that bad son in the Gospel went out to meet
+him, and fell on his neck! But I must not teach you against your
+mother's teaching! You know, little lass, whether or not I think our big
+brother bad!" said poor Constance. "Where is your mother?"
+
+"She hath gone to fetch Oceanus back; he crawled out of the open door
+and went as fast as a spider down the street, crawling, Constance! He
+looked so funny!" and Damaris laughed.
+
+Constance laughed too, and cried gaily, with one of her sudden changes
+from sober to gay: "And so Oceanus is beginning to run off, too! What a
+time we shall have, Damaris, with our big brother marching away, and our
+baby brother crawling away, both of them caring not a button whether we
+are frightened about them, or not!"
+
+She flitted down the stairs with her lightness of movement that gave her
+the effect of a half-flight, caught Damaris to her and kissed her
+soundly, and set her down just in time to escape rebuke for her
+demonstrativeness from Dame Eliza, who returned with her face reddened,
+and Oceanus kicking under one arm, hung like a sack below it, and
+screaming with baffled rage and the desire of adventure. On the beach
+nearly everyone of the small community was gathered to see the arrival.
+
+Constance stole up behind Priscilla Alden, and touched her shoulder.
+
+"You are not the only happy girl here to-day, my bonny bride," she
+said.
+
+Priscilla turned and caught Constance by both hands.
+
+"Nor the only one glad for this cause, Constance," she retorted. "Indeed
+I rejoice beyond my powers of telling, that Giles is come to thee, and
+that thou art spared the bitter sorrow that we feared had fallen upon
+thee!"
+
+"Well do I know that, dear Pris," said Constance. "Where is my father?"
+
+"Yonder with William Bradford, Edward Winslow, Elder Brewster; do you
+not see?" Priscilla replied nodding toward the group that stood somewhat
+apart from the others. Constance crossed over to them, and curtseyed
+respectfully to the heads of this small portion of the king's subjects.
+
+"Will you not come with me, my father?" she said, hoping that Stephen
+Hopkins would stand with her on the edge of the sands to be the first
+whom Giles would see on arriving, identifying himself with her who,
+Giles would know, was watching for him with a heart leaping out toward
+him.
+
+"No, Daughter, I will remain here. I am to-day less Giles Hopkins's
+father than one of the representatives of this community, which he and
+John Billington have offended," replied Stephen Hopkins, but whether
+with his mind in complete accord with his decision, or stifling a
+longing to run to meet his son, like that other father of whom Constance
+had spoken to Damaris, the girl could not tell.
+
+She turned away, recognizing the futility of pleading when her father
+was flanked as he then was.
+
+The shallop was beached and the lost lads leaped out, John with a broad
+grin on his face, unmixed enjoyment of the situation visible in his
+every look; Giles with his eyes troubled, joy in getting back struggling
+with his misgivings as to what he might find awaiting him.
+
+The first thing that he found was Constance, and there was no admixture
+in the delight with which he seized his sister's hands--warmer greeting
+being impossible before a concourse which would rebuke it sternly--and
+replied fervently to her: "Oh, Giles, how glad I am to see you again!"
+
+"And I to see you, sweet sis! Ah, there is Pris! I missed her wedding.
+And there is John Alden!" said Giles, shading his eyes with his hand,
+but Constance saw the eyes searching for his father, and merely glancing
+at Priscilla and John.
+
+"Our father is with the other weighty men of our plantation, waiting for
+you, Giles. You and John must go to them," suggested Constance.
+
+Giles shrugged his shoulders. "Otherwise they will not know we are
+back?" he asked. "Very well; come, then, Jack. The sooner the better;
+then the gods are propitiated."
+
+The two wilful lads walked over to the grave men awaiting them.
+
+"We thank you, Governor Bradford, for sending the shallop after us,"
+said Giles.
+
+"Is this all that you have to say?" demanded William Bradford!
+
+"No, sir; we have had adventures. We wandered five days, subsisting on
+berries and roots; came upon an Indian village, called Manamet, which we
+reckon to be some twenty miles to the southward of Plymouth here. These
+Indians conveyed us on to Nawsett still further along, and there we
+rested until the shallop appeared to take us off. This is, in brief, the
+history of our trip, although I assure you, it was longer in the living
+than in the telling. Permit me to add, Governor, that those Indians
+among whom we tarried are coming to make a peace with us and seek
+satisfaction from those of our community who took their corn what time
+we were dallying at Cape Cod, when we arrived in the _Mayflower_. This
+is, perhaps, in a measure due to our visit to them, though we would not
+claim the full merit of it, since it may also be partly wrought by
+Massasoit's example."
+
+Giles spoke with an easy nonchalance that held no suggestion of
+contrition, and William Bradford, as well as Elder Brewster, and Mr.
+Winslow, frowned upon him, while his father flushed darkly under the
+bronze tint of his skin, and his eyes flashed. At every encounter this
+father and son mutually angered each other.
+
+"Inasmuch as you have done well, Giles Hopkins and John Billington, we
+applaud you," said Governor Bradford, slowly. "In sooth we are rejoiced
+that you are not dead, not harmed by your adventure. We rejoice, also,
+in the tidings of peace with yet another savage neighbour. But we demand
+of you recognition of your evil ways, repentance for the anxiety that
+you have caused those to whom you are dear, to all Christians, who, as
+is their profession, wish you well; for the injury you have done us in
+taking yourselves off, to the neglect of your seasonable labours, and
+the time which hath been wasted by able-bodied men searching for you.
+You have not asked your father to pardon you."
+
+Giles looked straight into his father's eyes. Unfortunately there was in
+them nothing of the look they had worn a few nights earlier when
+Constance had read to him the psalm of the stricken heart.
+
+"I am truly grieved for the suffering that I know my sister bore while
+my fate was uncertain, for I know well her love for me. And I regret
+being a charge upon this struggling plantation. As far as lies in my
+power I will repay that debt to it. But as to my father, his last words
+to me expressed his dislike for me, and his certainty that I was a
+wrong-doer. I cannot think that he has grieved for me," said poor Giles,
+speaking like a man to men until, at the last words, his voice quavered.
+
+"I have grieved for thee often and bitterly, Giles, and over thee, which
+is harder for a father than sorrow for a son. Show me that I am wrong in
+my judgment of thee, by humbling thyself to my just authority, and
+conducting thyself as I would have thee act, and with a great joy in my
+heart I will confess myself mistaken in thee, and thank Heaven for my
+error," said Stephen Hopkins.
+
+Giles's eyes wavered, he dropped his lids, and bit his lip. The simple
+manhood in his father's words moved him, yet he reflected that he had
+been justified in resenting an unfounded suspicion on this father's
+part, and he steeled himself against him. More than this, how could he
+reply to him when he was surrounded by the stern men who condemned
+youthful folly, and whom Giles resisted in thought and deed?
+
+Giles turned away without raising his eyes; he did not see a half
+movement that his father made to hold out his hand to detain him.
+
+"Time will right, or end everything," the boy muttered, and walked away.
+
+Constance, who had been watching the meeting between her two
+well-beloveds, crossed over to Myles Standish.
+
+"Captain Standish," she begged him, "come with me; I need you."
+
+"Faith, little Con, I need you always, but never have you! You show
+scant pity to a lonely man, that misses his little friend," retorted
+Captain Standish, turning on his heel, obedient to a gesture from
+Constance to walk with her.
+
+"It is about Giles, dear Captain," Constance began. "He is back, I am
+thankful for it, but this breach between him and my father is a wide
+one, and over such a foolish thing! And it came about just when
+everything was going well!"
+
+"Foolish trifles make the deepest breaches, Constance, hardest to bridge
+over," said Captain Myles. "I grant you that the case is serious,
+chiefly because the man and the boy love each other so greatly; that,
+and their likeness, is what balk them. What would you have me do?"
+
+"I don't know, but something!" cried Constance wringing-her hands. "I
+hoped you would have a plan by which you could bring them together."
+
+"Well, truth to tell, Con, I have a plan by which to separate them,"
+said the captain, adding, laughing--as Constance cried out: "Oh, not for
+all time!"--"But I think a time spent apart would bring them together
+in the end. Here is my plan: I am going exploring. There is that vast
+tract of country north of us which we have not seen, and tribes of
+savages, of which Squanto tries to tell us, but which he lacks of
+English to describe. I am going to take a company of men from here and
+explore to the nor'ard. I would take Giles among them. He will learn
+self-discipline, obedience to me--I am too much a soldier to be lax in
+exacting obedience from all who serve under me--and he will return here
+licked into shape by the tongue of experience, as an unruly cub is
+licked into his proper form by his dam. In the meantime your father will
+see Giles more calmly than at short range, and will not be irritated by
+his manly airs. When they come together again it will be on a new plane,
+as men, not as man and boy, and I foresee between them the sane
+enjoyment of their profound mutual affection. I had it in mind to ask
+Stephen Hopkins to lend me his boy; what say you, my Constance?"
+
+"I say: Bless you, and thrice over bless you, Captain Myles Standish!"
+cried Constance. "It is the very solution! Oh, I am thankful! I shall be
+anxious every hour till you return, but with all my heart I say: Take
+Giles with you and teach him sense. What should we ever do here without
+you, Captain, dear 'Arm-of-the-Colony'?"
+
+"I doubt you ever have a chance to try that dire lack, my Con," said
+Captain Myles, with a humorous look at her. "I think I'm chained here by
+the interest that has grown in me day by day, and that I shall die among
+you. Though, by my sword, it's a curious thing to think of Myles
+Standish dying among strict Puritans!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+Sundry Herbs and Simples
+
+
+Stephen Hopkins and his son drew no nearer together as the days went by.
+
+Hurt and angry, Giles would not bend his stiff young neck to humble
+himself, checking any impulse to do so by reminding himself that his
+father had been unjust to him.
+
+Yet Doctor Fuller, good, kind, and wise, had the right of it when he
+said to the lad one day, laying his arm across Giles's shoulders,
+caressingly:
+
+"Remember, lad, that who is right, or who is wrong in a quarrel, or an
+estrangement, matters little, since we are all insects of a day and our
+dignity at best a poor thing, measured by Infinite standards. But he is
+always right who ends a quarrel; ten thousand times right if he does it
+at the sacrifice of his own sense of injury, laying down his pride to
+lift a far greater possession. There may be a difference of opinion as
+to which is right when two have fallen out, but however that be, the
+situation is in itself wrong beyond dispute, and all the honour is his
+who ends it."
+
+Giles heard him with lowered head, and knit brows, but he did not resent
+the brief sermon. Doctor Fuller was a gentle spirit; all his days were
+given over to healing and helping; he was free from the condemnatory
+sternness of most of the colonists, and Giles, as all others did, loved
+him.
+
+Giles kicked at the pebbles in the way, the slow colour mounting in his
+face. Then he threw back his head and looked the good doctor squarely in
+the eyes.
+
+"Ah, well, Doctor Fuller," he said. "I'd welcome peace, but what would
+you? My father condemns me, sees no good in me, nor would he welcome
+back the old days when we were close friends. There will be a ship come
+here from home some time on which I can sail back to England. It will be
+better to rid my father of my hateful presence; yet should I hate to
+leave Sis--Constance."
+
+"May the ship never leave the runway that shall take you from us, Giles,
+lad," said the doctor. "You are blind not to see that it is too-great
+love for thee that ails thy father! It often works to cross purposes,
+our unreasonable human affection. But the case is by no means past
+curing when love awry is the disease. Do your part, Giles, and all will
+be well."
+
+But Giles did not alter his course, and when Captain Myles Standish said
+to Stephen Hopkins: "We set forth on the eighteenth of September to
+explore the Massachusetts. I shall take ten men of our colour, and three
+red men, two besides Squanto. Let me have your lad for one of my band,
+old friend. I think it will be his remedy." Stephen Hopkins welcomed the
+suggestion, as Giles himself did, and it was settled. The Plymouth
+company sailed away in their shallop on a beautiful, sunshiny morning
+when the sun had scarcely come up out of the sea.
+
+Giles and his father had shaken hands on parting, and Stephen Hopkins
+had given the boy his blessing; both were conscious that it might be a
+final parting, since no one could be sure what would befall the small
+band among untried savages.
+
+Yet there was no further reconciliation than this, no apology on the one
+side, nor proffered pardon on the other.
+
+Constance clung long around her brother's neck in the dusk in which she
+had risen to prepare his breakfast; she did not go down to see the
+start, being heavy hearted at Giles's going, and going without lifting
+the cloud completely between him and his father. She bade him good-bye
+in the long low room under the rear of the lean-to, where wood was piled
+and water buckets were set and storage made of supplies.
+
+"Oh, Giles, Giles, my dearest, may God keep you and bring you back!"
+Constance whispered, and then let her brother go.
+
+She went about her household tasks that morning with lagging step and
+unsmiling lips. Damaris followed her, wistfully, much depressed by the
+unusual dejection of Constance, who, in spite of her stepmother's
+disapproval of anything like merriment, ordinarily contrived to
+entertain Damaris to the top of her bent when the household tasks were
+getting done.
+
+"Will Giles never come home again, Connie?" the child asked at last, and
+Constance cried with a catch in her voice:
+
+"Yes, oh yes, little sister! We know he will, because we so want him!"
+
+"There must be a better ground for hope than our poor desires,
+Damaris," Dame Eliza was beginning, speaking over the child at
+Constance; when opportunely a shadow fell across the floor through the
+open door and Constance turned to see Doctor Fuller smiling at her.
+
+"Good morning, Mistress Hopkins; good morning little Damaris; and good
+morning to you, Constance lass!" he said. "Is this a day of especial
+business? Are you too busy for charity to your neighbours, beginning
+with me, and indirectly reaching out to our entire community?"
+
+Constance smiled at him with that swift brightening of her face that was
+one of her chief attractions; her expression was always playing between
+grave and gay.
+
+"It is not a day of especial business, Doctor Fuller," she said, "or at
+least all our days are especial ones where there is everything yet to be
+done. But I could give it over to charity better than some other days,
+and if it were charity to you--though I fear there is nothing for such
+as I to do for such as you--then how gladly would I do it, if only to
+pay a tittle of the debt we all owe to you."
+
+"Good child!" said the doctor. "I need help and comradeship in my herb
+gathering; it is to be done to-day, if you will be that helper. There is
+no wind, and there is that benignity of sun and sky that hath always
+seemed to me to impart special virtue to herbs gathered under it. So
+will you come with me? We will gather the morning long, and this
+afternoon I purpose distilling, in which necessary work your deft
+fingers will be of the greatest assistance to me."
+
+"Gladly will I go," cried Constance, flushing with pleasure. "I will
+fetch my basket and shears, put on my bonnet, and be ready in a trice.
+Shall I prepare a lunch, or shall I be at home again for dinner?"
+
+"Neither, Constance; there is yet another alternative." Doctor Fuller
+looked with great satisfaction at Constance's happier face as he spoke;
+she had been so melancholy when he had come. "I have arranged that you
+shall be my guest at dinner in my house, and after it we will to work in
+my substitute for a laboratory. Mistress Hopkins, Constance will be
+quite safe, be assured; and you, I trust, will not mind a quiet day with
+Damaris and Oceanus to bear you company?"
+
+"And if I did mind it, would that prevent it?" demanded Dame Eliza with
+a toss of her head. "Not even with a 'by your leave' does Constantia
+Hopkins arrange her goings and comings."
+
+"Which was wholly my fault in not first putting my question to you,
+instead of to Constance directly," said Doctor Fuller. "And surely there
+is no excuse for my blundering, I who am trained to feel pulses and look
+at tongues! But since it is thus happily concluded, and your stepmother
+is glad to let you have a sort of holiday, come then; hasten, Constance
+girl!"
+
+Constance ran upstairs to hide her laughing face. She came down almost
+at once with that face shaded by a deep bonnet, a basket hung on her
+arm, shears sticking up out of it, pulling on long-armed half-gloves as
+she came.
+
+As they walked down the narrow street Constance glanced up at Doctor
+Fuller, interrogatively.
+
+"And----?" the doctor hinted.
+
+"And I was wondering whether you were not treating me to-day as your
+patient?" Constance said. "A patient with a trouble of the mind, and
+also a heart complaint?"
+
+"Which means----?" The doctor again waited for Constance to fill out his
+question.
+
+"Which means that you knew I was sorely troubled about Giles; that he
+had gone without better drawing to his father; that I was anxious about
+him, even while wishing him to go; and that you gave me this day in the
+woods with you for my healing," Constance answered.
+
+"At least not for your harm, little maid," said the doctor. "It hath
+been my experience that the gatherer of herbs gets a healing of spirit
+that is not set down in our books among the beneficial qualities of the
+plants, but which may, under conditions, be their best attribute.
+Although the singing of brooks and birds, the sweetness of the winds,
+the solemn nobility of the trees, the vastness of the sky, the
+over-brooding presence of God in His creation are compounded with the
+herbs, and impart their powers to us with that of the plants."
+
+"That is true," said Constance. "I feel my vexations go from me as if my
+soul were bathed in a miraculous elixir, when I go troubled to the woods
+and sit in them awhile."
+
+"Of a certainty," agreed the doctor, bending his tall, thin figure to
+pick a small leaf which he held up to Constance. "See this, with its
+likeness to the halberd at its base? This is vervain, which is called
+'Simpler's Joy,' because of the good it yields to those who, like us
+to-day, are simplers, gatherers of simple herbs for mankind's benefit.
+Now let us hope that this single plant is a forerunner of many of its
+kind, for it hath been a sacred herb among the ancients, as among
+Christians, and it should be an augury of good to us to find it. Look
+you, Constance, I do not mind confessing it to you, for you are not only
+young, but of that happy sort who yield to imagination something of its
+due. I like my omens to be favourable, not in superstition, though our
+brethren would condemn me thus, but from a sense of harmony and the
+satisfaction of it."
+
+"How pleasant a hearing is that, Doctor Fuller!" laughed Constance. "I
+love to have the new moon aright, though well I know the moon and I have
+naught in common! And though I do not believe in fairies, yet do I like
+to make due allowance for them!"
+
+"It is the poetry of these things, and children like you and me, my
+dear, are not to be deprived of poetry by mere facts and common sense,"
+said the doctor, sticking in the band of his hat the sprig of blue
+vervain which his sharp eyes had discovered.
+
+"Yonder on the side of that sandy hill shall we find mints, pennyroyal,
+and the close cousin of it, which is blue curls. There is the prunelle,
+and welcome to it! Gather all you can of it, Constance. That is
+self-heal, and a sovereign remedy for quinsy. So is it a balm for wounds
+of iron and steel tools, and for both these sorts of afflictions, what
+with our winter climate as to quinsy and our hard labour as to wounds, I
+am like to need abundant self-heal."
+
+Thus pleasantly chatting Doctor Fuller led the way, first up the sandy
+hill where grew the pennyroyal, all along the border of the woods where
+self-heal abounded. They found many plants unexpectedly, which the
+doctor always hailed with the joy of one who loved them, rather more
+than of the medical man who required them, and Constance busily snipped
+the stems, listening to the doctor's wise and kindly talk, loving him
+for his goodness and kindness to her in making her heart light and
+giving her on this day, which had promised to be sad, of his own
+abundant peace.
+
+"Now, Constance, I shall lead you to a secret of my own," announced the
+doctor as the sun mounted high above them, and noon drew near. "Come
+with me. But do not forget to rejoice in this wealth of bloom, purple
+and blue, these asters along the wayside. They are the glory of our new
+country, and for them let us praise God who sets beauty so lavishly
+around us, having no use but to praise Him, for not to any other purpose
+are these asters here, and yet, though I cannot use them, am I humbly
+thankful for them. And for these plumes of golden and silver flowers
+beside them, which we did not know across the seas. Now, Constance, what
+say you to that?"
+
+He pointed triumphantly to a small group of plants with heart-shaped
+leaves, having small leaves at their base, and which twisted as they
+grew around their neighbouring plants, or climbed a short distance on
+small shrubs. Groups of drooping berries of brilliant, translucent
+scarlet lighted up the little plant settlement, hanging as gracefully as
+jewels set by a skilful goldsmith for a fair lady's adornment.
+
+"I think they are wonderfully beautiful. They are like ornaments for a
+beautiful lady! What are they?" cried Constance.
+
+"They are themselves the beautiful lady," Doctor Fuller said, with a
+pleased laugh. "That is their name--belladonna, which means 'beautiful
+lady.' They are _Atropa Belladonna_, to give them their full title. But
+their beauty is only in appearance. If they are a belle dame, then she
+is the _belle dame sans merci_, a cruel beauty if you cross her. You
+must never taste these berries, Constance. I myself planted these vines.
+I brought them with me, carefully set in soil. The beautiful lady can be
+cruel if you take liberties with her, but she is capable of kindness. I
+shall gather the belladonna now and distil it. In case any one among us
+ate of poisonous toadstools, and were seized with severe spasms of the
+nature of the effect of toadstools, belladonna alone would save them.
+Nightshade, we also call this plant. See, I will myself gather this, by
+your leave, my assistant, and place it in my own herb wallet."
+
+The doctor suited the action to the word, arose from his knees and
+carefully brushed them. "When Mistress Fuller comes, which is a weary
+day awaiting, I hope she may not find me fallen into untidiness," he
+said, whimsically. "Constance, the ship is due that will bring my wife
+and child, if my longing be a calendar!"
+
+"Indeed, dear Doctor Fuller, I often think of it," said Constance. "You
+who are so good to us all are lonely and heavy of heart, but none is
+made to feel it. The comfort is that Mistress Fuller and your little
+one are safe and you will yet see them, while so many of the women who
+came hither in our ship are not here now, and those who loved them will
+never see them in this world again."
+
+"Surely, my child. I am not repining, for, though I am opposed to the
+extreme strict views of some of our community, and they look askance
+upon me for it at times, yet do I not oppose the will of God," said the
+doctor, simply.
+
+"Who of them fulfils it as you do?" cried Constance. "You who go out to
+minister to the sick savages, not content to heal your own brethren?"
+
+"And are not the savages also our brothers?" asked the doctor, taking up
+his wallet. "Come then, child; we will go home, and this afternoon shall
+you learn something of distilling, as you have, I hope, this morning
+learned something of selecting herbs for remedies."
+
+Constance went along at the doctor's side, swinging her bonnet, not
+afraid of the hot September sun upon her face. It lighted up her
+disordered hair, and turned it into the semblance of burnished metal,
+upon which the doctor's eyes rested with the same satisfaction that had
+warmed them as he looked on the generous beauty of aster and goldenrod,
+and he saw with pleasure that Constance's face was also shining, its
+brightness returned, and he was well content with the effect of his
+prescription for this patient.
+
+Constance had a gift of forgetting herself in an ecstasy that seized her
+when the weight of her new surroundings was lifted. With Doctor Fuller
+she felt perfect sympathy, and her utter delight in this lovely day
+bubbled up and found expression.
+
+Doctor Fuller heard her singing one of her little improvised songs,
+softly, under her breath, to a crooning air that was less an air than a
+succession of sweet sounds. It was the sort of little song with which
+Constance often amused the children of the settlement, and Doctor
+Fuller, that childlike soul, listened to her with much of their pleasure
+in it.
+
+ "Blossom, and berry, and herb of grace;
+ Purple and blue and gold lighting each place;
+ Herbs for our body and bloom for our heart--
+ Beauty and healing, for each hath its part.
+ Under the sunshine and in the starlight,
+ Warp and woof weareth the pattern aright.
+ Shineth the fabric when summer's at end:
+ The garment scarce hiding the Heart of our Friend,"
+
+Constance sang, nor did the doctor interrupt her simple Te Deum by a
+word.
+
+At the doctor's house dinner awaited them, kept hot, for they were
+tardy. After it, and when Constance had helped to put away all signs of
+its having been, the doctor said to her:
+
+"Now for my laboratory, such as it is, and for our task, my apprentice
+in medicine!" He conducted Constance into a small room, at the rear of
+the house where he had set up tables of various sizes of his own
+manufacture, and where were ranged on the shelves running around three
+sides of the room at different heights, bowls, glasses of odd
+shapes--the uses of which were not known to Constance--and small,
+delicate tools, knives, weights, and piles of strips of linen, neatly
+rolled and placed in assorted widths in an accessible corner.
+
+"Mount this stool, Constance, and watch," the doctor bade her. "Pay
+strict attention to what I shall do and tell you. Take this paper and
+quill and note names, or special instructions. I am serious in wishing
+you to know something of my work. I need assistance; there is no man to
+be spared from man's work in the plantation, and, to speak the truth,
+your brain is quicker to apprehend me, as your hand is more skilful to
+execute for me in the matters upon which I engage than are those of any
+of the lads who are with us. So mount this high stool, my lass, and
+learn your lesson."
+
+Constance obeyed him. Breathlessly she watched the beginnings of the
+distillation of the belladonna which she had seen gathered.
+
+As the small drops fell slowly into the glass which the doctor had set
+for them, he began to teach Constance other things, while the
+distillation went on.
+
+"These are my phials, Constance," he said. "Commit to memory the names
+of their contents, and note their positions. See, on these shelves are
+my drugs. Do you see this dark phial? That is for my belladonna. Now
+note where it is to stand. In that line are poisons. Their phials are
+dark, to prevent mistaking them for less harmful drugs, which are on
+this other shelf, in white containers."
+
+The doctor taught, and Constance obediently repeated her lesson, till
+the sound of the horn that summoned the settlers to their homes for
+supper, and the level rays of the sun across the floor, warned the
+doctor and his pupil that their pleasant day was over.
+
+"But you must return, till you are letter perfect in your knowledge,
+Constance," the doctor said. "I have decided that there must be one
+person among us whom I could dispatch to bring me what I needed in case
+I were detained, and could not come myself."
+
+"I will gladly learn, Doctor Fuller," said Constance, her face
+confirming her assurance. "I have no words to tell you how happy it
+makes me to hope that I may one day be useful in such great matters."
+
+"As you will be," the doctor said. "But remember, my child, the lesson
+of the fields: It does not concern us whether great or small affairs are
+given us to do; the one thing is to do well what comes our way; to be
+content to fill the background of the picture, or to be a figure in the
+foreground, as we may be required. Aster, goldenrod, herb, all are doing
+their portion."
+
+"Indeed you have helped me to see that, dear Doctor Fuller," said
+Constance, gently. "It is not ambition, but the remembrance of last
+winter's hardships, when there was so little aid, that makes me wish I
+could one day help."
+
+"Yes, Constance; I know. Good-night, my child, and thank you for your
+patient attention, for your help; most of all for your sweet
+companionship," said the doctor.
+
+"Oh, as to that, I am grateful enough to you! You made to-day a happy
+girl out of a doleful one!" cried Constance. "Good-night, Doctor
+Fuller!"
+
+She ran down the street, singing softly:
+
+ "Flower, and berry, and herb of grace;"
+
+till she reached her home and silenced her song with a kiss on eager
+Damaris's cheek.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+Light-Minded Man, Heavy-Hearted Master
+
+
+Constance Hopkins sat at the side of the cave-like fireplace; opposite
+to where her father, engrossed in a heavy, much-rubbed, leather-bound
+book, toasted his feet beside the fire, as was his nightly wont.
+
+He was too deeply buried in his reading to heed her presence, but the
+girl felt keenly that her father was there and that she had him quite to
+herself. The consciousness of this made her heart sing softly in her
+breast, with a contentment that she voiced in the softest humming, not
+unlike the contented song of the kettle on the crane, and the purring of
+the cat, who sat with infolded paws between her human friends.
+
+Puck, the small spaniel, and Hecate, the powerful mastiff, who had come
+with the Hopkins family on the _Mayflower_, shared the hearth with Lady
+Fair, the cat, a right that their master insisted upon for them, but
+which Dame Eliza never ceased to inveigh against.
+
+However, Dame Eliza had gone to attend upon a sick neighbour that night,
+a fact which Hecate had approvingly noted, with her deep-grooved eyelids
+half-open, and in which Constance, no less than Puck and Hecate,
+rejoiced.
+
+There was the quintessence of domestic joy in thus sitting alone
+opposite her father, free from the sense of an unsympathetic element
+dividing them, in watching the charring of the tremendous back log, and
+the lovely colours in the salt-soaked small sticks under and over it
+which had been cast up by the sea and gathered on the beach for this
+consumption.
+
+Damaris and baby Oceanus were tucked away asleep for the night. It was
+as if once more Constance were a child in England with her widowed
+father, and no second marriage had ever clouded their perfect oneness.
+
+So Constance hummed softly, not to disturb the reader, the content that
+she felt not lessened by anxiety for Giles; there were hours in which
+she was assured of Giles's safe return, and this was one of them.
+
+Stephen Hopkins had been conscious of his girl's loving companionship,
+though not aware that he felt it, till, at last, the small tune that she
+hummed crept through his brain into his thought, and he laid down his
+book to look at her.
+
+She sat straight and prim by necessity. Her chair was narrow and
+erect--a carved, dark oaken chair, with a small round seat; it had been
+Constance's mother's, and had come out of her grandfather's Tudor
+mansion, wherein he had once entertained Queen Bess.
+
+Constance's dress was of dark homespun stuff, coming up close under her
+soft chin, falling straight around her feet, ornamented but with narrow
+bands of linen at her neck and around her wrists. Yet by its extreme
+severity the Puritan gown said: "See how lovely this young creature is!
+Only her fleckless skin, her gracious outlines, could triumph over my
+barrenness!"
+
+Obedient to her elders' demands upon her to curb its riotousness,
+Constance had brushed smooth and capped her lustrous hair, yet its
+tendrils escaped upon her brow; it glinted below the cap around her
+ears, and in the back of her neck, and shone in the firelight like
+precious metal.
+
+Stephen Hopkins's eyes brightened with delight in her charm, but, though
+he was not one of the strictest of Plymouth colonists, yet was he too
+imbued with their customs to express his pleasure in Constance's beauty.
+
+Instead he said, but his voice thrilled with what he left unsaid:
+
+"It's a great thing, my girl, to draw such a woman as Portia, here in
+this leathern book. She shines through it, and you see her clever eyes,
+her splendid presence, best of all her great power to love, to humble
+herself, to forget herself for the man she hath chosen! I would have you
+conversant with the women here met, Constance; they are worthy friends
+for you, in the wilderness where such noble ladies are rare."
+
+"Yet we have fine women and devoted ones here, Father," objected
+Constance, putting down the fine linen that she was hemstitching for her
+father's wearing. He noted the slender, supple hands, long-fingered,
+graceful, yet a womanly hand, made for loyalty.
+
+"Far be it from me to belittle them who recognized their hard and
+repulsive duty in the plague last winter, and performed it with utter
+self-renunciation," said Stephen Hopkins. "But, Constance, there is a
+something that, while it cannot transcend goodness, enhances it and
+places its possessor on a sort of dais all her life. Your mother had it,
+child. She was beautiful, charming, winsome, gracious, yet had she a
+lordly way with her; you see it in a fine-bred steed; I know not how to
+describe it. She was mettlesome, spirited. It was as if she did the
+right with a sort of inborn scorn for aught low; had made her choice at
+birth for true nobility and could but abide by it for aye, having made
+that choice. You have much of her, my lass, and I am daily thankful for
+it. A fine lady, was your exquisite young mother, and that says it,
+though the term is lowered by common usage. I would that you could have
+known her, my poor child! It was a loss hard to accept that you were
+deprived of her too soon, and never could have her direct impress upon
+you. And yet, thank Heaven, she hath left it upon you in mothering you,
+though the memory of her doth not bless you. And you sit here, upon a
+Plymouth hearthstone, far from the civilization that produced her, and
+to this I brought you!"
+
+"Oh, Father, Father, my darling!" cried Constance, flinging aside her
+work and dropping upon her knees beside him, for his voice quivered with
+an emotion that he never before had allowed to escape him, as he uttered
+a self-reproach that no one knew he harboured. "Oh, my father, dearest,
+don't you know that I am happy here? And are you not here with me?
+However fine a lady my sweet mother was--and for your sake I am glad
+indeed if you see anything of her in me!--yet was she no truer lady than
+you are a fine gentleman. And with you I need no better exemplar. As
+time goes on we shall receive from England much of the good we have left
+behind; our colony will grow and prosper; we shall not be crude,
+unlettered. And how truly noble are many of our company, not only you,
+but Governor Bradford, Mr. Brewster, Mr. Winslow; their wives; our Arm,
+Captain Myles; and--dearest of all, save you--Doctor Fuller! No maiden
+need lack of models who has these! But indeed, I want to be all that you
+would have me to be! I cannot say how glad I am if you see in me
+anything of my mother! Not for my sake; for yours, for yours!"
+
+"Portia after all!" Stephen Hopkins cried, stroking Constance's cheek.
+"That proves how well he knew, great Will of Warwickshire--which is our
+county also, my lass! Not for their own sake do true women value their
+charm, but for him they love. 'But only to stand high in your account I
+might in virtues, beauties, livings, friends, exceed!' So spake Portia;
+so, in effect, spake you just now. That was your mother's way; she,
+too, longed to have, but to give, her possessions, herself----"
+
+There came a knocking at the door and Constance sprang back to her
+chair, catching up her sewing, thrusting in her needle with shortened
+breath, not to be caught by her severe Plymouth neighbours in so
+unseemly a thing as betraying love for her father, leaning on his knee.
+
+Mr. Hopkins answered the summons, and there entered Francis Eaton, Mr.
+Allerton, and John Howland, who having come to Plymouth as the servant
+of Governor Carver, was now living in the colony with his articles of
+bondage annulled, and was inclined to exceed in severity the other
+Puritans, as one who had not long had authority even over himself.
+
+"Peace be to you, Mr. Hopkins," said John Howland, gravely. "Mistress
+Constantia, I wish you a good evening. Sir, we are come to consult you
+as to certain provisions to be made for the winter to come, as to care
+of the sick, should there be many----. Will that great beast bite? She
+seems not to like me, and I may say the feeling is mutual; I never could
+bear a beast."
+
+"She will not bite you, John; she is but deciding on your credentials as
+set forth in the odour of your clothing," said Mr. Hopkins, smiling.
+"Down, Hecate, good lass! While I am here you may leave it to me to see
+to your dwelling and fireside, old trusty!"
+
+Hecate wagged her whip like tail and instantly lay down, her nose on her
+extended paws, frowning at the callers.
+
+"But what is this, Stephen Hopkins?" demanded Francis Eaton, picking up
+the marred, leather-covered great volume which Stephen Hopkins had laid
+down when he had risen. "Shakespeare! Plays! Fie, fie upon you; sir! I
+wot you know this is godless matter, and that you are sinning to set the
+example of such reading to your child."
+
+Stephen Hopkins's quick temper blazed; he took a step in the speaker's
+direction, and Hecate was justified in growling at her master's lead.
+
+"Zounds! Eaton," he cried. "I know that an Englishman's house is his
+castle, on whichever side of the ocean he builds it, and that I will not
+brook your coming into it to tell me--_you_ to tell _me_,
+forsooth!--that I am sinning! Look to your own affairs, sir, but keep
+your hands off mine. If you are too ignorant to know more of Shakespeare
+than to think him harmful, well, then, sir, you confess to an ignorance
+that is in itself a sin against the Providence that gave us poets."
+
+"As to that, Francis Eaton," said Mr. Allerton, "Mr. Hopkins hath the
+best of it. We who strive after the highest virtue do not indulge in
+worldly reading, but there be those among us who would not condemn
+Shakespeare. But what is the noise I hear? Permit us to go yonder into
+your outer room, Mr. Hopkins, to satisfy ourselves that worse than
+play-reading is not carried on within this house."
+
+"Noise? I heard no noise till now, being too much occupied to note it,
+but it is easy to decide upon its cause from here, though if you desire
+to go yonder, or to share the play, I'll not prevent you," said Mr.
+Hopkins, his anger mounting.
+
+"Say, rather, as I seriously fear, that you are too accustomed to the
+sound to note it. I will pass over, as unworthy of you and of my
+profession, the insult you proffered me in suggesting that I would bear
+part in a wicked game," said Mr. Allerton, going toward the door.
+
+He threw it open with a magnificent gesture and stalked through it,
+followed close by the other two, and by Hecate's growl and Puck's sharp
+barking.
+
+Constance had dropped her work and sat rigidly regarding her father with
+amazed and frightened eyes.
+
+Stephen Hopkins went after them, purple with rage. What they saw was a
+table marked off at its farther end by lines drawn in chalk. At the
+nearer end sat Edward Doty and Edward Lister, the men whom Stephen
+Hopkins had brought over with him on the _Mayflower_ to serve him.
+Beside them sat tankards of home-made beer, and a small pile of coins
+lay, one at each man's right hand.
+
+Just as Francis Eaton threw open the door, Edward Lister leaned
+forward, balanced a coin carefully between his thumb and finger, and
+shot it forward over one of the lines at the other end.
+
+"Aimed, by St. George! Well shot, Ted!" cried Edward Doty.
+
+"See that thou beatest me not, Ned; thou art a better man than me at
+it," said Lister, and they both took a draught of beer, wiping their
+lips on their sleeve in high satisfaction with the flavour, the game,
+and each other.
+
+"Shovelboard!" "Shuffleboard!" cried Francis Eaton and John Howland
+together, differing on the pronunciation of the obnoxious sport, but one
+in the boundless horror in their voices.
+
+"Stephen Hopkins, I am profoundly shocked," said Mr. Allerton, turning
+with lowering brows upon their host. "A man of your standing among us! A
+man of your experience of the world! Well wot you that playing of games
+is forbid among us. That you should tolerate it is frightful to
+consider----"
+
+"See here, Isaac Allerton," said Stephen Hopkins, stepping so close to
+his neighbour that Mr. Allerton fell back uneasily, "it is a principle
+among us that every man is to follow his conscience. If we have thrown
+off the authority of our old days, an authority mind you, that had much
+to be said for it, and set up our own conscience as the sole guide of
+our actions, then how dare you come into my house to reproach me for
+what I consider no wrong-doing? Ted and Ned are good fellows, on whose
+hands leisure hangs heavily, since they do not read Shakespeare, as does
+their master, whom equally you condemn. To my mind shovelboard is
+innocent; I have permitted my men to play it. Go, if you will, and
+report to our governor this heinous crime of allowing innocent play. But
+on your peril read me no sermon, nor set up your opinion in mine own
+house, for, by my honour, I'll not abide it."
+
+"By no will of mine will I report you, my brother," said Isaac Allerton,
+but the gleam in his eye belied him; there was jealousy in this little
+community, as in all human communities. "You know that my duty will
+compel me to lay before Governor Bradford what I have seen. Since we
+have with our own eyes seen it, there needs no further witnesses."
+
+"Imply that I would deny the truth, were there never a witness, and
+Heaven help you, Plymouth or no Plymouth, brother or no brother! I'm not
+a liar," cried Stephen Hopkins, so fiercely that Mr. Allerton and his
+companions went swiftly out the side door, Mr. Allerton protesting:
+
+"Nay, then Brother and friend; thou art a choleric man, and lax as to
+this business, but no one would doubt your honour."
+
+After they had gone Mr. Hopkins went back to his chair by the fireside,
+leaving Ted and Ned staring open-mouthed at each other, stunned by the
+tempest aroused by their game.
+
+"Well, rather would I have held the psalm book the whole evening than
+got the master into trouble," said Ted.
+
+"Easy done, since thou couldst no more than hold it, reading being
+beyond thee," grinned Ned. "Yet am I one with thy meaning, which is
+clearer to me than is print."
+
+Constance dared not speak to her father when he returned to her. She
+glanced up at his angry face and went on with her stitchery in silence.
+
+At length he stretched himself out, his feet well toward the fire, and
+let his right hand fall on Hecate's insinuating head, his left on Puck's
+thrusting nose.
+
+"Good friends!" he said to the happy dogs. "I am ashamed, my Constance,
+so to have afflicted thee. Smile, child; thou dost look as though
+destruction awaited me."
+
+"I am so sorry, Father! In good sooth, is there not trouble coming to
+you from this night's business?" asked Constance, folding up her work.
+
+"Nothing serious, child; likely a fine. But indeed it will be worth it
+to have the chance it will buy me to speak my mind clearly to my fellow
+colonists on these matters. Ah, my girl, my girl, what sad fools we
+mortals be, as Shakespeare, whom also these grave and reverend seigniors
+condemn, hath said! We have come here to sail by the free wind of
+conscience, but look you, it must be the conscience of the few, greater
+thraldom than it was in the Old World! Ah, Constance, Constance, we came
+here to escape the thraldom of men, but to do that it needs that no men
+came! If authority we are to have, then let it be authoritative, say I;
+not the mere opinion of men. My child, have you ever noted how much
+human nature there is in a man?"
+
+But the next day, during which Stephen Hopkins was absent from his home,
+when he returned at night his philosophy had been sadly jostled.
+
+He had been called before the governor, reprimanded and fined, and his
+pride, his sense of justice, were both outraged when he actually had to
+meet the situation. Dame Eliza was in a state of mind that made matters
+worse. She had heard from one of those persons through whom ill news
+filters as naturally as water through a spring, that her husband had
+been, as she termed it, "disgraced before the world."
+
+"They can't disgrace him, Stepmother," protested Constance, though she
+knew that it was useless to try to stem the tide of Dame Eliza's
+grievance. "My father is in the right; they have the power to fine, but
+not to disgrace him who hath done no wrong."
+
+"Of course he hath done no wrong," snapped Dame Eliza. "Shovelboard was
+played in my father's kitchen when I was no age. Are these prating men
+better than my father? Answer me that! But your father has no right to
+risk getting into trouble for two ne'er-do-wells, like his two precious
+Edwards. They eat more than any four men I ever knew, and that will I
+maintain against all comers, and as to work they cannot so much as see
+it. Worthless! And for them will he risk our good name. For mark me,
+Constantia, shovelboard is a game, and gaming an abomination, and not to
+be mentioned in a virtuous household, yet would your father permit it
+played----"
+
+"But you just said it was harmless, and that your father had a table!"
+cried Constance.
+
+"My father was a good man, but not a Puritan," said Dame Eliza, somewhat
+confused to be called upon to harmonize her own statements. "In England
+shovelboard is one thing; in Plymouth a second thing, and two things are
+not the same as one thing. I am disgusted with your father, but what
+good does it do me to speak? Never am I heeded but rather am I flouted
+by the Hopkins brood, young and old, which is why I never speak, but eat
+my heart out in silence and patience, knowing that had I married as I
+might have married--aye, and that many times, I'd have you know--I'd
+not be here among sands and marshes and Indians and barrens, slaving for
+ungrateful people who think to show their better blood by treating me as
+they best know how! But it is a long lane that hath no turning, and
+justice must one day be my reward."
+
+When Stephen Hopkins came in Dame Eliza dared not air her grievances;
+his angry face compelled silence. Even Constance did not intrude upon
+his annoyance, but contented herself with conveying her sympathy by
+waiting upon him and talking blithely to Damaris, succeeding at last in
+winning a smile from her father by her amusing stories to the child.
+
+"There is a moon, Constance; is it too cold for you to walk with me? The
+sea is fair and silvery beneath the moon rays," said Mr. Hopkins after
+supper.
+
+"Not a whit too chill, Father, and I shall like to be out of doors,"
+cried Constance, disregarding her stepmother's frown, who disapproved of
+pleasure strolls.
+
+Constance drew her cloak about her, its deep hood over her head, and
+went out with her father. Stephen Hopkins placed her hand in his arm,
+and led her toward the beach. It was a deep, clear autumn night, the
+moon was brilliant; the sea, still as a mirror, gave its surface for the
+path that led from the earth to the moon, made by the moon rays.
+
+At last her father spoke to Constance.
+
+"Wise little woman," he said, patting the hand in his arm, "to keep
+silent till a man has conquered his humours. Your mother had that rare
+feminine wisdom. What a comrade was she, my dear! Seeing your profile
+thus half-concealed by your hood I have been letting myself feel that
+she had returned to me. And so she has, for you are part of her, her
+gift to me! Trouble no more over my annoyance, Constance; I have
+conquered it. I do not say that there is no soreness left in me, that I
+should be thus dealt with, but I am philosopher enough to see that Myles
+Standish was right when he once said to me that I was a fool for my
+pains; that living in Plymouth I must bear myself Plymouth-wise."
+
+"Father, have you had enough of impertinence in the day's doings, that
+your neighbours should dare to judge you, or will you tolerate a little
+more impertinence, and from your own daughter?" asked Constance.
+
+"Now what's in the wind?" demanded Stephen Hopkins, stopping short.
+
+"Nay, Father, let me speak freely!" Constance implored. "Indeed there is
+nothing in my heart that you would disapprove, could I bare it to your
+eyes. Does not this day's experience throw a light upon Giles?"
+
+"Giles! How? Why?" exclaimed her father.
+
+"Giles is as like you as are two peas in a pod, dear Father. He does not
+count himself a boy any longer. He hath felt that he was dealt with for
+offences that he had not done. He has been wounded, angry, sore,
+sad--and most of all because he half worships you. The governor, Mr.
+Winslow, no one is to you, nor can hurt you, as you can hurt Giles.
+Don't you feel to-day, Father, how hard it is for a young lad to bear
+injustice? When Giles comes home will you not show him that you trust
+him, love him, as I so well know you do, but as he cannot now be made to
+believe you do? And won't you construe him by what you have suffered
+this day, and comfort him? Forgive me, Father, my dearest, dearest! I do
+not mean wrong, and after all, it is only your Constance speaking her
+heart out to you," she pleaded.
+
+For upwards of ten minutes Stephen Hopkins was silent while Constance
+hung trembling on his arm.
+
+Then her father turned to her, and took her face in both his hands,
+tears in his eyes.
+
+"It is only my Constance speaking; only my dearest earthly treasure," he
+said. "And by all the gods, she hath spoken sweetly and truly, and I
+will heed her! Yes, my Constance, I will read my own bitterness in
+Giles's heart, and I will heal it, if but the lad comes back safe to
+us."
+
+With which promise, that sounded in Constance's ears like the carol of
+angels, her father kissed her thrice on brow, and lips, a most unusual
+caress from him. It was a thankful Constance that lay down beside
+Damaris that night, beneath the lean-to roof.
+
+"Now I know that Giles will come back, for this is what has been meant
+in all that hath lately come to us," was her last thought as she drifted
+into sleep.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+The "Fortune," that Sailed, First West, then East
+
+
+"There's a ship, there's a sail standing toward us!"
+
+It was Francis Billington's shrill boyish voice that aroused the Hopkins
+household with this tidings, early in the morning on one of those
+mid-November days when at that hour the air was chill and at noon the
+warmth of summer brooded over land and sea.
+
+Stephen Hopkins called from within: "Wait, wait, Francis, till I can
+come to thee."
+
+In a moment or two he came out of his door and looked in the direction
+in which the boy pointed, although a hillock on the Hopkins land, which
+lay between Leyden and Middle streets, cut off the sight of the sail.
+
+"She's coming up from the south'ard," cried Francis, excitedly. "Most
+like from the Cape, but she must have come from England first, say you
+not so, Mr. Hopkins?"
+
+"Surely," agreed Stephen Hopkins. "The savages build no vessels like
+ours, as you well know. Thank you, my boy, for warning me of her
+approach. Go on and spread your news broadcast; let our entire community
+be out to welcome whatever good the ship brings, or to resist
+harm--though that I fear not. I will myself be at the wharf when she
+gets in."
+
+"Oh, as to that, Mr. Hopkins, you have time to eat as big a breakfast as
+you can get and still be too early for the arrival," said Francis,
+grinning. "She's got a long way to cover and a deal to do to reach
+Plymouth wharf in this still air. She's not close in, by much. I hurried
+and yelled to get you up quick because--well, because you've got to
+hurry folks and yell when a ship comes in, haven't you?"
+
+Mr. Hopkins smiled sympathetically at the boy whose actions rarely got
+sympathy.
+
+"Till ships become a more common sight in our harbour, Francis, I would
+advise letting your excitement on the coming of one have vent a-plenty,"
+he said, turning to reenter the house as Francis Billington, acting on
+advice more promptly than was his wont, ran down Leyden Street, throwing
+up his cap and shouting: "A ship! A sail! A ship! A sail!" at the top of
+his vigorous lungs, not only unreproved for his disturbance of the
+peaceful morning, but hailed with answering excitement by the men,
+women, and children whom he aroused as he ran.
+
+The ship took as long to reach haven as Francis Billington had
+prophesied she would require. She proved to be a small ship with a
+figure-head of a woman, meant to represent Fortune, for she was
+blindfolded, but her battered paint indicated that she had in her own
+person encountered ill-fortune in her course.
+
+A number of people were gathered on her forward deck, looking eagerly
+for indications of the sort of place that they were approaching.
+
+"Mr. Weston, knowing that we depend upon him and his brother merchants,
+our friends across seas, for supplies, hath at last dispatched us the
+long-waited ship," said Mr. Winslow to Mr. Hopkins.
+
+"With someone, let us hope, authorized to carry back report of us here,
+and thus to get us, later on, what we sore need. Many new colonists, as
+well as nearly all things that human beings require for existence," said
+Stephen Hopkins, with something of the strain upon his endurance that he
+had suffered getting into his voice.
+
+The ship was the _Fortune_--her figure-head had announced as much. When
+she made anchor, and her small boat came to the wharf, the first person
+to step ashore was Mr. Robert Cushman, the English agent who had played
+so large a part in the embarkation of the pilgrims in the _Mayflower_.
+
+"Welcome, in all truth!" said Governor Bradford stepping forward to
+seize the hand of this man, from whose coming and subsequent reports at
+home so much might be hoped. "Now, at last, have we what we have so long
+needed, a representative who can speak of us as one who hath seen!"
+
+"I am glad to be here in a twofold sense, Mr. Bradford," returned Mr.
+Cushman.
+
+"Glad to meet with you, whom I knew under the distant sky of home, glad
+to be at the end of my voyage. I have brought you thirty-five additional
+members of your community. We came first to Cape Cod, and a more
+discouraged band of adventurers would be hard to find than were these
+men when they saw how barren of everything was the Cape. I assured them
+that they would find you in better condition here, at Plymouth, and we
+set sail hither. They have been scanning waves and sky for the first
+symptom of something like comfort at Plymouth, beginning their anxious
+outlook long before it was possible to satisfy it. I assure you that
+never was a wharf hailed so gladly as was this one that you have built,
+for these men argued that before you would build a wharf you must have
+made sure of greater essentials."
+
+"We are truly thankful for new strength added to us; we need it sore,"
+said William Bradford. "We make out to live, nor have we wanted
+seriously, thus far."
+
+"The men I have gathered together and brought to you are not provided;
+they will be a charge upon you for a while in food and raiment, but
+after a time their strength should more than recompense you in labour,"
+said Mr. Cushman. "Where is the governor? I have a letter here from Mr.
+Weston to Governor Carver; will you take me to him?"
+
+"That we may not do, Mr. Cushman," said Governor Bradford, sadly.
+"Governor Carver is at rest since last April, a half year agone. It was
+a day of summer heat and he was labouring in the field, from which he
+came out very sick, complaining greatly of his head. He lay down and in
+a few hours his senses failed, which never returned to him till his
+death, some days later. Bitterly have we mourned that just man. And but
+a month and somewhat more, passed when Mistress Carver, who was a weak
+woman, and sore beset by the sufferings of her coming here, and so
+ill-fitted to bear grief, followed her spouse to their reward, as none
+who knew them could doubt. I am chosen, unworthily, to succeed John
+Carver as governor of this colony."
+
+"Then is the letter thine, William Bradford, and the Plymouth men have
+wisely picked out thee to hold chief office over them," said Robert
+Cushman. "Yet your news is heavy hearing, and I hope there is not much
+of such tidings to be given me."
+
+"Half of us lie yonder on the hillside," said Governor Bradford. "But
+they died in the first months of our landing, when we lacked shelter and
+all else. It was a mortality that assailed us, a swift plague, but since
+it hath passed there is little sickness among us. Gather your men and
+let us go on to the village which we have built us, a habitation in the
+wilderness, like Israel of old. Like old Plymouth at home it is in name,
+but in naught else, yet it is not wholly without its pleasant comfort,
+and we are learning to hold it dear, as Providence hath wisely made man
+to cherish his home."
+
+Mr. Cushman marshalled his sorry-looking followers; they were destitute
+of bedding, household utensils, even scantily provided with clothes, so
+that they came off the _Fortune_ in the lightest marching order, and
+filled with dismay the Plymouth people who saw that their deficiencies
+would fall upon the first settlers to supply.
+
+"Well, Constantia, and so hath it ever been, and ever will be, world
+without end, that they who till and sow do not reap, but rather some
+idle blackbird that sits upon a stump whistling for the corn that grows
+for him, and not for his betters," scolded Dame Eliza who, like others
+of the women who were hard-working and economical, felt especially
+aggrieved by this invoice of destitution. "It is we, and such as we who
+may feed them, even to Damaris. Get a pan of dried beans, child, and
+shell 'em, for it is against our profession to see them starve, but why
+the agents sent, or Robert Cushman brought, beggars to us it would
+puzzle Solomon to say. Where will your warm cloak come from that you
+hoped for, think you, Constantia, with these people requiring our
+stores? Do they take Plymouth for Beggars' Bush?"
+
+"I came hither walking beside my father, who was talking with Mr.
+Winslow, Stepmother," said Constance, noting with amusement that her
+stepmother commiserated her probable sacrifice, swayed by her
+indignation to make common cause with Constance, whose desires she
+rarely noted. "They said that it would put a burden upon us to provide
+for these new-comers at first, but that they looked like able and
+hopeful subjects to requite us abundantly, and that soon. So never mind
+my cloak; I will darn and patch my old one, and at least there be none
+here who will not know why I go shabby, and be in similar stress."
+
+The door opened and Humility Cooper entered. She kissed Constance on the
+cheek, a manner of greeting not common among these Puritan maidens,
+especially when they met often, and slowly took the stool that Constance
+placed for her in the chimney corner, loosening her cape as she did so.
+
+"I have news, dear Constance," Humility said.
+
+"How strangely you look at me, Humility!" cried Constance. "Is your news
+good or ill? Your face would tell me it was both; your eyes shine, yet
+are ready to tears, and your lips droop, yet are smiling!"
+
+"My news is that same mixture, Constance," cried Humility. "I am sent
+for from England. The letter is come by the _Fortune_. She is to lie in
+our harbour barely two sen' nights, and then weigh anchor for home. And
+I----"
+
+"You go on her!" cried Constance. "Oh Humility!"
+
+"And so I do," said Humility. "I am glad to go home. It is a sad and
+heavy-hearted thing to be here alone, with only Elizabeth Tilley, my
+cousin, left me. To be sure her father and mother, and Edward Tilley and
+his wife, who brought me hither, were but my cousins, though one degree
+nearer than John Tilley's Betsy; yet was it kindred, and they were
+those who had me in charge. Since they died I have felt lone, kind
+though everyone hath been; you and Priscilla Mullins Alden and Elizabeth
+are like my sisters. But my heart yearns back to England. Yet when I
+think of seeing you for the last time, till we meet beyond all parting,
+since you will never go to the old land, nor I return to the new one,
+then it seems that it will break my heart to say farewell, and that I
+cannot go."
+
+"Why, Humility, dear lass, we cannot let you go!" cried Constance,
+putting her arms around the younger girl toward whom she felt as a
+protector, as well as comrade.
+
+"Tut, tut!" said Dame Eliza, yet not unkindly. "It is best for Humility
+to go. I have long been glad to know, what we did know, that her kindred
+at home would send for her."
+
+Humility stooped and gathered up Lady Fair, the cat, on her knee.
+
+"I am like her," she said. "The warmth I have holds me, and I like not
+to venture out into the chillsome wet of the dark and storm."
+
+"Lady Fair would scamper home fast enough if she were among strangers,
+in a new place, Humility," cried Constance, with one of her mercurial
+changes setting herself to cheer Humility on her unavoidable road. "It
+will be hard setting out, but you will be glad enough when you see the
+green line of shore that will be England awaiting you!"
+
+"I thought you would be sorry, Constance!" cried Humility, tears
+springing to her eyes and rolling down her smooth, pink cheeks.
+
+"And am I not, dear heart, just because I want to make it easier for
+you?" Constance reproached her. "How I shall miss you, dear little
+trusting Humility, I cannot tell you. But I am glad to know that we who
+remain are worse off than you who go, and that when you see home again
+there will be more than enough there to make up to you for Pris,
+Elizabeth, and me. There will be ships coming after this, so my father
+and Mr. Winslow were saying, and you will write us, and we will write
+you. And some day, when Oceanus, or Peregrine White, or one of the other
+small children here, is grown up to be a great portrait painter, like
+Mr. Holbein, whose portraits I was taken to see at Windsor when I was
+small, I will dispatch to you a great canvas of an old lady in flowing
+skirts, with white hair puffed and coifed and it will be painted across
+the bottom in readable letters: 'Portrait of Constantia Hopkins, aetat.
+86,' else will you never know it for me, the silly girl you left
+behind."
+
+"'Silly girl,' indeed! You will be the wife of some great gentleman who
+is now in England, but who will cross to the colony, and you will be the
+mother of those who will help in its growth," cried Humility the
+prophetess.
+
+"Cease your foolish babble, both of you!" Dame Eliza ordered them,
+impatiently. "It is poor business talking of serious matters lightly,
+but Humility is well-off, and needs not pity, to be returning to the
+land that we cast off, nor am I as Lot's wife saying it, for it is true,
+nor am I repining."
+
+Humility had made a correct announcement in saying that the _Fortune_
+would stay on the western shore but two weeks.
+
+For that time she lay in the waters of Plymouth harbour taking on a
+cargo of goods to the value of 500 pounds, or thereabout, which the
+Plymouth people rightly felt would put their enterprise in a new light
+when the ship arrived in England, especially that she had come hither
+unprepared for trade, expecting no such store here.
+
+Lumber they stowed upon the _Fortune_ to her utmost capacity to carry,
+and two hogsheads full of beaver and otter skins, taken in exchange for
+the little that the Englishmen had to offer for them, the idea of
+trading for furs being new to them, till Squanto showed them the value
+in a beaver skin.
+
+On the night of the thirteenth day of the _Fortune's_ lying at anchor
+Humility went aboard to be ready in case that the ship's master should
+suddenly resolve to take advantage of a favourable wind and sail
+unexpectedly.
+
+Stephen Hopkins offered to take the young girls, who had been Humility's
+companions on the _Mayflower_, out to the _Fortune_ early the next
+morning for the final parting. It was decided that the _Fortune_ was to
+set sail at the turn of the tide on the fourteenth day, and drop down to
+sea on the first of its ebb.
+
+Priscilla, Elizabeth Tilley, Desire Minter, who was also to return to
+England when summoned, and Constance, were rowed out to the ship when
+the reddening east threw a glory upon the _Fortune_ and covered her
+battered, blindfolded figure-head with the robes of an aurora.
+
+Humility was dressed, awaiting them. She threw herself into the arms of
+each of the girls in succession, and for once five young girls were
+silent, their chatter hushed by the solemn thought that never would
+their eyes rest again upon Humility's pleasant little face; that never
+again would Humility see the faces which had smiled her through her days
+of bereavement, see Constance who had nursed her back to life when she
+herself seemed likely to follow her protectors to the hillside, to their
+corn-hidden graves.
+
+"We cannot forget, so we will not ask each other to remember, Humility
+dear," whispered Constance, her lips against Humility's soft, brown
+hair.
+
+Humility shook her head, unable otherwise to reply.
+
+"I love you more than any one on earth, Con," she managed to say at
+last.
+
+"I am sorry to shorten your stay, daughters, sorry to compel you to
+leave Mistress Humility," said Mr. Cushman, coming down the deck to the
+plaintive group, "but we are sailing now, and there will be no time when
+the last good-bye is easy. You must go ashore."
+
+Not a word was spoken as Priscilla, Desire--though for her the parting
+was not final--Elizabeth and Constance kissed, clung to Humility, and
+for ever let her go. Stephen Hopkins, not a little moved himself--for he
+was fond of Humility, over whom he had kept ward since Edward Tilley had
+died--guided the tear-blinded girls down the ship's ladder, into his
+boat, and rowed them ashore.
+
+The _Fortune's_ sails creaked and her gear rattled as her men hauled up
+her canvas for her homeward voyage.
+
+She weighed anchor and slowly moved on her first tack, bright in the
+golden sunshine of a perfect Indian summer morning.
+
+"Be brave, and wave a gay farewell to the little lass," said Stephen
+Hopkins. "And may God fend her from harm on her way, and lead her over
+still waters all her days."
+
+"Oh, amen, amen, Father!" sobbed Constance. "She can't see we are crying
+while we wave to her so blithely. But it is the harder part to stay
+behind."
+
+"With me, my lass?" asked Stephen Hopkins, smiling tenderly down on his
+usually courageous little pioneer.
+
+"Oh, no; no indeed! Forgive me, Father! The one hard thing would be to
+stay anywhere without thee," cried Constance, smiling as brightly as she
+had just wept bitterly. The _Fortune_ leaned over slightly, and sailed
+at a good speed down the harbour, Humility's white signal of farewell
+hanging out over the boat's stern, discernable long after the girl's
+plump little figure and pink round face, all washed white with tears,
+had been blotted out by intervening space.
+
+Before the _Fortune_ had gone wholly out of sight Francis Billington
+came over the marsh grass that edged the sand, sometimes running for a
+few steps, sometimes lagging; his whole figure and air eloquent of
+catastrophe.
+
+"What can ail Francis Billington?" exclaimed Stephen Hopkins.
+
+"He looks ghastly," cried Constance. "Father, it can't be--Giles?" she
+whispered.
+
+"Bad news of him!" cried her father quickly, turning pale. "Nonsense,
+no; of course not."
+
+Nevertheless he strode toward the boy hastily and caught him by the arm.
+
+"What aileth thee; speak!" he ordered him.
+
+"Jack. Jack is--Jack----" Francis stammered.
+
+"Oh, is it Jack?" cried Stephen Hopkins, relieved, though he could have
+struck himself a moment later for the seeming heartlessness of his
+excusable mistake.
+
+"What has Jack done now? He is always getting into mischief, but I am
+sure you need have no fear for him. But now that I look at you----. Why,
+my poor lad, what is it? No harm hath befallen your brother?"
+
+"Jack is dead," said Francis.
+
+Constance uttered a cry, and her father fell back a step or two, shocked
+and sorry.
+
+"Forgive me, Francis; I had no notion of this. I never thought John
+Billington, the younger, could come to actual harm--so daring, so
+reckless, but so strong and able to take care of himself! Dead! Francis,
+it can't be. You are mistaken. Where is Doctor Fuller?"
+
+"With my father," said Francis, and they saw that he shook from head to
+foot.
+
+"He was with Jack; he did what he could. He couldn't do more," said
+Francis.
+
+"Poor lad," said Stephen Hopkins, laying his hand gently on the boy's
+shoulder.
+
+"Do you want to tell us? Was it an accident?"
+
+Francis nodded. "Bouncing Bully," he muttered.
+
+Stephen Hopkins glanced questioningly at Constance; he thought perhaps
+Francis was wandering in his mind.
+
+"That was poor Jack's great pistol that he took such pride in," cried
+Constance.
+
+"Oh, Francis, did that kill him?"
+
+"Burst," cried Francis, and said no more.
+
+"Come home with us, Francis," said Mr. Hopkins. "Indeed, my boy, I am
+heartily sorry for thee, and wish I could comfort thee. Be brave, and
+bear it in the way that thou hast been taught."
+
+"I liked Jack," said poor Francis, turning away. "I thank you, Mr.
+Hopkins, but I'd not care to go home with you. If Giles was back----.
+Not that I don't love you, Con, but Jack and Giles----. I'm
+going--somewhere. I guess I'll find Nimrod, my dog. Thank you, Mr.
+Hopkins, but I couldn't come. I forgot why I came here. Doctor Fuller
+told me to say he wanted you. It's about Jack--Jack's----. They'll bury
+him."
+
+The boy turned away, staggering, but in a moment Constance and her
+father, watching him, saw him break into a run and disappear.
+
+"Don't look so worried, my dear," said Stephen Hopkins. "It is a boy's
+instinct to hide his grief, and the dog will be a good comrade for
+Francis for awhile. Later we will get hold of him. Best leave him to
+himself awhile. That wild, unruly Jack! And he is dead! I'd rather a
+hundred pounds were lost than that I had spoken as I did to Francis at
+first, but how should I have dreamed it was more than another of the
+Billington scrapes? I tell thee, Connie, it will be a rare mercy if the
+father does not end badly one day. He is insubordinate, lawless,
+dangerous. Perhaps young John is saved a worse fate."
+
+"Nevertheless I am sad enough over the fate that has befallen him," said
+Constance. "He was a kindly boy, and loyal enough to me to make it right
+that I should mourn him. And I did like him. Poor Jack. Poor, young,
+heedless Jack! And how proud he was of that clumsy weapon that hath
+turned on him!"
+
+"And so did I like him, Connie, though he and Francis have been, from
+our first embarkation on the _Mayflower_, the torment and black sheep of
+our company. But I liked the boy. I like his father less, and fear he
+will one day force us to deal with him extremely." In which prophecy
+Stephen Hopkins was only too right.
+
+"To think that in one day we should bid a last farewell to two of our
+young fellow-exiles, Humility and Jack, both gone home, and for ever
+from us! Giles liked Jack; Jack stood by him when he needed help. Oh,
+Father, Father, if it were Giles!" cried Constance.
+
+"I know, I know, child," said her father, huskily. "I've been thinking
+that. I've been thinking that, and more. My son has been headstrong, but
+never wicked. He is stiffnecked, but hath no evil in his will, except
+that he resists me. But I have been thinking hard, my Constance. You
+were right; I would have done well to listen to your pleadings, to your
+wiser understanding of my boy. I have been hard on him, unjust to him; I
+should have admitted him to my confidence, given mine to him. I am wrong
+and humbly I confess it to you, Giles's advocate. When he comes back my
+boy shall find a better father awaiting him. I wounded him through his
+very love for me, and well I know how once he loved me."
+
+"Oh, Father; dear, good, great Father!" cried Constance, forgetful of
+all grief. "Only a great man can thus acknowledge a mistake. My dear,
+dear, beloved Father!" And in her heart she thought perhaps poor Jack
+had not died in vain if his death helped to show their father how dear
+Giles was to him, still, and after all.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+A Gallant Lad Withal
+
+
+There was a gray sky the day after young madcap John Billington was laid
+to rest in the grave that had been hard to think of as meant for him,
+dug by the younger colonists. Long rifted clouds lay piled upon one
+another from the line of one horizon to the other, and the wind blew
+steadily, keeping close to the ground and whistling around chimneys and
+rafters in a way that portended a storm driven in from the sea.
+
+"I think it's lost-and-lone to-day, Constance," said Damaris, coining
+her own term for the melancholy that seemed to envelop earth and sky. "I
+think it's a good day for a story, and I'd like much to sit in your lap
+in the chimney corner and hear your nicest ones."
+
+"Would you, my Cosset? But you said a story at first, and now you say my
+nicest _ones_! Do you mean one story, or several stories, Damaris?"
+Constance asked.
+
+"I mean one first, and many ones after that, if you could tell them,
+Constance," said the child. "Mother says we have no time to idle in
+story-telling, but to-day is so empty and lonesome! I'd like to have a
+story."
+
+"And so you shall, my little sis!" cried Constance gathering Damaris
+into her arms and dropping into the high-backed chair which Dame Eliza
+preempted for herself, when she was there; but now she was not at home.
+"Come, at least the fire is gay! Hark how it snaps and sings! And how
+gaily red and golden are the flames, and how the great log glows! Shall
+we play it is a red-coated soldier, fighting the chill for us?"
+
+"No, oh, no," shuddered Damaris. "Don't play about fighting and guns!"
+
+Constance cuddled her closer, drawing her head into the hollow of her
+shoulder. Sensitive, grave little Damaris had been greatly unnerved by
+the death of Jack, and especially that his own pistol had taken his
+life.
+
+"We'll play that the red glow is loving kindness, and that we have had
+our eyes touched with magic that makes us able to see love," cried
+Constance. "Fire is the emblem of love, warming our hearts toward all
+things, so our fancy will be at once make-believe and truth. Remember,
+my cosset lamb, that love is around us, whether we see it or not, and
+that there can be no dismal gray days if we have our eyes touched to see
+the glow of love warming us! Now what shall the story be? Here in the
+hearth corner, shall it be Cinderella? Or shall it be the story of the
+lucky bear, that found a house empty and a fire burning when he wanted a
+home, and wherein he set up housekeeping for himself, like the quality?"
+
+"All of them, Constance! But first tell me what we shall do when Giles
+comes home. I like that story best. I wish he would come soon!" sighed
+Damaris.
+
+"Ah, so do I! And so he will;" Constance corrected instantly the pain
+that she knew had escaped into her voice. "Captain Standish will not
+risk the coming of cold weather; he will bring them home soon. Well,
+what shall we do then, you want to hear? First of all, someone will
+come running, calling to us that the shallop hath appeared below in the
+harbour. Then we shall all make ourselves fine, and----"
+
+"Someone is coming now, Con, but not running," cried Damaris, sitting up
+and holding up a warning finger.
+
+"It is a man's step," began Constance, but, as the door opened she
+sprang to her feet with a cry, and stood for an instant of stunned joy
+holding Damaris clasped to her breast. Then she set the child on her
+feet and leaped into Giles's arms, with a great sob, repeating his name
+and clinging to him.
+
+"Steady, Constance! Steady, dear lass," cried Giles, himself in not much
+better state, while Damaris clung around his waist and frantically
+kissed the tops of his muddy boots.
+
+"Oh, how did you get here? When did you come? Are they all safely here?"
+cried Constance.
+
+"Every man of them; we had a fine expedition, not a misfortune, perfect
+weather, and we saw wonders of noble country: streams and hills and
+plains," said Giles, and instantly Constance felt a new manhood and
+self-confidence in him, steadier, less assertive than his boyish pride,
+the self-reliance that is won through encountering realities, in
+conquering self and hence things outside of self.
+
+"I cannot wait to hear the tale! Let me help you off with your heavy
+coat, your matchlock, and then sit you down in this warmest corner, and
+tell me everything," cried Constance, beginning to recover herself, the
+rich colour of her delight flooding her face as, the first shock of
+surprise over, she realized that it was indeed Giles come back to her
+and that her secret anxiety for him was past. "Art hungry, my own?" she
+added, fluttering around her brother, like a true woman, wanting first
+of all to feed him.
+
+"Well, Con, to be truthful I am always hungry," said Giles, smiling down
+on her.
+
+"But not in such strait now that I cannot wait till the next meal."
+
+"Here are our father and Mistress Hopkins, hastening hither," said
+Constance, looking out the door, hoping for this coming of her father.
+"You have not seen Father yet?"
+
+"No, Con; I came straight home, but the captain has met with him, I am
+sure. And, Con, I want to tell you before he comes in, that I have seen
+how wrong I was toward our good father, and that I hope to carry myself
+dutifully toward him henceforth."
+
+Constance clasped her hands, rapturously, but had not time to reply
+before the door was thrown wide open and Stephen Hopkins strode in, his
+face radiant.
+
+He went up to his tall son and clasped his shoulders in a grip that made
+Giles wince, and said through his closed teeth, trying to steady his
+voice:
+
+"My lad, my fine son, thank God I have you back! And by His mercy never
+again shall we be parted, nor sundered by the least sundering."
+
+Giles looked up, and Giles looked down. He hoped, yet hardly dared to
+think, that his father meant more than mere bodily separation.
+
+"I am glad enough to be here, yet we had glorious days, and have seen a
+country so worthy that we wish that we might go thither, leaving this
+less profitable country," said Giles. "We have seen land that by a
+little effort would be turned into gracious meadows. We have seen great
+bays and rivers, full of fish, capable of navigation and industry. We
+have seen a beautiful river, which we have named the Charles, for we
+think it to be that river which Captain John Smith thus named in his
+map. The Charles flows down to the sea, past three hills which top a
+noble harbour, and where we would dearly like to build a town. I will
+tell you of these things in order. Captain Myles will have a meeting of
+the Plymouth people to hear our tale; I would wait for that, else will
+it be stale hearing to you."
+
+"Nay, Giles, we shall never tire of it!" cried Constance. "A good story
+is the better for oft hearing, as you know well, do you not, little
+Damaris?"
+
+"Well, it hath made a man of thee, Giles Hopkins," said Dame Eliza who
+had silently watched the lad closely as he talked. "It was a lucky thing
+for thee that the Arm of the Colony, Captain Myles, took thee for one of
+his tools."
+
+"A lucky thing for him, too," interposed Giles's father proudly. "I have
+seen Myles; he hath told me how, when you and he were fallen behind your
+companions, investigating a deep ravine, he had slipped and would have
+been killed by his own matchlock as it struck against the rock, but that
+you, risking your life, threw yourself forward on a narrow ledge and
+struck up the muzzle of the gun. The colony is in your debt, my son,
+that your arm warded death from the man it calls, justly, its Arm."
+
+"Prithee, father!" expostulated Giles, turning crimson. "Who could do
+less for a lesser man? And who would not do far more for Myles Standish?
+I would be a fool to hesitate over risk to a life no more valuable than
+mine, if such as he were in danger. Besides which the captain
+exaggerates my danger. I don't want that prated here. Please help me
+silence Myles Standish."
+
+Stephen Hopkins nodded in satisfaction.
+
+"Right, Giles. A blast on one's own horn produces much the sound of the
+bray of an ass. Yet am I glad that I know of this," he said.
+
+Little Love Brewster, who was often a messenger from one Plymouth house
+to another, came running in at that moment.
+
+"My father sends me," he panted. "The men of Plymouth are to sit this
+afternoon at our house to hear the tale of the adventurers to the
+Massachusetts. You will come? Giles, did you bring us new kinds of
+arrows from the strange savages? My father saith that Squanto was the
+best guide and helper on this expedition that white men ever had."
+
+"So he was, Love. I brought no new arrows, but I have in my sack
+something for each little lad in the colony. And for the girls I have
+wondrous beads," added Giles, seeing Damaris's crestfallen face.
+
+"I will risk a reprimand; it can be no worse than disapproval from Elder
+Brewster, and belike they will spare me because of the occasion,"
+thought Constance in her own room, making ready to go to the assembly
+that was to gather to welcome the explorers, but which to her mind was
+gathered chiefly to honour Giles.
+
+Thus deliberately she violated the rule of the colony; let her beautiful
+hair curl around her flushed face; put on a collar of her mother's
+finest lace, tied in such wise by a knot of rose-coloured ribbon that it
+looked like a cluster of buds under her decided little chin. And,
+surveying herself in the glass, which was over small and hazy for her
+merits, that chin raised itself in a hitch of defiance.
+
+"Why should I not be young, and fair and happy?" Constance demanded of
+her unjust reflection. "At the worst, and if I am forced to remove it, I
+shall have been gay and bonny--a wee bit so!--for a little while."
+
+With which this unworthy pilgrim maid danced down the stairs, seized by
+the hand Damaris, who looked beside her like a small brown grub, and set
+out for Elder Brewster's house.
+
+Although the older women raised disapproving brows at Constance, and
+shook their heads over her rose-tinted knots of ribbon, no one openly
+reproved her, and she slid into her place less pleased with her
+ornamentation than she had been while anticipating a rebuke.
+
+Captain Myles Standish rose up in his place and gave the history of his
+explorations in a clear-cut, terse way, that omitted nothing, yet dwelt
+on nothing beyond the narration of necessary facts.
+
+It was a long story, however condensed, yet no one wearied of it, but
+listened enthralled to his account of the Squaw-Sachem of the tribe of
+the Massachusetts, who ruled in the place of her dead spouse, the chief
+Nanepashemet, and was feared by other Indians as a relentless foe, and
+of the great rock that ended a promontory far in on the bay, at the foot
+of the three hills which were so good a site for a settlement, a rock
+that was fashioned by Nature into the profile of an Indian's face, and
+which they called Squaw Rock, or Squantum Head. As the captain went on
+telling of their inland marches from these three hills and their bay,
+and of the fertile country of great beauty which they everywhere came
+upon, there arose outside a commotion of children crying, and the larger
+children who were in charge of the small ones, calling frantically.
+
+Squanto, admitted to the assembly as one who had borne an important part
+in the story that Myles Standish was relating, sprang to his feet and
+ran out of the house. He came back in a few moments, followed by another
+Indian--a tall, lithe, lean youth, with an unfriendly manner.
+
+"What is this?" demanded Governor Bradford, rising.
+
+"Narragansett, come tell you not friends to you," said Squanto.
+
+The Narragansett warrior, with a great air of contempt, threw upon the
+floor, in the middle of the assembly, a small bundle of arrows, tied
+around with a spotted snake skin. This done, he straightened himself,
+folded his arms, and looked disdainfully upon the white men.
+
+"Well, what has gone amiss with _his_ digestion!" exclaimed Giles,
+aloud.
+
+His father shook his head at him. "How do you construe this act and
+manner, Squanto? Surely it portendeth trouble."
+
+"It is war," said Squanto. "Arrows tied by snake skin means no friend;
+war."
+
+"Perhaps we would do well to let it lie; picking it up may mean
+acceptance of the challenge, as if it were a glove in a tourney. The
+customs of men run amazingly together, though race and education
+separate them," suggested Myles Standish.
+
+"Squanto, take this defiant youngster out of here, and treat him
+politely; see that he is fed and given a place to sleep. Tell him that
+we will answer him----By your approval, Governor and gentlemen?"
+
+"You have anticipated my own suggestion, Captain Standish," said William
+Bradford bowing, and Squanto, who understood more than he could put into
+words, spoke rapidly to the Narragansett messenger and led him away.
+
+"Shall we deliberate upon this, being conveniently assembled?" suggested
+Governor Bradford.
+
+"It needs small consideration, meseems," said Myles Standish,
+impatiently. "Dismiss this messenger at once; do not let him remain here
+over night. The less your foe knows of you, the more your mystery will
+increase his dread of you. In the morning send a messenger of our own to
+the Narragansetts, and tell them that if they want war, war be it. If
+they prefer war to peace, let them begin upon the war at once; that we
+no more fear them than we have wronged them, and as they choose, so
+would we deal with them, as friends worth keeping, or foes to fear."
+
+"Admirable advice," Stephen Hopkins applauded the captain, and the other
+Plymouth men echoed his applause.
+
+Then, with boyish impetuosity and with laughter lighting up his handsome
+face, Giles leaped to his feet.
+
+"Now do I know the answer!" he cried. "Let the words be as our captain
+hath spoken; no one could utter better! But there is a further answer!
+Empty their snakeskin of arrows and fill it round with bullets, and
+throw it down among them, as they threw their pretty toy down to us! And
+our stuffing of it will have a bad flavour to their palates, mark me. It
+will be like filling a Christmas goose with red peppers, and if it
+doesn't send the Narragansetts away from the table they were setting for
+us, then is not my name Giles Hopkins! And one more word, my elders and
+masters! Let me be your messenger to the Narragansetts, I beseech you!
+They sent a youth to us; send you this youth back to them. If it be
+hauteur against hauteur, pride for pride, I'll bear me like the lion and
+the unicorn fighting for the crown, both together, in one person. See
+whether or not I can strike the true defiant attitude!"
+
+With which, eyes sparkling with fun and excitement, head thrown back,
+Giles struck an attitude, folding his arms and spreading his feet,
+looking at once so boyish and so handsome that with difficulty
+Constance held her clasped hands from clapping him.
+
+"Truth, friend Stephen, your lad hath an idea!" said Myles Standish,
+delightedly.
+
+"It could not be better. Conceived in true harmony with the savages'
+message to us, and carrying conviction of our sincerity to them at the
+first glimpse of it! By all means let us do as Giles suggests."
+
+There was not a dissentient voice in the entire assembly; indeed
+everyone was highly delighted with the humour of it.
+
+There was some objection to allowing Giles to be the messenger, but here
+Captain Standish stood his friend, though Constance looked at him
+reproachfully for helping Giles into this risky business.
+
+"Let the lad go, good gentlemen," he said. "Giles hath been with me on
+these recent explorations, and hath borne himself with fortitude,
+courage, and prudence. He longs to play a man's part among us; let him
+have the office of messenger to the Narragansetts, and go thither in the
+early morning, at dawn. We will dismiss their youth at once, and follow
+him with our better message without loss of time."
+
+So it was decided, and in high feather Giles returned to his home,
+Damaris on his shoulder, Constance walking soberly at his side, half
+sharing his triumph in his mission, half frightened lest her brother had
+but returned from unknown dangers to encounter worse ones.
+
+"Oh, they'll not harm me, timorous Con!" Giles assured her. "They know
+that it is prudent to let lie the sleeping English bulldogs, of whom,
+trust me, they know by repute! Now, Sis, can you deck me out in some
+wise impressive to these savages, who will not see the dignity of our
+sober dress as we do?"
+
+"Feathers?" suggested Constance, abandoning her anxiety to enter into
+this phase of the mission. "I think feathers in your hat, Giles, and
+some sort of a bright sash across your breast, all stuck through with
+knives? I will get knives from Pris and some of the others. And--oh, I
+know, Giles! That crimson velvet cloak that was our mother's, hung
+backward from your shoulder! Splendid, Giles; splendid enough for Sir
+Walter Raleigh himself to wear at Elizabeth's court, or to spread for
+her to walk upon."
+
+"It promises well, Sis, in sound, at least," said Giles. "But by all
+that's wise, help me to carry this paraphernalia ready to don at a safe
+distance from Plymouth, and by no means betray to our solemn rulers how
+I shall be decked out!"
+
+The sun was still two hours below his rising when Giles started, the
+crimson velvet cloak in a bag, his matchlock, or rather Myles Standish's
+matchlock lent Giles for the expedition, slung across his shoulder, a
+sword at his side, and the plumes fastened into his hat by Constance's
+needle and thread, but covered with another hat which surmounted his
+own.
+
+Constance had arisen, also, and went with Giles a little way upon his
+journey. Stephen Hopkins had blessed him and bidden him farewell on the
+preceding night, not to make too much of his setting forth.
+
+At the boundary which they had agreed upon, Constance kissed her brother
+good-bye, removing his second hat, and dressing the plumes crushed below
+it.
+
+"Good-bye, my dear one," she said. "And hasten back to me, for I cannot
+endure delay of your return. And you look splendid, my Knight of the
+Wilderness, even without the crimson cloak. But see to it that you make
+it swing back gloriously, and wave it in the dazzled eyes of the
+Narragansetts!"
+
+[Illustration: "'You look splendid, my knight of the wilderness'"]
+
+Thus with another kiss, Constance turned back singing, to show to Giles
+how little she feared for him, and half laughing to herself, for she was
+still very young, and they had managed between them to give this
+important errand much of the effect of a boy-and-girl, masquerading
+frolic.
+
+Yet, always subject to sudden variations of spirits, Constance had not
+gone far before she sat down upon a rock and cried heartily. Then,
+having sung and wept over Giles, she went sedately homeward to await his
+return in a mood that savoured of both extremes with which she had
+parted from him.
+
+The waiting was tedious, but it was not long. Sooner than she had dared
+to hope for him, Giles came marching back to her, and as he sang as he
+came, at the top of a lusty voice, Plymouth knew before he could tell it
+that his errand had been successful.
+
+Giles went straight to Governor Bradford's house, whither those who had
+seen and heard him coming followed him.
+
+"There is our gift of war rejected," said Giles, throwing down the
+spotted snakeskin, still bulging with its bullets. "They would have
+naught of it, but picked it up and gave it back to me with much air of
+solicitude, and with many words, which I could not understand, but which
+I doubt not were full of the warmest love for us English. And I was glad
+to get back the stuffed snakeskin and our good bullets, for here, so far
+from supplies, bullets are bullets, and if any of our red neighbours did
+attack us we could not afford to have lessened our stock in object
+lessons. All's well that ends well--where have I heard that phrase?
+Father, isn't it in a book of yours?" Giles concluded, innocently
+unconscious that he was walking on thin ice in alluding to a play of
+Shakespeare's, and his father's possession of it.
+
+"You have done well, Giles Hopkins," said Governor Bradford, heartily,
+"both in your conception of this message, and in your bearing it to the
+Narragansetts. And so from them we have no more to fear?"
+
+"No more whatever," said Giles.
+
+"Nevertheless, from this day let us build a stockade around the town,
+and close our gates at night, appointing sentinels to take shifts of
+guarding us," said Myles Standish. "This incident hath shown me that the
+outlying savages are not securely to be trusted. I have long thought
+that we should organize into military form. I want four squadrons of our
+men, each squadron given a quarter of the town to guard; I want pickets
+planted around us, and at any alarm, as of danger from fire or foe, I
+want these Plymouth companies to be ready to fly to rescue."
+
+"It shall be as you suggest, Captain," said Governor Bradford. "These
+things are for you to order, and the wisdom of this is obvious."
+
+Constance and Giles walked home together, Constance hiding beneath her
+gown the plumes which she had first fastened into, then ripped out of
+Giles's hat.
+
+"It is a delight to see you thus bearing your part in the affairs of
+Plymouth, Giles, dearest," she said. "And what fun this errand must have
+been!"
+
+Giles turned on her a pain-drawn face.
+
+"So it was, Constance, and I did like it," he said. "But how I wish Jack
+Billington had been with me! He was a brave lad, Constance, and a true
+friend. He was unruly, but he was not wicked, and the strict ways here
+irked him. Oh, I wish he had been here to do this service instead of me!
+I miss him, miss him."
+
+Giles stopped abruptly, and Constance gently touched his arm. Giles had
+not spoken before of Jack's death, and she had not dared allude to it.
+
+"I am sorry, too, dear Giles," she whispered, and Giles acknowledged her
+sympathy by a touch upon her hand, while his other hand furtively wiped
+away the tears that manhood forbade the boy to let fall.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+The Well-Conned Lesson
+
+
+Giles took a new place in Plymouth after his embassy to the
+Narragansetts. No longer a boy among his fellow pilgrims, he fulfilled
+well and busily the offices that were his as one of the younger, yet
+mature men.
+
+He was given the discipline of the squadron, that, pursuant to Captain
+Standish's plan for guarding the settlement, was the largest and
+controlled the most important gate of the stockade which was rapidly put
+up around the boundary of Plymouth after the defiance of the
+Narragansetts. Though that had come to naught, it had warned the
+colonists that danger might arise at an unforeseen moment.
+
+There was scarcity of provisions for the winter, the thirty-five
+destitute persons left the colony by the _Fortune_ being a heavy
+additional drain upon its supplies. Everyone was put upon half rations,
+and it devolved upon Giles and John Alden to apportion each family's
+share. It was hard to subsist through the bitter weather upon half of
+what would, at best, have been a slender nourishment, yet the Plymouth
+people faced the outlook patiently, uncomplainingly, and Giles,
+naturally hot-headed, impatient, got more benefit than he gave when he
+handed out the rations and saw the quiet heroism of their acceptance.
+
+He grew to be a silent Giles, falling into the habit of thoughtfulness,
+with scant talk, that was the prevailing manner of the Plymouth men.
+Between his father and himself there was friendliness, the former
+opposition between them, mutual annoyance, and irritation, were gone.
+Yet there they halted, not resuming the intimacy of Giles's childhood
+days. It was as if there were a reserve, rather of embarrassment than of
+lack of love; as if something were needed to jostle them into closer
+intercourse.
+
+Constance saw this, and waited, convinced that it would come, glad in
+the perfect confidence that she felt existed between them.
+
+She was a busy Constance in these days. The warmth of September held
+through that November, brooding, slumberous, quiet in the sunshine that
+warmed like wine.
+
+Constance and her stepmother cut and strung the few vegetables which
+they had, and hung them in the sunny corner of the empty attic room.
+
+They spread out corn and pumpkins upon the floor, instructing the
+willing Lady Fair to see to it that mice did not steal them.
+
+Dame Eliza, also, had grown comparatively silent. Her long tirades were
+wanting; she showed no softening toward Constance, yet she let her
+alone. Constance thought that something was on her stepmother's mind,
+but she did not try to discover what--glad of the new sparing of her
+sharp tongue, having no expectation of anything better than this from
+her.
+
+Damaris had been sent with the other children to be instructed in the
+morning by Mrs. Brewster in sampler working and knitting; by her husband
+in the Westminster catechism, and the hornbook.
+
+In the afternoon Damaris was allowed to play quietly at keeping house,
+with Love Brewster, who was a quiet child and liked better to play at
+being a pilgrim, and making a house with Damaris, than to share in the
+boys' games.
+
+"Where do you go, lambkin?" Constance asked her. "For we must know where
+to find you, nor must it be far from the house."
+
+"It is just down by that little patch, Connie; it's as nice as it can
+be, and it is the safest place in Plymouth, I'm sure," Damaris assured
+her earnestly. "You see there is a woods, and a hollow, and a big, big,
+great tree, and its roots go all out, every way, and we live in them,
+because they are rooms already; don't you see? And it's nice and
+damp--but you don't get your feet wet!" Damaris anticipated the
+objection which she saw in Constance's eye. "It's only--only--soft,
+gentle damp; not wetness, and moss grows there, as green as green can
+be, and feathery! And on the tree are nice little yellow plates, with
+brown edges! Growing on it! And we play they are our best plates that we
+don't use every day, because they are soft-like, and we didn't care to
+touch them when we did it. But they make the prettiest best plates in
+the cupboard, for they grow, in rows, with their edges over the next
+one, just the way you set up our plates in the corner cupboard. So
+please don't think it isn't a nice place, Constance, because it is, and
+I'd feel terribly afflicted, and cast down, and as nothing, if I
+couldn't go there with Love."
+
+Constance smiled at the child's quoting of the phrases which she had
+heard in the long sermons that Elder Brewster read, or delivered to them
+twice on Sunday, there being no minister yet come to Plymouth.
+
+"You little echo!" Constance cried. "It surely would be a matter to move
+one's pity if you suffered so deeply as that in the loss of your
+playground! Well, dear, till the warmth breaks up I suppose you may keep
+your house with Love, but promise to leave it if you feel chilly there.
+We must trust you so far. Art going there now?"
+
+"Yes, dear Constance. You have a heart of compassion and I love you with
+all of mine," said Damaris, expressing herself again like a little
+Puritan, but hugging her sister with the natural heartiness of a loving
+child.
+
+Then she ran away, and Constance, taking her capacious darning bag on
+her arm, went to bear Priscilla Alden company at her mending, as she
+often did when no work about the house detained her.
+
+Giles came running down the road when the afternoon had half gone, his
+face white. "Con, come home!" he cried, bursting open the door. "Hasten!
+Damaris is strangely ill."
+
+Constance sprang up, throwing her work in all directions, and Priscilla
+sprang up with her. Without stopping to pick up a thread, the two girls
+went with Giles.
+
+"I don't know what it is," Giles said, in reply to Constance's
+questions. "Love Brewster came running to Dame Hopkins, crying that
+Damaris was sick and strange. She followed him to the children's
+playground, and carried the child home. She is like to die; convulsions
+and every sign of poison she has, but what it is, what to do, no one
+knows. The women are there, but Doctor Fuller, as you know, is gone to a
+squaw who is suffering sore, and we could not bring him, even if we knew
+where he was, till it was too late. They have done all that they can
+recall for such seizures, but the child grows worse."
+
+"Oh, Giles!" groaned Constance. "She hath eaten poison. What has Doctor
+Fuller told me of these things? If only I can remember! All I can think
+of is that he hath said different poisons require different treatment.
+Oh, Giles, Giles!"
+
+"Steady, Sister; it may be that you can help," said Giles. "It had not
+occurred to any one how much the doctor had told you of his methods.
+Perhaps Love will know what Damaris touched."
+
+"There is Love, sitting crouched in the corner of the garden plot, his
+head on his knees, poor little Love!"
+
+Constance broke into a run and knelt beside the little boy, who did not
+look up as she put her arms around him.
+
+"Love, Love, dear child, if you can tell me what Damaris ate perhaps God
+will help me cure her," she said. "Look up, and be brave and help me.
+Did you see Damaris eat anything that you did not eat with her?"
+
+"Little things that grow around the big tree where it is wetter, we
+picked for our furniture," Love said at once. "Damaris said you cooked
+them and they were good. So then she said we would play some of them was
+furniture, and some of them was our dinner. And I didn't eat them, for
+they were like thin leather, only soft, and I felt of them, and couldn't
+eat them. But Damaris did eat them."
+
+"Toadstools!" cried Constance with a gasp. "Toadstools, Love! Did they
+look like little tables? And did Damaris call them mushrooms?"
+
+"Yes, like little tables," Love nodded his head hard. "All full
+underneath with soft crimped----"
+
+But Constance waited for no more. With a cry she was on her feet and
+running like the wind, calling back over her shoulder to Giles:
+
+"I'll come quick! I know! I know! Tell Father I know!"
+
+"She hath gone to Doctor Fuller's house," said Priscilla, watching
+Constance's flying figure, her hair unbound and streaming like a
+burnished banner behind her as she ran to get her weapon to fight with
+Death. "No girl ever ran as she can. Come, Giles; obey her. Tell your
+father and Mistress Hopkins that mayhap Constance can save the child."
+
+They turned toward the house, and Constance sped on.
+
+"Nightshade! The belladonna!" she was saying to herself as she ran. "I
+know the phial; I know its place. O, God, give me time, and give me wit,
+and do Thou the rest!" Past power to explain, she swept aside with a
+vehement arm the woman who found needed shelter for herself in Doctor
+Fuller's house, and kept it for him till his wife should come to
+Plymouth.
+
+Into the crude laboratory and pharmacy--in which the doctor had allowed
+her to work with him, of the contents of which he had taught her so much
+for an emergency that she had little dreamed would so closely affect
+herself when it came--Constance flew, and turned to the shelf where
+stood, in their dark phials, the few poisons which the doctor kept ready
+to do beneficent work for him.
+
+"Belladonna, belladonna, the beautiful lady," Constance murmured, in the
+curious way that minds have of seizing words and dwelling on them with
+surface insistence, while the actual mind is intensely working on a
+vital matter.
+
+She took down the wrong phial first, and set it back impatiently.
+
+"There should be none other like belladonna," she said aloud, and took
+down the phial she sought. To be sure that she was right, though it was
+labelled in the doctor's almost illegible small writing, she withdrew
+the cork. She knew the sickening odour of the nightshade which she had
+helped distil, an odour that dimly recalled a tobacco that had come to
+her father in England in her childhood from some Spanish colony, as she
+had been told, and also a wine that her stepmother made from wild
+berries.
+
+Constance shuddered as she replaced the cork.
+
+"It sickens me, but if only it will restore little Damaris!" she
+thought.
+
+Holding the phial tight Constance hastened away, and, her breath still
+coming painfully, she broke into her swift race homeward, diminishing
+nothing of her speed in coming, her great purpose conquering the pain
+that oppressed her labouring breast.
+
+When she reached her home her father was watching for her in the
+doorway. He took her hands in both of his without a word, covering the
+phial which she clasped, and looking at her questioningly.
+
+"I hope so; oh, I hope so, Father!" she said. "The doctor told me."
+
+Stephen Hopkins led her into the house; Dame Eliza met her within.
+
+"Constance? Connie?" Thus Mistress Hopkins implored her to do her best,
+and to allow her to hope.
+
+"Yes, yes, Mother," Constance replied to the prayer, and neither noted
+that they spoke to each other by names that they had never used before.
+
+The first glimpse that Constance had of Damaris on the bed sent all the
+blood back against her heart with a pang that made her feel faint. It
+did not seem possible that she was in time, even should her knowledge be
+correct.
+
+The child lay rigid as Constance's eyes fell on her; her lips and cheeks
+were ghastly, her long hair heightening the awful effect of her deathly
+colour. Frequent convulsions shook her body, her struggling breathing
+alone broke the stillness of the room.
+
+"She is quieter, but it is not that she is better," whispered Dame
+Eliza.
+
+Priscilla Alden stood ready with a spoon and glass in one hand, water in
+a small ewer in the other, always the efficient, sensible girl when
+needed.
+
+Constance accepted the glass, took from it the spoon, gave the glass
+back to Priscilla and poured from the dark phial into the spoon the dose
+of belladonna that Doctor Fuller had explained to her would be proper to
+use in an extreme case of danger.
+
+"How wonderful that he should have told me particularly about toadstool
+poisoning, yet it is because of the children," Constance's dual mind was
+saying to her, even while she poured the remedy and prayed with all her
+might for its efficacy.
+
+"Open her mouth," she said to her father, and he obeyed her. Constance
+poured the belladonna down Damaris's throat.
+
+Even after the first dose the child's rigor relaxed before a long time
+had passed. The dose was repeated; the early dusk of the grayest month
+closed down upon the watchers in that room. The neighbours slipped away
+to their own homes and duties; night fell, and Stephen Hopkins, his
+wife, Giles, and Constance stood around that bed, feeling no want of
+food, watching, watching the gradual cessation of the wracking
+convulsions, the relaxation of the stiffened little limbs, the fall of
+the strained eyelids, the quieter breathing, the changing tint of the
+skin as the poison loosed its grip upon the poor little heart and the
+blood began to course languidly, but duly, through the congested veins.
+
+"Constance, she is safe!" Stephen Hopkins ventured at last to say as
+Damaris turned on her side with a long, refreshing breath.
+
+Giles went quickly from the room, and Constance turned to her father
+with sudden weakness that made her faint.
+
+Constance swayed as she stood and her father caught her in his arms,
+tenderly drawing her head down on his shoulder, as great rending sobs
+shook her from relief and the accumulated exhaustion of hunger, physical
+weariness, anxiety, and grief.
+
+"Brave little lass!" Stephen Hopkins whispered, kissing her again and
+again. "Brave, quick-witted, loving, wise little lass o' mine!"
+
+Dame Eliza spoke never a word, but on her knees, with her head buried in
+the bright patch bedspread, one of Damaris's cold little hands laid
+across her lips, she wept as Constance had never dreamed that her
+stepmother could weep.
+
+"Better look after her, Father," Constance whispered, alarmed. "She will
+do herself a mischief, poor soul! Mother, oh--she loves me not! Father,
+comfort her; I will rest, and then I shall be my old self."
+
+"You did not notice that Priscilla had come back," her father said. "She
+is in the kitchen, and the kettle is singing on the hob. Go, dear one,
+and Priscilla will give you food and warm drink. Let me help you there.
+My Constance, Damaris would be far beyond our love by now had you not
+saved her. You have saved her life, Constance! What do we not all owe to
+you?"
+
+"It was Doctor Fuller. He taught me. He is wise, and knew that children
+might take harm from toadstools, playing in the woods as ours do. It was
+not due to me that Damaris was saved," Constance said.
+
+She was not conscious of how heavily she leaned on her father's arm,
+which lovingly enfolded her, leading her to the big chair in the
+inglenook. The fire leaped and crackled; the steam from the singing
+kettle on the crane showed rosy red in the firelight; Hecate, Puck, and
+Lady Fair basked in the warmth, and Priscilla Alden knelt on the hearth
+stirring something savoury in the saucepan that sat among the raked-off
+ashes, while John Alden, who had brought Priscilla back to be useful to
+the worn-out household, sat on the settle, leaning forward, elbows on
+knees, the bellows between his hands, ready to pump up wind under a
+flame that might show a sign of flagging.
+
+"Dear me, how cosy it looks!" exclaimed Constance, involuntarily, her
+drooping muscles tautening to welcome the brightness waiting for her.
+"It does not seem as though there ever could come a sorrow to threaten a
+hearthstone so shut in, so well tended as this one!"
+
+"It did not come, my dear; it only looked in at the window, and when it
+saw the tended hearth, and how well-armed you were to grapple with it,
+off it went!" cried Priscilla, drawing Constance into the high-backed
+chair. "Feet on this stool, my pretty, and this napery over your knees!
+That's right! Now this bowl and spoon, and then your Pris will pour her
+hot posset into your bowl, and you must shift it into your sweet mouth,
+and we'll be as right as a trivet, instanter!"
+
+Priscilla acted as she chattered, and Constance gladly submitted to
+being taken care of, lying back smiling in weary, happy acquiescence.
+
+Priscilla's posset was a heartening thing, and Constance after it,
+munched blissfully on a biscuit and sipped the wine that had been made
+of elder too brief a time before, yet which was friendly to her,
+nevertheless.
+
+Constance's lids drooped in the warmth, her head nodded, her fingers
+relaxed. Priscilla caught her glass just in time as it was falling, and
+Constance slept beside the fire while John and Priscilla crept away, and
+Giles came to take their place, to keep up the blaze in case a kettle of
+hot water might be needed when Damaris wakened from her first restoring
+sleep.
+
+At dawn Doctor Fuller came in and Constance aroused to welcome him.
+
+"Child, what an experience you have borne!" the good man said, bending
+with a moved face to greet Constance. "To think that I should have been
+absent! Your practice was more successful than mine; the squaw is dead.
+And you remembered my teaching, and saved the child with the nightshade
+we gathered and distilled that fair day, more than two months ago! 'Twas
+a lesson well conned!"
+
+"'Twas a lesson well taught," Constance amended. "Sit here, Doctor
+Fuller, and let me call my father. You will see Damaris? And her mother
+is in need of a quieting draught, I think. The poor soul was utterly
+spent when last I saw her, though I've selfishly slept, nor known aught
+of what any one else might be bearing."
+
+Constance slipped softly through the door as she spoke, into the bedroom
+where Damaris lay. The little girl was sleeping, but her mother lay
+across her feet, her gloomy eyes staring at the wall, her face white and
+mournful.
+
+"Doctor Fuller is come, Stepmother," whispered Constance. "Shall he not
+see Damaris? And you, have you not slept?"
+
+"Not a wink," said Dame Eliza, rising heavily. "To me it is as if
+Damaris had died, and that that child there was another. I bore the
+agony of parting from her, and now must abide by it, meseems, for I
+cannot believe that she is here and safe. Constance, it is to you----."
+She stopped and began again. "I was ever fond of calling you your
+father's daughter, making plain that I had no part in you. It was true;
+none have I, nor ever can have. But in my child you have the right of
+sister, and the restorer of her life. Damaris's mother, and Damaris is
+your father's other daughter, is heavily in your debt. I do not
+know----." She paused. She had spoken slowly, with difficulty, as if she
+could not find the words, nor use them as she wished to when she had
+found them. Young as she was, Constance saw that her stepmother was
+labouring under the stress of profound emotion, that tore her almost
+like a physical agony.
+
+"Now, now, prithee, Mistress Hopkins!" cried Constance, purposely using
+her customary title for her stepmother, to avoid the effect of there
+being anything out of the ordinary between them. "Bethink thee that I
+have loved Damaris dearly all her short life, and that her loss would
+have wounded me hardly less than it would have you. What debt can there
+be where there is love? Would I not have sacrificed anything to keep the
+child, even for myself? And what have I done but remember what the
+doctor taught me, and give her drops? Do not, I pray thee, make of my
+selfishness and natural affection a matter of merit! And now the doctor
+is waiting. Will you not go to him and let him treat you, too?--for
+indeed you need it. And he will tell you how best to bring Damaris back
+to her strength. I am going out into the morning air, for my long sleep
+by the hot fire hath made me heavy. I will be back in a short time to
+help with breakfast, Stepmother!"
+
+Constance snatched her cloak and ran out by the other door to escape
+seeing the doctor again and hearing her stepmother dilate to him upon
+the night's events.
+
+The sun was rising, resplendent, but the air was cold.
+
+"And no wonder!" Constance thought, startled by her discovery. "Winter
+is upon us; to-day is December! Our warmth must leave us, and then will
+danger of poisoning be past, even in sheltered spots, such as that in
+which our little lass near found her death!"
+
+She spread her arms out to the sun rays, and let the crisp, sea wind
+cool her face.
+
+"What a world! What a world! How fair, how glad, how sweet! Oh, thank
+God that it is so to us all this morning! Never will I repine at
+hardships in kind Plymouth colony, nor at the cost of coming on this
+pilgrimage, for of all the world in Merry England there is none to-day
+happier or more grateful than is this pilgrim maid!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+Christmas Wins, Though Outlawed
+
+
+Little Damaris, who had so nearly made the last great pilgrimage upon
+which we must all go, having turned her face once more toward the world
+she had been quitting, resumed her place in it but languidly. Never a
+robust child, her slender strength was impaired by the poison which she
+had absorbed. Added to this was the sudden coming of winter upon
+Plymouth, not well prepared to resist it, and it set in with violence,
+as if to atone for dallying on its way, for allowing summer to overlap
+its domain. Without a word to each other both Dame Eliza and Constance
+entered into an alliance of self-denial, doing without part of the more
+nourishing food out of their scanty allowance to give it to Damaris, and
+to plot in other ways to bring her back to health.
+
+Constance scarcely knew her stepmother. Silent, where she had been prone
+to talk; patient, where she had been easily vexed; with something almost
+deprecatory in her manner where she always had been self-assertive, Dame
+Eliza went about her round of work like a person whom her husband's
+daughter had never known.
+
+Toward Constance most of all was she changed. Never by the most remote
+implication did she blame her, whereas heretofore everything that the
+girl did was wrong, and the subject of wearisome, scolding comment. She
+avoided unnecessary speech to Constance, seemed even to try not to look
+at her, but this without the effect of her old-time dislike; it was
+rather as if she felt humiliated before her, and could not bring herself
+to meet the girl's eyes.
+
+Constance, as she realized this, began to make little overtures toward
+her stepmother. Her sweetness of nature made her suffer discomfort when
+another was ill-at-ease, but so far her cautious attempts had met with
+failure.
+
+"We have been in Plymouth a year, lacking but a sen' Night, Stepmother,"
+Constance said one December day when the snow lay white on Plymouth and
+still thickened the air and veiled the sky. "And we have been in the New
+World past a year."
+
+"It is ordered that we remember it in special prayer and psalmody to the
+Lord, with thanksgiving on the anniversary of our landing; you heard
+that, Constantia?" her stepmother responded.
+
+"No, but that would be seemly, a natural course to follow," said
+Constance.
+
+"There is not one of us who is not reliving the voyage hither and the
+hard winter of a year ago, I'll warrant. And Christmas is nearing."
+
+"That is a word that may not be uttered here," said Dame Eliza with a
+gleam of humour in her eyes, though she did not lift them, and a
+flitting smile across her somewhat grimly set lips.
+
+"Oh, can it be harmful to keep the day on which, veiled in an infant's
+form, man first saw his redemption?" cried Constance. "There were
+sweetness and holiness in Christmas-keeping, meseems. If only we could
+cut out less violently! Stepmother, will you let me have my way?"
+
+"Your way is not in my guidance, Constantia," said Dame Eliza. "It is
+for your father to grant you, or refuse you; not me."
+
+"This is beyond my father's province," laughed Constance. "Will you let
+me make a doll--I have my box of paints, and you know that a gift for
+using paints and for painting human faces is mine. I will make a doll of
+white rags and dress her in our prettiest coloured ones, with fastenings
+upon her clothes, so that they may be taken off and changed, else would
+she be a trial to her little mother! And then I will paint her face with
+my best skill, big blue eyes, curling golden hair, rose-red cheeks and
+lips, and a fine, straight little nose. Oh, she shall be a lovely
+creature, upon my honour! And will you let me give her to Damaris on
+Christmas morning, saying naught of it to any one outside this house, so
+no one shall rebuke us, or fine my father again for letting his child
+have a Christmas baby, as they fined him for letting Ted and Ned play at
+a harmless game? Then I shall know that there is one happy child on the
+birthday of Him who was born that all children, of all ages, should be
+happy, and that it will be, of all the possible little ones, our dear
+little lass who is thus full of joy!"
+
+Mistress Hopkins did not reply for a moment. Then she raised the corner
+of her apron and wiped her eyes, muttering something about "strong
+mustard."
+
+"How fond you are of my little Damaris," she then said. "You know,
+Constantia, that I have no right to consent to your keeping Christmas,
+since our elders have set their faces dead against all practices of the
+Old Church. Yet are your reasons for wishing to do this, or so it seems
+to me in my ignorance, such as Heaven would approve, and it sorely is
+borne upon me that many worser sins may be wrought in Plymouth than
+making a delicate child happy on the birthday of the Lord. Go, then, and
+make your puppet, but do not tell any one that you first consulted me.
+If trouble comes of it they will blame you less, who are young and not
+so long removed from the age of dolls, than me, who am one of the
+Mothers in Israel."
+
+"Oh, thank you, thank you, Stepmother!" cried Constance jumping up and
+clapping her hands with greater delight than if she had herself received
+a Christmas gift.
+
+"I'll never betray you, never! None shall know that any but my wicked,
+light-minded self had a hand in this profanation of----. What does it
+profane, Stepmother?"
+
+"Plymouth and Plymouth pilgrimage," said Dame Eliza, and this time the
+smile that she had checked before had its way.
+
+Constance ran upstairs to look for the pieces which were to be
+transformed by fairy magic, through her means, from shapeless rags to a
+fair and rosy daughter for pale Damaris. She remembered, wondering, as
+she knelt before her chest, that she had clapped her hands and pranced,
+and that Dame Eliza had not reproved her.
+
+Constance was busy with her doll till Christmas morning, the more so
+that she must hide it from Damaris and there was not warmth anywhere to
+sit and sew except in the great living room where Damaris amused Oceanus
+most of the darksome days. But Damaris's mother connived with Constance
+to divert the child, and there were long evenings, for, to give
+Constance more time, Dame Eliza put Damaris early to bed, and Constance
+sat late at her sewing.
+
+Thus when Christmas day came there sat on the hearth, propped up against
+the back of Stephen Hopkins's big volume of Shakespeare, a doll with a
+painted face that had real claim to prettiness. She wore a gown of
+sprigged muslin that hung so full around the pointed stomacher of her
+waist that it was a scandal to sober Plymouth, and a dangerous example
+to Damaris, had she been inclined to vain light-mindedness. And--though
+this was a surprise also to Dame Eliza--there was a horse of brown
+woollen stuff, with a tail of fine-cut rags and a mane of ravelled rags,
+and legs which, though considerably curved as to shape and unreliable as
+to action, were undeniably legs, and four in number. There were bright,
+black buttons on the steed's head suggestive of eyes, and the red paint
+in two spots below them were all the fiery nostrils the animal required.
+This was Giles's contribution to the joy of his ailing baby brother.
+Oceanus was a frail child whose grasp on life had been taken at a time
+too severe for him to hold it long, nor indeed did he.
+
+"Come out and wander down the street, Con," Giles whispered to Constance
+under the cover of the shouts of the two children who had come
+downstairs to find the marvellous treasures, the doll and horse,
+awaiting them, and who went half mad with joy, just like modern children
+in old Plymouth, as if they had not been little pilgrims.
+
+"There will be amusement for thee; come out, but never say I bade you
+come. You can make an errand."
+
+"Oh, Giles, you are not plotting mischief?" Constance implored, seeing
+the fun in her brother's eyes and fearing an attempt at Christmas
+fooling.
+
+"No harm afoot, but we hope a little laughter," said Giles, nodding
+mysteriously as he left the house.
+
+Constance could not resist her curiosity. She wrapped herself in her
+cloak against the cold and tied a scarf over her hair, before drawing
+its hood over her head.
+
+"You look like a witch, like a sweet, lovely witch," cried Damaris,
+getting up from her knees on which she had seemed, and not unjustly, to
+be worshipping her doll, whom she had at once christened Connie, and
+running over to hug her sister, breathless. "Are you a witch, Constance,
+and made my Connie by magic? No, a fairy! A fairy you are! My fairy,
+darling, lovely sister!"
+
+"Be grateful to Constantia, as you should be, Damaris, but prate not of
+fairies. I will not let go undone all my duty as a Puritan and pilgrim
+mother. Constantia is a kind sister to you, which is better, than a
+fairy falsehood," said Dame Eliza, rallying something of her old spirit.
+
+Constance kissed Damaris and whispered something to her so softly that
+all the child caught was "Merry." Yet the lost word was not hard to
+guess.
+
+Then Constance went out and down the street, wondering what Giles had
+meant. She saw a small group of men before her, near the general
+storehouse for supplies, and easily made out that they were the younger
+men of the plantation, including those that had come on the _Fortune_,
+and that Giles and Francis Billington were to the fore.
+
+Up the street in his decorous raiment, but without additional marking of
+the day by his better cloak as on Sunday, came Governor Bradford with
+his unhastening pace not quickened, walking with his English thorn stick
+that seemed to give him extra, gubernatorial dignity, toward the group.
+The younger lads nudged one another, laughing, half afraid, but not
+Giles. He stood awaiting the governor as if he faced him for a serious
+cause, yet Constance saw that his eyes danced.
+
+"Good morning, my friends," said William Bradford. "Not at work? You are
+apportioned to the building of the stockade. It is late to begin your
+day, especially that the sun sets early at this season."
+
+"It is because of the season, though not of the sun's setting, that we
+are not at work," said Giles, chosen spokesman for this prank by his
+fellows, and now getting many nudges lest he neglect his office. "Hast
+forgotten, Mr. Bradford, what day this is? It offends our conscience to
+work on a day of such high reverence. This be a holy day, and we may not
+work without sin, as the inward voice tells us. We waited to explain to
+you what looked like idleness, but is rather prompted by high and lofty
+principles."
+
+The governor raised his eyebrows and bowed deeply, not without a slight
+twitching of his lips, as he heard this unexpected and solemn protest.
+
+"Indeed, Giles Hopkins! And is it so? You have in common with these,
+your fellow labourers, a case of scruples to which the balm of the
+opinions of your elders and betters, at least in experience and
+authority, does not apply? Far be it from me to interfere with your
+consciences! We have come to the New World, and braved no slight
+adversity for just this cause, that conscience unbridled, undriven,
+might guide us in virtue. Disperse, therefore, to your homes, and for
+the day let the work of protection wait. I bid you good morning,
+gentlemen, and pray you be always such faithful harkeners to the voice
+of conscience."
+
+The governor went on, having spoken, and the actors in the farce looked
+crestfallen at one another, the point of the jest somewhat blunted by
+the governor's complete approval. Indeed there were some among them who
+followed the governor. He turned back, hoping for this, and said:
+
+"This is not done to approve of Christmas-keeping but rather to spare
+you till you are better informed."
+
+"What will you do, Giles?" asked Constance, as her brother joined her,
+Francis also, not in the least one with those who relinquished the idea
+of a holiday.
+
+"Do? Why follow our consciences, as we were commended for doing!"
+shouted Francis tossing his hat in the air and catching it neatly on his
+head in the approved fashion of a mountebank at a fair in England.
+
+"Our consciences bid us play at games on Christmas," supplemented Giles.
+"Would you call the girls and watch us? Or we'll play some games that
+you can join in, such as catch-catch, or pussy-wants-a-corner."
+
+Constance shook her head. "Giles, be prudent," she warned. "You have
+won your first point, but if I know the governor's face there was
+something in it that betokened more to come. You know there'll be no
+putting up with games on any day here, least of all on this day, which
+would be taken as a return to abandoned ways. Yet it is comical!"
+Constance added, finding her role of mentor irksome when all her youth
+cried out for fun.
+
+"Good Con! You are no more ready for unbroken dulness than we are!"
+Francis approved her. "Come along, Giles; get the bar for throwing, and
+the ball, and who said pitch-and-toss? I have a set of rings I made, I
+and--someone else." Francis's face clouded. Pranks had lost much of
+their flavour since he lacked Jack.
+
+Seeing this, Giles raced Francis off, and the other conscientious youths
+who refused work, streamed after them.
+
+Constance continued her way to the Alden home. She thought that a timely
+visit to Priscilla would bring her home at such an hour as to let her
+see the end of the morning escapade.
+
+Elizabeth Tilley drifted into Priscilla's kitchen in an aimless way, not
+like her usual busy self, although she made the reason for her coming a
+recipe which she needed. Soon Desire Minter followed her, asking
+Priscilla if she would show her how to cut an apron from a worn-out
+skirt, but, like Elizabeth, Desire seemed listless and uncertain.
+
+"There's something wrong!" cried Desire at last, without connection.
+"There is a sense of there being Christmas in the world somewhere
+to-day, and not here! I am glad that I go back to England as soon as
+opportunity offers."
+
+"There is Christmas here, most conscientiously kept!" laughed Constance.
+"Hark to the tale of it!" And she told the girls what had happened that
+morning.
+
+"Come with me, bear me company home, and we shall, most probably, see
+the end of it, for I am sure that the governor is not done with those
+lads," she added.
+
+Desire and Elizabeth welcomed the suggestion, for they were, also, about
+to go home.
+
+"See yonder!" cried Constance, pointing.
+
+Down the street there was what, in Plymouth, constituted a crowd,
+gathered into two bands. With great shouting and noise one band was
+throwing a ball, which the other band did its utmost to prevent from
+entering a goal toward which the throwers directed it. Alone, one young
+man was throwing a heavy bar, taking pride in his muscles which balanced
+the bar and threw it a long distance with ease and grace.
+
+"To think that this is Plymouth, with merrymaking in its street on
+Christmas day!" exclaimed Desire, her eyes kindling with pleasure.
+
+"Ah, but see the governor is coming, leading back those men who went to
+work; he has himself helped to build the stockade. Now we shall see how
+he receives this queer idea of a holiday, which is foreign to us, though
+it comes from England," said Constance.
+
+Governor Bradford came toward the shouting and mirth-making with his
+dignified gait unvaried. The game slackened as he drew nearer, though
+some of the players did their best to keep it up at the same pace, not
+to seem to dread the governor's disapproval.
+
+Having gained the centre of the players, the governor halted, and looked
+from one to another.
+
+"Hand me that ball, and yonder bar, and all other implements of play
+which you have here," he said, sternly. "My friends," he added to the
+men who had been at work, "take from our idlers their toys."
+
+There was no resistance on the part of the players; they yielded up
+bats, ball, and bar, the stool-ball, goal sticks, and all else, without
+demur, curious to see what was in the wind.
+
+"Now, young men of Plymouth colony," said Governor Bradford, "this
+morning you told me that your consciences forbade you to work on
+Christmas day. Although I could not understand properly trained Puritan
+consciences going so astray, yet did I admit your plea, not being
+willing to force you to do that which there was a slender chance of your
+being honest in objecting to, for conscience sake. You have not worked
+with your neighbours for half of this day. Now doth my conscience
+arouse, nor will it allow me, as governor, to see so many lusty men at
+play, while others labour for our mutual benefit. Therefore I forbid the
+slightest attempt at game-playing on this day. If your consciences will
+not allow you to labour then will mine, though exempting you from work
+because of your sense of right, yet not allow you to play while others
+work. For the rest of this day, which is called Christmas, but which we
+consider but as the twenty-fifth day of this last month of the year, you
+will either go to work, or you will remain close within your various
+houses, on no account to appear beyond your thresholds. For either this
+is a work-a-day afternoon, or else is it holy, which we by no means
+admit. In either case play is forbidden you. See to it that you obey me,
+or I will deal with you as I am empowered to deal."
+
+The young men looked at one another, some inclined to resent this,
+others with a ready sense of humour, burst out laughing; among these
+latter was Giles, who cried:
+
+"Fairly caught, Governor Bradford! You have played a Christmas game this
+day yourself and have won out at it! For me, as a choice between staying
+close within the house and working, I will take to the stockade. By your
+leave, then, Governor, I will join you at the work, dinner being over."
+
+"You have my leave, Giles Hopkins," said William Bradford, and there was
+a twinkle in his eyes as he turned them, with no smile on his lips, upon
+Giles.
+
+Giles went home with Constance in perfect good humour, taking the end of
+his mischief in good part.
+
+"For look you," he said, summing up comments upon it to his sister. "I
+don't mind encountering defeat by clever outwitting of me. We tried a
+scheme and the governor had a better one. What I mind is unfairness;
+that was fair, and I like the governor better than I ever did before."
+
+Stephen Hopkins stood in the doorway of the house as the brother and
+sister came toward it. He was gazing at the skyline with eyes that saw
+nothing near to him, preoccupied, wistful, in a mood that was rare to
+him, and never betrayed to others. His eyes came back to earth slowly,
+and he looked at Giles and Constance as one looks who has difficulty in
+seeing realities, so occupied was he with his thoughts. He put out a
+hand and took one of Constance's hands, drawing it up close to his
+breast, and he laid his left hand heavily on Giles's shoulder.
+
+"Across that ocean it is Christmas day," he said, slowly. "In England
+people are sitting around their hearths mulling ale, roasting apples,
+singing old songs and carols. When I was young your mother and I rode
+miles across a dim forest, she on her pillion, I guiding a mettlesome
+beauty. But she had no fear with my hand on his bridle; we had been
+married but since Michaelmas. We went to visit your grandmother, her
+mother, Lady Constantia, who was a famous toast in her youth. You are
+very like your mother, Constance; I have often told you this. Strange,
+that one can inhabit the same body in such different places in a
+lifetime; stranger that, still in the same body, he can be such an
+altered man! Giles, my son, I have been thinking long thoughts to-day.
+There is something that I must say to you as your due; nay something,
+rather, that I want to say to you. I have been wrong, my son. I have
+loved you so well that a defect in you annoyed me, and I have been hard,
+impatient, offending against the charity in judgment that we owe all
+men, surely most those who are our nearest and dearest. I accused you
+unjustly, and gave you no opportunity to explain. Giles, as man to man,
+and as a father who failed you, I beg your pardon."
+
+"Oh, sir! Oh, dear, dear Father!" cried Giles in distress. "It needed
+not this! All I ask is your confidence. I have been an arrogant young
+upstart, denying you your right to deal with me. It is I who am wrong,
+wrongest in that I have never confessed the wrong, and asked your
+forgiveness. Surely it is for me to beg your pardon; not you mine!"
+
+"At least a good example is your due from me," said Stephen Hopkins,
+with a smile of wistful tenderness. "We are all upstarts, Giles lad,
+denying that we should receive correction, and this from a Greater than
+I. The least that we can do is to be willing to acknowledge our errors.
+With all my heart I forgive you, lad, and I ask you to try to love me,
+and let there be the perfect loving comradeship between us that, it hath
+seemed, we had left behind us on the other shore, just when it was most
+needed to sustain us in our venture on this one. You loved me well,
+Giles, as a child; love me as well as you can as a man."
+
+Giles caught his father's hand in both of his, and was not ashamed that
+tears were streaming down his cheeks.
+
+"Father, I never loved you till to-day!" he cried. "You have taught me
+true greatness, and--and--Oh, indeed I love and honour you, dear sir!"
+
+"The day of good will, and of peace to it! And of love that triumphs
+over wrongs," said Stephen Hopkins, turning toward the house, and
+whimsically touching with his finger-tips the happy tears that quivered
+on Constance's lashes.
+
+"We cannot keep it out of Plymouth colony, however we strive to erect
+barriers against the feast; Christmas wins, though outlawed!"
+
+ "God rest ye merry, gentlemen;
+ Let nothing you dismay,"
+
+Constance carolled as she hung up her cloak, her heart leaping in
+rapture of gratitude. Nor did Dame Eliza reprove her carol, but half
+smiled as Oceanus crowed and beat a pan wildly with his Christmas horse.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+A Fault Confessed, Thereby Redressed
+
+
+As the winter wore away, that second winter in Plymouth colony that
+proved so hard to endure, the new state of things in the Hopkins
+household continued. Constance could not understand her stepmother.
+Though the long habit of a lifetime could not be at once entirely
+abandoned, yet Dame Eliza scolded far less, and toward Constance herself
+maintained an attitude that was far from fault-finding. Indeed she
+managed to combine something like regretful deference that was not
+unlike liking, with a rigid keeping of her distance from the girl.
+Constance wondered what had come over Mistress Hopkins, but she was too
+thankful for the peace she enjoyed to disturb it by the least attempt to
+bridge the distance that Dame Eliza had established between them.
+
+Her father and Giles were a daily delight to Constance. The comradeship
+that they had been so happy in when Giles was a child was theirs again,
+increased and deepened by the understanding that years had enabled Giles
+and his father to share as one man with another. And added to that was
+wistful affection, as if the older man and the younger one longed to
+make up by strength of love for the wasted days when all had not been
+right between them.
+
+Constance watched them together with gladness shining upon her face.
+Dame Eliza also watched them, but with an expression that Constance
+could not construe. Certain it was that her stepmother was not happy,
+not sure of herself, as she had always been.
+
+Oceanus was not well; he did not grow strong and rosy as did the other
+_Mayflower_ baby, Peregrine White, though Oceanus was by this time
+walking and talking--a tall, thin, reed-like little baby, fashioned not
+unlike the long grasses that grew on Plymouth harbour shore. But Damaris
+had come back to health. She was Constance's charge; her mother yielded
+her to Constance and devoted herself to the baby, as if she had a
+presentiment of how brief a time she was to keep him.
+
+It was a cruelly hard winter; except that there was not a second
+epidemic of mortal disease it was harder to the exiles than the first
+winter in Plymouth.
+
+Hunger was upon them, not for a day, a week, or a month, but hourly and
+on all the days that rose and set upon the lonely little village,
+encompassed by nothing kinder than reaches of marsh, sand, and barrens
+that ended in forest; the monotonous sea that moaned against their coast
+and separated them from food and kin; and the winter sky that often
+smiled on them sunnily, it is true, but oftener was coldly gray, or
+hurling upon them bleak winds and driving snows.
+
+From England had come on the _Fortune_ more settlers to feed, but no
+food for them. Plymouth people were hungry, but they faithfully divided
+their scarcity with the new-comers and hoped that in the spring Mr.
+Weston, the agent in England who had promised them the greatest help and
+assured them of the liveliest interest in this heroic venture, would
+send them at least a fraction of the much he had pledged to its
+assistance.
+
+So when the spring, that second spring, came in and brought a small ship
+there was the greatest excitement of hope in her coming. But all she
+brought was letters, and seven more passengers to consume the food
+already so shortened, but not an ounce of addition to the supplies. One
+letter was from Mr. Weston, filled with fair words, but so discouraging
+in its smooth avoidance of actual help that Governor Bradford dared not
+make its contents known, lest it should discourage the people, already
+sufficiently downhearted, and with more than enough reason to be so.
+There was a letter on this ship for Constance from Humility, and
+Governor Bradford beckoned to John Howland, standing near and said to
+him:
+
+"Take this letter up to Mistress Constantia Hopkins, and ask her father
+to come to me, if it please him. Say to him that I wish to consult him."
+
+"I will willingly do your bidding, Mr. Bradford," said John Howland,
+accepting the letter which the governor held out to him and turning it
+to see in all lights its yellowed folder and the seal thrice impressed
+along its edge to insure that none other than she whose name appeared
+written in a fine, running hand on the obverse side, should first read
+the letter. "In fact I have long contemplated a visit to Mistress
+Constantia. It hath seemed to me that Stephen Hopkins's daughter was
+growing a woman and a comely woman. She is not so grave as I would want
+her to be, but allowance must be made for her youth, and her father is
+not so completely, nor profoundly set free from worldliness as are our
+truer saints; witness the affair of the shovelboard. But Constantia
+Hopkins, under the control and obedience of a righteous man, may be
+worthy of his hand."
+
+"Say you so!" exclaimed William Bradford, half amused, half annoyed, and
+wondering what his quick-tempered but honoured friend Stephen would say
+to this from John Howland--he who had a justifiable pride in his
+honourable descent and who held no mere man equal to his Constance, the
+apple of his eye. "I had not a suspicion that you were turning over in
+your mind thoughts of this nature. I would advise you to consult Mr.
+Hopkins before you let them take too strong hold upon your desire. But
+in as far as my errand runneth with your purpose to further your
+acquaintance with the maiden, in so far I will help you, good John, for
+I am anxious that Mr. Hopkins shall know as soon as possible what news
+the ship hath brought. Stay; here is another letter; for Mistress Eliza
+Hopkins this time. Take that, also, if you will and bid Mr. Hopkins
+hither."
+
+John Howland, missing entirely the hint of warning in the governor's
+voice and manner, took the two letters and went his way.
+
+He found Stephen Hopkins at his house, planning the planting of a garden
+with his son.
+
+"I will go at once; come thou with me, Giles. It sounds like ill news, I
+fear me, that hint of wishing to consult me. Somehow it seems that as
+'good wine needs no bush,' for which we have Shakespeare's authority, so
+good news needs little advice, or rarely seeks it, for its dealing."
+
+So saying Stephen Hopkins, straightening himself with a hand on his
+stiffened side went into the house, and, taking his hat, went
+immediately out of it again, with Giles. John Howland followed them into
+the house, but not out of it. Instead, he seated himself, unbidden, upon
+the fireside settle, and awaited their departure.
+
+Then he produced his two letters, and offered one to Constance.
+
+"I have brought you this, Mistress Constantia," he said, ponderously,
+"at the request of the governor, but no less have I brought it because
+it pleaseth me to do you a service, as I hope to do you many, even to
+the greatest, in time to come."
+
+"Thank you, John," said innocent Constance, having no idea of the
+weighty meaning underlying this statement, indeed scarce hearing it,
+being eager to get the letter which he held. "Oh, from Humility! It is
+from Humility! Look, little Damaris, a letter from England, writ by
+Humility Cooper! The _Fortune_ is safely in port, then! Come, my cosset,
+and I will read you what Humility hath to tell us of her voyage, of
+home, and all else! First of all shall you and I hear this: then we will
+hasten to Priscilla Alden and read it to her new little daughter, for
+she hath been so short a time in Plymouth that she must long for news
+from across the sea, do you not say so?"
+
+Damaris giggled in enjoyment of Constance's nonsense, which the serious
+little thing never failed to enter into and to enjoy, as unplayful
+people always enjoy those who can frolic. The big sister ran away, with
+the smaller one clinging to her skirt, and with never a backward glance
+nor thought for John Howland, meditating a great opportunity for
+Constance, as he sat on the fireside settle.
+
+"Mistress Hopkins, this is your letter," said John, completing his
+errand when Constance was out of sight.
+
+He offered Dame Eliza her letter. She looked at it and thrust it into
+her pocket with such a heightened colour and distressed look that even
+John Howland's preoccupation took note of it.
+
+"This present hour seems to be an opportunity that is a leading, and I
+will follow this leading, Mistress Hopkins, by your leave," John said.
+"It cannot be by chance that all obstacles to plain speaking to you are
+removed. I had thought first to speak to Stephen Hopkins, or perhaps to
+Constantia herself, but I see that it is better to engage a woman's good
+offices."
+
+Dame Eliza frowned at him, darkly; she was in no mood for dallying, and
+this preamble had a sound that she did not like.
+
+"Good offices for what? My good offices? Why?" she snapped. "Why should
+you speak to Mr. Hopkins, with whose Christian name better men than you
+in this colony make less free? And still more I would know why you
+should speak either first or last to Mistress Constantia? That hath a
+sound that I do not like, John Howland!"
+
+John Howland stared at her, aghast, a moment, then he said:
+
+"It is my intent, Mistress Eliza Hopkins, to offer to wed Mistress
+Constantia, and that cannot mislike you. Young though she be, and
+somewhat frivolous, yet do I hope much for her from marriage with a
+godly man, and I find her comely to look upon. Therefore----"
+
+"Therefore!" cried Dame Eliza who seemed to have lost her breath for a
+moment in sheer angry amazement. "Therefore you would make a fool of
+yourself, had not it been done for you at your birth! Art completely a
+numbskull, John Howland, that you speak as though it was a favour, and
+a matter for you to weigh heavily before coming to it, that you might
+make Stephen Hopkins's daughter your wife? Put the uneasiness that it
+gives you as to her light-mindedness out of your thoughts, nor dwell
+over-much upon her comeliness, for your own good! Comely is she, and a
+rare beauty, to give her partly her due. And what is more, is she a
+sweet and noble lass, graced with wit and goodness that far exceed your
+knowledge; not even her father can know as I do, with half my sore
+reason, her patience, her charity, her unfailing generosity to give, or
+to forgive. Marry Constance, forsooth! Why, man, there is not a man in
+this Plymouth settlement worthy of her latchets, nor in all England is
+there one too good for her, if half good enough! Your eyes will be awry
+and for ever weak from looking so high for your mate. But that you are
+the veriest ninny afoot I would deal with you, John Howland, for your
+impudence! Learn your place, man, and never let your conceit so run away
+with you that you dare to speak as if you were hesitant as to Mr.
+Hopkins's daughter to be your wife! Zounds! John, get out of my sight
+lest I be tempted to take my broom and clout ye! Constance Hopkins and
+you, forsooth! Oh, be gone, I tell ye! She's the pick and flower of
+maidens, in Plymouth or England, or where you will!"
+
+John Howland rose, slowly, stiffly, angry, but also ashamed, for he had
+not spirit, and he felt that he had stepped beyond bounds in aspiring
+to Constance since Dame Eliza with such vehemence set it before him.
+Then, too, it were a strong man who could emerge unscathed from an
+inundation of Dame Eliza's wrath.
+
+"I meant no harm, Mistress," he said, awkwardly. "No harm is done, for
+the maid herself knows naught of it, nor any one save the governor, and
+he but a hint. Let be no ill will between us for this. I suppose, since
+Mistress Constantia is not for me, I must e'en marry whom I can, and I
+think I must marry Elizabeth Tilley."
+
+"What does it matter to me who you marry?" said Dame Eliza, turning away
+with sudden weariness. "It's no concern of mine, beyond the point I've
+settled for good and all."
+
+John Howland went away. After he had gone Constance came around the
+house and entered by the rear door. Her eyes were full of moisture from
+suppressed laughter, yet her lips were tremulous and her eyes, dewy
+though they were, shone with happiness.
+
+"Hast heard?" demanded Dame Eliza.
+
+"I could not help it," said Constance. "I left Damaris at Priscilla's
+and ran back to ask you, for Priscilla, to lend her the pattern of the
+long wrapping cloak that you made for our baby when he was tiny. Pris's
+baby seems cold, she thinks. And as I entered I heard John. I near died
+of laughing! I had thought a lover always felt his beloved to be so
+fair and fine that he scarce dared look at her! Not so John! But after
+all, it is less that I am John's beloved than his careful--and doubtful
+choice. But for the rest, Mistress Hopkins--Stepmother--might I call you
+Mother?--what shall I say? I am ashamed, grateful but ashamed, that you
+praise me so! Yet how glad I am, never can I find words to tell you. I
+thought that you hated me, and it hath grieved me, for love is the air I
+breathe, and without it I shrivel up from chill and suffocation! I would
+that I could thank you, tell you----." Constance stopped.
+
+The expression on Dame Eliza's face, wholly beyond her understanding,
+silenced her.
+
+"You have thanked me," Dame Eliza said. "Damaris is alive only through
+you. However you love her, yet her life is her mother's debt to you.
+Much, much more do I owe you, Constantia Hopkins, and none knows it
+better than myself. Let be. Words are poor. There is something yet to be
+done. After it you may thank me, or deny me as you will, but between us
+there will be a new beginning, its shaping shall be as you will. Till
+that is done which I must do, let there be no more talk between us."
+
+Puzzled, but impressed by her stepmother's manner and manifest distress,
+Constance acquiesced. It was not many days before she understood.
+
+The people of Plymouth were summoned to a meeting at Elder William
+Brewster's house. It was generally understood that something of the
+nature of a court of justice, and at the same time of a religious
+character was to take place. Everyone came, drawn by curiosity and the
+dearth of interesting public events.
+
+Stephen Hopkins, Giles, and Constance came, the two little children with
+them, because there was no one at home to look after them. Not the least
+suspicion of what they were to hear entered the mind of these three, or
+it might never have been heard.
+
+Elder Brewster, William Bradford, Edward Winslow sat in utmost gravity
+at the end of the room. It crossed Stephen Hopkins's mind to wonder a
+little at his exclusion from this tribunal, for it had the effect of a
+tribunal, but it was only a passing thought, and instantly it was
+answered.
+
+Dame Eliza Hopkins entered the room, with Mistress Brewster, and seated
+herself before the three heads of the colony.
+
+"My brethren," said William Brewster, rising, "it hath been said on
+Authority which one may not dispute that a broken and contrite heart
+will not be despised. You have been called together this night for what
+purpose none but my colleagues and myself knew. It is to harken to the
+public acknowledgment of a grave fault, and by your hearing of a public
+confession to lend your part to the wiping out of this sin, which is
+surely forgiven, being repented of, yet which is thus atoned for. We
+have vainly endeavoured to persuade the person thus coming before you
+that this course was not necessary; since her fault affected no one but
+her family, to them alone need confession be made. As she insisted upon
+this course, needs must we consent to it. Dame Eliza Hopkins, we are
+ready to harken to you."
+
+He sat down, and Dame Eliza, rising, came forward. Stephen Hopkins's
+face was a study, and Giles and Constance, crimson with distress, looked
+appealingly at their father, but the situation was beyond his control.
+
+"Friends, neighbours, fellow pilgrims," began Dame Eliza, manifestly in
+real agony of shamed distress, yet half enjoying herself, through her
+love for drama and excitement, "I am a sinner. I cannot continue in your
+membership unless you know the truth, and admit me thereto. My anger, my
+wicked jealousy hath persecuted the innocent children of my husband,
+they whose mother died and whose place I should have tried in some
+measure to make good. But at all times, and in all ways have I used them
+ill, not with blows upon the body, but upon their hearts. Jealousy was
+my temptation, and I yielded to it. But, not content with sharp and
+cruel words, I did plot against them to turn their father from them,
+especially from his son, because I wanted for my son the inheritance in
+England which Stephen Hopkins hath power to distribute. I succeeded in
+sowing discord between the father and Giles, but not between my husband
+and his daughter. At last I used a signature which fell into my hands,
+and by forwarding it to England, set in train actions before the law
+which would defraud Giles Hopkins and benefit my own son. By the ship
+that lately came into our harbour I received a letter, sent to me by the
+governor, by the hand of John Howland, promising me success in my wicked
+endeavour. My brethren, my heart is sick unto death within me.
+Thankfully I say that all estrangement is past between Giles Hopkins and
+his father. In that my wicked success at the beginning was foiled. While
+I was doing these things against the children, Constantia Hopkins, by
+her sweetness, her goodness, her devotion, without a tinge of grudging,
+to her little half-sister and brother, and at last her saving of my
+child's life when no help but hers was near and the child was dying
+before me, hath broken my hard heart; and in slaying me--for I have died
+to my old self under it--hath made me to live. Therefore I publicly
+acknowledge my sin, and bid you, my fellow pilgrims, deal with me as you
+see fit, neither asking for mercy, nor in any wise claiming it as my
+desert."
+
+Stephen Hopkins had bent forward, his elbows on his knees, hiding his
+face in his hands. Giles stared straight before him, his brow dark red,
+frowning till his face was drawn out of likeness to itself, his nether
+lip held tight in his teeth.
+
+Poor Constance hid her misery in Oceanus's breast, holding the baby
+close up against her so that no one could see her face. Little Damaris,
+pale and quiet, too frightened to move or fully to breathe, clutched
+Constance's arm, not understanding what was going forward, but knowing
+that whatever it was it distressed everyone that constituted her little
+world, and suffering under this knowledge.
+
+"My friends," Elder Brewster resumed his office, "you have heard what
+Mistress Hopkins hath spoken. It is not for us to deny pardon to her.
+She hath done all, and more than was required of her, in publicly
+confessing her wrong. Let us take her by the hand, and let us pray that
+she may live long to shed peace and joy upon the young people whom she
+hath wronged, and might have wronged further, had not repentance found
+her."
+
+One by one these severely stern people of Plymouth arose and, passing
+before Mistress Hopkins, took her hand, and said:
+
+"Sister, we rejoice with you." Or some said: "Be of good consolation,
+and Heaven's blessing be upon you." A few merely shook her hand and
+passed on.
+
+Before many had thus filed past, Myles Standish leaped to his feet and
+cried: "Stephen, Stephen Hopkins, come! There's a wild cat somewhere!"
+
+Stephen Hopkins went out after him, thankful to escape.
+
+"Poor old comrade," said Captain Standish, putting his hand on the
+other's shoulder. "If only good and sincere people would consider what
+these scenes, which relieve their nerves, cost others! There is a wild
+cat somewhere; I did not lie for thee, Stephen, but in good sooth I've
+no mortal idea where it may be!"
+
+He laughed, and Stephen Hopkins smiled. "You are a good comrade, Myles,
+and we are as like as two peas in a pod. Certes, we find this Plymouth
+pod tight quarters, do we not, at least at times? I've no liking for
+airing private grievances in public: to my mind they belong between us
+and the Lord!--but plainly my wife sees this as the right way. What
+think you, Myles? Is it going to be better henceforward?" he said.
+
+"No doubt of that, no doubt whatever," asserted Myles, positively. "And
+my pet Con is the chief instrument of Dame Eliza's change of heart!
+Well, to speak openly, Stephen, I did not give thy wife credit for so
+much sense! Constance is sweet, and fair, and winsome enough to bring
+any one to her--his!--senses. Or drive him out of them! Better times
+are in store for thee, Stephen, old friend, and I am heartily thankful
+for it. So, now; take your family home, and do not mind the talk of
+Plymouth. For a few days they will discuss thee, thy wife, thy son, and
+thy daughter, but it will not be without praise for thee, and it will be
+a strange thing if Giles and I cannot stir up another event that will
+turn their attention from thee before thy patience quite gives out."
+
+Myles Standish laughed, and clapped his hand on his friend's shoulder by
+way of encouragement to him to face what any man, and especially a man
+of his sort, must dread to face--the comments and talk of his small
+world.
+
+The Hopkins family went home in silence, Stephen Hopkins gently leading
+his wife by her arm, for she was exhausted by the strain of her
+emotions.
+
+Giles and Constance, walking behind them with the children, were
+thinking hard, going back in their minds to their early childhood, to
+the beautiful old mansion which both remembered dimly, to the
+Warwickshire cousins, to their embittered days since their stepmother
+had reigned over them, and now this marvellous change in her, this
+strange acknowledgment from her before everyone--_their_ every-one--of
+wrong done, and greater wrong attempted and abandoned. They both shrank
+from the days to come, feeling that they could not treat their
+stepmother as they had done, yet still less could they come nearer to
+her, as would be their duty after this, without embarrassment. Giles
+went at once to his room to postpone the evil hour, but Constance could
+not escape it.
+
+She unfastened Damaris's cloak, trying to chatter to the child in her
+old way, and she glanced up at her stepmother, as she knelt before
+Damaris, to invite her to share their smiles. Dame Eliza was watching
+her with longing that was almost fear. "Constance," she said in a low
+voice. "Constance----?" She paused, extending her hands.
+
+Constance sprang up, forgetful of embarrassment, forgetful of old
+wrongs, remembering only to pity and to forgive, like the sweet girl
+that she was.
+
+"Ah, Mother, never mind! Love me now, and never mind that once you did
+not!" she cried.
+
+Dame Eliza leaned to her and kissed her cheek.
+
+"Dear lass," she murmured, "how could I grudge thee thy father's love,
+since needs must one love thee who knows thee?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+The Third Summer's Garnered Yield
+
+
+Side by side now, through the weary days of another year, Constance
+Hopkins and her stepmother bore and vanquished the cruel difficulties
+which those days brought.
+
+Dame Eliza had been sincere in her contrition as was proved by the one
+test of sincerity--her actions bore out her words.
+
+Toward Giles she held herself kindly, yet never showed him affection.
+But toward Constance her manner was what might be called eagerly
+affectionate, as if she so longed to prove her love for the girl that
+the limitations of speech and opportunity left her unsatisfied of
+expression.
+
+Hunger was the portion of everyone in Plymouth; conditions had grown
+harder with longer abiding there, except in the one--though that was
+important--matter of the frightful epidemic of the first winter.
+
+In spite of want Constance grew lovelier as she grew older. She was now
+a full-grown woman, tall with the slenderness of early youth. Her scant
+rations did not give her the gaunt look that most of the pilgrims, even
+the young ones, wore as they went on working hard and eating little.
+Instead, it etherealized and spiritualized Constance's beauty. Under her
+wonderful eyes, with their far-off look of a dreamer warmed and
+corrected by the light in them of love and sacrifice, were shadows that
+increased their brilliance. The pallor that had replaced the wild-rose
+colour in her cheeks did not lessen the exquisite fairness of her skin,
+and it set in sharp contrast to it the redness of her lips and
+emphasized their sweetness.
+
+Dame Eliza watched her with a sort of awe, and Damaris was growing old
+enough to offer to her sister's beauty the admiration that was apart
+from her adoring love for that sister.
+
+"Connie would set London afire, Stephen Hopkins," said Dame Eliza to her
+husband one day. "Why not send her over to her cousins in Warwickshire,
+to your first wife's noble kindred, and let her come into her own? It
+seems a sinful thing to keep her here to fade and wane where no eye can
+see her."
+
+"This from you, Eliza!" cried Stephen Hopkins, honestly surprised, but
+feigning to be shocked. "Nay but you and I have changed roles! Never was
+I the Puritan you are, yet have I seen enough of the world to know that
+it hath little to offer my girl by way of peace and happiness, though it
+kneel before her offering her adulation on its salvers. Constance is
+safer here, and Plymouth needs her; she can give here, which is in very
+truth better than receiving; especially to receive the heartaches that
+the great world would be like to give one so lovely to attract its eye,
+so sensitive to its disillusionments. And as to wasted, wife, Con gives
+me joy, and you, too, and I think there is not one among us who does not
+drink in her loveliness like food, where actual food is short. Captain
+Myles and our doctor would be going lame and halt, and would feel blind,
+I make no doubt, did they not meet Constance Hopkins on their ways, like
+a flower of eglantine, fair and sweet, and for that matter look how she
+helps the doctor in his ministrations! Nay, nay, wife; we will keep our
+Plymouth maid, and I am certain there will come to her from across seas
+one day the romance and happiness that should be hers."
+
+"Ah, well; life is short and it fades us sore. What does it matter where
+it passes? I was a buxom lass myself, as you may remember, and look at
+me now! Not that I was the rare creature that your girl is," sighed Dame
+Eliza. "Is it true that Mr. Weston is coming hither?"
+
+"True that he is coming hither," assented her husband, "and to our
+house. He hath made us many promises, but kept none. He hath come over
+with fishermen, in disguise, hath been cast away and lost everything at
+the hands of savages. He is taking refuge with us and we shall outfit
+him and deal with him as a brother. I do not believe his protestations
+of good-will and the service he will do us in return, when he gets back
+to England. Yet we must deal generously, little as we have to spare,
+with a man in distress such as his."
+
+"Giles is coming now, adown the way with a stranger; is this Mr.
+Weston?" asked Dame Eliza.
+
+"I'll go out to greet and bring him in. Yes; this is the man," said Mr.
+Hopkins, going forth to welcome a man, whom in his heart he could not
+but dread. The guest stayed with the Hopkins family for a few days, till
+the colony should be won over to give him beaver skins, under his
+promise to repay them with generous interest, when he should have traded
+them, and was once more in England to send to Plymouth something of its
+requirements.
+
+On the final day of his stay Mr. Weston arose from the best seat in the
+inglenook, which had been yielded to him as his right, and strolled
+toward the door.
+
+"Come with me, my lad," he said to Giles. "I have somewhat to say to
+thee."
+
+"Why not say it here?" asked Giles, surlily, though he followed slowly
+after their guest.
+
+"Giles Hopkins, you like me not," said Weston, when they had passed out
+of earshot. "Why is it? Surely I not only use you well, but you are the
+one person in this plantation that hath all the qualities I like best in
+a man: brains, courage, youth, good birth, which makes for spirit, and
+good looks. Your sister is all this and more, yet is the 'more' because
+she is a maid, and that excludes her from my preference for my purposes.
+Giles Hopkins, are you the man I take you for?"
+
+"Faith, sir, that I cannot tell till you have shown me what form that
+taking bears," said Giles.
+
+"There you show yourself! Prudence added to my list of qualities!"
+applauded Weston, clapping Giles on the back with real, or pretended
+enthusiasm. "I take you for a man with resolution, courage to seize an
+opportunity to make your fortune, to put yourself among those men of
+consequence who are secure of place, and means to adorn it. Will you
+march with me upon the way I will open to you?"
+
+"'I dare do all that may become a man; who dares do more is none,'"
+replied Giles. "I don't know where I learned that, but it sounds like
+one of my father's beloved phrases, from his favourite poet. It seems
+well to fit the case."
+
+"Shakespeare is not a Puritan text book," observed Weston, dryly. "No
+Hopkins is ever fully atune with such a community as this. Therefore,
+Giles, will you welcome my offer, as a more canting Plymouth pilgrim
+might not. Not to waste more time: Will you collect, after I have gone,
+all the skins which you can obtain from these settlers? And will you
+hold them in a safe place together, assuring your neighbours that you
+are secured of a market for them at better prices than they have ever
+received? And will you then, after you have got together all the skins
+available, ship them to me by means which I will open to you as soon as
+I am sure of your cooperation? This will leave your Plymouth people
+stripped to the winds; their commodity of trade gone, and, scant of food
+as they are, they will come to heel like dogs behind him who will lead
+them to meat. This will be yourself. I will furnish you with the means
+to give them what they will require in order to be bound to you. You
+shall be a prince of the New World, holding your little kingdom under
+the great English throne; there shall be no end to your possible
+grandeur. I will send you men, commodities for trade, arms, fine cloth
+and raiment to fulfil the brightest fairy dreams of youth. And look you,
+Giles Hopkins, this is no idle boast; it is within my power to do
+exactly as I promise. Are you mine?"
+
+"Yours!" Giles spoke with difficulty, the blood mounting to his temples
+and knotting its veins, his hands clenching and unclenching as if it was
+almost beyond him to hold them from throttling his father's guest. "Am I
+a man or a cur? Cur? Nay, no cur is so low as you would make me. Betray
+Plymouth? Turn on these people with whom I've suffered and wrought? I
+would give my hand to kick you out into yonder harbour and drown you
+there as you deserve. I have but to turn you over to our governor, and
+short ways will you get with the good beaver skins which have been given
+to you by these people you want me to trick, scant though they are of
+everything, and that owing to you who have never sent them anything but
+your lying promises. Nay, turn not so white! You may keep your courage,
+as you keep your worthless life. Neither will I betray you to them. But
+see to it that this last day of your stay here is indeed the last one!
+Only till sunset do I give you to get out of Plymouth. If you are within
+our boundaries at moonrise I will deliver you over, and urge your
+hanging. And be sure these starved immigrants will be in a mood to hang
+you higher than Haman, when they hear of what you have laid before me,
+against them who are in such straits."
+
+Mr. Weston did not delay to test Giles's sincerity. There was no
+mistaking that he would do precisely as he promised, and Weston took his
+departure a good two hours before sundown.
+
+Giles stood with his hands in his pockets beside his father as Weston
+departed.
+
+"Giles, courtesy to a guest is a law that binds us all," suggested
+Stephen Hopkins.
+
+"Mercy, rather," said Giles, tersely. He nodded to Mr. Weston without
+removing his hands. "A last salute, Mr. Weston," he said. "I expect
+never to meet you again, neither in this, nor any other world."
+
+"Giles!" cried Constance, shocked.
+
+"Son, what do you know of this man that you dare insult him in
+departing?" said Mr. Hopkins.
+
+"That never will Plymouth receive one penny of value for the beaver
+skins he hath taken, nor gratitude for the kindness shown him when he
+was destitute," said Giles, turning on his heel shortly and leaving his
+father to look after Weston, troubled by this confirmation of the doubt
+that he had always felt of this false friend of Plymouth colony.
+
+The effect upon Giles of having put far from him temptation and stood
+fast by his fellow-colonists, though no one but himself knew of it, was
+to arouse in him greater zeal for the welfare of Plymouth than he had
+felt before, and greater effort to promote it.
+
+Plymouth had been working upon the community plan; all its population
+labouring together, sharing together the results of that labour, like
+one large family. And, though the plan was based upon the ideal of
+brotherhood, yet it worked badly; food was short, and the men not equal
+in honest effort, nor willing to see their womankind tilling the soil
+and bearing heavy burdens for others than their own families. So while
+some bore their share of the work, and more, others lay back and
+shirked. There must be a remedy found, and that at once, to secure the
+necessary harvest in the second year, and third summer of the life of
+the plantation.
+
+Giles Hopkins went swinging down the road after he had seen the last of
+Mr. Weston. He was bound for the governor's house, but he came up with
+William Bradford on the way and laid before him his thoughts.
+
+"Mr. Bradford," he said, "I've been considering. We shall starve to
+death, even though we get the ship that is promised us from home,
+bringing us all that for which we hope, unless we can raise better
+crops. I am one of the youngest men, but may I lay before you my
+suggestion?"
+
+"Surely, my son," said Governor Bradford. "Old age does not necessarily
+include wisdom, nor youth folly. What do you advise?"
+
+"Give every family its allotment of land and seed," said Giles. "Let
+each family go to work to raise what it shall need for itself, and abide
+by the result of its own industry, or indolence, always supposing that
+no misfortune excuses failure. I'll warrant we shall see new days--or
+new sacks filled, which is more to the point--than when we let the
+worthless profit by worth, or worth be discouraged by the leeches upon
+it."
+
+Governor Bradford regarded Giles smilingly. "Thou art an emphatic lad,
+Giles, but I like earnestness and strong convictions. Never yet was
+there any one who did not believe in his own panacea for whatever evil
+had set him to discovering it! It was Plato's conceit, and other
+ancients with him, that bringing into the community of a commonwealth
+all property, making it shared in common, was to make mankind happy and
+prosperous. But I am of your opinion that it has been found to breed
+much confusion and discontent, and that it is against the ordinance of
+God, who made it a law that a man should labour for his own nearest of
+kin, and transmit to them the fruit of his labours. So will I act upon
+your suggestion, which I had already considered, having seen how wrong
+was Plato's utopian plan, or at least how ill it was working here. With
+the approval of our councillors, I will distribute land, seed, and all
+else required, and establish individual production instead of our
+commonality."
+
+"It is time we tried a new method, Governor Bradford," said Giles.
+"Another year like these we've survived, and there would be no survival
+of them. I don't remember how it felt to have enough to eat!"
+
+"Poor lad," said the governor, kindly, though to the full he had shared
+the scarcity. "It is hard to be young and hungry, for at best youth is
+rarely satisfied, and it must be cruel to see every day at the worst!
+But I have good ground to hope that our winter is over and past, and
+that the voice of the turtle will soon be heard in our land. In other
+words, I think that a ship, or possibly more than one, will be here this
+summer, bringing us new courage in new helpers, and supplies in plenty."
+
+"It is to be hoped," said Giles, and went away.
+
+The new plan was adopted, and it infused new enthusiasm into the
+Plymouth people. Constance insisted upon having for her own one section
+of her father's garden. Indeed all the women of the colony went to work
+in the fields now, quite willingly, and without opposition from their
+men, since their work was for themselves.
+
+"It was wholly different from having their women slaving for strong men
+who were no kin to them, as they had done when the community plan
+prevailed," said the men of Plymouth. And so the women of Plymouth went
+to work willingly, even gaily.
+
+There was great hope of a large crop, early in May, when all the land
+was planted, and little green heads were everywhere popping up to
+announce the grain to come. Constance had planted nothing but peas; she
+said that she loved them because they climbed so bravely, and put out
+their plucky tendrils to help themselves up. Her peas were the pride of
+her heart, and all Plymouth was admiring them, when the long drouth set
+in.
+
+From the third week in May till the middle of July not a drop of rain
+fell upon the afflicted fields of Plymouth. The corn had been planted
+with fish, which for a time insured it moisture and helped it, but
+gradually the promising green growth drooped, wilted, browned, and on
+the drier plain, burned and died under the unshadowed sun.
+
+Constance saw her peas drying up, helpless to save them. She fell into
+the habit of sitting drooping like the grain, on the doorstep of the
+Leyden Street house, her bonnet pushed back, her chin in her hands,
+sorrowfully sharing the affliction of the soil.
+
+Elder Brewster, passing, found her thus, and stopped.
+
+"Not blithe Constantia like this?" he said.
+
+"Ah, yes, Mr. Brewster," said Constance, rising, "just like this. The
+drouth has parched my heart and dried up my courage. For nine weeks no
+rain, and our life hanging upon it! Oh, Elder Brewster, call for a day
+of fasting and prayer that we may be pitied by the Lord with the
+downfall of his merciful rain! Without it, without His intervention,
+starvation will be ours. But it needs not me to tell you this!"
+
+"My daughter, I will do as you say; indeed is it time, and I have been
+thinking so," replied the elder. "The day after to-morrow shall be set
+aside to implore Heaven's mercy on our brave plantation, which has borne
+and can offer the sacrifice of a long-suffering patience to supplement
+its prayers."
+
+The day of fast and prayer arose with the same metallic sky that had
+cloudlessly stretched over Plymouth for two months. Not a sign of mercy,
+nor of relenting was anywhere above them as the people of Plymouth, the
+less devout subdued to the same fearless eagerness to implore for mercy
+that the more devout ones felt, went silently along the dusty roads,
+heads bent beneath the scorching sun, without having tasted food,
+assembling in their meeting house to pray.
+
+In the rear of the bare little building stood the Indians who lived
+among the Englishmen, Squanto at their head, with folded arms watching
+and wondering what results should follow this appeal to the God of the
+white men, now to be tested for the first time in a great public way as
+to whether He was faithful to His promise, as these men said, and
+powerful to fulfil.
+
+All day long the prayer continued, with the coming and going of the
+people, taking turns to perform the necessary tasks of the small farms,
+and to continue in supplication.
+
+There had been no hotter day of all those so long trying these poor
+people, and no cloud appeared as the sun mounted and reached his height,
+then began to descend. Damaris took Constance's hand as they walked
+homeward, then dropped it.
+
+"It is too hot; it burns me," she said, fretfully.
+
+Constance raised her head and pushed back her hair with the backs of her
+burning hands. She folded her lips and snuffed the air, much as a fine
+dog stands to scent the birds. Constance was as sensitive to atmospheric
+conditions as a barometer.
+
+"Damaris, Damaris, rain!" she cried.
+
+And the "little cloud, no bigger than a man's hand," was rising on the
+horizon.
+
+Before bedtime the sky was overcast, and the blessed, the prayed-for
+rain began to fall. Without wind or lightning, quietly it fell, as if
+the angels of God were sent to open the phials of the delicious wetness
+and pour it steadily upon Plymouth. As the night went on the rain
+increased, one of the soft, steady, soaking rains that penetrate to the
+depths of the sun-baked earth, find the withered rootlets, and heal and
+revivify.
+
+Plymouth wakened to an earth refreshed and moistened by a downpour so
+steady, so generous, so calm that no rain could have seemed more like a
+direct visitation of Heaven's mercy than this, which the reverent and
+awe-stricken colony, even to the doubting Indians, so received. For by
+it Plymouth was saved.
+
+It was two weeks later that Doctor Fuller came hastily to Stephen
+Hopkins's door.
+
+"Friends," he said, with trembling voice, "the _Anne_ is coming up!
+Mistress Fuller and my child are aboard, as we have so often reminded
+one another. Constance, you promised to go with me to welcome this
+fateful ship."
+
+"Have I time to make a little, a very small toilette, doctor mine?"
+cried Constance, excitedly. "I want to look my prettiest to greet
+Mistress Fuller, and to tell her what I--what we all owe to you."
+
+"You have a full half hour, yet it is a pleasure to watch the ship
+approach. Hasten, then, vain little Eve of this desolate First Abiding
+Place!" the doctor gave her permission.
+
+Constance ran away and began to dress with her heart beating fast.
+
+"I wonder why the _Anne_ means so much to me, as if she were the
+greatest event of all my days here?" she thought.
+
+Her simple white gown slipped over her head and into place and out of
+its thin, soft folds her little throat rose like a calla, and her face,
+all flushed, like a wild rose.
+
+She pinned a lace neckerchief over her breast, and laid its ruffles into
+place with fluttering fingers, catching it with a delicate hoop of
+pearls that had been her mother's. For once she decided against her
+Puritan cap, binding her radiant hair with fillets of narrow blue velvet
+ribbon, around and over which its little tendrils rose, wilful and
+resisting its shackles.
+
+On her hands she drew long mitts of white lace, and she slipped her feet
+into white shoes, which had also once been worn by her mother in
+far-away days when she danced the May dances in Warwickshire.
+
+Constance's glass was too small, too high-hung, to give her the effect
+of her complete figure, but it showed her the face that scanned it, and
+what it showed her flushed that lovely face with innocent joy in its
+loveliness, and completed its perfection.
+
+She got the full effect of her appearance in the eyes of the four men in
+the colony whom, till this day, she had loved best, her father, Giles,
+Doctor Fuller, and Myles Standish, as she came down the winding stairway
+to them.
+
+They all uttered an involuntary exclamation, and took a step toward her.
+
+Her father took her hand and tucked it into his own.
+
+"You are attired like a bride, my wild rose," he said. "Who are you
+going to meet?"
+
+"Who knows!" cried Constance, gaily, with unconscious prophecy.
+"Mistress Fuller, but who can say whom else beside?"
+
+The _Anne_ came up with wide-spread canvas, free of the gentle easterly
+breeze. Her coming marked the end of the hardest days of Plymouth
+colony; she was bringing it much that it needed, some sixty colonists;
+the wives and children of many who had borne the brunt of the beginning
+and had come on the _Mayflower_; new colonists, some among Plymouth's
+best, some too bad to be allowed to stay, and stores and articles of
+trade abundantly.
+
+As the coming of the _Anne_ marked the close of Plymouth's worst days,
+so it meant to many who were already there the dawn of a new existence.
+
+Doctor Fuller took into his arms his beloved wife and his child, with
+grateful tears running down his face.
+
+He turned to present Mistress Fuller to Constance, but found, instead,
+Captain Myles Standish watching with a smile at once tender, melancholy,
+and glad another meeting. A young man, tall, browned, gallant, and
+fearless in bearing, with honest eyes and a kindly smile, had come off
+the _Anne_ and had stood a moment looking around him. His eyes fell upon
+Constance Hopkins on her father's arm, her lips parted, her eyes
+dilated, her cheeks flushed, a figure so exquisite that he fell back in
+thrilled wonder. Never again could he see another face, so completely
+were his eyes and heart filled by this first sight of Constance Hopkins,
+unconsciously waiting for him, her husband-to-be, upon the shore of the
+New World.
+
+Damaris was clinging to her hand; Giles and her step-mother were
+watching her with loving pride; it was easy to see that all those who
+had come ashore from the _Anne_ were admiring this slender blossom of
+Plymouth.
+
+But the young man went toward her, almost without knowing that he did
+so, drawn to her irresistibly, and Constance looked toward him, and saw
+him for the first time, her pulses answering the look in his eyes.
+
+Myles Standish joined them; he had learned the young man's name.
+
+"Welcome, Nicholas Snowe, to Plymouth," he said. "We have borne much,
+but we have won our fight; we have founded our kingdom. Nicholas Snowe,
+this is a Plymouth maid, Constance Hopkins."
+
+"I am glad you are come," said Constance; her voice was low and the hand
+that she extended trembled slightly.
+
+"I, too, am glad that you are here, Nicholas Snowe," added Stephen
+Hopkins. "Yes, this is Constance Hopkins, a Plymouth maid, and my
+dearest lass."
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS
+
+GARDEN CITY, N. Y.
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
+
+Small capital text has been replaced with all capitals.
+
+Page 36: "remanent" changed to "remnant" (what would my remnant of life
+be to me)
+
+Page 51: "so" changed to "no" (I mean no such thing, as well you know)
+
+Page 67: "senstive" changed to "sensitive" (a girl, sensitive and easily
+wounded)
+
+Page 83: "devasting" changed to "devastating" (The devastating diseases
+of winter)
+
+Page 106: "begining" changed to "beginning" (the beginning of a street)
+
+Page 140: "wordly" changed to "worldly" (to take pride in worldly things)
+
+Page 160: normalised "work-aday" (her work-a-day tasks)
+
+Page 180: changed case of "Come" to lower case (come with me; I need
+you)
+
+Page 192: "mercie" changed to "merci" (belle dame sans merci)
+
+Page 196: "be" changed to "he" (he began to teach Constance other
+things)
+
+Page 210 "Shakspeare" normalised to "Shakespeare" (we mortals be,
+as Shakespeare, whom)
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of A Pilgrim Maid, by Marion Ames Taggart
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A PILGRIM MAID ***
+
+***** This file should be named 39323.txt or 39323.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/3/9/3/2/39323/
+
+Produced by Roger Frank, Maria Grist and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/39323.zip b/39323.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9a86f38
--- /dev/null
+++ b/39323.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ce440a4
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #39323 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/39323)