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- IN THE MORNING GLOW
-
-
-
-
-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 http://www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-
-
-Title: In the Morning Glow
- Short Stories
-Author: Roy Rolfe Gilson
-Release Date: October 01, 2013 [EBook #43862]
-Language: English
-Character set encoding: US-ASCII
-
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN THE MORNING GLOW ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Al Haines.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Cover art]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: "'WHAT A BEAUTIFUL DREAM!'" (See page 187)]
-
-
-
-
- IN THE
- MORNING GLOW
-
- SHORT STORIES
-
-
- By
-
- ROY ROLFE GILSON
-
- AUTHOR OF
- "Miss Primrose" "The Flower of Youth"
- Etc. Etc.
-
-
-
- ILLUSTRATED
-
-
-
- NEW YORK
- GROSSET & DUNLAP
- PUBLISHERS
-
- Published by arrangement with Harper & Brothers
-
-
-
-
- Copyright, 1902, by HARPER & BROTHERS.
-
- _All rights reserved._
-
- Published October, 1902.
-
-
-
-
- TO
- MY WIFE
-
-
-
-
- *Contents*
-
-
-GRANDFATHER
-
-GRANDMOTHER
-
-WHILE AUNT JANE PLAYED
-
-LITTLE SISTER
-
-OUR YARD
-
-THE TOY GRENADIER
-
-FATHER
-
-MOTHER
-
-
-
-
- *Illustrations*
-
-
-"'WHAT A BEAUTIFUL DREAM!'" . . . . . . _Frontispiece_
-
-"WHEN GRANDFATHER WORE HIS WHITE VEST YOU WALKED LIKE OTHER FOLKS"
-
-"YOU STOLE SOFTLY TO HIS SIDE"
-
-"WATCHED HIM MAKE THE BLUE FRAGMENTS INTO THE BLUE PITCHER AGAIN"
-
-"THE SAIL-BOATS HE WHITTLED FOR YOU ON RAINY DAYS"
-
-"YOU CLUNG TO HER APRON FOR SUPPORT IN YOUR MUTE AGONY"
-
-"YOU WATCHED THEM AS THEY WENT DOWN THE WALK TOGETHER"
-
-"TO AND FRO GRANDMOTHER ROCKED YOU"
-
-"YOU SAID 'NOW I LAY ME' IN UNISON"
-
-"MOTHER TUCKED YOU BOTH INTO BED AND KISSED YOU"
-
-"THEY TOOK YOU AS FAR AS THE BEDROOM DOOR TO SEE HER"
-
-"'BAD DREAM, WAS IT, LITTLE CHAP?'"
-
-"'FATHER, WHAT DO YOU THINK WHEN YOU DON'T SAY ANYTHING, BUT JUST
-LOOK?'"
-
-"'MOTHER,' YOU SAID, SOFTLY"
-
-"THE PICTURE-BOOK"
-
-"BEFORE YOU WENT TO BED"
-
-
-
-
- *Grandfather*
-
-
-When you gave Grandfather both your hands and put one foot against his
-knee and the other against his vest, you could walk right up to his
-white beard like a fly--but you had to hold tight. Sometimes your foot
-slipped on the knee, but the vest was wider and not so hard, so that
-when you were that far you were safe. And when you had both feet in the
-soft middle of the vest, and your body was stiff, and your face was
-looking right up at the ceiling, Grandfather groaned down deep inside,
-and that was the sign that your walk was ended. Then Grandfather
-crumpled you up in his arms. But on Sunday, when Grandfather wore his
-white vest, you walked like other folks.
-
-[Illustration: "WHEN GRANDFATHER WORE HIS WHITE VEST YOU WALKED LIKE
-OTHER FOLKS"]
-
-In the morning Grandfather sat in the sun by the wall--the stone wall at
-the back of the garden, where the golden-rod grew. Grandfather read the
-paper and smoked. When it was afternoon and Mother was taking her nap,
-Grandfather was around the corner of the house, on the porch, in the
-sun--always in the sun, for the sun followed Grandfather wherever he
-went, till he passed into the house at supper-time. Then the sun went
-down and it was night.
-
-Grandfather walked with a cane; but even then, with all the three legs
-he boasted of, you could run the meadow to the big rock before
-Grandfather had gone half-way. Grandfather's pipe was corn-cob, and
-every week he had a new one, for the little brown juice that cuddled
-down in the bottom of the bowl, and wouldn't come out without a straw,
-wasn't good for folks, Grandfather said. Old Man Stubbs, who came
-across the road to see Grandfather, chewed his tobacco, yet the little
-brown juice did not hurt him at all, he said. Still it was not pleasant
-to kiss Old Man Stubbs, and Mother said that chewing tobacco was a
-filthy habit, and that only very old men ever did it nowadays, because
-lots of people used to do it when Grandfather and Old Man Stubbs were
-little boys. Probably, you thought, people did not kiss other folks so
-often then.
-
-One morning Grandfather was reading by the wall, in the sun. You were
-on the ground, flat, peeping under the grass, and you were so still that
-a cricket came and teetered on a grass-stalk near at hand. Two red ants
-climbed your hat as it lay beside you, and a white worm swung itself
-from one grass-blade to another, like a monkey. The ground under the
-apple-trees was broken out with sun-spots. Bees were humming in the red
-clover. Butterflies lazily flapped their wings and sailed like little
-boats in a sea of goldenrod and Queen Anne's lace.
-
-"Dee, dee-dee, dee-dee," you sang, and Mr. Cricket sneaked under a
-plantain leaf. You tracked him to his lair with your finger, and he
-scuttled away.
-
-"Grandfather."
-
-No reply.
-
-"_Grand_father."
-
-Not a word. Then you looked. Grandfather's paper had slipped to the
-ground, and his glasses to his lap. He was fast asleep in the sunshine
-with his head upon his breast. You stole softly to his side With a long
-grass you tickled his ear. With a jump he awoke, and you tumbled,
-laughing, on the grass.
-
-[Illustration: "YOU STOLE SOFTLY TO HIS SIDE"]
-
-"Ain't you 'shamed?" cried Lizzie-in-the-kitchen, who was hanging out
-the clothes.
-
-"Huh! Grandfather don't care."
-
-Grandfather never cared. That is one of the things which made him
-Grandfather. If he had scolded he might have been Father, or even Uncle
-Ned--but he would not have been Grandfather. So when you spoiled his
-nap he only said, "H'm," deep in his beard, put on his glasses, and read
-his paper again.
-
-When it was afternoon, and the sun followed Grandfather to the porch,
-and you were tired of playing House, or Hop-Toad, or Indian, or the
-Three Bears, it was only a step from Grandfather's foot to Grandfather's
-lap. When you sat back and curled your legs, your head lay in the
-hollow of Grandfather's shoulder, in the shadow of his white beard.
-Then Grandfather would say,
-
-"Once upon a time there was a bear..."
-
-Or, better still,
-
-"Once, when I was a little boy..."
-
-Or, best of all,
-
-"When Grandfather went to the war..."
-
-That was the story where Grandfather lay all day in the tall grass
-watching for Johnny Reb, and Johnny Reb was watching for Grandfather.
-When it came to the exciting part, you sat straight up to see
-Grandfather squint one eye and look along his outstretched arm, as
-though it were his gun, and say, "Bang!"
-
-But Johnny Reb saw the tip of Grandfather's blue cap just peeping over
-the tops of the tall grass, and so he, too, went "Bang!"
-
-And ever afterwards Grandfather walked with a cane.
-
-"Did Johnny Reb have to walk with a cane, too, Grandfather?"
-
-"Johnny Reb, he just lay in the tall grass, all doubled up, and says he,
-'Gimme a chaw o' terbaccer afore I die.'"
-
-"Did you give it to him, Grandfather?"
-
-"He died 'fore I could get the plug out o' my pocket."
-
-Then Mother would say:
-
-"I wouldn't, Father--such stories to a child!"
-
-Then Grandfather would smoke grimly, and would not tell you any more,
-and you would play Grandfather and Johnny Reb in the tall grass.
-Lizzie-in-the-kitchen would give you a piece of brown-bread for the chaw
-of tobacco, and when Johnny Reb died too soon you ate it yourself, to
-save it. You wondered what would have happened if Johnny Reb had not
-died too soon. Standing over Johnny Reb's prostrate but still animate
-form in the tall grass, with the brown-bread tobacco in your hand, you
-even contemplated playing that your adversary lived to tell the tale,
-but the awful thought that in that case you would have to give up the
-chaw (the brown-bread was fresh that day) kept you to the letter of
-Grandfather's story. Once only did you play that Johnny Reb lived--but
-the brown-bread was hard that day, and you were not hungry.
-
-Grandfather wore the blue, and on his breast were the star and flag of
-the Grand Army. Every May he straightened his bent shoulders and
-marched to the music of fife and drum to the cemetery on the hill. So
-once a year there were tears in Grandfather's eyes. All the rest of
-that solemn May day he marched in the garden with his hands behind him,
-and a far-away look in his eyes, and once in a while his steps quickened
-as he hummed to himself,
-
- "Tramp, tramp, tramp, the boys are marching."
-
-And if it so happened that he told you the story of Johnny Reb that day,
-he would always have a new ending:
-
-"Then we went into battle. The Rebs were on a tarnal big hill, and as
-we charged up the side, 'Boys,' says the Colonel--'boys, give 'em hell!'
-says he. And, sir, we just did, I tell you."
-
-"Oh Father, Father--_don't!_--such language before the child!" Mother
-would cry, and that would be the end of the new end of Grandfather's
-story.
-
-On a soap-box in Abe Jones's corner grocery, Grandfather argued politics
-with Old Man Stubbs and the rest of the boys.
-
-"I've voted the straight Republican ticket all my life," he would say,
-proudly, when the fray was at its height, "and, by George! I'll not
-make a darned old fool o' myself by turning coat now. Pesky few
-Democrats ever I see who--"
-
-Here Old Man Stubbs would rise from the cracker-barrel.
-
-"If I understand you correctly, sir, you have called me a darned old
-fool."
-
-"Not at all, Stubbs," Grandfather would reply, soothingly. "Not by a
-jugful. Now you're a Democrat--"
-
-"And proud of it, sir," Old Man Stubbs would break in.
-
-"You're a Democrat, Stubbs, and as such you are not responsible; but if
-I was to turn Democrat, Stubbs, I'd be a darned old fool."
-
-And in the roar that followed, Old Man Stubbs would subside to the
-cracker-barrel and smoke furiously. Then Grandfather would say:
-
-"Stubbs, do you remember old Mose Gray?" That was to clear the
-battle-field of the political carnage, so to speak--so that Old Man
-Stubbs would forget his grievance and walk home with Grandfather
-peaceably when the grocery closed for the night.
-
-If it was winter-time, and the snowdrifts were too deep for grandfathers
-and little boys, you sat before the fireplace, Grandfather in his
-arm-chair, you flat on the rug, your face between your hands, gazing
-into the flames.
-
-"Who was the greatest man that ever lived, Grandfather?"
-
-"Jesus of Nazareth, boy."
-
-"And who was the greatest soldier?"
-
-"Ulysses S. Grant."
-
-"And the next greatest?"
-
-"George Washington."
-
-"But Old Man Stubbs says Napoleon was the greatest soldier."
-
-"Old Man Stubbs? Old Man Stubbs? What does he know about it, I'd like
-to know? He wasn't in the war. He's afraid of his own shadder. U. S.
-Grant was the greatest general that ever lived. I guess I know. I was
-there, wasn't I? Napoleon! Old Man Stubbs! Fiddlesticks!"
-
-And Grandfather would sink back into his chair, smoking wrath and weed
-in his trembling corn-cob, and scowling at the blazing fagots and the
-curling hickory smoke. By-and-by--
-
-"Who was the greatest woman that ever lived, Grandfather?"
-
-"Your mother, boy."
-
-"Oh, Father"--it was Mother's voice--"you forget."
-
-"Forget nothing," cried Grandfather, fiercely. "Boy, your mother is the
-best woman that ever lived, and mind you remember it, too. Every boy's
-mother is the best woman that ever lived."
-
-And when Grandfather leaned forward in his chair and waved his pipe,
-there was no denying Grandfather.
-
-At night, after supper, when your clothes were in a little heap on the
-chair, and you had your nighty on, and you had said your prayers, Mother
-tucked you in bed and kissed you and called Grandfather. Then
-Grandfather came stumping up the stairs with his cane. Sitting on the
-edge of your bed, he sang to you,
-
- "The wild gazelle with the silvery feet
- I'll give thee for a playmate sweet."
-
-
-And after Grandfather went away the wild gazelle came and stood beside
-you, and put his cold little nose against your cheek, and licked your
-face with his tongue. It was rough at first, but by-and-by it got softer
-and softer, till you woke up and wanted a drink, and found beside you,
-in place of the wild gazelle, a white mother with a brimming cup in her
-hand. She covered you up when you were through, and kissed you, and
-then you went looking for the wild gazelle, and sometimes you found him;
-but sometimes, when you had just caught up to him and his silvery feet
-were shining like stars, he turned into Grandfather with his cane.
-
-"Hi, sleepy-head! The dicky-birds are waitin' for you."
-
-And then Grandfather would tickle you in the ribs, and help you on with
-your stockings, till it was time for him to sit by the wall in the sun.
-
-When you were naughty, and Mother used the little brown switch that hung
-over the wood-shed door, Grandfather tramped up and down in the garden,
-and the harder you hollered, the harder Grandfather tramped. Once when
-you played the empty flower-pots were not flower-pots at all, but just
-cannon-balls, and you killed a million Indians with them, Mother showed
-you the pieces, and the switch descended, and the tears fell, and
-Grandfather tramped and tramped, and lost the garden-path completely,
-and stepped on the pansies. Then they shut you up in your own room
-up-stairs, and you cried till the hiccups came. You heard the dishes
-rattling on the dining-room table below. They would be eating supper
-soon, and at one end of the table in a silver dish there would be a
-chocolate cake, for Lizzie-in-the-kitchen had baked one that afternoon.
-You had seen it in the pantry window with your own eyes, while you fired
-the flower-pots. Now chocolate cake was your favorite, so you hated
-your bread-and-milk, and tasted and wailed defiantly. Now and then you
-listened to hear if they pitied and came to you, but they came not, and
-you moaned and sobbed in the twilight, and hoped you would die, to make
-them sorry. By-and-by, between the hiccups, you heard the door open
-softly. Then Grandfather's hand came through the crack with a piece of
-chocolate cake in it. You knew it was Grandfather's hand, because it
-was all knuckly. So you cried no more, and while the chocolate cake was
-stopping the hiccups, you heard Grandfather steal down the stairs,
-softly--but it did not sound like Grandfather at all, for you did not
-hear the stumping of his cane. Next morning, when you asked him about
-it, his vest shook, and just the tip of his tongue showed between his
-teeth, for that was the way it did when anything pleased him. And
-Grandfather said:
-
-"You won't ever tell?"
-
-"No, Grandfather."
-
-"Sure as shootin'?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Well, then--" but Grandfather kept shaking so he could not tell.
-
-"Oh, Grandfather! _Why_ didn't the cane sound on the stairs?"
-
-"Whisht, boy! I just wrapped my old bandanna handkerchief around the
-end."
-
-But worse than that time was the awful morning when you broke the blue
-pitcher that came over in the _Mayflower_. An old family law said you
-should never even touch it, where it sat on the shelf by the clock, but
-the Old Nick said it wouldn't hurt if you looked inside--just once. You
-had been munching bread-and-butter, and your fingers were slippery, and
-that is how the pitcher came to fall. Grandfather found you sobbing over
-the pieces, and his face was white.
-
-"Sonny, Sonny, what have you done?"
-
-"I--I d-didn't mean to, Grandfather."
-
-In trembling fingers Grandfather gathered up the blue fragments--all
-that was left of the family heirloom, emblem of Mother's ancestral
-pride.
-
-"'Sh! Don't cry, Sonny. We'll make it all right again."
-
-"M-Moth--Mother 'll whip me."
-
-"'Sh, boy. No, she won't. We'll take it to the tinker. He'll make it
-all right again. Come."
-
-And you and Grandfather slunk guiltily to the tinker and watched him
-make the blue fragments into the blue pitcher again, and then you
-carried it home, and as Grandfather set it back on the shelf you
-whispered:
-
-[Illustration: "WATCHED HIM MAKE THE BLUE FRAGMENTS INTO THE BLUE
-PITCHER AGAIN"]
-
-"Grandfather!"
-
-Grandfather bent his ear to you. Very softly you said it:
-
-"Grandfather, the cracks don't show at all from here."
-
-Grandfather nodded his head. Then he tramped up and down in the garden.
-He forgot to smoke. Crime weighed upon his soul.
-
-"Boy," said he, sternly, stopping in his walk. "You must never be
-naughty again. Do you hear me?"
-
-"I won't, Grandfather."
-
-Grandfather resumed his tramping; then paused and turned to where you
-sat on the wheelbarrow.
-
-"But if you ever _are_ naughty again, you must go at once and tell
-Mother. Do you understand?"
-
-"Yes, Grandfather."
-
-Up and down Grandfather tramped moodily, his head bent, his hands
-clasped behind him--up and down between the verbenas and hollyhocks. He
-paused irresolutely--turned--turned again--and came back to you.
-
-"Boy, Grandfather's just as bad and wicked as you are. He ought to have
-made you tell Mother about the pitcher first, and take it to the tinker
-afterwards. You must never keep anything from your mother again--never.
-Do you hear?"
-
-"Yes, Grandfather," you whimpered, hanging your head.
-
-"Come, boy."
-
-You gave him your hand. Mother listened, wondering, while Grandfather
-spoke out bravely to the very end. You had been bad, but he had been
-worse, he confessed; and he asked to be punished for himself and you.
-
-Mother did not even look at the cracked blue pitcher on the clock-shelf,
-but her eyes filled, and at the sight of her tears you flung yourself,
-sobbing, into her arms.
-
-"Oh, Mother, don't whip Grandfather. Just whip me."
-
-"It isn't the blue pitcher I care about," she said. "It's only to think
-that Grandfather and my little boy were afraid to tell me."
-
-And at this she broke out crying with your wet cheek against her wet
-cheek, and her warm arms crushing you to her breast. And you cried, and
-Grandfather blew his nose, and Carlo barked and leaped to lick your
-face, until by-and-by, when Mother's white handkerchief and
-Grandfather's red one were quite damp, you and Mother smiled through
-your tears, and she said it did not matter, and Grandfather patted one
-of her hands while you kissed the other. And you and Grandfather said
-you would never be bad again. When you were good, or sick--dear
-Grandfather! It was not what he said, for only Mother could say the
-love-words. It was the things he did without saying much at all--the
-circus he took you to see, the lessons in A B C while he held the book
-for you in his hand, the sail-boats he whittled for you on rainy
-days--for Grandfather was a ship-carpenter before he was a
-grandfather--and the willow whistles he made for you, and the soldier
-swords. It was Grandfather who fished you from the brook. Grandfather
-saved you from Farmer Tompkins's cow--the black one which gave no milk.
-Grandfather snatched you from prowling dogs, and stinging bees, and bad
-boys and their wiles. That is what grandfathers are for, and so we love
-them and climb into their laps and beg for sail-boats and tales--and
-_that_ is their reward.
-
-[Illustration: "THE SAIL-BOATS HE WHITTLED FOR YOU ON RAINY DAYS"]
-
-One day--your birthday had just gone by and it was time to think of
-Thanksgiving--you walked with Grandfather in the fields. Between the
-stacked corn the yellow pumpkins lay, and they made you think of
-Thanksgiving pies. The leaves, red and gold, dropped of old age in the
-autumn stillness, and you gathered an armful for Mother.
-
-"Why don't all the people die every year, Grandfather, like the leaves?"
-
-"Everybody dies when his work's done, little boy. The leaf's work is
-done in the fall when the frost comes. It takes longer for a man to do
-his work, 'cause a man has more to do."
-
-"When will your work be done, Grandfather?"
-
-"It's almost done now, little boy."
-
-"Oh no, Grandfather. There's lots for you to do. You said you'd make
-me a bob-sled, and a truly engine what goes, when I'm bigger; and when I
-get to be a grown-up man like Father, you are to come and make willow
-whistles for my little boys."
-
-And you were right, for while the frost came again and again for the
-little leaves, Grandfather stayed on in the sun, and when he had made
-you the bob-sled he still lingered, for did he not have the truly engine
-to make for you, and the willow whistles for your own little boys?
-
-Waking from a nap, you could not remember when you fell asleep. You
-wondered what hour it was. Was it morning? Was it afternoon? Dreamily
-you came down-stairs. Golden sunlight crossed the ivied porch and
-smiled at you through the open door. The dining-room table was set with
-blue china, and at every place was a dish of red, red strawberries.
-Then you knew it was almost supper-time. You were rested with sleep,
-gentle with dreams of play, happy at the thought of red berries in blue
-dishes with sugar and cream. You found Grandfather in the garden
-sitting in the sun. He was not reading or smoking; he was just waiting.
-
-"Are you tired waiting for me, Grandfather?"
-
-"No, little boy."
-
-"I came as soon as I could, Grandfather."
-
-The leaves did not move. The flowers were motionless. Grandfather sat
-quite still, his soft, white beard against your cheek, flushed with
-sleep. You nestled in his lap. And so you sat together, with the sun
-going down about you, till Mother came and called you to supper. Even
-now when you are grown, you remember, as though it were yesterday, the
-long nap and the golden light in the doorway, and the red berries on the
-table, and Grandfather waiting in the sun.
-
-One day--it was not long afterwards--they took you to see Aunt Mary, on
-the train. When you came home again, Grandfather was not waiting for
-you.
-
-"Where is Grandfather?"
-
-"Grandfather isn't here any more, dearie. He has gone 'way up in the sky
-to see God and the angels."
-
-"And won't he ever come back to our house?"
-
-"No, dear; but if you are a good boy, you will go to see him some day."
-
-"But, oh, Mother, what will Grandfather do when he goes to walk with the
-little boy angels? See--he's gone and forgot his cane!"
-
-
-
-
- *Grandmother*
-
-
-In the days when you went into the country to visit her, Grandmother was
-a gay, spry little lady with velvety cheeks and gold-rimmed spectacles,
-knitting reins for your hobby-horse, and spreading bread-and-butter and
-brown sugar for you in the hungry middle of the afternoon. For a bumped
-head there was nothing in the bottles to compare with the magic of her
-lips.
-
-"And what did the floor do to my poor little lamb? See! Grandmother
-will make the place well again." And when she had kissed it three
-times, lo! you knew that you were hungry, and on the door-sill of
-Grandmother's pantry you shed a final tear.
-
-When you arrived for a visit, and Grandmother had taken off your cap and
-coat as you sat in her lap, you would say, softly, "Grandmother." Then
-she would know that you wanted to whisper, and she would lower her ear
-till it was even with your lips. Through the hollow of your two hands
-you said it:
-
-"I think I would like some sugar pie now, Grandmother."
-
-And then she would laugh till the tears came, and wipe her spectacles,
-for that was just what she had been waiting for you to say all the time,
-and if you had not said it--but, of course, that was impossible.
-Always, on the day before you came, she made two little sugar pies in
-two little round tins with crinkled edges. One was for you, and the
-other was for Lizbeth.
-
-After you had eaten your pies you chased the rooster till he dropped you
-a white tail-feather in token of surrender, and just tucking the feather
-into your cap made you an Indian. Grandmother stood at the window and
-watched you while you scalped the sunflowers. The Indians and tigers at
-Grandmother's were wilder than those in Our Yard at home.
-
-Being an Indian made you think of tents, and then you remembered
-Grandmother's old plaid shawl. She never wore it now, for she had a new
-one, but she kept it for you in the closet beneath the stairs. While
-you were gone, it hung in the dark alone, dejected, waiting for you to
-come back and play. When you came, at last, and dragged it forth, it
-clung to you warmly, and did everything you said: stretched its frayed
-length from chair to chair and became a tent for you; swelled proudly in
-the summer gale till your boat scudded through the surf of waving grass,
-and you anchored safely, to fish with string and pin, by the Isles of
-the Red Geraniums.
-
-"The pirates are coming," you cried to Lizbeth, scanning the horizon of
-picket fence.
-
-"The pirates are coming," she repeated, dutifully.
-
-"And now we must haul up the anchor," you commanded, dragging in the
-stone. Lizbeth was in terror. "Oh, my poor dolly!" she cried, hushing
-it in her arms. Gallantly the old plaid shawl caught the breeze; and as
-it filled, your boat leaped forward through--
-
-"Harry! Lizbeth! Come and be washed for dinner!"
-
-Grandmother's voice came out to you across the waters. You hesitated.
-The pirate ship was close behind. You could see the cutlasses flashing
-in the sun.
-
-"More sugar pies," sang the Grandmother siren on the rocks of the front
-porch, and at those melting words the pirate ship was a mere speck on
-the horizon. Seizing Lizbeth by the hand, you ran boldly across the
-sea.
-
-By the white bowl Grandmother took your chin in one hand and lifted your
-face.
-
-"My, what a dirty boy!"
-
-With the rough wet rag she mopped the dirt away--grime of your long
-sea-voyage--while you squinted your eyes and pursed up your lips to keep
-out the soap. You clung to her apron for support in your mute agony.
-
-[Illustration: "YOU CLUNG TO HER APRON FOR SUPPORT IN YOUR MUTE AGONY"]
-
-"Grand--" you managed to sputter ere the wet rag smothered you. Warily
-you waited till the cloth went higher, to your puckered eyes. Then,
-"Grand-m-m--" But that was all, for with a trail of suds the rag swept
-down again, and as the half-word slipped out, the soap slipped in. So
-Grandmother dug and dug till she came to the pink stratum of your
-cheeks, and then it was wipe, wipe, wipe, till the stratum shone. Then
-it was your hands' turn, while Grandmother listened to your belated
-tale, and last of all she kissed you above and gave you a little spank
-below, and you were done.
-
-All through dinner your mind was on the table--not on the middle of it,
-where the meat was, but on the end of it.
-
-"Harry, why don't you eat your bread?"
-
-"Why, I don't feel for bread, Grandmother," you explained, looking at
-the end of the table. "I just feel for pie."
-
-It was hard when you were back home again, for there it was mostly
-bread, and no sugar pies at all, and very little cake.
-
-"Grandmother lets me have _two_ pieces," you would urge to Mother, but
-the argument was of no avail. Two pieces, she said, were not good for
-little boys.
-
-"Then why does Grandmother let me have them?" you would demand,
-sullenly, kicking the table leg; but Mother could not hear you unless
-you kicked hard, and then it was naughty boys, not Grandmothers, that
-she talked about. And if that happened which sometimes does to naughty
-little boys--
-
-"Grandmother don't hurt at all when _she_ spanks," you said.
-
-So there were wrathful moments when you wished you might live always
-with Grandmother. It was so easy to be good at her house--so easy, that
-is, to get two pieces of cake. And when God made little boys, you
-thought, He must have made Grandmothers to bake sugar pies for them.
-
-"Suppose you were a little boy like me, Grandmother?" you once said to
-her.
-
-"That would be fine," she admitted; "but suppose you were a little
-grandmother like me?"
-
-"Well," you replied, with candor, "I think I would rather be like
-Grandfather, 'cause he was a soldier, and fought Johnny Reb."
-
-"And if you were a grandfather," Grandmother asked, "what would you do?"
-
-"Why, if I were a grandfather," you said--"why--"
-
-"Well, what would you do?"
-
-"Why, if I were a grandfather," you said, "I should want you to come and
-be a grandmother with me." And Grandmother kissed you for that.
-
-"But I like you best as a little boy," she said. "Once Grandmother had
-a little boy just like you, and he used to climb into her lap and put
-his arms around her. Oh, he was a beautiful little boy, and sometimes
-Grandmother gets very lonesome without him--till you come, and then it's
-like having him back again. For you've got his blue eyes and his brown
-hair and his sweet little ways, and Grandmother loves you--once for
-yourself and once for him."
-
-"But where is the little boy now, Grandmother?"
-
-"He's a man now, darling. He's your own father."
-
-Every Sunday, Grandmother went to church. After breakfast there was a
-flurry of dressing, with an opening and shutting of doors up-stairs, and
-Grandfather would be down-stairs in the kitchen, blacking his Sunday
-boots. On Sunday his beard looked whiter than on other days, but that
-was because he seemed so much blacker everywhere else. He creaked out
-to the stable and hitched Peggy to the buggy and led them around to the
-front gate. Then he would snap his big gold watch and go to the bottom
-of the stairs and say:
-
-"Maria! Come! It's ten o'clock."
-
-Grandmother's door would open a slender crack--"Yes, John"--and
-Grandfather would creak up and down in his Sunday boots, up and down,
-waiting, till there was a rustling on the stairs and Grandmother came
-down to him in a glory of black silk. There was a little frill of white
-about her neck, fastened with her gold brooch, and above that her gentle
-Sabbath face. Her face took on a new light when Sunday came, and she
-never seemed so near, somehow, as on other days. There was a look in
-her eyes that did not speak of sugar pies or play. There was a little
-pressure of the thin lips and a silence, as though she had no time for
-fairy-tales or lullabies. When she set her little black bonnet on her
-gray hair and lifted up her chin to tie the ribbon strings beneath, you
-stopped your game to watch, wondering at her awesomeness; and when in
-her black-gloved fingers she clasped her worn Bible and stooped and
-kissed you good-bye, you never thought of putting your arms around her.
-She was too wonderful--this little Sabbath Grandmother--for that.
-
-Through the window you watched them as they went down the walk together
-to the front gate, Grandmother and Grandfather, the tips of her gloved
-fingers laid in the hollow of his arm. Solemn was the steady stumping
-of his cane. Solemn was the day. Even the roosters knew it was Sunday,
-somehow, and crowed dismally; and the bells--the church-bells tolling
-through the quiet air--made you lonesome and cross with Lizbeth. Your
-collar was very stiff, and your Sunday trousers were very tight, and
-there was nothing to do, and you were dreary.
-
-[Illustration: "YOU WATCHED THEM AS THEY WENT DOWN THE WALK TOGETHER"]
-
-After dinner Grandfather went to sleep on the sofa, with a newspaper
-over his face. Then Grandmother took you up into her black silk lap and
-read you Bible stories and taught you the Twenty-third Psalm and the
-golden text. And every one of the golden texts meant the same
-thing--that little boys should be very good and do as they are told.
-
-Grandmother's Sunday lap was not so fine as her other ones to lie in.
-Her Monday lap, for instance, was soft and gray, and there were no texts
-to disturb your reverie. Then Grandmother would stop her knitting to
-pinch your cheek and say, "You don't love Grandmother."
-
-"Yes, I do."
-
-"How much?"
-
-"More'n tonguecantell. What is a tonguecantell, Grandmother?"
-
-And while she was telling you she would be poking the tip of her finger
-into the soft of your jacket, so that you doubled up suddenly with your
-knees to your chin; and while you guarded your ribs a funny spider would
-crawl down the back of your neck; and when you chased the spider out of
-your collar it would suddenly creep under your chin, or there would be a
-panic in the ribs again. By that time you were nothing but wriggles and
-giggles and little cries.
-
-"Don't, Grandmother; you tickle." And Grandmother would pause,
-breathless as yourself, and say, "_Oh_, my!"
-
-"Now you must do it some more, Grandmother," you would urge, but she
-would shake her head at you and go back to her knitting again.
-
-"Grandmother's tired," she would say.
-
-You were tired, too, so you lay with your head on her shoulder, sucking
-your thumb. To and fro Grandmother rocked you, to and fro, while the
-kitten played with the ball of yarn on the floor. The afternoon
-sunshine fell warmly through the open window. Bees and butterflies
-hovered in the honeysuckles. Birds were singing. Your mind went
-a-wandering--out through the yard and the front gate and across the
-road. On it went past the Taylors' big dog and up by Aunty Green's,
-where the crullers lived, all brown and crusty, in the high stone crock.
-It scrambled down by the brook where the little green frogs were hopping
-into the water, leaving behind them trembling rings that grew wider and
-wider and wider, till pretty soon they were the ocean. That was a big
-thought, and you roused yourself.
-
-[Illustration: "TO AND FRO GRANDMOTHER ROCKED YOU"]
-
-"How big is the ocean, Grandmother?"
-
-"As big--oh, as big as all out-doors."
-
-Your mind waded out into the ocean till the water was up to its knees.
-Then it scrambled back again and lay in the warm sand and looked up at
-the sky. And the sand rocked to and fro, to and fro, as your mind lay
-there, all curled up and warm, by the ocean, watching the butterflies in
-the honeysuckles and the crullers in the crock. And all the people were
-singing ... all the people in the world, almost ... and the little green
-frogs.... "Bye--bye, bye--bye," they were singing, in time to the
-rocking of the sand ... "Bye--bye" ... "Bye" ... "Bye" ...
-
-And when you awoke you were on the sofa, all covered up with
-Grandmother's shawl.
-
-So you liked the gay week-day Grandmother best, with her soft lap and
-her lullabies. Grandfather must have liked her best too, you thought,
-for when he went away forever and forgot his cane, it was the Sunday
-Grandmother he left behind--a little, gray Grandmother sitting by the
-window and gazing silently through the panes.
-
-What she saw there you never knew--but it was not the trees, or the
-distant hills, or the people passing in the road.
-
-
-
-
- *While Aunt Jane Played*
-
-
-Aunt Jane played the piano in the parlor. You could play, too--"Peter,
-Peter, Punkin-eater," with your forefinger, Aunt Jane holding it in her
-hand so that you would strike the right notes. But when Aunt Jane played
-she used both hands. Sometimes the music was so fast and stirring that
-it made you dance, or romp, or sing, or play that you were not a little
-boy at all, but a soldier like Grandfather or George Washington; and
-sometimes the music was so soft and beautiful that you wanted to be a
-prince in a fairy tale; and then again it was so slow and grim that you
-wished it were not Sunday, for the Sunday tunes, like your tight, black,
-Sunday shoes, had all their buttons on, and so were not comfy or made
-for fun. You could not march to them, or fight to them, or be a
-grown-up man to them. Somehow they always reminded you that you were
-only a pouting, naughty little boy.
-
-The sound of the piano came out to you as you lingered by the table
-where Lizzie-in-the-kitchen was making pies. You ran into the parlor
-and sat on a hassock by Aunt Jane, watching her as she played. It was
-not a fast piece that day, nor yet a slow one, but just in-between, so
-that as you sat by the piano you wondered if the snow and sloppy little
-puddles would ever go and leave Our Yard green again. Even with rubber
-boots now Mother made you keep the paths, and mostly you had to stay in
-the house. Through the window you could see the maple boughs still
-bare, but between them the sky was warm and blue. Pretty soon the
-leaves would be coming, hiding the sky.
-
-"Auntie."
-
-"Yes," though she did not stop playing.
-
-"Where do the leaves come from?"
-
-"From the little buds on the twigs, dearie."
-
-"But how do they know when it's time to come, Auntie Jane? 'Cause if
-they came too soon, they might catch cold and die."
-
-"Well, the sun tells them when."
-
-"How does the sun tell them, Auntie?"
-
-"Why, he makes the trees all warm, and when the buds feel it, out they
-come."
-
-"Oh."
-
-Your eyes were very wide. They were always wide when you wondered; and
-sometimes when you were not wondering at all, just hearing Aunt Jane
-play would make you, and then your eyes would grow bigger and bigger as
-you sat on the hassock by the piano, looking at the maple boughs and
-hearing the music and being a little boy.
-
-It was a beautiful piece that Aunt Jane was playing that March morning.
-The sun came and shone on the maple boughs.
-
-"And now the sun is telling the little buds," you said to yourself in
-time to Aunt Jane's music, but so softly that she did not hear.
-
-"And now the little buds are saying 'All right,'" you whispered, more
-softly still, for the bigger your eyes got, the smaller, always, was
-your voice.
-
-A little song-sparrow came and teetered on a twig.
-
-"Oh, Auntie, see! The birdie's come, too, to tell the buds, I guess."
-
-Aunt Jane turned her head and smiled at the sparrow, but she did not
-stop playing. Your heart was beating in time to the music, as you sat
-on the hassock by the piano, watching the bird and the sun. The sparrow
-danced like Aunt Jane's fingers, and put up his little open bill. He
-was singing, though you could not hear.
-
-"But, Auntie."
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Who told the little bird?"
-
-"God told the little bird, dearie--away down South where the oranges and
-roses grow in the winter, and there isn't any snow. And the little bird
-flew up here to Ourtown to build his nest and sing in our maple-tree."
-
-Your eyes were so wide now that you had no voice at all. You just sat
-there on the hassock while Aunt Jane played.
-
-Away down South ... away down South, singing in an orange-tree, you saw
-the little bird ... but now he stopped to listen with his head on one
-side, and his bright eye shining, while the warm wind rustled in the
-leaves ... God was telling him ... So the little bird spread his wings
-and flew ... away up in the blue sky, above the trees, above the
-steeples, over the hills and running brooks ... miles and miles and
-miles ... till he came to Our Yard, in the sun.
-
-"And here he is now," you ended aloud your little story, for you had
-found your voice again.
-
-"Who is here, dearie?" asked Aunt Jane, still playing.
-
-"Why, the little bird," you said.
-
-The sparrow flew away. The sun came through the window to where you sat
-on the hassock, by the piano. It warmed your knees and told you--what
-it told the buds, what God told the little bird in the orange-tree.
-Like the little bird you could stay no longer. You ran out-of-doors
-into the soft, sweet wind and the morning.
-
-Aunt Jane gave the keys a last caress. Grandmother turned in her chair
-by the sitting-room window.
-
-"What were you playing, Janey?"
-
-"Mendelssohn's 'Spring Song,' Mother."
-
-The little gray Grandmother looked out-of-doors again to where you
-played, singing, in the sun.
-
-"Isn't it beautiful?" she murmured.
-
-You waved your hand to her and laughed, and she nodded back at you,
-smiling at your fun.
-
-"Bless his heart, _he's_ playing the music, too," she said.
-
-
-
-
- *Little Sister*
-
-
-In the daytime she played with you, and believed all you said, and was
-always ready to cry. At night she slept with you and the four dolls.
-She was your little sister, Lizbeth.
-
-"Whose little girl are you?" they would ask her. If she were sitting in
-Father's lap, she would doubtless reply--
-
-"Father's little girl."
-
-But--
-
-"Oh, _Lizbeth_!" Mother would cry.
-
-"--and Mother's," Lizbeth would add, to keep peace in the family.
-Though she never mentioned you at such times, she told you privately
-that she would marry you when you grew to be a man, and publicly she
-remembered you in her prayers. Kneeling down at Mother's knee, you and
-Lizbeth, in your little white nighties, before you went to bed, you said
-"Now I lay me" in unison, and ended with blessing every one, only at the
-very end _you_ said:
-
-[Illustration: "YOU SAID 'NOW I LAY ME' IN UNISON"]
-
-"--and God bless Captain Jinks," for even a wooden soldier needed God in
-those long, dark nights of childhood, while Lizbeth said:
-
-"--and God bless all my dollies, and send my Sally doll a new leg."
-
-But though God sent three new legs in turn, Sally was always losing
-them, so that finally Lizbeth confided in Mother:
-
-"Pretty soon God 'll be tired of sending Sally new legs, I guess. _You_
-speak to Him next time, Mother, 'cause I'm 'shamed to any more."
-
-And when Mother asked Him, He sent a new Sally instead of a new leg. It
-would be cheaper, Mother told Father, in the long-run.
-
-In the diplomatic precedence of Lizbeth's prayers, Father and Mother
-were blessed first, and you came between "Grandfather and Grandmother"
-and "God bless my dollies." Thus was your family rank established for
-all time by a little girl in a white night-gown. You were a little
-lower than your elders, it is true, but you were higher than the legless
-Sally or the waxen blonde.
-
-When Lizbeth and you were good, you loved each other, and when you were
-bad, both of you at the same time, you loved each other too, _very_
-dearly. But sometimes it happened that Lizbeth was good and you were
-bad, and then she only loved Mother, and ran and told tales on you. And
-you--well, you did not love anybody at all.
-
-When your insides said it would be a long time before dinner, and your
-mouth watered, and you stood on a chair by the pantry shelf with your
-hand in a brown jar, and when Lizbeth found you there, you could tell by
-just looking at her face that she was very good that day, and that she
-loved Mother better than she did you. So you knew without even thinking
-about it that you were very bad, and you did not love anybody at all,
-and your heart quaked within you at Lizbeth's sanctity. But there was
-always a last resort.
-
-"Lizbeth, if you tell"--you mumbled awfully, pointing at her an uncanny
-forefinger dripping preserves--"if you tell, a great big black Gummy-gum
-'ll get you when it's dark, and he'll pick out your eyes and gnaw your
-ears off, and he'll keep one paw over your mouth, so you can't holler,
-and when the blood comes--"
-
-Lizbeth quailed before you. She began to cry.
-
-"You won't tell, _will_ you?" you demanded, fiercely, making eyes like a
-Gummy-gum and showing your white teeth.
-
-"No--o--o," wailed Lizbeth.
-
-"Well, stop crying, then," you commanded, sucking your syrupy fingers.
-"If you cry, the Gummy-gum 'll come and get you _now_."
-
-Lizbeth looked fearfully over her shoulder and stopped. By that time
-your fingers were all sucked, and the cover was back on the jar, and you
-were saved. But that night, when Mother and Father came home, you
-watched Lizbeth, and lest she should forget, you made the eyes of a
-Gummy-gum, when no one but Lizbeth saw. Mother tucked you both into bed
-and kissed you and put out the light. Then Lizbeth whimpered.
-
-[Illustration: "MOTHER TUCKED YOU BOTH INTO BED AND KISSED YOU"]
-
-"Why, Lizbeth," said Mother from the dark.
-
-Quick as a flash you snuggled up to Lizbeth's side. "The Gummy-gum 'll
-get you if you don't stop," you whispered, warningly--but with one
-dismal wail Lizbeth was out of bed and in Mother's arms. Then you knew
-all was over. Desperately you awaited retribution, humming a little
-song, and so it was to the tune of "I want to be an angel" that you
-heard Lizbeth sob out her awful tale:
-
-"Harry ... he ... he said the Gummy-gum 'd get me ... if I told about
-the p'serves."
-
-And it was _you_ the Gummy-gum got that time, and your blood, you
-thought, almost came.
-
-But other nights when you went to bed--nights after days when you had
-both been good and loved each other--it was fine to lie there in the
-dark with Lizbeth, playing Make-Believe before you fell asleep.
-
-"I tell you," you said, putting up your foot so that the covers rose
-upon it, making a little tent--"I tell you; let's be Indians."
-
-"Let's," said Lizbeth.
-
-"And this is our little tent, and there's bears outside what 'll eat you
-up if you don't look out."
-
-Lizbeth shivered and drew her knees up to her chin, so that she was
-nothing but a little warm roll under the wigwam.
-
-"And now the bears are coming--wow! wow! wow!"
-
-And as the great hungry beasts pushed their snouts under the canvas and
-growled and gnashed their teeth, Lizbeth, little squaw, squealed with
-terror, and seized you as you lay there helpless in your triple role of
-tent and bears and Indian brave; seized you in the ticklish ribs so that
-the wigwam came tumbling about your ears, and the Indian brave rolled
-and shrieked with laughter, and the brute bears fled to their mountain
-caves.
-
-"Children!"
-
-"W-what?"
-
-"Stop that noise and go right to sleep. Do you hear me?"
-
-Was it not the voice of the mamma bear? Stealthily you crept under the
-fallen canvas, which had grown smaller, somehow, in the _melee_, so that
-when you pulled it up to your chin and tucked it in around you, Lizbeth
-was out in the cold; and when Lizbeth tucked herself in, then you were
-shivering. But by-and-by you huddled close in the twisted sheets and
-talked low beneath the edge of the coverlet, so that no one heard
-you--not even the Gummy-gum, who spent his nights on the back stairs.
-
-"Does the Gummy-gum eat little folks while they're asleep?" asked
-Lizbeth, with a precautionary snuggle-up.
-
-"No; 'cause the Gummy-gum is afraid of the little black gnomes what live
-in the pillows."
-
-"Well, if the little black gnomes live in the pillows, why can't you
-feel them then?"
-
-"'Cause, now, they're so teenty-weenty and so soft."
-
-"And can't you ever see them at all?"
-
-"No; 'cause they don't come out till you're asleep."
-
-"Oh ... Well, Harry--now--if a Gummy-gum had a head like a horse, and a
-tail like a cow, and a bill like a duck, what?"
-
-"Why--why, he _wouldn't_, 'cause he _isn't_."
-
-"Oh ... Well, is the Gummy-gum just afraid of the little gnomes, and
-that's all?"
-
-"Um-hm; 'cause the little gnomes have little knives, all sharp and
-shiny, what they got on the Christmas-tree."
-
-"_Our_ Christmas-tree?"
-
-"No; the little gnomes's Christmas-tree."
-
-"The little gnomes's Christmas-tree?"
-
-"Um-hm."
-
-"Why?"
-
-"'Cause ... why, there ain't any why ... just Christmas-tree."
-
-"Just ... just Christmas-tree?"
-
-"Um."
-
-"Why ... I thought ... I ..."
-
-And you and Lizbeth never felt Mother smooth out the covers at all,
-though she lifted you up to straighten them; and so you slept,
-spoon-fashion, warm as toast, with the little black gnomes watching in
-the pillows, and the Gummy-gum, hungry but afraid, in the dark of the
-back stairs.
-
-The pear-tree on the edge of the enchanted garden, green with summer and
-tremulous with breeze, sheltered a little girl and her dolls. On the
-cool turf she sat alone, preoccupied, her dress starched and white like
-the frill of a valentine, her fat little legs straight out before her,
-her bright little curls straight down behind, her lips parted, her eyes
-gentle with a dream of motherhood--Mamma Lizbeth crooning lullabies to
-her four children cradled in the soft grass.
-
-"I'll tell you just one more story," she was saying, "just one, and
-that's all, and then you children must go to sleep. Sally, lie still!
-Ain't you 'shamed, kicking all the covers off and catching cold?
-Naughty girl. Now you must listen. Well ... Once upon a time there was
-a fairy what lived in a rose, and she had beautiful wings--oh, all
-colors--and she could go wherever she wanted to without anybody ever
-seeing her, 'cause she was iwisible, which is when you can't see anybody
-at all. Well, one day the fairy saw a little girl carrying her father's
-dinner, and she turned herself into an old witch and said to the little
-girl, 'Come to me, pretty one, and I will give thee a stick of
-peppermint candy.' Now the little girl, she just loved candy, and
-peppermint was her favorite, but she was a good little girl and minded
-her mother most dut'fly, and never told any lies or anything; so she
-courtesied to the old witch and said, 'Thank you kindly, but I must
-hurry with my father's dinner, or he will be hungry waiting.' _And what
-do you think_? Just then the old witch turned into the beautiful fairy
-again, and she kissed the little girl, and gave her a whole bag of
-peppermint candy, and a doll what talked, and a velocipede for her
-little brother. And what does this story teach us, children? ... Yes.
-That's right. It teaches us to be good little boys and girls and mind
-our parents. And that's all."
-
-The dolls fell asleep. Lizbeth whispered lest they should awake, and
-tiptoed through the grass. A blue-jay called harshly from a neighboring
-tree. Lizbeth frowned and glanced anxiously at the grassy trundle-bed.
-"'Sh!" she said, warningly, her finger on her lip, whenever you came
-near.
-
-Suddenly there was a rustle in the leaves above, and out of their
-greenness a little pear dropped to the grass at Lizbeth's feet.
-
-"It's mine," you cried, reaching out your hand.
-
-"No--o," screamed Lizbeth. "It's for my dollies' breakfast," and she
-hugged the stunted, speckled fruit to her bosom so tightly that its
-brown, soft side was crushed in her hands. You tried to snatch it from
-her, but she struck you with her little clinched fist.
-
-"No--o," she cried again. "It's my dollies' pear." Her lip quivered.
-Tears sprang into her eyes. You straightened yourself.
-
-"All right," you muttered, fiercely. "All right for you. I'll run
-away, I will, and I'll never come back--_never_!"
-
-You climbed the stone wall.
-
-"No," cried Lizbeth.
-
-"I'll never come back," you called, defiantly, as you stood on the top.
-
-"No," Lizbeth screamed, scrambling to her feet and turning to you a face
-wet with tears and white with terror.
-
-"Never, _never_!" was your farewell to her as you jumped. Deaf to the
-pitiful wail behind you, you ran out across the meadow, muttering to
-yourself your fateful, parting cry.
-
-Lizbeth looked for a moment at the wall where you had stood. Then she
-ran sobbing after you, around through the gate, for the wall was too
-high for her, and out into the field, where to her blurred vision you
-were only a distant figure now, never, never to return.
-
-"Harry!" she screamed, and the wind blew her cry to you across the
-meadow, but you ran on, unheeding. She struggled after you. The
-daisies brushed her skirt. Creeping vines caught at her little shoes
-and she fell. Scratched by briers, she scrambled to her feet again and
-stumbled on, blind with tears, crying ever "Harry, Harry!" but so
-faintly now in her sobs and breathlessness that you did not hear. At
-the top of a weary, weary slope she sank helpless and heartbroken in the
-grass, a little huddle of curls and pinafore, so that your conscience
-smote you as you stood waiting, half hidden by the hedge.
-
-"Don't be a cry-baby. I was only fooling," you said, and at the sound
-of your voice Lizbeth lifted her face from the grasses and put out her
-arms to you with a cry. In one hand was the little pear.
-
-"Oh, I don't want the old thing," you cried, throwing yourself beside
-her on the turf. Smiling again through her tears, Lizbeth reached out a
-little hand scratched by briers, and patted your cheek.
-
-"Harry," she said, "you can have all my animal crackers for your
-m'nagerie, if you want to, and my little brown donkey; and I'll play
-horse with you any time you want me to, Harry, I will."
-
-So, after all, you did not run away, and you and Lizbeth went home at
-last across the meadow, hand in hand. Behind you, hidden and forgotten
-in the red clover, lay your quarrel and the little pear.
-
-When Lizbeth loved you, there were stars in her brown eyes; when you
-looked more closely, so that you were very near their shining, you saw
-in their round, black pupils, smiling back at you, the face of a little
-boy; and then in your own eyes, Lizbeth, holding your cheeks between her
-hands, found the face of a little girl.
-
-"Why, it's _me_!" she cried.
-
-And when you looked again into Lizbeth's eyes, you saw yourself; and
-"Oh, Mother," you said afterwards, for you had thought deeply, "I think
-it's the _good_ Harry that's in Lizbeth's eyes, 'cause when I look at
-him, he's always smiling." That was as far as you thought about it
-then; but once, long afterwards, it came to you that little boys never
-find their pictures in a sister's eyes unless they are good, and love
-her, and hold her cheeks between their hands.
-
-Lizbeth's cheeks were softer than yours, and when she played horse, or
-the day was windy, so that the grass rippled and the trees sang, or when
-it was tub-day with soap and towels up-stairs, her cheeks were pink as
-the roses in Mother's garden. That is how you came to tell Mother a
-great secret, one evening in summer, as you sat with her and Lizbeth on
-the front steps watching the sun go down.
-
-"I guess it's tub-day in the sky, Mother."
-
-"Tub-day?"
-
-"Why, yes. All the little clouds have been having their bath, I think,
-'cause they're all pink and shiny, like Lizbeth."
-
-But once Lizbeth's cheeks were white, and she stayed in bed every day,
-and you played by yourself. Twice a day they took you as far as the
-bedroom door to see her.
-
-[Illustration: "THEY TOOK YOU AS FAR AS THE BEDROOM DOOR TO SEE HER"]
-
-"H'lo," you said, as you peeked.
-
-"H'lo," she whispered back, very softly, for she was almost asleep, and
-she did not even smile at you, and before you could tell her what the
-Pussy-cat did they took you away--but not till you had seen the two
-glasses on the table with the silver spoon on top.
-
-There was no noise in the days then. Even the trees stopped singing, and
-the wind walked on tiptoe and whispered into people's ears, like you.
-
-"Is it to-day Lizbeth comes down-stairs?" you asked every morning.
-
-"Do you think Lizbeth will play with me to-morrow?" you asked every
-night. Night came a long time after morning in the days when Lizbeth
-could not play.
-
-"Oh, dear, I don't think I feel very well," you told Mother. Tears
-spilled out of your eyes and rolled down your cheeks. Mother felt your
-brow and looked at your tongue.
-
-"_I_ know what's the matter with my little boy," she said, and kissed
-you; but she did not put you to bed.
-
-One day, when no one was near, you peeked and saw Lizbeth. She was
-alone and very little and very white.
-
-"H'lo," you said.
-
-"H'lo," she whispered back, and smiled at you, and when she smiled you
-could not wait any longer. You went in very softly and kissed her where
-she lay and gave her a little hug. She patted your cheek.
-
-"I'd like my dollies," she whispered. You brought them to her, all
-four--the two china ones and the rag brunette and the waxen blonde.
-
-"Dollies are sick," she said. "They 'most died, I guess. Play you're
-sick, too."
-
-Mother found you there--Lizbeth and you and the four dolls, side by side
-on the bed, all in a little sick row. And from the very moment that you
-kissed Lizbeth and gave her the little hug, she grew better, so that
-by-and-by the wind blew louder and the trees sang lustily, and all Our
-Yard was bright with flowers and sun and voices and play, for you and
-Lizbeth and the four dolls were well again.
-
-
-
-
- *Our Yard*
-
-
-The breadth of Our Yard used to be from the beehives to the red
-geraniums. When the beehives were New York, the geraniums were Japan,
-so the distance is easy to calculate. The apple-tree Alps overshadowed
-New York then, which seems strange now, but geography is not what it
-used to be. In the lapse of years the Manhattan hives have crumbled in
-the Alpine shade, an earthquake of garden spade has wiped Japan from the
-map, and where the scarlet islands lay in the sun there are green
-billows now, and other little boys in the grass, at play.
-
-In the old days when you sailed away on the front gate, which swung and
-creaked through storms, to the other side of the sea, you could just
-descry through a fog of foliage the rocky shores of the back-yard fence,
-washed by a surf of golden-rod. If you moored your ship--for an
-unlatched gate meant prowling dogs in the garden, and Mother was cross
-at that--if you anchored your gate-craft dutifully to become a soldier,
-you could march to the back fence, but it was a long journey. Starting,
-a drummer-boy, you could never foretell your end, for the future was
-vague, even with the fence in view, and your cocked hat on your curls,
-and your drumsticks in your hand. Lizbeth and the dolls might halt you
-at the front steps and muster you out of service to become a doctor with
-Grandmother's spectacles and Grandfather's cane. And if the dolls were
-well that day, with normal pulses and unflushed cheeks, and you marched
-by with martial melody, there was your stalled hobby-horse on the side
-porch, neighing to you for clover hay; and stopping to feed him meant
-desertion from the ranks, to become a farmer, tilling the soil and
-bartering acorn eggs and clean sand butter on market-day. And even
-though you marched untempted by bucolic joys, there lay in wait for you
-the kitchen door, breathing a scent of crullers, or gingerbread, or
-apple-pies, or leading your feet astray to the unscraped frosting-bowl
-or the remnant cookies burned on one side, and so not good for supper,
-but fine for weary drummer-boys. So whether you reached the fence that
-day was a question for you and the day and the sirens that beckoned to
-you along your play.
-
-Across the clover prairie the trellis mountains reared their vine-clad
-heights. Through their morning-glories ran a little pass, which led to
-the enchanted garden on the other side, but the pass was so narrow and
-overhung with vines that when Grandfather was a pack-horse and carried
-you through on his back, your outstretched feet would catch on the
-trellis sides. Then the pack-horse would pick his way cautiously and
-you would dig your heels into his sides and hold fast, and so you got
-through. Once inside the garden, oh, wonder of pansies and hollyhocks
-and bachelor's-buttons and roses and sweet smells! The sun shone
-warmest there, and the fairies lived there, Mother said.
-
-"But when it rains, Mother?"
-
-"Oh, then they hide beneath the trellis, under the honeysuckles."
-
-Mother wore an apron and sun-bonnet, and knelt in the little path,
-digging with a trowel in the moist, brown earth. You helped her with
-your little spade. Under a lilac-bush Lizbeth made mud-pies, and the
-pies of the enchanted garden were the brownest and richest in all Our
-Yard. They were the most like Mother's, Lizbeth said. Grandfather sat
-on the wheelbarrow-ship and smoked.
-
-"Do fairies smoke, Grandfather?"
-
-"The old grandfather fairies do," he said.
-
-Of all the flowers in the enchanted garden you liked the roses best, and
-of all the roses you liked the red. There was a big one that hung on
-the wall above your head. You could just reach it when you stood on
-tiptoe, and pulling it down to you then, you would bury your face in its
-petals and take a long snuff, and say,
-
-"Um-m-m."
-
-And when you let it go, it bobbed and courtesied on its prickly stem.
-But one morning, very early, when you pulled it down to you, you were
-rough with it, and it sprinkled your face with dew.
-
-"The rose is crying," Lizbeth said.
-
-"You should be very gentle with roses," Mother told you. "Sometimes
-when folks are sick or cross, just the sight of a red rose cheers them
-and makes them smile again."
-
-That was a beautiful thought, and it came back to you the day you left
-Our Yard and ran away. You were gone a long time. It was late in the
-afternoon when you trudged guiltily back again, and when you were still
-a long way off you could see Mother waiting for you at the gate. The
-brown switch, doubtless, was waiting too. So you stole into Our Yard
-through the back fence, and hid in the enchanted garden, crying and
-afraid. It began to rain, a gentle summer shower, and like the fairies
-you hid beneath the honeysuckles. Looking up through your tears, you
-saw the red rose--and remembered. The rain stopped. You climbed upon
-the wheelbarrow-ship and pulled the rose from the vine. Trembling, you
-approached the house. Softly you opened the front door. At the sight
-of you Mother gave a little cry. Your lip quivered; the tears rolled
-down your cheeks; for you were cold and wet and dreary.
-
-"M-mother," you said, with outstretched hand, "here's a r-rose I brought
-you"; and she folded you and the flower in her arms. It was true, then,
-what she had told you--that when people are cross there is sometimes
-nothing in the world like the sight of a sweet red rose to cheer them
-and make them smile again.
-
-Once in Our Yard, you were safe from bad boys and their fists, from bad
-dogs and their bites, and all the other perils of the road. Yet Our
-Yard had its dangers too. Through the rhubarb thicket in the corner of
-the fence stalked a black bear. You had heard him growl. You had seen
-the flash of his white teeth. You had tracked him to his lair. Just
-behind you, one hand upon your coat, came Lizbeth.
-
-"'Sh! I see him," you whispered, as you raised your wooden gun.
-
-Bang! Bang!
-
-And the bear fell dead.
-
-"Don't hurt Pussy," said Mother, warningly.
-
-"No," you said, and the dead bear purred and rubbed his head against
-your legs. Once, after you had killed and eaten him, he mewed and ran
-before you to his basket-cave; and there were five little bears, all
-blind and crying, and you took them home and tamed them by the kitchen
-fire.
-
-But the bear was nothing to the Wild Man who lived next door. In the
-barn, close to your fence, he lay in wait for little girls and boys to
-eat them and drink their blood and gnaw their bones. Oh, you had seen
-him once yourself, as you peered through a knot-hole in the barn-side.
-He was sitting on an upturned water-pail, smoking a pipe and muttering.
-
-You and Lizbeth stole out to look at him. Hand in hand you tiptoed
-across the clover prairie where the red Indians roved. You scanned the
-horizon, but there was not a feather or painted face in sight
-to-day--though they always came when you least expected them, popping up
-from the tall grass with wild, blood-curdling yells, and scalping you
-when you didn't watch out. Across the prairie, then, you went,
-silently, hand in hand. The sun fell warm and golden in the open.
-Birds were singing in the sky, unmindful of the lurking perils among the
-tall grass and beyond the fence. Back of you were home and Mother's
-arms, and in the pantry window, cooling, two juicy pies. Before you,
-across the clover, a great gray dungeon frowned upon you; within its
-walls a creature of blood and mystery waiting with hungry jaws. Hushed
-and timorous, you approached.
-
-"Oh, I'm afraid," Lizbeth whimpered. Savagely you caught her arm.
-
-"'Sh! He'll hear you," you hissed through chattering teeth. A cloud
-hid the sun, and the ominous shadow fell upon you as you crouched,
-trembling, on the edge of the raspberry wood.
-
-"Sh!" you said. Under cover of the forest shade you crept with bated
-breath, on all-fours, stealthily. Oh, what was that? That awful sound,
-that hideous groan? From the barn it came, with a crunching of teeth
-and a rattle of chain. Lizbeth gave a little cry, seized you, and hid
-her face against your coat.
-
-"'Sh!" you said. "That's him! Hear him!"
-
-Through wood and prairie rang a piercing cry--
-
-"Mother! I want my mother!"
-
-And Lizbeth fled, wailing, across the plain. You followed--to cheer
-her.
-
-"Cowardy Calf!" you said, but you did not say it till you had reached
-the kitchen door. And in hunting the Wild Man you never got farther
-than his groan.
-
-Mornings in Our Yard the clover prairie sparkled with a million gems.
-The fairies had dropped them, dancing in the moonbeams, while you slept.
-Strung on a blade of grass you found a necklace of diamonds left by the
-queen herself in her flight at dawn, but when you plucked it, the
-quivering brilliants melted into water drops and trickled down your
-hand. Then the warm sun came and took the diamonds back to the fairies
-again--but your shoes were still damp with dew. And by-and-by you would
-be sneezing, and Mother would be taking down bottles for you, for the
-things that fairies wear are not good for little boys. And if ever you
-squash the fairies' diamonds beneath your feet, and don't change your
-shoes, the fairies will be angry with you, and you will be catching
-cold; and if you take the queen's necklace--oh, then watch out, for they
-will be putting a necklace of red flannel on you!
-
-Wide-awake was Our Yard in the morning with its birds and wind and
-sunshine and your play, but when noonday dinner was over there was a
-yawning in the trees. The birds hushed their songs. Grandfather dozed
-in his chair on the porch. The green grass dozed in the sun. And as the
-shadows lengthened even the perils slept--Indians on the clover prairie,
-bear in the rhubarb thicket, Wild Man in the barn. In the apple-tree
-shade you lay wondering, looking up at the sky--wondering why bees
-purred like pussy-cats, why the sparrows bowed to you as they eyed you
-sidewise, what they twittered in the leaves, where the clouds went when
-they sailed to the end of the sky. Three clouds there were, floating
-above the apple-tree, and two were big and one was little.
-
-"The big clouds are the Mother and Father clouds," you told yourself,
-for no one was there to hear, "and the little one is the Little Boy
-cloud, and they are out walking in the sky. And now the Mother cloud is
-talking to the Little Boy cloud. 'Hurry up,' she says; 'why do you walk
-so slow?' And the Little Boy cloud says, 'I can't go any faster 'cause
-my legs are so short.' And then the Father cloud laughs and says,
-'Let's have some ice-cream soda.' Then the Little Boy cloud says, 'I'll
-take vaniller, and make it sweet,' and they all drink. And by-and-by
-they all go home and have supper, and after supper the Mother cloud
-undresses the Little Boy cloud, and puts on his nighty, and he kneels
-down and says, 'Now I lay me down to sleep.' And then the Mother cloud
-kisses the Little Boy cloud on both cheeks and on his eyes and on his
-curls and on his mouth twice, and he cuddles down under the moon and
-goes to sleep. And that's all."
-
-Far beyond the apple-tree, far beyond your ken, the three clouds
-floated--Father and Mother and Little Son--else your story had been
-longer; and in the floating of little clouds, in the making of little
-stories, in the sleeping of little boys, it was always easiest when Our
-Yard slumbered in the afternoon.
-
-When supper was over a bonfire blazed in the western sky, just over the
-back fence. The clouds built it, you explained to Lizbeth, to keep
-themselves warm at night. It was a beautiful fire, all gold and red,
-but as Our Yard darkened, the fire sank lower till only the sparks
-remained, and sometimes the clouds came and put the sparks out too.
-When the moon shone you could see, through the window by your bed, the
-clover prairie and the trellis mountains, silver with fairies, and you
-longed to hold one in your hand. But when the night fell moonless and
-starless, the fairies in Our Yard groped their way--you could see their
-lanterns twinkling in the trees--and there were goblins under every
-bush, and, crouching in the black shadows, was the Wild Man, gnawing a
-little boy's bone. Oh, Our Yard was awful on a dark night, and when you
-were tucked in bed and the lamp was out and Mother away downstairs, you
-could hear the Wild Man crunching his bone beneath your window, and you
-pulled the covers over your head. But always, when you woke, Our Yard
-was bright and green again, for though the moon ran away some nights,
-the sun came every day.
-
-With all its greenness and its brightness and its vastness and its
-enchanted garden, Our Yard bore a heavy yoke. You were not quite sure
-what the burden was, but it was something about tea. Men, painted and
-feathered like the red Indians, had gone one night to a ship in the
-harbor and poured the tea into the sea. That you knew; and you had
-listened and heard of the midnight ride of Paul Revere. Through the
-window you saw Our Yard smiling in the morning sun; trees green with
-summer; flight of white clouds in the sky; flight of brown birds in the
-bush. Wondering, you saw it there, a fair land manacled by a tyrant's
-hand, and the blood mounted to your cheeks.
-
-"Mother, I want my sword."
-
-"It is where you left it, my boy."
-
-"And my soldier-hat and drum."
-
-"They are under the stairs."
-
-Over your shoulder you slung your drum. With her own hands Mother
-belted your sword around you and set your cocked hat on your curls.
-Then twice she kissed you, and you marched away to the music of your
-drum. She watched you from the open door.
-
-It was a windy morning, and you were bravest in the wind. From the back
-fence to the front gate, from the beehives to the red geraniums, there
-was a scent and stir of battle in the air. Rhubarb thicket and
-raspberry wood re-echoed with the beat of drums and the tramp of
-marching feet. Far away beyond the wood-pile hills, behind the trellis
-mountains where the morning-glories clung, tremulous, in the gale, even
-the enchanted garden woke from slumber and the flowers shuddered in
-their peaceful beds. On you marched, through the wind and the morning,
-on through Middlesex, village and farm, till you heard the cannon and
-the battle-cries.
-
-"Halt!"
-
-You unslung your drum. Mounting your charger, you galloped down the
-line.
-
-"Forward!"
-
-And you rode across the blood-stained clover. Into the battle you led
-them, sword in hand--into the thickest of the fight--while all about
-you, thundering in the apple-boughs, reverberating in the wood-pile
-hills, roared the guns of the west wind. Fair in the face of that
-cannonade you flung the flower of your army. Around you lay the wounded,
-the dead, the dying. Beneath you your charger fell, blood gushing from
-his torn side. A thrust bayonet swept off your cocked hat. You were
-down yourself. Tut! 'Twas a mere scratch--and you struggled on.
-Repulsed, you rallied and charged again ... again ... again, across the
-clover, to the mouths of the smoking guns. Afoot, covered with blood,
-your shattered sword gleaming in the morning sun, you stood at last on
-the scorched heights. Before your flashing eyes, a rout of redcoats in
-retreat; behind your tossing curls, the buff and blue.
-
-A cry of triumph came down the beaten wind:
-
-"Mother! Mother! We licked 'em!"
-
-"Whom?"
-
-"The Briddish!"
-
-And Our Yard was free.
-
-
-
-
- *The Toy Grenadier*
-
-
-It was a misnomer. He was not a captain at all, nor was he of the Horse
-Marines. He was a mere private in the Grenadier Guards, with his musket
-at a carry and his heels together, and his little fingers touching the
-seams of his pantaloons. Still, Captain Jinks was the name he went by
-when he first came to Our House, years ago, and Captain Jinks he will be
-always in your memory--the only original Captain Jinks, the ballad to
-the contrary notwithstanding.
-
-It was Christmas Eve when you first saw him. He was stationed on sentry
-duty beneath a fir-tree, guarding a pile of commissary stores. He
-looked neither to the left nor to the right, but straight before him,
-and not a tremor or blink or sigh disturbed his military bearing. His
-bearskin was glossy as a pussy-cat's fur; his scarlet coat, with the
-cross of honor on his heart, fitted him like a glove, and every gilt
-button of it shone in the candlelight; and oh, the loveliness, the
-spotless loveliness, of his sky-blue pantaloons!
-
-"My boy," said Father, "allow me to present Captain Jinks. Captain
-Jinks, my son."
-
-"Oh!" you cried, the moment you clapped eyes on him. "Oh, Father! What
-a beautiful soldier!"
-
-And at your praise the Captain's checks were scarlet. He would have
-saluted, no doubt, had you been a military man, but you were only a
-civilian then.
-
-"Take him," said Father, "and give him some rations. He's about
-starved, I guess, guarding those chocolates."
-
-So you relieved the Captain of his stern vigil--or, rather, the Captain
-and his gun, for he refused to lay down his arms even for mess call,
-without orders from the officer of the guard, though he did desert his
-post, which was inconsistent from a military point of view, and deserved
-court-martial. And while he was gone the commissary stores were
-plundered by ruthless, sticky hands.
-
-Lizbeth brought a new wax doll to mess with the Captain. A beautiful
-blonde she was, and the Captain was gallantry itself, but she was a
-little stiff with him, in her silks and laces, preferring, no doubt, a
-messmate with epaulets and sword. So the chat lagged till the Rag Doll
-came--an unassuming brunette creature--and the Captain got on very well
-with her. Indeed, when the Wax Doll flounced away, the Captain leaned
-and whispered in the Rag Doll's ear. What he said you did not hear, but
-the Rag Doll drew away, shyly--
-
-"Very sudden," she seemed to say. But the Captain leaned nearer, at an
-angle perilous to both, and--kissed her! The Rag Doll fainted to the
-floor. The Captain was at his wits' end. Without orders he could not
-lay aside his gun, for he was a sentry, albeit off his post. Yet here
-was a lady in distress. The gun or the lady? The lady or the gun? The
-Captain struggled betwixt his honor and his love. In the very stress of
-his contending emotions he tottered, and would have fallen to the Rag
-Doll's side, but you caught him just in time. Lizbeth applied the
-smelling-bottle to the Rag Doll's nose, and she revived. Pale, but
-every inch a rag lady, she rose, leaning on Lizbeth. She gave the
-Captain a withering glance, and swept towards the open door. The
-Captain did not flinch. Proudly he drew himself to his full height; his
-heels clicked together; his gun fell smartly to his side; and as the
-lady passed he looked her squarely in her scornful eyes, and bore their
-_conge_ like a soldier.
-
-Next morning--Christmas morning--in the trenches before the Coal
-Scuttle, the Captain fought with reckless bravery. The earthworks of
-building-blocks reached barely to his cartridge-belt, yet he stood erect
-in a hail of marble balls.
-
-"Jinks, you're clean daft," cried Grandfather. "Lie down, man!"
-
-But the Captain would not budge. Commies and glassies crashed around
-him. They ploughed up the earthworks before him; they did great
-execution on the legs of chairs and tables and other non-combatants
-behind. Yet there he stood, unmoved in the midst of the carnage, his
-heels together, his little fingers just touching the seams of his
-pantaloons. It was for all the world as though he were on dress parade.
-Perhaps he was--for while he stood there, valorous in that Christmas
-fight, his eyes were on the heights of Rocking Chair beyond, where, safe
-from the marble hail, sat the Rag Doll with Lizbeth and the waxen
-blonde.
-
-There was a rumble--a crash through the torn earthworks--a shock--a
-scream from the distant heights--and the Captain fell. A monstrous
-glassy had struck him fairly in the legs, and owing to his military
-habit of standing with them close together--well, it was all too sad,
-too harrowing, to relate. An ambulance corps of Grandfather and Uncle
-Ned carried the crippled soldier to the Tool Chest Hospital. He was
-just conscious, that was all. The operation he bore with great
-fortitude, refusing to take chloroform, and insisting on dying with his
-musket beside him, if die he must. What seemed to give him greatest
-anguish was his heels, for, separated at last, they would not click
-together now; and his little fingers groped nervously for the misplaced
-seams of his pantaloons.
-
-Long afterwards, when the Captain had left his cot for active duty
-again, it was recalled that the very moment when he fell so gallantly in
-the trenches that day a lady was found unconscious, flat on her face, at
-the foot of Rocking Chair Hill.
-
-Captain Jinks was never the same after that. Still holding his gun as
-smartly as before, there was, on the other hand, a certain carelessness
-of attire, a certain dulness of gilt buttons, a smudginess of scarlet
-coat, as though it were thumb-marked; and dark clouds were beginning to
-lower in the clear azure of his pantaloons. There was, withal, a certain
-rakishness of bearing not provided for in the regulations; a little
-uncertainty as to legs; a tilt and limp, as it were, in sharp contrast
-to the trim soldier who had guarded the commissary chocolates under the
-Christmas fir. Moreover--though his comrades at arms forbore to mention
-it, loving him for his gallant service--he was found one night, flat on
-his face, under the dinner-table. Now the Captain had always been
-abstemious before. Liquor of any kind he had shunned as poison, holding
-that it spotted his uniform; and once when forced to drink from
-Lizbeth's silver cup, at the end of a dusty march, his lips paled at the
-contaminating touch, his red cheeks blanched, and his black mustache, in
-a single drink, turned gray. But here he lay beneath the festive board,
-bedraggled, his nose buried in the soft rug, hopelessly
-inarticulate--though the last symptom was least to be wondered at, since
-he had always been a silent man.
-
-You shook him where he lay. There was no response. You dragged him
-forth in his shame and set him on his feet again, but he staggered and
-fell. Yet as he lay there in his cups--oh, mystery of discipline!--his
-heels were close together, his toes turned out, his musket was at a
-carry, and his little fingers were just touching the seams of his
-pantaloons.
-
-For the good of the service Mother offered to retire the Captain on half
-pay, and give him free lodging on the garret stair, but he scorned the
-proposal, and you backed him in his stand. All his life he had been a
-soldier. Now, with war and rumors of war rife in the land, should he,
-Captain Jinks, a private in the Grenadier Guards, lay down his arms for
-the piping peace of a garret stair? No, by gad, sir! No! And he
-stayed; and, strangest thing of all, he was yet to fight and stand guard
-and suffer as he had never done before.
-
-But while the Captain thus sadly went down hill, the Rag Doll retired to
-a modest villa in the closet country up-stairs. It was quiet there, and
-she could rest her shattered nerves. Whether she blamed herself for her
-rejected lover's downfall, or whether it was mere petulance at the
-social triumphs of the waxen blonde is a question open to debate.
-Sentimentalists will find the former theory more to their fancy, but,
-the blonde and her friends told a different tale. Be that as it may,
-the Rag Doll went away.
-
-January passed in barracks; then February and March, with only an
-occasional scouting after cattle-thieves and brigand bands. The Captain
-chafed at such inactivity.
-
-"War! You call this war!" his very bristling manner seemed to say. "By
-gad! sir, when I was in the trenches before..."
-
-It was fine then to see the Captain and Grandfather--both grizzled
-veterans with tales to tell--side by side before the library fire. When
-Grandfather told the story of Johnny Reb in the tall grass, the Captain
-was visibly moved.
-
-"Jinks," Grandfather would say--"Jinks, you know how it is
-yourself--when the bacon's wormy and the coffee's thin, and there's a
-man with a gun before you and a girl with a tear behind."
-
-And at the mention of the girl and the tear the Captain would turn away.
-
-Spring came, and with it the marching orders for which you and the
-Captain had yearned so long. There was a stir in the barracks that
-morning. The Captain was drunk again, it is true, but drunk this time
-with joy. He could not march in the ranks--he was too far gone for
-that--so you stationed him on a wagon to guard the commissary stores.
-
-A blast from the bugle--Assembly--and you fell into line.
-
-"Forward--_March!_"
-
-And you marched away, your drum beating a double-quick, the Captain
-swaying ignominiously on the wagon and hugging his old brown gun. As
-the Guards swung by the reviewing-stand, their arms flashing in the sun,
-the Captain did not raise his eyes. So he never knew that looking down
-upon his shame that April day sat his rag lady, with Lizbeth and the
-waxen blonde. Her cheeks were pale, but her eyes were tearless. She did
-not utter a sound as her tottering lover passed. She just leaned far
-out over the flag-hung balcony and watched him as he rode away.
-
-It was a hard campaign. Clover Plain, Wood-pile Mountain, and the
-Raspberry Wilderness are names to conjure with. From the back fence to
-the front gate, from the beehives to the red geraniums, the whole land
-ran with blood. Brevetted for personal gallantry on the Wood-pile
-Heights, you laid aside your drum for epaulets and sword. The Guards
-and the Captain drifted from your ken. When you last saw him he was
-valiantly defending a tulip pass, and defying a regiment of the Black
-Ant Brigade to come and take him--by gad! sirs--if they dared.
-
-The war went on. Days grew into weeks, weeks into months, and the
-summer passed. Search in camps and battlefields revealed no trace of
-Captain Jinks. Sitting by the camp-fire on blustering nights, your
-thoughts went back to the old comrade of the winter days.
-
-"Poor Captain Jinks!" you sighed.
-
-"Jinks?" asked Grandfather, laying down his book.
-
-"Yes. He's lost. Didn't you know?"
-
-"Jinks among the missing!" Grandfather cried. Then he gazed silently
-into the fire.
-
-"Poor old Jinks!" he mused. "He was a brave soldier, Jinks was--a brave
-soldier, sir." He puffed reflectively on his corn-cob pipe. Presently
-he spoke again, more sadly than before:
-
-"But he had one fault, Jinks had--just one, sir. He was a leetle too
-fond o' his bottle on blowy nights."
-
-November came. The year and the war were drawing to a close. Before
-Grape Vine Ridge the enemy lay intrenched for a final desperate stand.
-To your council of war in the fallen leaves came Grandfather, a scarf
-around his throat, its loose ends flapping in the gale. He leaned on
-his cane; you, on your sword.
-
-"Bring up your guns, boy," he cried. "Bring up your heavy guns. Fling
-your cavalry to the left, your infantry to the right. 'Up, Guards, and
-at 'em!' Cold steel, my boy--as Jinks used to say."
-
-Grandfathers for counsel; little boys for war. At five that night the
-enemy surrendered--horse, foot, and a hundred guns. Declining the
-General's proffered sword, you rode back across the battle field to your
-camp in the fallen leaves. The afternoon was waning. In the gathering
-twilight your horse stumbled on a prostrate form. You dismounted,
-knelt, brushed back the leaves, peered into the dimmed eyes and ashen
-face.
-
-"Captain!" you cried. "Captain Jinks!" And at your call came Lizbeth,
-running, dragging the Rag Doll by her hand. Breathless they knelt beside
-him where he lay.
-
-"Oh, it's Captain Jinks," said Lizbeth, but softly, when she saw. Prone
-on the battle-field lay the wounded Grenadier, his uniform gray with
-service in the wind and rain.
-
-"Captain!" you cried again, but he did not hear you. Then the Rag Doll
-bent her face to his, in the twilight, though she could not speak. A
-glimmer of recognition blazed for a moment, but faded in the Captain's
-eyes.
-
-"He's tired marching, I guess," said Lizbeth.
-
-"'Sh!" you said. "He's dying."
-
-You bent lower to feel his fluttering pulse. You placed your ear to the
-cross of honor, rusted, on his breast. His heart was silent. And so he
-died--on the battlefield, his musket at his side, his heels together,
-his little fingers just touching the seams of his pantaloons.
-
-
-
-
- *Father*
-
-
-Every evening at half-past six there was a sound of footsteps on the
-front porch. You ran, you and Lizbeth, and by the time you had reached
-the door it opened suddenly from without, and you each had a leg of
-Father. Mother was just behind you in the race, and though she did not
-shout or dance, or pull his coat or seize his bundles, she won his first
-kiss, so that you and Lizbeth came in second after all.
-
-"Hello, Buster!" he would sing out to you, so that you cried, "My name
-ain't Buster--it's Harry," at which he would be mightily surprised. But
-he always called Lizbeth by her right name.
-
-"Well, Lizbeth," he would say, kneeling, for you had pulled him down to
-you, bundles and all, and Lizbeth would cuddle down into his arms and
-say:
-
-"_Fa_-ther."
-
-"What?"
-
-"Why, Father, now what do you think? My Sally doll has got the measles
-awful."
-
-"No! You don't say?"
-
-And "Father!" you would yell into his other ear, for while Lizbeth used
-one, you always used the other--using one by two persons at the same
-time being strictly forbidden.
-
-"Father."
-
-"Yes, my son.
-
-"The Jones boy was here to-day and--and--and he said--why, now, he
-said--"
-
-"_Fa_-ther" (it was Lizbeth talking into _her_ ear now), "do you think
-my Sally doll--"
-
-It was Mother who rescued Father and his bundles at last and carried you
-off to supper, and when your mouth was not too full you finished telling
-him what the Jones boy said, and he listened gravely, and prescribed for
-the Sally doll. Though he came home like that every night except Sunday
-in all the year, you always had something new to tell him in both ears,
-and it was always, to all appearances, the most wonderful thing he had
-ever heard.
-
-But now and then there were times when you did not yearn for the sound
-of Father's footsteps on the porch.
-
-"Wait till Father comes home and Mother tells him what a bad, bad boy
-you have been!"
-
-"I don't care," you whispered, defiantly, all to yourself, scowling out
-of the window, but "Tick-tock, tick-tock" went the clock on the
-mantel-shelf--"Tick-tock, tick-tock"--more loudly, more swiftly than you
-had ever heard it tick before. Still you were brave in the broad light
-of day, and if sun and breeze and bird-songs but held out long enough,
-Mother might forget. You flattened your nose against the pane. There
-was a dicky-bird hopping on the apple-boughs outside. You heard him
-twittering. If you were only a bird, now, instead of a little boy.
-Birds were so happy and free. Nobody ever made them stay in-doors on an
-afternoon made for play. If only a fairy godmother would come in a gold
-coach and turn you into a bird. Then you would fly away, miles and
-miles, and when they looked for you, at half-past six, you would be
-chirping in some cherry-tree.
-
-"Tick-tock, tick-tock--whir-r-r! One! Two! Three! Four! Five!"
-struck the clock on the mantel-shelf. The bright day was running away
-from you, leaving you far behind to be caught, at half-past six--caught
-and ...
-
-But Father might not come home to supper to-night! Once he did not. At
-the thought the sun lay warm upon your cheek, and you rapped on the pane
-bravely at the dicky-bird outside. The bird flew away.
-
-"Tick-tock, tick-tock, tick-tock, tick-tock."
-
-Swiftly the day passed. Terribly fell the black night, fastening its
-shadows on you and all the world. Grimly Mother passed you, without a
-look or word. She pulled down the window shades. One by one she
-lighted the lamps--the tall piano-lamp with the red globe, the little
-green lamp on the library-table, the hanging lamp in the dining-room.
-Already the supper-table was set.
-
-The clock struck six!
-
-You watched Mother out of the corners of your eyes. Had she forgotten?
-
-"Mother," you said, engagingly. "See me stand on one leg."
-
-"Mother does not care to look at naughty little boys."
-
-"Tick-tock, tick-tock, tick-tock, tick-tock."
-
-You were very little to punish. Besides, you were not feeling very
-well. It was not your tummy, nor your head, nor yet the pussy-scratch
-on your finger. It was a deeper pain.
-
-"Tick-tock, tick-tock."
-
-If you should die like the Jones boy's little brother and be put in the
-cemetery on the hill, they would be sorry.
-
-"Tick-tock, tick-tock."
-
-Mother went to the window and peered out.
-
-"TICK-TOCK!"
-
-"Whir-r-r-"
-
-And the clock struck half-past six!
-
-Steps sounded upon the porch--Mother was going to the door--it opened!
-
-"Where's Buster?"
-
-And Mother told!
-
-... And somehow when Father spanked it always seemed as if he were
-meddling. He was an outsider all day. Why, then, did he concern himself
-so mightily at night?
-
-After supper Father would sit before the fire with you on one knee and
-Lizbeth on the other, while Mother sewed, till by-and-by, just when you
-were most comfy and the talk most charming, he would say:
-
-"Well, Father must go now."
-
-"Oh no, Father. Don't go yet."
-
-"But Father must. He must go to Council-meeting."
-
-"What's a Council-meeting, Father?" you asked, and while he was telling
-you he would be putting on his coat.
-
-"Don't sit up for me," he would tell Mother, and the door would shut at
-half-past seven just as it had opened at half-past six, with the same
-sound of footsteps on the porch.
-
-"Oh, dear," you would say. "Father's always going somewhere. I guess
-he doesn't like to stay home, Mother."
-
-Then Mother would take you and Lizbeth on her lap.
-
-"Dearies, Father would love to stay at home and play with you and
-Mother, but he can't. All day long he has to work to take care of us
-and buy us bread-and-butter--"
-
-"And chocolate cake, Mother?"
-
-"Yes, and chocolate cake. And he goes to the Council to help the other
-men take care of Ourtown so that the burglars won't get in or the
-street-lamps go out and leave us in the dark."
-
-Your eyes were very round. That night after you and Lizbeth were in bed
-and the lights were out, you thought of the Council and the burglars so
-that you could not sleep, and while you lay there thinking, the
-wolf-wind began to howl outside. Then suddenly you heard the patter,
-patter, patter of its feet upon the roof. You shuddered and drew the
-bedclothes over your head. What if It got inside? Could It bite
-through the coverlet with its sharp teeth? Would the Council come and
-save you just in time? ... Which would be worse, a wolf or a burglar? A
-wolf, of course, for a burglar might have a little boy of his own
-somewhere, in bed, curled up and shivering, with the covers over his
-head.... But what if the burglar had no little boy? Did burglars ever
-have little boys? ... How could a man ever be brave enough to be a
-burglar, in the dead of night, crawling through windows into pitch-dark
-rooms, ... into little boys' rooms, ... crawling in stealthily with
-pistols and false-faces and l-lanterns? ...
-
-But That One was crawling in! Right into your room, ... right in over
-the window-sill, ... like a cat, ... with a false-face on, and pistols,
-loaded and pointed right at you.... You tried to call; ... your voice
-was dried up in your throat, ... and all the time He was coming nearer,
-... nearer, ... nearer...
-
-"Bad dream, was it, little chap?" asked the Council, holding you close
-to his coat, all smoky of cigars, and patting your cheek.
-
-[Illustration: "BAD DREAM, WAS IT, LITTLE CHAP?"]
-
-"F-father, where did he go?"
-
-"Who go, my boy?"
-
-"Why, the burglar, Father."
-
-"There wasn't any burglar, child."
-
-"Why, yes, Father. I saw him. Right there. Coming through the
-window."
-
-And it took Father and Mother and two oatmeal crackers and a drink of
-water to convince you that it was all a dream. So whether it was in
-frightening burglars away, or keeping the street-lamps burning, or
-smoking cigars, or soothing a little boy with a nightmare and a fevered
-head, the Council was a useful body, and always came just in time.
-
-On week-day mornings Father had gone to work when you came down-stairs,
-but on Sunday mornings, when you awoke, a trifle earlier if anything--
-
-"Father!"
-
-Silence.
-
-"Father!" a little louder.
-
-Then a sleepy "Yes."
-
-"We want to get up."
-
-"It isn't time yet. You children go to sleep."
-
-You waited. Then--
-
-"Father, is it time yet?"
-
-"No. You children lie still."
-
-So you and Lizbeth, wide-awake, whispered together; and then, to while
-away the time while Father slept, you played Indian, which required two
-little yells from you to begin with (when the Indian You arrived in your
-war-paint) and two big yells from Lizbeth to end with (when the Paleface
-She was being scalped).
-
-Then Father said it was "no use," and Mother took a hand. You were
-quiet after that, but it was yawny lying there with the sun so high.
-You listened. Not a sound came from Father and Mother's room. You rose
-cautiously, you and Lizbeth, in your little bare feet. You stole softly
-across the floor. The door was a crack open, so you peeked in, your
-face even with the knob and Lizbeth's just below. And then, at one and
-the same instant, you both said "Boo!" and grinned; and the harder you
-grinned the harder Father tried not to laugh, which was a sign that you
-could scramble into bed with him, you on one side and Lizbeth on the
-other, cuddling down close while Mother went to see about breakfast.
-
-It was very strange, but while it had been so hard to drowse in your own
-bed, the moment you were in Father's you did not want to get up at all.
-Indeed, it was Father who wanted to get up first, and it was you who
-cried that it was not time.
-
-Week-days were always best for most things, but for two reasons Sunday
-was the best day of all. One reason was Sunday dinner. The other was
-Father. On Sunday the dinner-table was always whitest with clean linen
-and brightest with silver and blue china and fullest of good things to
-eat, and sometimes Company came and brought their children with them.
-On Sunday, too, there was no store to keep, and Father could stay at
-home all day.
-
-He came down to breakfast in slippers and a beautiful, wide jacket,
-which was brown to match the coffee he always took three cups of, and
-the cigar which he smoked afterwards in a big chair with his feet thrust
-out on a little one. While he smoked he would read the paper, and
-sometimes he would laugh and read it out loud to Mother; and sometimes
-he would say, "That's so," and lay down his paper and talk to Mother
-like the minister's sermon. And once he talked so loudly that he said
-"Damn." Mother looked at you, for you were listening, and sent you for
-her work-basket up-stairs. After that, when you talked loudest to
-Lizbeth or the Jones boy, you said "Damn," too, like Father, till Mother
-overheard you and explained that only fathers and grandfathers and bad
-little boys ever said such things. It wasn't a pretty word, she said,
-for nice little boys like you.
-
-"But, Mother, if the bad little boys say it, why do the good fathers say
-it--hm?"
-
-Mother explained that, too. Little boys should mind their mothers, she
-said.
-
-It was easy enough not to say the word when you talked softly, but when
-you talked loudest it was hard to remember what Mother said. For when
-you talked softly, somehow, you always remembered Mother, and when you
-talked loudly it was Father you remembered best.
-
-The sun rose high and warm. It was a long time after breakfast.
-Fragrance came from the kitchen to where you sat in the library, all
-dressed-up, looking at picture-books and waiting for dinner, and
-wondering if there would be pie. Father was all dressed-up, too, and
-while he read silently, you and Lizbeth felt his cheeks softly with your
-finger-tips. Where the prickers had been at breakfast-time it was as
-smooth as velvet now. Father's collar was as white as snow. In place
-of his jacket he wore his long, black Sunday coat, and in his shoes you
-could almost see your face.
-
-"Father's beautifulest on Sunday," Lizbeth said.
-
-"So am I," you said, proudly, looking down your blouse and trousers to
-the shine of your Sunday shoes.
-
-"So are you, too," you added kindly to Lizbeth, who was all in white and
-curls.
-
-Then you drew a little chair beside Father's and sat, quiet and very
-straight, with your legs crossed carelessly like his and an open book
-like his in your lap. And when Father changed his legs, you changed your
-legs, too. Lizbeth looked at you two awhile awesomely. Then she
-brought her little red chair and sat beside you with the Aladdin book on
-her lap, but she did not cross her legs. And so you sat there, all
-three, clean and dressed-up and beautiful, by the bay-window, while the
-sun lay warm and golden on the library rug, and sweeter and sweeter grew
-the kitchen smells.
-
-Then dinner came, and the last of it was best because it was sweetest,
-and if Company were not there you cried:
-
-"It's going to be pie to-day, isn't it, Mother?"
-
-But Mother would only smile mysteriously while the roast was carried
-away. Then Lizbeth guessed.
-
-"It's pudding," she said.
-
-"No, pie," you cried again, "'cause yesterday was pudding."
-
-"Now, Father, you guess," said Lizbeth.
-
-"I guess?"
-
-"Yes, Father."
-
-And at that Father would knit his brows and put one finger to one side
-of his nose, so that he could think the harder, and by-and-by he would
-say:
-
-"I know. I'll bet it's custard."
-
-"Oh _no_, Father," you broke in, for you liked pie best, and even to
-admit the possibility of custard, aloud, might make it come true.
-
-"Then it's lemon jelly with cream," said Father, trying another finger
-to his nose and pondering deeply.
-
-"Oh, you only have one guess," cried you and Lizbeth together, and
-Father, cornered, stuck to the jelly and cream.
-
-"Oh, dear," Lizbeth said, "I don't see what good it does to brush off
-the crumbs in the middle of dinner."
-
-Silence fell upon the table, you and Lizbeth holding Father's
-outstretched hands. Your eyes were wide, the better to see. Your lips
-were parted, the better, doubtless, to hear. Only Mother was serene,
-for only Mother knew. And then through the stillness came the sound of
-rattling plates.
-
-"Pie," you whispered.
-
-"Pudding," whispered Lizbeth.
-
-"Jelly," whispered Father, hoarsely.
-
-The door swung open. You rose in your seats, you and Lizbeth and
-Father, craning your necks to see, and, seeing--
-
-"_Pie!_" you cried, triumphantly.
-
-"Ah!" said Father, lifting his pie-crust gayly with the tip of his fork.
-
-"Apples," you said, peeping under your crust.
-
-"Apples, my son? Apples? Why, no. Bless my soul! As I live, this is a
-robber's cave filled with sacks of gold."
-
-"Oh, _Father_!" you cried, incredulous, not knowing how to take him yet;
-but you peeped again, and under your pie-crust it was like a cave, and
-the little slices of juicy apple lay there like sacks of gold.
-
-"And see!" said Father, pointing with his fork, "there is the entrance
-to the cave, and when the policemen chased the robbers--pop! they went,
-right into their hole, like rabbits."
-
-And sure enough, in the upper crusts were the little cuts through which
-the robbers popped. Your eyes widened.
-
-"And oh, Father," you said, "the smoke can come out through the little
-holes when the robbers build their fire."
-
-"Aha!" cried Father, fiercely. "I'm the policeman breaking into the
-cave while the robbers are away," and he took a bite.
-
-"And I'm another policeman," you cried, catching the spirit of the thing
-and taking a bigger bite than Father's.
-
-"And I'm a policeman's wife coming along, too," said Lizbeth, helping
-herself, so that Mother said:
-
-"John, John, how am I ever going to teach these children table manners
-when--"
-
-"But see, Mother, see!" Father explained, taking another bite, and
-ignoring Mother's eyes. "If we don't get the gold away the robbers will
-come back and--"
-
-"Kill us!" you broke in.
-
-"Yes, kill us, Mother!" shouted Father, balancing another sack of gold
-on the end of his fork. "Yes, yes, Mother, don't you see?"
-
-"I see," said Mother, just between laugh and frown, and when the robbers
-came back around the coffee-pot hill, lo! there was no gold or cave
-awaiting them--only three plates scraped clean, and two jubilant
-policemen and a policeman's wife, full of gold.
-
-And when Father was Father again, leaning on the back of Mother's chair,
-she said to him, "You're nothing but a great big boy," so that Father
-chuckled, his cheek against hers and his eyes shining. That was the way
-with Father. Six days he found quite long enough to be a man; so on
-Sunday he became a boy.
-
-The gate clicked behind you, Father in the middle and you and Lizbeth
-holding each a hand, and keeping step with him when you could, running a
-little now and then to catch up again. Your steps were always longest
-on Sunday when you walked with Father, and even Lizbeth knew you then
-for a little man, and peeked around Father's legs to see you as you
-strode along. Father was proud of you, too, though he did not tell you.
-He just told other people when he thought you could not hear.
-
-"Little pitchers have big ears," Mother would warn him then, but you
-heard quite plainly out of one ear, and it was small at that.
-
-Everybody looked as you three went down the shady street together, and
-the nice young ladies gave you smiles and the nice old ladies gave you
-flowers, handing them out to you over their garden walls.
-
-"Thank you. My name is Harry," you said.
-
-"And I'm Lizbeth," said little sister. And as you passed on your stride
-grew longer and your voice sank bigger and deeper in your throat, like
-Father's.
-
-But it wasn't the town you liked best to walk in with Father in the
-long, warm Sunday afternoons. It was the river-side, where the willows
-drooped over the running waters, and the grass was deepest and greenest
-and waved in the sun. On the meadow-bank at the water's silver edge you
-sat down together.
-
-"Who can hear the most?" asked Father.
-
-You listened.
-
-"I hear the river running over the log," you said, softly.
-
-"And the birds," whispered Lizbeth.
-
-"And the wind in the willows," said Father.
-
-"And the cow-bells tinkling way, way off," you added, breathlessly.
-
-"Oh, and I hear the grass whispering," said Lizbeth.
-
-"And oh, a bee," you cried.
-
-"And something else," said Father.
-
-You held your breath and listened. From the distant village the wind
-blew you faintly the sound of--
-
-"Church-bells," cried you and Lizbeth together.
-
-You fell to playing in the long grass. Lizbeth gathered daisies for
-Mother. You lay with your face just over the river-bank, humming a
-little song and gazing down into the mirror of the waters. You wondered
-how it would feel to be a little boy-fish, darting in and out among the
-river grasses.
-
-By-and-by you went back to Father and sat beside him with your cheek
-against his arm.
-
-"Father."
-
-"Yes."
-
-"What do you think when you don't say anything, but just look?"
-
-[Illustration: "'FATHER, WHAT DO YOU THINK WHEN YOU DON'T SAY ANYTHING,
-BUT JUST LOOK?'"]
-
-"When I just look?"
-
-"Yes. Do you think what I do?"
-
-"Well, what do you think?"
-
-"Why, I think I'd like to be a big man like you and wear a long coat,
-and take my little boy and girl out walking. Did you think that,
-Father?"
-
-"No. I was thinking how nice it would be just to be a little boy again
-like you and go out walking by the river with my father."
-
-"Oh, Father, how funny! I wanted to be you and you wanted to be me. I
-guess people always want to be somebody else when they just look and
-don't say anything."
-
-"What makes you think that, my boy?"
-
-"Well, there's Grandmother. _She_ sits by the window all day long and
-just looks and looks, and wishes she was an angel with Grandfather up in
-the sky."
-
-"And Lizbeth?"
-
-"Oh, Lizbeth wishes she was Mother."
-
-"And how about Mother? Does she wish she were somebody else, do you
-think?"
-
-"Oh no, Father, _she_ doesn't, 'cause then she wouldn't have me and
-Lizbeth. Besides, she don't have time to just sit and look, Mother
-don't."
-
-Your eyes were big and shining. Father just looked and looked a long
-time.
-
-"And what do you think _now_, Father?"
-
-"I was thinking of Mother waiting for you and Lizbeth and Father, and
-wondering why we don't come home."
-
-And almost always after that, when you went out walking with Father,
-Sundays, Mother went with you. It seemed strange at first, but fine, to
-have her sit with you on the river-bank and just look and look and look,
-smiling but never saying a word; and though you asked her many times
-what she thought about as she sat there dreaming, she was never once
-caught wishing that she were anybody but her own self. She was happy,
-she told you; but while it was you she told, she would be looking at
-Father.
-
-Oh, it was golden in the morning glow, when you were a little boy. But
-clouds skurried across the sky--black clouds, storm clouds--casting
-their chill and shadow for a while over all Our Yard, darkening Our
-House, so that a little boy playing on the hearth-rug left his toy
-soldier prostrate there to wander, wondering, from room to room.
-
-"Mother, why doesn't Father play with us like he used to?"
-
-"Mother, why do you sew and sew and sew all the time? Hm, Mother?"
-
-All through the long evenings till bed-time came, and long afterwards,
-Father and Mother talked low together before the fire. The murmur of
-their voices downstairs was the last thing you heard before you fell
-asleep. It sounded like the brook in the meadow where the little green
-frogs lived, hopping through water-rings.
-
-Of those secret conferences by the fire you could make nothing at all.
-Mother stopped you whenever you drew near.
-
-"Run away, dear, and play."
-
-You frowned and sidled off as far as the door, lingering wistfully.
-
-"Father, the Jones boy made fun of me to-day. He called me
-Patchy-pants."
-
-"Never mind what the Jones boy says," Mother broke in; but Father said,
-"He ought to have a new pair, Mother." You brightened at that.
-
-"The Jones boy's got awful nice pants," you said; "all striped like a
-zebra."
-
-Father smiled a little at that. Mother looked down at her sewing,
-saying never a word. That night you dreamed you had new pants, all
-spotted like a leopard, and you were proud, for every one knows that a
-leopard could whip a zebra, once he jumped upon his back.
-
-Leaning on the garden fence, the Jones boy watched you as you sprinkled
-the geraniums with your little green watering-can.
-
-"Where'd you get it?" he asked.
-
-"Down at my father's store," you replied, loftily, for the Jones boy had
-no watering-can.
-
-"Your father hasn't got a store any more."
-
-"He has, too," you replied.
-
-"He hasn't, either, 'cause my pa says he hasn't."
-
-"I don't care what your pa says. My father has, too, got a store."
-
-"He hasn't."
-
-"He has."
-
-"He hasn't, either."
-
-"He has, teether."
-
-"I say he hasn't."
-
-"And I say he has," you screamed, and threw the watering-can straight at
-the Jones boy. It struck the fence and the water splashed all over him
-so that he retreated to the road. There in a rage he hurled stones at
-you.
-
-"Your--father--hasn't--got--any-- store--any--more--old--Patchy-pants--
-old--Patchy-pants--old--"
-
-And then suddenly the Jones boy fled, and when you looked around there
-was Father standing behind you by the geraniums.
-
-"Never mind what the Jones boy says," he told you, and he was not angry
-with you for throwing the watering-can. The little green spout of it
-was broken when you picked it up, but Father said he would buy you a new
-one.
-
-"To-morrow, Father?"
-
-"No, not to-morrow--some day."
-
-You and Lizbeth, tumbling down-stairs to breakfast, found Father sitting
-before the fire.
-
-"Father!" you cried, astonished, for it was not Sunday, and though you
-ran to him he did not hear you till you pounced upon him in his chair.
-
-"Oh, Father," you said, joyfully, "are you going to stay home and play
-with us all day?"
-
-"_Fa_-ther!" cried Lizbeth. "Will you play house with us?"
-
-"Oh no, Father. Play _store_ with us," you cried.
-
-"Don't bother Father," Mother said, but Father just held you both in his
-arms and would not let you go.
-
-"No--let them stay," he said, and Mother slipped away.
-
-"Mother's got an awful cold," said Lizbeth. "Her eyes--"
-
-"So has Father; only Father's cold is in his voice," you said.
-
-You scarcely waited to eat your breakfast before you were back again to
-Father by the fire, telling him of the beautiful games just three could
-play. But while you were telling him the door-bell rang, and there were
-two men with books under their arms, come to see Father. They stayed
-with him all day long--you could hear them muttering in the library--and
-all day you looked wistfully at the closed door, lingering there lest
-Father should come out to play and find you gone.
-
-He did not come out till dinner-time. After dinner he walked in the
-garden alone. He held a cigar in his clinched teeth.
-
-"Why don't you smoke the cigar, Father?"
-
-He did not hear you. He just walked up and down, up and down, with his
-eyes on the ground and his hands thrust hard into the pockets of his
-coat.
-
-Mother watched him for a moment through the window. Then with her own
-hands she built a fire in the grate, for the night was chill. Before it
-she drew an easy-chair, and put Father's smoking-jacket on the back of
-it and set his slippers to warm against the fender. On a reading-table
-near by she laid the little blue china ash-tray you had given Father for
-Christmas, and beside it a box of matches ready for his hand. Then she
-called him in.
-
-He came and sat there before the fire, saying nothing, but looking into
-the flames--looking, looking, till your mind ran back to a Sunday
-afternoon in summer by the river-side.
-
-"I know what you are thinking, Father."
-
-Slowly he turned his head to you, so that you knew he was listening
-though he did not speak.
-
-"You're thinking how nice it would be, Father, if you were a little boy
-like me."
-
-He made no answer. Mother came and sat on one of the arms of his chair,
-her cheek against his hair. Lizbeth undressed her dolls for the night,
-crooning a lullaby. One by one you dropped your marbles into their
-little box. Then you rose and sat like Mother on an arm of Father's
-chair. For a while you dreamed there, drowsy, in the glow.
-
-"Mother," you said, softly.
-
-[Illustration: "'MOTHER, YOU SAID, SOFTLY'"]
-
-"Yes," she whispered back to you.
-
-"Mother, isn't it _fine_?" you said.
-
-"Fine, dearie?"
-
-"Yes, Mother, everything ... 'specially--"
-
-"Yes, sweetheart?"
-
-"--'specially just having Father."
-
-Father gave a little jump; seized you; crushed you in his arms, stars
-shining in his brimming eyes.
-
-"Little chap--little chap," he cried, but could get no further, till
-by-and-by--
-
-"Mother," he said--and his voice was clear and strong--"Mother, with a
-little chap like that and two girls like you and Lizbeth--"
-
-His voice caught, but he shook it free again.
-
-"--_any_ man could begin--all over again--and _win_," he said.
-
-
-
-
- *Mother*
-
-
-A," you said.
-
-"And what's that?"
-
-"B."
-
-"And that?"
-
-You sat on Mother's lap. The wolf-wind howled at the door, and you
-shuddered, cuddling down in Mother's arms and the glow. The wilder the
-wolf-wind howled, the softer was the lamp-light, the redder were the
-apples on the table, the warmer was the fire.
-
-On your knees lay the picture-book with its sad, sad little tale.
-Mother read it to you--she had read it fifty times before--her face
-grave, her voice low and tragic, while you listened with bated breath:
-
- "Who killed Cock Robin?
- 'I,' said the Sparrow,
- 'With my bow and arrow--
- I killed Cock Robin.'"
-
-
-[Illustration: "THE PICTURE-BOOK"]
-
-It was the first murder you had ever heard about. You saw it all, the
-hideous spectacle--a beautiful, warm, red breast pierced by that fatal
-dart--a poor, soft little birdie, dead, by an assassin's hand. A lump
-rose in your throat. A tear rose in your eye--two tears, three tears.
-They rolled down your cheek. They dropped, hot and sad, on the fish
-with his little dish, on the owl with his spade and trowel, on the rook
-with his little book.
-
-"P-poor Cock R-robin!"
-
-"There, there, dear. Don't cry."
-
-"But, M-mother--the Sparrow--he k-killed him."
-
-Alas, yes! The Sparrow had killed him, for the book said so, but had
-you heard?
-
-"N-no, w-what?"
-
-The book, it seems, like other books, had told but half the story.
-Mother knew the other half. Cock Robin was murdered, murdered in cold
-blood, it was true, but--O merciful, death-winged arrow!--he had gone
-where the good birds go. And there--O joy!--he had met his robin wife
-and his little robin boy, who had gone before.
-
-"And I expect they are all there now, dear," she told you, kissing your
-tear-stained cheek, "the happiest robins that ever were."
-
-Dry and wide were your eyes. In the place where the good birds go, you
-saw Cock Robin. His eyes and his fat, red breast were bright again. He
-chirped. He sang. He hopped from bough to bough, with his robin wife
-and his little robin boy. For in the mending of little stories or the
-mending of little hearts, like the mending of little stockings, Mother
-was wonderful.
-
-In those times there were knees to your stockings, knees with holes in
-them at the end of the day, with the soiled skin showing through.
-
-"Just look!" Mother would cry. "Just look there! And I'd only just
-mended them."
-
-"Well, you see, Mother, when you play Black Bear--"
-
-"I see," she said, and before you went to bed you would be sitting on
-the edge of a tub, paddling your feet in the water.
-
-[Illustration: "BEFORE YOU WENT TO BED"]
-
-"You dirty boy," she would be saying, scrubbing at the scratched, black
-knees; but when you were shining again she would be saying--
-
-"You darling!"
-
-And though your stockings were whole in the clean of morning when you
-scampered out into the sun, in the dirt of night when you scampered back
-again--O skein, where is thy yarn? O darning-needle, where is thy
-victory?
-
-Summer mornings, in the arbor-seat of the garden, Mother would be
-sewing, her lap brimming, her work-basket at her feet, the sun falling
-golden through the trellised green. In the nap of the afternoon, when
-even the birds drowsed and the winds slept, she would be sewing, ever
-sewing. And when night fell and the dishes were put away, she would be
-sewing still, in the lamp-light's yellow glow.
-
-"Mother, why do you sew and sew?"
-
-"To make my little boy blue sailor suits and my little girl white
-frocks, and to stop the holes."
-
-"Do you like to sew, Mother?"
-
-"I don't mind it."
-
-"But doesn't it make you tired, Mother?"
-
-"Oh, now and then."
-
-"But I should think you'd rest sometimes, Mother."
-
-"Should you, dear?"
-
-"Yes, I would. Oh, I'd sew a _little_--just enough--and then I'd play."
-
-"But Mother does sew _just enough_, and it takes all day, my dear. What
-do you say to that?"
-
-You pondered.
-
-"Well," you said, and stopped.
-
-"Well?" she said, and laughed. Then you laughed, too.
-
-"A mother," you told them afterwards, "is a person what takes care of
-you, and loves you, and sews and sews--just enough--all day."
-
-Since mothers take care of little boys, they told you, little boys
-should take care of their mothers, too. So right in front of her you
-stood, bravely, your fists clinched, your lips trembling, your eyes
-flashing with rage and tears.
-
-"You sha'n't touch my mother!"
-
-But Mother's arms stole swiftly around you, pinning your own to your
-side.
-
-"Father was only fooling, dear," she said, kneeling behind you and
-folding you to her breast. "See, he's laughing at us."
-
-"Why, little chap," he said, "Father was only playing."
-
-Mother wiped away your tears, smiling at them, but proudly. You looked
-doubtfully at Father, who held out his arms to you; then slowly you went
-to him, urged by Mother's hand.
-
-"You must always take care of Mother like that," he said, "and never let
-any one hurt her, or bother her, when Father's away."
-
-"Mother's little knight," she said, kissing your brow. And ever
-afterwards she was safe when you were near.
-
-"Oh, that Mrs. Waddles. I wish she wouldn't bother me."
-
-Under her breath Mother said it, but you heard, and you hated Mrs.
-Waddles with all your soul, and her day of reckoning came. Mother was
-in the garden and did not hear. You answered the knock yourself.
-
-"Little darling, how--"
-
-"You can't see my mother to-day," you said, stiffly.
-
-"That's very strange," said Mrs. Waddles, with a forward step.
-
-"No," you said, a little louder, throwing yourself into the breach and
-holding the door-knob with all your might. "No! You mustn't come in!"
-
-"You impertinent little child!" cried Mrs. Waddles, threateningly, but
-you faced her down, raising your voice again:
-
-"You can't see my mother any more," you repeated, firmly.
-
-"And why not, I'd like to know?" demanded the old lady, swelling
-visibly. "Why not, I'd like to know?"
-
-"'Cause I'm to take care of my mother when my father's away, and he said
-not to let anybody bother her that she don't want to see."
-
-It was a long explanation and took all your breath.
-
-"Oh, is _that_ it?" cackled Mrs. Waddles, with withering scorn. "And
-how do you _know_ that your mother doesn't want to see me--_hey_?"
-
-"'Cause--she--said--so!"
-
-You separated your words like the ABC book, that Mrs. Waddles might
-understand. It was a master-stroke. Gasping, her face on fire,
-gathering her skirts together with hands that trembled in their black
-silk mitts, Mrs. Waddles turned and swept away.
-
-"I never!" she managed to utter as she slammed the gate.
-
-You shut the door softly, the battle won, and went back to the garden.
-
-"Well, _that's_ over," you said, with a sigh, as Mother herself would
-have said it.
-
-"What's over, dear?"
-
-"Mrs. Waddles," you replied.
-
-So you took care of Mother so well that she loved you more and more as
-the days of your knighthood passed; and she took care of you so well
-that your cheeks grew rosier and your eyes brighter and your legs
-stronger, and you loved her more and more with the days of her
-motherhood.
-
-Even being sick was fine in those days, for she brought you little
-things in bowls with big spoons in them, and you ate till you wanted
-more--a sign that you would not die. And so you lay in the soft of the
-pillows, with the patchwork coverlet that Mother made with her own
-hands. There was the white silk triangle from her wedding-gown, and a
-blue one from a sash that was her Sunday best, long ago, when she was a
-little girl. There was a soft-gray piece from a dress of Grandmother's,
-and a bright-pink one that was once Lizbeth's, and a striped one, blue
-and yellow, that was once Father's necktie in the gay plumage of his
-youth.
-
-As you lay there, sick and drowsy, the bridal triangle turned to snow,
-cold and white and pure, and you heard sleighbells and saw the Christmas
-cards with the little church in the corner, its steeple icy, but its
-windows warm and red with the Christmas glow. That was the white
-triangle. But the blue one, next, was sky, and when you saw it you
-thought of birds and stars and May; and if it so happened that your eyes
-turned to the gray piece that was Grandmother's, and the sky that was
-blue darkened and the rain fell, you had only to look at the pink piece
-that was Lizbeth's, or the blue and yellow that was Father's, to find
-the flowers and the sun again. Then the colors blended. Dandelions
-jingled, sleigh-bells and violets blossomed in the snow, and you
-slept--the sleep that makes little boys well.
-
-The bees and the wind were humming in the cherry-trees, for it was May.
-You were all alone, you and Mother, in the garden, where the white
-petals were falling, silently, like snow-flakes, and the birds were
-singing in the morning glow.
-
-Your feet scampered down the paths. Your curls bobbed among the budding
-shrubs and vines. You leaped. You laughed. You sang. In your wide
-eyes blue of the great sky, green of the grasses. On your flushed cheeks
-sunshine and breeze. In your beating heart childhood and spring--a
-childhood too big, a spring too wonderful, for the smallness of one
-little, brimming boy.
-
-"Look, Mother! See me jump."
-
-"My!" she said.
-
-"And see me almost stand on my head."
-
-"Wonderful!"
-
-"I know what I'll be when I grow to be a man, Mother."
-
-"What will you be?"
-
-"A circus-rider."
-
-"Gracious!" said she.
-
-"On a big, white horse, Mother."
-
-"Dear me!"
-
-"And we'll jump 'way over the moon, Mother."
-
-"The moon?"
-
-"Yes, the moon. See!"
-
-Then you jumped over the rake-handle. You were practising for the moon,
-you said.
-
-"But maybe I _won't_ be a circus-rider, Mother, after all."
-
-"Maybe not," said she.
-
-"Maybe I'll be President, like George Washington. Father said I could.
-Could I, Mother?"
-
-"Yes--you might--some day."
-
-"But the Jones boy couldn't, Mother."
-
-"Why couldn't the Jones boy?"
-
-"Because he swears and tells lies. _I_ don't. And George Washington
-didn't, Mother. I guess I won't be a circus-rider, after all."
-
-"Oh, I'm glad of that, dear."
-
-"No, I guess I'll keep right on, Mother--as long as I've started--and
-just be President."
-
-"Oh, that will be fine," said she. She was sewing in the arbor, her lap
-filled with linen, her work-basket at her feet.
-
-"Mother."
-
-"Yes."
-
-"I think I'd like to sing a song now."
-
-Straight and proper you stood in the little path, your heels together,
-your hands at your side, and so you sang to her the song of the little
-duck:
-
- "'Quack, quack,' said the Duck,
- 'Quack, quack.'
- 'Quack, quack,' said--"
-
-
-You stopped.
-
-"Try it a little lower, dear."
-
- "'Quack, quack,' said--"
-
-
-"No, that's _too_ low," you said. You tried again and started right
-that time and sang it through, the song of the little duck who
-
- "'... wouldn't be a girl,
- With only a curl,
- I wouldn't be a girl, would you?'"
-
-
-"Oh, it's beautiful," Mother said.
-
-"Now it's your turn, Mother, to tell a story."
-
-"A story?"
-
-"Yes. About the violets."
-
-"The violets?" she said, poising her needle, musingly. "The blue, blue
-violets--"
-
-"As blue as the sky, Mother," you said, softly, for it is always in the
-hush of the garden that the stories grow.
-
-"As blue as the sky," she said. "Ah, yes. Well, once there wasn't a
-violet in the whole world."
-
-"Nor a single star," you said, awesomely, helping her. And as you sat
-there listening the world grew wider and wider--for when you are a
-little boy the world is always just as wide as your eyes.
-
-"Not a violet or a single star in the whole world," Mother went on.
-"And what do you think? They just took little bits of the blue sky and
-sprinkled them all over the green world, and they were the first
-violets."
-
-"And the stars, Mother?"
-
-"Why, don't you see? The stars are the little holes they left in the
-blue sky, with the light of heaven shining through."
-
-"Oh!" you said, softly. "Oh, Mother!"
-
-And then, in the hush of the garden, you looked at her, and lo! her eyes
-were blue like the violets, and bright like the stars, for the light of
-heaven was shining through.
-
-She was the most wonderful person in the whole world--who never did
-anything wrong, who knew everything, even who God was, watching, night
-and day, over little boys. Even the hairs of your head were numbered,
-she told you, and not a little bird died but He knew.
-
-"And did He know when Cock Robin died, Mother?"
-
-"Yes. He knew."
-
-"And when I hurt my finger, Mother? Did He know then?"
-
-"Yes, He knows everything."
-
-"And was He sorry, Mother, when I hurt my finger?"
-
-"Very sorry, dear."
-
-"Then why did He _let_ me hurt my finger--why?"
-
-For a moment she did not speak.
-
-"Dearie," she said at last, "I don't know. There are many things that
-nobody knows but God."
-
-Hushed and wondering you sat in Mother's lap, for His eye was upon you.
-Somewhere up in the sky, above the clouds, you knew He was sitting, on a
-great, bright throne, with a gold crown upon His head and a sceptre in
-His hand--King of Kings and Lord of All. Down below Him on the green
-earth little birds were falling, little boys were hurting their fingers
-and crying in their Mothers' arms, and He saw them all, every one,
-little birds and little boys, but did not help them. You crept closer to
-Mother's bosom, flinging your arms about her neck.
-
-"Don't let Him get me, Mother!"
-
-"Why, darling, He loves you."
-
-"Oh no, Mother--not like you do; not like you."
-
-The bees and the wind were in the apple trees, for it was May. You were
-all alone, you and Mother, in the garden, where the white petals were
-falling, like snowflakes, silently. In the swing Grandfather built for
-you, you sat swaying, to and fro, in the shadows; and the shadows
-swayed, to and fro, in the gale; and to and fro your thoughts swayed in
-your dreaming.
-
-The wind sang in the apple-boughs, the flowering branches filled and
-bent, and all about you were the tossing, shimmering grasses, and all
-above you birds singing and flitting in the sky. And so you swayed, to
-and fro, till you were a sailor, in a blue suit, sailing the blue sea.
-
-The wind sang in the rigging. The white sails filled and bent. Your
-ship scudded through the tossing, shimmering foam. Gulls screamed and
-circled in the sky, ... and so you sailed and sailed with the sea-breeze
-in your curls...
-
-The ship anchored.
-
-The swing stopped.
-
-You were only a little boy.
-
-"Mother," you said, softly, for your voice was drowsy with your dream.
-
-She did not hear you. She sat there in the arbor-seat, smiling at you,
-her hands idle, her sewing slipping from her knees. You did not know it
-then, but you do now--that to see the most beautiful woman in the whole
-world you must be her little boy.
-
-There in her garden, in her lap, with her arms around you and her cheeks
-between your hands, you gazed, wondering, into the blue fondness of her
-eyes. You saw her lips, forever smiling at you, forever seeking your
-own. You heard her voice, sweet with love-words--
-
-"My dearest."
-
-"Yes."
-
-"My darling."
-
-"Yes."
-
-"My own dear little boy."
-
-And then her arms crushing you to her breast; and then her lips; and
-then her voice again--
-
-"Once in this very garden, in this very seat, Mother sat dreaming of
-you."
-
-"Of me, Mother?"
-
-"Of you. Here in the garden, with that very bush there red with
-blossoms, and the birds singing in these very trees. She dreamed that
-you were a little baby--a little baby, warm and soft in her arms--and
-while the wind sang to the flowers Mother sang you a lullaby, and you
-stretched out your hands to her and smiled; and then--ah, darling!"
-
-"But it was a _dream_, Mother."
-
-"It was only a dream--yes--but it came true. It came true on a night in
-June--the First of June, it was--"
-
-"_My_ birthday, Mother!"
-
-"Your birthday, dear."
-
-"Oh, Mother," you said, breathlessly--"what a beautiful dream!"
-
-
-
-
- THE END
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- *A FEW OF
- GROSSET & DUNLAP'S
- Great Books at Little Prices*
-
- NEW, CLEVER, ENTERTAINING.
-
-
-GRET: The Story of a Pagan. By Beatrice Mantle. Illustrated by C. M.
-Relyea.
-
-The wild free life of an Oregon lumber camp furnishes the setting for
-this strong original story. Gret is the daughter of the camp and is
-utterly content with the wild life--until love comes. A fine book,
-unmarred by convention.
-
-
-OLD CHESTER TALES. By Margaret Deland. Illustrated by Howard Pyle.
-
-A vivid yet delicate portrayal of characters in an old New England town.
-
-Dr. Lavendar's fine, kindly wisdom is brought to bear upon the lives of
-all, permeating the whole volume like the pungent odor of pine,
-healthful and life giving. "Old Chester Tales" will surely be among the
-books that abide.
-
-
-THE MEMOIRS OF A BABY. By Josephine Daskam. Illustrated by F. Y. Cory.
-
-The dawning intelligence of the baby was grappled with by its great
-aunt, an elderly maiden, whose book knowledge of babies was something at
-which even the infant himself winked. A delicious bit of humor.
-
-
-REBECCA MARY. By Annie Hamilton Donnell. Illustrated by Elizabeth
-Shippen Green.
-
-The heart tragedies of this little girl with no one near to share them,
-are told with a delicate art, a keen appreciation of the needs of the
-childish heart and a humorous knowledge of the workings of the childish
-mind.
-
-
-THE FLY ON THE WHEEL. By Katherine Cecil Thurston. Frontispiece by
-Harrison Fisher.
-
-An Irish story of real power, perfect in development and showing a true
-conception of the spirited Hibernian character as displayed in the
-tragic as well as the tender phases of life.
-
-
-THE MAN FROM BRODNEY'S. By George Barr McCutcheon. Illustrated by
-Harrison Fisher.
-
-An island in the South Sea is the setting for this entertaining tale,
-and an all-conquering hero and a beautiful princess figure in a most
-complicated plot. One of Mr. McCutcheon's best books.
-
-
-TOLD BY UNCLE REMUS. By Joel Chandler Harris. Illustrated by A. B.
-Frost, J. M. Conde and Frank Verbeck.
-
-Again Uncle Remus enters the fields of childhood, and leads another
-little boy to that non-locatable land called "Brer Rabbit's Laughing
-Place," and again the quaint animals spring into active life and play
-their parts, for the edification of a small but appreciative audience.
-
-
-THE CLIMBER. By E. F. Benson. With frontispiece.
-
-An unsparing analysis of an ambitious woman's soul--a woman who believed
-that in social supremacy she would find happiness, and who finds instead
-the utter despair of one who has chosen the things that pass away.
-
-
-LYNCH'S DAUGHTER. By Leonard Merrick. Illustrated by Geo. Brehm.
-
-A story of to-day, telling how a rich girl acquires ideals of beautiful
-and simple living, and of men and love, quite apart from the teachings
-of her father, "Old Man Lynch" of Wall St. True to life, clever in
-treatment.
-
-
-
- *GROSSET & DUNLAP'S
- DRAMATIZED NOVELS*
-
- A Few that are Making Theatrical History
-
-
-MARY JANE'S PA. By Norman Way. Illustrated with scenes from the play.
-
-Delightful, irresponsible "Mary Jane's Pa" awakes one morning to find
-himself famous, and, genius being ill adapted to domestic joys, he
-wanders from home to work out his own unique destiny. One of the most
-humorous bits of recent fiction.
-
-
-CHERUB DEVINE. By Sewell Ford.
-
-"Cherub," a good hearted but not over refined young man is brought in
-touch with the aristocracy. Of sprightly wit, he is sometimes a
-merciless analyst, but he proves in the end that manhood counts for more
-than ancient lineage by winning the love of the fairest girl in the
-flock.
-
-
-A WOMAN'S WAY. By Charles Somerville. Illustrated with scenes from the
-play.
-
-A story in which a woman's wit and self-sacrificing love save her
-husband from the toils of an adventuress, and change an apparently
-tragic situation into one of delicious comedy.
-
-
-THE CLIMAX. By George C. Jenks.
-
-With ambition luring her on, a young choir soprano leaves the little
-village where she was born and the limited audience of St. Jude's to
-train for the opera in New York. She leaves love behind her and meets
-love more ardent but not more sincere in her new environment. How she
-works, how she studies, how she suffers, are vividly portrayed.
-
-
-A FOOL THERE WAS. By Porter Emerson Browne. Illustrated by Edmund
-Magrath and W. W. Fawcett.
-
-A relentless portrayal of the career of a man who comes under the
-influence of a beautiful but evil woman; how she lures him on and on,
-how he struggles, falls and rises, only to fall again into her net, make
-a story of unflinching realism.
-
-
-THE SQUAW MAN. By Julie Opp Faversham and Edwin Milton Royle.
-Illustrated with scenes from the play.
-
-A glowing story, rapid in action, bright in dialogue with a fine
-courageous hero and a beautiful English heroine.
-
-
-THE GIRL IN WAITING. By Archibald Eyre. Illustrated with scenes from
-the play.
-
-A droll little comedy of misunderstandings, told with a light touch, a
-venturesome spirit and an eye for human oddities.
-
-
-THE SCARLET PIMPERNEL. By Baroness Orczy. Illustrated with scenes from
-the play.
-
-A realistic story of the days of the French Revolution, abounding in
-dramatic incident, with a young English soldier of fortune, daring,
-mysterious as the hero.
-
-
-
- *TITLES SELECTED FROM
- GROSSET & DUNLAP'S LIST*
-
- REALISTIC, ENGAGING PICTURES OF LIFE
-
-
-THE GARDEN OF FATE. By Roy Norton. Illustrated by Joseph Clement Coll.
-
-The colorful romance of an American girl in Morocco, and of a beautiful
-garden, whose beauty and traditions of strange subtle happenings were
-closed to the world by a Sultan's seal.
-
-
-THE MAN HIGHER UP. By Henry Russell Miller. Full page vignette
-illustrations by M. Leone Bracker.
-
-The story of a tenement waif who rose by his own ingenuity to the office
-of mayor of his native city. His experiences while "climbing," make a
-most interesting example of the possibilities of human nature to rise
-above circumstances.
-
-
-THE KEY TO YESTERDAY. By Charles Neville Buck. Illustrated by R.
-Schabelitz.
-
-Robert Saxon, a prominent artist, has an accident, while in Paris, which
-obliterates his memory, and the only clue he has to his former life is a
-rusty key. What door in Paris will it unlock? He must know that before
-he woos the girl he loves.
-
-
-THE DANGER TRAIL. By James Oliver Curwood. Illustrated by Charles
-Livingston Bull.
-
-The danger trail is over the snow-smothered North. A young Chicago
-engineer, who is building a road through the Hudson Bay region, is
-involved in mystery, and is led into ambush by a young woman.
-
-
-THE GAY LORD WARING. By Houghton Townley. Illustrated by Will Grefe.
-
-A story of the smart hunting set in England. A gay young lord wins in
-love against his selfish and cowardly brother and apparently against
-fate itself.
-
-
-BY INHERITANCE. By Octave Thanet. Illustrated by Thomas Fogarty.
-Elaborate wrapper in colors.
-
-A wealthy New England spinster with the most elaborate plans for the
-education of the negro goes to visit her nephew in Arkansas, where she
-learns the needs of the colored race first hand and begins to lose her
-theories.
-
-
- *KATE DOUGLAS WIGGINS
- STORIES OF PURE DELIGHT*
-
- Full of originality and humor, kindliness and cheer
-
-
-THE OLD PEABODY PEW. Large Octavo. Decorative text pages, printed in
-two colors. Illustrations by Alice Barber Stephens.
-
-One of the prettiest romances that has ever come from this author's pen
-is made to bloom on Christmas Eve in the sweet freshness of an old New
-England meeting house.
-
-
-PENELOPE'S PROGRESS. Attractive cover design in colors.
-
-Scotland is the background for the merry doings of three very clever and
-original American girls. Their adventures in adjusting themselves to
-the Scot and his land are full of humor.
-
-
-PENELOPE'S IRISH EXPERIENCES. Uniform in style with "Penelope's
-Progress."
-
-The trio of clever girls who rambled over Scotland cross the border to
-the Emerald Isle, and again they sharpen their wits against new
-conditions, and revel in the land of laughter and wit.
-
-
-REBECCA OF SUNNYBROOK FARM.
-
-One of the most beautiful studies of childhood--Rebecca's artistic,
-unusual and quaintly charming qualities stand cut midst a circle of
-austere New Englanders. The stage version is making a phenomenal
-dramatic record.
-
-
-NEW CHRONICLES OF REBECCA. With illustrations by F. C. Yohn.
-
-Some more quaintly amusing chronicles that carry Rebecca through various
-stages to her eighteenth birthday.
-
-
-ROSE O' THE RIVER. With illustrations by George Wright.
-
-The simple story of Rose, a country girl and Stephen a sturdy young
-farmer. The girl's fancy for a city man interrupts their love and
-merges the story into an emotional strain where the reader follows the
-events with rapt attention.
-
-
-
- GROSSET & DUNLAP, 526 WEST 26th ST., NEW YORK
-
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