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authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-14 18:38:04 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-14 18:38:04 -0700
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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44257 ***
+
+CAPE BRETON TALES
+
+
+[Illustration: THE INNER HARBOR]
+
+
+
+
+CAPE BRETON TALES
+
+BY
+
+HARRY JAMES SMITH
+
+AUTHOR OF
+
+_Amédée's Son, Enchanted Ground, Mrs. Bumpstead Leigh,
+Tailor Made Man, etc._
+
+WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY
+
+OLIVER M. WIARD
+
+[Illustration]
+
+_The_ ATLANTIC MONTHLY PRESS
+
+BOSTON
+Copyright 1920
+
+_Printed in the United States of America_
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ ON THE FRENCH SHORE OF CAPE BRETON (1908) 1
+
+ LA ROSE WITNESSETH (1908) 17
+
+ OF THE BUCHERONS 19
+
+ OF LA BELLE MÉLANIE 32
+
+ OF SIMÉON'S SON 44
+
+ AT A BRETON CALVAIRE (1903) 57
+
+ THE PRIVILEGE (1910) 61
+
+ THEIR TRUE LOVE (1910) 77
+
+ GARLANDS FOR PETTIPAW (1915) 99
+
+ FLY, MY HEART (1915) 119
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+By OLIVER M. WIARD
+
+
+ THE INNER HARBOR _Frontispiece_
+
+ ARICHAT 17
+
+ A CALVAIRE 56
+
+ FOUGÈRE'S COVE 76
+
+ A FISHERMAN'S HOUSE 118
+
+
+_"On the French Shore of Cape Breton" and "The Privilege" were first
+published in The Atlantic Monthly, while "La Rose Witnesseth of La Belle
+Mélanie" is reprinted from "Amédée's Son" (Chapters VIII and IX) with
+the kind permission of the publishers, Houghton Mifflin Company._
+
+_"At a Breton Calvaire" was first published in The Williams Literary
+Monthly during undergraduate days, and was rewritten several times
+during the next few years. The final form is the one used here, except
+for the last stanza, which is a combination of the two versions now
+extant._
+
+_The illustrations are from sketches made during Oliver Wiard's visits
+in Arichat. It is an especial pleasure to include them, not only
+because of their fidelity and beauty, but also because of my brother's
+enthusiastic interest and delight in them._
+
+EDITH SMITH.
+
+
+
+
+ON THE FRENCH SHORE OF CAPE BRETON
+
+
+
+
+ON THE FRENCH SHORE OF CAPE BRETON
+
+
+Summer comes late along the Cape Breton shore; and even while it stays
+there is something a little diffident and ticklish about it, as if each
+clear warm day might perhaps be the last. Though by early June the
+fields are in their first emerald, there are no flowers yet. The little
+convent girls who carry the banners at the head of the Corpus Christi
+procession at Arichat wear wreaths of artificial lilies of the valley
+and marguerites over their white veils, and often enough their teeth
+chatter with cold before the completion of the long march--out from the
+church portals westward by the populous street, then up through the
+steep open fields to the old Calvary on top of the hill, then back to
+the church along the grass-grown upper road, far above the roofs, in
+full view of the wide bay.
+
+Despite some discomforts, the procession is a very great event; every
+house along the route is decked out with bunting or flags or a bright
+home-made carpet, hung from a window. Pots of tall geraniums in scarlet
+bloom have been set out on the steps; and numbers of little evergreen
+trees, or birches newly in leaf, have been brought in from the country
+and bound to the fences. Along the roadside are gathered all the
+Acadians from the neighboring parishes, devoutly gay, enchanted with
+the pious spectacle. The choir, following after the richly canopied
+Sacrament and swinging censers, are chanting psalms of benediction and
+thanksgiving; banners and flags and veils flutter in the wind; the
+harbor, ice-bound so many months, is flecked with dancing white-caps and
+purple shadows: surely summer cannot be far off.
+
+"When once the ice has done passing _down there_," they say--"which may
+happen any time now--you will see! Perhaps all in a day the change will
+come. The fog that creeps in so cold at night--it will all be sucked up;
+the sky will be clear as glass down to the very edge of the water. Ah,
+the fine season it will be!"
+
+That is the way summer arrives on the Acadian shore: everything bursting
+pell-mell into bloom; daisies and buttercups and August flowers rioting
+in the fields, lilacs and roses shedding their fragrance in sheltered
+gardens; and over all the world a drench of unspeakable sunlight.
+
+You could never forget your first sight of Arichat if you entered its
+narrow harbor at this divine moment. Steep, low hills, destitute of
+trees, set a singularly definite sky-line just behind; and the town
+runs--dawdles, rather--in a thin, wavering band for some miles sheer
+on the edge of the water. Eight or ten wharves, some of them fallen
+into dilapidation, jut out at intervals from clumps of weatherbeaten
+storehouses; and a few small vessels, it may be, are lying up alongside
+or anchored idly off shore. Only the occasional sound of a creaking
+block or of a wagon rattling by on the hard roadway breaks the silence.
+
+Along the street the houses elbow one another in neighborly groups,
+or straggle out in single file, separated by bits of declivitous
+white-fenced yard; and to the westward, a little distance up the hill,
+sits the square church, far outvying every other edifice in size and
+dignity, glistening white, with a tall bronze Virgin on the peak of the
+roof--Our Lady of the Assumption, the special patron of the Acadians.
+
+But what impresses you above all is the incredible vividness of color
+in this landscape: the dazzling gold-green of the fields, heightened
+here and there by luminous patches of foam-white where the daisies are
+in full carnival, or subdued to duller tones where, on uncultivated
+ground, moss-hummocks and patches of rock break through the investiture
+of grass. The sky has so much room here too: the whole world seems to be
+adrift in azure; the thin strip of land hangs poised between, claimed
+equally by firmament and the waters under it.
+
+In the old days, they tell us, Arichat was a very different place from
+now. Famous among the seaports of the Dominion, it saw a continual
+coming and going of brigs and ships and barquentines in the South
+American fish trade.
+
+"But if you had known it then!" they say. "The wharves were as thick all
+the length of the harbor as the teeth of a comb; and in winter, when the
+vessels were laid up--eh, mon Dieu! you would have called it a forest,
+for all the masts and spars you saw there. No indeed, it was not dreamed
+of in those days that Arichat would ever come to this!"
+
+So passes the world's glory! An air of tender, almost jealous
+reminiscence hangs about the town; and in its gentle decline into
+obscurity it has kept a sort of dignity, a self-possession, a certain
+look of wisdom and experience, which in a sense make it proof against
+all arrows of outrageous Fortune.
+
+Back from the other shore of the harbor, jutting out for some miles
+into Chedabucto Bay, lies the Cape. You get a view of it if you climb
+to the crest of the hill--a broad reach of barrens, fretted all day
+by the sea. Out there it is what the Acadians call a bad country.
+About the sluice-like coves that have been eaten into its rocky shore
+are scrambling groups of fishermen's houses; but aside from these
+and the lighthouse on the spit of rocks to southward, the region is
+uninhabited--a waste of rock and swamp-alder and scrub-balsam, across
+which a single thread of a road takes its circuitous way, dipping over
+steep low hills, turning out for gnarls of rock and patches of gleaming
+marsh, losing itself amid dense thickets of alder, then emerging upon
+some bare hilltop, where the whole measureless sweep of sea and sky
+fills the vision.
+
+When the dusk begins to fall of an autumn afternoon--between dog and
+wolf, as the saying goes--you could almost believe in the strange
+noises--the rumblings, clankings, shrill voices--that are to be heard
+above the dull roar of the sea by belated passers on the barrens. Some
+people have seen death-fires too, and a headless creature, much like a
+horse, galloping through the darkness; and over there at Fougère's Cove,
+the most remote settlement of the Cape, there were knockings at doors
+through all one winter from hands not human. The Fougères--they were
+mostly of one tribe there--were driven to desperation; they consulted a
+priest; they protected themselves with blessed images, with prayers and
+holy water; and no harm came to them, though poor Marcelle, who was a
+_jeune fille_ of marriageable age, was prostrated for a year with the
+fright of it.
+
+This barren territory, where nothing grows above the height of a man's
+shoulder, still goes by the name of "the woods"--_les bois_--among the
+Acadians. "Once the forest was magnificent here," they tell you--"trees
+as tall as the church tower; but the great fire swept it all away; and
+never has there been a good growth since. For one thing, you see, we
+must get our firewood from it somehow."
+
+This fact accounts for a curious look in the ubiquitous stubby
+evergreens: their lower branches spread flat and wide close on the
+ground,--that is where the snow in winter protects them,--and above
+reaches a thin, spire-like stem, trimmed close, except for new growth at
+the top, of all its branches. It gives suggestion of a harsh, misshapen,
+all but defeated existence; the adverse forces are so tyrannical out
+here on the Cape, the material of life so sparse.
+
+I remember once meeting a little funeral train crossing the barrens.
+They were bearing the body of a young girl, Anna Béjean, to its last
+rest, five miles away by the road, in the yard of the parish church
+amongst the wooden crosses. The long box of pine lay on the bottom of
+a country wagon, and a wreath of artificial flowers and another of
+home-dyed immortelles were fastened to the cover. A young fisherman,
+sunburned and muscular, was leading the horse along the rough road, and
+behind followed three or four carts, carrying persons in black, all of
+middle age or beyond, and silent.
+
+Yet in the full tide of summer the barrens have a beauty in which
+this characteristic melancholy is only a persistent undertone. Then
+the marshes flush rose-pink with lovely multitudes of calopogons that
+cluster like poising butterflies amongst the dark grasses; here too
+the canary-yellow bladderwort flecks the black pools, and the red,
+leathery pitcher-plant springs in sturdy clumps from the moss-hummocks.
+And the wealth of color over all the country!--gray rock touched into
+life with sky-reflections; rusty green of alder thickets, glistening
+silver-green of balsam and juniper; and to the sky-line, wherever it
+can keep its hold, the thin, variegated carpet of close-cropped grass,
+where creeping berries of many kinds grow in profusion. Flocks of sheep
+scamper untended over the barrens all day, and groups of horses, turned
+out to shift for themselves while the fishing season keeps their owners
+occupied, look for a moment, nose in the air, at the passer, kick up
+their heels, and race off.
+
+As you turn back again toward Arichat you catch a glimpse of its
+glistening white church, miles distant in reality, but looking curiously
+near, across a landscape where none of the familiar standards of
+measure exist. You lose it on the next decline; then it flashes in
+sight again, and the blue, sun-burnished expanse of water between. It
+occurs to you that the whole life of the country finds its focus
+there: christenings and first communions, marriages and burials--how
+wonderfully the church holds them all in her keeping; how she sends
+out her comfort and her exhortation, her reproach and her eternal hope
+across even this bad country, where the circumstances of human life are
+so ungracious.
+
+But it is on a Sunday morning, when, in response to the quavering
+summons of the chapel bell, the whole countryside gives up its
+population, that you get the clearest notion of what religion means
+in the life of the Acadians. From the doorway of our house, which was
+close to the road at the upper end of the harbor, we could see the whole
+church-going procession from the outlying districts. The passing would
+be almost unbroken from eight o'clock on for more than an hour and a
+half: a varied, vivacious, friendly human stream. They came in hundreds
+from the scattered villages and hamlets of the parish--from Petit de
+Grat and Little Anse and Pig Cove and Gros Nez and Point Rouge and Cap
+au Guet, eight or nine miles often enough.
+
+First, those who went afoot and must allow plenty of time on account
+of age: bent old fishermen, whose yellowed and shiny coats had been
+made for more robust shoulders; old women, invariably in short black
+capes, and black bonnets tied tight under the chin, and in their hands
+a rosary and perhaps a thumb-worn missal. Then troops of children, much
+_endimanché_,--one would like to say "Sundayfied,"--trotting along
+noisily, stopping to examine every object of interest by the way,
+extracting all the excitement possible out of the weekly pilgrimage.
+
+A little later the procession became more general: young and old and
+middle-aged together. In Sunday boots that creaked loudly passed numbers
+of men and boys, sometimes five or six abreast, reaching from side
+to side of the street, sometimes singly attendant upon a conscious
+young person of the other sex. The wagons are beginning to appear now,
+scattering the pedestrians right and left as they rattle by, bearing
+whole families packed in little space; and away across the harbor, you
+see a small fleet of brown sails putting off from the Cape for the
+nearer shore.
+
+Outside the church, in the open space before the steps, is gathered a
+constantly growing multitude, a dense, restless swarm of humanity, full
+of gossip and prognostic, until suddenly the bell stops its clangor
+overhead; then there is a surging up the steps and through the wide
+doors of the sanctuary; and outside all is quiet once more.
+
+The Acadians do not appear greatly to relish the more solemn things of
+religion. They like better a religion demurely gay, pervaded by light
+and color.
+
+"Elle est très chic, notre petite église, n'est-ce pas?" was a comment
+made by a pious soul of my acquaintance, eager to uphold the honor of
+her parish.
+
+Proper, mild-featured saints and smiling Virgins in painted robes and
+gilt haloes abound in the Acadian churches; on the altars are lavish
+decorations of artificial flowers--silver lilies, paper roses, red
+and purple immortelles; and the ceilings and pillars and wall-spaces
+are often done in blue and pink, with gold stars; such a style, one
+imagines, as might appeal to our modern St. Valentine. The piety
+that expresses itself in this inoffensive gayety of embellishment is
+more akin to that which moves universal humanity to don its finery
+o' Sundays,--to the greater glory of God,--than to the sombre,
+death-remembering zeal of some other communities. A kind religion
+this, one not without its coquetries, gracious, tactful, irresistible,
+interweaving itself throughout the very texture of the common life.
+
+Last summer, out at Petit de Grat, three miles from Arichat, where
+the people have just built a little church of their own, they held a
+"Grand Picnic and Ball" for the raising of funds with which to erect
+a glebe house. The priest authorized the affair, but stipulated that
+sunset should end each day's festivities, so that all decencies might be
+respected. This parish picnic started on a Monday and continued daily
+for the rest of the week--that is to say, until all that there was to
+sell was sold, and until all the youth of the vicinity had danced their
+legs to exhaustion.
+
+An unoccupied shop was given over to the sale of cakes, tartines,
+doughnuts, imported fruits, syrup drinks (unauthorized beverages being
+obtainable elsewhere), to the vending of chances on wheels of fortune,
+target-shooting, dice-throwing, hooked rugs, shawls, couvertures,
+knitted hoods, and the like; and above all the hubbub and excitement
+twanged the ceaseless, inevitable voice of a graphophone, reviving
+long-forgotten rag-time.
+
+Outside, most conspicuous on the treeless slope of hill, was a
+"pavilion" of boards, bunting-decked, on which, from morn till eve,
+rained the incessant clump-clump of happy feet. For music there was a
+succession of performers and of instruments: a mouth-organ, a fiddle, a
+concertina, each lending its particular quality of gayety to the dance;
+the mouth-organ, shrill, extravagant, whimsical, failing in richness;
+the concertina, rich, noisy, impetuous, failing in fine shades; the
+fiddle, wheedling, provocative, but a little thin. And besides--the
+fiddle is not what it used to be in the hands of old Fortune.
+
+Fortune died a year ago, and he was never appreciated till death
+snatched him from us: the skinniest, most ramshackle of mankind, tall,
+loose-jointed, shuffling in gait; at all other times than those that
+called his art into play, a shiftless, hang-dog sort of personage, who
+would always be begging a coat of you, or asking the gift of ten cents
+to buy him some tobacco. But at a dance he was a despot unchallenged.
+Only to hear him jig off the Irish Washerwoman was to acknowledge
+his preëminence. His bleary eyes and tobacco-stained lips took on a
+radiance, his body rocked to and fro, vibrated to the devil-may-care
+rhythm of the thing, while his left foot emphatically rapped out the
+measure.
+
+Until another genius shall be raised up amongst us, Fortune's name will
+be held in cherished memory. For that matter, it is not likely to die
+out, since, on the day of his death, the old reprobate was married to
+the mother of his seven children--baptized, married, administered, and
+shuffled off in a day.
+
+It had never occurred to any of us, somehow, that Fortune might be as
+transitory and impermanent as his patron goddess herself. We had always
+accepted him as a sort of ageless thing, a living symbol, a peripatetic
+mortal, coming out of Petit de Grat, and going about, tobacco in cheek,
+fiddle under arm, as irresponsible as mirth itself among the sons of
+men. God rest him! Another landmark gone.
+
+And old Maximen Forêt, too, from whom one used to take weather-wisdom
+every day--his bench out there in the sun is empty. Maximen's shop was
+just across the street from our house--a long, darkish, tunnel-like
+place under a steep roof. Tinware of all descriptions hung in dully
+shining array from the ceiling; barrels and a rusty stove and two broad
+low counters occupied most of the floor space, and the atmosphere was
+charged with a curious sharp odor in which you could distinguish oil and
+tobacco and molasses. The floor was all dented full of little holes,
+like a honeycomb, where Maximen had walked over it with his iron-pointed
+crutch; for he was something of a cripple. But you rarely had any
+occasion to enter the smelly little shop, for no one ever bought much of
+anything there nowadays.
+
+Instead, you sat down on the sunny bench beside the old man--Acadian of
+the Acadians--and listened to his tireless, genial babble--now French,
+now English, as the humor struck him.
+
+"It go mak' a leetle weat'er, m'sieu," he would say. "I t'ink you better
+not go fur in the p'tit caneau t'is day. Dere is squall--là-bas--see,
+dark--may be t'unner. Dat is not so unlike, dis mont'. Oh, w'at a hell
+time for de hays!"
+
+For everybody who passed he had a greeting, even for those who had
+hastened his business troubles through never paying their accounts. To
+the last he never lost his faith in their good intentions.
+
+"Dose poor devil fishermen," he would say, "however dey mak' leeve, God
+know. You t'ink I mak' 'em go wid notting? It ain't lak dat wit' me here
+yet, m'sieu. Dey pay some day, when le bon Dieu, he send dem some feesh;
+dat's sure sure."
+
+If it happened that anybody stopped on business, old Maximen would
+hobble to the door and tug violently at a bell-rope.
+
+"Cr-r-r-line! Cr-r-r-line!" he would call.
+
+"Tout d' suite!" answered a shrill voice from some remoter portion of
+the edifice; and a moment later an old woman with straggling white
+hair, toothless gums, and penetrating, humorous eyes, deepset under a
+forehead of infinite wrinkles, would come shuffling up the pebble walk
+from the basement.
+
+"Me voila!" she would ejaculate, panting. "Me ol' man, he always know
+how to git me in a leetle minute, hé?"
+
+On Sundays Caroline and Maximen would drive to chapel in a queer, heavy,
+antiquated road-cart that had been built especially for his use, hung
+almost as low between the axles as a chariot.
+
+"We go mak' our respec' to the bon Dieu," he would laugh, as he took
+the reins in hand and waited for Célestine, the chunky little mare, to
+start--which she did when the mood took her.
+
+The small shop is closed and beginning to fall to pieces. Maximen has
+been making his respects amid other surroundings for some four or five
+years, and Caroline, at the end of a twelvemonth of lonely waiting,
+followed after.
+
+"It seem lak I need t'e ol' man to look out for," she used to say. "All
+t'e day I listen to hear t'at bell again. 'Tout d' suite! I used to
+call, no matter what I do--maybe over the stove or pounding my bread;
+and den, 'Me voila, mon homme!' I would be at t'e shop, ready to help."
+
+I suppose that wherever a man looks in the world, if he but have the
+eyes to see, he finds as much of gayety and pathos, of failure and
+courage, as in any particular section of it; yet so much at least is
+true: that in a little community like this, so removed from the larger,
+more spectacular conflicts of life, so face to face, all the year, with
+the inveterate and domineering forces of nature, one seems to discover a
+more poignant relief in all the homely, familiar, universal episodes of
+the human comedy.
+
+
+[Illustration: ARICHAT]
+
+
+
+
+LA ROSE WITNESSETH
+
+ OF THE BUCHERONS
+ OF LA BELLE MÉLANIE
+ OF SIMÉON'S SON
+
+
+
+
+LA ROSE WITNESSETH
+
+_Of How the Bucherons Were Punished for Their Hard Hearts_
+
+
+It was a boy of ten who listened to La Rose, and while he listened, the
+sun stood still in the sky, there was an enchantment on all the world.
+Whatever La Rose said you had to believe, somehow. Oh, I assure you, no
+one could be more exacting than she in the matter of proofs. For persons
+who would give an ear to any absurd story tattled abroad she had nothing
+but contempt.
+
+"Before you believe a thing," said La Rose, sagely, "you must know
+whether it is true or not. That is the most important part of a story."
+
+She would give a decisive nod to her small head and shut her lips
+together almost defiantly. Yet always, somewhere in the corner of her
+alert gray eye, there seemed to be lurking the ghost of a twinkle. La
+Rose had no age. She was both very young and very old. For all she had
+never traveled more than ten miles from the little Cape Breton town of
+Port l'Évêque, you had the feeling that she had seen a good deal of
+the world, and it is certain that her life had not been easy; yet she
+would laugh as quickly and abundantly as a young girl just home from the
+convent.
+
+These two were the best of comrades. La Rose had been the boy's nurse
+when he was little, and as he had no mother she had kept a feeling
+of special affection and responsibility for him. Thus it happened
+that whenever she was making some little expedition out across the
+harbor--say for blueberries on the barrens, or white moorberries, or
+ginseng--she would get permission from the captain for Michel to go with
+her; and this was the happiest privilege in the boy's life. Most of all
+because of the stories La Rose would tell him.
+
+La Rose had a story to tell about every spot they visited, about every
+person they passed. She had been brought up, herself, out here on the
+Cape; and not an inch of its territory but was familiar to her.
+
+"Now that is where those Bucherons lived," she observed one day, as they
+were walking homeward from Pig Cove by the Calvaire road. "They are all
+gone now, and the house is almost fallen to pieces; but once things were
+lively enough there--mon Dieu, oui!--quite lively enough for comfort."
+
+She gave a sagacious nod to her head, with the look of one who could say
+more, and would, if you urged her a little.
+
+"Was it at the Bucherons' that all the chairs stood on one leg?" asked
+Michel, thrilling mysteriously.
+
+"Oui, c'est ça," answered La Rose, in a voice of the most sepulchral,
+"right there in that house, the chairs stood on one leg and went
+rap--rap--against the floor. And more than once a table with dishes
+and other things on it fell over, and there were strange sounds in
+the cupboard. Oh, it is certain those Bucherons were tormented; but
+for that matter they had brought it on themselves because of their
+greediness and their hard hearts. It came for a punishment; and when
+they repented themselves, it went away."
+
+"I haven't ever heard all the story about the Bucherons," said
+Michel--"or at least, not since I was big. I am almost sure I would like
+it."
+
+"Well, I daresay," agreed La Rose. "It is an interesting story in some
+ways; and the best of it is, it is not one of those stories that are
+only to make you laugh, and then you go right away and forget them. And
+another thing: this story about the Bucherons really happened. It was
+when my poor stepmother was a girl. She lived at Pig Cove then, and that
+is only two miles from Gros Nez. And one of those Bucherons was once
+wanting to marry her; but do you think she would have anything to do
+with a man like that?
+
+"'No,' she said. 'I will have nothing to do with you. I would sooner not
+ever be married, me, than to have you for my man.'
+
+"And the reason she spoke that way was because of the cruelty they had
+shown toward that poor widow of a Noémi, which everybody on the Cape
+knew about, and it was a great scandal. And if you want me to tell you
+about it, that is what I am going to do now."
+
+La Rose seated herself on a flat rock by the road, and Michel found
+another for himself close by. Below them lay a deep rocky cove, with
+shores as steep as a sluice, and close above its inner margin stood the
+shell of a small house. The chimney had fallen in, the windows were all
+gone--only vacant holes now, through which you saw the daylight from the
+other side, and the roof had begun to sag.
+
+"Yes," said La Rose, "it will soon be gone to pieces entirely, and then
+there will be nothing to remind anyone of those Bucherons and what
+torments they had. You see there were four of them, an old woman and two
+sons, and one of the sons was married, but there were not any children;
+and all those four must have had stones instead of hearts. They were
+only thinking how they could get the better of other people, and so
+become rich.
+
+"And before that there had been three sons at home; but one of
+them--Benoît his name was--had married a certain Noémi Boudrot; and she
+was as sweet and beautiful as a lily, and he too was different from the
+others; and so they had not lived here, but had got a little house at
+Pig Cove, where they were very happy; and the good God sent them two
+children, of a beauty and gentleness indescribable; and they called them
+Évangéline and little Benoît, but you do not need to remember that,
+because it is not a part of the story.
+
+"So things went on that way for quite a while; and all the time those
+four Bucherons were growing more and more hard-hearted, like four
+serpents in a pile together.
+
+"Well, one day in October that Benoît Bucheron who lived in Pig Cove
+was going alone in a small cart to Port l'Évêque to buy some provisions
+for winter--flour, I suppose, and meal, and perhaps some clothes and
+some tobacco; and instead of going direct by the Gros Nez road, he
+came around this way by the Calvaire so as to stop in and speak to his
+relatives; and to see them welcoming him, you would never have suspected
+their stone hearts. But Benoît was solemn for all that, as if troubled
+by some idea. Then that sly old mother, she said:
+
+"'Dear Benoît,' she said, 'what troubles you? Can you not put trust in
+your own mother, who loves you better than her eyes and nose?'--and she
+smiled at him just like a fat wicked old spider that is waiting for a
+fly to come and get tangled up in her net.
+
+"But Benoît only remembered then that she was his mother; so he said:
+
+"'I have a fear, me, that I shall not be long for this world, my mother.
+Last week I saw a little blue fire on the barrens one night, and again
+one night I heard hoofs going _claquin-claquant_ down there on the
+beach, much like the horse without head. And that is why I am getting my
+provisions so early, and making everything ready for the winter. See,'
+he said, 'here is the thirteen dollars I have saved this year. I am
+going to buy things with it in Port l'Évêque.'
+
+"Now you may depend that when he showed them all that money, their
+eyes stuck out like the eyes of crabs; but of course they did not say
+anything only some words of the most comforting. And finally he said,
+getting ready to go:
+
+"'If anything should happen,' he said, 'will you promise me to be good
+to that poor Noémi and those two poor little innocent lambs?'--and
+those serpents said, certainly, they would do all that was possible;
+and with that Benoît gets into his cart, and starts down the hill; and
+suddenly the horse takes a fright of something and runs away, and the
+cart tips over, and Benoît is thrown out; and when his brothers get to
+him he is quite quite dead--and that shows what it means to see one of
+those little blue fires at night in the woods.
+
+"Well, you can believe that Noémi was not very happy when they brought
+back that poor Benoît to Pig Cove. Her eyes were like two brooks, and
+for a long time she could not say anything, and then finally, summoning
+a little voice of courage:
+
+"'I am glad of one thing,' she said, 'which is that he had saved all
+that money, for without it I would never know how to live through the
+winter.'
+
+"And one of those brothers said, with an innocent voice of a dove, 'what
+money then?'--and she said, 'He had it with him.' And so they look for
+it; but no, there is not any.
+
+"'You must have deceived yourself,' said that brother. 'I am sure he
+would have spoken of it if he had had any money with him; but he said
+never a word of such a thing.'
+
+"Now was not that a wicked lie for him to tell? It is hard to understand
+how abominable can be some of those men! But you may be sure they will
+be punished for it in the end; and that is what happened to those four
+serpents, the Bucherons.
+
+"For listen. The old mother had taken the money and had put it inside a
+sort of covered bowl, like a sugar bowl, but there was no sugar in it;
+and then she had set this bowl away on a shelf in the cupboard where
+they kept the dishes and such things; and the Bucherons thought it
+would be safe until the time when they had something to spend it for in
+Port l'Évêque; and they were telling themselves how no one would ever
+know what they had done; and they were glad that the promise they had
+made to Benoît had not been heard by anyone but themselves. And so that
+poor Noémi was left all alone without man or money; but sometimes the
+neighbors would give her a little food; but for all that those two lambs
+were often hungry, and their mother too, when it came bedtime.
+
+"But do you think the Bucherons cared--those four hearts of stone? They
+would not even give her so much as a crust of dry, mouldy bread; and
+Noémi was too proud to go and beg; and beside something seemed to tell
+her that there had been a wickedness somewhere, and that the Bucherons
+perhaps knew more than they had told her about that money. So she waited
+to see if anything would happen.
+
+"Now one night in December, when all those four were in the house alone,
+the beginning of their punishment arrived, and surely nothing more
+strange was ever heard of in this world.
+
+"'Ah, mon Dieu!' cries out the married woman all of a sudden--'mon Dieu,
+what is that!'
+
+"They all looked where she was looking, and what do you think they saw?
+There was a chair standing with three legs in the air, and only the
+little point of one on the floor.
+
+"The old woman pushed a scream and jumped to her feet and went over to
+it, and with much force set it back on the floor, the way a chair is
+meant to stand; but immediately when she let go of it, there it was
+again, as before, all on one leg.
+
+"And then, there cries out the younger woman again, with a voice shrill
+as a frightened horse that throws up its head and then runs away--'Oh,
+mère Bucheron, mère Bucheron,' cries she, 'the chair you were just
+sitting in is three legs in air too!'
+
+"And so it was! With that all the family got up in terror; but no sooner
+had they done that than at once all the chairs behaved just like the
+first, which made five chairs. These chairs did not seem to move at all,
+but stood there on one leg just as if they were always like that. Those
+Bucherons were almost dead with fright, and all four of them fled out of
+the house as fast as ever their legs could carry them--you would have
+said sheep chased by a mad dog--and never stopped for breath till they
+reached Gros Nez.
+
+"And pell-mell into old Pierre Leblanc's house all together, and shaking
+like ague. Hardly able to talk, they tell what has happened; and he will
+not believe them but says, well, he will go back with them and see. So
+he does, and they re-enter the house together, and look! the chairs are
+all just as usual.
+
+"'You have been making some crazy dreams,' says Pierre, rather angry,
+'or else,' he says, 'you have something bad in your hearts.' And with
+that he goes home again; and there is nothing more to be told about that
+night, though I daresay none of those wicked persons slept very well.
+
+"But that was only the beginning of what happened to them during that
+winter. Sometimes it would be these knockings about the roof, as of
+someone with a great hammer; and again it was as if they had seen a face
+at the window--just an instant, all white, in the dark--and then it
+would be gone. And often, often, the chairs would be standing as before
+on one leg. The table likewise, which once let fall a great crowd of
+dishes, and not a few were broken. But worst of all were these strange
+sounds that made themselves heard in the cupboard, like the hand of
+a corpse going rap--rap, rap--rap--rap, rap,--against the lid of its
+coffin. You may well believe it was a dreadful fright for those four
+infamous ones; but still they would do nothing, because of their desire
+to keep all that money and buy things with it.
+
+"Everybody on the Cape soon knew about what was happening at the
+Bucherons', but some pretended it was to laugh at, saying that such
+things did not happen nowadays; and others said the Bucherons must
+have gone crazy, and had better be left alone--and their arms and legs
+would sometimes keep jerking a little when they talked to anyone, as
+my stepmother told me a thousand times; and they had a way of looking
+behind them--so!--as if they were afraid of being pursued. So however
+that might be, nobody would go and see them.
+
+"Well, things went on like that for quite a while, and finally, one day
+in February, through all the snow that it made on the ground then, that
+poor Noémi marched on her feet from Pig Cove to her mother-in-law's,
+having left her two infants at a neighbor's; for she had resolved
+herself to ask for some help, seeing that she had had nothing but a
+little bite since three days. And when they saw her coming they were
+taken with a fright, and at first they were not going to let her in; but
+that old snake of a mother, she said:
+
+"'If we refuse to let her in, my children, she will go and suspect
+something.'
+
+"So they let her in, and when she was in, they let her make all her
+story, or as much as she had breath for, and then:
+
+"'I am sorry,' said this old snake of a mother, 'that we cannot possibly
+do anything for you. Alas, my dear little daughter, it is barely even
+if we can manage to hold soul and body together ourselves, with the
+terrible winter it makes these days.'
+
+"And just as she said that, what do you think happened? A chair got on
+one leg and went rap--rap, rap--against the floor.
+
+"That Noémi would often be telling about it afterwards to my stepmother,
+and she said never of her life had she seen anything so terrifying. But
+she did not scream or do anything like that, because something, she
+said, inside her seemed to bid her keep quiet just then. And she used
+to tell how that old Bucheron woman's face turned exactly the color of
+an oyster on a white plate, and a trembling took her, and finally she
+said, scarcely able to make the sound of the words:
+
+"'Though perhaps--I might find--a crust of bread somewhere that--that we
+could spare.'
+
+"That was how she spoke, and at the same instant, _rap_ went the chair,
+still on its one leg; and there was a sound of a hammering on the roof.
+
+"'Or perhaps--a little loaf of bread and some potatoes,' said that old
+Bucheron, while the other Bucherons sat there without one word, in
+their chairs, as if paralyzed, except that their hands kept up a little
+shaking motion all the time, like this scour-grass you get in the marsh,
+which trembles always even if there is not any wind. 'Or perhaps a loaf
+of bread and some potatoes'--that is what she was saying, when listen,
+there is a knock as of the hand of corpse just inside the cupboard; and
+suddenly the two doors fly open--you would have said _pushed_ from the
+inside!
+
+"Noémi crosses herself, but does not say anything, for she knows it is a
+time to keep still.
+
+"'And perhaps,' says the old woman then, in a voice of the most piteous,
+as if someone were giving her a pinch, 'and perhaps, if only I had it,
+a dollar or two to help buy some medicine and a pair of shoes for that
+Évangéline.... But no, I do not think we have so much as that anywhere
+in the house.'
+
+"Now was not that like the old serpent, to be telling a lie even at the
+last; and surely if God had struck her dead by a ball of lightning at
+that moment it would have been none too good for her. But no, he was
+going to give her a chance to repent and not to have to go to Hell for a
+punishment. So what do you think He made happen then?
+
+"Hardly had those abominable words jumped out of her when with a great
+crash, down off the top shelf comes that sugar bowl (if it was a sugar
+bowl), and as it hits the floor, it breaks into a thousand pieces; and
+there, in a little pile, are those thirteen dollars, just as on the day
+when that poor Benoît had been carrying them with him to Port l'Évêque.
+
+"Now just as if they are not doing it at all of their own wish, but
+something makes them act that way, all of a sudden those four Bucherons
+are kneeling on the floor, saying their prayers in a strange voice like
+the prayers you might hear in a tomb; and with that, the chair goes back
+quietly to its four legs, and the noise ceases on the roof, and those
+two cupboard doors draw shut without human hands. As for Noémi, she
+grabs up the money, and out she goes, swift as a bird that is carrying
+a worm to its children, leaving her parents by marriage still there on
+their knees, like so many images; but as she opens the door she says:
+
+"'May the good God have pity on all the four of you!'--which was a
+Christian thing to say, seeing how much she had suffered at their hands.
+
+"Well, there is not much more to tell. Noémi got through the rest of
+that winter without any more trouble; and the next year she married a
+fisherman from Little Anse, and went away from the Cape. As for the
+Bucherons, they were not like the same people any more. You would not
+have known them--so pious they were and charitable, though always,
+perhaps, a little strange in their ways. But when the old woman died,
+two years later, or three, all the people of Pig Cove and Gros Nez
+followed the corpse in to Port l'Évêque; and her grave is there in the
+cemetery.
+
+"The rest of the family are gone now too, as you see; and soon, I
+suppose, there will not be many left, even out here on the Cape, who
+know all about what happened to the Bucherons, because of their hard
+hearts; which is a pity, seeing that the story has such a good lesson to
+it...."
+
+
+
+
+LA ROSE WITNESSETH
+
+[A]_Of the Headless Horse and of La Belle Mélanie's Narrow Escape from
+the Feu Follet_
+
+
+[A] Included with permission of and by arrangements with Houghton
+Mifflin Company authorized publishers.
+
+One of the privileges Michel esteemed most highly was that of
+accompanying La Rose occasionally when she went blueberrying over on the
+barrens--_dans les bois_, as the phrase still goes in Port l'Évêque,
+though it is all of sixty years since there were any woods there. The
+best barrens for blueberrying lay across the harbor. They reached back
+to the bay four or five miles to southward. Along the edges of several
+rocky coves, narrow and steep as a sluice, clung a few weatherbeaten
+fishermen's houses; but there was no other sign of human habitation.
+
+It is what they call a bad country over there. Alder and scrub balsam
+grow sparsely over the low rocky hills, where little flocks of sheep
+nibble all day at the thin herbage; and from the marshes that lie, green
+and mossy, at the foot of every slope, a solitary loon may occasionally
+be seen rising into the air with a great spread of slow wings. A single
+thread of a road makes its way somehow across the region, twisting
+in and out among the small hills, now climbing suddenly to a bare
+elevation, from which the whole sweep of the sea bursts upon the view,
+now shelving off along the side of a knoll of rocks, quickly dipping
+into some close hollow, where the world seems to reach no farther than
+to the strange sky-line, wheeling sharply against infinite space.
+
+Two miles back from the inner shore, the road forks at the base of a
+little hill more conspicuously bare than the rest, and close to the
+naked summit of it, overlooking all the Cape, stands a Calvary. Nobody
+knows how long it has stood there, or why it was first erected; though
+tradition has it that long, long ago, a certain man by the name of
+Toussaint was there set upon by wild beasts and torn to pieces. However
+that may be, the tall wooden cross, painted black, and bearing on its
+center, beneath a rude penthouse, a small iron crucifix, has been there
+longer than any present memory records--an encouragement, as they say,
+for those who have to cross the bad country after dark.
+
+"That makes courage for you," they say. "It is good to know it is there
+on the windy nights."
+
+By daylight, however, and especially in the sunshine, the barrens are
+quite without other terrors than those of loneliness; and upon Michel
+this remoteness and silence always exercised a kind of spell. He was
+glad that La Rose was with him, partly because he would have been a
+little afraid to be there quite by himself, but chiefly because of the
+imaginative sympathy that at this time existed so strongly between them.
+La Rose could tell him all about the strange things that had been seen
+here of winter nights; she herself once, tending a poor old sick woman
+at Gros Nez, out at the end of the Cape, had heard the hoofs of the
+white horse that gallops across the barrens _claquin-claquant_ in the
+darkness.
+
+"It was just there outside the house, pawing the ground. Almost
+paralyzed for terror, I ran to the window and looked out. It was as tall
+as the church door,--that animal,--all white, and there was no head to
+it.
+
+"'Oh, mère Babinot,' I whispered, scarcely able to make the sound of the
+words. 'It is as tall as the church door and all white.'
+
+"She sits up in bed and stares at me like a corpse. 'La Rose,' she
+says,--just like that, shrill as a whistle of wind,--'La Rose, do you
+see a head to it?'
+
+"'No, not any!'
+
+"'Oh, mon Dieu, mon Dieu! Then it's sure! It is the very one, the horse
+without head!'
+
+"And the next day she took only a little spoonful of tea, and in two
+weeks she was dead, poor mère Babinot; and that's as true as that I made
+my communion last Easter. Oh, it's often seen hereabouts, that horse.
+It's a sign that something will happen, and never has it failed yet."
+
+They made their way, La Rose and Michel, slowly over the low hills,
+picking the blueberries that grew thickly in clumps of green close to
+the ground. La Rose always wore a faded yellow-black dress, the skirt
+caught up, to save it, over a red petticoat; and on her small brown head
+she carried the old Acadian _mouchoir_, black, brought up to a peak in
+front, and knotted at the side.
+
+She picked rapidly, with her alert, spry movements, her head always
+cocked a little to one side, almost humorously, as she peered about
+among the bushes for the best spots. And wherever he was, Michel heard
+her chattering softly to herself, in an inconsequential undertone, now
+humming a scrap of some pious song, now commenting on the quality of the
+berry crop--never had she seen so few and so small as these last years.
+Surely there must be something to account for it. Perhaps the birds had
+learned the habitude of devouring them--now addressing some strayed
+sheep that had ventured with timid bleats within range: "Te voilà, petit
+méchant! Little rogue! What are you looking about for? Did the others go
+off and leave you? Eh bien, that's how it happens, mon petit. They'll
+leave you. The world's like that. Eh, là, là!"
+
+He liked to go to the other side of the hill, out of sight of her,
+where he could imagine that he was lost _dans les bois_. Then he would
+listen for her continual soft garrulity; and if he could not hear it
+he would wait quietly for a minute in the silence, feeling a strange
+exhilaration, which was almost pain, in the presence of the great sombre
+spaces, the immense emptiness of the overhanging sky, until he could
+endure it no longer.
+
+"La Rose!" he would call. "Êtes-vous toujours là?"
+
+"Mais oui, mon enfant. What do you want?"
+
+"Nothing. It is only that I was thinking."
+
+"The strange child that you are!" she would exclaim. "You are not like
+the others."
+
+"La Rose," he would ask, "was it by here that La Belle Mélanie passed on
+the night she saw the death fire?"
+
+"Yes, by this very spot. She was on her way to Pig Cove, over beyond
+the Calvary to the east. It is a desolate little rat-hole, Pig Cove,
+nowadays; but then it was different--as many as two dozen houses. My
+stepmother lived in one of them. Now there are scarcely six, and falling
+to pieces at that. La Belle Mélanie, she was a Boudrot, sister of the
+Pierre Boudrot whose son, Théobald, was brother-in-law of stepmother.
+That was many years ago. They are all dead now, or gone away from
+here--to Boston, I daresay."
+
+"Will you tell me about that again,--the _feu follet_ and Mélanie?"
+
+It was the story Michel liked the best, most of all when he could sit
+beside La Rose, on a moss-hummock of some rough hill on the barrens.
+Perhaps there would be cloud shadows flitting like dream presences
+across the shining face of the moor. In the distance, over the backs of
+the hills that crouched so thickly about them, he saw the stretch of the
+ocean, a motionless floor of azure and purple, flecked, it might be, by
+a leaning sail far away; and now and then a gull or two would fly close
+over their heads, wheeling and screaming for a few seconds, and then
+off again through the blue.
+
+"S'il vous plaît, tante La Rose, see how many berries I have picked
+already!"
+
+The little woman was not difficult of persuasion.
+
+"It was in November," she began. "There had not been any snow yet; but
+the nights were cold and terribly dark under a sky of clouds. That
+autumn, as my stepmother often told me, many people had seen the horse
+without head as it galloped _claquin-claquant_ across the barrens. At
+Gros Nez it was so bad that no one dared go out after dark, unless it
+was to run with all one's force to the neighbors--but not across the
+woods to save their souls. Especially because of the _feu follet_.
+
+"Now you must know that the _feu follet_ is of all objects whatever in
+the world the most mysterious. No one knows what it is or when it will
+come. You might walk across the barrens every night of your life and
+never encounter it; and again it might come upon you all unawares, not
+more than ten yards from your own threshold. It is more like a ball
+of fire than any other mortal thing, now large, now small, and always
+moving. Usually it is seen first hovering over one of the marshes,
+feeding on the poison vapors that rise from them at night: it floats
+there, all low, and like a little luminous cloud, so faint as scarcely
+to be seen by the eye. And sometimes people can travel straight by it,
+giving no attention, as if they did not know it was there, but keeping
+the regard altogether ahead of them on the road, and the _feu follet_
+will let them pass without harm.
+
+"But that does not happen often, for there are not many who can keep
+their wits clear enough to manage it. It brings a sort of dizziness, and
+one's legs grow weak. And then the _feu follet_ draws itself together
+into a ball of fire and begins to pursue. It glides over the hills and
+flies across the marshes, sometimes in circles, sometimes bounding
+from rock to rock, but all the while stealing a little closer and a
+little closer, no matter how fast you run away. And finally--bff! like
+that--it's upon you--and that's the end. Death for a certainty. Not all
+the medicine in the four parishes can help you.
+
+"Indeed, there are only two things in all the world that can save you
+from the _feu follet_ once it gets after you. One is, if you are in a
+state of grace, all your sins confessed; which does not happen often
+to the inhabitants of Pig Cove, for even at this day Père Galland
+reproaches them for their neglect. And the other is, if you have a
+needle with you. So little a thing as a needle is enough, incredible as
+it may seem; for if you stick the needle upright--like that--in an old
+stump, the _feu follet_ gets all tangled up in the eye of it. Try as it
+will, it cannot free itself; and meanwhile you run away, and are safe
+before it reappears. That is why all the inhabitants of the Cape used
+to carry a needle stuck somewhere in their garments, to use on such an
+occasion.
+
+"Well, I must tell you about La Belle Mélanie. That is the name she
+was known by in all parts, for she was beautiful as a lily flower, and
+no lily was ever more pure and sweet than she. Mélanie lived with her
+mother, who was aged almost to helplessness, and she cared for her with
+all the tenderness imaginable. You may believe that she was much sought
+after by the young fellows of the Cape--yes, and of Port l'Évêque as
+well, which used to hold its head in the air in those days; but her
+mother would hear nothing of her marrying.
+
+"'You are only seventeen,' she said, 'ma Mélanie. I will hear nothing
+of your marrying, no, not for five years at the least. By that time we
+shall see.'
+
+"And Mélanie tried to be obedient to all her mother's commands,
+difficult as they often were for a young girl, who naturally desires a
+little to amuse herself sometimes. For even had her mother forbidden her
+to speak alone to the young men of the neighborhood, so fearful was she
+lest her daughter should think of marriage.
+
+"Eh bien, and so that was how things went for quite a while, and every
+day Mélanie grew more beautiful. And one Saturday afternoon in November
+she had been in to Port l'Évêque to make her confession, for she was a
+pious girl. And when she went to meet her companions in order to return
+to Pig Cove with them, they said they were not going back that night,
+for there was to be a dance at the courthouse, and they were going to
+spend the night with some parents by marriage of theirs. Poor Mélanie!
+she would have been glad to stay, but alas, her poor mother, aged and
+helpless, was expecting her, and she dared not disappoint the poor soul.
+
+"So finally one of the young men said he would put her across the
+harbor, if she did not mind traversing the woods alone; and she said,
+no, why should she mind? It was still plain daylight. And so he put her
+across. And she said good-night to him and set off along the solitary
+road to the Cape, little imagining what an adventure was ahead of her.
+
+"For scarcely had she gone so much as a mile when it had grown almost
+night, so suddenly at that time of the year does the daylight extinguish
+itself. The sky had grown dark, dark, and there was a look of storm in
+it. La Belle Mélanie began to grow uneasy of mind. And she thought then
+of the _feu follet_, and put her hand to her bodice to assure herself of
+her needle. What then! Alas! it was gone, by some accident, whether or
+not she had lost it on the road or in the church.
+
+"With that Mélanie began to feel a terror creep over her; and this was
+not lessened, as you may well believe, when, a few minutes later, she
+perceived a floating thing like a luminous cloud in a marsh some long
+distance from the road. The night was now all black; scarcely could she
+perceive the road ahead, always winding there among the hills.
+
+"She had the idea of running; but alas, her legs were like lead; she
+could not make them march in front of her. She saw herself already dead.
+The _feu follet_ was beginning to move, first very slowly and all
+uncertain, but then drawing itself together into a ball of fire, and
+leaping as if in play from one hummock of moss to another, just as a cat
+will leave a poor little mouse half dead on the floor while it amuses
+itself in another way.
+
+"What the end would have been, who would have the courage to say, if
+just at this moment, all ready to fall to the ground for terror, poor
+Mélanie had not bethought herself of her rosary. It was in her pocket.
+She grasped it. She crossed herself. She saluted the crucifix. And then
+she commenced to say her prayers; and with that, wonderful to say, her
+strength came back to her, and she began to run. She had never ran like
+that before--swift as a horse, not feeling her legs under her, and
+praying with high voice all the time.
+
+"But for all that, the death fire followed, always faster and faster,
+now creeping, now flying, now leaping from rock to rock, and always
+drawing nearer, and nearer, with a strange sound of a hissing not of
+this world. Mélanie began to feel her forces departing. She was almost
+exhausted. She would not be able to run much more.
+
+"And suddenly, just ahead, on a bare height, there was the tall
+Calvaire, and a new hope came to her. If she could only reach it! She
+summoned all her strength and struggled up. She climbs the ascent. Alas,
+once more it seems she will fail! There is a fence, as you know, built
+of white pales, about the cross. She had not the power to climb it. She
+sinks to the ground. And it was at that last minute, all flat on the
+ground in fear of death, that an idea came to her, as I will tell you.
+
+"She raises herself to her feet by clinging to the white palings; she
+faces the _feu follet_, already not more than ten yards away; she holds
+out the rosary, making the holy sign in the air.
+
+"'I did not make a full confession!' she cries. 'I omitted one thing. My
+mother had forbidden me to have anything to do with a young man; and one
+day when I was looking for Fanchette, our cow, who had wandered in the
+woods, I met André Babinot, and he kissed me.'
+
+"That was what saved her. The _feu follet_ rushed at her with a roar of
+defeat, and in the same instant it burst apart into a thousand flames
+and disappeared.
+
+"As for Mélanie, she fell to the ground again, and lay there for a
+while, quite unconscious. At last the rain came on, and she revived, and
+set out for home, but not very vigorously. Ah, mon Dieu! if her poor
+mother was glad to see her alive again! She embraced her most tenderly,
+and with encouraging voice inquired what had happened, for Mélanie
+was still as white as milk, and there was a strange smell of fire in
+her garments, and still she held in her hands the little rosary; and
+so finally Mélanie told her everything, not even concealing the last
+confession about André, and with that her mother burst into tears, and
+said:
+
+"'Mélanie,' she said, 'I have been wrong, me. A young girl will be a
+young girl despite all the contrary intentions of her mother. To show
+how grateful to God I am that you are returned to me safe and sound, you
+shall marry André as soon as you like.'
+
+"So they were married the next year. And there is a lesson to this
+story, too, which is that one should always tell the truth; because if
+La Belle Mélanie had told all the truth at the beginning she would not
+have had all that fright.
+
+"And to show that the story is true, there were found the marks of
+flames on the white fence of the Calvaire the next day; and as often as
+they painted it over with whitewash, still the darkness of the scorched
+wood would show through, as I often saw for myself; but now there is a
+new fence there...."
+
+
+
+
+LA ROSE WITNESSETH
+
+_Of How Old Siméon's Son Came Home Again_
+
+
+In the old cemetery above the church some men were at work setting up a
+rather ornate monument at the head of two long-neglected and overgrown
+graves. La Rose had noticed what was going on, as she came out from
+early mass, and had informed herself about it; and since then, she said,
+all through the day, her thoughts had been traveling back to things that
+happened many years ago.
+
+"Is it not strange," she observed musingly, sitting about dusk with
+Michel on the doorsill of the kitchen, while Céleste finished the
+putting-away of the supper dishes--"is it not strange how things go
+in this world? So often they turn out sorrowfully, and you cannot
+understand why that should be so. Think of that poor Léonie Gilet, who
+was taken so suddenly in the chest last winter and died all in a month,
+and she one of the purest and sweetest lilies that ever existed, and the
+next year she was to be married to a good man that loved her better than
+both his two eyes. Ah, mon Dieu, sometimes I think the sadness comes
+much more often than the joy down here."
+
+She looked out broodingly, and with eyes that did not see anything,
+across the captain's garden and the hayfield below, dipping gently
+to the margin of the harbor. Michel was silent. La Rose's fits of
+melancholy interested him even when he only dimly sensed the burden of
+them.
+
+"And then," she resumed, after a moment, "sometimes the ending to things
+is happy. For a while all looks dark, dark, and there is grief, perhaps,
+and some tears; and then, just at the worst moment--tiens!--there is a
+change, and the happiness comes again, very likely even greater than
+it was at first. It is as if this good God up there, he could not bear
+any longer to see it so heartbreaking, and so he must take things into
+his own hands and set them right. And so, sometimes, when I find myself
+feeling sad about things, I like to remember what arrived to that poor
+Siméon Leblanc, whose son is just having them place a fine tombstone for
+him up there in the cimetière; for if ever happiness came to any man,
+it came to him, and that after a long time of griefs. Did you ever hear
+about this old Siméon Leblanc?"
+
+"Never, tante La Rose," answered the boy, gravely. "But if it has a
+pleasant ending, I wish you would tell me about it, and I don't mind if
+it makes me cry a little in the middle."
+
+By this, Céleste, the stout domestic, had finished her kitchen work, and
+throwing an apron over her stocky head and shoulders, she clumped out
+into the yard.
+
+"I am running over to Alec Samson's," she explained, "to get a mackerel
+for breakfast, if he caught any to-day."
+
+The gate clicked after her, and there was a silence. At last La Rose
+began, a little absently and as if, for the moment at least, unaware of
+her auditor....
+
+"This Siméon Leblanc, he lived over there on the other side of the
+harbor, just beyond the place where the road turns off to go to the
+Cape. My poor stepmother when coming in to Port l'Évêque to sell some
+eggs or berries--three gallons, say, of blueberries, or perhaps some of
+those large strawberries from Pig Cove--she would often be running in
+there for a little rest and a talk with his wife, Célie--who always was
+glad to see any one, for that matter, the poor soul, for this Siméon was
+not too gentle, and often he made her unhappy with his harsh talk.
+
+"'Ah, mon amie,' she would say to my stepmother, at the same time
+wetting her eyes with tears--'Ah, I have such a fear, me, that he will
+do himself a harm, one day, with the temper he has. He frightens me to
+death sometimes--especially about that Tommy.'
+
+"Now you must understand that this Tommy was the son they had, and in
+some ways he resembled to his father, and in some ways to his mother.
+For it is certain he had a pride of the most incredible, which I daresay
+made him a little hard to manage; and yet in his heart there was a
+softness.
+
+"'That Tommy,' said his mother, 'he wants to be loved. That is the way
+to get him to do anything. There is no use in always punishing him and
+treating him hardly.'
+
+"But for all that, old Siméon must have his will, and so he does not
+cease to be scolding the boy. He commands him now to do this thing, now
+that--here, there. He forbids him to be from home at night. He tells him
+he is a disgrace of a son to be so little laborious. Oh, it was a horror
+the way that poor lamb of a Tommy was treated; and finally, one day,
+when he was seventeen or eighteen, there was a great quarrel, and that
+Siméon called him by some cruel name, and white as a corpse cries out
+Tommy:
+
+"'My father, that is not true. You shall not say it!'--and the other,
+furious as an animal: 'I shall say what I choose!' And he says the same
+thing again. And Tommy: 'After that, I will not endure to stay here
+another day. I am tired of being treated so. You will not have another
+chance.'
+
+"And with that he places a kiss on the forehead of his poor mother, who
+was letting drop some tears, and walks out of the house without so much
+as turning his head again; and he marches over to Petit Ingrat, where
+there was an American fisherman which had put in for some bait, and he
+says to the captain: 'Will you give me a place?' and the captain says,
+'We are just needing another man. Yes, we will give you a place.' So
+this Tommy, he got aboard, and a little later they put out and went off
+to the Banks for the fish.
+
+"Well, it was not very long before that Siméon got over his bad wicked
+rage; and then he was sorry enough for what he had done, especially
+because there was no longer any son in the house, and that poor Célie
+must always be grieving herself after him. And you may believe that
+Siméon got little pity from the neighbors.
+
+"'It is good enough for him,' they would say--'a man like that, who is
+not decent to his own son.'
+
+"But they were sorry for Célie, most of all when she began to grow
+thinner and thinner and had a strange look in her eyes that was not
+entirely of this world. The old man said, 'She will be all right again
+when that schooner comes back,' and he was always going over to Petit
+Ingrat to find out if it had returned yet; but you see, of course there
+would not be any need of bait when the season was finished, and so
+the schooner did not put in at all; and the autumn came, and went by,
+and then followed the winter, and still no news, but only waiting and
+waiting, and a little before Easter that poor Célie went away among the
+angels. I think her heart was quite broken in two, and it did not seem
+to her that she needed to stay any longer in this hustling world. And so
+they buried her in the old cimetière--I saw her grave to-day, next to
+Siméon's, and this fine new monument is to be for the two of them; but
+for all these years there has been just a wooden cross there, like the
+other graves.
+
+"But still no word came of Tommy, and the old Siméon was all alone in
+the house. Oh, I can remember him well, well, although I was only a
+young tiny girl then and had not had any sorrow myself. We would see him
+walking along the Petit Ingrat road, all bent over and trailing one leg
+a little.
+
+"'Hst!' one of my companions would whisper, 'that is old Siméon, who
+drove his son from home; and his poor wife is dead with grief. He is
+going across there to see if a schooner will have come in yet with any
+news.'
+
+"And that was true. He took this habitude of making a promenade
+almost every day to Petit Ingrat during that season of the year when
+the Americans are going down to the fish--là-bas--and if there was a
+schooner in the harbor, he finds the captain or one of the crew, and he
+says, 'Is it, m'sieu, for example, that you have seen a boy anywhere
+named Tommy Leblanc? It is my son--you understand?--a very pretty
+young boy, with black hair and fine white teeth and a little curly
+mustache--so--just beginning to sprout.' And he would go on to describe
+that Tommy, but of course, for one thing they could not understand his
+French very well, for the Americans, as you know, do not speak that
+language among themselves; and anyway, you may depend that none of them
+had ever heard of Tommy Leblanc; and sometimes they would have a little
+mockery of the old man; and sometimes, on the contrary, they would feel
+pity, and would say, well, God's name, it was a damage, but they could
+not tell him anything.
+
+"And then the old man would say, 'Well, if ever you should see him
+anywhere, will you please tell him that his father is wanting him
+to come home, if he will be so kind as to do it; because it is very
+lonesome without him, and the mother is dead.'
+
+"Then after he had said that, he would go back again along the road
+to the Cape, not speaking to anybody unless they spoke to him first,
+and trailing one leg after him a little, like one of these horses you
+see sometimes with a weight tied to a hind foot so that it cannot run
+away--or at least not very far. That is how I remember old Siméon from
+the time when I was a little girl--walking there along the road to or
+from Petit Ingrat. I used to hear people say: 'Ah, my God, how old he
+is grown all in these few years! He is not the same man--so quiet and
+so timid'--and others: 'But can one say how it is possible for him to
+live there all alone like that?'--and someone replied: 'You could not
+persuade him to live anywhere else, for that is where he has all his
+memories, both the good and the bad, and what else is left for him
+now--that, and the crazy idea he has that his Tommy will one day come
+home again?'
+
+"You see, as the years passed, everybody took the belief that Tommy must
+be dead, at sea or somewhere, seeing that not one word was heard of him;
+but of course they guarded themselves well from saying anything like
+that to poor old Siméon.
+
+"Well, it was about the time when your poor father, Amédée, was a boy
+of your age, or a little older, that all this sorrow came to an end;
+and this is the pleasant part of the story. I was living at Madame
+Paon's then, down near the post-office wharf, and we had the habitude
+of looking out of the window every day when the packet-boat came in
+(which was three times a week) to see if anybody would be landing at
+Port l'Évêque. Well, and one afternoon whom should we see but a fine
+m'sieu with black beard, carrying a cane, dressed like an American; and
+next, a lovely lady in clothes of the most fashionable and magnificent;
+and then, six beautiful young children, all just as handsome as dolls,
+and holding tightly one another by the hand, with an affection the most
+charming in the world. Ah, ma foi, if I shall ever forget that sight!
+
+"And Madame Paon to me: 'Rose,--La Rose,--in God's name, who can they
+be! Perhaps some millionaires from Boston--for look, the trunks that
+they have!'
+
+"And that was the truth, for the trunks and bags were piled all over the
+wharf; and opening the window a little, we hear m'sieu giving directions
+to have them taken to the Couronne d'Or--'and who,' he asks in French,
+'is the proprietor there now?'--and they say: 'Gaston Lebal'--and he
+says: 'What! Gaston Lebal! Is it possible!'
+
+"'He knows Port l'Évêque, it seems,' says Madame Paon, all excitement;
+and just then the first two trunks go by the windows, and she tells me,
+'It is an English name, or an American.' And then, spelling out the
+letters, for she reads with a marvel of ease, she says, 'W-H-I-T-E is
+what the trunks say on them; but I can make nothing out of that. I am
+going outside, me,' she says, 'and perhaps I shall learn something.'
+
+"She descends into the garden, and seems to be working a little at
+the flowers, and a minute later, here comes the fine m'sieu, and he
+looks at her for an instant--right in the face, so, and as if asking
+a question--and then: 'Ah, mon Dieu, it is Suzon Boudrot!' he cries,
+using the name she was born with. 'Can you not remember me?--That Tommy
+Leblanc who ran away twenty years ago?'
+
+"Madame Paon gives a scream of joy, and they embrace; and then he
+presents this Mees W'ite, qui est une belle Américaine, and then he
+says: 'What is there of news about my dear mother and my father?'--and
+she: 'Did you not know your poor mother was dead the year after you
+went!'--and he: 'Ma mère--she is dead?'--and the tears jump out of his
+eyes, and his voice trembles as if it had a crack in it. 'Well, she is
+with the blessed angels, then,' says he.
+
+"'But your poor old father,' goes on Madame Paon, 'he is still waiting
+for you every day. He has waited all these twenty years for you to come
+back.'
+
+"'He is still in the old place?' asks he.
+
+"'Yes, he would not leave it.'
+
+"'We shall go over there at once,' he says, opening out his two
+arms--so!--'before ever we set foot in another house. It is my duty as a
+son.'
+
+"So while André Gilet--the father of that dear Léonie who was taken in
+the chest--while he is getting the boat ready to cross the harbor, Tommy
+tells her how he has been up there in Boston all these years--at a place
+called Shee-cahgo, a big city--and has been making money; and how he
+changed his name to W'ite, which means the same as Leblanc and is more
+in the mode; and how he married this lovely Américaine, whose name was
+Finnegan, and had all these sweet little children; but always, he said,
+he had desired to make a little visit at home, only it was so far to
+come; and he was afraid that his father would still be angry at him.
+
+"'Ah,' says Madame Paon, with emotion, 'you will not know your father.
+He is so different: just as mild as a sheep. Everyone has come to love
+him.' ...
+
+"Now for the rest of the story, all I know is what that André told us,
+for he put all this family across to the other side in his boat. So when
+they reached the shore, M'sieu Tommy, he says: 'You will all wait here
+until I open the door and beckon: and then you, Maggie, will come up;
+and then, a little later, we will have the children in, all together.'
+
+"And with that he leaves them, and goes up to the old house, and
+knocks, and opens the door, and walks in--and who can say the joy and
+the comfort of the meeting that happened then? And quite a long while
+passed, André said; and that lovely lady sat there on the side of the
+boat, all as white as milk, and never saying a word; and those six
+lambs, whispering softly among themselves--and one of them said, just a
+little above its breath:
+
+"'It will be nice to have a grandpa all for ourselves, don't you
+think?'--and was not that a dear sweet little thing for it to say?...
+
+"And finally the door opens again, and see! and his hand makes a sign;
+and that lady, swift as one of these sea-gulls, leaps ashore. And up the
+hill; and through the gate; and into the house! And the door shuts again.
+
+"And another wait, while those six look at each other, and say their
+little things. And at last they are called too, and away they go, all
+together, just like one of these flocks of curlew that fly over the
+Cape, making those soft little sounds; and then into the house; and
+André said he had to wipe two tears out of his eyes to see a thing like
+that.
+
+"Well, this was the end of old Siméon's grief, as you may well believe.
+Those W'ites stay at the Couronne d'Or for as much as nine or ten days,
+and every morning they will be going across to see their dear dear
+grandfather; and finally when they went away, they had hired that widow
+Bergère to keep his house comfortable for him; and M'sieu Tommy left
+money for all needs.
+
+"And every Christmas after that, so long as old Siméon existed, there
+would come boxes of presents from that place in Boston. Oh, I assure
+you, he did not lack that good care. And always he must be talking about
+that Tommy of his, who was so rich, and was some great personage in the
+city--what they called an alderman--and yet he had not forgotten his
+poor old father, who had waited all those years to see him.
+
+"So this story shows that sometimes things turn out just as well in
+this life down here as they do in those silly stories they tell you
+about princesses and all those things that are not so; and that is a
+comfort sometimes, when you see so much that is sad and heartbreaking in
+this world...."
+
+
+[Illustration: A CALVAIRE]
+
+
+
+
+AT A BRETON CALVAIRE
+
+
+
+
+AT A BRETON CALVAIRE
+
+
+ Upon that cape that thrusts so bare
+ Its crest above the wasting sea--
+ Grey rocks amidst eternity--
+ There stands an old and frail calvaire,
+ Upraising like an unvoiced cry
+ Its great black arms against the sky.
+
+ For storm-beat years that cross has stood:
+ It slants before the winter gale;
+ And now the Christ is marred and pale;
+ The rain has washed away the blood
+ That ran once on its brow and side,
+ And in its feet the seams are wide.
+
+ But when the boats put out to sea
+ At earliest dawn before the day,
+ The fishermen, they turn and pray,
+ Their eyes upon the calvary:
+ "O Jesu, Son of Mary fair,
+ Our little boats are in thy care!"
+
+ And when the storm beats hard and shrill
+ Then toil-bent women, worn with fear,
+ Pray for the lives they hold so dear,
+ And seek the cross upon the hill:
+ "O Jesu, Son of Mary mild,
+ Be with them where the waves are wild!"
+
+ And when the dead they carry by
+ Across that melancholy land,--
+ Dead that were cast up on the strand
+ Beneath a black and whirling sky,--
+ They pause before the old calvaire;
+ They cross themselves and say a prayer.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ O Jesu, Son of Mary fair!
+ O Faith, that seeks thy cross of pain!
+ Their voices break above the rain,
+ The wind blows hard, the heart lies bare:
+ Clutching through dark, their hands find Thee,
+ O Christ, that died on Calvary!
+
+
+
+
+THE PRIVILEGE
+
+
+
+
+THE PRIVILEGE
+
+
+To-day I can think about only one thing. It is in vain I have tried
+to busy myself with my sermon for next Sunday. Last week, for another
+reason, I had recourse to an old sermon; but I dislike to make a
+practice of so doing, even though I strongly suspect that none of our
+little Salmon River congregation would know the difference. We are a
+very simple people, in this out-of-the-way Cape Breton parish, called
+mostly to be fishers, like Our Lord's apostles, and recking not a
+whit of the finer points of doctrine. Nevertheless, it is an hireling
+shepherd who is faithless only because the flock do not ask to be fed
+with the appointed manna; and I shall broach the sermon again, once I
+have set down the thing that is so heavy on my heart.
+
+For all I can think of just now is that Renny and Suse, out there on
+Halibut Head, four miles away, are alone; alone for the first time in
+well-nigh thirty years. The last of the brood has taken wing.
+
+Yet it came to me this morning, as I watched Renny on the wharf saying
+good-by to the boy, and bidding him wrap the tippet snug about his neck
+in case the wind would be raw--it came to me that there is a triumph
+about the nest when it is empty that it could never have earlier. I saw
+the look of it in Renny's face--not defeat, but exultation.
+
+"And what are you going to do now, Renny?" I asked him, as the steamer
+slipped out of sight behind the lighthouse rock.
+
+He stared at me a little contemptuously, a manner he has always had.
+
+"_Do_, Mr. Biddles?" says he, with a queer laugh. "Why, what _would_ I
+do, sor? They ain't no less fish to be catched, is they, off Halibut
+Head, just because I got quit of a son or two?"
+
+He left me, with a toss of his crisp, tawny-gray curls, jumped into his
+little two-wheeled cart, and was off. And I thought, "Ah, Renny Marks,
+outside you are still the same wild beast as when I had my first meeting
+with you, two-and-thirty years ago; but inside--yes, I knew then it must
+come; and it was not for me to order the how of it."
+
+So as I took my way homeward, alone, toward the Rectory, I found myself
+recalling, as if it were yesterday, the first words I had ever exchanged
+with that tawny giant, just then in his first flush of manhood, and
+with a face as ruddy and healthy-looking as one of these early New Rose
+potatoes. Often, to be sure, I had seen him already in church, of a
+Sunday, sitting defiant and uncomfortable on one of the rear benches,
+struggling vainly to keep his eyes open; but before the last Amen was
+fairly out of the people's mouth, he had always bolted for the door;
+and I had never come, as you may say, face to face with him until this
+afternoon when I was footing it back, by the cove road, from a visit to
+an old sick woman, Nannie Odell. And here comes Renny Marks on his way
+home from the boat; and over his shoulder was the mainsail and gaff and
+a mackerel-seine and two great oars; and by one arm he had slung the
+rudder and tackle and bait-pot; and under the other he lugged a couple
+of bundles of lath for to mend his traps; and so he was pacing along
+there as proud and careless as Samson bearing away the gates of Gaza on
+his back (_Judges_ xvi, 3).
+
+Now I had entertained the belief for some time that it was my duty,
+should the occasion offer, to have a serious word with Renny about
+matters not temporal; and this was clearly the moment. Yet even before
+we had met he gave me one of those proud, distrustful, I have said
+contemptuous, looks of his; and I seemed suddenly to perceive the figure
+I must cut in his eyes, pattering along there so trimly in my clerical
+garb, and with my book of prayers under one arm; and, do you know, I was
+right tongue-tied; and so we came within hand-reach, and still never a
+word.
+
+At last, "Good-day to ye, Mister Biddles," says he, with a scant,
+off-hand nod; and, as if he knew I must be admiring of his strength, "I
+can fetch twice this load, sor," says he, "without so mucht as knowing
+the difference."
+
+"It's a fine thing, Renny Marks," said I, gaining my tongue again, at
+his boast, "a fine thing to be the strongest man in three parishes, if
+that's what ye be, as they tell me."
+
+"It is that, sor," says he. "I never been cast yet; and I don't never
+expect for to be."
+
+"But it's still finer a thing, Renny," I went on, "to use that strength
+in the honor of your Maker. Tell me, do you remember to say your prayers
+every night before you go to bed?"
+
+Never shall I forget the horse-laugh the young fellow had at those words.
+
+"Why, sor," he exclaimed, as if I had suggested the most unconscionable
+thing in the world, "saying prayers! that's for the likes of them as
+wash their face every day. I say my prayers on Sunday; and that's enough
+for the likes of me!"
+
+And with that, not even affording me a chance to reply, he strode off up
+the beach road; and in every movement of his great limbs I seemed to see
+the pride and glory of life. Doubtless I was to blame for not pressing
+home to him more urgently at that moment the claims of religion; but as
+I stood there, watching him, it came to me that after all he was almost
+to be pardoned for being proud. For surely there is something to warm
+the heart in the sight of the young lion's strength and courage; and
+even the Creator, I thought, must have taken delight in turning out such
+a fine piece of mortal handiwork as that Renny Marks.
+
+But with that thought immediately came another: "Whom the Lord loveth he
+chasteneth, and scourgeth every son whom he receiveth" (_Hebrews_ xii,
+6). And I went home sadly, for I seemed to see that Renny had bitter
+things ahead of him before he should learn the great lesson of life.
+
+Well, and this is the way it came to him. At the age of
+four-and-twenty, he married this Suse Barlow from down the coast a
+piece,--Green Harbor was the name of the town,--and she was a sweet
+young thing, gentle and ladylike, though of plainest country stock, and
+with enough education so they'd let her keep school down there. He built
+a little house for her, the one they still live in, with his own hands,
+at Halibut Head; and I never saw anything prettier than the way that
+young giant treated his wife--like a princess! It was the first time
+in his life, I dare say, he had ever given a thought to anything but
+himself; and in a fashion, I suppose, 'twas still but a satisfaction of
+his pride, to have her so beautiful, and so well-dressed.
+
+I remember of how often they would come in late to church,--even as late
+as the Te Deum,--and I could almost suspect him of being behindhand of
+purpose, for of course every one would look around when he came creaking
+down the aisle in his big shoes, with a wide smile on his ruddy face
+that showed all his white teeth through his beard; and none could fail
+to observe how fresh and pretty Suse was, tripping along there behind
+him, and looking very demure and modest in her print frock, and oh, so
+very, very sorry to be late! And during the prayers I had to remark how
+his face would always be turned straight toward her, as if it were to
+her he was addressing his supplications; the young heathen!
+
+Now there is one thing I never could seem to understand, though I have
+often turned it over in my mind, and that is, why it should be that a
+young Samson like Renny Marks, and a fine, bouncing girl like that
+Suse of his, should have children who were too weak and frail to stay
+long on this earth; but such was the case. They saved only three out
+of six; and the oldest of those three, Michael John, when he got to be
+thirteen years of age, shipped as cabin boy on a fisherman down to the
+Grand Banks, and never came back. So that left only Bessie Lou, who was
+twelve, and little Martin, who was the baby.
+
+If ever children had a good bringing up, it was those two. I never
+saw either of them in a dirty frock or in bare feet; and that means
+something, you must allow, when you consider the hardness of the
+fisherman's life, and how often he has nothing at all to show for a
+season's toil except debts! But work--I never saw any one work like
+that Renny; and he made a lovely little farm out there; and Suse wasn't
+ashamed to raise chickens and sell them in Salmon River; and she dyed
+wool, and used to hook these rugs, with patterns of her own design,
+baskets of flowers, or handsome fruit-dishes; and almost always she
+could get a price for them. But, as you may believe, she couldn't keep
+her sweet looks with work like that. Before she was thirty she began
+to look old, as is so often true in a hard country like ours; and not
+often would she be coming in to church any more, because, she said,
+of the household duties; but my own belief is that she did not have
+anything to wear. But Bessie Lou and little Martin, when the boy was
+well enough, were there every fine Sunday, as pretty as pictures, and
+able to recite the Creed, and the Lord's Prayer, and the Collects, and
+the Commandments, quite like the children of gentlefolk.
+
+Well, when Bessie Lou got to be sixteen, she took it into her head that
+she must go off to Boston, where she would be earning her own living,
+and see something more of the world than is possible for a girl in
+Salmon River. Our girls all get that notion nowadays; they are not
+content to stay at home as girls used to do; but off they go in droves
+to the States, where wages are big, and there is excitement and variety.
+So the old people finally said yes, and off goes Bessie Lou, like the
+others; and in two years we heard she was to be married to a mechanic in
+Lynn (I think that is the name of the city) somewhere outside of Boston.
+She has been gone eight years now, and has three children; and she
+writes occasionally. She is always wishing she could come down and visit
+the old folks; but it is hard to get away, I presume, and they are plain
+working people.
+
+So after Bessie Lou's going, all they had left at home was Martin, who
+was always ailing more or less. And on my word, I never saw anything
+like the care they gave that boy. There wasn't anything too good for
+him. All these most expensive tonics and patent medicines they would
+be for trying, one after another, and telling themselves every time
+that at last they had found just the right thing, because he'd seem to
+be bracing up a bit, and getting more active. And then he would take
+another of his bad spells, and lose ground again; and they would put
+by that bottle and try something else. One day when I was out there
+his ma showed me all of twenty bottles of patent medicine, some of them
+scarcely touched, that Renny had got for him, one time or another.
+
+You see, Martin couldn't run about outdoors very much because of his
+asthma; and then, his eyes being bad, that made him unhappy in the
+house, for he couldn't be reading or studying. His father got him an
+old fiddle once, he'd picked up at an auction, and the boy took to it
+something wonderful; but not having any teacher and no music he soon
+grew tired of it. And whenever old Renny would be in the village, he
+must always be getting some little thing to take out to Martin: a couple
+of bananas, say, or a jack-knife, or one of those American magazines
+with nice pictures, especially pictures of ships and other sailing
+craft, of which the lad was very fond.
+
+Well, and so last winter came, which was a very bad winter indeed, in
+these parts; and the poor lamb had a pitiful hard time; and whenever
+Renny got in to church, it was plain to see that he was eating his heart
+out with worry. He still had his old way of always snoring during the
+sermon; but oh, if you could see once the tired, anxious, supplicating
+look in his face, as soon as his proud eyes shut, you never would have
+had the heart to wish anything but "Sleep on now, and take your rest"
+(_Mark_ xiv, 41), for you knew that perhaps, for a few minutes, he had
+stopped worrying about that little lad of his.
+
+Spring came on, at last, and Martin was out again for a while every
+day in the sun; and sometimes the old man would be taking him abroad
+for a drive or for a little sail in the boat, when he was going out to
+his traps; and it appeared that the strain was over again for the time
+being. That is why I was greatly surprised and troubled one day, about
+two months ago, to see Renny come driving up toward the Rectory like
+mad, all alone in his cart.
+
+I had just been doing a turn of work myself at the hay; for it is hard
+to get help with us when you need it most; and as I came from the barn,
+in my shirt-sleeves, Renny turned in at the gate.
+
+"Something has happened to the boy," was my thought; and I was all but
+certain of it when I saw the man's face, sharp set as a flint stone, and
+all the blood gone from his ruddy skin so that it looked right blue. He
+jumped out before the mare stopped, and came up to me.
+
+"Can I have a word with ye?" said he; and when he saw my look of
+question, he added, "It ain't nothink, sor. He's all right."
+
+I put my hand on his shoulder, and led him into my study, and we sat
+down there, just as we were, I in my shirt-sleeves, and still unwashed
+after the hayfield.
+
+"What is it, Renny, man?" says I.
+
+It seemed like he could not make his lips open for a moment, and then,
+suddenly, he began talking very fast and excitedly, pecking little dents
+in the arms of the chair with his big black fingernails.
+
+"That Bessie Lou of oors up to Boston," said he, as if he were accusing
+some one of an outrage, "we got a letter from 'er last night, we did,
+and she sayse, says she, why wouldn't we be for a-sending o' the leetle
+lad up theyr? They'd gladly look oot for him, she sayse; and the winter
+ain't severe, she sayse; and he could go to one o' them fine city
+eye-doctors and 'ave his eyes put right with glasses or somethink; and
+prob'ly he could be for going to school again and a-getting of his
+learning, which he's sadly be'indhand in, sor, becaust he's ben ailing
+so much."
+
+His eyes flashed, and the sweat poured down his forehead in streams.
+
+I don't know why I was so slow to understand; but I read his look
+wrong, there seemed so much of the old insolence and pride in it, and I
+replied, I daresay a little reproachfully,--
+
+"Well, and why wouldn't that be an excellent thing, Renny? I should
+think you would feel grateful."
+
+He stared at me for a second, as if I had struck him. Ah, we can
+forget the words people say to us, even in wrath; but can we ever free
+ourselves from the memory of such a look? Without knowing why, I had
+the feeling of being a traitor. And then, all of a sudden, there he had
+crumpled down in his chair, and put his head in his big hands, and was
+sobbing.
+
+"I cain't--I cain't let him go," he groaned. "I woon't let him go. He's
+all what we got left."
+
+I sat there for a time, helpless, looking at him. You might think that
+a priest, with the daily acquaintance he has with the bitter things
+of life, ought to know how to face them calmly; but so far as my own
+small experience goes, I seem to know nothing more about all that than
+at the beginning. It always hurts just as much; it's always just as
+bewildering, just as terrible, as if you had never seen anything like
+it before. And when I saw that giant of a Renny Marks just broken over
+there like some big tree shattered by lightning, it seemed as if I could
+not bear to face such suffering. Then I remembered that he had been
+committed into my care by God, and that I must not be only an hireling
+shepherd. So I said:--
+
+"Renny, lad, it isn't for ourselves we must be thinking. It's for him."
+
+He lifted up his head, with the shaggy, half-gray hair all rumpled on
+his wet forehead, and pulled his sleeve across his eyes.
+
+"Hark'e, Mister Biddles," he commanded harshly. "Ain't we did the best
+we could for him? Who dares say we ain't did the best we could for him?
+_You?_"
+
+I made no answer, and for a minute we faced each other, while he shook
+his clenched fists at me, and the creature in him that had never yet
+been cast challenged all the universe.
+
+"They're tryin' to tak my boy away from me," he roared, "and they cain't
+do it--I tell you they cain't. He's all what we got left, now."
+
+"And so you mean to keep him for yourself?" I asked.
+
+"Ay, that I do," he cried, jumping out of his chair, and striding up and
+down the room as if clean out of his wits. "I do! I do! Why _wouldn't_
+I mean to, hey? Ain't he mine? Who's got a better right to him?"
+
+Of a sudden he comes to a dead halt in front of me, with his arms
+crossed. "Mister Biddles," he says, very bitterly, "you may well be
+thankfu' you never wast a father yoursel'. Nobody ain't for trying to
+tak nothink away from you."
+
+"That's quite true, Renny," said I. "But remember," I said, not
+intending any irreverence, but uttering such poor words as were given
+to me in my extremity, "remember, Renny, it's to a Father you say your
+prayers in church every Sunday; and you needn't think as that Father
+doesn't know full as well as you what it is to give up an only Son for
+love's sake."
+
+"Hey?--What's that, sor?" cries Renny, with a face right like a dead
+thing.
+
+"And would He be asking of you for to let yours go, if He didn't know
+there was love enough in your heart to stand the test?"
+
+Renny broke out with a terrible groan, like the roar of anguish of a
+wild beast that has got a mortal wound; and the same instant the savage
+look died in his eyes, and the bigger love in him had triumphed over the
+smaller love. I could see it, I knew it, even before he spoke. He caught
+at my hand, blunderingly, and gave it a twist like a winch.
+
+"He shall go, sor. He shall go for all of I. And Mr. Biddles, while I'm
+for telling the old woman and the boy, would ye be so condescending as
+to say over some of them there prayers, so I could have the feeling, as
+you might say, that some one was keeping an eye on me? It'll all be done
+in less nor a half-hour."
+
+And with that, off he goes, and jumps into his cart, and whips up the
+mare, tearing down the road like a whirlwind, just as he had come,
+without so much as saying good-by. And the next day I heard them saying
+in the village that Renny Marks's boy was to go up to the States to be
+raised with his sister's family.
+
+Ah, well, that's only a common sort of a story, I know. The same kind of
+things happen near us every day. I can't even quite tell why I wanted to
+set it down on paper like this, only that, some way, it makes me believe
+in God more; even when I have to remember, and it seems to me just now
+like I could never stop remembering it, that Renny and Suse are all
+alone to-day out there on Halibut Head. Renny is at the fish, of course;
+and Suse, I daresay, is working in her little potato patch; and Martin
+is out there on the sea, being borne to a world far away, and from
+which, I suppose, he will not be very anxious to return; for few of them
+do come back, nowadays, to the home country.
+
+
+[Illustration: FOUGÈRE'S COVE]
+
+
+
+
+THEIR TRUE LOVE
+
+
+
+
+THEIR TRUE LOVE
+
+
+Even Zabette, with her thousand wrinkles, was young once. They say her
+lips were red as wild strawberries and her hair as sleek as the wing
+of a blackbird in spring. All the old people of St. Esprit remember
+how she used to swing along the street on her way to mass of a Sunday,
+straight, proud, agile as a goat, with her dark head flung back, and
+a disdainful smile on her lips that kept young men from being unduly
+forward. The country people, who must have their own name for everything
+and everybody, used to call her "la belle orgueilleuse," and sometimes,
+"the highstepper"; and though they had to laugh at her a little for her
+lofty ways, they found it quite natural to address her as mademoiselle.
+
+But all these things one only knows by hearsay. Zabette does not talk
+much herself. So far as she is concerned, you might never guess that
+she had a story at all. She lives there in the little dormer-windowed
+cottage beyond the post-office with Suzanne Benoît. For thirty-three
+years now the two women have lived together; and it is the earnest
+prayer of both of them that when the time for going arrives, they may go
+together.
+
+These two good souls have the reputation, all over the country, of
+immense industry and thrift. Suzanne keeps three cows, and her butter
+is famous. Zabette--she was a Fuseau, from the Grande Anse--takes in
+washing of the better class. Nobody in St. Esprit can do one of those
+stiff white linen collars so well as she. Positively, it shines in the
+sun like a looking-glass. If you notice the men going to church, you can
+always pick out those who have their shirts and collars done by Zabette
+Fuseau. By comparison, the others appear dull and very commonplace.
+
+"But why must Zabette do collars for her living?" you are asking. "Why
+has she not a man of her own to look out for her, and half a dozen grown
+up children? Did she never marry, then--this belle orgueilleuse?"
+
+No. Never. But not on account of that pride of hers; at least not
+directly. If you go into the pretty little living-room of the second
+cottage beyond the post-office--the one with such a show of geraniums
+in the front windows--you will guess half the secret, for just above
+the mantelpiece, between two vases of artificial asters, hangs the
+daguerreotype portrait of a young man in mariner's slops. The lineaments
+have so faded with the years that it is difficult to make them out with
+any assurance. It is as if the portrait itself were seeking to escape
+from life, retreating little by little, imperceptibly, into the dull
+shadows of the ground, so that only as you look at it from a certain
+angle can you still clearly distinguish the small dark eyes, the full
+moustache, the round chin, the square stocky shoulders of the subject.
+Only the two rosy spots added by the daguerreotypist to the cheeks defy
+time and change, indestructible token of youth and ardor.
+
+A little frame of immortelles encloses the portrait. And directly in
+front of it, on the mantelpiece, stands a pretty shell box, with the
+three words on the mother-of-pearl lid: "À ma chérie." What is in the
+box--if anything--no one can tell you for a certainty, though there are
+plenty of theories. "Love letters," say some; and others, with a pitying
+laugh, "Old maid's tears."
+
+Zabette and Suzanne hold their tongues. I think I know what the treasure
+of the box is; for I had the story directly from a very aged woman who
+knew both the "girls" when they were young; and she vouched for the
+truth of it by all the beads of her rosary. This is how it went.
+
+Zabette Fuseau was eighteen, and she lived at the Grand Anse, two miles
+out of St. Esprit; and the procession of young fellows, going there
+to woo, was like a pilgrimage, exactly. Among them came one from far
+down the coast, a place called Rivière Bourgeoise. He was a deep sea
+fisherman, from off a vessel which had put in at St. Esprit for repairs,
+mid-course to the Grand Banks; and on his first shore leave Maxence
+had caught sight of la belle orgueilleuse, who had come into town with
+a basket of eggs; and he had followed her home, at a little distance,
+sighing, but without the courage to address her so long as they were
+in the village. He was a very handsome young fellow, with a brown,
+ruddy skin, and the most beautiful dark curly hair and crisp moustache
+imaginable.
+
+Zabette knew he was behind her; but she would not turn; not she; only
+walked a little more proudly and gracefully, with that swinging movement
+of hers, like a vessel sailing in a head wind. At last, when they had
+reached the Calvaire at the end of the village, he managed to get out
+his first word.
+
+"Oh!" he cried, haltingly. "Mademoiselle!"
+
+She turned half about and fixed her dark proud eyes upon him, while her
+cheeks crimsoned.
+
+"Well, m'sieur?"
+
+He could not speak, and the two stared at each other for a long time in
+silence, while the thought came to her that this was the man for whom
+she was destined.
+
+"Had you something to say to me?" she repeated, finally, in a tone that
+tried to be severe, but was really very soft.
+
+He nodded his curly head, and licked his lips hard to moisten them.
+
+"I cannot wait any longer," she protested, after a while. "They need me
+at home."
+
+She turned quickly again, as if to go; but her feet were glued to the
+ground, and she did not take a step.
+
+"Oh, s'il vous plaît, mam'selle!" he cried, to hold her. "You think I am
+rude. But I did not mean to follow you like this. I could not help it.
+You are so beautiful."
+
+The look he gave her with those words sank deep into her heart and
+rooted itself there forever. In vain, for the rest of her life, she
+might try to tear it out; there was a fatality about it. Zabette, fine
+highstepper that she was, had been caught at last. She knew that she
+ought to send the handsome young sailor away; but her tongue would not
+obey her. Instead, it uttered some very childish words of confusion and
+pleasure; and before she knew it, there was her man walking along at
+her side, with one hand on his heart, declaring that she was the most
+angelic creature in the world, that he was desperately in love with
+her, that he could not live without her, and that she must promise then
+and there to be his, or he would instantly kill himself. The burning,
+impassioned look in his eyes struck her with dismay.
+
+"But I cannot decide all in a moment like this," she protested, in a
+weak voice. "It would be indecent. I must think."
+
+"Think!" he retorted, bitterly. "Oh, very well. Then you do not love me!"
+
+"Ah, but I do!" she cried, all trembling.
+
+With that he took her in his arms and kissed her, and nothing more was
+heard about suicide or any such subject.
+
+"But we must not tell any one yet," she pleaded. "They would not
+understand."
+
+He agreed, with the utmost readiness. "We will not tell a soul. It shall
+be exactly as you wish. But I may come and see you?"
+
+"Oh, certainly," she responded. "Often,--that is, every day or two,--at
+Grande Anse; and perhaps we may happen to meet sometimes in the
+village, as well."
+
+"The _Soleil_ will be delaying at St. Esprit for two weeks," he
+explained, as they walked along, hand in hand. "She put in for some
+repairs. By the end of that time, perhaps"--
+
+"Oh, no, not so soon as that," she interrupted. "We must let a longer
+while pass first."
+
+She gazed at him yearningly. "You will be returning by here in the
+autumn, at the end of the season on the Banks?"
+
+"We are taking on three men from St. Esprit," he answered. "We shall
+stop here on the return to set them ashore. That will be in October,
+near the end of the month, if the season is good."
+
+She sighed, as if dreading some disaster; and they looked at each other
+again, and the look ended in a kiss. It is not by words, that new love
+feeds and grows.
+
+Before they reached the Grande Anse he quitted her; but he gave her
+his promise to come again that evening. He did--that evening, and two
+evenings later, and so on, every other evening for those two weeks.
+Zabette's old mother took a great fancy to him, and gave him every
+encouragement; but the old père Fuseau, who had sailed many a voyage, in
+younger days, round the Horn, would never speak a good word for him--and
+perhaps his hostility only increased the girl's attachment.
+
+"A little grease is all very well for the hair of a young man," he would
+say. "But this scented pomade they use nowadays--pah!"
+
+"You object then to a sailor's being a gentleman?" demanded the girl
+haughtily.
+
+"Yes, I do," roared the old père Fuseau. "Have a care, Zabette."
+
+Nevertheless, the two lovers found plenty of chances to be alone
+together; and they would talk, in low voices, of their happiness and
+of the future, which looked very bright to Zabette, despite all the
+uncertainties of the sea.
+
+"When we put in on the return from the Banks," said Maxence, "you will
+be at the wharf to meet me; and that very day we will announce our
+fiancailles. What an astonishment for everybody!"
+
+"And then," she asked--"after that?"
+
+"After that, I will stay ashore for a while. They can do without me on
+the _Soleil_. And at the end of a month"--he told her the rest with a
+kiss; and surely Zabette had never been so happy in her life.
+
+But for the time being the affair was kept very, very secret, so that
+people might not get to gossiping. Even those frequent expeditions of
+Maxence to the Grande Anse were not remarked, for he always came after
+dusk: and when the fortnight was over and the _Soleil_ once more was
+ready for sea, the two sweethearts exchanged keepsakes, and he left her.
+
+"I will send you a letter from St. Pierre Miquelon," he said, to cheer
+her, while he wiped away her tears with a silk handkerchief.
+
+"Do you promise?" she asked.
+
+He promised. Three weeks later the letter arrived; and it told her that
+his heart was breaking for his dear little Zabette. "Sois fidèle--be
+true," were the last words. The letter had a perfume of pomade about it,
+and she carried it all summer in her bodice, taking it out many times a
+day to scan the loving words again.
+
+In St. Esprit, when the fishing fleet begins to return from the Banks,
+they keep an old man on the lookout in the church tower; and as soon as
+he sights a vessel in the offing, he rings the bell.
+
+It was the fourth week in October that year before the bell was heard;
+and then rapidly, two or three at a time, the schooners came in. First
+the _Dame Blanche_, which was always in the lead; then the _Êtoile_, the
+_Deux Frères_, the _Lottie B._, and the _Milo_. Every day, morning or
+afternoon, the bell would ring, and poor Zabette must find some excuse
+or other to be in town. Down at the wharf there was always gathered an
+anxious throng, watching for the appearance of the vessel round the
+Cape. And when she was visible at last, there would be cries of joy from
+some, and silence on the part of others. Zabette was among the silent.
+When she saw the happiness about her, tears would swim unbidden in her
+eyes; but of course she did not lose heart, for still there were several
+vessels to arrive, and no disasters had been reported by the earlier
+comers. People noticed her, standing there with expectant mien, and they
+wondered what it could be that brought her; but it was not their habit
+to ask questions of the fine highstepper.
+
+There was another young girl on the wharf, too, who had the air of
+looking for some one--a certain Suzanne Benoît, from l'Étang, three
+miles inshore, a very pretty girl, with a mild, appealing look in her
+brown eyes. Zabette had seen her often here and there; but she had no
+acquaintance with her. At the present moment, strangely enough, she
+felt herself powerfully drawn to this Suzanne. It came to her, somehow,
+that the girl had come thither on a mission similar to her own, she
+was so silent, and had not the look of those who had waited on the
+wharf in previous years. And so, one afternoon, when two vessels had
+rounded the Cape and were entering the harbor, amid a great hubbub of
+expectancy,--and neither of them was the _Soleil_,--Zabette surprised
+a look of woe in the face of the other which she could not resist. She
+went over to her, with some diffidence, and offered a few words of
+sympathy.
+
+"You are waiting for some one, too?" she asked her.
+
+The eyes of the other filled quickly to overflowing. "Yes," she
+answered. "He has not come yet."
+
+"You must not worry," said Zabette, stoutly. "There are always delays,
+you know. Some are ahead; others behind; it is so every year."
+
+The girl gave her a grateful look, and squeezed her hand. "It is a
+secret," she murmured.
+
+Zabette smiled. "I have a secret too."
+
+"Then we are waiting together," said Suzanne. "That makes it so much
+easier!"
+
+They walked back to the street, arm in arm, as if they had always been
+bosom friends. And the next day they were both at the wharf again. The
+afternoon was bleak; but as usual they were in their best clothes.
+
+"Oh, it does not seem as if I could wait any longer," whispered Suzanne,
+confidingly. "I do hope it will be the _Soleil_ this time."
+
+"The _Soleil_!" exclaimed Zabette, joyfully. "You are waiting for the
+_Soleil_?"
+
+And at the other's nod, she went on. "How lovely that we are expecting
+the same vessel. Oh, I am sure it will come to-day--or certainly
+to-morrow."
+
+The two girls felt themselves very close together, now that they had
+shared so much of their secret; and it made the waiting less hard to
+bear.
+
+"Is he handsome, your man?" asked Suzanne, timidly.
+
+"Ravishing," replied Zabette, eagerly. "And yours?"
+
+Suzanne sighed with adoration. "Beyond words," was her reply--and the
+girls exchanged another of those pressures of the hand which mean so
+much where love is concerned. "He has the most beautiful moustache in
+the world."
+
+"Oh, no," protested Zabette, smilingly. "Mine has a more beautiful one
+yet, and such crisp curly hair, and dark eyes."
+
+Her companion suddenly looked at her. "Large eyes or small?" she asked
+in a strange voice.
+
+"Oh," replied Zabette, doubtfully. "Not too large. I would not fancy ox
+eyes in a man."
+
+Suzanne freed herself and stood facing her with a flash of hatred in her
+mild face which Zabette could not understand.
+
+"And his name!" she demanded, harshly. "His name, then!"
+
+Zabette smiled a little proudly. "That is my secret," she replied. "But,
+Suzanne, what is the matter?"
+
+"It is not your secret," laughed the other, bitterly. "It is not your
+secret. It is my secret."
+
+"What do you mean?" cried Zabette, with a sudden feeling of terror at
+the girl's drawn face.
+
+"His name is Maxence!" Suzanne's laugh was like bones rattling in a
+coffin.
+
+It seemed to Zabette as if a flash of lightning had cleft her soul in
+two. That was the way the truth came to her. She drew back like a viper
+ready to strike.
+
+"Oh, I hate you!" she cried, and turned on her heel, white to the eyes
+with anger and shame.
+
+But Suzanne would not leave her. She followed to the other side of
+the wharf, and as soon as she could speak again without attracting
+attention, she said, more kindly:
+
+"I am very sorry for you, Zabette. It is too bad you were so mistaken.
+Why, he was engaged to me the very second day he came ashore."
+
+Zabette stifled back a cry, and retorted, icily, "He was engaged to me
+the first day. He followed me all the way to the Grande Anse."
+
+Suzanne's eyes glittered, this time. "He followed me all the way to
+l'Étang. He is mine."
+
+Zabette brought out, through white lips, "Leave me alone. He was mine
+first."
+
+"He was mine last," retaliated the other, undauntedly. "The very morning
+he went away, he came to see me. Did he come to you that day? Did he?
+Did he?"
+
+Zabette ignored her question. "He wrote me a letter from St. Pierre
+Miquelon," she announced, crisply. "So that settles it, first and last."
+
+The hand of Suzanne suddenly lifted to her bosom, as if feeling for
+something. "My letter was written at St. Pierre, too."
+
+For an instant they glared at each other like wild animals fighting over
+prey. Neither said a word. Neither yielded a hair. Each felt that her
+life's happiness was at stake. Zabette had thought that this chit of a
+girl from l'Étang was mild and timid; but now she realized that she had
+met her match for courage. And the thought came to her: "When he sees
+us, let him choose."
+
+She was not conscious of having uttered the words. Perhaps her glance,
+swiftly directed toward the Cape, conveyed the thought to her rival. At
+all events the answer came promptly and with complete self-assurance:
+
+"Yes, let Maxence choose."
+
+Just at that moment the first vessel appeared at the harbor entrance,
+while the bell redoubled its jubilation in the church tower on the hill.
+
+"The _Mercure_!" cried an old woman. "Thank God!"
+
+And a few minutes later, there was the _Anne-Marie_, all sail set over
+her green hull; and then a vessel which at first no one seemed to
+recognize.
+
+"Which is that?" they asked. "Oh, it must be--yes, it is the _Soleil_,
+from Rivière Bourgeoise. She has several men from here aboard."
+
+With eyes that seemed to be starting from her head, Zabette watched the
+_Soleil_ entering the harbor. She could distinguish forms on deck. She
+saw handkerchiefs waving. At last she could begin to make out the faces
+a little. But she did not discover the one she sought. Holding tight to
+a mooring post, unable to think, unable to do anything but watch, it
+seemed to her that hours passed before the schooner cast anchor and a
+boat was put over. There were four persons in it: the mate and the three
+men from St. Esprit. They rowed rapidly to the wharf; and the three men
+threw up their gunny sacks and climbed the ladder, one after the other.
+
+The mate was just about to put off again when Zabette spoke to him. She
+leaned over the edge of the wharf, reaching out a detaining hand.
+
+"M'sieur!"
+
+At the same instant the word was uttered by another voice close by. She
+looked up and saw Suzanne, very white, in the same attitude.
+
+"What is it, mesdemoiselles?" asked the mate, touching his vizor.
+
+As if by concerted arrangement came the question from both sides.
+
+"And Maxence?"
+
+The man answered them seriously and directly, perceiving from their
+manner that his reply was of great import to these two, whatever the
+reason for it might be.
+
+"Maxence?--But we do not know where he is. There was a fog. He was out
+in a dory, alone. We picked up the dory the next day. Perhaps"--he
+shrugged his shoulders incredulously--"perhaps he might have been picked
+up by another vessel. Who can say?"
+
+The girls gave him no answer. They reeled, and would have fallen, save
+that each found support in the other's arms. Sinking to the string
+piece of the wharf, they buried their faces on each other's shoulders
+and sobbed. Happy fathers and mothers and sweethearts, gathered on the
+wharf, looked at them in wonder, and left them alone, ignorant of the
+cause of their grief. So a long time passed, and still they crouched
+there, tight clasped, with buried heads.
+
+"He was so good, so brave!" sobbed Suzanne.
+
+"I loved him so much," repeated Zabette, over and over.
+
+"I shall die without him," moaned Suzanne.
+
+"So shall I," responded the other. "I cannot bear to live any longer."
+
+"If only I had a picture of him, that would be some comfort," said the
+poor girl from l'Étang.
+
+"I have one," said Zabette, sitting up straight and putting some orderly
+touches to her disarranged _mouchoir_. "He gave it to me the very last
+night."
+
+Suzanne looked at her enviously, and mopped her red eyes. "All I have,"
+she sighed, "is a little shell box he brought me, with the motto, _À
+ma chérie_. He gave me that the very last morning of all. It is very
+beautiful, but no one but me has seen it yet."
+
+"You must show it to me sometime," said Zabette. "I have a right to see
+it."
+
+"If you will let me look at the picture," consented the other, guardedly.
+
+"Yes, you may look at it," said Zabette, "so long as you do not forget
+that it belongs to me."
+
+"To you!" retorted the other. "And have you a better right to it than I,
+seeing that he would have been my husband in a month's time? You are a
+bad, cruel girl; you have no heart. It is a mercy he escaped the traps
+you set for him--my poor Maxence!"
+
+A thousand taunting words came to Zabette's lips, but she controlled
+herself, rose to her feet with a show of dignity, and quitted the wharf.
+She resolved that she would never speak to that Benoît girl again. To do
+so was only to be insulted.
+
+She went back to her home on the Grande Anse and endeavored to take up
+her everyday life again as though nothing had happened. She hid her
+grief from the neighbors, even from her own parents, who had never
+suspected the strength of her attachment for Maxence. By day she could
+keep herself busy about the house, and the secret would only be a dull
+pain; but at night, especially when the wind blew, it would gnaw and
+gnaw at her heart like a hungry beast.
+
+At last she could keep it to herself no longer. She must share her
+misery. But there was only one person in the world who could understand.
+She declared to herself that nothing would induce her to go to l'Étang;
+and yet, as if under a spell, she made ready for the journey.
+
+"Where are you going, my Zabette?" asked her old mother.
+
+"To l'Étang," she answered. "I hear there is a girl there who makes a
+special brown dye for wool."
+
+"Well, the walk will do you good, ma fille. You have been indoors too
+much lately. You are growing right pale and ill-looking."
+
+"Oh, it is nothing, maman. I never feel very brisk, you know, in
+November. 'Tis such a dreary month."
+
+She took a back road across the barrens to l'Étang. Scarcely any one
+traveled it except in winter to fetch kindling wood from the scrub fir
+that grew there. Consequently Zabette was much surprised, after walking
+about a mile and a half, to discover that some one was approaching from
+the opposite direction--a woman, with a red shawl across her shoulders.
+Gradually the distance between them lessened; and then she saw, with
+a start, that it was Suzanne Benoît. Her knees began to tremble under
+her. When they met, at last, no words would come to her lips: they only
+looked at each other with questioning, hunted eyes, then embraced,
+weeping, and sat down silently on a moss-hummock beside the road.
+Zabette had not felt so comforted since the disaster of October. For the
+first time she could let the tears flow without any fear of detection.
+At last she said, very calmly:
+
+"I have brought the picture."
+
+She drew it out from under her coat, and held it on her knees, where
+Suzanne could see it.
+
+"And here is the shell box," rejoined her companion. "I do not
+know how to read, me; but there are the words--_À ma chérie_. It's
+pretty--_hein_?"
+
+Each gazed at the other's treasure.
+
+"Ah," sighed Suzanne, mournfully. "How handsome he was to look at--and
+so true and brave!"
+
+"I shall never love another," said Zabette, with sad conviction--"never.
+Love is over for me."
+
+"And for me," said Suzanne. "But we have our memories."
+
+"Mine," corrected Zabette. "You are forgetting."
+
+"Did he ever give you a present that said _À ma chérie_?" demanded
+Suzanne, pointedly.
+
+The other explained blandly: "You cannot say anything, my dear, on the
+back of a tintype.--But I have my letter from St. Pierre."
+
+She showed it.
+
+"Even if I cannot read mine," declared the girl from l'Étang, hotly, "I
+know it is fully as nice as yours. Nicer!"
+
+"Oh, can I never see you but you must insult me!" cried Zabette. "Keep
+your old box and your precious letter from St. Pierre Miquelon. What can
+they matter to me?"
+
+Without a word of good-by she sprang to her feet and set out for the
+Grande Anse. She did not see the Benoît girl again that winter; but she
+could not help thinking about her, sometimes with sympathy, sometimes
+with bitter hatred. The young men came flocking to her home, as usual,
+vying with one another in attentions to her, for not only was Zabette
+known as the handsomest girl in three parishes, but also as an excellent
+housekeeper--"good saver, rare spender."
+
+She would not encourage any of them, however.
+
+"If I marry," she said to herself, "it is giving Maxence over to that
+l'Étang girl. She will crow about it. She will say, 'At last he is mine
+altogether. She has surrendered.' No, I could not stand that."
+
+So that winter passed, and the next summer, and other winters and
+summers. Zabette did not marry; and after a time she began hearing
+herself spoken of as an old maid. The young men flocked to other houses,
+not hers. At the end of twelve years both her father and mother were
+dead, and she was alone in the world, thirty, and unprovided for.
+
+It was, of course, fated, that these two women whose lives had been so
+strangely entangled should drift together again, sooner or later. So
+long as both were young and could claim love for themselves, jealousy
+was bound to separate them; but when they found themselves quite alone
+in the world, no longer beautiful, no longer arousing thoughts of love
+in the breast of another, the memory of all that was most precious in
+their lives drew them together as surely as a magnet draws two bits of
+metal.
+
+It was after mass, one Sunday, that Zabette sought out her rival finally
+and found the courage to propose a singular plan.
+
+"You are alone, Suzanne," she said. "So am I. We are both poor. Come and
+live with me."
+
+"And you will give me Maxence?" asked Suzanne, a little hardly.
+
+"No. But I will give you half of him. See, why should we quarrel any
+more? He is dead. Let us be reasonable. After this he shall belong to
+both of us."
+
+Still the _vieille fille_ from l'Étang held back, though her eyes
+softened.
+
+"All these years," she said, with a remnant of defiance--"all these
+years he has been mine. I did not get married, me, because that would
+have let him belong to you."
+
+Zabette sighed wearily. "And all these years I have been saying the same
+thing. And yet I could never forget the shell box and your letter from
+St. Pierre Miquelon. Come, don't you see how much easier it will be--how
+much more natural--if we put our treasures together: all we have of
+Maxence, and call him _ours_?"
+
+Suzanne was beginning to yield, but doubtfully. "If it would be proper,"
+she said.
+
+"Not if he were living, of course," replied the other, with assurance.
+"The laws of the church forbid that. But in the course of a lifetime a
+husband may have more than one wife. I do not see why, when a husband is
+dead, two wives should not have him. Do you?"
+
+"I will come," said Suzanne, softly and gratefully. "I am so lonely."
+
+Three years later the two women moved from the Grande Anse into the
+village, renting the little cottage with the dormer windows in which
+they have lived ever since. You must look far to find so devoted a pair.
+They are more than sisters to each other. If their lives have not been
+happy, as the world judges happiness, they have at least been illumined
+by two great and abiding loves,--which does not happen often,--that for
+the dead, and that for each other.
+
+
+
+
+GARLANDS FOR PETTIPAW
+
+
+
+
+GARLANDS FOR PETTIPAW
+
+
+Towns, like persons, I suppose, wake up now and then to find themselves
+famous; but I doubt if any town having this experience could be more
+amazed by it, more dazed by it, than was Three Rivers, one day last
+March, when we opened our newspapers from Boston and Montreal and lo,
+there was our own name staring at us from the front page! Three Rivers
+is in the Province of Quebec, on the shore of the Bay de Chaleurs; but
+we receive our metropolitan papers every day, only thirty-six hours off
+the presses; and this makes us feel closely in touch with the outside
+world. Until the railroad from Matapedia came through, four years ago,
+mail was brought by stage, every second day. The coming of the railroad
+had seemed an important event then; but it had never put Three Rivers on
+the front page of the Boston _Herald_.
+
+The news-item in question was to the effect that the S. S. _Maid
+of the North_, Captain Pettipaw of Three Rivers, P. Q., had been
+torpedoed, forty miles off Fastnet, while en route from Sydney, N. S.,
+to Liverpool, with a cargo of pig-iron. The captain and crew (said the
+item) had been allowed to take to the boats; but only one of the two
+boats had been heard from. That one was in command of the mate, and had
+been rescued by a trawler.
+
+Captain Pettipaw of Three Rivers! _Our_ Captain Pettipaw! How well we
+knew him; and who among us had ever thought of him as one likely to
+make Three Rivers figure on the front page of the world's news! Yet
+this had come to pass; and even amid the anxiety we felt as to the fate
+of Captain Joe, we could but be agreeably conscious of the distinction
+that had come to our little community. All that afternoon poor Mrs.
+Pettipaw's house was thronged with neighbors who hurried over there,
+newspaper in hand, ready to congratulate or to condole as might seem
+most called for.
+
+"Poor Mrs. Pettipaw" or "poor Melina" was the way we always spoke
+of her, partly, I suppose, because of her nine children, and partly
+because--I hesitate to say it--she was Captain Joe's wife. But now that
+it seemed so very likely she might be his widow, our hearts went out
+to her the more. You see Captain Joe was, in our local phrase, "one
+of those Pettipaws." Pettipaws never seemed to get anywhere or to do
+anything that mattered. Pettipaws were always behindhand. Pettipaws were
+always in trouble, one way or another. It was a family characteristic.
+
+Only five or six years ago Captain Joe's new schooner, the _Melina
+P._, had broken from her harbor moorings under a sudden gale from the
+northwest and driven square on the Fiddle Reef, where she foundered
+before our eyes. Other vessels were anchored close by the _Melina P._;
+but not one of them broke loose. All the Captain's savings for years and
+years had gone into the new schooner, not to speak of several hundreds
+borrowed from his fellow-townsmen.
+
+And the very next winter his house had burned to the ground; and the
+seven children--there were only seven then--had been parceled out
+amongst the neighbors for six or seven months until, about midsummer,
+the new house was roofed over and the windows set; and then the family
+moved in, and there they lived for several more months, "sort of
+camping-out fashion," as poor Melina cheerfully put it, while Captain
+Joe was occasionally seen putting on a row of shingles or sawing a
+board. At last, after the snow had begun to fly, the neighbors came
+once more to the rescue. A collection was made for the stricken family;
+carpenters finished the house; a mason built the chimney and plastered
+the downstairs partitions; curtains were donated for the windows; and
+the Pettipaws spent the winter in comfort.
+
+The following spring Captain Joe got a position as second officer on
+a coastwise ship out of Boston, and the affairs of the family began
+to look up. From that he was promoted to the captaincy of a little
+freighter plying between Montreal and the Labrador; and the next we
+knew, he was in command of a large collier sailing out of Sydney, Nova
+Scotia. Poor Melina appeared in a really handsome new traveling suit,
+ordered from the big mail order house in Montreal; and the young ones
+could all go to church the same Sunday, and often did.
+
+For the last year or two we had ceased to make frequent inquiries after
+Captain Joe; he had dropped pretty completely out of our life; and the
+thought that he might be holding a commission of special dangerousness
+had never so much as entered our minds. But poor Melina's calmness in
+the face of the news-item surprised everyone. It was like a reproach to
+her neighbors for not having acknowledged before the worth of the man
+she had married. It had not required a German torpedo to teach her that.
+And as for his safety, that apparently caused her no anxiety whatever.
+
+"You couldn't kill the Captain," she repeated, with a quiet, untroubled
+smile, which was as much as to say that anything else might happen to a
+Pettipaw, but not that.
+
+The rest of us admired her faith without being able to share it. Poor
+Melina rarely had leisure to read a newspaper, and she did not know much
+about the disasters of the war zone. And so, instinctively, everyone
+began to say the eulogistic things about Captain Joe that had never been
+said--though now we realized they ought to have been said--while he was
+with us.
+
+"He was such a good man," said Mrs. Thibault, the barrister's wife.
+"So devoted to his home. I remember of how he would sit there on the
+doorstep for hours, watching his little ones at their play. Poor babies!
+Poor little babies!"
+
+"Such a brave man, too; and so witty!" said John Boutin, our tailor.
+"The stories he would tell, my! my! Many a day in the shop he'd be
+telling stories from dinner till dark, without once stopping for breath
+as you might say. It passed the time so nice!"
+
+"And devout!" added Mrs. Fougère, the postmistress. "A Christian. He
+loved to listen to the church-bells. I remember like it was yesterday
+his saying to me, 'The man,' he said, 'who can hear a church-bell
+without thinking of religion, is as good as lost, to my thinking.'"
+
+"Not that he went to church very often," said Boutin.
+
+"His knee troubled him," explained Mrs. Fougère.
+
+Early in the evening came the cable message that justified poor Melina's
+confidence. Eugénie White--the Whites used to be Le Blancs, but since
+Eugénie came back from Boston, they have taken the more up-to-date
+name--Eugénie came flying up the street from the railroad station,
+waving the yellow envelope and spreading the news as she flew. The
+message consisted of only one word: "Safe"; but it was dated Queenstown,
+and it bore the signature we were henceforth to be so proud of: Joseph
+Pettipaw.
+
+Two days later the _Herald_ contained a notice of the rescue by a
+Norwegian freighter of the Captain of the _Maid of the North_; but we
+had to wait ten days for the full story, which occupied two columns in
+one of the Queenstown journals and almost as much in the Dublin _Post_,
+with a very lifelike photograph of Captain Joe. It was a wonderful
+story, as you may very likely remember, for the American papers gave it
+plenty of attention a little later.
+
+It had been a calm, warm day, but with an immense sea running. Before
+entering the war zone Captain Joe had made due preparation for
+emergencies. The ship's boats were ready to be swung, and in each was a
+barrel of water and a supply of biscuit and other rations. The submarine
+was not sighted until it was too late to think of escaping; the engines
+were reversed; and when the German commander called out through his
+megaphone that ten minutes would be allowed for the escape of the crew,
+all hands hurried to the lee side and began piling into the boats. The
+mate's was lowered away first and cleared safely.
+
+The Captain was about to give the order for the lowering of his own
+boat, when the only woman in the party cried out that her husband was
+being left behind. It was the cook, who was indulging in an untimely
+nap, his noonday labors in the galley being over. In her first
+excitement Martha Figman had failed to notice his absence, but had made
+for the boat as fast as she could, carrying her three-year-old child.
+
+"Be quick!" called out the commander of the submarine. "Your time is up!"
+
+"Oh, Captain, Captain, don't leave him," implored the desperate woman.
+"He's all I have!"
+
+Then Captain Joe did the thing that will go down in history. He seized
+the little girl and held her aloft in his arms and called out to the
+Germans:
+
+"In the name of this little child, grant me three more minutes."
+
+"Two!" replied the commander.
+
+Captain Joe leaped to the deck and rushed aft, burst open the cook's
+cabin, and hauled Danny Figman, quite sound asleep, out of his berth.
+The poor rascal was only partly dressed, but there was no time to make
+him presentable. A blanket and a sou'wester had to suffice. Still
+bewildered, he was dragged on deck and ordered to run for his life.
+
+A few seconds later the boat lowered away with its full quota of
+passengers; the men took the oars, cleared a hundred yards safely; and
+then there was a snort, a white furrow through the waves, an explosion;
+the _Maid of the North_ listed, settled, and disappeared. The submarine
+steamed quickly out of sight; and the two boats were all that was left
+as witness of what had happened.
+
+On account of the terrible seas that were running, the boats soon became
+separated; and for sixty-two hours Captain Joe bent his every energy
+to keeping his boat afloat, for she was in momentary danger of being
+swamped, until on the third morning the Norwegian was sighted, came to
+the rescue, and carried the exhausted occupants into Queenstown.
+
+Three Rivers, you may depend, had this story by heart, and backward
+and forward, long before Captain Joe returned to us; for not only did
+it appear in those Irish journals, but also on the occasion of the
+Captain's arrival in New York in several metropolitan papers, written
+up with great detail, and with a picture of little Tina Figman in the
+Captain's arms.
+
+"This is the Captain," ran the print under the picture, "who risked his
+life that a baby might not be fatherless."
+
+You can imagine how anxious we were by this time in Three Rivers to
+welcome that Captain home again; not one of us but wanted to make ample
+amends for the injustice we had done him in the past. But we had to
+wait several weeks, for even after the owners had brought Captain Joe
+and his crew back to New York on the St. Louis, still he had to go to
+Montreal for a ten days' stay, to depose his evidence officially and to
+wind up the affairs of the torpedoed ship. But at last he was positively
+returning to us; and extensive preparations were undertaken for his
+reception.
+
+As he was coming by the St. Lawrence steamer, _Lady of Gaspé_, the
+principal decorations were massed in the vicinity of the government
+wharf. If I tell you that well nigh three hundred dollars had been
+collected for this purpose from the good people of Three Rivers, you
+can form some idea of the magnitude of the effort. A double row of
+saplings had been set up along the wharf and led thence to the Palace
+of Justice; and the full distance, an eighth of a mile, was hung with
+red and tricolor bunting. Then there were three triumphal arches, one
+at the head of the wharf, one at the turn into the street, and one in
+front of the post-office. These arches were very cleverly built, with
+little turrets at the corners, the timber-work completely covered with
+spruce-branches; and each arch displayed a motto. Mrs. Fougère and
+Eugénie White had devised the mottoes, little John Boutin had traced
+the letters on cotton, and Mrs. Boutin had painted them. The first
+read: "Honor to Our Hero." The second was in French, for the reason that
+half our population still use that language by preference, and it read:
+"Honneur à notre Héro"; and the third arch bore the one word, ornately
+inscribed: "Welcome."
+
+All the houses along the way were decorated with geraniums and flags;
+and as the grass was already very green (it was June) and the willows
+and silver-oaks beginning to leave out, it may fairly be said that Three
+Rivers was a beauty spot.
+
+Seeing that no one can tell beforehand when a steamer is going to
+arrive, the whole town was in its best clothes and ready at an early
+hour of the morning. The neighbors trooped in at poor Melina's, offering
+their services in case any of the children still needed combing,
+curling, or buttoning; and all through the forenoon the young people
+were climbing to the top of St. Anne's hill to see if there was any sign
+of the _Lady of Gaspé_; but it was not till three in the afternoon that
+the church-bell, madly ringing, announced that the long-expected moment
+was about to arrive.
+
+I wish I could quote for you in full the account of that day's doings
+which appeared in our local sheet, the Bonaventure _Record_, for it
+was beautifully written and described every feature as it deserved,
+reproducing _verbatim_ the Mayor's address of welcome, Father Quinnan's
+speech in the Palace, and the Resolutions drawn up by ten representative
+citizens and presented to Captain Pettipaw on a handsomely illuminated
+scroll, which you may see to-day hanging in the place of honor in his
+parlor.
+
+But let my readers imagine for themselves the arrival of the steamer,
+the cheer upon cheer as Captain Joe came gravely down the gang-plank;
+the affecting meeting between him and poor Melina and the nine little
+Pettipaws, the littlest of whom he had never seen, and several of whom
+had grown so in these last four years that he had the names wrong, which
+caused happy laughter and happy tears on all sides. Then the procession
+to the Palace! There was an orchestra of four pieces from Cape Cove; and
+a troop of little girls, in white, scattered tissue-paper flowers along
+the line of march.
+
+The Mayor began his speech by saying that an honor had come to our
+little town which would be rehearsed from father to son for generations.
+Father Quinnan took for his theme the three words: "Father, Husband,
+Hero"; and he showed us how each of those words, in its highest and best
+sense, necessarily comprised the other two. And the exercises closed
+with a very enjoyable piano duet which you doubtless know: "Wandering
+Dreams," by some foreign composer.
+
+People watched Captain Joe very closely. It would have been only natural
+if, returning to us in this way, he should have remembered a time,
+not so long before, when the attitude of his fellow-citizens had been
+extremely cool. But if he remembered it, he gave no sign; and he smiled
+at everyone in a grave, thoughtful manner that made one's heart beat
+high.
+
+"He has aged," whispered Mrs. Fougère. "But his face is noble. It
+reminds me of Napoleon, somehow."
+
+"To me he looks more like that American we see so often in the
+papers--Bryan. So much dignity!" This from Mrs. Boutin.
+
+We appreciated the Captain's freedom from condescension the more when
+we heard from his own lips, that same evening, a recital of the honors
+that had been showered upon him during the past weeks. The Mayor of
+Queenstown had had him to dinner; Lady Derntwood, known as the most
+beautiful woman in Ireland, had entertained him for three days at
+Derntwood Park, and sent an Indian shawl as a present to his wife. On
+the _St. Louis_ he had sat at the Captain's right hand; in New York he
+had been interviewed and royally fêted by the newspaper-men; and at
+Montreal the owners had presented him with a gold watch and a purse of
+$250. Also, they had offered him another ship immediately.
+
+"Oh, you're going again!" we exclaimed; and the words were repeated from
+one to another in admiration--"He's going again!" But Captain Joe smiled
+thoughtfully.
+
+"I told them I didn't mind being torpedoed," he said ('Oh, no! Certainly
+not! Mind being torpedoed; you! Captain Joe!') "but--"
+
+"But what, Captain?"
+
+"But I said as I couldn't bear for to see a little child exposed again
+in an open boat for sixty-four hours."
+
+"But Captain, wouldn't they give you a ship without a child?"
+
+"They _said_ they would," he replied, doubtfully, shaking his head.
+
+"Then what will you be doing next?" we asked, mentally reviewing the
+various fields in which he might add laurels to laurels.
+
+He meditated a little while and then replied: "Home'll suit me pretty
+good for a spell."
+
+Well, that could be understood, certainly. Indeed, it was to his credit.
+We remembered Father Quinnan's speech. The husband, the father, had
+their claim. A little stay at home, in the bosom of loved ones, yes, to
+be sure, it seemed fitting and right, after the perils of the sea.
+
+And yet, why was it, as we took down the one-eighth-mile of bunting that
+night, there was a faint but perceptible dampening of our enthusiasm.
+Perhaps it was the reaction from the strain and excitement of the day,
+for it had been, there was no denying it, a day of days for Three
+Rivers; a day, which, as Father Quinnan had said, would be writ in
+letters of gold in Memory's fair album. This day was ended now, and
+night came down upon a very proud and very tired little community.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+If this were a fancy story instead of a record of things that came to
+pass last year on the Gaspé Coast, my pen should stop here; but as it
+is, I feel under a plain obligation to pursue the narrative.
+
+I've no doubt that many other towns in the history of the world have
+faced precisely the same problem that Three Rivers faced in the months
+following: namely, what to do with a hero when you have one. Oh, if
+you could only set them up on a pedestal in front of the Town Hall or
+the post-office and _keep_ them there! A statue is so practicable.
+Once in so often, say on anniversaries, you can freshen it up, hang
+it with garlands and bunting, and polish the inscription; and then
+the school-children can come, and somebody can explain to them about
+the statue, and why we should venerate it, and what were the splendid
+qualities of the hero which we are to try to imitate in our own lives. I
+hope that all cities with statues realize their happy condition.
+
+For two or three weeks after the Great Day Three Rivers still kept its
+air of festivity. The triumphal arches could be appreciated even from
+the train, and many travelers, we heard, passing through, leaned out of
+the windows and asked questions of the station agent.
+
+Wherever Captain Joe went, there followed a little knot of children,
+listening open-mouthed for any word that might fall from his lips; and
+you could hear them explaining to one another how it was that a man
+could be torpedoed and escape undamaged. At first no one of lesser
+importance than the Mayor or the Bank Manager presumed to walk with him
+on the street; and he was usually to be seen proceeding in solitary
+dignity to or from the post-office, head a little bowed, one hand
+in the opening of his coat, his step slow and thoughtful, while the
+children pattered along behind.
+
+But the barrier between the Captain and his fellow-townsmen was
+entirely of their own creation, it transpired, for he was naturally a
+sociable man, and now more than ever he craved society, being sure of a
+deferential hearing. Once established again in Boutin's tailor-shop and
+pool-parlor, he seemed disposed never to budge from it; and as often
+as you might pass, day or night, you could hear him holding forth to
+whatever company happened to be present. It was impossible not to gather
+many scraps of his discourse, for his voice was as loud as an orator's.
+
+"And Lady Derntwood--no, it was Lady Genevieve, Lady Derntwood's dairter
+by her first husband and fully as beautiful as her mother, she said to
+me, 'Captain,' she said, 'when I read that about the little girl--For
+the sake of this little child, grant me three minutes!--the tears filled
+my eyes, and I said to my maid, who had brought me my _Times_ on the
+breakfast tray, "Lucienne," I said, "that is a man I should be proud
+to know!"'--and that's a fact sir, as true as I'm settin' here, for
+Lucienne herself told me the same thing. A little beauty, that Lucienne:
+black hair; medium height. We used to talk French together."
+
+Or another time you would hear: "And they said to me, 'Captain,' they
+says, 'and are you satisfied with the gold watch and chain and with the
+little purse we have made up for you here, not pretending, of course,
+for one minute,' they says, 'that 'tis any measure of the services you
+have rendered to us or to your country. We ask you,' they says, 'are you
+satisfied?' And I said, 'I am,' and the fact is, I was, for the watch
+I'd lost was an Ingersoll, and my clothes put together wouldn't have
+brought a hundred dollars."
+
+So the weeks went by; and the triumphal arches, on which the mottoes
+had run a good deal, were taken down and broken up for kindling; and
+still Captain Joe sat and talked all day long and all night long, too,
+if only anybody would listen to him. But listeners were growing scarce.
+His story had been heard too often; and any child in town was able to
+correct him when he slipped up, which often happened. The two hundred
+and fifty dollars was spent long since, and now the local merchants were
+forced to insist once more on strictly cash purchases, and many a day
+the Pettipaw family must have "done meagre," as the French say. Unless
+all signs failed, they would be soon living again at the charge of the
+community. Close your eyes if you like, sooner or later certain grim
+truths will be borne home to you. A leopard cannot change his spots, nor
+a Pettipaw his skin. Before our very eyes the honor and glory of Three
+Rivers, the thing that was to be passed from generation to generation,
+was vanishing: worse than that, we were becoming ridiculous in our own
+eyes, which is harder to bear, even, than being ridiculous in the eyes
+of others.
+
+There was one remedy and only one. It was plain to anybody who
+considered the situation thoughtfully. Captain Joe must be got away. So
+long as your hero is alive, he can only be viewed advantageously at a
+distance. At all events, if he is a Pettipaw.
+
+It was proposed that we should elect him our local member to the
+provincial Parliament. It might be managed. We suggested it to him,
+dwelling upon the opportunities it would afford for the exercise of his
+special talents which, we said, were being thrown away in a little town
+like Three Rivers. He conceded that we spoke the truth; "but," he said,
+after a moment of thoughtful silence, "I am a sailor born and bred, and
+my health would never stand the confinement. Never!"
+
+Next it was found that we could secure for him the position of purser
+on the S. S. _Lady of the Gaspé_. But this offer he refused even more
+emphatically.
+
+"Purser!--Me!" There was evidently nothing more to be said.
+
+Writing to Montreal, Father Quinnan learned that if he so wished Captain
+Pettipaw might have again the command of the little freighter that ran
+to the Labrador; and the proposition was laid before him with sanguine
+expectations. Again he declined.
+
+"The Labrador! Thank you! They wouldn't even know who I was!"
+
+"You could tell them, Captain."
+
+"What good would that do?"
+
+No answer being forthcoming to this demand, still another scheme had to
+be sought. It was the Mayor who finally saved the day for Three Rivers.
+He instigated a Patriotic Fund, to which every man, woman and child
+contributed what he could, and with the proceeds a three-masted schooner
+of two hundred tons burden was acquired (she had been knocked down for a
+song at a sheriff's sale at Campbellton); she was handsomely refitted,
+rechristened, and presented, late in October, to Captain Joe, as a
+tribute of esteem from his native town.
+
+It is not for me to say just how grateful the Captain was, at heart; but
+he accepted the gift with becoming dignity; and before the winter ice
+closed the Gulf (so expeditiously had our plans been carried out) the
+_Gloria_ was ready to sail with a cargo of dry fish for the Barbadoes.
+
+The evening previous to her departure there was a big farewell meeting
+in the Palace of Justice, with speeches by the Mayor and Father Quinnan,
+a piano duet, and an original poem by Eugénie White, beginning:
+
+ _Sail forth, sail far,
+ O Captain bold!_
+
+It was remarkable to see how all the enthusiasm and fervor of an earlier
+celebration in that same hall sprang to life again; yes, and with a
+solemnity added, for this time our hero was going from us. He sat
+there on the platform by the Mayor, handsome, square-shouldered, his
+head a little bowed, a thoughtful smile on his lips under the grizzled
+moustache: he was every inch the noble figure that had stood unflinching
+before the gates of death; and we realized as never before what a debt
+of gratitude we owed him. At last our hero was our hero again.
+
+There is but little more to tell. The next morning, bright and early,
+everybody was at the wharf to watch the _Gloria_ hoist her sails, weigh
+anchor, and tack out into the bay. There were tears in many, many eyes
+besides those of poor Mrs. Pettipaw. The sea had a dark look, off there,
+and one thought of the dangers that awaited any man who sailed out on it
+at this time of the year.
+
+"Heaven send him good passage!" said Mrs. Thibault, wiping her eyes
+vigorously.
+
+"Yes, yes, and bring him safe home again, the brave man!" added Mrs.
+Boutin, earnestly; and all those who heard her breathed a sincere amen
+to that prayer.
+
+It was sincere. We had wanted Captain Joe to go away; we had actually
+forced him to go away; yet no sooner was he gone than we prayed he might
+be brought safe home again. Yes, for when all is said and done, a town
+that has a hero must love him and cherish him and wish him well. Because
+we have ours, Three Rivers will always be a better place to live in and
+to bring up children in: a more inspiring place.
+
+Only, perhaps, if Mrs. Boutin had spoken less impulsively, she would
+have added one or two qualifying clauses to her petition. For instance,
+she might have added: "Only not too soon, and not for too long at once!"
+But for my part, I believe that will be understood by the good angel who
+puts these matters on record, up there.
+
+
+[Illustration: A FISHERMAN'S HOUSE]
+
+
+
+
+FLY, MY HEART!
+
+
+
+
+FLY, MY HEART!
+
+
+They called her Sabine Bob--"S'been Bob"--because her real name was
+Sabine Anne Boudrot; and being a Boudrot in Petit Espoir is like being
+a Smith or a Brown in our part of the world, only ten times more so,
+for in that little fishing-port of Cape Breton, down in the Maritime
+Provinces, practically everybody belongs to the abounding tribe.
+Boudrot, therefore, having ceased to possess more than a modicum of
+specificity (to borrow a term from the logicians), the custom has arisen
+of tagging the various generations and households of Boudrots with the
+familiar name of the father that begat them.
+
+And thus Sabine Anne Boudrot, "old girl" of fifty, was known only as
+Sabine Bob, and Mary Boudrot, her friend, to whom she was dictating
+a love-letter on a certain August evening, was known only as Mary
+Willee--with the accent so strongly on the final syllable that it
+sounded like Marywil-Lee. Sabine Bob was in service; always had
+been. Mary kept house for an invalid father. But there was no social
+distinction between the two.
+
+Mary Willee bent close over the sheet of ruled note-paper and
+laboriously traced out the words, dipping her pen every few seconds with
+professional punctiliousness and screwing up her homely face into all
+sorts of homely expressions: tongue now tight-bitten between her teeth,
+now working restlessly in one cheek, now hard pressed against bulging
+lips. There was agony for both of them in this business of producing a
+love-letter: agony for Mary Willee because she had never fully mastered
+the art of writing, and the shaping just-so of the letters and above
+all the spelling brought out beads of sweat on her forehead; agony for
+Sabine Bob because her heart was so burstingly full and words were so
+powerless to ease that bursting.
+
+Besides, how could she be sure, really, positively _sure_, that Mary
+Willee was recording there on that paper the very words, just those
+very words and none others, which she was confiding to her! Writing was
+a tricky affair. Tricky, like the English language which Sabine Bob
+was using, against her will, for the reason that Mary Willee had never
+learned to write French. French was natural. In French one could say
+what one thought: it felt homelike. In English one had to be stiff.
+
+"Read me what I have said so far," directed Sabine Bob, and she held to
+the seat of her chair with her bony hands and listened.
+
+Mary Willee began, compliantly. "'My dearling Thomas'"--
+
+Sabine Bob interrupted. "The number of the day comes first. Always! I
+brought you the calendar with the day marked on it."
+
+"I wrote it here," said Mary Willee. "You need not be so anxious. I have
+done letters before this."
+
+"Oh, but everything is so important!" ejaculated Sabine, with tragedy in
+her voice. "Now begin again."
+
+"'My dearling Thomas. It is bad times here. So much fogg all ways. i was
+houghing potatoes since 2 days and they looks fine and i am nitting yous
+some socks for when yous come back. i hope you is getting lots of them
+poggiz.'"
+
+Mary Willee hesitated. "I ain't just sure how to spell that word," she
+confessed.
+
+"Pogeys?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"You ought to be. What for did they send you to the convent all those
+four years?"
+
+"It was only three. And the nuns never taught us no such things as
+about pogey-fishing. But no matter. Thomas Ned will know what you mean,
+because that's what he's gone fishing after."
+
+And she continued: "'I miss yous awful some days. when you comes back in
+octobre we's git married sure.'"
+
+She looked up. "That's all you told me so far."
+
+Sabine's face was drawn into furrows of intense thought. "How many more
+lines is there to fill?"
+
+"Seven."
+
+"Well, then, tell him I was looking at the little house what his auntie
+Sophie John left him and thinking how nice it would be when there was
+some front steps and the shimney was fix' and there were curtains to the
+windows in front and some geraniums and I t'ink I will raise some hens
+because they are such good company running in and out all day when he
+will be away pogey-fishing but perhaps when we're married he won't have
+to go off any more because his healt' is put to danger by it and how
+would it do, say, if he got a little horse and truck with the hundred
+and fifty dollars I got saved up and did work by the day for people
+ashore and then"--she paused for breath.
+
+"Is that too much to write?" she remarked with sudden anxiety.
+
+"It is," replied Mary Willee, firmly. "You can say two things, and then
+good-by."
+
+Two things! Sabine Bob stared at the little yellow circle of light
+on the smoky ceiling over the lamp; then out of the window into the
+darkness. Two things more; and there were so many thousand things to
+say! Her mind was a blank.
+
+"I am waiting," Mary reminded her, poising her pen pitilessly.
+
+"Tell him," gasped out Sabine, "tell him--I t'ink I raise some hens."
+
+Letter by letter the pregnant sentence was inscribed, while Sabine
+stared at the pen with paralyzed attention, as if her doom were being
+written in the Book of Judgment; and now the time had come for the
+second thing! Tears of helplessness stood in her eyes.
+
+"Ask him," she blurted out, "would the hundred and fifty dollars what I
+got buy a nice little horse and truck."
+
+Mary Willee paused. She seemed embarrassed.
+
+"Write it," commanded the other.
+
+Mary Willee looked almost frightened. "Must you say that about the
+money?" she asked, weakly.
+
+"Write the words I told you," insisted Sabine. "This is my letter, not
+yours."
+
+Reluctantly the younger woman set down the sentence; then added the
+requisite and necessary "Good-by, from Sabine."
+
+"Is there room for a few kisses?" asked the fiancée.
+
+"One row."
+
+Sabine seized the pen greedily and holding it between clenched fingers
+added a line of significant little lop-sided symbols. Then while her
+secretary prepared the letter for mailing, she wiped her forehead
+with a large blue handkerchief which she refolded and returned to the
+skirt-pocket that contained her rosary and her purse. She put on her
+little old yellow-black hat again and made ready to go.
+
+"Now to the post-office," she said. "How glad Thomas Ned will be when he
+gets it!"
+
+"I am sure he will," said Mary; and if there was any doubt in her tone,
+it was not perceived by her friend, who suddenly flung her arms about
+her in a gush of happy emotion.
+
+"Dieu, que c'est beau, l'amour!" she exclaimed.
+
+The sentiment was not a new one in the world; but it was still a new
+one, and very wonderful, to Sabine Bob: Sabine Bob who had never been
+pretty, even in youthful days, who had never had any nice clothes or
+gone to parties, but had just scrubbed and washed and swept, saved what
+she could, gone to church on Sundays, bought a new pair of shoes every
+other year.
+
+Not that she had ever thought of pitying herself. She was too practical
+for that; and besides, there had always been plenty to be happy about.
+The music in church, for instance, which thrilled and dissolved and
+comforted her; and the pictures there, which she loved to gaze at,
+especially the one of Our Lady above the altar.
+
+And then there were children! No one need be very unhappy, it seemed
+to Sabine Bob, in a world where there were children. She never went
+out without first putting a few little hard, colored candies in her
+pocket to dispense along the street, over gates and on front steps.
+The tinier the children were the more she loved them. Every spring in
+Petit Espoir there was a fresh crop of the very tiniest of all; and
+towards these--little pink bundles of softness and helplessness--she
+felt something of the adoration which those old Wise Men felt who had
+followed the star. If she had had spices and frankincense, Sabine Bob
+would have offered it, on her knees. But in lieu of that, she brought
+little knitted sacques and blankets and hoods.
+
+Such had been Sabine Bob's past; and that a day was to come in her
+life when a handsome young man should say sweet, loving things to
+her, present her with perfumery, bottle on bottle, ask her to be his
+wife, bless you, she would have been the first to scout the ridiculous
+idea--till six months ago! Thomas Ned was a small man, about forty,
+squarely built, with pink cheeks, long lashes, luxuriant moustache; a
+pretty man; a man who cut quite a figure amongst the girls and (many
+declared) could have had his pick of them. Why, why, had he chosen
+Sabine Bob? When she considered the question thoughtfully, she found
+answers enough, for she was not a girl who underestimated her own worth.
+
+"Thomas is sensible," she explained to Mary Willee. "He knows better
+than to take up with one of those weak, sickly young things that have
+nothing but a pretty face and stylish clothes to recommend them. I can
+work; I can save; I can make his life easy. He knows he will be well
+looked out for."
+
+If Mary Willee could have revised this explanation, she refrained from
+doing so. It would have taken courage to do so at that moment, for
+Sabine Bob was so happy! It was almost comical for any one to be so
+happy as that! Sabine realized it and laughed at herself and was happier
+still. Morning, noon, and night, during those first mad, marvelous days
+after she had promised to become Madame Thomas Ned, she was singing a
+bit of gay nonsense she had known from childhood:
+
+ _Vive la Canadienne,
+ Vole, vole, vole, mon coeur!_
+
+"Fly, fly, oh fly, my heart," trolled Sabine Bob; and every evening,
+until the time came when he must depart for the pogey-fishing, in May,
+he had come and sat with her in the kitchen; he would smoke; she would
+knit away at a pair of mittens for him (oh, such small hands as that
+Thomas had!), and about ten o'clock she would fetch a glass of blueberry
+wine and some currant cookies. How nice it was to be doing such things
+for some one--of one's own!
+
+She hovered over him like a ministering spirit, beaming and tender. This
+was what she had starved for all her life without knowing it: to serve
+some one of her own! Not for wages now; for love! She flung herself on
+the altar of Thomas and burned there with a clear ecstatic flame.
+
+And now that he had been away four months, pogey-fishing, she would
+sometimes console herself by getting out the five picture-postcards he
+had sent her and muse upon the scenes of affection depicted there and
+pick out, word by word, the brief messages he had written. With Mary
+Willee's assistance she had memorized them; and they were words of
+sempiternal devotion; and there were little round love-knows-what's in
+plenty; and on one card he called her his little wife; and that was the
+one she prized the most. Wife! Sabine Bob!
+
+That no card arrived in answer to her August letter did not surprise
+her, for the pogeymen often did not put into port for weeks at a time;
+and anyhow the day was not far away, now, when the season would be over
+and those who had gone up from Petit Espoir would come down again.
+
+So the weeks slipped by. October came. The pogey-fishermen returned.
+
+She waited for Thomas Ned in the kitchen that first evening, palpitating
+with expectancy; and he did not come. During the sleepless night that
+followed she conjured up excuses for him. He had had one of his attacks
+of rheumatism. His mother had been ill and had required his presence
+at home. The next evening he would come, oh certainly, and explain
+everything. Attired in her best, she sat and waited a second evening;
+then a third. There was no sign of him.
+
+From Mary Willie she learned that Thomas had arrived with the others;
+that he appeared in perfect health, never handsomer; also that his
+mother was well.
+
+"Oh, it cannot be that anything has happened," cried Sabine, with
+choking tears. "Surely it will all be explained soon!" But there was a
+tightening about her heart, a black premonition of ill to come.
+
+She continued to wait. She was on the watch for him day and night. At
+least he would pass on the street, and she could waylay him! Every time
+she heard footsteps or voices she flew to the kitchen door. When her
+work was done, she would hurry out to the barn, where there was a little
+window commanding a good view of the harbor-front; and there she would
+sit, muffled in a shawl, for hours, hunger gnawing at her heart, her
+eyes dry and staring, until her teeth began to chatter with cold and
+nervousness.
+
+He never passed. Some one met him taking the back road into the village.
+He was purposely avoiding her.
+
+When Sabine Bob realized that she was deserted by the man she loved,
+thrown aside without a word, she suffered unspeakably; but her native
+good sense saved her from making any exhibition of her grief. She
+knew better than to make a fool of herself. If there was one thing
+she dreaded worse than death it was being laughed at. She was a
+self-respecting girl; she had her pride. And no one witnessed the
+spasms, the cyclones, which sometimes seized her in the seclusion of
+her little attic bedroom. These were not the picturesque, grandiose
+sufferings of high tragedy; there was small resemblance between Sabine
+Bob and Carthaginian Dido; Sabine's agonies were stark and cruel and
+ugly, unsoftened by poetry. But she kept them to herself.
+
+She did her work as before. But she did not sing; and perhaps she nicked
+more dishes than usual, for her hands trembled a good deal. But she kept
+her lips tight shut. And she never went out on the street if she could
+help it.
+
+So a month passed. Two months. And then one evening Mary Willee came
+running in breathless with news for her: news that made her skin prickle
+and her blood, after one dizzy, faint moment, drum hotly in her temples.
+
+Thomas Ned was paying attentions to Tina Lejeune, that blonde young girl
+from the Ponds. He had taken her to a dance. He had bought a scarf for
+her and a bottle of perfumery. He had taken her to drive. They had been
+seen walking together several times in the dark on the upper street.
+
+"Does he say he is going to marry her?" asked Sabine Bob, with dry lips.
+
+"I do not know that. _She_ says so. She says they are to be married
+soon."
+
+"Does she know about--about me?"
+
+"Yes, but she says--" Mary Willee stopped short in embarrassment.
+
+"Says what! Tell me! Tell me at once!" commanded Sabine, fiercely. "What
+does she say!"
+
+"She says Thomas thought you had a lot of money. He was deceived, he
+said."
+
+Sabine broke out in a passion of indignation. "I never deceived him:
+never, never! I never once said anything about money. He never asked me
+anything. It's a lie. I tell you, it's a lie!"
+
+Mary quailed visibly, unable to disguise a tell-tale look of guilt.
+
+"What is the matter with you, Mary Willee!" cried Sabine. "You are
+hiding something. You know something you have not told me!"
+
+Mary replied, in a very frightened voice: "Once he asked me if you had
+any money. I did not think he was really in earnest, so I told him you
+had saved a thousand dollars. Oh, I didn't mean any harm. I only said it
+to be agreeable. And later I was afraid to tell the truth, for it was
+only two or three days later he asked you to marry him, and you were so
+happy."
+
+Mary Willee hid her face in her hands and waited for the storm to break
+upon her; but it did not break. The room was very quiet. At last she
+heard Sabine moving about, and she looked up again. Sabine was putting
+on her hat and coat.
+
+"Sabine! Sabine!" she gasped. "What are you doing!"
+
+Sabine Bob turned quietly and stood for a moment gazing at her without a
+word. Then she said:
+
+"Mary Willee, you are a bad girl and I can never forgive you; but if
+Tina Lejeune thinks she is going to marry Thomas Ned, she will find out
+that she is mistaken. That is a thing that will not happen."
+
+Mary recoiled, terrified, at the pitiless, menacing smile on the other
+woman's face; but before she could say anything Sabine Bob had stalked
+out of the house into the darkness.
+
+She climbed the hill to the back road, stumbling often, blinded more by
+her own fierce emotions than by the winter night; she fought her way
+westward against the bitter wind that was rising; then turned off by the
+Old French Road, as it was called, toward the Ponds.
+
+It was ten o'clock at night; stars, but no moon. She saw a shadow
+approaching in the darkness from the opposite direction: it was a man,
+short and squarely-built. With a sickening weakness she sank down
+against the wattle fence at the side of the road. He passed her, so
+close that she could have reached out and touched him. But he had not
+seen. She got up and hurried on.
+
+By and by she saw ahead of her the little black bulk of a house from the
+tiny window of which issued a yellow glow. The house stood directly on
+the road. She went quietly to the window and looked in. A young girl
+was sitting by a bare table, her head supported by the palms of her
+hands. Sabine knew the weak white face and hated it. She made her way to
+the door and knocked. There was a smothered, startled exclamation; then
+the rustle of some one moving.
+
+"Who is it?" inquired a timid voice.
+
+"Let me in and I will tell you," responded the woman outside, in a voice
+the more menacing because of its control.
+
+"My mother is not at home to-night. She is over at the widow Babinot's.
+If you go over there you will find her."
+
+"It is you I wish to see. Open the door!"
+
+There was no answer. Sabine turned the knob and entered. At the sight of
+her the blonde girl gave a cry of dismay and retreated behind the table,
+trembling.
+
+"What do you want?" she gasped.
+
+"We have an account to settle together, you and me," said Sabine, with
+something like a laugh.
+
+"Account?" said the other, bracing herself, but scarcely able to
+articulate. "What account? I have not done you any harm. Before God I
+have not done you any harm."
+
+Sabine laughed mockingly. "So you think there is no harm in taking away
+from me the man I was going to marry?"
+
+"I did not take him away," said Tina, faintly.
+
+"You did! You did take him away!" cried Sabine, fiercely. "He was mine;
+it was last March he promised to marry me; any one can tell you that. I
+have witnesses. I have letters. Everything I tell you can be proved. He
+belongs to me just as much as if we had been before a priest already;
+and if you think you can take him away from me, you will find out you
+are wrong!"
+
+For a few seconds the paralyzed girl before her could not utter a word;
+then she stammered out:
+
+"He told me you had deceived him about money."
+
+Sabine gave an inarticulate cry of rage, like a wild beast at bay. "It's
+a lie! A lie! I never deceived him. It's he who deceived me; but let me
+tell you this: when a woman like me promises to marry a man, she keeps
+her word. Do you understand? She keeps her word! I am going to marry
+Thomas Ned. He cannot escape me. I will go to the priest. I will go to
+the lawyer. There are plenty of ways."
+
+The blonde girl sank trembling into a chair.
+
+"He cannot marry you," she gasped. "He cannot. He cannot."
+
+"No?" cried Sabine, with ringing mockery. "And why not?"
+
+Tina's lips moved inaudibly. She moistened them with her tongue and made
+a second attempt.
+
+"Because--" she breathed.
+
+"Yes? Yes?"
+
+"Because--he must marry me." She buried her head in her hands and sobbed.
+
+Sabine Bob strode to the cringing girl, seized her by the shoulders,
+forcing her up roughly against the back of the chair, and broke out with
+a ruthless laugh:
+
+"Must! Must! You don't say so! And why, tell me, must he marry you?"
+
+The white girl raised her eyes for one instant to the other's face; and
+there was a look in them of mute pleading and confession, a look that
+was like a death-cry for pity. The look shot through Sabine's turgid
+consciousness like a white-hot dagger. She staggered back as if mortally
+stricken, supporting herself against a tall cupboard, staring at the
+girl, whose head had now sunk to the table again and whose body was
+shaking with spasmodic sobs. It was one of the moments when destinies
+are written.
+
+At such moments we act from something deeper, more elemental, than will.
+The best or the worst in us leaps out--or perhaps neither one nor the
+other but merely that thing in us that is most essentially ourselves.
+
+Sabine stared at the poor girl whose terrifying, wonderful secret had
+just been revealed to her, and she felt through all her being a sense of
+shattering and disintegration; and suddenly she was there, beside Tina,
+on the arm of her chair; and she brought the girl's head over against
+her bosom and held her very tight in her eager old arms, patting her
+shoulders and stroking her soft hair, while the tears rained down her
+cheeks and she murmured, soothingly:
+
+"Pauvre petite!" and again and again, "Pauvre petite! Ma pauvre petite!"
+
+Tina abandoned herself utterly to the other's impassioned tenderness;
+and for a long time the two sat there, tightly clasped, silent,
+understanding.
+
+Sabine Bob had no word of blame for the unhappy girl. Vaguely she knew
+that she ought to blame her; very vaguely she remembered that girls
+like this were bad girls; but that did not seem to make any difference.
+Instead of indignation she felt something very like humility and
+reverence.
+
+"Yes, he must marry you," she said at last, very simply and gently.
+
+"Oh, if he only would!" sobbed Tina.
+
+"What!" cried Sabine, in amazement.
+
+"He says such cruel things to me," confessed the girl. "He knows, oh, he
+does know I never loved any man but himself; never, never any other man,
+nor ever will!"
+
+Sabine's eyes opened upon new vistas of man's perfidiousness. And yet,
+in spite of everything, how one could love them! She felt an immense
+compassion toward this poor girl who had loved not wisely but so
+all-givingly.
+
+"I will go to him," she said, resolutely. "I will tell him he must marry
+you; and I will say that if he does not, I will tell every person in
+Petit Espoir what a wicked thing he has done."
+
+Tina leaped to her feet in terror. "Oh, no, no!" she pleaded. "No one
+must know."
+
+Sabine understood. Not the present only, but the future must be thought
+of.
+
+"And if he was forced like that to marry me, he would hate me," pursued
+the girl, who saw things with the pitiless clear foresight that
+desperation gives. "He must marry me from his own choice. Oh, if I could
+only make him choose; but to-night he said NO! and went away, very
+angry. I'm afraid he will never come back again."
+
+"Yes, he will," said Sabine Bob. There was a grim smile on her lips; and
+she squared her shoulders as if to give herself courage for some dreaded
+ordeal. "There is a way."
+
+But to the startled, eager question in the other's eyes, she vouchsafed
+no answer. She came to her and put her hands firmly on her shoulders.
+
+"Tina, will you promise not to believe anything you hear them say about
+me? Will you promise to keep on loving me just the same?"
+
+The girl clung to her. "Oh, yes, yes," she promised. "Always!" and then,
+in a shy whisper, she added: "And some day--I will not be the only one
+to love you."
+
+Sabine Bob gave her a quick, almost violent kiss, and went out, not
+stopping for even a word of good-night. And the next day she put her
+plan into execution. There was a perfectly relentless logic about Sabine
+Bob. She saw a thing to do; and she went and did it.
+
+As soon as her dinner dishes were washed and put away, she donned
+her old brown coat and the little yellow-black hat that had served
+her winter and summer from time immemorial, and proceeded to make
+a dozen calls on her friends, up and down the street. Wherever she
+went she talked, volubly, feverishly. She railed; she threatened; she
+vociferated; and the object of her vociferations was Thomas Ned. He had
+promised to marry her; and he had deserted her; and she would have the
+law on him! Marry her he must, now, whether he would or no.
+
+"See that word?" she demanded, displaying her sheaf of compromising
+post-cards. "That word is _wife_; and the man who calls me wife must
+stick to it. I am not a woman to be made a fool of!"
+
+So she stormed away, from house to house. Her friends tried to pacify
+her; but the more they tried, the more venom she put into her threats.
+And soon the news spread through the whole town. Nothing else was talked
+of.
+
+"She's crazy," people said. "But she can make trouble for him, if she
+wants to, no doubt about it."
+
+Sabine laughed grimly to herself. She was going to succeed. The scheme
+would work. She knew the kind of man Thomas Ned was: full of shifts. He
+had proved that already. He would never face a thing squarely. He would
+look for a way out.
+
+She was right. It was only ten days later, at high mass, that the
+success of her strategy was tangibly proved. At the usual point in
+the service for such announcements, just before the sermon, Father
+Beauclerc, standing in the pulpit, called the banns for Thomas Boudrot,
+of Petit Espoir, North, and Tina Mélanie Brigitte Lejeune, of the Ponds.
+
+The announcement caused a sensation. An audible murmur of amazement, not
+to say consternation, went up from all quarters of the edifice, floor
+and galleries; even the altar boys exchanged whispers with one another;
+and there was a great stretching of necks in the direction of Sabine
+Bob, who sat there in her uncushioned pew, very straight and very red,
+with set lips, while her rough old fingers played nervously with the
+rosary in her lap.
+
+This was her victory! She had never felt the ugliness of her fifty years
+so cruelly before. A bony, ridiculous old maid, making a fool of herself
+in public! That was the sum of it! And all her life she had been so
+careful, so jealously careful, not to do anything that might cause her
+to be laughed at!
+
+She could hear some of the whispers that were being exchanged in
+neighboring pews. "Poor old thing!" people were saying. "But how could
+she expect anybody would want to marry her at her age!"
+
+A trembling like ague seized her, and she felt suddenly very cold and
+very very weak. She shut her eyes, for things were beginning to flicker
+and whirl; and when she opened them again, they were caught and held by
+the picture above the high altar.
+
+It was the Mother. The Mother and the Little One. He lay in her arms and
+smiled.
+
+The tears gushed up in Sabine Bob's eyes, and a smile of wonderful
+tenderness and peace broke over the harsh lines of her face and
+transfigured it, just for one instant. It was a victory; it _was_ a
+victory; though nobody knew it but herself; just herself, and one
+other, and--perhaps--
+
+Sabine still gazed at the picture, poor old Sabine Bob in her brown
+coat and faded little yellow-black hat: and the Eternal Mother returned
+the gaze of the Eternal Mother, smiling; and it didn't matter very much
+after that--how could it?--what people might think or say in Petit
+Espoir.
+
+Once more, that afternoon, as she slashed the suds over the dishes,
+Sabine Bob was singing. You could hear her way down there on the street,
+so buoyant and so merry was her voice:
+
+ _Long live the Canadian maid;
+ Fly, fly, oh fly, my heart!_
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Cape Breton Tales, by Harry James Smith
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44257 ***
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44257 ***</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<img src="images/front_cover.jpg" width="400" height="600" alt="" />
+</div>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h1>CAPE BRETON TALES</h1>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 411px;">
+<a name="INNER_HARBOR" id="INNER_HARBOR"></a>
+<img src="images/inner_harbor.jpg" width="411" height="600" alt="" />
+<div class="caption center">THE INNER HARBOR</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p class="tptitle center">CAPE BRETON TALES</p>
+
+<p class="center">BY</p>
+
+<p class="tptitle2 center">HARRY JAMES SMITH</p>
+
+<p class="tptitle3 center">AUTHOR OF</p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Amédée's Son, Enchanted Ground, Mrs. Bumpstead Leigh,
+Tailor Made Man, etc.</i></p>
+
+<p class="tptitle4 center">WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY</p>
+
+<p class="center">OLIVER M. WIARD</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter vspace" style="width: 106px;">
+<img src="images/title_page.png" width="106" height="80" alt="" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="tptitle5 center"><i>The</i> ATLANTIC MONTHLY PRESS</p>
+
+<p class="center">BOSTON</p>
+<hr class="tb" />
+<p class="center">Copyright 1920</p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Printed in the United States of America</i>
+</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS</a></h2>
+
+<table summary="Contents">
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">On the French Shore of Cape Breton (1908)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><span><a href="#ON_THE_FRENCH_SHORE_OF">1</a></span></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">La Rose Witnesseth (1908)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#LA_ROSE_WITNESSETH">17</a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcapall">&emsp;Of the Bucherons</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#BUCHERONS">19</a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcapall">&emsp;Of La Belle Mélanie</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#MELANIE">32</a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcapall">&emsp;Of Siméon's Son</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#SIMEON">44</a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">At a Breton Calvaire (1903)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#AT_A_BRETON_CALVAIRE">57</a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Privilege (1910)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#THE_PRIVILEGE">61</a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Their True Love (1910)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#THEIR_TRUE_LOVE">77</a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Garlands for Pettipaw (1915)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#GARLANDS_FOR_PETTIPAW">99</a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fly, My Heart (1915)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#FLY_MY_HEART">119</a></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="ILLUSTRATIONS" id="ILLUSTRATIONS">ILLUSTRATIONS</a></h2>
+
+<p class="center">By OLIVER M. WIARD</p>
+
+<table summary="Illustrations">
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Inner Harbor</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#INNER_HARBOR">Frontispiece</a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Arichat</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#ARICHAT">17</a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Calvaire</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CALVAIRE">56</a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fougère's Cove</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#FOUGERE">76</a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Fisherman's House</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#HOUSE">118</a></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+
+<p><i>"On the French Shore of Cape Breton" and "The
+Privilege" were first published in The Atlantic Monthly,
+while "La Rose Witnesseth of La Belle Mélanie"
+is reprinted from "Amédée's Son" (Chapters VIII and
+IX) with the kind permission of the publishers, Houghton
+Mifflin Company.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>"At a Breton Calvaire" was first published in The
+Williams Literary Monthly during undergraduate
+days, and was rewritten several times during the next
+few years. The final form is the one used here, except
+for the last stanza, which is a combination of the two
+versions now extant.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>The illustrations are from sketches made during Oliver
+Wiard's visits in Arichat. It is an especial pleasure
+to include them, not only because of their fidelity and
+beauty, but also because of my brother's enthusiastic
+interest and delight in them.</i></p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<span class="smcap">Edith Smith.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="ON_THE_FRENCH_SHORE_OF" id="ON_THE_FRENCH_SHORE_OF">ON THE FRENCH SHORE OF
+CAPE BRETON</a></h2>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="ph3">ON THE FRENCH SHORE OF
+CAPE BRETON</p>
+
+
+<div class="figleft dropcap" style="width: 79px;">
+<img src="images/i_015.png" width="79" height="81" alt="" />
+<div class="caption"></div>
+</div>
+<p><span class="dropcap">S</span>ummer comes late along the Cape Breton
+shore; and even while it stays there is something
+a little diffident and ticklish about it,
+as if each clear warm day might perhaps be
+the last. Though by early June the fields are in their
+first emerald, there are no flowers yet. The little convent
+girls who carry the banners at the head of the
+Corpus Christi procession at Arichat wear wreaths of
+artificial lilies of the valley and marguerites over their
+white veils, and often enough their teeth chatter with
+cold before the completion of the long march&mdash;out
+from the church portals westward by the populous
+street, then up through the steep open fields to the old
+Calvary on top of the hill, then back to the church along
+the grass-grown upper road, far above the roofs, in
+full view of the wide bay.</p>
+
+<p>Despite some discomforts, the procession is a very
+great event; every house along the route is decked out
+with bunting or flags or a bright home-made carpet,
+hung from a window. Pots of tall geraniums in scarlet
+bloom have been set out on the steps; and numbers
+of little evergreen trees, or birches newly in leaf, have
+been brought in from the country and bound to the
+fences. Along the roadside are gathered all the Acadians
+from the neighboring parishes, devoutly gay,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span>
+enchanted with the pious spectacle. The choir, following
+after the richly canopied Sacrament and swinging
+censers, are chanting psalms of benediction and thanksgiving;
+banners and flags and veils flutter in the wind;
+the harbor, ice-bound so many months, is flecked with
+dancing white-caps and purple shadows: surely summer
+cannot be far off.</p>
+
+<p>"When once the ice has done passing <i>down there</i>,"
+they say&mdash;"which may happen any time now&mdash;you
+will see! Perhaps all in a day the change will come.
+The fog that creeps in so cold at night&mdash;it will all be
+sucked up; the sky will be clear as glass down to the
+very edge of the water. Ah, the fine season it will
+be!"</p>
+
+<p>That is the way summer arrives on the Acadian
+shore: everything bursting pell-mell into bloom; daisies
+and buttercups and August flowers rioting in the
+fields, lilacs and roses shedding their fragrance in sheltered
+gardens; and over all the world a drench of
+unspeakable sunlight.</p>
+
+<p>You could never forget your first sight of Arichat if
+you entered its narrow harbor at this divine moment.
+Steep, low hills, destitute of trees, set a singularly definite
+sky-line just behind; and the town runs&mdash;dawdles,
+rather&mdash;in a thin, wavering band for some miles sheer
+on the edge of the water. Eight or ten wharves, some
+of them fallen into dilapidation, jut out at intervals
+from clumps of weatherbeaten storehouses; and a few
+small vessels, it may be, are lying up alongside or
+anchored idly off shore. Only the occasional sound of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>
+a creaking block or of a wagon rattling by on the hard
+roadway breaks the silence.</p>
+
+<p>Along the street the houses elbow one another in
+neighborly groups, or straggle out in single file, separated
+by bits of declivitous white-fenced yard; and to
+the westward, a little distance up the hill, sits the
+square church, far outvying every other edifice in size
+and dignity, glistening white, with a tall bronze Virgin
+on the peak of the roof&mdash;Our Lady of the Assumption,
+the special patron of the Acadians.</p>
+
+<p>But what impresses you above all is the incredible
+vividness of color in this landscape: the dazzling gold-green
+of the fields, heightened here and there by luminous
+patches of foam-white where the daisies are in
+full carnival, or subdued to duller tones where, on uncultivated
+ground, moss-hummocks and patches of rock
+break through the investiture of grass. The sky has
+so much room here too: the whole world seems to be
+adrift in azure; the thin strip of land hangs poised
+between, claimed equally by firmament and the waters
+under it.</p>
+
+<p>In the old days, they tell us, Arichat was a very different
+place from now. Famous among the seaports
+of the Dominion, it saw a continual coming and going
+of brigs and ships and barquentines in the South American
+fish trade.</p>
+
+<p>"But if you had known it then!" they say. "The
+wharves were as thick all the length of the harbor as
+the teeth of a comb; and in winter, when the vessels
+were laid up&mdash;eh, mon Dieu! you would have called it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>
+a forest, for all the masts and spars you saw there.
+No indeed, it was not dreamed of in those days that
+Arichat would ever come to this!"</p>
+
+<p>So passes the world's glory! An air of tender,
+almost jealous reminiscence hangs about the town; and
+in its gentle decline into obscurity it has kept a sort of
+dignity, a self-possession, a certain look of wisdom and
+experience, which in a sense make it proof against all
+arrows of outrageous Fortune.</p>
+
+<p>Back from the other shore of the harbor, jutting out
+for some miles into Chedabucto Bay, lies the Cape.
+You get a view of it if you climb to the crest of the
+hill&mdash;a broad reach of barrens, fretted all day by the
+sea. Out there it is what the Acadians call a bad
+country. About the sluice-like coves that have been
+eaten into its rocky shore are scrambling groups of
+fishermen's houses; but aside from these and the lighthouse
+on the spit of rocks to southward, the region is
+uninhabited&mdash;a waste of rock and swamp-alder and
+scrub-balsam, across which a single thread of a road
+takes its circuitous way, dipping over steep low hills,
+turning out for gnarls of rock and patches of gleaming
+marsh, losing itself amid dense thickets of alder, then
+emerging upon some bare hilltop, where the whole
+measureless sweep of sea and sky fills the vision.</p>
+
+<p>When the dusk begins to fall of an autumn afternoon&mdash;between
+dog and wolf, as the saying goes&mdash;you
+could almost believe in the strange noises&mdash;the
+rumblings, clankings, shrill voices&mdash;that are to be
+heard above the dull roar of the sea by belated passers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>
+on the barrens. Some people have seen death-fires
+too, and a headless creature, much like a horse, galloping
+through the darkness; and over there at Fougère's
+Cove, the most remote settlement of the Cape, there
+were knockings at doors through all one winter from
+hands not human. The Fougères&mdash;they were mostly
+of one tribe there&mdash;were driven to desperation; they
+consulted a priest; they protected themselves with
+blessed images, with prayers and holy water; and no
+harm came to them, though poor Marcelle, who was a
+<i>jeune fille</i> of marriageable age, was prostrated for a
+year with the fright of it.</p>
+
+<p>This barren territory, where nothing grows above
+the height of a man's shoulder, still goes by the name
+of "the woods"&mdash;<i>les bois</i>&mdash;among the Acadians.
+"Once the forest was magnificent here," they tell you&mdash;"trees
+as tall as the church tower; but the great fire
+swept it all away; and never has there been a good
+growth since. For one thing, you see, we must get our
+firewood from it somehow."</p>
+
+<p>This fact accounts for a curious look in the ubiquitous
+stubby evergreens: their lower branches spread
+flat and wide close on the ground,&mdash;that is where the
+snow in winter protects them,&mdash;and above reaches a
+thin, spire-like stem, trimmed close, except for new
+growth at the top, of all its branches. It gives suggestion
+of a harsh, misshapen, all but defeated existence;
+the adverse forces are so tyrannical out here on
+the Cape, the material of life so sparse.</p>
+
+<p>I remember once meeting a little funeral train<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
+crossing the barrens. They were bearing the body of
+a young girl, Anna Béjean, to its last rest, five miles
+away by the road, in the yard of the parish church
+amongst the wooden crosses. The long box of pine
+lay on the bottom of a country wagon, and a wreath
+of artificial flowers and another of home-dyed immortelles
+were fastened to the cover. A young fisherman,
+sunburned and muscular, was leading the horse along
+the rough road, and behind followed three or four
+carts, carrying persons in black, all of middle age or
+beyond, and silent.</p>
+
+<p>Yet in the full tide of summer the barrens have a
+beauty in which this characteristic melancholy is only
+a persistent undertone. Then the marshes flush rose-pink
+with lovely multitudes of calopogons that cluster
+like poising butterflies amongst the dark grasses; here
+too the canary-yellow bladderwort flecks the black
+pools, and the red, leathery pitcher-plant springs in
+sturdy clumps from the moss-hummocks. And the
+wealth of color over all the country!&mdash;gray rock
+touched into life with sky-reflections; rusty green of
+alder thickets, glistening silver-green of balsam and
+juniper; and to the sky-line, wherever it can keep its
+hold, the thin, variegated carpet of close-cropped
+grass, where creeping berries of many kinds grow in
+profusion. Flocks of sheep scamper untended over the
+barrens all day, and groups of horses, turned out to
+shift for themselves while the fishing season keeps their
+owners occupied, look for a moment, nose in the air,
+at the passer, kick up their heels, and race off.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>As you turn back again toward Arichat you catch a
+glimpse of its glistening white church, miles distant in
+reality, but looking curiously near, across a landscape
+where none of the familiar standards of measure
+exist. You lose it on the next decline; then it flashes
+in sight again, and the blue, sun-burnished expanse of
+water between. It occurs to you that the whole life of
+of the country finds its focus there: christenings and
+first communions, marriages and burials&mdash;how wonderfully
+the church holds them all in her keeping; how
+she sends out her comfort and her exhortation, her
+reproach and her eternal hope across even this bad
+country, where the circumstances of human life are so
+ungracious.</p>
+
+<p>But it is on a Sunday morning, when, in response to
+the quavering summons of the chapel bell, the whole
+countryside gives up its population, that you get the
+clearest notion of what religion means in the life of
+the Acadians. From the doorway of our house, which
+was close to the road at the upper end of the harbor,
+we could see the whole church-going procession from
+the outlying districts. The passing would be almost
+unbroken from eight o'clock on for more than an hour
+and a half: a varied, vivacious, friendly human stream.
+They came in hundreds from the scattered villages and
+hamlets of the parish&mdash;from Petit de Grat and Little
+Anse and Pig Cove and Gros Nez and Point Rouge
+and Cap au Guet, eight or nine miles often enough.</p>
+
+<p>First, those who went afoot and must allow plenty
+of time on account of age: bent old fishermen, whose<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>
+yellowed and shiny coats had been made for more
+robust shoulders; old women, invariably in short black
+capes, and black bonnets tied tight under the chin, and
+in their hands a rosary and perhaps a thumb-worn missal.
+Then troops of children, much <i>endimanché</i>,&mdash;one
+would like to say "Sundayfied,"&mdash;trotting along
+noisily, stopping to examine every object of interest by
+the way, extracting all the excitement possible out of
+the weekly pilgrimage.</p>
+
+<p>A little later the procession became more general:
+young and old and middle-aged together. In Sunday
+boots that creaked loudly passed numbers of men and
+boys, sometimes five or six abreast, reaching from side
+to side of the street, sometimes singly attendant upon
+a conscious young person of the other sex. The wagons
+are beginning to appear now, scattering the pedestrians
+right and left as they rattle by, bearing whole
+families packed in little space; and away across the
+harbor, you see a small fleet of brown sails putting off
+from the Cape for the nearer shore.</p>
+
+<p>Outside the church, in the open space before the
+steps, is gathered a constantly growing multitude, a
+dense, restless swarm of humanity, full of gossip and
+prognostic, until suddenly the bell stops its clangor
+overhead; then there is a surging up the steps and
+through the wide doors of the sanctuary; and outside
+all is quiet once more.</p>
+
+<p>The Acadians do not appear greatly to relish the
+more solemn things of religion. They like better a
+religion demurely gay, pervaded by light and color.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Elle est très chic, notre petite église, n'est-ce pas?"
+was a comment made by a pious soul of my acquaintance,
+eager to uphold the honor of her parish.</p>
+
+<p>Proper, mild-featured saints and smiling Virgins in
+painted robes and gilt haloes abound in the Acadian
+churches; on the altars are lavish decorations of artificial
+flowers&mdash;silver lilies, paper roses, red and purple
+immortelles; and the ceilings and pillars and wall-spaces
+are often done in blue and pink, with gold stars;
+such a style, one imagines, as might appeal to our modern
+St. Valentine. The piety that expresses itself in
+this inoffensive gayety of embellishment is more akin
+to that which moves universal humanity to don its
+finery o' Sundays,&mdash;to the greater glory of God,&mdash;than
+to the sombre, death-remembering zeal of some
+other communities. A kind religion this, one not without
+its coquetries, gracious, tactful, irresistible, interweaving
+itself throughout the very texture of the common
+life.</p>
+
+<p>Last summer, out at Petit de Grat, three miles from
+Arichat, where the people have just built a little church
+of their own, they held a "Grand Picnic and Ball" for
+the raising of funds with which to erect a glebe house.
+The priest authorized the affair, but stipulated that
+sunset should end each day's festivities, so that all
+decencies might be respected. This parish picnic started
+on a Monday and continued daily for the rest of the
+week&mdash;that is to say, until all that there was to sell
+was sold, and until all the youth of the vicinity had
+danced their legs to exhaustion.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>An unoccupied shop was given over to the sale of
+cakes, tartines, doughnuts, imported fruits, syrup
+drinks (unauthorized beverages being obtainable elsewhere),
+to the vending of chances on wheels of fortune,
+target-shooting, dice-throwing, hooked rugs,
+shawls, couvertures, knitted hoods, and the like; and
+above all the hubbub and excitement twanged the ceaseless,
+inevitable voice of a graphophone, reviving long-forgotten
+rag-time.</p>
+
+<p>Outside, most conspicuous on the treeless slope of
+hill, was a "pavilion" of boards, bunting-decked, on
+which, from morn till eve, rained the incessant clump-clump
+of happy feet. For music there was a succession
+of performers and of instruments: a mouth-organ,
+a fiddle, a concertina, each lending its particular quality
+of gayety to the dance; the mouth-organ, shrill,
+extravagant, whimsical, failing in richness; the concertina,
+rich, noisy, impetuous, failing in fine shades; the
+fiddle, wheedling, provocative, but a little thin. And
+besides&mdash;the fiddle is not what it used to be in the
+hands of old Fortune.</p>
+
+<p>Fortune died a year ago, and he was never appreciated
+till death snatched him from us: the skinniest,
+most ramshackle of mankind, tall, loose-jointed, shuffling
+in gait; at all other times than those that called
+his art into play, a shiftless, hang-dog sort of personage,
+who would always be begging a coat of you, or
+asking the gift of ten cents to buy him some tobacco.
+But at a dance he was a despot unchallenged. Only to
+hear him jig off the Irish Washerwoman was to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>
+acknowledge his preëminence. His bleary eyes and
+tobacco-stained lips took on a radiance, his body rocked
+to and fro, vibrated to the devil-may-care rhythm of
+the thing, while his left foot emphatically rapped out
+the measure.</p>
+
+<p>Until another genius shall be raised up amongst us,
+Fortune's name will be held in cherished memory. For
+that matter, it is not likely to die out, since, on the day
+of his death, the old reprobate was married to the
+mother of his seven children&mdash;baptized, married,
+administered, and shuffled off in a day.</p>
+
+<p>It had never occurred to any of us, somehow, that
+Fortune might be as transitory and impermanent as
+his patron goddess herself. We had always accepted
+him as a sort of ageless thing, a living symbol, a peripatetic
+mortal, coming out of Petit de Grat, and going
+about, tobacco in cheek, fiddle under arm, as irresponsible
+as mirth itself among the sons of men. God rest
+him! Another landmark gone.</p>
+
+<p>And old Maximen Forêt, too, from whom one used
+to take weather-wisdom every day&mdash;his bench out
+there in the sun is empty. Maximen's shop was just
+across the street from our house&mdash;a long, darkish,
+tunnel-like place under a steep roof. Tinware of all
+descriptions hung in dully shining array from the ceiling;
+barrels and a rusty stove and two broad low
+counters occupied most of the floor space, and the
+atmosphere was charged with a curious sharp odor in
+which you could distinguish oil and tobacco and
+molasses. The floor was all dented full of little holes,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>
+like a honeycomb, where Maximen had walked over it
+with his iron-pointed crutch; for he was something of
+a cripple. But you rarely had any occasion to enter
+the smelly little shop, for no one ever bought much of
+anything there nowadays.</p>
+
+<p>Instead, you sat down on the sunny bench beside the
+old man&mdash;Acadian of the Acadians&mdash;and listened to
+his tireless, genial babble&mdash;now French, now English,
+as the humor struck him.</p>
+
+<p>"It go mak' a leetle weat'er, m'sieu," he would
+say. "I t'ink you better not go fur in the p'tit caneau
+t'is day. Dere is squall&mdash;là-bas&mdash;see, dark&mdash;may
+be t'unner. Dat is not so unlike, dis mont'. Oh, w'at
+a hell time for de hays!"</p>
+
+<p>For everybody who passed he had a greeting, even
+for those who had hastened his business troubles
+through never paying their accounts. To the last he
+never lost his faith in their good intentions.</p>
+
+<p>"Dose poor devil fishermen," he would say, "however
+dey mak' leeve, God know. You t'ink I mak'
+'em go wid notting? It ain't lak dat wit' me here yet,
+m'sieu. Dey pay some day, when le bon Dieu, he
+send dem some feesh; dat's sure sure."</p>
+
+<p>If it happened that anybody stopped on business, old
+Maximen would hobble to the door and tug violently
+at a bell-rope.</p>
+
+<p>"Cr-r-r-line! Cr-r-r-line!" he would call.</p>
+
+<p>"Tout d' suite!" answered a shrill voice from some
+remoter portion of the edifice; and a moment later an
+old woman with straggling white hair, toothless gums,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
+and penetrating, humorous eyes, deepset under a forehead
+of infinite wrinkles, would come shuffling up the
+pebble walk from the basement.</p>
+
+<p>"Me voila!" she would ejaculate, panting. "Me
+ol' man, he always know how to git me in a leetle minute,
+hé?"</p>
+
+<p>On Sundays Caroline and Maximen would drive to
+chapel in a queer, heavy, antiquated road-cart that had
+been built especially for his use, hung almost as low
+between the axles as a chariot.</p>
+
+<p>"We go mak' our respec' to the bon Dieu," he
+would laugh, as he took the reins in hand and waited
+for Célestine, the chunky little mare, to start&mdash;which
+she did when the mood took her.</p>
+
+<p>The small shop is closed and beginning to fall to
+pieces. Maximen has been making his respects amid
+other surroundings for some four or five years, and
+Caroline, at the end of a twelvemonth of lonely waiting,
+followed after.</p>
+
+<p>"It seem lak I need t'e ol' man to look out for," she
+used to say. "All t'e day I listen to hear t'at bell
+again. 'Tout d' suite! I used to call, no matter what
+I do&mdash;maybe over the stove or pounding my bread;
+and den, 'Me voila, mon homme!' I would be at t'e
+shop, ready to help."</p>
+
+<p>I suppose that wherever a man looks in the world,
+if he but have the eyes to see, he finds as much of gayety
+and pathos, of failure and courage, as in any particular
+section of it; yet so much at least is true: that
+in a little community like this, so removed from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
+larger, more spectacular conflicts of life, so face to
+face, all the year, with the inveterate and domineering
+forces of nature, one seems to discover a more poignant
+relief in all the homely, familiar, universal episodes
+of the human comedy.</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<a name="ARICHAT" id="ARICHAT"></a>
+<img src="images/arichat.jpg" width="600" height="418" alt="" />
+<div class="caption"><p class="center">ARICHAT</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="LA_ROSE_WITNESSETH" id="LA_ROSE_WITNESSETH">LA ROSE WITNESSETH</a></h2>
+
+<p class="center">
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">OF THE BUCHERONS</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">OF LA BELLE MÉLANIE</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">OF SIMÉON'S SON</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h3 title="OF THE BUCHERONS"><a name="BUCHERONS" id="BUCHERONS">LA ROSE WITNESSETH</a></h3>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Of How the Bucherons Were Punished for Their
+Hard Hearts</i></p>
+
+<div class="figleft dropcap" style="width: 79px;">
+<img src="images/i_033.png" width="79" height="80" alt="" />
+<div class="caption"></div>
+</div>
+<p><span class="dropcap">I</span>t was a boy of ten who listened to La Rose,
+and while he listened, the sun stood still in
+the sky, there was an enchantment on all
+the world. Whatever La Rose said you had
+to believe, somehow. Oh, I assure you, no one could
+be more exacting than she in the matter of proofs.
+For persons who would give an ear to any absurd story
+tattled abroad she had nothing but contempt.</p>
+
+<p>"Before you believe a thing," said La Rose, sagely,
+"you must know whether it is true or not. That is
+the most important part of a story."</p>
+
+<p>She would give a decisive nod to her small head and
+shut her lips together almost defiantly. Yet always,
+somewhere in the corner of her alert gray eye, there
+seemed to be lurking the ghost of a twinkle. La Rose
+had no age. She was both very young and very old.
+For all she had never traveled more than ten miles
+from the little Cape Breton town of Port l'Évêque,
+you had the feeling that she had seen a good deal of
+the world, and it is certain that her life had not been
+easy; yet she would laugh as quickly and abundantly
+as a young girl just home from the convent.</p>
+
+<p>These two were the best of comrades. La Rose had
+been the boy's nurse when he was little, and as he had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
+no mother she had kept a feeling of special affection
+and responsibility for him. Thus it happened that
+whenever she was making some little expedition out
+across the harbor&mdash;say for blueberries on the barrens,
+or white moorberries, or ginseng&mdash;she would get permission
+from the captain for Michel to go with her;
+and this was the happiest privilege in the boy's life.
+Most of all because of the stories La Rose would tell
+him.</p>
+
+<p>La Rose had a story to tell about every spot they visited,
+about every person they passed. She had been
+brought up, herself, out here on the Cape; and not an
+inch of its territory but was familiar to her.</p>
+
+<p>"Now that is where those Bucherons lived," she observed
+one day, as they were walking homeward from
+Pig Cove by the Calvaire road. "They are all gone
+now, and the house is almost fallen to pieces; but once
+things were lively enough there&mdash;mon Dieu, oui!&mdash;quite
+lively enough for comfort."</p>
+
+<p>She gave a sagacious nod to her head, with the look
+of one who could say more, and would, if you urged
+her a little.</p>
+
+<p>"Was it at the Bucherons' that all the chairs stood
+on one leg?" asked Michel, thrilling mysteriously.</p>
+
+<p>"Oui, c'est ça," answered La Rose, in a voice of the
+most sepulchral, "right there in that house, the chairs
+stood on one leg and went rap&mdash;rap&mdash;against the
+floor. And more than once a table with dishes and
+other things on it fell over, and there were strange
+sounds in the cupboard. Oh, it is certain those Bucherons<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
+were tormented; but for that matter they had
+brought it on themselves because of their greediness
+and their hard hearts. It came for a punishment; and
+when they repented themselves, it went away."</p>
+
+<p>"I haven't ever heard all the story about the Bucherons,"
+said Michel&mdash;"or at least, not since I was
+big. I am almost sure I would like it."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I daresay," agreed La Rose. "It is an interesting
+story in some ways; and the best of it is, it is not
+one of those stories that are only to make you laugh,
+and then you go right away and forget them. And
+another thing: this story about the Bucherons really
+happened. It was when my poor stepmother was a girl.
+She lived at Pig Cove then, and that is only two miles
+from Gros Nez. And one of those Bucherons was
+once wanting to marry her; but do you think she would
+have anything to do with a man like that?</p>
+
+<p>"'No,' she said. 'I will have nothing to do with
+you. I would sooner not ever be married, me, than to
+have you for my man.'</p>
+
+<p>"And the reason she spoke that way was because of
+the cruelty they had shown toward that poor widow of
+a Noémi, which everybody on the Cape knew about,
+and it was a great scandal. And if you want me to tell
+you about it, that is what I am going to do now."</p>
+
+<p>La Rose seated herself on a flat rock by the road,
+and Michel found another for himself close by. Below
+them lay a deep rocky cove, with shores as steep
+as a sluice, and close above its inner margin stood the
+shell of a small house. The chimney had fallen in, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
+windows were all gone&mdash;only vacant holes now,
+through which you saw the daylight from the other
+side, and the roof had begun to sag.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said La Rose, "it will soon be gone to pieces
+entirely, and then there will be nothing to remind anyone
+of those Bucherons and what torments they had.
+You see there were four of them, an old woman and
+two sons, and one of the sons was married, but there
+were not any children; and all those four must have
+had stones instead of hearts. They were only thinking
+how they could get the better of other people, and so
+become rich.</p>
+
+<p>"And before that there had been three sons at home;
+but one of them&mdash;Benoît his name was&mdash;had married
+a certain Noémi Boudrot; and she was as sweet and
+beautiful as a lily, and he too was different from the
+others; and so they had not lived here, but had got a
+little house at Pig Cove, where they were very happy;
+and the good God sent them two children, of a beauty
+and gentleness indescribable; and they called them
+Évangéline and little Benoît, but you do not need to
+remember that, because it is not a part of the story.</p>
+
+<p>"So things went on that way for quite a while; and
+all the time those four Bucherons were growing more
+and more hard-hearted, like four serpents in a pile
+together.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, one day in October that Benoît Bucheron
+who lived in Pig Cove was going alone in a small cart
+to Port l'Évêque to buy some provisions for winter&mdash;flour,
+I suppose, and meal, and perhaps some clothes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
+and some tobacco; and instead of going direct by the
+Gros Nez road, he came around this way by the Calvaire
+so as to stop in and speak to his relatives; and to
+see them welcoming him, you would never have suspected
+their stone hearts. But Benoît was solemn for
+all that, as if troubled by some idea. Then that sly
+old mother, she said:</p>
+
+<p>"'Dear Benoît,' she said, 'what troubles you? Can
+you not put trust in your own mother, who loves you
+better than her eyes and nose?'&mdash;and she smiled at
+him just like a fat wicked old spider that is waiting for
+a fly to come and get tangled up in her net.</p>
+
+<p>"But Benoît only remembered then that she was his
+mother; so he said:</p>
+
+<p>"'I have a fear, me, that I shall not be long for this
+world, my mother. Last week I saw a little blue fire
+on the barrens one night, and again one night I heard
+hoofs going <i>claquin-claquant</i> down there on the beach,
+much like the horse without head. And that is why I
+am getting my provisions so early, and making everything
+ready for the winter. See,' he said, 'here is the
+thirteen dollars I have saved this year. I am going to
+buy things with it in Port l'Évêque.'</p>
+
+<p>"Now you may depend that when he showed them
+all that money, their eyes stuck out like the eyes of
+crabs; but of course they did not say anything only
+some words of the most comforting. And finally he
+said, getting ready to go:</p>
+
+<p>"'If anything should happen,' he said, 'will you
+promise me to be good to that poor Noémi and those<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
+two poor little innocent lambs?'&mdash;and those serpents
+said, certainly, they would do all that was possible;
+and with that Benoît gets into his cart, and starts down
+the hill; and suddenly the horse takes a fright of something
+and runs away, and the cart tips over, and Benoît
+is thrown out; and when his brothers get to him he is
+quite quite dead&mdash;and that shows what it means to
+see one of those little blue fires at night in the woods.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you can believe that Noémi was not very
+happy when they brought back that poor Benoît to Pig
+Cove. Her eyes were like two brooks, and for a long
+time she could not say anything, and then finally, summoning
+a little voice of courage:</p>
+
+<p>"'I am glad of one thing,' she said, 'which is that
+he had saved all that money, for without it I would
+never know how to live through the winter.'</p>
+
+<p>"And one of those brothers said, with an innocent
+voice of a dove, 'what money then?'&mdash;and she said,
+'He had it with him.' And so they look for it; but no,
+there is not any.</p>
+
+<p>"'You must have deceived yourself,' said that
+brother. 'I am sure he would have spoken of it if he
+had had any money with him; but he said never a word
+of such a thing.'</p>
+
+<p>"Now was not that a wicked lie for him to tell? It
+is hard to understand how abominable can be some of
+those men! But you may be sure they will be punished
+for it in the end; and that is what happened to those
+four serpents, the Bucherons.</p>
+
+<p>"For listen. The old mother had taken the money<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
+and had put it inside a sort of covered bowl, like a
+sugar bowl, but there was no sugar in it; and then she
+had set this bowl away on a shelf in the cupboard
+where they kept the dishes and such things; and the
+Bucherons thought it would be safe until the time when
+they had something to spend it for in Port l'Évêque;
+and they were telling themselves how no one would
+ever know what they had done; and they were glad
+that the promise they had made to Benoît had not been
+heard by anyone but themselves. And so that poor
+Noémi was left all alone without man or money; but
+sometimes the neighbors would give her a little food;
+but for all that those two lambs were often hungry,
+and their mother too, when it came bedtime.</p>
+
+<p>"But do you think the Bucherons cared&mdash;those four
+hearts of stone? They would not even give her so
+much as a crust of dry, mouldy bread; and Noémi was
+too proud to go and beg; and beside something seemed
+to tell her that there had been a wickedness somewhere,
+and that the Bucherons perhaps knew more than they
+had told her about that money. So she waited to see
+if anything would happen.</p>
+
+<p>"Now one night in December, when all those four
+were in the house alone, the beginning of their punishment
+arrived, and surely nothing more strange was
+ever heard of in this world.</p>
+
+<p>"'Ah, mon Dieu!' cries out the married woman all
+of a sudden&mdash;'mon Dieu, what is that!'</p>
+
+<p>"They all looked where she was looking, and what
+do you think they saw? There was a chair standing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
+with three legs in the air, and only the little point of
+one on the floor.</p>
+
+<p>"The old woman pushed a scream and jumped to
+her feet and went over to it, and with much force set it
+back on the floor, the way a chair is meant to stand;
+but immediately when she let go of it, there it was
+again, as before, all on one leg.</p>
+
+<p>"And then, there cries out the younger woman again,
+with a voice shrill as a frightened horse that throws up
+its head and then runs away&mdash;'Oh, mère Bucheron,
+mère Bucheron,' cries she, 'the chair you were just sitting
+in is three legs in air too!'</p>
+
+<p>"And so it was! With that all the family got up in
+terror; but no sooner had they done that than at once
+all the chairs behaved just like the first, which made
+five chairs. These chairs did not seem to move at all,
+but stood there on one leg just as if they were always
+like that. Those Bucherons were almost dead with
+fright, and all four of them fled out of the house as fast
+as ever their legs could carry them&mdash;you would have
+said sheep chased by a mad dog&mdash;and never stopped
+for breath till they reached Gros Nez.</p>
+
+<p>"And pell-mell into old Pierre Leblanc's house all
+together, and shaking like ague. Hardly able to talk,
+they tell what has happened; and he will not believe
+them but says, well, he will go back with them and see.
+So he does, and they re-enter the house together, and
+look! the chairs are all just as usual.</p>
+
+<p>"'You have been making some crazy dreams,' says
+Pierre, rather angry, 'or else,' he says, 'you have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
+something bad in your hearts.' And with that he goes
+home again; and there is nothing more to be told about
+that night, though I daresay none of those wicked persons
+slept very well.</p>
+
+<p>"But that was only the beginning of what happened
+to them during that winter. Sometimes it would be
+these knockings about the roof, as of someone with a
+great hammer; and again it was as if they had seen a
+face at the window&mdash;just an instant, all white, in the
+dark&mdash;and then it would be gone. And often, often,
+the chairs would be standing as before on one leg. The
+table likewise, which once let fall a great crowd of
+dishes, and not a few were broken. But worst of all
+were these strange sounds that made themselves heard
+in the cupboard, like the hand of a corpse going rap&mdash;rap,
+rap&mdash;rap&mdash;rap, rap,&mdash;against the lid of its
+coffin. You may well believe it was a dreadful fright
+for those four infamous ones; but still they would do
+nothing, because of their desire to keep all that money
+and buy things with it.</p>
+
+<p>"Everybody on the Cape soon knew about what was
+happening at the Bucherons', but some pretended it
+was to laugh at, saying that such things did not happen
+nowadays; and others said the Bucherons must have
+gone crazy, and had better be left alone&mdash;and their
+arms and legs would sometimes keep jerking a little
+when they talked to anyone, as my stepmother told me
+a thousand times; and they had a way of looking
+behind them&mdash;so!&mdash;as if they were afraid of being
+pursued. So however that might be, nobody would go
+and see them.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Well, things went on like that for quite a while,
+and finally, one day in February, through all the snow
+that it made on the ground then, that poor Noémi
+marched on her feet from Pig Cove to her mother-in-law's,
+having left her two infants at a neighbor's; for
+she had resolved herself to ask for some help, seeing
+that she had had nothing but a little bite since three
+days. And when they saw her coming they were taken
+with a fright, and at first they were not going to let
+her in; but that old snake of a mother, she said:</p>
+
+<p>"'If we refuse to let her in, my children, she will go
+and suspect something.'</p>
+
+<p>"So they let her in, and when she was in, they let
+her make all her story, or as much as she had breath
+for, and then:</p>
+
+<p>"'I am sorry,' said this old snake of a mother, 'that
+we cannot possibly do anything for you. Alas, my dear
+little daughter, it is barely even if we can manage to
+hold soul and body together ourselves, with the terrible
+winter it makes these days.'</p>
+
+<p>"And just as she said that, what do you think happened?
+A chair got on one leg and went rap&mdash;rap,
+rap&mdash;against the floor.</p>
+
+<p>"That Noémi would often be telling about it afterwards
+to my stepmother, and she said never of her life
+had she seen anything so terrifying. But she did not
+scream or do anything like that, because something,
+she said, inside her seemed to bid her keep quiet just
+then. And she used to tell how that old Bucheron
+woman's face turned exactly the color of an oyster on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>
+a white plate, and a trembling took her, and finally she
+said, scarcely able to make the sound of the words:</p>
+
+<p>"'Though perhaps&mdash;I might find&mdash;a crust of
+bread somewhere that&mdash;that we could spare.'</p>
+
+<p>"That was how she spoke, and at the same instant,
+<i>rap</i> went the chair, still on its one leg; and there was a
+sound of a hammering on the roof.</p>
+
+<p>"'Or perhaps&mdash;a little loaf of bread and some
+potatoes,' said that old Bucheron, while the other
+Bucherons sat there without one word, in their chairs,
+as if paralyzed, except that their hands kept up a little
+shaking motion all the time, like this scour-grass you
+get in the marsh, which trembles always even if there
+is not any wind. 'Or perhaps a loaf of bread and some
+potatoes'&mdash;that is what she was saying, when listen,
+there is a knock as of the hand of corpse just inside the
+cupboard; and suddenly the two doors fly open&mdash;you
+would have said <i>pushed</i> from the inside!</p>
+
+<p>"Noémi crosses herself, but does not say anything,
+for she knows it is a time to keep still.</p>
+
+<p>"'And perhaps,' says the old woman then, in a voice
+of the most piteous, as if someone were giving her a
+pinch, 'and perhaps, if only I had it, a dollar or two to
+help buy some medicine and a pair of shoes for that
+Évangéline.... But no, I do not think we have so
+much as that anywhere in the house.'</p>
+
+<p>"Now was not that like the old serpent, to be telling
+a lie even at the last; and surely if God had struck her
+dead by a ball of lightning at that moment it would
+have been none too good for her. But no, he was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+going to give her a chance to repent and not to have to
+go to Hell for a punishment. So what do you think
+He made happen then?</p>
+
+<p>"Hardly had those abominable words jumped out
+of her when with a great crash, down off the top shelf
+comes that sugar bowl (if it was a sugar bowl), and
+as it hits the floor, it breaks into a thousand pieces;
+and there, in a little pile, are those thirteen dollars,
+just as on the day when that poor Benoît had been carrying
+them with him to Port l'Évêque.</p>
+
+<p>"Now just as if they are not doing it at all of their
+own wish, but something makes them act that way, all
+of a sudden those four Bucherons are kneeling on the
+floor, saying their prayers in a strange voice like the
+prayers you might hear in a tomb; and with that, the
+chair goes back quietly to its four legs, and the noise
+ceases on the roof, and those two cupboard doors draw
+shut without human hands. As for Noémi, she grabs
+up the money, and out she goes, swift as a bird that is
+carrying a worm to its children, leaving her parents by
+marriage still there on their knees, like so many
+images; but as she opens the door she says:</p>
+
+<p>"'May the good God have pity on all the four of
+you!'&mdash;which was a Christian thing to say, seeing
+how much she had suffered at their hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, there is not much more to tell. Noémi got
+through the rest of that winter without any more
+trouble; and the next year she married a fisherman
+from Little Anse, and went away from the Cape. As
+for the Bucherons, they were not like the same people<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
+any more. You would not have known them&mdash;so
+pious they were and charitable, though always, perhaps,
+a little strange in their ways. But when the old
+woman died, two years later, or three, all the people
+of Pig Cove and Gros Nez followed the corpse in to
+Port l'Évêque; and her grave is there in the cemetery.</p>
+
+<p>"The rest of the family are gone now too, as you
+see; and soon, I suppose, there will not be many left,
+even out here on the Cape, who know all about what
+happened to the Bucherons, because of their hard
+hearts; which is a pity, seeing that the story has such a
+good lesson to it...."</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h3 title="OF LA BELLE MÉLANIE"><a name="MELANIE" id="MELANIE">LA ROSE WITNESSETH</a></h3>
+
+<p class="center"><a name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a><i>Of the Headless Horse and of La Belle Mélanie's
+Narrow Escape from the Feu Follet</i></p>
+
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_A_1" id="Footnote_A_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_1"><span class="label">[A]</span></a> Included with permission of and by arrangements with Houghton Mifflin Company
+authorized publishers.</p></div>
+
+<div class="figleft dropcap" style="width: 80px;">
+<img src="images/i_046.png" width="80" height="79" alt="" />
+<div class="caption"></div>
+</div>
+<p><span class="dropcap">O</span>ne of the privileges Michel esteemed most
+highly was that of accompanying La Rose
+occasionally when she went blueberrying
+over on the barrens&mdash;<i>dans les bois</i>, as the
+phrase still goes in Port l'Évêque, though it is all of
+sixty years since there were any woods there. The
+best barrens for blueberrying lay across the harbor.
+They reached back to the bay four or five miles to
+southward. Along the edges of several rocky coves,
+narrow and steep as a sluice, clung a few weatherbeaten
+fishermen's houses; but there was no other sign
+of human habitation.</p>
+
+<p>It is what they call a bad country over there. Alder
+and scrub balsam grow sparsely over the low rocky
+hills, where little flocks of sheep nibble all day at the
+thin herbage; and from the marshes that lie, green and
+mossy, at the foot of every slope, a solitary loon may
+occasionally be seen rising into the air with a great
+spread of slow wings. A single thread of a road
+makes its way somehow across the region, twisting in
+and out among the small hills, now climbing suddenly
+to a bare elevation, from which the whole sweep of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>
+sea bursts upon the view, now shelving off along the
+side of a knoll of rocks, quickly dipping into some
+close hollow, where the world seems to reach no
+farther than to the strange sky-line, wheeling sharply
+against infinite space.</p>
+
+<p>Two miles back from the inner shore, the road
+forks at the base of a little hill more conspicuously
+bare than the rest, and close to the naked summit of it,
+overlooking all the Cape, stands a Calvary. Nobody
+knows how long it has stood there, or why it was first
+erected; though tradition has it that long, long ago, a
+certain man by the name of Toussaint was there set
+upon by wild beasts and torn to pieces. However that
+may be, the tall wooden cross, painted black, and bearing
+on its center, beneath a rude penthouse, a small
+iron crucifix, has been there longer than any present
+memory records&mdash;an encouragement, as they say, for
+those who have to cross the bad country after dark.</p>
+
+<p>"That makes courage for you," they say. "It is
+good to know it is there on the windy nights."</p>
+
+<p>By daylight, however, and especially in the sunshine,
+the barrens are quite without other terrors than those
+of loneliness; and upon Michel this remoteness and
+silence always exercised a kind of spell. He was glad
+that La Rose was with him, partly because he would
+have been a little afraid to be there quite by himself,
+but chiefly because of the imaginative sympathy that at
+this time existed so strongly between them. La Rose
+could tell him all about the strange things that had
+been seen here of winter nights; she herself once, ten<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>ding
+a poor old sick woman at Gros Nez, out at the end
+of the Cape, had heard the hoofs of the white horse
+that gallops across the barrens <i>claquin-claquant</i> in the
+darkness.</p>
+
+<p>"It was just there outside the house, pawing the
+ground. Almost paralyzed for terror, I ran to the
+window and looked out. It was as tall as the church
+door,&mdash;that animal,&mdash;all white, and there was no
+head to it.</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh, mère Babinot,' I whispered, scarcely able to
+make the sound of the words. 'It is as tall as the
+church door and all white.'</p>
+
+<p>"She sits up in bed and stares at me like a corpse.
+'La Rose,' she says,&mdash;just like that, shrill as a whistle
+of wind,&mdash;'La Rose, do you see a head to it?'</p>
+
+<p>"'No, not any!'</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh, mon Dieu, mon Dieu! Then it's sure! It is
+the very one, the horse without head!'</p>
+
+<p>"And the next day she took only a little spoonful of
+tea, and in two weeks she was dead, poor mère Babinot;
+and that's as true as that I made my communion
+last Easter. Oh, it's often seen hereabouts, that horse.
+It's a sign that something will happen, and never has
+it failed yet."</p>
+
+<p>They made their way, La Rose and Michel, slowly
+over the low hills, picking the blueberries that grew
+thickly in clumps of green close to the ground. La
+Rose always wore a faded yellow-black dress, the skirt
+caught up, to save it, over a red petticoat; and on her
+small brown head she carried the old Acadian <i>mou<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>choir</i>,
+black, brought up to a peak in front, and knotted
+at the side.</p>
+
+<p>She picked rapidly, with her alert, spry movements,
+her head always cocked a little to one side, almost
+humorously, as she peered about among the bushes for
+the best spots. And wherever he was, Michel heard
+her chattering softly to herself, in an inconsequential
+undertone, now humming a scrap of some pious song,
+now commenting on the quality of the berry crop&mdash;never
+had she seen so few and so small as these last
+years. Surely there must be something to account for
+it. Perhaps the birds had learned the habitude of devouring
+them&mdash;now addressing some strayed sheep
+that had ventured with timid bleats within range:
+"Te voilà, petit méchant! Little rogue! What are
+you looking about for? Did the others go off and
+leave you? Eh bien, that's how it happens, mon
+petit. They'll leave you. The world's like that. Eh,
+là, là!"</p>
+
+<p>He liked to go to the other side of the hill, out of
+sight of her, where he could imagine that he was lost
+<i>dans les bois</i>. Then he would listen for her continual
+soft garrulity; and if he could not hear it he would
+wait quietly for a minute in the silence, feeling a
+strange exhilaration, which was almost pain, in the
+presence of the great sombre spaces, the immense
+emptiness of the overhanging sky, until he could endure
+it no longer.</p>
+
+<p>"La Rose!" he would call. "Êtes-vous toujours
+là?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Mais oui, mon enfant. What do you want?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing. It is only that I was thinking."</p>
+
+<p>"The strange child that you are!" she would exclaim.
+"You are not like the others."</p>
+
+<p>"La Rose," he would ask, "was it by here that La
+Belle Mélanie passed on the night she saw the death
+fire?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, by this very spot. She was on her way to Pig
+Cove, over beyond the Calvary to the east. It is a
+desolate little rat-hole, Pig Cove, nowadays; but then
+it was different&mdash;as many as two dozen houses. My
+stepmother lived in one of them. Now there are
+scarcely six, and falling to pieces at that. La Belle
+Mélanie, she was a Boudrot, sister of the Pierre Boudrot
+whose son, Théobald, was brother-in-law of stepmother.
+That was many years ago. They are all dead
+now, or gone away from here&mdash;to Boston, I daresay."</p>
+
+<p>"Will you tell me about that again,&mdash;the <i>feu follet</i>
+and Mélanie?"</p>
+
+<p>It was the story Michel liked the best, most of all
+when he could sit beside La Rose, on a moss-hummock
+of some rough hill on the barrens. Perhaps there
+would be cloud shadows flitting like dream presences
+across the shining face of the moor. In the distance,
+over the backs of the hills that crouched so thickly
+about them, he saw the stretch of the ocean, a motionless
+floor of azure and purple, flecked, it might be, by
+a leaning sail far away; and now and then a gull or
+two would fly close over their heads, wheeling and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+screaming for a few seconds, and then off again
+through the blue.</p>
+
+<p>"S'il vous plaît, tante La Rose, see how many berries
+I have picked already!"</p>
+
+<p>The little woman was not difficult of persuasion.</p>
+
+<p>"It was in November," she began. "There had not
+been any snow yet; but the nights were cold and terribly
+dark under a sky of clouds. That autumn, as my
+stepmother often told me, many people had seen the
+horse without head as it galloped <i>claquin-claquant</i>
+across the barrens. At Gros Nez it was so bad that
+no one dared go out after dark, unless it was to run
+with all one's force to the neighbors&mdash;but not across
+the woods to save their souls. Especially because of
+the <i>feu follet</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Now you must know that the <i>feu follet</i> is of all
+objects whatever in the world the most mysterious. No
+one knows what it is or when it will come. You might
+walk across the barrens every night of your life and
+never encounter it; and again it might come upon you
+all unawares, not more than ten yards from your own
+threshold. It is more like a ball of fire than any other
+mortal thing, now large, now small, and always moving.
+Usually it is seen first hovering over one of the
+marshes, feeding on the poison vapors that rise from
+them at night: it floats there, all low, and like a little
+luminous cloud, so faint as scarcely to be seen by the
+eye. And sometimes people can travel straight by it,
+giving no attention, as if they did not know it was
+there, but keeping the regard altogether ahead of them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
+on the road, and the <i>feu follet</i> will let them pass without
+harm.</p>
+
+<p>"But that does not happen often, for there are not
+many who can keep their wits clear enough to manage
+it. It brings a sort of dizziness, and one's legs grow
+weak. And then the <i>feu follet</i> draws itself together
+into a ball of fire and begins to pursue. It glides over
+the hills and flies across the marshes, sometimes in
+circles, sometimes bounding from rock to rock, but all
+the while stealing a little closer and a little closer, no
+matter how fast you run away. And finally&mdash;bff! like
+that&mdash;it's upon you&mdash;and that's the end. Death for
+a certainty. Not all the medicine in the four parishes
+can help you.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, there are only two things in all the world
+that can save you from the <i>feu follet</i> once it gets after
+you. One is, if you are in a state of grace, all your
+sins confessed; which does not happen often to the
+inhabitants of Pig Cove, for even at this day Père Galland
+reproaches them for their neglect. And the other
+is, if you have a needle with you. So little a thing as a
+needle is enough, incredible as it may seem; for if you
+stick the needle upright&mdash;like that&mdash;in an old stump,
+the <i>feu follet</i> gets all tangled up in the eye of it. Try
+as it will, it cannot free itself; and meanwhile you run
+away, and are safe before it reappears. That is why
+all the inhabitants of the Cape used to carry a needle
+stuck somewhere in their garments, to use on such an
+occasion.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I must tell you about La Belle Mélanie.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
+That is the name she was known by in all parts, for
+she was beautiful as a lily flower, and no lily was ever
+more pure and sweet than she. Mélanie lived with her
+mother, who was aged almost to helplessness, and she
+cared for her with all the tenderness imaginable. You
+may believe that she was much sought after by the
+young fellows of the Cape&mdash;yes, and of Port l'Évêque
+as well, which used to hold its head in the air in those
+days; but her mother would hear nothing of her
+marrying.</p>
+
+<p>"'You are only seventeen,' she said, 'ma Mélanie.
+I will hear nothing of your marrying, no, not for five
+years at the least. By that time we shall see.'</p>
+
+<p>"And Mélanie tried to be obedient to all her
+mother's commands, difficult as they often were for a
+young girl, who naturally desires a little to amuse herself
+sometimes. For even had her mother forbidden
+her to speak alone to the young men of the neighborhood,
+so fearful was she lest her daughter should think
+of marriage.</p>
+
+<p>"Eh bien, and so that was how things went for quite
+a while, and every day Mélanie grew more beautiful.
+And one Saturday afternoon in November she had
+been in to Port l'Évêque to make her confession, for
+she was a pious girl. And when she went to meet her
+companions in order to return to Pig Cove with them,
+they said they were not going back that night, for there
+was to be a dance at the courthouse, and they were
+going to spend the night with some parents by marriage
+of theirs. Poor Mélanie! she would have been glad<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>
+to stay, but alas, her poor mother, aged and helpless,
+was expecting her, and she dared not disappoint the
+poor soul.</p>
+
+<p>"So finally one of the young men said he would put
+her across the harbor, if she did not mind traversing
+the woods alone; and she said, no, why should she
+mind? It was still plain daylight. And so he put her
+across. And she said good-night to him and set off
+along the solitary road to the Cape, little imagining
+what an adventure was ahead of her.</p>
+
+<p>"For scarcely had she gone so much as a mile when
+it had grown almost night, so suddenly at that time of
+the year does the daylight extinguish itself. The sky
+had grown dark, dark, and there was a look of storm
+in it. La Belle Mélanie began to grow uneasy of mind.
+And she thought then of the <i>feu follet</i>, and put her
+hand to her bodice to assure herself of her needle.
+What then! Alas! it was gone, by some accident,
+whether or not she had lost it on the road or in the
+church.</p>
+
+<p>"With that Mélanie began to feel a terror creep
+over her; and this was not lessened, as you may well
+believe, when, a few minutes later, she perceived a
+floating thing like a luminous cloud in a marsh some
+long distance from the road. The night was now all
+black; scarcely could she perceive the road ahead,
+always winding there among the hills.</p>
+
+<p>"She had the idea of running; but alas, her legs
+were like lead; she could not make them march in
+front of her. She saw herself already dead. The <i>feu<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>
+follet</i> was beginning to move, first very slowly and all
+uncertain, but then drawing itself together into a ball
+of fire, and leaping as if in play from one hummock of
+moss to another, just as a cat will leave a poor little
+mouse half dead on the floor while it amuses itself in
+another way.</p>
+
+<p>"What the end would have been, who would have
+the courage to say, if just at this moment, all ready to
+fall to the ground for terror, poor Mélanie had not
+bethought herself of her rosary. It was in her pocket.
+She grasped it. She crossed herself. She saluted the
+crucifix. And then she commenced to say her prayers;
+and with that, wonderful to say, her strength came
+back to her, and she began to run. She had never ran
+like that before&mdash;swift as a horse, not feeling her legs
+under her, and praying with high voice all the time.</p>
+
+<p>"But for all that, the death fire followed, always
+faster and faster, now creeping, now flying, now leaping
+from rock to rock, and always drawing nearer, and
+nearer, with a strange sound of a hissing not of this
+world. Mélanie began to feel her forces departing.
+She was almost exhausted. She would not be able to
+run much more.</p>
+
+<p>"And suddenly, just ahead, on a bare height, there
+was the tall Calvaire, and a new hope came to her. If
+she could only reach it! She summoned all her strength
+and struggled up. She climbs the ascent. Alas,
+once more it seems she will fail! There is a fence, as
+you know, built of white pales, about the cross. She
+had not the power to climb it. She sinks to the ground.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
+And it was at that last minute, all flat on the ground in
+fear of death, that an idea came to her, as I will
+tell you.</p>
+
+<p>"She raises herself to her feet by clinging to the
+white palings; she faces the <i>feu follet</i>, already not
+more than ten yards away; she holds out the rosary,
+making the holy sign in the air.</p>
+
+<p>"'I did not make a full confession!' she cries. 'I
+omitted one thing. My mother had forbidden me to
+have anything to do with a young man; and one day
+when I was looking for Fanchette, our cow, who had
+wandered in the woods, I met André Babinot, and he
+kissed me.'</p>
+
+<p>"That was what saved her. The <i>feu follet</i> rushed
+at her with a roar of defeat, and in the same instant it
+burst apart into a thousand flames and disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>"As for Mélanie, she fell to the ground again, and
+lay there for a while, quite unconscious. At last the
+rain came on, and she revived, and set out for home,
+but not very vigorously. Ah, mon Dieu! if her poor
+mother was glad to see her alive again! She embraced
+her most tenderly, and with encouraging voice inquired
+what had happened, for Mélanie was still as white as
+milk, and there was a strange smell of fire in her garments,
+and still she held in her hands the little rosary;
+and so finally Mélanie told her everything, not even
+concealing the last confession about André, and with
+that her mother burst into tears, and said:</p>
+
+<p>"'Mélanie,' she said, 'I have been wrong, me. A
+young girl will be a young girl despite all the contrary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>
+intentions of her mother. To show how grateful to
+God I am that you are returned to me safe and sound,
+you shall marry André as soon as you like.'</p>
+
+<p>"So they were married the next year. And there is
+a lesson to this story, too, which is that one should
+always tell the truth; because if La Belle Mélanie had
+told all the truth at the beginning she would not have
+had all that fright.</p>
+
+<p>"And to show that the story is true, there were
+found the marks of flames on the white fence of the
+Calvaire the next day; and as often as they painted it
+over with whitewash, still the darkness of the scorched
+wood would show through, as I often saw for myself;
+but now there is a new fence there...."</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h3 title="OF SIMÉON'S SON"><a name="SIMEON" id="SIMEON">LA ROSE WITNESSETH</a></h3>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Of How Old Siméon's Son Came Home Again</i></p>
+
+
+<div class="figleft dropcap" style="width: 80px;">
+<img src="images/i_058.png" width="80" height="80" alt="" />
+<div class="caption"></div>
+</div>
+<p><span class="dropcap">I</span>n the old cemetery above the church some
+men were at work setting up a rather ornate
+monument at the head of two long-neglected
+and overgrown graves. La Rose had noticed
+what was going on, as she came out from early
+mass, and had informed herself about it; and since
+then, she said, all through the day, her thoughts had
+been traveling back to things that happened many
+years ago.</p>
+
+<p>"Is it not strange," she observed musingly, sitting
+about dusk with Michel on the doorsill of the kitchen,
+while Céleste finished the putting-away of the supper
+dishes&mdash;"is it not strange how things go in this
+world? So often they turn out sorrowfully, and you
+cannot understand why that should be so. Think of
+that poor Léonie Gilet, who was taken so suddenly in
+the chest last winter and died all in a month, and she
+one of the purest and sweetest lilies that ever existed,
+and the next year she was to be married to a good man
+that loved her better than both his two eyes. Ah,
+mon Dieu, sometimes I think the sadness comes much
+more often than the joy down here."</p>
+
+<p>She looked out broodingly, and with eyes that did
+not see anything, across the captain's garden and the
+hayfield below, dipping gently to the margin of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>
+harbor. Michel was silent. La Rose's fits of melancholy
+interested him even when he only dimly sensed
+the burden of them.</p>
+
+<p>"And then," she resumed, after a moment, "sometimes
+the ending to things is happy. For a while all
+looks dark, dark, and there is grief, perhaps, and some
+tears; and then, just at the worst moment&mdash;tiens!&mdash;there
+is a change, and the happiness comes again, very
+likely even greater than it was at first. It is as if this
+good God up there, he could not bear any longer to see
+it so heartbreaking, and so he must take things into his
+own hands and set them right. And so, sometimes,
+when I find myself feeling sad about things, I like to
+remember what arrived to that poor Siméon Leblanc,
+whose son is just having them place a fine tombstone
+for him up there in the cimetière; for if ever happiness
+came to any man, it came to him, and that after a
+long time of griefs. Did you ever hear about this old
+Siméon Leblanc?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never, tante La Rose," answered the boy, gravely.
+"But if it has a pleasant ending, I wish you would tell
+me about it, and I don't mind if it makes me cry a little
+in the middle."</p>
+
+<p>By this, Céleste, the stout domestic, had finished her
+kitchen work, and throwing an apron over her stocky
+head and shoulders, she clumped out into the yard.</p>
+
+<p>"I am running over to Alec Samson's," she explained,
+"to get a mackerel for breakfast, if he caught
+any to-day."</p>
+
+<p>The gate clicked after her, and there was a silence.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
+At last La Rose began, a little absently and as if, for
+the moment at least, unaware of her auditor....</p>
+
+<p>"This Siméon Leblanc, he lived over there on the
+other side of the harbor, just beyond the place where
+the road turns off to go to the Cape. My poor stepmother
+when coming in to Port l'Évêque to sell some
+eggs or berries&mdash;three gallons, say, of blueberries, or
+perhaps some of those large strawberries from Pig
+Cove&mdash;she would often be running in there for a little
+rest and a talk with his wife, Célie&mdash;who always was
+glad to see any one, for that matter, the poor soul, for
+this Siméon was not too gentle, and often he made her
+unhappy with his harsh talk.</p>
+
+<p>"'Ah, mon amie,' she would say to my stepmother,
+at the same time wetting her eyes with tears&mdash;'Ah, I
+have such a fear, me, that he will do himself a harm,
+one day, with the temper he has. He frightens me to
+death sometimes&mdash;especially about that Tommy.'</p>
+
+<p>"Now you must understand that this Tommy was
+the son they had, and in some ways he resembled to
+his father, and in some ways to his mother. For it is
+certain he had a pride of the most incredible, which I
+daresay made him a little hard to manage; and yet in
+his heart there was a softness.</p>
+
+<p>"'That Tommy,' said his mother, 'he wants to be
+loved. That is the way to get him to do anything.
+There is no use in always punishing him and treating
+him hardly.'</p>
+
+<p>"But for all that, old Siméon must have his will,
+and so he does not cease to be scolding the boy. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>
+commands him now to do this thing, now that&mdash;here,
+there. He forbids him to be from home at night. He
+tells him he is a disgrace of a son to be so little
+laborious. Oh, it was a horror the way that poor lamb
+of a Tommy was treated; and finally, one day, when
+he was seventeen or eighteen, there was a great quarrel,
+and that Siméon called him by some cruel name,
+and white as a corpse cries out Tommy:</p>
+
+<p>"'My father, that is not true. You shall not say
+it!'&mdash;and the other, furious as an animal: 'I shall say
+what I choose!' And he says the same thing again.
+And Tommy: 'After that, I will not endure to stay
+here another day. I am tired of being treated so.
+You will not have another chance.'</p>
+
+<p>"And with that he places a kiss on the forehead of
+his poor mother, who was letting drop some tears, and
+walks out of the house without so much as turning his
+head again; and he marches over to Petit Ingrat,
+where there was an American fisherman which had
+put in for some bait, and he says to the captain: 'Will
+you give me a place?' and the captain says, 'We are
+just needing another man. Yes, we will give you a
+place.' So this Tommy, he got aboard, and a little
+later they put out and went off to the Banks for the
+fish.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it was not very long before that Siméon got
+over his bad wicked rage; and then he was sorry
+enough for what he had done, especially because there
+was no longer any son in the house, and that poor
+Célie must always be grieving herself after him. And<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
+you may believe that Siméon got little pity from the
+neighbors.</p>
+
+<p>"'It is good enough for him,' they would say&mdash;'a
+man like that, who is not decent to his own son.'</p>
+
+<p>"But they were sorry for Célie, most of all when
+she began to grow thinner and thinner and had a
+strange look in her eyes that was not entirely of this
+world. The old man said, 'She will be all right again
+when that schooner comes back,' and he was always
+going over to Petit Ingrat to find out if it had returned
+yet; but you see, of course there would not be any need
+of bait when the season was finished, and so the
+schooner did not put in at all; and the autumn came,
+and went by, and then followed the winter, and still no
+news, but only waiting and waiting, and a little before
+Easter that poor Célie went away among the angels. I
+think her heart was quite broken in two, and it did not
+seem to her that she needed to stay any longer in this
+hustling world. And so they buried her in the old
+cimetière&mdash;I saw her grave to-day, next to Siméon's,
+and this fine new monument is to be for the two of
+them; but for all these years there has been just a
+wooden cross there, like the other graves.</p>
+
+<p>"But still no word came of Tommy, and the old
+Siméon was all alone in the house. Oh, I can remember
+him well, well, although I was only a young tiny
+girl then and had not had any sorrow myself. We
+would see him walking along the Petit Ingrat road, all
+bent over and trailing one leg a little.</p>
+
+<p>"'Hst!' one of my companions would whisper,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
+'that is old Siméon, who drove his son from home;
+and his poor wife is dead with grief. He is going
+across there to see if a schooner will have come in yet
+with any news.'</p>
+
+<p>"And that was true. He took this habitude of making
+a promenade almost every day to Petit Ingrat during
+that season of the year when the Americans are
+going down to the fish&mdash;là-bas&mdash;and if there was a
+schooner in the harbor, he finds the captain or one of
+the crew, and he says, 'Is it, m'sieu, for example, that
+you have seen a boy anywhere named Tommy Leblanc?
+It is my son&mdash;you understand?&mdash;a very
+pretty young boy, with black hair and fine white teeth
+and a little curly mustache&mdash;so&mdash;just beginning to
+sprout.' And he would go on to describe that Tommy,
+but of course, for one thing they could not understand
+his French very well, for the Americans, as you know,
+do not speak that language among themselves; and
+anyway, you may depend that none of them had ever
+heard of Tommy Leblanc; and sometimes they would
+have a little mockery of the old man; and sometimes,
+on the contrary, they would feel pity, and would say,
+well, God's name, it was a damage, but they could not
+tell him anything.</p>
+
+<p>"And then the old man would say, 'Well, if ever you
+should see him anywhere, will you please tell him that
+his father is wanting him to come home, if he will be
+so kind as to do it; because it is very lonesome without
+him, and the mother is dead.'</p>
+
+<p>"Then after he had said that, he would go back<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>
+again along the road to the Cape, not speaking to anybody
+unless they spoke to him first, and trailing one
+leg after him a little, like one of these horses you see
+sometimes with a weight tied to a hind foot so that it
+cannot run away&mdash;or at least not very far. That is
+how I remember old Siméon from the time when I was
+a little girl&mdash;walking there along the road to or from
+Petit Ingrat. I used to hear people say: 'Ah, my God,
+how old he is grown all in these few years! He is not
+the same man&mdash;so quiet and so timid'&mdash;and others:
+'But can one say how it is possible for him to live there
+all alone like that?'&mdash;and someone replied: 'You
+could not persuade him to live anywhere else, for that
+is where he has all his memories, both the good and
+the bad, and what else is left for him now&mdash;that, and
+the crazy idea he has that his Tommy will one day
+come home again?'</p>
+
+<p>"You see, as the years passed, everybody took the
+belief that Tommy must be dead, at sea or somewhere,
+seeing that not one word was heard of him; but of
+course they guarded themselves well from saying anything
+like that to poor old Siméon.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it was about the time when your poor father,
+Amédée, was a boy of your age, or a little older, that
+all this sorrow came to an end; and this is the pleasant
+part of the story. I was living at Madame
+Paon's then, down near the post-office wharf, and we
+had the habitude of looking out of the window every
+day when the packet-boat came in (which was three
+times a week) to see if anybody would be landing at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
+Port l'Évêque. Well, and one afternoon whom should
+we see but a fine m'sieu with black beard, carrying a
+cane, dressed like an American; and next, a lovely lady
+in clothes of the most fashionable and magnificent;
+and then, six beautiful young children, all just as handsome
+as dolls, and holding tightly one another by the
+hand, with an affection the most charming in the world.
+Ah, ma foi, if I shall ever forget that sight!</p>
+
+<p>"And Madame Paon to me: 'Rose,&mdash;La Rose,&mdash;in
+God's name, who can they be! Perhaps some millionaires
+from Boston&mdash;for look, the trunks that they
+have!'</p>
+
+<p>"And that was the truth, for the trunks and bags
+were piled all over the wharf; and opening the window
+a little, we hear m'sieu giving directions to have them
+taken to the Couronne d'Or&mdash;'and who,' he asks in
+French, 'is the proprietor there now?'&mdash;and they
+say: 'Gaston Lebal'&mdash;and he says: 'What! Gaston
+Lebal! Is it possible!'</p>
+
+<p>"'He knows Port l'Évêque, it seems,' says Madame
+Paon, all excitement; and just then the first two trunks
+go by the windows, and she tells me, 'It is an English
+name, or an American.' And then, spelling out the
+letters, for she reads with a marvel of ease, she says,
+'W-H-I-T-E is what the trunks say on them; but I can
+make nothing out of that. I am going outside, me,'
+she says, 'and perhaps I shall learn something.'</p>
+
+<p>"She descends into the garden, and seems to be
+working a little at the flowers, and a minute later, here
+comes the fine m'sieu, and he looks at her for an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>
+instant&mdash;right in the face, so, and as if asking a question&mdash;and
+then: 'Ah, mon Dieu, it is Suzon Boudrot!'
+he cries, using the name she was born with. 'Can you
+not remember me?&mdash;That Tommy Leblanc who ran
+away twenty years ago?'</p>
+
+<p>"Madame Paon gives a scream of joy, and they
+embrace; and then he presents this Mees W'ite, qui est
+une belle Américaine, and then he says: 'What is there
+of news about my dear mother and my father?'&mdash;and
+she: 'Did you not know your poor mother was dead
+the year after you went!'&mdash;and he: 'Ma mère&mdash;she
+is dead?'&mdash;and the tears jump out of his eyes, and his
+voice trembles as if it had a crack in it. 'Well, she is
+with the blessed angels, then,' says he.</p>
+
+<p>"'But your poor old father,' goes on Madame
+Paon, 'he is still waiting for you every day. He has
+waited all these twenty years for you to come back.'</p>
+
+<p>"'He is still in the old place?' asks he.</p>
+
+<p>"'Yes, he would not leave it.'</p>
+
+<p>"'We shall go over there at once,' he says, opening
+out his two arms&mdash;so!&mdash;'before ever we set foot in
+another house. It is my duty as a son.'</p>
+
+<p>"So while André Gilet&mdash;the father of that dear
+Léonie who was taken in the chest&mdash;while he is getting
+the boat ready to cross the harbor, Tommy tells
+her how he has been up there in Boston all these years&mdash;at
+a place called Shee-cahgo, a big city&mdash;and has
+been making money; and how he changed his name to
+W'ite, which means the same as Leblanc and is more in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>
+the mode; and how he married this lovely Américaine,
+whose name was Finnegan, and had all these sweet
+little children; but always, he said, he had desired to
+make a little visit at home, only it was so far to come;
+and he was afraid that his father would still be angry
+at him.</p>
+
+<p>"'Ah,' says Madame Paon, with emotion, 'you will
+not know your father. He is so different: just as mild
+as a sheep. Everyone has come to love him.' ...</p>
+
+<p>"Now for the rest of the story, all I know is what
+that André told us, for he put all this family across
+to the other side in his boat. So when they reached
+the shore, M'sieu Tommy, he says: 'You will all wait
+here until I open the door and beckon: and then you,
+Maggie, will come up; and then, a little later, we will
+have the children in, all together.'</p>
+
+<p>"And with that he leaves them, and goes up to the
+old house, and knocks, and opens the door, and walks
+in&mdash;and who can say the joy and the comfort of the
+meeting that happened then? And quite a long while
+passed, André said; and that lovely lady sat there on
+the side of the boat, all as white as milk, and never
+saying a word; and those six lambs, whispering softly
+among themselves&mdash;and one of them said, just a
+little above its breath:</p>
+
+<p>"'It will be nice to have a grandpa all for ourselves,
+don't you think?'&mdash;and was not that a dear sweet
+little thing for it to say?...</p>
+
+<p>"And finally the door opens again, and see! and his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
+hand makes a sign; and that lady, swift as one of these
+sea-gulls, leaps ashore. And up the hill; and through
+the gate; and into the house! And the door shuts
+again.</p>
+
+<p>"And another wait, while those six look at each
+other, and say their little things. And at last they are
+called too, and away they go, all together, just like one
+of these flocks of curlew that fly over the Cape, making
+those soft little sounds; and then into the house;
+and André said he had to wipe two tears out of his
+eyes to see a thing like that.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, this was the end of old Siméon's grief, as
+you may well believe. Those W'ites stay at the Couronne
+d'Or for as much as nine or ten days, and every
+morning they will be going across to see their dear
+dear grandfather; and finally when they went away,
+they had hired that widow Bergère to keep his house
+comfortable for him; and M'sieu Tommy left money
+for all needs.</p>
+
+<p>"And every Christmas after that, so long as old
+Siméon existed, there would come boxes of presents
+from that place in Boston. Oh, I assure you, he did
+not lack that good care. And always he must be talking
+about that Tommy of his, who was so rich, and
+was some great personage in the city&mdash;what they
+called an alderman&mdash;and yet he had not forgotten his
+poor old father, who had waited all those years to see
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"So this story shows that sometimes things turn out<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
+just as well in this life down here as they do in those
+silly stories they tell you about princesses and all those
+things that are not so; and that is a comfort sometimes,
+when you see so much that is sad and heartbreaking
+in this world...."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56"></a>[Pg 56]</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 416px;">
+<a name="CALVAIRE" id="CALVAIRE"></a>
+<img src="images/calvaire.jpg" width="416" height="600" alt="" />
+<div class="caption center">A CALVAIRE</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57"></a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="AT_A_BRETON_CALVAIRE" id="AT_A_BRETON_CALVAIRE">AT A BRETON CALVAIRE</a></h2>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="ph3">AT A BRETON CALVAIRE</p>
+
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Upon that cape that thrusts so bare<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Its crest above the wasting sea&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Grey rocks amidst eternity&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">There stands an old and frail calvaire,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Upraising like an unvoiced cry<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Its great black arms against the sky.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">For storm-beat years that cross has stood:<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">It slants before the winter gale;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And now the Christ is marred and pale;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The rain has washed away the blood<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">That ran once on its brow and side,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And in its feet the seams are wide.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">But when the boats put out to sea<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">At earliest dawn before the day,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">The fishermen, they turn and pray,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Their eyes upon the calvary:<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">"O Jesu, Son of Mary fair,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Our little boats are in thy care!"<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">And when the storm beats hard and shrill<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Then toil-bent women, worn with fear,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Pray for the lives they hold so dear,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And seek the cross upon the hill:<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">"O Jesu, Son of Mary mild,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Be with them where the waves are wild!"<br /></span><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">And when the dead they carry by<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Across that melancholy land,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Dead that were cast up on the strand<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Beneath a black and whirling sky,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">They pause before the old calvaire;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">They cross themselves and say a prayer.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">O Jesu, Son of Mary fair!<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">O Faith, that seeks thy cross of pain!<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Their voices break above the rain,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The wind blows hard, the heart lies bare:<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Clutching through dark, their hands find Thee,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">O Christ, that died on Calvary!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61"></a></span></p>
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="THE_PRIVILEGE" id="THE_PRIVILEGE">THE PRIVILEGE</a></h2>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="ph3">THE PRIVILEGE</p>
+
+
+<div class="figleft dropcap" style="width: 80px;">
+<img src="images/i_079.png" width="80" height="78" alt="" />
+</div>
+<p><span class="dropcap">T</span>o-day I can think about only one thing. It
+is in vain I have tried to busy myself with
+my sermon for next Sunday. Last week, for
+another reason, I had recourse to an old sermon;
+but I dislike to make a practice of so doing, even
+though I strongly suspect that none of our little Salmon
+River congregation would know the difference. We
+are a very simple people, in this out-of-the-way Cape
+Breton parish, called mostly to be fishers, like Our
+Lord's apostles, and recking not a whit of the finer
+points of doctrine. Nevertheless, it is an hireling
+shepherd who is faithless only because the flock do not
+ask to be fed with the appointed manna; and I shall
+broach the sermon again, once I have set down the
+thing that is so heavy on my heart.</p>
+
+<p>For all I can think of just now is that Renny and
+Suse, out there on Halibut Head, four miles away, are
+alone; alone for the first time in well-nigh thirty years.
+The last of the brood has taken wing.</p>
+
+<p>Yet it came to me this morning, as I watched Renny
+on the wharf saying good-by to the boy, and bidding
+him wrap the tippet snug about his neck in case the
+wind would be raw&mdash;it came to me that there is a
+triumph about the nest when it is empty that it could
+never have earlier. I saw the look of it in Renny's
+face&mdash;not defeat, but exultation.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"And what are you going to do now, Renny?" I
+asked him, as the steamer slipped out of sight behind
+the lighthouse rock.</p>
+
+<p>He stared at me a little contemptuously, a manner
+he has always had.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Do</i>, Mr. Biddles?" says he, with a queer laugh.
+"Why, what <i>would</i> I do, sor? They ain't no less fish
+to be catched, is they, off Halibut Head, just because I
+got quit of a son or two?"</p>
+
+<p>He left me, with a toss of his crisp, tawny-gray curls,
+jumped into his little two-wheeled cart, and was off.
+And I thought, "Ah, Renny Marks, outside you are
+still the same wild beast as when I had my first meeting
+with you, two-and-thirty years ago; but inside&mdash;yes,
+I knew then it must come; and it was not for me to
+order the how of it."</p>
+
+<p>So as I took my way homeward, alone, toward the
+Rectory, I found myself recalling, as if it were yesterday,
+the first words I had ever exchanged with that
+tawny giant, just then in his first flush of manhood,
+and with a face as ruddy and healthy-looking as one of
+these early New Rose potatoes. Often, to be sure, I
+had seen him already in church, of a Sunday, sitting
+defiant and uncomfortable on one of the rear benches,
+struggling vainly to keep his eyes open; but before the
+last Amen was fairly out of the people's mouth, he had
+always bolted for the door; and I had never come, as
+you may say, face to face with him until this afternoon
+when I was footing it back, by the cove road,
+from a visit to an old sick woman, Nannie Odell. And<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>
+here comes Renny Marks on his way home from the
+boat; and over his shoulder was the mainsail and gaff
+and a mackerel-seine and two great oars; and by one
+arm he had slung the rudder and tackle and bait-pot;
+and under the other he lugged a couple of bundles of
+lath for to mend his traps; and so he was pacing along
+there as proud and careless as Samson bearing away
+the gates of Gaza on his back (<i>Judges</i> xvi, 3).</p>
+
+<p>Now I had entertained the belief for some time that
+it was my duty, should the occasion offer, to have a
+serious word with Renny about matters not temporal;
+and this was clearly the moment. Yet even before we
+had met he gave me one of those proud, distrustful, I
+have said contemptuous, looks of his; and I seemed
+suddenly to perceive the figure I must cut in his eyes,
+pattering along there so trimly in my clerical garb, and
+with my book of prayers under one arm; and, do you
+know, I was right tongue-tied; and so we came within
+hand-reach, and still never a word.</p>
+
+<p>At last, "Good-day to ye, Mister Biddles," says he,
+with a scant, off-hand nod; and, as if he knew I must
+be admiring of his strength, "I can fetch twice this
+load, sor," says he, "without so mucht as knowing the
+difference."</p>
+
+<p>"It's a fine thing, Renny Marks," said I, gaining my
+tongue again, at his boast, "a fine thing to be the
+strongest man in three parishes, if that's what ye be, as
+they tell me."</p>
+
+<p>"It is that, sor," says he. "I never been cast yet;
+and I don't never expect for to be."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"But it's still finer a thing, Renny," I went on, "to
+use that strength in the honor of your Maker. Tell
+me, do you remember to say your prayers every night
+before you go to bed?"</p>
+
+<p>Never shall I forget the horse-laugh the young fellow
+had at those words.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, sor," he exclaimed, as if I had suggested the
+most unconscionable thing in the world, "saying prayers!
+that's for the likes of them as wash their face
+every day. I say my prayers on Sunday; and that's
+enough for the likes of me!"</p>
+
+<p>And with that, not even affording me a chance to
+reply, he strode off up the beach road; and in every
+movement of his great limbs I seemed to see the pride
+and glory of life. Doubtless I was to blame for not
+pressing home to him more urgently at that moment
+the claims of religion; but as I stood there, watching
+him, it came to me that after all he was almost to be
+pardoned for being proud. For surely there is something
+to warm the heart in the sight of the young lion's
+strength and courage; and even the Creator, I thought,
+must have taken delight in turning out such a fine piece
+of mortal handiwork as that Renny Marks.</p>
+
+<p>But with that thought immediately came another:
+"Whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth, and scourgeth
+every son whom he receiveth" (<i>Hebrews</i> xii, 6). And
+I went home sadly, for I seemed to see that Renny had
+bitter things ahead of him before he should learn the
+great lesson of life.</p>
+
+<p>Well, and this is the way it came to him. At the age<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
+of four-and-twenty, he married this Suse Barlow from
+down the coast a piece,&mdash;Green Harbor was the name
+of the town,&mdash;and she was a sweet young thing, gentle
+and ladylike, though of plainest country stock, and
+with enough education so they'd let her keep school
+down there. He built a little house for her, the one
+they still live in, with his own hands, at Halibut Head;
+and I never saw anything prettier than the way that
+young giant treated his wife&mdash;like a princess! It was
+the first time in his life, I dare say, he had ever given
+a thought to anything but himself; and in a fashion, I
+suppose, 'twas still but a satisfaction of his pride, to
+have her so beautiful, and so well-dressed.</p>
+
+<p>I remember of how often they would come in late to
+church,&mdash;even as late as the Te Deum,&mdash;and I could
+almost suspect him of being behindhand of purpose,
+for of course every one would look around when he
+came creaking down the aisle in his big shoes, with a
+wide smile on his ruddy face that showed all his white
+teeth through his beard; and none could fail to observe
+how fresh and pretty Suse was, tripping along there
+behind him, and looking very demure and modest in
+her print frock, and oh, so very, very sorry to be late!
+And during the prayers I had to remark how his face
+would always be turned straight toward her, as if it
+were to her he was addressing his supplications; the
+young heathen!</p>
+
+<p>Now there is one thing I never could seem to understand,
+though I have often turned it over in my mind,
+and that is, why it should be that a young Samson like<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
+Renny Marks, and a fine, bouncing girl like that Suse
+of his, should have children who were too weak and
+frail to stay long on this earth; but such was the case.
+They saved only three out of six; and the oldest of
+those three, Michael John, when he got to be thirteen
+years of age, shipped as cabin boy on a fisherman down
+to the Grand Banks, and never came back. So that
+left only Bessie Lou, who was twelve, and little Martin,
+who was the baby.</p>
+
+<p>If ever children had a good bringing up, it was those
+two. I never saw either of them in a dirty frock or in
+bare feet; and that means something, you must allow,
+when you consider the hardness of the fisherman's life,
+and how often he has nothing at all to show for a season's
+toil except debts! But work&mdash;I never saw any
+one work like that Renny; and he made a lovely little
+farm out there; and Suse wasn't ashamed to raise
+chickens and sell them in Salmon River; and she dyed
+wool, and used to hook these rugs, with patterns of her
+own design, baskets of flowers, or handsome fruit-dishes;
+and almost always she could get a price for
+them. But, as you may believe, she couldn't keep her
+sweet looks with work like that. Before she was
+thirty she began to look old, as is so often true in a
+hard country like ours; and not often would she be
+coming in to church any more, because, she said, of the
+household duties; but my own belief is that she did not
+have anything to wear. But Bessie Lou and little
+Martin, when the boy was well enough, were there
+every fine Sunday, as pretty as pictures, and able to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
+recite the Creed, and the Lord's Prayer, and the Collects,
+and the Commandments, quite like the children
+of gentlefolk.</p>
+
+<p>Well, when Bessie Lou got to be sixteen, she took it
+into her head that she must go off to Boston, where she
+would be earning her own living, and see something
+more of the world than is possible for a girl in Salmon
+River. Our girls all get that notion nowadays; they
+are not content to stay at home as girls used to do; but
+off they go in droves to the States, where wages are
+big, and there is excitement and variety. So the old
+people finally said yes, and off goes Bessie Lou, like the
+others; and in two years we heard she was to be married
+to a mechanic in Lynn (I think that is the name of
+the city) somewhere outside of Boston. She has been
+gone eight years now, and has three children; and she
+writes occasionally. She is always wishing she could
+come down and visit the old folks; but it is hard to get
+away, I presume, and they are plain working people.</p>
+
+<p>So after Bessie Lou's going, all they had left at
+home was Martin, who was always ailing more or less.
+And on my word, I never saw anything like the care
+they gave that boy. There wasn't anything too good
+for him. All these most expensive tonics and patent
+medicines they would be for trying, one after another,
+and telling themselves every time that at last they had
+found just the right thing, because he'd seem to be
+bracing up a bit, and getting more active. And then
+he would take another of his bad spells, and lose
+ground again; and they would put by that bottle and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
+try something else. One day when I was out there his
+ma showed me all of twenty bottles of patent medicine,
+some of them scarcely touched, that Renny had got for
+him, one time or another.</p>
+
+<p>You see, Martin couldn't run about outdoors very
+much because of his asthma; and then, his eyes being
+bad, that made him unhappy in the house, for he
+couldn't be reading or studying. His father got him
+an old fiddle once, he'd picked up at an auction, and
+the boy took to it something wonderful; but not having
+any teacher and no music he soon grew tired of it. And
+whenever old Renny would be in the village, he must
+always be getting some little thing to take out to Martin:
+a couple of bananas, say, or a jack-knife, or one of
+those American magazines with nice pictures, especially
+pictures of ships and other sailing craft, of which the
+lad was very fond.</p>
+
+<p>Well, and so last winter came, which was a very bad
+winter indeed, in these parts; and the poor lamb had a
+pitiful hard time; and whenever Renny got in to
+church, it was plain to see that he was eating his heart
+out with worry. He still had his old way of always
+snoring during the sermon; but oh, if you could see
+once the tired, anxious, supplicating look in his face,
+as soon as his proud eyes shut, you never would have
+had the heart to wish anything but "Sleep on now, and
+take your rest" (<i>Mark</i> xiv, 41), for you knew that
+perhaps, for a few minutes, he had stopped worrying
+about that little lad of his.</p>
+
+<p>Spring came on, at last, and Martin was out again<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>
+for a while every day in the sun; and sometimes
+the old man would be taking him abroad for a drive
+or for a little sail in the boat, when he was going out
+to his traps; and it appeared that the strain was over
+again for the time being. That is why I was greatly
+surprised and troubled one day, about two months ago,
+to see Renny come driving up toward the Rectory like
+mad, all alone in his cart.</p>
+
+<p>I had just been doing a turn of work myself at the
+hay; for it is hard to get help with us when you need it
+most; and as I came from the barn, in my shirt-sleeves,
+Renny turned in at the gate.</p>
+
+<p>"Something has happened to the boy," was my
+thought; and I was all but certain of it when I saw the
+man's face, sharp set as a flint stone, and all the blood
+gone from his ruddy skin so that it looked right blue.
+He jumped out before the mare stopped, and came up
+to me.</p>
+
+<p>"Can I have a word with ye?" said he; and when
+he saw my look of question, he added, "It ain't nothink,
+sor. He's all right."</p>
+
+<p>I put my hand on his shoulder, and led him into my
+study, and we sat down there, just as we were, I in my
+shirt-sleeves, and still unwashed after the hayfield.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it, Renny, man?" says I.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed like he could not make his lips open for a
+moment, and then, suddenly, he began talking very fast
+and excitedly, pecking little dents in the arms of the
+chair with his big black fingernails.</p>
+
+<p>"That Bessie Lou of oors up to Boston," said he, as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
+if he were accusing some one of an outrage, "we got a
+letter from 'er last night, we did, and she sayse, says
+she, why wouldn't we be for a-sending o' the leetle lad
+up theyr? They'd gladly look oot for him, she sayse;
+and the winter ain't severe, she sayse; and he could go
+to one o' them fine city eye-doctors and 'ave his eyes
+put right with glasses or somethink; and prob'ly he
+could be for going to school again and a-getting of his
+learning, which he's sadly be'indhand in, sor, becaust
+he's ben ailing so much."</p>
+
+<p>His eyes flashed, and the sweat poured down his
+forehead in streams.</p>
+
+<p>I don't know why I was so slow to understand; but
+I read his look wrong, there seemed so much of the old
+insolence and pride in it, and I replied, I daresay a
+little reproachfully,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Well, and why wouldn't that be an excellent thing,
+Renny? I should think you would feel grateful."</p>
+
+<p>He stared at me for a second, as if I had struck him.
+Ah, we can forget the words people say to us, even in
+wrath; but can we ever free ourselves from the memory
+of such a look? Without knowing why, I had the
+feeling of being a traitor. And then, all of a sudden,
+there he had crumpled down in his chair, and put his
+head in his big hands, and was sobbing.</p>
+
+<p>"I cain't&mdash;I cain't let him go," he groaned. "I
+woon't let him go. He's all what we got left."</p>
+
+<p>I sat there for a time, helpless, looking at him. You
+might think that a priest, with the daily acquaintance
+he has with the bitter things of life, ought to know how<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>
+to face them calmly; but so far as my own small experience
+goes, I seem to know nothing more about all
+that than at the beginning. It always hurts just as
+much; it's always just as bewildering, just as terrible,
+as if you had never seen anything like it before. And
+when I saw that giant of a Renny Marks just broken
+over there like some big tree shattered by lightning, it
+seemed as if I could not bear to face such suffering.
+Then I remembered that he had been committed into
+my care by God, and that I must not be only an hireling
+shepherd. So I said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Renny, lad, it isn't for ourselves we must be thinking.
+It's for him."</p>
+
+<p>He lifted up his head, with the shaggy, half-gray
+hair all rumpled on his wet forehead, and pulled his
+sleeve across his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Hark'e, Mister Biddles," he commanded harshly.
+"Ain't we did the best we could for him? Who dares
+say we ain't did the best we could for him? <i>You?</i>"</p>
+
+<p>I made no answer, and for a minute we faced each
+other, while he shook his clenched fists at me, and the
+creature in him that had never yet been cast challenged
+all the universe.</p>
+
+<p>"They're tryin' to tak my boy away from me," he
+roared, "and they cain't do it&mdash;I tell you they cain't.
+He's all what we got left, now."</p>
+
+<p>"And so you mean to keep him for yourself?" I
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, that I do," he cried, jumping out of his chair,
+and striding up and down the room as if clean out of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
+his wits. "I do! I do! Why <i>wouldn't</i> I mean to, hey?
+Ain't he mine? Who's got a better right to him?"</p>
+
+<p>Of a sudden he comes to a dead halt in front of me,
+with his arms crossed. "Mister Biddles," he says,
+very bitterly, "you may well be thankfu' you never
+wast a father yoursel'. Nobody ain't for trying to tak
+nothink away from you."</p>
+
+<p>"That's quite true, Renny," said I. "But remember,"
+I said, not intending any irreverence, but uttering
+such poor words as were given to me in my extremity,
+"remember, Renny, it's to a Father you say your prayers
+in church every Sunday; and you needn't think as
+that Father doesn't know full as well as you what it is
+to give up an only Son for love's sake."</p>
+
+<p>"Hey?&mdash;What's that, sor?" cries Renny, with a
+face right like a dead thing.</p>
+
+<p>"And would He be asking of you for to let yours go,
+if He didn't know there was love enough in your heart
+to stand the test?"</p>
+
+<p>Renny broke out with a terrible groan, like the roar
+of anguish of a wild beast that has got a mortal
+wound; and the same instant the savage look died in
+his eyes, and the bigger love in him had triumphed
+over the smaller love. I could see it, I knew it, even
+before he spoke. He caught at my hand, blunderingly,
+and gave it a twist like a winch.</p>
+
+<p>"He shall go, sor. He shall go for all of I. And
+Mr. Biddles, while I'm for telling the old woman and
+the boy, would ye be so condescending as to say over
+some of them there prayers, so I could have the feel<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>ing,
+as you might say, that some one was keeping an
+eye on me? It'll all be done in less nor a half-hour."</p>
+
+<p>And with that, off he goes, and jumps into his cart,
+and whips up the mare, tearing down the road like a
+whirlwind, just as he had come, without so much as
+saying good-by. And the next day I heard them saying
+in the village that Renny Marks's boy was to go up to
+the States to be raised with his sister's family.</p>
+
+<p>Ah, well, that's only a common sort of a story, I
+know. The same kind of things happen near us every
+day. I can't even quite tell why I wanted to set it down
+on paper like this, only that, some way, it makes me
+believe in God more; even when I have to remember,
+and it seems to me just now like I could never stop
+remembering it, that Renny and Suse are all alone to-day
+out there on Halibut Head. Renny is at the fish,
+of course; and Suse, I daresay, is working in her little
+potato patch; and Martin is out there on the sea, being
+borne to a world far away, and from which, I suppose,
+he will not be very anxious to return; for few of them
+do come back, nowadays, to the home country.</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<a name="FOUGERE" id="FOUGERE"></a>
+<img src="images/fougere.jpg" width="600" height="410" alt="" />
+<div class="caption center">FOUGÈRE'S COVE</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77"></a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="THEIR_TRUE_LOVE" id="THEIR_TRUE_LOVE">THEIR TRUE LOVE</a></h2>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="ph3">THEIR TRUE LOVE</p>
+
+
+<div class="figleft dropcap" style="width: 79px;">
+<img src="images/i_097.png" width="79" height="80" alt="" />
+</div>
+<p><span class="dropcap">E</span>ven Zabette, with her thousand wrinkles,
+was young once. They say her lips were
+red as wild strawberries and her hair as
+sleek as the wing of a blackbird in spring.
+All the old people of St. Esprit remember how she
+used to swing along the street on her way to mass of a
+Sunday, straight, proud, agile as a goat, with her dark
+head flung back, and a disdainful smile on her lips that
+kept young men from being unduly forward. The
+country people, who must have their own name for
+everything and everybody, used to call her "la belle
+orgueilleuse," and sometimes, "the highstepper"; and
+though they had to laugh at her a little for her lofty
+ways, they found it quite natural to address her as
+mademoiselle.</p>
+
+<p>But all these things one only knows by hearsay. Zabette
+does not talk much herself. So far as she is concerned,
+you might never guess that she had a story at
+all. She lives there in the little dormer-windowed cottage
+beyond the post-office with Suzanne Benoît. For
+thirty-three years now the two women have lived together;
+and it is the earnest prayer of both of them
+that when the time for going arrives, they may go
+together.</p>
+
+<p>These two good souls have the reputation, all over
+the country, of immense industry and thrift. Suzanne<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>
+keeps three cows, and her butter is famous. Zabette&mdash;she
+was a Fuseau, from the Grande Anse&mdash;takes
+in washing of the better class. Nobody in St. Esprit can
+do one of those stiff white linen collars so well as she.
+Positively, it shines in the sun like a looking-glass. If
+you notice the men going to church, you can always
+pick out those who have their shirts and collars done
+by Zabette Fuseau. By comparison, the others appear
+dull and very commonplace.</p>
+
+<p>"But why must Zabette do collars for her living?"
+you are asking. "Why has she not a man of her own
+to look out for her, and half a dozen grown up children?
+Did she never marry, then&mdash;this belle orgueilleuse?"</p>
+
+<p>No. Never. But not on account of that pride of
+hers; at least not directly. If you go into the pretty
+little living-room of the second cottage beyond the
+post-office&mdash;the one with such a show of geraniums in
+the front windows&mdash;you will guess half the secret, for
+just above the mantelpiece, between two vases of artificial
+asters, hangs the daguerreotype portrait of a
+young man in mariner's slops. The lineaments have
+so faded with the years that it is difficult to make them
+out with any assurance. It is as if the portrait itself
+were seeking to escape from life, retreating little by
+little, imperceptibly, into the dull shadows of the
+ground, so that only as you look at it from a certain
+angle can you still clearly distinguish the small dark
+eyes, the full moustache, the round chin, the square
+stocky shoulders of the subject. Only the two rosy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>
+spots added by the daguerreotypist to the cheeks defy
+time and change, indestructible token of youth and
+ardor.</p>
+
+<p>A little frame of immortelles encloses the portrait.
+And directly in front of it, on the mantelpiece, stands
+a pretty shell box, with the three words on the mother-of-pearl
+lid: "À ma chérie." What is in the box&mdash;if
+anything&mdash;no one can tell you for a certainty, though
+there are plenty of theories. "Love letters," say
+some; and others, with a pitying laugh, "Old maid's
+tears."</p>
+
+<p>Zabette and Suzanne hold their tongues. I think I
+know what the treasure of the box is; for I had the
+story directly from a very aged woman who knew both
+the "girls" when they were young; and she vouched
+for the truth of it by all the beads of her rosary. This
+is how it went.</p>
+
+<p>Zabette Fuseau was eighteen, and she lived at the
+Grand Anse, two miles out of St. Esprit; and the procession
+of young fellows, going there to woo, was like
+a pilgrimage, exactly. Among them came one from
+far down the coast, a place called Rivière Bourgeoise.
+He was a deep sea fisherman, from off a vessel which
+had put in at St. Esprit for repairs, mid-course to the
+Grand Banks; and on his first shore leave Maxence
+had caught sight of la belle orgueilleuse, who had come
+into town with a basket of eggs; and he had followed
+her home, at a little distance, sighing, but without the
+courage to address her so long as they were in the village.
+He was a very handsome young fellow, with a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>
+brown, ruddy skin, and the most beautiful dark curly
+hair and crisp moustache imaginable.</p>
+
+<p>Zabette knew he was behind her; but she would not
+turn; not she; only walked a little more proudly and
+gracefully, with that swinging movement of hers, like
+a vessel sailing in a head wind. At last, when they had
+reached the Calvaire at the end of the village, he managed
+to get out his first word.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" he cried, haltingly. "Mademoiselle!"</p>
+
+<p>She turned half about and fixed her dark proud eyes
+upon him, while her cheeks crimsoned.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, m'sieur?"</p>
+
+<p>He could not speak, and the two stared at each other
+for a long time in silence, while the thought came to
+her that this was the man for whom she was destined.</p>
+
+<p>"Had you something to say to me?" she repeated,
+finally, in a tone that tried to be severe, but was really
+very soft.</p>
+
+<p>He nodded his curly head, and licked his lips hard
+to moisten them.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot wait any longer," she protested, after a
+while. "They need me at home."</p>
+
+<p>She turned quickly again, as if to go; but her feet
+were glued to the ground, and she did not take a step.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, s'il vous plaît, mam'selle!" he cried, to hold
+her. "You think I am rude. But I did not mean to
+follow you like this. I could not help it. You are so
+beautiful."</p>
+
+<p>The look he gave her with those words sank deep
+into her heart and rooted itself there forever. In vain,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
+for the rest of her life, she might try to tear it out;
+there was a fatality about it. Zabette, fine highstepper
+that she was, had been caught at last. She knew that
+she ought to send the handsome young sailor away;
+but her tongue would not obey her. Instead, it uttered
+some very childish words of confusion and pleasure;
+and before she knew it, there was her man walking
+along at her side, with one hand on his heart, declaring
+that she was the most angelic creature in the world,
+that he was desperately in love with her, that he could
+not live without her, and that she must promise then
+and there to be his, or he would instantly kill himself.
+The burning, impassioned look in his eyes struck her
+with dismay.</p>
+
+<p>"But I cannot decide all in a moment like this," she
+protested, in a weak voice. "It would be indecent. I
+must think."</p>
+
+<p>"Think!" he retorted, bitterly. "Oh, very well.
+Then you do not love me!"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but I do!" she cried, all trembling.</p>
+
+<p>With that he took her in his arms and kissed her,
+and nothing more was heard about suicide or any such
+subject.</p>
+
+<p>"But we must not tell any one yet," she pleaded.
+"They would not understand."</p>
+
+<p>He agreed, with the utmost readiness. "We will
+not tell a soul. It shall be exactly as you wish. But
+I may come and see you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, certainly," she responded. "Often,&mdash;that is,
+every day or two,&mdash;at Grande Anse; and perhaps we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>
+may happen to meet sometimes in the village, as well."</p>
+
+<p>"The <i>Soleil</i> will be delaying at St. Esprit for two
+weeks," he explained, as they walked along, hand in
+hand. "She put in for some repairs. By the end of
+that time, perhaps"&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no, not so soon as that," she interrupted.
+"We must let a longer while pass first."</p>
+
+<p>She gazed at him yearningly. "You will be returning
+by here in the autumn, at the end of the season on
+the Banks?"</p>
+
+<p>"We are taking on three men from St. Esprit," he
+answered. "We shall stop here on the return to set
+them ashore. That will be in October, near the end of
+the month, if the season is good."</p>
+
+<p>She sighed, as if dreading some disaster; and they
+looked at each other again, and the look ended in a
+kiss. It is not by words, that new love feeds and
+grows.</p>
+
+<p>Before they reached the Grande Anse he quitted
+her; but he gave her his promise to come again that
+evening. He did&mdash;that evening, and two evenings
+later, and so on, every other evening for those two
+weeks. Zabette's old mother took a great fancy to
+him, and gave him every encouragement; but the old
+père Fuseau, who had sailed many a voyage, in
+younger days, round the Horn, would never speak a
+good word for him&mdash;and perhaps his hostility only
+increased the girl's attachment.</p>
+
+<p>"A little grease is all very well for the hair of a
+young man," he would say. "But this scented
+pomade they use nowadays&mdash;pah!"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"You object then to a sailor's being a gentleman?"
+demanded the girl haughtily.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I do," roared the old père Fuseau. "Have a
+care, Zabette."</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, the two lovers found plenty of chances
+to be alone together; and they would talk, in low
+voices, of their happiness and of the future, which
+looked very bright to Zabette, despite all the uncertainties
+of the sea.</p>
+
+<p>"When we put in on the return from the Banks,"
+said Maxence, "you will be at the wharf to meet me;
+and that very day we will announce our fiancailles.
+What an astonishment for everybody!"</p>
+
+<p>"And then," she asked&mdash;"after that?"</p>
+
+<p>"After that, I will stay ashore for a while. They
+can do without me on the <i>Soleil</i>. And at the end of a
+month"&mdash;he told her the rest with a kiss; and surely
+Zabette had never been so happy in her life.</p>
+
+<p>But for the time being the affair was kept very, very
+secret, so that people might not get to gossiping. Even
+those frequent expeditions of Maxence to the Grande
+Anse were not remarked, for he always came after
+dusk: and when the fortnight was over and the <i>Soleil</i>
+once more was ready for sea, the two sweethearts
+exchanged keepsakes, and he left her.</p>
+
+<p>"I will send you a letter from St. Pierre Miquelon,"
+he said, to cheer her, while he wiped away her tears
+with a silk handkerchief.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you promise?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>He promised. Three weeks later the letter arrived;
+and it told her that his heart was breaking for his dear<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>
+little Zabette. "Sois fidèle&mdash;be true," were the last
+words. The letter had a perfume of pomade about
+it, and she carried it all summer in her bodice, taking
+it out many times a day to scan the loving words again.</p>
+
+<p>In St. Esprit, when the fishing fleet begins to return
+from the Banks, they keep an old man on the lookout
+in the church tower; and as soon as he sights a vessel
+in the offing, he rings the bell.</p>
+
+<p>It was the fourth week in October that year before
+the bell was heard; and then rapidly, two or three at a
+time, the schooners came in. First the <i>Dame Blanche</i>,
+which was always in the lead; then the <i>Êtoile</i>, the <i>Deux
+Frères</i>, the <i>Lottie B.</i>, and the <i>Milo</i>. Every day, morning
+or afternoon, the bell would ring, and poor Zabette
+must find some excuse or other to be in town.
+Down at the wharf there was always gathered an anxious
+throng, watching for the appearance of the vessel
+round the Cape. And when she was visible at last,
+there would be cries of joy from some, and silence on
+the part of others. Zabette was among the silent.
+When she saw the happiness about her, tears would
+swim unbidden in her eyes; but of course she did not
+lose heart, for still there were several vessels to
+arrive, and no disasters had been reported by the
+earlier comers. People noticed her, standing there with
+expectant mien, and they wondered what it could be
+that brought her; but it was not their habit to ask questions
+of the fine highstepper.</p>
+
+<p>There was another young girl on the wharf, too,
+who had the air of looking for some one&mdash;a certain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>
+Suzanne Benoît, from l'Étang, three miles inshore, a
+very pretty girl, with a mild, appealing look in her
+brown eyes. Zabette had seen her often here and
+there; but she had no acquaintance with her. At the
+present moment, strangely enough, she felt herself
+powerfully drawn to this Suzanne. It came to her,
+somehow, that the girl had come thither on a mission
+similar to her own, she was so silent, and had not the
+look of those who had waited on the wharf in previous
+years. And so, one afternoon, when two vessels
+had rounded the Cape and were entering the harbor,
+amid a great hubbub of expectancy,&mdash;and neither of
+them was the <i>Soleil</i>,&mdash;Zabette surprised a look of woe
+in the face of the other which she could not resist. She
+went over to her, with some diffidence, and offered a
+few words of sympathy.</p>
+
+<p>"You are waiting for some one, too?" she asked
+her.</p>
+
+<p>The eyes of the other filled quickly to overflowing.
+"Yes," she answered. "He has not come yet."</p>
+
+<p>"You must not worry," said Zabette, stoutly.
+"There are always delays, you know. Some are
+ahead; others behind; it is so every year."</p>
+
+<p>The girl gave her a grateful look, and squeezed her
+hand. "It is a secret," she murmured.</p>
+
+<p>Zabette smiled. "I have a secret too."</p>
+
+<p>"Then we are waiting together," said Suzanne.
+"That makes it so much easier!"</p>
+
+<p>They walked back to the street, arm in arm, as if
+they had always been bosom friends. And the next<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>
+day they were both at the wharf again. The afternoon
+was bleak; but as usual they were in their best
+clothes.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, it does not seem as if I could wait any longer,"
+whispered Suzanne, confidingly. "I do hope it will
+be the <i>Soleil</i> this time."</p>
+
+<p>"The <i>Soleil</i>!" exclaimed Zabette, joyfully. "You
+are waiting for the <i>Soleil</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>And at the other's nod, she went on. "How lovely
+that we are expecting the same vessel. Oh, I am sure
+it will come to-day&mdash;or certainly to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>The two girls felt themselves very close together,
+now that they had shared so much of their secret; and
+it made the waiting less hard to bear.</p>
+
+<p>"Is he handsome, your man?" asked Suzanne,
+timidly.</p>
+
+<p>"Ravishing," replied Zabette, eagerly. "And
+yours?"</p>
+
+<p>Suzanne sighed with adoration. "Beyond words,"
+was her reply&mdash;and the girls exchanged another of
+those pressures of the hand which mean so much where
+love is concerned. "He has the most beautiful moustache
+in the world."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no," protested Zabette, smilingly. "Mine has
+a more beautiful one yet, and such crisp curly hair, and
+dark eyes."</p>
+
+<p>Her companion suddenly looked at her. "Large
+eyes or small?" she asked in a strange voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh," replied Zabette, doubtfully. "Not too large.
+I would not fancy ox eyes in a man."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Suzanne freed herself and stood facing her with a
+flash of hatred in her mild face which Zabette could
+not understand.</p>
+
+<p>"And his name!" she demanded, harshly. "His
+name, then!"</p>
+
+<p>Zabette smiled a little proudly. "That is my secret,"
+she replied. "But, Suzanne, what is the matter?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is not your secret," laughed the other, bitterly.
+"It is not your secret. It is my secret."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean?" cried Zabette, with a sudden
+feeling of terror at the girl's drawn face.</p>
+
+<p>"His name is Maxence!" Suzanne's laugh was like
+bones rattling in a coffin.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to Zabette as if a flash of lightning had
+cleft her soul in two. That was the way the truth came
+to her. She drew back like a viper ready to strike.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I hate you!" she cried, and turned on her heel,
+white to the eyes with anger and shame.</p>
+
+<p>But Suzanne would not leave her. She followed to
+the other side of the wharf, and as soon as she could
+speak again without attracting attention, she said,
+more kindly:</p>
+
+<p>"I am very sorry for you, Zabette. It is too bad
+you were so mistaken. Why, he was engaged to me
+the very second day he came ashore."</p>
+
+<p>Zabette stifled back a cry, and retorted, icily, "He
+was engaged to me the first day. He followed me all
+the way to the Grande Anse."</p>
+
+<p>Suzanne's eyes glittered, this time. "He followed
+me all the way to l'Étang. He is mine."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Zabette brought out, through white lips, "Leave me
+alone. He was mine first."</p>
+
+<p>"He was mine last," retaliated the other, undauntedly.
+"The very morning he went away, he came to see
+me. Did he come to you that day? Did he? Did he?"</p>
+
+<p>Zabette ignored her question. "He wrote me a letter
+from St. Pierre Miquelon," she announced, crisply.
+"So that settles it, first and last."</p>
+
+<p>The hand of Suzanne suddenly lifted to her bosom,
+as if feeling for something. "My letter was written
+at St. Pierre, too."</p>
+
+<p>For an instant they glared at each other like wild
+animals fighting over prey. Neither said a word.
+Neither yielded a hair. Each felt that her life's happiness
+was at stake. Zabette had thought that this
+chit of a girl from l'Étang was mild and timid; but
+now she realized that she had met her match for courage.
+And the thought came to her: "When he sees
+us, let him choose."</p>
+
+<p>She was not conscious of having uttered the words.
+Perhaps her glance, swiftly directed toward the Cape,
+conveyed the thought to her rival. At all events the
+answer came promptly and with complete self-assurance:</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, let Maxence choose."</p>
+
+<p>Just at that moment the first vessel appeared at
+the harbor entrance, while the bell redoubled its jubilation
+in the church tower on the hill.</p>
+
+<p>"The <i>Mercure</i>!" cried an old woman. "Thank
+God!"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And a few minutes later, there was the <i>Anne-Marie</i>,
+all sail set over her green hull; and then a vessel which
+at first no one seemed to recognize.</p>
+
+<p>"Which is that?" they asked. "Oh, it must be&mdash;yes,
+it is the <i>Soleil</i>, from Rivière Bourgeoise. She has
+several men from here aboard."</p>
+
+<p>With eyes that seemed to be starting from her head,
+Zabette watched the <i>Soleil</i> entering the harbor. She
+could distinguish forms on deck. She saw handkerchiefs
+waving. At last she could begin to make out
+the faces a little. But she did not discover the one she
+sought. Holding tight to a mooring post, unable to
+think, unable to do anything but watch, it seemed to
+her that hours passed before the schooner cast anchor
+and a boat was put over. There were four persons in
+it: the mate and the three men from St. Esprit. They
+rowed rapidly to the wharf; and the three men threw
+up their gunny sacks and climbed the ladder, one after
+the other.</p>
+
+<p>The mate was just about to put off again when
+Zabette spoke to him. She leaned over the edge of the
+wharf, reaching out a detaining hand.</p>
+
+<p>"M'sieur!"</p>
+
+<p>At the same instant the word was uttered by another
+voice close by. She looked up and saw Suzanne, very
+white, in the same attitude.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it, mesdemoiselles?" asked the mate,
+touching his vizor.</p>
+
+<p>As if by concerted arrangement came the question
+from both sides.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"And Maxence?"</p>
+
+<p>The man answered them seriously and directly, perceiving
+from their manner that his reply was of great
+import to these two, whatever the reason for it might be.</p>
+
+<p>"Maxence?&mdash;But we do not know where he is.
+There was a fog. He was out in a dory, alone. We
+picked up the dory the next day. Perhaps"&mdash;he
+shrugged his shoulders incredulously&mdash;"perhaps he
+might have been picked up by another vessel. Who
+can say?"</p>
+
+<p>The girls gave him no answer. They reeled, and
+would have fallen, save that each found support in the
+other's arms. Sinking to the string piece of the
+wharf, they buried their faces on each other's shoulders
+and sobbed. Happy fathers and mothers and
+sweethearts, gathered on the wharf, looked at them in
+wonder, and left them alone, ignorant of the cause of
+their grief. So a long time passed, and still they
+crouched there, tight clasped, with buried heads.</p>
+
+<p>"He was so good, so brave!" sobbed Suzanne.</p>
+
+<p>"I loved him so much," repeated Zabette, over and
+over.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall die without him," moaned Suzanne.</p>
+
+<p>"So shall I," responded the other. "I cannot bear
+to live any longer."</p>
+
+<p>"If only I had a picture of him, that would be some
+comfort," said the poor girl from l'Étang.</p>
+
+<p>"I have one," said Zabette, sitting up straight and
+putting some orderly touches to her disarranged <i>mouchoir</i>.
+"He gave it to me the very last night."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Suzanne looked at her enviously, and mopped her
+red eyes. "All I have," she sighed, "is a little shell
+box he brought me, with the motto, <i>À ma chérie</i>. He
+gave me that the very last morning of all. It is very
+beautiful, but no one but me has seen it yet."</p>
+
+<p>"You must show it to me sometime," said Zabette.
+"I have a right to see it."</p>
+
+<p>"If you will let me look at the picture," consented
+the other, guardedly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, you may look at it," said Zabette, "so long as
+you do not forget that it belongs to me."</p>
+
+<p>"To you!" retorted the other. "And have you a
+better right to it than I, seeing that he would have been
+my husband in a month's time? You are a bad, cruel
+girl; you have no heart. It is a mercy he escaped the
+traps you set for him&mdash;my poor Maxence!"</p>
+
+<p>A thousand taunting words came to Zabette's lips,
+but she controlled herself, rose to her feet with a show
+of dignity, and quitted the wharf. She resolved that
+she would never speak to that Benoît girl again. To
+do so was only to be insulted.</p>
+
+<p>She went back to her home on the Grande Anse and
+endeavored to take up her everyday life again as
+though nothing had happened. She hid her grief from
+the neighbors, even from her own parents, who had
+never suspected the strength of her attachment for
+Maxence. By day she could keep herself busy about
+the house, and the secret would only be a dull pain;
+but at night, especially when the wind blew, it would
+gnaw and gnaw at her heart like a hungry beast.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>At last she could keep it to herself no longer. She
+must share her misery. But there was only one person
+in the world who could understand. She declared to
+herself that nothing would induce her to go to
+l'Étang; and yet, as if under a spell, she made ready
+for the journey.</p>
+
+<p>"Where are you going, my Zabette?" asked her old
+mother.</p>
+
+<p>"To l'Étang," she answered. "I hear there is a
+girl there who makes a special brown dye for wool."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, the walk will do you good, ma fille. You
+have been indoors too much lately. You are growing
+right pale and ill-looking."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, it is nothing, maman. I never feel very brisk,
+you know, in November. 'Tis such a dreary month."</p>
+
+<p>She took a back road across the barrens to l'Étang.
+Scarcely any one traveled it except in winter to fetch
+kindling wood from the scrub fir that grew there. Consequently
+Zabette was much surprised, after walking
+about a mile and a half, to discover that some one was
+approaching from the opposite direction&mdash;a woman,
+with a red shawl across her shoulders. Gradually the
+distance between them lessened; and then she saw, with
+a start, that it was Suzanne Benoît. Her knees began
+to tremble under her. When they met, at last, no
+words would come to her lips: they only looked at each
+other with questioning, hunted eyes, then embraced,
+weeping, and sat down silently on a moss-hummock beside
+the road. Zabette had not felt so comforted since
+the disaster of October. For the first time she could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
+let the tears flow without any fear of detection. At
+last she said, very calmly:</p>
+
+<p>"I have brought the picture."</p>
+
+<p>She drew it out from under her coat, and held it on
+her knees, where Suzanne could see it.</p>
+
+<p>"And here is the shell box," rejoined her companion.
+"I do not know how to read, me; but there are
+the words&mdash;<i>À ma chérie</i>. It's pretty&mdash;<i>hein</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>Each gazed at the other's treasure.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah," sighed Suzanne, mournfully. "How handsome
+he was to look at&mdash;and so true and brave!"</p>
+
+<p>"I shall never love another," said Zabette, with sad
+conviction&mdash;"never. Love is over for me."</p>
+
+<p>"And for me," said Suzanne. "But we have our
+memories."</p>
+
+<p>"Mine," corrected Zabette. "You are forgetting."</p>
+
+<p>"Did he ever give you a present that said <i>À ma
+chérie</i>?" demanded Suzanne, pointedly.</p>
+
+<p>The other explained blandly: "You cannot say anything,
+my dear, on the back of a tintype.&mdash;But I have
+my letter from St. Pierre."</p>
+
+<p>She showed it.</p>
+
+<p>"Even if I cannot read mine," declared the girl from
+l'Étang, hotly, "I know it is fully as nice as yours.
+Nicer!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, can I never see you but you must insult me!"
+cried Zabette. "Keep your old box and your precious
+letter from St. Pierre Miquelon. What can they matter
+to me?"</p>
+
+<p>Without a word of good-by she sprang to her feet<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
+and set out for the Grande Anse. She did not see the
+Benoît girl again that winter; but she could not help
+thinking about her, sometimes with sympathy, sometimes
+with bitter hatred. The young men came flocking
+to her home, as usual, vying with one another in
+attentions to her, for not only was Zabette known as
+the handsomest girl in three parishes, but also as an
+excellent housekeeper&mdash;"good saver, rare spender."</p>
+
+<p>She would not encourage any of them, however.</p>
+
+<p>"If I marry," she said to herself, "it is giving Maxence
+over to that l'Étang girl. She will crow about it.
+She will say, 'At last he is mine altogether. She has
+surrendered.' No, I could not stand that."</p>
+
+<p>So that winter passed, and the next summer, and
+other winters and summers. Zabette did not marry;
+and after a time she began hearing herself spoken of
+as an old maid. The young men flocked to other
+houses, not hers. At the end of twelve years both her
+father and mother were dead, and she was alone in the
+world, thirty, and unprovided for.</p>
+
+<p>It was, of course, fated, that these two women whose
+lives had been so strangely entangled should drift
+together again, sooner or later. So long as both were
+young and could claim love for themselves, jealousy
+was bound to separate them; but when they found
+themselves quite alone in the world, no longer beautiful,
+no longer arousing thoughts of love in the breast
+of another, the memory of all that was most precious
+in their lives drew them together as surely as a magnet
+draws two bits of metal.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It was after mass, one Sunday, that Zabette sought
+out her rival finally and found the courage to propose
+a singular plan.</p>
+
+<p>"You are alone, Suzanne," she said. "So am I.
+We are both poor. Come and live with me."</p>
+
+<p>"And you will give me Maxence?" asked Suzanne,
+a little hardly.</p>
+
+<p>"No. But I will give you half of him. See, why
+should we quarrel any more? He is dead. Let us be
+reasonable. After this he shall belong to both of us."</p>
+
+<p>Still the <i>vieille fille</i> from l'Étang held back, though
+her eyes softened.</p>
+
+<p>"All these years," she said, with a remnant of defiance&mdash;"all
+these years he has been mine. I did not
+get married, me, because that would have let him
+belong to you."</p>
+
+<p>Zabette sighed wearily. "And all these years I have
+been saying the same thing. And yet I could never forget
+the shell box and your letter from St. Pierre Miquelon.
+Come, don't you see how much easier it will be&mdash;how
+much more natural&mdash;if we put our treasures
+together: all we have of Maxence, and call him <i>ours</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>Suzanne was beginning to yield, but doubtfully. "If
+it would be proper," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Not if he were living, of course," replied the other,
+with assurance. "The laws of the church forbid that.
+But in the course of a lifetime a husband may have
+more than one wife. I do not see why, when a husband
+is dead, two wives should not have him. Do
+you?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I will come," said Suzanne, softly and gratefully.
+"I am so lonely."</p>
+
+<p>Three years later the two women moved from the
+Grande Anse into the village, renting the little cottage
+with the dormer windows in which they have lived ever
+since. You must look far to find so devoted a pair.
+They are more than sisters to each other. If their
+lives have not been happy, as the world judges happiness,
+they have at least been illumined by two great
+and abiding loves,&mdash;which does not happen often,&mdash;that
+for the dead, and that for each other.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99"></a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="GARLANDS_FOR_PETTIPAW" id="GARLANDS_FOR_PETTIPAW">GARLANDS FOR PETTIPAW</a></h2>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="ph3">GARLANDS FOR
+PETTIPAW</p>
+
+
+<div class="figleft dropcap" style="width: 80px;">
+<img src="images/i_119.png" width="80" height="80" alt="" />
+</div>
+<p><span class="dropcap">T</span>owns, like persons, I suppose, wake up
+now and then to find themselves famous;
+but I doubt if any town having this experience
+could be more amazed by it, more
+dazed by it, than was Three Rivers, one day last
+March, when we opened our newspapers from Boston
+and Montreal and lo, there was our own name staring
+at us from the front page! Three Rivers is in the
+Province of Quebec, on the shore of the Bay de Chaleurs;
+but we receive our metropolitan papers every
+day, only thirty-six hours off the presses; and this
+makes us feel closely in touch with the outside world.
+Until the railroad from Matapedia came through, four
+years ago, mail was brought by stage, every second
+day. The coming of the railroad had seemed an important
+event then; but it had never put Three Rivers
+on the front page of the Boston <i>Herald</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The news-item in question was to the effect that the
+S. S. <i>Maid of the North</i>, Captain Pettipaw of Three
+Rivers, P. Q., had been torpedoed, forty miles off Fastnet,
+while en route from Sydney, N. S., to Liverpool,
+with a cargo of pig-iron. The captain and crew (said
+the item) had been allowed to take to the boats; but
+only one of the two boats had been heard from. That<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
+one was in command of the mate, and had been rescued
+by a trawler.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Pettipaw of Three Rivers! <i>Our</i> Captain
+Pettipaw! How well we knew him; and who among
+us had ever thought of him as one likely to make Three
+Rivers figure on the front page of the world's news!
+Yet this had come to pass; and even amid the anxiety
+we felt as to the fate of Captain Joe, we could but be
+agreeably conscious of the distinction that had come to
+our little community. All that afternoon poor Mrs.
+Pettipaw's house was thronged with neighbors who
+hurried over there, newspaper in hand, ready to congratulate
+or to condole as might seem most called for.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor Mrs. Pettipaw" or "poor Melina" was the
+way we always spoke of her, partly, I suppose, because
+of her nine children, and partly because&mdash;I hesitate to
+say it&mdash;she was Captain Joe's wife. But now that it
+seemed so very likely she might be his widow, our
+hearts went out to her the more. You see Captain Joe
+was, in our local phrase, "one of those Pettipaws."
+Pettipaws never seemed to get anywhere or to do anything
+that mattered. Pettipaws were always behindhand.
+Pettipaws were always in trouble, one way or
+another. It was a family characteristic.</p>
+
+<p>Only five or six years ago Captain Joe's new
+schooner, the <i>Melina P.</i>, had broken from her harbor
+moorings under a sudden gale from the northwest and
+driven square on the Fiddle Reef, where she foundered
+before our eyes. Other vessels were anchored close by
+the <i>Melina P.</i>; but not one of them broke loose. All
+the Captain's savings for years and years had gone<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
+into the new schooner, not to speak of several hundreds
+borrowed from his fellow-townsmen.</p>
+
+<p>And the very next winter his house had burned to
+the ground; and the seven children&mdash;there were only
+seven then&mdash;had been parceled out amongst the neighbors
+for six or seven months until, about midsummer,
+the new house was roofed over and the windows set;
+and then the family moved in, and there they lived for
+several more months, "sort of camping-out fashion,"
+as poor Melina cheerfully put it, while Captain Joe
+was occasionally seen putting on a row of shingles or
+sawing a board. At last, after the snow had begun to
+fly, the neighbors came once more to the rescue. A collection
+was made for the stricken family; carpenters
+finished the house; a mason built the chimney and plastered
+the downstairs partitions; curtains were donated
+for the windows; and the Pettipaws spent the winter in
+comfort.</p>
+
+<p>The following spring Captain Joe got a position as
+second officer on a coastwise ship out of Boston, and
+the affairs of the family began to look up. From that
+he was promoted to the captaincy of a little freighter
+plying between Montreal and the Labrador; and the
+next we knew, he was in command of a large collier
+sailing out of Sydney, Nova Scotia. Poor Melina
+appeared in a really handsome new traveling suit,
+ordered from the big mail order house in Montreal;
+and the young ones could all go to church the same
+Sunday, and often did.</p>
+
+<p>For the last year or two we had ceased to make frequent
+inquiries after Captain Joe; he had dropped<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
+pretty completely out of our life; and the thought that
+he might be holding a commission of special dangerousness
+had never so much as entered our minds. But
+poor Melina's calmness in the face of the news-item
+surprised everyone. It was like a reproach to her
+neighbors for not having acknowledged before the
+worth of the man she had married. It had not
+required a German torpedo to teach her that. And as
+for his safety, that apparently caused her no anxiety
+whatever.</p>
+
+<p>"You couldn't kill the Captain," she repeated, with
+a quiet, untroubled smile, which was as much as to say
+that anything else might happen to a Pettipaw, but not
+that.</p>
+
+<p>The rest of us admired her faith without being able
+to share it. Poor Melina rarely had leisure to read a
+newspaper, and she did not know much about the disasters
+of the war zone. And so, instinctively, everyone
+began to say the eulogistic things about Captain
+Joe that had never been said&mdash;though now we realized
+they ought to have been said&mdash;while he was
+with us.</p>
+
+<p>"He was such a good man," said Mrs. Thibault, the
+barrister's wife. "So devoted to his home. I remember
+of how he would sit there on the doorstep for
+hours, watching his little ones at their play. Poor
+babies! Poor little babies!"</p>
+
+<p>"Such a brave man, too; and so witty!" said John
+Boutin, our tailor. "The stories he would tell, my!
+my! Many a day in the shop he'd be telling stories<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>
+from dinner till dark, without once stopping for breath
+as you might say. It passed the time so nice!"</p>
+
+<p>"And devout!" added Mrs. Fougère, the postmistress.
+"A Christian. He loved to listen to the church-bells.
+I remember like it was yesterday his saying to
+me, 'The man,' he said, 'who can hear a church-bell
+without thinking of religion, is as good as lost, to my
+thinking.'"</p>
+
+<p>"Not that he went to church very often," said
+Boutin.</p>
+
+<p>"His knee troubled him," explained Mrs. Fougère.</p>
+
+<p>Early in the evening came the cable message that
+justified poor Melina's confidence. Eugénie White&mdash;the
+Whites used to be Le Blancs, but since Eugénie
+came back from Boston, they have taken the more up-to-date
+name&mdash;Eugénie came flying up the street from
+the railroad station, waving the yellow envelope and
+spreading the news as she flew. The message consisted
+of only one word: "Safe"; but it was dated Queenstown,
+and it bore the signature we were henceforth to
+be so proud of: Joseph Pettipaw.</p>
+
+<p>Two days later the <i>Herald</i> contained a notice of the
+rescue by a Norwegian freighter of the Captain of the
+<i>Maid of the North</i>; but we had to wait ten days for
+the full story, which occupied two columns in one of
+the Queenstown journals and almost as much in the
+Dublin <i>Post</i>, with a very lifelike photograph of Captain
+Joe. It was a wonderful story, as you may very
+likely remember, for the American papers gave it
+plenty of attention a little later.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It had been a calm, warm day, but with an immense
+sea running. Before entering the war zone Captain
+Joe had made due preparation for emergencies. The
+ship's boats were ready to be swung, and in each was
+a barrel of water and a supply of biscuit and other
+rations. The submarine was not sighted until it was
+too late to think of escaping; the engines were reversed;
+and when the German commander called out through
+his megaphone that ten minutes would be allowed for
+the escape of the crew, all hands hurried to the lee side
+and began piling into the boats. The mate's was lowered
+away first and cleared safely.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain was about to give the order for the
+lowering of his own boat, when the only woman in the
+party cried out that her husband was being left behind.
+It was the cook, who was indulging in an untimely nap,
+his noonday labors in the galley being over. In her
+first excitement Martha Figman had failed to notice
+his absence, but had made for the boat as fast as she
+could, carrying her three-year-old child.</p>
+
+<p>"Be quick!" called out the commander of the submarine.
+"Your time is up!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Captain, Captain, don't leave him," implored
+the desperate woman. "He's all I have!"</p>
+
+<p>Then Captain Joe did the thing that will go down
+in history. He seized the little girl and held her aloft
+in his arms and called out to the Germans:</p>
+
+<p>"In the name of this little child, grant me three
+more minutes."</p>
+
+<p>"Two!" replied the commander.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Captain Joe leaped to the deck and rushed aft, burst
+open the cook's cabin, and hauled Danny Figman, quite
+sound asleep, out of his berth. The poor rascal was
+only partly dressed, but there was no time to make him
+presentable. A blanket and a sou'wester had to suffice.
+Still bewildered, he was dragged on deck and ordered
+to run for his life.</p>
+
+<p>A few seconds later the boat lowered away with its
+full quota of passengers; the men took the oars,
+cleared a hundred yards safely; and then there was a
+snort, a white furrow through the waves, an explosion;
+the <i>Maid of the North</i> listed, settled, and disappeared.
+The submarine steamed quickly out of sight; and the
+two boats were all that was left as witness of what had
+happened.</p>
+
+<p>On account of the terrible seas that were running,
+the boats soon became separated; and for sixty-two
+hours Captain Joe bent his every energy to keeping his
+boat afloat, for she was in momentary danger of being
+swamped, until on the third morning the Norwegian
+was sighted, came to the rescue, and carried the
+exhausted occupants into Queenstown.</p>
+
+<p>Three Rivers, you may depend, had this story by
+heart, and backward and forward, long before Captain
+Joe returned to us; for not only did it appear in
+those Irish journals, but also on the occasion of the
+Captain's arrival in New York in several metropolitan
+papers, written up with great detail, and with a picture
+of little Tina Figman in the Captain's arms.</p>
+
+<p>"This is the Captain," ran the print under the picture,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
+"who risked his life that a baby might not be
+fatherless."</p>
+
+<p>You can imagine how anxious we were by this time
+in Three Rivers to welcome that Captain home again;
+not one of us but wanted to make ample amends for
+the injustice we had done him in the past. But we had
+to wait several weeks, for even after the owners had
+brought Captain Joe and his crew back to New York
+on the St. Louis, still he had to go to Montreal for a
+ten days' stay, to depose his evidence officially and to
+wind up the affairs of the torpedoed ship. But at last
+he was positively returning to us; and extensive preparations
+were undertaken for his reception.</p>
+
+<p>As he was coming by the St. Lawrence steamer,
+<i>Lady of Gaspé</i>, the principal decorations were massed
+in the vicinity of the government wharf. If I tell you
+that well nigh three hundred dollars had been collected
+for this purpose from the good people of Three
+Rivers, you can form some idea of the magnitude of
+the effort. A double row of saplings had been set up
+along the wharf and led thence to the Palace of Justice;
+and the full distance, an eighth of a mile, was
+hung with red and tricolor bunting. Then there were
+three triumphal arches, one at the head of the wharf,
+one at the turn into the street, and one in front of the
+post-office. These arches were very cleverly built, with
+little turrets at the corners, the timber-work completely
+covered with spruce-branches; and each arch displayed
+a motto. Mrs. Fougère and Eugénie White had devised
+the mottoes, little John Boutin had traced the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
+letters on cotton, and Mrs. Boutin had painted them.
+The first read: "Honor to Our Hero." The second
+was in French, for the reason that half our population
+still use that language by preference, and it read:
+"Honneur à notre Héro"; and the third arch bore the
+one word, ornately inscribed: "Welcome."</p>
+
+<p>All the houses along the way were decorated with
+geraniums and flags; and as the grass was already very
+green (it was June) and the willows and silver-oaks
+beginning to leave out, it may fairly be said that Three
+Rivers was a beauty spot.</p>
+
+<p>Seeing that no one can tell beforehand when a
+steamer is going to arrive, the whole town was in its
+best clothes and ready at an early hour of the morning.
+The neighbors trooped in at poor Melina's, offering
+their services in case any of the children still needed
+combing, curling, or buttoning; and all through the
+forenoon the young people were climbing to the top of
+St. Anne's hill to see if there was any sign of the <i>Lady
+of Gaspé</i>; but it was not till three in the afternoon that
+the church-bell, madly ringing, announced that the
+long-expected moment was about to arrive.</p>
+
+<p>I wish I could quote for you in full the account of
+that day's doings which appeared in our local sheet,
+the Bonaventure <i>Record</i>, for it was beautifully written
+and described every feature as it deserved, reproducing
+<i>verbatim</i> the Mayor's address of welcome, Father
+Quinnan's speech in the Palace, and the Resolutions
+drawn up by ten representative citizens and presented
+to Captain Pettipaw on a handsomely illuminated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
+scroll, which you may see to-day hanging in the place
+of honor in his parlor.</p>
+
+<p>But let my readers imagine for themselves the
+arrival of the steamer, the cheer upon cheer as Captain
+Joe came gravely down the gang-plank; the affecting
+meeting between him and poor Melina and the nine
+little Pettipaws, the littlest of whom he had never seen,
+and several of whom had grown so in these last four
+years that he had the names wrong, which caused
+happy laughter and happy tears on all sides. Then the
+procession to the Palace! There was an orchestra of
+four pieces from Cape Cove; and a troop of little
+girls, in white, scattered tissue-paper flowers along the
+line of march.</p>
+
+<p>The Mayor began his speech by saying that an
+honor had come to our little town which would be
+rehearsed from father to son for generations. Father
+Quinnan took for his theme the three words: "Father,
+Husband, Hero"; and he showed us how each of those
+words, in its highest and best sense, necessarily comprised
+the other two. And the exercises closed with a
+very enjoyable piano duet which you doubtless know:
+"Wandering Dreams," by some foreign composer.</p>
+
+<p>People watched Captain Joe very closely. It would
+have been only natural if, returning to us in this way,
+he should have remembered a time, not so long before,
+when the attitude of his fellow-citizens had been extremely
+cool. But if he remembered it, he gave no
+sign; and he smiled at everyone in a grave, thoughtful
+manner that made one's heart beat high.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"He has aged," whispered Mrs. Fougère. "But
+his face is noble. It reminds me of Napoleon,
+somehow."</p>
+
+<p>"To me he looks more like that American we see so
+often in the papers&mdash;Bryan. So much dignity!" This
+from Mrs. Boutin.</p>
+
+<p>We appreciated the Captain's freedom from condescension
+the more when we heard from his own lips,
+that same evening, a recital of the honors that had
+been showered upon him during the past weeks. The
+Mayor of Queenstown had had him to dinner; Lady
+Derntwood, known as the most beautiful woman in
+Ireland, had entertained him for three days at Derntwood
+Park, and sent an Indian shawl as a present to
+his wife. On the <i>St. Louis</i> he had sat at the Captain's
+right hand; in New York he had been interviewed and
+royally fêted by the newspaper-men; and at Montreal
+the owners had presented him with a gold watch and a
+purse of $250. Also, they had offered him another
+ship immediately.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you're going again!" we exclaimed; and the
+words were repeated from one to another in admiration&mdash;"He's
+going again!" But Captain Joe smiled
+thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>"I told them I didn't mind being torpedoed," he
+said ('Oh, no! Certainly not! Mind being torpedoed;
+you! Captain Joe!') "but&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But what, Captain?"</p>
+
+<p>"But I said as I couldn't bear for to see a little child
+exposed again in an open boat for sixty-four hours."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"But Captain, wouldn't they give you a ship without
+a child?"</p>
+
+<p>"They <i>said</i> they would," he replied, doubtfully,
+shaking his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Then what will you be doing next?" we asked,
+mentally reviewing the various fields in which he might
+add laurels to laurels.</p>
+
+<p>He meditated a little while and then replied:
+"Home'll suit me pretty good for a spell."</p>
+
+<p>Well, that could be understood, certainly. Indeed,
+it was to his credit. We remembered Father Quinnan's
+speech. The husband, the father, had their claim.
+A little stay at home, in the bosom of loved ones, yes,
+to be sure, it seemed fitting and right, after the perils
+of the sea.</p>
+
+<p>And yet, why was it, as we took down the one-eighth-mile
+of bunting that night, there was a faint but perceptible
+dampening of our enthusiasm. Perhaps it was
+the reaction from the strain and excitement of the day,
+for it had been, there was no denying it, a day of days
+for Three Rivers; a day, which, as Father Quinnan
+had said, would be writ in letters of gold in Memory's
+fair album. This day was ended now, and night came
+down upon a very proud and very tired little
+community.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>If this were a fancy story instead of a record of
+things that came to pass last year on the Gaspé Coast,
+my pen should stop here; but as it is, I feel under a
+plain obligation to pursue the narrative.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I've no doubt that many other towns in the history
+of the world have faced precisely the same problem
+that Three Rivers faced in the months following:
+namely, what to do with a hero when you have one.
+Oh, if you could only set them up on a pedestal in
+front of the Town Hall or the post-office and <i>keep</i>
+them there! A statue is so practicable. Once in so
+often, say on anniversaries, you can freshen it up, hang
+it with garlands and bunting, and polish the inscription;
+and then the school-children can come, and somebody
+can explain to them about the statue, and why we
+should venerate it, and what were the splendid qualities
+of the hero which we are to try to imitate in our
+own lives. I hope that all cities with statues realize
+their happy condition.</p>
+
+<p>For two or three weeks after the Great Day Three
+Rivers still kept its air of festivity. The triumphal
+arches could be appreciated even from the train, and
+many travelers, we heard, passing through, leaned out
+of the windows and asked questions of the station
+agent.</p>
+
+<p>Wherever Captain Joe went, there followed a little
+knot of children, listening open-mouthed for any
+word that might fall from his lips; and you could
+hear them explaining to one another how it was that a
+man could be torpedoed and escape undamaged. At
+first no one of lesser importance than the Mayor or
+the Bank Manager presumed to walk with him on the
+street; and he was usually to be seen proceeding in
+solitary dignity to or from the post-office, head a little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
+bowed, one hand in the opening of his coat, his step
+slow and thoughtful, while the children pattered along
+behind.</p>
+
+<p>But the barrier between the Captain and his fellow-townsmen
+was entirely of their own creation, it transpired,
+for he was naturally a sociable man, and now
+more than ever he craved society, being sure of a deferential
+hearing. Once established again in Boutin's
+tailor-shop and pool-parlor, he seemed disposed never
+to budge from it; and as often as you might pass, day
+or night, you could hear him holding forth to whatever
+company happened to be present. It was impossible
+not to gather many scraps of his discourse, for
+his voice was as loud as an orator's.</p>
+
+<p>"And Lady Derntwood&mdash;no, it was Lady Genevieve,
+Lady Derntwood's dairter by her first husband
+and fully as beautiful as her mother, she said to me,
+'Captain,' she said, 'when I read that about the little
+girl&mdash;For the sake of this little child, grant me three
+minutes!&mdash;the tears filled my eyes, and I said to my
+maid, who had brought me my <i>Times</i> on the breakfast
+tray, "Lucienne," I said, "that is a man I should be
+proud to know!"'&mdash;and that's a fact sir, as true as
+I'm settin' here, for Lucienne herself told me the same
+thing. A little beauty, that Lucienne: black hair;
+medium height. We used to talk French together."</p>
+
+<p>Or another time you would hear: "And they said to
+me, 'Captain,' they says, 'and are you satisfied with
+the gold watch and chain and with the little purse we
+have made up for you here, not pretending, of course,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
+for one minute,' they says, 'that 'tis any measure of
+the services you have rendered to us or to your country.
+We ask you,' they says, 'are you satisfied?' And
+I said, 'I am,' and the fact is, I was, for the watch I'd
+lost was an Ingersoll, and my clothes put together
+wouldn't have brought a hundred dollars."</p>
+
+<p>So the weeks went by; and the triumphal arches, on
+which the mottoes had run a good deal, were taken
+down and broken up for kindling; and still Captain Joe
+sat and talked all day long and all night long, too, if
+only anybody would listen to him. But listeners were
+growing scarce. His story had been heard too often;
+and any child in town was able to correct him when he
+slipped up, which often happened. The two hundred
+and fifty dollars was spent long since, and now the
+local merchants were forced to insist once more on
+strictly cash purchases, and many a day the Pettipaw
+family must have "done meagre," as the French say.
+Unless all signs failed, they would be soon living again
+at the charge of the community. Close your eyes if
+you like, sooner or later certain grim truths will be
+borne home to you. A leopard cannot change his
+spots, nor a Pettipaw his skin. Before our very eyes
+the honor and glory of Three Rivers, the thing that
+was to be passed from generation to generation, was
+vanishing: worse than that, we were becoming ridiculous
+in our own eyes, which is harder to bear, even,
+than being ridiculous in the eyes of others.</p>
+
+<p>There was one remedy and only one. It was plain
+to anybody who considered the situation thoughtfully.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
+Captain Joe must be got away. So long as your hero
+is alive, he can only be viewed advantageously at a distance.
+At all events, if he is a Pettipaw.</p>
+
+<p>It was proposed that we should elect him our local
+member to the provincial Parliament. It might be
+managed. We suggested it to him, dwelling upon the
+opportunities it would afford for the exercise of his
+special talents which, we said, were being thrown away
+in a little town like Three Rivers. He conceded that
+we spoke the truth; "but," he said, after a moment of
+thoughtful silence, "I am a sailor born and bred, and
+my health would never stand the confinement. Never!"</p>
+
+<p>Next it was found that we could secure for him the
+position of purser on the S. S. <i>Lady of the Gaspé</i>. But
+this offer he refused even more emphatically.</p>
+
+<p>"Purser!&mdash;Me!" There was evidently nothing
+more to be said.</p>
+
+<p>Writing to Montreal, Father Quinnan learned that
+if he so wished Captain Pettipaw might have again the
+command of the little freighter that ran to the Labrador;
+and the proposition was laid before him with sanguine
+expectations. Again he declined.</p>
+
+<p>"The Labrador! Thank you! They wouldn't even
+know who I was!"</p>
+
+<p>"You could tell them, Captain."</p>
+
+<p>"What good would that do?"</p>
+
+<p>No answer being forthcoming to this demand, still
+another scheme had to be sought. It was the Mayor
+who finally saved the day for Three Rivers. He instigated
+a Patriotic Fund, to which every man, woman<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
+and child contributed what he could, and with the proceeds
+a three-masted schooner of two hundred tons
+burden was acquired (she had been knocked down for
+a song at a sheriff's sale at Campbellton); she was
+handsomely refitted, rechristened, and presented, late
+in October, to Captain Joe, as a tribute of esteem from
+his native town.</p>
+
+<p>It is not for me to say just how grateful the Captain
+was, at heart; but he accepted the gift with becoming
+dignity; and before the winter ice closed the Gulf (so
+expeditiously had our plans been carried out) the
+<i>Gloria</i> was ready to sail with a cargo of dry fish for
+the Barbadoes.</p>
+
+<p>The evening previous to her departure there was a
+big farewell meeting in the Palace of Justice, with
+speeches by the Mayor and Father Quinnan, a piano
+duet, and an original poem by Eugénie White,
+beginning:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><i>Sail forth, sail far,</i><br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><i>O Captain bold!</i><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>It was remarkable to see how all the enthusiasm and
+fervor of an earlier celebration in that same hall
+sprang to life again; yes, and with a solemnity added,
+for this time our hero was going from us. He sat
+there on the platform by the Mayor, handsome,
+square-shouldered, his head a little bowed, a thoughtful
+smile on his lips under the grizzled moustache: he
+was every inch the noble figure that had stood unflinching
+before the gates of death; and we realized as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
+never before what a debt of gratitude we owed him.
+At last our hero was our hero again.</p>
+
+<p>There is but little more to tell. The next morning,
+bright and early, everybody was at the wharf to watch
+the <i>Gloria</i> hoist her sails, weigh anchor, and tack out
+into the bay. There were tears in many, many eyes
+besides those of poor Mrs. Pettipaw. The sea had a
+dark look, off there, and one thought of the dangers
+that awaited any man who sailed out on it at this time
+of the year.</p>
+
+<p>"Heaven send him good passage!" said Mrs. Thibault,
+wiping her eyes vigorously.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes, and bring him safe home again, the brave
+man!" added Mrs. Boutin, earnestly; and all those
+who heard her breathed a sincere amen to that prayer.</p>
+
+<p>It was sincere. We had wanted Captain Joe to go
+away; we had actually forced him to go away; yet no
+sooner was he gone than we prayed he might be
+brought safe home again. Yes, for when all is said
+and done, a town that has a hero must love him and
+cherish him and wish him well. Because we have ours,
+Three Rivers will always be a better place to live in
+and to bring up children in: a more inspiring place.</p>
+
+<p>Only, perhaps, if Mrs. Boutin had spoken less impulsively,
+she would have added one or two qualifying
+clauses to her petition. For instance, she might have
+added: "Only not too soon, and not for too long at
+once!" But for my part, I believe that will be understood
+by the good angel who puts these matters on
+record, up there.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<a name="HOUSE" id="HOUSE"></a>
+<img src="images/house.jpg" width="600" height="430" alt="" />
+<div class="caption center">A FISHERMAN'S HOUSE</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="FLY_MY_HEART" id="FLY_MY_HEART">FLY, MY HEART!</a></h2>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="ph3">FLY, MY HEART!</p>
+
+
+<div class="figleft dropcap" style="width: 80px;">
+<img src="images/i_141.png" width="80" height="78" alt="" />
+</div>
+<p><span class="dropcap">T</span>hey called her Sabine Bob&mdash;"S'been Bob"&mdash;because
+her real name was Sabine Anne
+Boudrot; and being a Boudrot in Petit Espoir
+is like being a Smith or a Brown in our
+part of the world, only ten times more so, for in that
+little fishing-port of Cape Breton, down in the Maritime
+Provinces, practically everybody belongs to the
+abounding tribe. Boudrot, therefore, having ceased to
+possess more than a modicum of specificity (to borrow
+a term from the logicians), the custom has arisen
+of tagging the various generations and households of
+Boudrots with the familiar name of the father that
+begat them.</p>
+
+<p>And thus Sabine Anne Boudrot, "old girl" of fifty,
+was known only as Sabine Bob, and Mary Boudrot,
+her friend, to whom she was dictating a love-letter on
+a certain August evening, was known only as Mary
+Willee&mdash;with the accent so strongly on the final syllable
+that it sounded like Marywil-Lee. Sabine Bob
+was in service; always had been. Mary kept house
+for an invalid father. But there was no social distinction
+between the two.</p>
+
+<p>Mary Willee bent close over the sheet of ruled note-paper
+and laboriously traced out the words, dipping
+her pen every few seconds with professional punctiliousness
+and screwing up her homely face into all sorts<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>
+of homely expressions: tongue now tight-bitten between
+her teeth, now working restlessly in one cheek,
+now hard pressed against bulging lips. There was
+agony for both of them in this business of producing a
+love-letter: agony for Mary Willee because she had
+never fully mastered the art of writing, and the shaping
+just-so of the letters and above all the spelling
+brought out beads of sweat on her forehead; agony
+for Sabine Bob because her heart was so burstingly
+full and words were so powerless to ease that bursting.</p>
+
+<p>Besides, how could she be sure, really, positively
+<i>sure</i>, that Mary Willee was recording there on that
+paper the very words, just those very words and none
+others, which she was confiding to her! Writing was
+a tricky affair. Tricky, like the English language
+which Sabine Bob was using, against her will, for the
+reason that Mary Willee had never learned to write
+French. French was natural. In French one could
+say what one thought: it felt homelike. In English
+one had to be stiff.</p>
+
+<p>"Read me what I have said so far," directed Sabine
+Bob, and she held to the seat of her chair with her
+bony hands and listened.</p>
+
+<p>Mary Willee began, compliantly. "'My dearling
+Thomas'"&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Sabine Bob interrupted. "The number of the day
+comes first. Always! I brought you the calendar with
+the day marked on it."</p>
+
+<p>"I wrote it here," said Mary Willee. "You need
+not be so anxious. I have done letters before this."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but everything is so important!" ejaculated
+Sabine, with tragedy in her voice. "Now begin again."</p>
+
+<p>"'My dearling Thomas. It is bad times here. So
+much fogg all ways. i was houghing potatoes since 2
+days and they looks fine and i am nitting yous some
+socks for when yous come back. i hope you is getting
+lots of them poggiz.'"</p>
+
+<p>Mary Willee hesitated. "I ain't just sure how to
+spell that word," she confessed.</p>
+
+<p>"Pogeys?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"You ought to be. What for did they send you to
+the convent all those four years?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was only three. And the nuns never taught us
+no such things as about pogey-fishing. But no matter.
+Thomas Ned will know what you mean, because that's
+what he's gone fishing after."</p>
+
+<p>And she continued: "'I miss yous awful some days.
+when you comes back in octobre we's git married
+sure.'"</p>
+
+<p>She looked up. "That's all you told me so far."</p>
+
+<p>Sabine's face was drawn into furrows of intense
+thought. "How many more lines is there to fill?"</p>
+
+<p>"Seven."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, tell him I was looking at the little
+house what his auntie Sophie John left him and thinking
+how nice it would be when there was some front
+steps and the shimney was fix' and there were curtains
+to the windows in front and some geraniums and I t'ink
+I will raise some hens because they are such good com<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>pany
+running in and out all day when he will be away
+pogey-fishing but perhaps when we're married he won't
+have to go off any more because his healt' is put to
+danger by it and how would it do, say, if he got a little
+horse and truck with the hundred and fifty dollars I
+got saved up and did work by the day for people
+ashore and then"&mdash;she paused for breath.</p>
+
+<p>"Is that too much to write?" she remarked with
+sudden anxiety.</p>
+
+<p>"It is," replied Mary Willee, firmly. "You can
+say two things, and then good-by."</p>
+
+<p>Two things! Sabine Bob stared at the little yellow
+circle of light on the smoky ceiling over the lamp; then
+out of the window into the darkness. Two things
+more; and there were so many thousand things to say!
+Her mind was a blank.</p>
+
+<p>"I am waiting," Mary reminded her, poising her
+pen pitilessly.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell him," gasped out Sabine, "tell him&mdash;I t'ink
+I raise some hens."</p>
+
+<p>Letter by letter the pregnant sentence was inscribed,
+while Sabine stared at the pen with paralyzed attention,
+as if her doom were being written in the Book
+of Judgment; and now the time had come for the second
+thing! Tears of helplessness stood in her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Ask him," she blurted out, "would the hundred
+and fifty dollars what I got buy a nice little horse and
+truck."</p>
+
+<p>Mary Willee paused. She seemed embarrassed.</p>
+
+<p>"Write it," commanded the other.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Mary Willee looked almost frightened. "Must you
+say that about the money?" she asked, weakly.</p>
+
+<p>"Write the words I told you," insisted Sabine.
+"This is my letter, not yours."</p>
+
+<p>Reluctantly the younger woman set down the sentence;
+then added the requisite and necessary "Good-by,
+from Sabine."</p>
+
+<p>"Is there room for a few kisses?" asked the fiancée.</p>
+
+<p>"One row."</p>
+
+<p>Sabine seized the pen greedily and holding it between
+clenched fingers added a line of significant little
+lop-sided symbols. Then while her secretary prepared
+the letter for mailing, she wiped her forehead with a
+large blue handkerchief which she refolded and returned
+to the skirt-pocket that contained her rosary
+and her purse. She put on her little old yellow-black
+hat again and made ready to go.</p>
+
+<p>"Now to the post-office," she said. "How glad
+Thomas Ned will be when he gets it!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am sure he will," said Mary; and if there was
+any doubt in her tone, it was not perceived by her
+friend, who suddenly flung her arms about her in a
+gush of happy emotion.</p>
+
+<p>"Dieu, que c'est beau, l'amour!" she exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>The sentiment was not a new one in the world; but
+it was still a new one, and very wonderful, to Sabine
+Bob: Sabine Bob who had never been pretty, even in
+youthful days, who had never had any nice clothes
+or gone to parties, but had just scrubbed and washed
+and swept, saved what she could, gone to church on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
+Sundays, bought a new pair of shoes every other year.</p>
+
+<p>Not that she had ever thought of pitying herself.
+She was too practical for that; and besides, there had
+always been plenty to be happy about. The music in
+church, for instance, which thrilled and dissolved and
+comforted her; and the pictures there, which she loved
+to gaze at, especially the one of Our Lady above the
+altar.</p>
+
+<p>And then there were children! No one need be very
+unhappy, it seemed to Sabine Bob, in a world where
+there were children. She never went out without first
+putting a few little hard, colored candies in her pocket
+to dispense along the street, over gates and on front
+steps. The tinier the children were the more she loved
+them. Every spring in Petit Espoir there was a fresh
+crop of the very tiniest of all; and towards these&mdash;little
+pink bundles of softness and helplessness&mdash;she felt
+something of the adoration which those old Wise Men
+felt who had followed the star. If she had had spices
+and frankincense, Sabine Bob would have offered it, on
+her knees. But in lieu of that, she brought little knitted
+sacques and blankets and hoods.</p>
+
+<p>Such had been Sabine Bob's past; and that a day
+was to come in her life when a handsome young man
+should say sweet, loving things to her, present her with
+perfumery, bottle on bottle, ask her to be his wife,
+bless you, she would have been the first to scout the
+ridiculous idea&mdash;till six months ago! Thomas Ned
+was a small man, about forty, squarely built, with pink
+cheeks, long lashes, luxuriant moustache; a pretty man;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
+a man who cut quite a figure amongst the girls and
+(many declared) could have had his pick of them.
+Why, why, had he chosen Sabine Bob? When she
+considered the question thoughtfully, she found
+answers enough, for she was not a girl who underestimated
+her own worth.</p>
+
+<p>"Thomas is sensible," she explained to Mary Willee.
+"He knows better than to take up with one of
+those weak, sickly young things that have nothing but
+a pretty face and stylish clothes to recommend them.
+I can work; I can save; I can make his life easy. He
+knows he will be well looked out for."</p>
+
+<p>If Mary Willee could have revised this explanation,
+she refrained from doing so. It would have taken
+courage to do so at that moment, for Sabine Bob was
+so happy! It was almost comical for any one to be so
+happy as that! Sabine realized it and laughed at herself
+and was happier still. Morning, noon, and night,
+during those first mad, marvelous days after she had
+promised to become Madame Thomas Ned, she was
+singing a bit of gay nonsense she had known from
+childhood:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><i>Vive la Canadienne,</i><br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><i>Vole, vole, vole, mon coeur!</i><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"Fly, fly, oh fly, my heart," trolled Sabine Bob; and
+every evening, until the time came when he must depart
+for the pogey-fishing, in May, he had come and
+sat with her in the kitchen; he would smoke; she would
+knit away at a pair of mittens for him (oh, such small<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
+hands as that Thomas had!), and about ten o'clock
+she would fetch a glass of blueberry wine and some
+currant cookies. How nice it was to be doing such
+things for some one&mdash;of one's own!</p>
+
+<p>She hovered over him like a ministering spirit,
+beaming and tender. This was what she had starved
+for all her life without knowing it: to serve some one
+of her own! Not for wages now; for love! She flung
+herself on the altar of Thomas and burned there with
+a clear ecstatic flame.</p>
+
+<p>And now that he had been away four months, pogey-fishing,
+she would sometimes console herself by getting
+out the five picture-postcards he had sent her and muse
+upon the scenes of affection depicted there and pick out,
+word by word, the brief messages he had written. With
+Mary Willee's assistance she had memorized them;
+and they were words of sempiternal devotion; and
+there were little round love-knows-what's in plenty;
+and on one card he called her his little wife; and that
+was the one she prized the most. Wife! Sabine Bob!</p>
+
+<p>That no card arrived in answer to her August letter
+did not surprise her, for the pogeymen often did not
+put into port for weeks at a time; and anyhow the day
+was not far away, now, when the season would be over
+and those who had gone up from Petit Espoir would
+come down again.</p>
+
+<p>So the weeks slipped by. October came. The
+pogey-fishermen returned.</p>
+
+<p>She waited for Thomas Ned in the kitchen that first
+evening, palpitating with expectancy; and he did not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>
+come. During the sleepless night that followed she
+conjured up excuses for him. He had had one of his
+attacks of rheumatism. His mother had been ill and
+had required his presence at home. The next evening
+he would come, oh certainly, and explain everything.
+Attired in her best, she sat and waited a second evening;
+then a third. There was no sign of him.</p>
+
+<p>From Mary Willie she learned that Thomas had
+arrived with the others; that he appeared in perfect
+health, never handsomer; also that his mother was well.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, it cannot be that anything has happened,"
+cried Sabine, with choking tears. "Surely it will all be
+explained soon!" But there was a tightening about
+her heart, a black premonition of ill to come.</p>
+
+<p>She continued to wait. She was on the watch for
+him day and night. At least he would pass on the
+street, and she could waylay him! Every time she
+heard footsteps or voices she flew to the kitchen door.
+When her work was done, she would hurry out to the
+barn, where there was a little window commanding a
+good view of the harbor-front; and there she would
+sit, muffled in a shawl, for hours, hunger gnawing at
+her heart, her eyes dry and staring, until her teeth
+began to chatter with cold and nervousness.</p>
+
+<p>He never passed. Some one met him taking the
+back road into the village. He was purposely avoiding
+her.</p>
+
+<p>When Sabine Bob realized that she was deserted by
+the man she loved, thrown aside without a word, she
+suffered unspeakably; but her native good sense saved<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>
+her from making any exhibition of her grief. She knew
+better than to make a fool of herself. If there was
+one thing she dreaded worse than death it was being
+laughed at. She was a self-respecting girl; she had
+her pride. And no one witnessed the spasms, the
+cyclones, which sometimes seized her in the seclusion
+of her little attic bedroom. These were not the picturesque,
+grandiose sufferings of high tragedy; there was
+small resemblance between Sabine Bob and Carthaginian
+Dido; Sabine's agonies were stark and cruel and
+ugly, unsoftened by poetry. But she kept them to
+herself.</p>
+
+<p>She did her work as before. But she did not sing;
+and perhaps she nicked more dishes than usual, for her
+hands trembled a good deal. But she kept her lips
+tight shut. And she never went out on the street if
+she could help it.</p>
+
+<p>So a month passed. Two months. And then one
+evening Mary Willee came running in breathless with
+news for her: news that made her skin prickle and her
+blood, after one dizzy, faint moment, drum hotly in
+her temples.</p>
+
+<p>Thomas Ned was paying attentions to Tina Lejeune,
+that blonde young girl from the Ponds. He had
+taken her to a dance. He had bought a scarf for her
+and a bottle of perfumery. He had taken her to drive.
+They had been seen walking together several times in
+the dark on the upper street.</p>
+
+<p>"Does he say he is going to marry her?" asked
+Sabine Bob, with dry lips.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I do not know that. <i>She</i> says so. She says they
+are to be married soon."</p>
+
+<p>"Does she know about&mdash;about me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but she says&mdash;" Mary Willee stopped short
+in embarrassment.</p>
+
+<p>"Says what! Tell me! Tell me at once!" commanded
+Sabine, fiercely. "What does she say!"</p>
+
+<p>"She says Thomas thought you had a lot of money.
+He was deceived, he said."</p>
+
+<p>Sabine broke out in a passion of indignation. "I
+never deceived him: never, never! I never once said
+anything about money. He never asked me anything.
+It's a lie. I tell you, it's a lie!"</p>
+
+<p>Mary quailed visibly, unable to disguise a tell-tale
+look of guilt.</p>
+
+<p>"What is the matter with you, Mary Willee!" cried
+Sabine. "You are hiding something. You know something
+you have not told me!"</p>
+
+<p>Mary replied, in a very frightened voice: "Once he
+asked me if you had any money. I did not think he
+was really in earnest, so I told him you had saved a
+thousand dollars. Oh, I didn't mean any harm. I only
+said it to be agreeable. And later I was afraid to tell
+the truth, for it was only two or three days later he
+asked you to marry him, and you were so happy."</p>
+
+<p>Mary Willee hid her face in her hands and waited
+for the storm to break upon her; but it did not break.
+The room was very quiet. At last she heard Sabine
+moving about, and she looked up again. Sabine was
+putting on her hat and coat.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Sabine! Sabine!" she gasped. "What are you
+doing!"</p>
+
+<p>Sabine Bob turned quietly and stood for a moment
+gazing at her without a word. Then she said:</p>
+
+<p>"Mary Willee, you are a bad girl and I can never
+forgive you; but if Tina Lejeune thinks she is going to
+marry Thomas Ned, she will find out that she is mistaken.
+That is a thing that will not happen."</p>
+
+<p>Mary recoiled, terrified, at the pitiless, menacing
+smile on the other woman's face; but before she could
+say anything Sabine Bob had stalked out of the house
+into the darkness.</p>
+
+<p>She climbed the hill to the back road, stumbling
+often, blinded more by her own fierce emotions than by
+the winter night; she fought her way westward against
+the bitter wind that was rising; then turned off by the
+Old French Road, as it was called, toward the Ponds.</p>
+
+<p>It was ten o'clock at night; stars, but no moon. She
+saw a shadow approaching in the darkness from the
+opposite direction: it was a man, short and squarely-built.
+With a sickening weakness she sank down
+against the wattle fence at the side of the road. He
+passed her, so close that she could have reached out
+and touched him. But he had not seen. She got up
+and hurried on.</p>
+
+<p>By and by she saw ahead of her the little black bulk
+of a house from the tiny window of which issued a yellow
+glow. The house stood directly on the road. She
+went quietly to the window and looked in. A young<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
+girl was sitting by a bare table, her head supported by
+the palms of her hands. Sabine knew the weak white
+face and hated it. She made her way to the door and
+knocked. There was a smothered, startled exclamation;
+then the rustle of some one moving.</p>
+
+<p>"Who is it?" inquired a timid voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me in and I will tell you," responded the
+woman outside, in a voice the more menacing because
+of its control.</p>
+
+<p>"My mother is not at home to-night. She is over
+at the widow Babinot's. If you go over there you will
+find her."</p>
+
+<p>"It is you I wish to see. Open the door!"</p>
+
+<p>There was no answer. Sabine turned the knob and
+entered. At the sight of her the blonde girl gave a
+cry of dismay and retreated behind the table,
+trembling.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you want?" she gasped.</p>
+
+<p>"We have an account to settle together, you and
+me," said Sabine, with something like a laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"Account?" said the other, bracing herself, but
+scarcely able to articulate. "What account? I have
+not done you any harm. Before God I have not done
+you any harm."</p>
+
+<p>Sabine laughed mockingly. "So you think there is
+no harm in taking away from me the man I was going
+to marry?"</p>
+
+<p>"I did not take him away," said Tina, faintly.</p>
+
+<p>"You did! You did take him away!" cried Sabine,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>
+fiercely. "He was mine; it was last March he promised
+to marry me; any one can tell you that. I have
+witnesses. I have letters. Everything I tell you can
+be proved. He belongs to me just as much as if we
+had been before a priest already; and if you think you
+can take him away from me, you will find out you are
+wrong!"</p>
+
+<p>For a few seconds the paralyzed girl before her
+could not utter a word; then she stammered out:</p>
+
+<p>"He told me you had deceived him about money."</p>
+
+<p>Sabine gave an inarticulate cry of rage, like a wild
+beast at bay. "It's a lie! A lie! I never deceived
+him. It's he who deceived me; but let me tell you this:
+when a woman like me promises to marry a man, she
+keeps her word. Do you understand? She keeps her
+word! I am going to marry Thomas Ned. He cannot
+escape me. I will go to the priest. I will go to the
+lawyer. There are plenty of ways."</p>
+
+<p>The blonde girl sank trembling into a chair.</p>
+
+<p>"He cannot marry you," she gasped. "He cannot.
+He cannot."</p>
+
+<p>"No?" cried Sabine, with ringing mockery. "And
+why not?"</p>
+
+<p>Tina's lips moved inaudibly. She moistened them
+with her tongue and made a second attempt.</p>
+
+<p>"Because&mdash;" she breathed.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes? Yes?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because&mdash;he must marry me." She buried her
+head in her hands and sobbed.</p>
+
+<p>Sabine Bob strode to the cringing girl, seized her by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>
+the shoulders, forcing her up roughly against the back
+of the chair, and broke out with a ruthless laugh:</p>
+
+<p>"Must! Must! You don't say so! And why, tell
+me, must he marry you?"</p>
+
+<p>The white girl raised her eyes for one instant to the
+other's face; and there was a look in them of mute
+pleading and confession, a look that was like a death-cry
+for pity. The look shot through Sabine's turgid
+consciousness like a white-hot dagger. She staggered
+back as if mortally stricken, supporting herself against
+a tall cupboard, staring at the girl, whose head had
+now sunk to the table again and whose body was shaking
+with spasmodic sobs. It was one of the moments
+when destinies are written.</p>
+
+<p>At such moments we act from something deeper,
+more elemental, than will. The best or the worst in
+us leaps out&mdash;or perhaps neither one nor the other
+but merely that thing in us that is most essentially
+ourselves.</p>
+
+<p>Sabine stared at the poor girl whose terrifying, wonderful
+secret had just been revealed to her, and she felt
+through all her being a sense of shattering and disintegration;
+and suddenly she was there, beside Tina, on
+the arm of her chair; and she brought the girl's head
+over against her bosom and held her very tight in her
+eager old arms, patting her shoulders and stroking her
+soft hair, while the tears rained down her cheeks and
+she murmured, soothingly:</p>
+
+<p>"Pauvre petite!" and again and again, "Pauvre
+petite! Ma pauvre petite!"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Tina abandoned herself utterly to the other's impassioned
+tenderness; and for a long time the two sat
+there, tightly clasped, silent, understanding.</p>
+
+<p>Sabine Bob had no word of blame for the unhappy
+girl. Vaguely she knew that she ought to blame her;
+very vaguely she remembered that girls like this were
+bad girls; but that did not seem to make any difference.
+Instead of indignation she felt something very like
+humility and reverence.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, he must marry you," she said at last, very
+simply and gently.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, if he only would!" sobbed Tina.</p>
+
+<p>"What!" cried Sabine, in amazement.</p>
+
+<p>"He says such cruel things to me," confessed the
+girl. "He knows, oh, he does know I never loved any
+man but himself; never, never any other man, nor ever
+will!"</p>
+
+<p>Sabine's eyes opened upon new vistas of man's perfidiousness.
+And yet, in spite of everything, how one
+could love them! She felt an immense compassion
+toward this poor girl who had loved not wisely but so
+all-givingly.</p>
+
+<p>"I will go to him," she said, resolutely. "I will tell
+him he must marry you; and I will say that if he does
+not, I will tell every person in Petit Espoir what a
+wicked thing he has done."</p>
+
+<p>Tina leaped to her feet in terror. "Oh, no, no!"
+she pleaded. "No one must know."</p>
+
+<p>Sabine understood. Not the present only, but the
+future must be thought of.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"And if he was forced like that to marry me, he
+would hate me," pursued the girl, who saw things with
+the pitiless clear foresight that desperation gives. "He
+must marry me from his own choice. Oh, if I could
+only make him choose; but to-night he said NO! and
+went away, very angry. I'm afraid he will never come
+back again."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, he will," said Sabine Bob. There was a grim
+smile on her lips; and she squared her shoulders as if
+to give herself courage for some dreaded ordeal.
+"There is a way."</p>
+
+<p>But to the startled, eager question in the other's eyes,
+she vouchsafed no answer. She came to her and put
+her hands firmly on her shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"Tina, will you promise not to believe anything you
+hear them say about me? Will you promise to keep
+on loving me just the same?"</p>
+
+<p>The girl clung to her. "Oh, yes, yes," she promised.
+"Always!" and then, in a shy whisper, she
+added: "And some day&mdash;I will not be the only one
+to love you."</p>
+
+<p>Sabine Bob gave her a quick, almost violent kiss, and
+went out, not stopping for even a word of good-night.
+And the next day she put her plan into execution.
+There was a perfectly relentless logic about Sabine
+Bob. She saw a thing to do; and she went and did it.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as her dinner dishes were washed and put
+away, she donned her old brown coat and the little
+yellow-black hat that had served her winter and summer
+from time immemorial, and proceeded to make a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>
+dozen calls on her friends, up and down the street.
+Wherever she went she talked, volubly, feverishly. She
+railed; she threatened; she vociferated; and the object
+of her vociferations was Thomas Ned. He had promised
+to marry her; and he had deserted her; and she
+would have the law on him! Marry her he must, now,
+whether he would or no.</p>
+
+<p>"See that word?" she demanded, displaying her
+sheaf of compromising post-cards. "That word is
+<i>wife</i>; and the man who calls me wife must stick to it.
+I am not a woman to be made a fool of!"</p>
+
+<p>So she stormed away, from house to house. Her
+friends tried to pacify her; but the more they tried, the
+more venom she put into her threats. And soon the
+news spread through the whole town. Nothing else
+was talked of.</p>
+
+<p>"She's crazy," people said. "But she can make
+trouble for him, if she wants to, no doubt about it."</p>
+
+<p>Sabine laughed grimly to herself. She was going to
+succeed. The scheme would work. She knew the kind
+of man Thomas Ned was: full of shifts. He had
+proved that already. He would never face a thing
+squarely. He would look for a way out.</p>
+
+<p>She was right. It was only ten days later, at high
+mass, that the success of her strategy was tangibly
+proved. At the usual point in the service for such announcements,
+just before the sermon, Father Beauclerc,
+standing in the pulpit, called the banns for
+Thomas Boudrot, of Petit Espoir, North, and Tina
+Mélanie Brigitte Lejeune, of the Ponds.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The announcement caused a sensation. An audible
+murmur of amazement, not to say consternation, went
+up from all quarters of the edifice, floor and galleries;
+even the altar boys exchanged whispers with one another;
+and there was a great stretching of necks in the
+direction of Sabine Bob, who sat there in her uncushioned
+pew, very straight and very red, with set lips,
+while her rough old fingers played nervously with the
+rosary in her lap.</p>
+
+<p>This was her victory! She had never felt the ugliness
+of her fifty years so cruelly before. A bony, ridiculous
+old maid, making a fool of herself in public!
+That was the sum of it! And all her life she had been
+so careful, so jealously careful, not to do anything
+that might cause her to be laughed at!</p>
+
+<p>She could hear some of the whispers that were being
+exchanged in neighboring pews. "Poor old thing!"
+people were saying. "But how could she expect anybody
+would want to marry her at her age!"</p>
+
+<p>A trembling like ague seized her, and she felt suddenly
+very cold and very very weak. She shut her eyes,
+for things were beginning to flicker and whirl; and
+when she opened them again, they were caught and
+held by the picture above the high altar.</p>
+
+<p>It was the Mother. The Mother and the Little
+One. He lay in her arms and smiled.</p>
+
+<p>The tears gushed up in Sabine Bob's eyes, and a
+smile of wonderful tenderness and peace broke over
+the harsh lines of her face and transfigured it, just for
+one instant. It was a victory; it <i>was</i> a victory;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>
+though nobody knew it but herself; just herself, and
+one other, and&mdash;perhaps&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Sabine still gazed at the picture, poor old Sabine
+Bob in her brown coat and faded little yellow-black
+hat: and the Eternal Mother returned the gaze of the
+Eternal Mother, smiling; and it didn't matter very
+much after that&mdash;how could it?&mdash;what people might
+think or say in Petit Espoir.</p>
+
+<p>Once more, that afternoon, as she slashed the suds
+over the dishes, Sabine Bob was singing. You could
+hear her way down there on the street, so buoyant and
+so merry was her voice:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><i>Long live the Canadian maid;</i><br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><i>Fly, fly, oh fly, my heart!</i><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter vspace" style="width: 125px;">
+<img src="images/end.png" width="125" height="125" alt="" />
+</div>
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44257 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #44257 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/44257)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Cape Breton Tales, by Harry James Smith
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Cape Breton Tales
+
+Author: Harry James Smith
+
+Contributor: Edith Smith
+
+Illustrator: Oliver M. Wiard
+
+Release Date: November 22, 2013 [EBook #44257]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CAPE BRETON TALES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Daniel Meade, sp1nd and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CAPE BRETON TALES
+
+
+[Illustration: THE INNER HARBOR]
+
+
+
+
+CAPE BRETON TALES
+
+BY
+
+HARRY JAMES SMITH
+
+AUTHOR OF
+
+_Amédée's Son, Enchanted Ground, Mrs. Bumpstead Leigh,
+Tailor Made Man, etc._
+
+WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY
+
+OLIVER M. WIARD
+
+[Illustration]
+
+_The_ ATLANTIC MONTHLY PRESS
+
+BOSTON
+Copyright 1920
+
+_Printed in the United States of America_
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ ON THE FRENCH SHORE OF CAPE BRETON (1908) 1
+
+ LA ROSE WITNESSETH (1908) 17
+
+ OF THE BUCHERONS 19
+
+ OF LA BELLE MÉLANIE 32
+
+ OF SIMÉON'S SON 44
+
+ AT A BRETON CALVAIRE (1903) 57
+
+ THE PRIVILEGE (1910) 61
+
+ THEIR TRUE LOVE (1910) 77
+
+ GARLANDS FOR PETTIPAW (1915) 99
+
+ FLY, MY HEART (1915) 119
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+By OLIVER M. WIARD
+
+
+ THE INNER HARBOR _Frontispiece_
+
+ ARICHAT 17
+
+ A CALVAIRE 56
+
+ FOUGÈRE'S COVE 76
+
+ A FISHERMAN'S HOUSE 118
+
+
+_"On the French Shore of Cape Breton" and "The Privilege" were first
+published in The Atlantic Monthly, while "La Rose Witnesseth of La Belle
+Mélanie" is reprinted from "Amédée's Son" (Chapters VIII and IX) with
+the kind permission of the publishers, Houghton Mifflin Company._
+
+_"At a Breton Calvaire" was first published in The Williams Literary
+Monthly during undergraduate days, and was rewritten several times
+during the next few years. The final form is the one used here, except
+for the last stanza, which is a combination of the two versions now
+extant._
+
+_The illustrations are from sketches made during Oliver Wiard's visits
+in Arichat. It is an especial pleasure to include them, not only
+because of their fidelity and beauty, but also because of my brother's
+enthusiastic interest and delight in them._
+
+EDITH SMITH.
+
+
+
+
+ON THE FRENCH SHORE OF CAPE BRETON
+
+
+
+
+ON THE FRENCH SHORE OF CAPE BRETON
+
+
+Summer comes late along the Cape Breton shore; and even while it stays
+there is something a little diffident and ticklish about it, as if each
+clear warm day might perhaps be the last. Though by early June the
+fields are in their first emerald, there are no flowers yet. The little
+convent girls who carry the banners at the head of the Corpus Christi
+procession at Arichat wear wreaths of artificial lilies of the valley
+and marguerites over their white veils, and often enough their teeth
+chatter with cold before the completion of the long march--out from the
+church portals westward by the populous street, then up through the
+steep open fields to the old Calvary on top of the hill, then back to
+the church along the grass-grown upper road, far above the roofs, in
+full view of the wide bay.
+
+Despite some discomforts, the procession is a very great event; every
+house along the route is decked out with bunting or flags or a bright
+home-made carpet, hung from a window. Pots of tall geraniums in scarlet
+bloom have been set out on the steps; and numbers of little evergreen
+trees, or birches newly in leaf, have been brought in from the country
+and bound to the fences. Along the roadside are gathered all the
+Acadians from the neighboring parishes, devoutly gay, enchanted with
+the pious spectacle. The choir, following after the richly canopied
+Sacrament and swinging censers, are chanting psalms of benediction and
+thanksgiving; banners and flags and veils flutter in the wind; the
+harbor, ice-bound so many months, is flecked with dancing white-caps and
+purple shadows: surely summer cannot be far off.
+
+"When once the ice has done passing _down there_," they say--"which may
+happen any time now--you will see! Perhaps all in a day the change will
+come. The fog that creeps in so cold at night--it will all be sucked up;
+the sky will be clear as glass down to the very edge of the water. Ah,
+the fine season it will be!"
+
+That is the way summer arrives on the Acadian shore: everything bursting
+pell-mell into bloom; daisies and buttercups and August flowers rioting
+in the fields, lilacs and roses shedding their fragrance in sheltered
+gardens; and over all the world a drench of unspeakable sunlight.
+
+You could never forget your first sight of Arichat if you entered its
+narrow harbor at this divine moment. Steep, low hills, destitute of
+trees, set a singularly definite sky-line just behind; and the town
+runs--dawdles, rather--in a thin, wavering band for some miles sheer
+on the edge of the water. Eight or ten wharves, some of them fallen
+into dilapidation, jut out at intervals from clumps of weatherbeaten
+storehouses; and a few small vessels, it may be, are lying up alongside
+or anchored idly off shore. Only the occasional sound of a creaking
+block or of a wagon rattling by on the hard roadway breaks the silence.
+
+Along the street the houses elbow one another in neighborly groups,
+or straggle out in single file, separated by bits of declivitous
+white-fenced yard; and to the westward, a little distance up the hill,
+sits the square church, far outvying every other edifice in size and
+dignity, glistening white, with a tall bronze Virgin on the peak of the
+roof--Our Lady of the Assumption, the special patron of the Acadians.
+
+But what impresses you above all is the incredible vividness of color
+in this landscape: the dazzling gold-green of the fields, heightened
+here and there by luminous patches of foam-white where the daisies are
+in full carnival, or subdued to duller tones where, on uncultivated
+ground, moss-hummocks and patches of rock break through the investiture
+of grass. The sky has so much room here too: the whole world seems to be
+adrift in azure; the thin strip of land hangs poised between, claimed
+equally by firmament and the waters under it.
+
+In the old days, they tell us, Arichat was a very different place from
+now. Famous among the seaports of the Dominion, it saw a continual
+coming and going of brigs and ships and barquentines in the South
+American fish trade.
+
+"But if you had known it then!" they say. "The wharves were as thick all
+the length of the harbor as the teeth of a comb; and in winter, when the
+vessels were laid up--eh, mon Dieu! you would have called it a forest,
+for all the masts and spars you saw there. No indeed, it was not dreamed
+of in those days that Arichat would ever come to this!"
+
+So passes the world's glory! An air of tender, almost jealous
+reminiscence hangs about the town; and in its gentle decline into
+obscurity it has kept a sort of dignity, a self-possession, a certain
+look of wisdom and experience, which in a sense make it proof against
+all arrows of outrageous Fortune.
+
+Back from the other shore of the harbor, jutting out for some miles
+into Chedabucto Bay, lies the Cape. You get a view of it if you climb
+to the crest of the hill--a broad reach of barrens, fretted all day
+by the sea. Out there it is what the Acadians call a bad country.
+About the sluice-like coves that have been eaten into its rocky shore
+are scrambling groups of fishermen's houses; but aside from these
+and the lighthouse on the spit of rocks to southward, the region is
+uninhabited--a waste of rock and swamp-alder and scrub-balsam, across
+which a single thread of a road takes its circuitous way, dipping over
+steep low hills, turning out for gnarls of rock and patches of gleaming
+marsh, losing itself amid dense thickets of alder, then emerging upon
+some bare hilltop, where the whole measureless sweep of sea and sky
+fills the vision.
+
+When the dusk begins to fall of an autumn afternoon--between dog and
+wolf, as the saying goes--you could almost believe in the strange
+noises--the rumblings, clankings, shrill voices--that are to be heard
+above the dull roar of the sea by belated passers on the barrens. Some
+people have seen death-fires too, and a headless creature, much like a
+horse, galloping through the darkness; and over there at Fougère's Cove,
+the most remote settlement of the Cape, there were knockings at doors
+through all one winter from hands not human. The Fougères--they were
+mostly of one tribe there--were driven to desperation; they consulted a
+priest; they protected themselves with blessed images, with prayers and
+holy water; and no harm came to them, though poor Marcelle, who was a
+_jeune fille_ of marriageable age, was prostrated for a year with the
+fright of it.
+
+This barren territory, where nothing grows above the height of a man's
+shoulder, still goes by the name of "the woods"--_les bois_--among the
+Acadians. "Once the forest was magnificent here," they tell you--"trees
+as tall as the church tower; but the great fire swept it all away; and
+never has there been a good growth since. For one thing, you see, we
+must get our firewood from it somehow."
+
+This fact accounts for a curious look in the ubiquitous stubby
+evergreens: their lower branches spread flat and wide close on the
+ground,--that is where the snow in winter protects them,--and above
+reaches a thin, spire-like stem, trimmed close, except for new growth at
+the top, of all its branches. It gives suggestion of a harsh, misshapen,
+all but defeated existence; the adverse forces are so tyrannical out
+here on the Cape, the material of life so sparse.
+
+I remember once meeting a little funeral train crossing the barrens.
+They were bearing the body of a young girl, Anna Béjean, to its last
+rest, five miles away by the road, in the yard of the parish church
+amongst the wooden crosses. The long box of pine lay on the bottom of
+a country wagon, and a wreath of artificial flowers and another of
+home-dyed immortelles were fastened to the cover. A young fisherman,
+sunburned and muscular, was leading the horse along the rough road, and
+behind followed three or four carts, carrying persons in black, all of
+middle age or beyond, and silent.
+
+Yet in the full tide of summer the barrens have a beauty in which
+this characteristic melancholy is only a persistent undertone. Then
+the marshes flush rose-pink with lovely multitudes of calopogons that
+cluster like poising butterflies amongst the dark grasses; here too
+the canary-yellow bladderwort flecks the black pools, and the red,
+leathery pitcher-plant springs in sturdy clumps from the moss-hummocks.
+And the wealth of color over all the country!--gray rock touched into
+life with sky-reflections; rusty green of alder thickets, glistening
+silver-green of balsam and juniper; and to the sky-line, wherever it
+can keep its hold, the thin, variegated carpet of close-cropped grass,
+where creeping berries of many kinds grow in profusion. Flocks of sheep
+scamper untended over the barrens all day, and groups of horses, turned
+out to shift for themselves while the fishing season keeps their owners
+occupied, look for a moment, nose in the air, at the passer, kick up
+their heels, and race off.
+
+As you turn back again toward Arichat you catch a glimpse of its
+glistening white church, miles distant in reality, but looking curiously
+near, across a landscape where none of the familiar standards of
+measure exist. You lose it on the next decline; then it flashes in
+sight again, and the blue, sun-burnished expanse of water between. It
+occurs to you that the whole life of the country finds its focus
+there: christenings and first communions, marriages and burials--how
+wonderfully the church holds them all in her keeping; how she sends
+out her comfort and her exhortation, her reproach and her eternal hope
+across even this bad country, where the circumstances of human life are
+so ungracious.
+
+But it is on a Sunday morning, when, in response to the quavering
+summons of the chapel bell, the whole countryside gives up its
+population, that you get the clearest notion of what religion means
+in the life of the Acadians. From the doorway of our house, which was
+close to the road at the upper end of the harbor, we could see the whole
+church-going procession from the outlying districts. The passing would
+be almost unbroken from eight o'clock on for more than an hour and a
+half: a varied, vivacious, friendly human stream. They came in hundreds
+from the scattered villages and hamlets of the parish--from Petit de
+Grat and Little Anse and Pig Cove and Gros Nez and Point Rouge and Cap
+au Guet, eight or nine miles often enough.
+
+First, those who went afoot and must allow plenty of time on account
+of age: bent old fishermen, whose yellowed and shiny coats had been
+made for more robust shoulders; old women, invariably in short black
+capes, and black bonnets tied tight under the chin, and in their hands
+a rosary and perhaps a thumb-worn missal. Then troops of children, much
+_endimanché_,--one would like to say "Sundayfied,"--trotting along
+noisily, stopping to examine every object of interest by the way,
+extracting all the excitement possible out of the weekly pilgrimage.
+
+A little later the procession became more general: young and old and
+middle-aged together. In Sunday boots that creaked loudly passed numbers
+of men and boys, sometimes five or six abreast, reaching from side
+to side of the street, sometimes singly attendant upon a conscious
+young person of the other sex. The wagons are beginning to appear now,
+scattering the pedestrians right and left as they rattle by, bearing
+whole families packed in little space; and away across the harbor, you
+see a small fleet of brown sails putting off from the Cape for the
+nearer shore.
+
+Outside the church, in the open space before the steps, is gathered a
+constantly growing multitude, a dense, restless swarm of humanity, full
+of gossip and prognostic, until suddenly the bell stops its clangor
+overhead; then there is a surging up the steps and through the wide
+doors of the sanctuary; and outside all is quiet once more.
+
+The Acadians do not appear greatly to relish the more solemn things of
+religion. They like better a religion demurely gay, pervaded by light
+and color.
+
+"Elle est très chic, notre petite église, n'est-ce pas?" was a comment
+made by a pious soul of my acquaintance, eager to uphold the honor of
+her parish.
+
+Proper, mild-featured saints and smiling Virgins in painted robes and
+gilt haloes abound in the Acadian churches; on the altars are lavish
+decorations of artificial flowers--silver lilies, paper roses, red
+and purple immortelles; and the ceilings and pillars and wall-spaces
+are often done in blue and pink, with gold stars; such a style, one
+imagines, as might appeal to our modern St. Valentine. The piety
+that expresses itself in this inoffensive gayety of embellishment is
+more akin to that which moves universal humanity to don its finery
+o' Sundays,--to the greater glory of God,--than to the sombre,
+death-remembering zeal of some other communities. A kind religion
+this, one not without its coquetries, gracious, tactful, irresistible,
+interweaving itself throughout the very texture of the common life.
+
+Last summer, out at Petit de Grat, three miles from Arichat, where
+the people have just built a little church of their own, they held a
+"Grand Picnic and Ball" for the raising of funds with which to erect
+a glebe house. The priest authorized the affair, but stipulated that
+sunset should end each day's festivities, so that all decencies might be
+respected. This parish picnic started on a Monday and continued daily
+for the rest of the week--that is to say, until all that there was to
+sell was sold, and until all the youth of the vicinity had danced their
+legs to exhaustion.
+
+An unoccupied shop was given over to the sale of cakes, tartines,
+doughnuts, imported fruits, syrup drinks (unauthorized beverages being
+obtainable elsewhere), to the vending of chances on wheels of fortune,
+target-shooting, dice-throwing, hooked rugs, shawls, couvertures,
+knitted hoods, and the like; and above all the hubbub and excitement
+twanged the ceaseless, inevitable voice of a graphophone, reviving
+long-forgotten rag-time.
+
+Outside, most conspicuous on the treeless slope of hill, was a
+"pavilion" of boards, bunting-decked, on which, from morn till eve,
+rained the incessant clump-clump of happy feet. For music there was a
+succession of performers and of instruments: a mouth-organ, a fiddle, a
+concertina, each lending its particular quality of gayety to the dance;
+the mouth-organ, shrill, extravagant, whimsical, failing in richness;
+the concertina, rich, noisy, impetuous, failing in fine shades; the
+fiddle, wheedling, provocative, but a little thin. And besides--the
+fiddle is not what it used to be in the hands of old Fortune.
+
+Fortune died a year ago, and he was never appreciated till death
+snatched him from us: the skinniest, most ramshackle of mankind, tall,
+loose-jointed, shuffling in gait; at all other times than those that
+called his art into play, a shiftless, hang-dog sort of personage, who
+would always be begging a coat of you, or asking the gift of ten cents
+to buy him some tobacco. But at a dance he was a despot unchallenged.
+Only to hear him jig off the Irish Washerwoman was to acknowledge
+his preëminence. His bleary eyes and tobacco-stained lips took on a
+radiance, his body rocked to and fro, vibrated to the devil-may-care
+rhythm of the thing, while his left foot emphatically rapped out the
+measure.
+
+Until another genius shall be raised up amongst us, Fortune's name will
+be held in cherished memory. For that matter, it is not likely to die
+out, since, on the day of his death, the old reprobate was married to
+the mother of his seven children--baptized, married, administered, and
+shuffled off in a day.
+
+It had never occurred to any of us, somehow, that Fortune might be as
+transitory and impermanent as his patron goddess herself. We had always
+accepted him as a sort of ageless thing, a living symbol, a peripatetic
+mortal, coming out of Petit de Grat, and going about, tobacco in cheek,
+fiddle under arm, as irresponsible as mirth itself among the sons of
+men. God rest him! Another landmark gone.
+
+And old Maximen Forêt, too, from whom one used to take weather-wisdom
+every day--his bench out there in the sun is empty. Maximen's shop was
+just across the street from our house--a long, darkish, tunnel-like
+place under a steep roof. Tinware of all descriptions hung in dully
+shining array from the ceiling; barrels and a rusty stove and two broad
+low counters occupied most of the floor space, and the atmosphere was
+charged with a curious sharp odor in which you could distinguish oil and
+tobacco and molasses. The floor was all dented full of little holes,
+like a honeycomb, where Maximen had walked over it with his iron-pointed
+crutch; for he was something of a cripple. But you rarely had any
+occasion to enter the smelly little shop, for no one ever bought much of
+anything there nowadays.
+
+Instead, you sat down on the sunny bench beside the old man--Acadian of
+the Acadians--and listened to his tireless, genial babble--now French,
+now English, as the humor struck him.
+
+"It go mak' a leetle weat'er, m'sieu," he would say. "I t'ink you better
+not go fur in the p'tit caneau t'is day. Dere is squall--là-bas--see,
+dark--may be t'unner. Dat is not so unlike, dis mont'. Oh, w'at a hell
+time for de hays!"
+
+For everybody who passed he had a greeting, even for those who had
+hastened his business troubles through never paying their accounts. To
+the last he never lost his faith in their good intentions.
+
+"Dose poor devil fishermen," he would say, "however dey mak' leeve, God
+know. You t'ink I mak' 'em go wid notting? It ain't lak dat wit' me here
+yet, m'sieu. Dey pay some day, when le bon Dieu, he send dem some feesh;
+dat's sure sure."
+
+If it happened that anybody stopped on business, old Maximen would
+hobble to the door and tug violently at a bell-rope.
+
+"Cr-r-r-line! Cr-r-r-line!" he would call.
+
+"Tout d' suite!" answered a shrill voice from some remoter portion of
+the edifice; and a moment later an old woman with straggling white
+hair, toothless gums, and penetrating, humorous eyes, deepset under a
+forehead of infinite wrinkles, would come shuffling up the pebble walk
+from the basement.
+
+"Me voila!" she would ejaculate, panting. "Me ol' man, he always know
+how to git me in a leetle minute, hé?"
+
+On Sundays Caroline and Maximen would drive to chapel in a queer, heavy,
+antiquated road-cart that had been built especially for his use, hung
+almost as low between the axles as a chariot.
+
+"We go mak' our respec' to the bon Dieu," he would laugh, as he took
+the reins in hand and waited for Célestine, the chunky little mare, to
+start--which she did when the mood took her.
+
+The small shop is closed and beginning to fall to pieces. Maximen has
+been making his respects amid other surroundings for some four or five
+years, and Caroline, at the end of a twelvemonth of lonely waiting,
+followed after.
+
+"It seem lak I need t'e ol' man to look out for," she used to say. "All
+t'e day I listen to hear t'at bell again. 'Tout d' suite! I used to
+call, no matter what I do--maybe over the stove or pounding my bread;
+and den, 'Me voila, mon homme!' I would be at t'e shop, ready to help."
+
+I suppose that wherever a man looks in the world, if he but have the
+eyes to see, he finds as much of gayety and pathos, of failure and
+courage, as in any particular section of it; yet so much at least is
+true: that in a little community like this, so removed from the larger,
+more spectacular conflicts of life, so face to face, all the year, with
+the inveterate and domineering forces of nature, one seems to discover a
+more poignant relief in all the homely, familiar, universal episodes of
+the human comedy.
+
+
+[Illustration: ARICHAT]
+
+
+
+
+LA ROSE WITNESSETH
+
+ OF THE BUCHERONS
+ OF LA BELLE MÉLANIE
+ OF SIMÉON'S SON
+
+
+
+
+LA ROSE WITNESSETH
+
+_Of How the Bucherons Were Punished for Their Hard Hearts_
+
+
+It was a boy of ten who listened to La Rose, and while he listened, the
+sun stood still in the sky, there was an enchantment on all the world.
+Whatever La Rose said you had to believe, somehow. Oh, I assure you, no
+one could be more exacting than she in the matter of proofs. For persons
+who would give an ear to any absurd story tattled abroad she had nothing
+but contempt.
+
+"Before you believe a thing," said La Rose, sagely, "you must know
+whether it is true or not. That is the most important part of a story."
+
+She would give a decisive nod to her small head and shut her lips
+together almost defiantly. Yet always, somewhere in the corner of her
+alert gray eye, there seemed to be lurking the ghost of a twinkle. La
+Rose had no age. She was both very young and very old. For all she had
+never traveled more than ten miles from the little Cape Breton town of
+Port l'Évêque, you had the feeling that she had seen a good deal of
+the world, and it is certain that her life had not been easy; yet she
+would laugh as quickly and abundantly as a young girl just home from the
+convent.
+
+These two were the best of comrades. La Rose had been the boy's nurse
+when he was little, and as he had no mother she had kept a feeling
+of special affection and responsibility for him. Thus it happened
+that whenever she was making some little expedition out across the
+harbor--say for blueberries on the barrens, or white moorberries, or
+ginseng--she would get permission from the captain for Michel to go with
+her; and this was the happiest privilege in the boy's life. Most of all
+because of the stories La Rose would tell him.
+
+La Rose had a story to tell about every spot they visited, about every
+person they passed. She had been brought up, herself, out here on the
+Cape; and not an inch of its territory but was familiar to her.
+
+"Now that is where those Bucherons lived," she observed one day, as they
+were walking homeward from Pig Cove by the Calvaire road. "They are all
+gone now, and the house is almost fallen to pieces; but once things were
+lively enough there--mon Dieu, oui!--quite lively enough for comfort."
+
+She gave a sagacious nod to her head, with the look of one who could say
+more, and would, if you urged her a little.
+
+"Was it at the Bucherons' that all the chairs stood on one leg?" asked
+Michel, thrilling mysteriously.
+
+"Oui, c'est ça," answered La Rose, in a voice of the most sepulchral,
+"right there in that house, the chairs stood on one leg and went
+rap--rap--against the floor. And more than once a table with dishes
+and other things on it fell over, and there were strange sounds in
+the cupboard. Oh, it is certain those Bucherons were tormented; but
+for that matter they had brought it on themselves because of their
+greediness and their hard hearts. It came for a punishment; and when
+they repented themselves, it went away."
+
+"I haven't ever heard all the story about the Bucherons," said
+Michel--"or at least, not since I was big. I am almost sure I would like
+it."
+
+"Well, I daresay," agreed La Rose. "It is an interesting story in some
+ways; and the best of it is, it is not one of those stories that are
+only to make you laugh, and then you go right away and forget them. And
+another thing: this story about the Bucherons really happened. It was
+when my poor stepmother was a girl. She lived at Pig Cove then, and that
+is only two miles from Gros Nez. And one of those Bucherons was once
+wanting to marry her; but do you think she would have anything to do
+with a man like that?
+
+"'No,' she said. 'I will have nothing to do with you. I would sooner not
+ever be married, me, than to have you for my man.'
+
+"And the reason she spoke that way was because of the cruelty they had
+shown toward that poor widow of a Noémi, which everybody on the Cape
+knew about, and it was a great scandal. And if you want me to tell you
+about it, that is what I am going to do now."
+
+La Rose seated herself on a flat rock by the road, and Michel found
+another for himself close by. Below them lay a deep rocky cove, with
+shores as steep as a sluice, and close above its inner margin stood the
+shell of a small house. The chimney had fallen in, the windows were all
+gone--only vacant holes now, through which you saw the daylight from the
+other side, and the roof had begun to sag.
+
+"Yes," said La Rose, "it will soon be gone to pieces entirely, and then
+there will be nothing to remind anyone of those Bucherons and what
+torments they had. You see there were four of them, an old woman and two
+sons, and one of the sons was married, but there were not any children;
+and all those four must have had stones instead of hearts. They were
+only thinking how they could get the better of other people, and so
+become rich.
+
+"And before that there had been three sons at home; but one of
+them--Benoît his name was--had married a certain Noémi Boudrot; and she
+was as sweet and beautiful as a lily, and he too was different from the
+others; and so they had not lived here, but had got a little house at
+Pig Cove, where they were very happy; and the good God sent them two
+children, of a beauty and gentleness indescribable; and they called them
+Évangéline and little Benoît, but you do not need to remember that,
+because it is not a part of the story.
+
+"So things went on that way for quite a while; and all the time those
+four Bucherons were growing more and more hard-hearted, like four
+serpents in a pile together.
+
+"Well, one day in October that Benoît Bucheron who lived in Pig Cove
+was going alone in a small cart to Port l'Évêque to buy some provisions
+for winter--flour, I suppose, and meal, and perhaps some clothes and
+some tobacco; and instead of going direct by the Gros Nez road, he
+came around this way by the Calvaire so as to stop in and speak to his
+relatives; and to see them welcoming him, you would never have suspected
+their stone hearts. But Benoît was solemn for all that, as if troubled
+by some idea. Then that sly old mother, she said:
+
+"'Dear Benoît,' she said, 'what troubles you? Can you not put trust in
+your own mother, who loves you better than her eyes and nose?'--and she
+smiled at him just like a fat wicked old spider that is waiting for a
+fly to come and get tangled up in her net.
+
+"But Benoît only remembered then that she was his mother; so he said:
+
+"'I have a fear, me, that I shall not be long for this world, my mother.
+Last week I saw a little blue fire on the barrens one night, and again
+one night I heard hoofs going _claquin-claquant_ down there on the
+beach, much like the horse without head. And that is why I am getting my
+provisions so early, and making everything ready for the winter. See,'
+he said, 'here is the thirteen dollars I have saved this year. I am
+going to buy things with it in Port l'Évêque.'
+
+"Now you may depend that when he showed them all that money, their
+eyes stuck out like the eyes of crabs; but of course they did not say
+anything only some words of the most comforting. And finally he said,
+getting ready to go:
+
+"'If anything should happen,' he said, 'will you promise me to be good
+to that poor Noémi and those two poor little innocent lambs?'--and
+those serpents said, certainly, they would do all that was possible;
+and with that Benoît gets into his cart, and starts down the hill; and
+suddenly the horse takes a fright of something and runs away, and the
+cart tips over, and Benoît is thrown out; and when his brothers get to
+him he is quite quite dead--and that shows what it means to see one of
+those little blue fires at night in the woods.
+
+"Well, you can believe that Noémi was not very happy when they brought
+back that poor Benoît to Pig Cove. Her eyes were like two brooks, and
+for a long time she could not say anything, and then finally, summoning
+a little voice of courage:
+
+"'I am glad of one thing,' she said, 'which is that he had saved all
+that money, for without it I would never know how to live through the
+winter.'
+
+"And one of those brothers said, with an innocent voice of a dove, 'what
+money then?'--and she said, 'He had it with him.' And so they look for
+it; but no, there is not any.
+
+"'You must have deceived yourself,' said that brother. 'I am sure he
+would have spoken of it if he had had any money with him; but he said
+never a word of such a thing.'
+
+"Now was not that a wicked lie for him to tell? It is hard to understand
+how abominable can be some of those men! But you may be sure they will
+be punished for it in the end; and that is what happened to those four
+serpents, the Bucherons.
+
+"For listen. The old mother had taken the money and had put it inside a
+sort of covered bowl, like a sugar bowl, but there was no sugar in it;
+and then she had set this bowl away on a shelf in the cupboard where
+they kept the dishes and such things; and the Bucherons thought it
+would be safe until the time when they had something to spend it for in
+Port l'Évêque; and they were telling themselves how no one would ever
+know what they had done; and they were glad that the promise they had
+made to Benoît had not been heard by anyone but themselves. And so that
+poor Noémi was left all alone without man or money; but sometimes the
+neighbors would give her a little food; but for all that those two lambs
+were often hungry, and their mother too, when it came bedtime.
+
+"But do you think the Bucherons cared--those four hearts of stone? They
+would not even give her so much as a crust of dry, mouldy bread; and
+Noémi was too proud to go and beg; and beside something seemed to tell
+her that there had been a wickedness somewhere, and that the Bucherons
+perhaps knew more than they had told her about that money. So she waited
+to see if anything would happen.
+
+"Now one night in December, when all those four were in the house alone,
+the beginning of their punishment arrived, and surely nothing more
+strange was ever heard of in this world.
+
+"'Ah, mon Dieu!' cries out the married woman all of a sudden--'mon Dieu,
+what is that!'
+
+"They all looked where she was looking, and what do you think they saw?
+There was a chair standing with three legs in the air, and only the
+little point of one on the floor.
+
+"The old woman pushed a scream and jumped to her feet and went over to
+it, and with much force set it back on the floor, the way a chair is
+meant to stand; but immediately when she let go of it, there it was
+again, as before, all on one leg.
+
+"And then, there cries out the younger woman again, with a voice shrill
+as a frightened horse that throws up its head and then runs away--'Oh,
+mère Bucheron, mère Bucheron,' cries she, 'the chair you were just
+sitting in is three legs in air too!'
+
+"And so it was! With that all the family got up in terror; but no sooner
+had they done that than at once all the chairs behaved just like the
+first, which made five chairs. These chairs did not seem to move at all,
+but stood there on one leg just as if they were always like that. Those
+Bucherons were almost dead with fright, and all four of them fled out of
+the house as fast as ever their legs could carry them--you would have
+said sheep chased by a mad dog--and never stopped for breath till they
+reached Gros Nez.
+
+"And pell-mell into old Pierre Leblanc's house all together, and shaking
+like ague. Hardly able to talk, they tell what has happened; and he will
+not believe them but says, well, he will go back with them and see. So
+he does, and they re-enter the house together, and look! the chairs are
+all just as usual.
+
+"'You have been making some crazy dreams,' says Pierre, rather angry,
+'or else,' he says, 'you have something bad in your hearts.' And with
+that he goes home again; and there is nothing more to be told about that
+night, though I daresay none of those wicked persons slept very well.
+
+"But that was only the beginning of what happened to them during that
+winter. Sometimes it would be these knockings about the roof, as of
+someone with a great hammer; and again it was as if they had seen a face
+at the window--just an instant, all white, in the dark--and then it
+would be gone. And often, often, the chairs would be standing as before
+on one leg. The table likewise, which once let fall a great crowd of
+dishes, and not a few were broken. But worst of all were these strange
+sounds that made themselves heard in the cupboard, like the hand of
+a corpse going rap--rap, rap--rap--rap, rap,--against the lid of its
+coffin. You may well believe it was a dreadful fright for those four
+infamous ones; but still they would do nothing, because of their desire
+to keep all that money and buy things with it.
+
+"Everybody on the Cape soon knew about what was happening at the
+Bucherons', but some pretended it was to laugh at, saying that such
+things did not happen nowadays; and others said the Bucherons must
+have gone crazy, and had better be left alone--and their arms and legs
+would sometimes keep jerking a little when they talked to anyone, as
+my stepmother told me a thousand times; and they had a way of looking
+behind them--so!--as if they were afraid of being pursued. So however
+that might be, nobody would go and see them.
+
+"Well, things went on like that for quite a while, and finally, one day
+in February, through all the snow that it made on the ground then, that
+poor Noémi marched on her feet from Pig Cove to her mother-in-law's,
+having left her two infants at a neighbor's; for she had resolved
+herself to ask for some help, seeing that she had had nothing but a
+little bite since three days. And when they saw her coming they were
+taken with a fright, and at first they were not going to let her in; but
+that old snake of a mother, she said:
+
+"'If we refuse to let her in, my children, she will go and suspect
+something.'
+
+"So they let her in, and when she was in, they let her make all her
+story, or as much as she had breath for, and then:
+
+"'I am sorry,' said this old snake of a mother, 'that we cannot possibly
+do anything for you. Alas, my dear little daughter, it is barely even
+if we can manage to hold soul and body together ourselves, with the
+terrible winter it makes these days.'
+
+"And just as she said that, what do you think happened? A chair got on
+one leg and went rap--rap, rap--against the floor.
+
+"That Noémi would often be telling about it afterwards to my stepmother,
+and she said never of her life had she seen anything so terrifying. But
+she did not scream or do anything like that, because something, she
+said, inside her seemed to bid her keep quiet just then. And she used
+to tell how that old Bucheron woman's face turned exactly the color of
+an oyster on a white plate, and a trembling took her, and finally she
+said, scarcely able to make the sound of the words:
+
+"'Though perhaps--I might find--a crust of bread somewhere that--that we
+could spare.'
+
+"That was how she spoke, and at the same instant, _rap_ went the chair,
+still on its one leg; and there was a sound of a hammering on the roof.
+
+"'Or perhaps--a little loaf of bread and some potatoes,' said that old
+Bucheron, while the other Bucherons sat there without one word, in
+their chairs, as if paralyzed, except that their hands kept up a little
+shaking motion all the time, like this scour-grass you get in the marsh,
+which trembles always even if there is not any wind. 'Or perhaps a loaf
+of bread and some potatoes'--that is what she was saying, when listen,
+there is a knock as of the hand of corpse just inside the cupboard; and
+suddenly the two doors fly open--you would have said _pushed_ from the
+inside!
+
+"Noémi crosses herself, but does not say anything, for she knows it is a
+time to keep still.
+
+"'And perhaps,' says the old woman then, in a voice of the most piteous,
+as if someone were giving her a pinch, 'and perhaps, if only I had it,
+a dollar or two to help buy some medicine and a pair of shoes for that
+Évangéline.... But no, I do not think we have so much as that anywhere
+in the house.'
+
+"Now was not that like the old serpent, to be telling a lie even at the
+last; and surely if God had struck her dead by a ball of lightning at
+that moment it would have been none too good for her. But no, he was
+going to give her a chance to repent and not to have to go to Hell for a
+punishment. So what do you think He made happen then?
+
+"Hardly had those abominable words jumped out of her when with a great
+crash, down off the top shelf comes that sugar bowl (if it was a sugar
+bowl), and as it hits the floor, it breaks into a thousand pieces; and
+there, in a little pile, are those thirteen dollars, just as on the day
+when that poor Benoît had been carrying them with him to Port l'Évêque.
+
+"Now just as if they are not doing it at all of their own wish, but
+something makes them act that way, all of a sudden those four Bucherons
+are kneeling on the floor, saying their prayers in a strange voice like
+the prayers you might hear in a tomb; and with that, the chair goes back
+quietly to its four legs, and the noise ceases on the roof, and those
+two cupboard doors draw shut without human hands. As for Noémi, she
+grabs up the money, and out she goes, swift as a bird that is carrying
+a worm to its children, leaving her parents by marriage still there on
+their knees, like so many images; but as she opens the door she says:
+
+"'May the good God have pity on all the four of you!'--which was a
+Christian thing to say, seeing how much she had suffered at their hands.
+
+"Well, there is not much more to tell. Noémi got through the rest of
+that winter without any more trouble; and the next year she married a
+fisherman from Little Anse, and went away from the Cape. As for the
+Bucherons, they were not like the same people any more. You would not
+have known them--so pious they were and charitable, though always,
+perhaps, a little strange in their ways. But when the old woman died,
+two years later, or three, all the people of Pig Cove and Gros Nez
+followed the corpse in to Port l'Évêque; and her grave is there in the
+cemetery.
+
+"The rest of the family are gone now too, as you see; and soon, I
+suppose, there will not be many left, even out here on the Cape, who
+know all about what happened to the Bucherons, because of their hard
+hearts; which is a pity, seeing that the story has such a good lesson to
+it...."
+
+
+
+
+LA ROSE WITNESSETH
+
+[A]_Of the Headless Horse and of La Belle Mélanie's Narrow Escape from
+the Feu Follet_
+
+
+[A] Included with permission of and by arrangements with Houghton
+Mifflin Company authorized publishers.
+
+One of the privileges Michel esteemed most highly was that of
+accompanying La Rose occasionally when she went blueberrying over on the
+barrens--_dans les bois_, as the phrase still goes in Port l'Évêque,
+though it is all of sixty years since there were any woods there. The
+best barrens for blueberrying lay across the harbor. They reached back
+to the bay four or five miles to southward. Along the edges of several
+rocky coves, narrow and steep as a sluice, clung a few weatherbeaten
+fishermen's houses; but there was no other sign of human habitation.
+
+It is what they call a bad country over there. Alder and scrub balsam
+grow sparsely over the low rocky hills, where little flocks of sheep
+nibble all day at the thin herbage; and from the marshes that lie, green
+and mossy, at the foot of every slope, a solitary loon may occasionally
+be seen rising into the air with a great spread of slow wings. A single
+thread of a road makes its way somehow across the region, twisting
+in and out among the small hills, now climbing suddenly to a bare
+elevation, from which the whole sweep of the sea bursts upon the view,
+now shelving off along the side of a knoll of rocks, quickly dipping
+into some close hollow, where the world seems to reach no farther than
+to the strange sky-line, wheeling sharply against infinite space.
+
+Two miles back from the inner shore, the road forks at the base of a
+little hill more conspicuously bare than the rest, and close to the
+naked summit of it, overlooking all the Cape, stands a Calvary. Nobody
+knows how long it has stood there, or why it was first erected; though
+tradition has it that long, long ago, a certain man by the name of
+Toussaint was there set upon by wild beasts and torn to pieces. However
+that may be, the tall wooden cross, painted black, and bearing on its
+center, beneath a rude penthouse, a small iron crucifix, has been there
+longer than any present memory records--an encouragement, as they say,
+for those who have to cross the bad country after dark.
+
+"That makes courage for you," they say. "It is good to know it is there
+on the windy nights."
+
+By daylight, however, and especially in the sunshine, the barrens are
+quite without other terrors than those of loneliness; and upon Michel
+this remoteness and silence always exercised a kind of spell. He was
+glad that La Rose was with him, partly because he would have been a
+little afraid to be there quite by himself, but chiefly because of the
+imaginative sympathy that at this time existed so strongly between them.
+La Rose could tell him all about the strange things that had been seen
+here of winter nights; she herself once, tending a poor old sick woman
+at Gros Nez, out at the end of the Cape, had heard the hoofs of the
+white horse that gallops across the barrens _claquin-claquant_ in the
+darkness.
+
+"It was just there outside the house, pawing the ground. Almost
+paralyzed for terror, I ran to the window and looked out. It was as tall
+as the church door,--that animal,--all white, and there was no head to
+it.
+
+"'Oh, mère Babinot,' I whispered, scarcely able to make the sound of the
+words. 'It is as tall as the church door and all white.'
+
+"She sits up in bed and stares at me like a corpse. 'La Rose,' she
+says,--just like that, shrill as a whistle of wind,--'La Rose, do you
+see a head to it?'
+
+"'No, not any!'
+
+"'Oh, mon Dieu, mon Dieu! Then it's sure! It is the very one, the horse
+without head!'
+
+"And the next day she took only a little spoonful of tea, and in two
+weeks she was dead, poor mère Babinot; and that's as true as that I made
+my communion last Easter. Oh, it's often seen hereabouts, that horse.
+It's a sign that something will happen, and never has it failed yet."
+
+They made their way, La Rose and Michel, slowly over the low hills,
+picking the blueberries that grew thickly in clumps of green close to
+the ground. La Rose always wore a faded yellow-black dress, the skirt
+caught up, to save it, over a red petticoat; and on her small brown head
+she carried the old Acadian _mouchoir_, black, brought up to a peak in
+front, and knotted at the side.
+
+She picked rapidly, with her alert, spry movements, her head always
+cocked a little to one side, almost humorously, as she peered about
+among the bushes for the best spots. And wherever he was, Michel heard
+her chattering softly to herself, in an inconsequential undertone, now
+humming a scrap of some pious song, now commenting on the quality of the
+berry crop--never had she seen so few and so small as these last years.
+Surely there must be something to account for it. Perhaps the birds had
+learned the habitude of devouring them--now addressing some strayed
+sheep that had ventured with timid bleats within range: "Te voilà, petit
+méchant! Little rogue! What are you looking about for? Did the others go
+off and leave you? Eh bien, that's how it happens, mon petit. They'll
+leave you. The world's like that. Eh, là, là!"
+
+He liked to go to the other side of the hill, out of sight of her,
+where he could imagine that he was lost _dans les bois_. Then he would
+listen for her continual soft garrulity; and if he could not hear it
+he would wait quietly for a minute in the silence, feeling a strange
+exhilaration, which was almost pain, in the presence of the great sombre
+spaces, the immense emptiness of the overhanging sky, until he could
+endure it no longer.
+
+"La Rose!" he would call. "Êtes-vous toujours là?"
+
+"Mais oui, mon enfant. What do you want?"
+
+"Nothing. It is only that I was thinking."
+
+"The strange child that you are!" she would exclaim. "You are not like
+the others."
+
+"La Rose," he would ask, "was it by here that La Belle Mélanie passed on
+the night she saw the death fire?"
+
+"Yes, by this very spot. She was on her way to Pig Cove, over beyond
+the Calvary to the east. It is a desolate little rat-hole, Pig Cove,
+nowadays; but then it was different--as many as two dozen houses. My
+stepmother lived in one of them. Now there are scarcely six, and falling
+to pieces at that. La Belle Mélanie, she was a Boudrot, sister of the
+Pierre Boudrot whose son, Théobald, was brother-in-law of stepmother.
+That was many years ago. They are all dead now, or gone away from
+here--to Boston, I daresay."
+
+"Will you tell me about that again,--the _feu follet_ and Mélanie?"
+
+It was the story Michel liked the best, most of all when he could sit
+beside La Rose, on a moss-hummock of some rough hill on the barrens.
+Perhaps there would be cloud shadows flitting like dream presences
+across the shining face of the moor. In the distance, over the backs of
+the hills that crouched so thickly about them, he saw the stretch of the
+ocean, a motionless floor of azure and purple, flecked, it might be, by
+a leaning sail far away; and now and then a gull or two would fly close
+over their heads, wheeling and screaming for a few seconds, and then
+off again through the blue.
+
+"S'il vous plaît, tante La Rose, see how many berries I have picked
+already!"
+
+The little woman was not difficult of persuasion.
+
+"It was in November," she began. "There had not been any snow yet; but
+the nights were cold and terribly dark under a sky of clouds. That
+autumn, as my stepmother often told me, many people had seen the horse
+without head as it galloped _claquin-claquant_ across the barrens. At
+Gros Nez it was so bad that no one dared go out after dark, unless it
+was to run with all one's force to the neighbors--but not across the
+woods to save their souls. Especially because of the _feu follet_.
+
+"Now you must know that the _feu follet_ is of all objects whatever in
+the world the most mysterious. No one knows what it is or when it will
+come. You might walk across the barrens every night of your life and
+never encounter it; and again it might come upon you all unawares, not
+more than ten yards from your own threshold. It is more like a ball
+of fire than any other mortal thing, now large, now small, and always
+moving. Usually it is seen first hovering over one of the marshes,
+feeding on the poison vapors that rise from them at night: it floats
+there, all low, and like a little luminous cloud, so faint as scarcely
+to be seen by the eye. And sometimes people can travel straight by it,
+giving no attention, as if they did not know it was there, but keeping
+the regard altogether ahead of them on the road, and the _feu follet_
+will let them pass without harm.
+
+"But that does not happen often, for there are not many who can keep
+their wits clear enough to manage it. It brings a sort of dizziness, and
+one's legs grow weak. And then the _feu follet_ draws itself together
+into a ball of fire and begins to pursue. It glides over the hills and
+flies across the marshes, sometimes in circles, sometimes bounding
+from rock to rock, but all the while stealing a little closer and a
+little closer, no matter how fast you run away. And finally--bff! like
+that--it's upon you--and that's the end. Death for a certainty. Not all
+the medicine in the four parishes can help you.
+
+"Indeed, there are only two things in all the world that can save you
+from the _feu follet_ once it gets after you. One is, if you are in a
+state of grace, all your sins confessed; which does not happen often
+to the inhabitants of Pig Cove, for even at this day Père Galland
+reproaches them for their neglect. And the other is, if you have a
+needle with you. So little a thing as a needle is enough, incredible as
+it may seem; for if you stick the needle upright--like that--in an old
+stump, the _feu follet_ gets all tangled up in the eye of it. Try as it
+will, it cannot free itself; and meanwhile you run away, and are safe
+before it reappears. That is why all the inhabitants of the Cape used
+to carry a needle stuck somewhere in their garments, to use on such an
+occasion.
+
+"Well, I must tell you about La Belle Mélanie. That is the name she
+was known by in all parts, for she was beautiful as a lily flower, and
+no lily was ever more pure and sweet than she. Mélanie lived with her
+mother, who was aged almost to helplessness, and she cared for her with
+all the tenderness imaginable. You may believe that she was much sought
+after by the young fellows of the Cape--yes, and of Port l'Évêque as
+well, which used to hold its head in the air in those days; but her
+mother would hear nothing of her marrying.
+
+"'You are only seventeen,' she said, 'ma Mélanie. I will hear nothing
+of your marrying, no, not for five years at the least. By that time we
+shall see.'
+
+"And Mélanie tried to be obedient to all her mother's commands,
+difficult as they often were for a young girl, who naturally desires a
+little to amuse herself sometimes. For even had her mother forbidden her
+to speak alone to the young men of the neighborhood, so fearful was she
+lest her daughter should think of marriage.
+
+"Eh bien, and so that was how things went for quite a while, and every
+day Mélanie grew more beautiful. And one Saturday afternoon in November
+she had been in to Port l'Évêque to make her confession, for she was a
+pious girl. And when she went to meet her companions in order to return
+to Pig Cove with them, they said they were not going back that night,
+for there was to be a dance at the courthouse, and they were going to
+spend the night with some parents by marriage of theirs. Poor Mélanie!
+she would have been glad to stay, but alas, her poor mother, aged and
+helpless, was expecting her, and she dared not disappoint the poor soul.
+
+"So finally one of the young men said he would put her across the
+harbor, if she did not mind traversing the woods alone; and she said,
+no, why should she mind? It was still plain daylight. And so he put her
+across. And she said good-night to him and set off along the solitary
+road to the Cape, little imagining what an adventure was ahead of her.
+
+"For scarcely had she gone so much as a mile when it had grown almost
+night, so suddenly at that time of the year does the daylight extinguish
+itself. The sky had grown dark, dark, and there was a look of storm in
+it. La Belle Mélanie began to grow uneasy of mind. And she thought then
+of the _feu follet_, and put her hand to her bodice to assure herself of
+her needle. What then! Alas! it was gone, by some accident, whether or
+not she had lost it on the road or in the church.
+
+"With that Mélanie began to feel a terror creep over her; and this was
+not lessened, as you may well believe, when, a few minutes later, she
+perceived a floating thing like a luminous cloud in a marsh some long
+distance from the road. The night was now all black; scarcely could she
+perceive the road ahead, always winding there among the hills.
+
+"She had the idea of running; but alas, her legs were like lead; she
+could not make them march in front of her. She saw herself already dead.
+The _feu follet_ was beginning to move, first very slowly and all
+uncertain, but then drawing itself together into a ball of fire, and
+leaping as if in play from one hummock of moss to another, just as a cat
+will leave a poor little mouse half dead on the floor while it amuses
+itself in another way.
+
+"What the end would have been, who would have the courage to say, if
+just at this moment, all ready to fall to the ground for terror, poor
+Mélanie had not bethought herself of her rosary. It was in her pocket.
+She grasped it. She crossed herself. She saluted the crucifix. And then
+she commenced to say her prayers; and with that, wonderful to say, her
+strength came back to her, and she began to run. She had never ran like
+that before--swift as a horse, not feeling her legs under her, and
+praying with high voice all the time.
+
+"But for all that, the death fire followed, always faster and faster,
+now creeping, now flying, now leaping from rock to rock, and always
+drawing nearer, and nearer, with a strange sound of a hissing not of
+this world. Mélanie began to feel her forces departing. She was almost
+exhausted. She would not be able to run much more.
+
+"And suddenly, just ahead, on a bare height, there was the tall
+Calvaire, and a new hope came to her. If she could only reach it! She
+summoned all her strength and struggled up. She climbs the ascent. Alas,
+once more it seems she will fail! There is a fence, as you know, built
+of white pales, about the cross. She had not the power to climb it. She
+sinks to the ground. And it was at that last minute, all flat on the
+ground in fear of death, that an idea came to her, as I will tell you.
+
+"She raises herself to her feet by clinging to the white palings; she
+faces the _feu follet_, already not more than ten yards away; she holds
+out the rosary, making the holy sign in the air.
+
+"'I did not make a full confession!' she cries. 'I omitted one thing. My
+mother had forbidden me to have anything to do with a young man; and one
+day when I was looking for Fanchette, our cow, who had wandered in the
+woods, I met André Babinot, and he kissed me.'
+
+"That was what saved her. The _feu follet_ rushed at her with a roar of
+defeat, and in the same instant it burst apart into a thousand flames
+and disappeared.
+
+"As for Mélanie, she fell to the ground again, and lay there for a
+while, quite unconscious. At last the rain came on, and she revived, and
+set out for home, but not very vigorously. Ah, mon Dieu! if her poor
+mother was glad to see her alive again! She embraced her most tenderly,
+and with encouraging voice inquired what had happened, for Mélanie
+was still as white as milk, and there was a strange smell of fire in
+her garments, and still she held in her hands the little rosary; and
+so finally Mélanie told her everything, not even concealing the last
+confession about André, and with that her mother burst into tears, and
+said:
+
+"'Mélanie,' she said, 'I have been wrong, me. A young girl will be a
+young girl despite all the contrary intentions of her mother. To show
+how grateful to God I am that you are returned to me safe and sound, you
+shall marry André as soon as you like.'
+
+"So they were married the next year. And there is a lesson to this
+story, too, which is that one should always tell the truth; because if
+La Belle Mélanie had told all the truth at the beginning she would not
+have had all that fright.
+
+"And to show that the story is true, there were found the marks of
+flames on the white fence of the Calvaire the next day; and as often as
+they painted it over with whitewash, still the darkness of the scorched
+wood would show through, as I often saw for myself; but now there is a
+new fence there...."
+
+
+
+
+LA ROSE WITNESSETH
+
+_Of How Old Siméon's Son Came Home Again_
+
+
+In the old cemetery above the church some men were at work setting up a
+rather ornate monument at the head of two long-neglected and overgrown
+graves. La Rose had noticed what was going on, as she came out from
+early mass, and had informed herself about it; and since then, she said,
+all through the day, her thoughts had been traveling back to things that
+happened many years ago.
+
+"Is it not strange," she observed musingly, sitting about dusk with
+Michel on the doorsill of the kitchen, while Céleste finished the
+putting-away of the supper dishes--"is it not strange how things go
+in this world? So often they turn out sorrowfully, and you cannot
+understand why that should be so. Think of that poor Léonie Gilet, who
+was taken so suddenly in the chest last winter and died all in a month,
+and she one of the purest and sweetest lilies that ever existed, and the
+next year she was to be married to a good man that loved her better than
+both his two eyes. Ah, mon Dieu, sometimes I think the sadness comes
+much more often than the joy down here."
+
+She looked out broodingly, and with eyes that did not see anything,
+across the captain's garden and the hayfield below, dipping gently
+to the margin of the harbor. Michel was silent. La Rose's fits of
+melancholy interested him even when he only dimly sensed the burden of
+them.
+
+"And then," she resumed, after a moment, "sometimes the ending to things
+is happy. For a while all looks dark, dark, and there is grief, perhaps,
+and some tears; and then, just at the worst moment--tiens!--there is a
+change, and the happiness comes again, very likely even greater than
+it was at first. It is as if this good God up there, he could not bear
+any longer to see it so heartbreaking, and so he must take things into
+his own hands and set them right. And so, sometimes, when I find myself
+feeling sad about things, I like to remember what arrived to that poor
+Siméon Leblanc, whose son is just having them place a fine tombstone for
+him up there in the cimetière; for if ever happiness came to any man,
+it came to him, and that after a long time of griefs. Did you ever hear
+about this old Siméon Leblanc?"
+
+"Never, tante La Rose," answered the boy, gravely. "But if it has a
+pleasant ending, I wish you would tell me about it, and I don't mind if
+it makes me cry a little in the middle."
+
+By this, Céleste, the stout domestic, had finished her kitchen work, and
+throwing an apron over her stocky head and shoulders, she clumped out
+into the yard.
+
+"I am running over to Alec Samson's," she explained, "to get a mackerel
+for breakfast, if he caught any to-day."
+
+The gate clicked after her, and there was a silence. At last La Rose
+began, a little absently and as if, for the moment at least, unaware of
+her auditor....
+
+"This Siméon Leblanc, he lived over there on the other side of the
+harbor, just beyond the place where the road turns off to go to the
+Cape. My poor stepmother when coming in to Port l'Évêque to sell some
+eggs or berries--three gallons, say, of blueberries, or perhaps some of
+those large strawberries from Pig Cove--she would often be running in
+there for a little rest and a talk with his wife, Célie--who always was
+glad to see any one, for that matter, the poor soul, for this Siméon was
+not too gentle, and often he made her unhappy with his harsh talk.
+
+"'Ah, mon amie,' she would say to my stepmother, at the same time
+wetting her eyes with tears--'Ah, I have such a fear, me, that he will
+do himself a harm, one day, with the temper he has. He frightens me to
+death sometimes--especially about that Tommy.'
+
+"Now you must understand that this Tommy was the son they had, and in
+some ways he resembled to his father, and in some ways to his mother.
+For it is certain he had a pride of the most incredible, which I daresay
+made him a little hard to manage; and yet in his heart there was a
+softness.
+
+"'That Tommy,' said his mother, 'he wants to be loved. That is the way
+to get him to do anything. There is no use in always punishing him and
+treating him hardly.'
+
+"But for all that, old Siméon must have his will, and so he does not
+cease to be scolding the boy. He commands him now to do this thing, now
+that--here, there. He forbids him to be from home at night. He tells him
+he is a disgrace of a son to be so little laborious. Oh, it was a horror
+the way that poor lamb of a Tommy was treated; and finally, one day,
+when he was seventeen or eighteen, there was a great quarrel, and that
+Siméon called him by some cruel name, and white as a corpse cries out
+Tommy:
+
+"'My father, that is not true. You shall not say it!'--and the other,
+furious as an animal: 'I shall say what I choose!' And he says the same
+thing again. And Tommy: 'After that, I will not endure to stay here
+another day. I am tired of being treated so. You will not have another
+chance.'
+
+"And with that he places a kiss on the forehead of his poor mother, who
+was letting drop some tears, and walks out of the house without so much
+as turning his head again; and he marches over to Petit Ingrat, where
+there was an American fisherman which had put in for some bait, and he
+says to the captain: 'Will you give me a place?' and the captain says,
+'We are just needing another man. Yes, we will give you a place.' So
+this Tommy, he got aboard, and a little later they put out and went off
+to the Banks for the fish.
+
+"Well, it was not very long before that Siméon got over his bad wicked
+rage; and then he was sorry enough for what he had done, especially
+because there was no longer any son in the house, and that poor Célie
+must always be grieving herself after him. And you may believe that
+Siméon got little pity from the neighbors.
+
+"'It is good enough for him,' they would say--'a man like that, who is
+not decent to his own son.'
+
+"But they were sorry for Célie, most of all when she began to grow
+thinner and thinner and had a strange look in her eyes that was not
+entirely of this world. The old man said, 'She will be all right again
+when that schooner comes back,' and he was always going over to Petit
+Ingrat to find out if it had returned yet; but you see, of course there
+would not be any need of bait when the season was finished, and so
+the schooner did not put in at all; and the autumn came, and went by,
+and then followed the winter, and still no news, but only waiting and
+waiting, and a little before Easter that poor Célie went away among the
+angels. I think her heart was quite broken in two, and it did not seem
+to her that she needed to stay any longer in this hustling world. And so
+they buried her in the old cimetière--I saw her grave to-day, next to
+Siméon's, and this fine new monument is to be for the two of them; but
+for all these years there has been just a wooden cross there, like the
+other graves.
+
+"But still no word came of Tommy, and the old Siméon was all alone in
+the house. Oh, I can remember him well, well, although I was only a
+young tiny girl then and had not had any sorrow myself. We would see him
+walking along the Petit Ingrat road, all bent over and trailing one leg
+a little.
+
+"'Hst!' one of my companions would whisper, 'that is old Siméon, who
+drove his son from home; and his poor wife is dead with grief. He is
+going across there to see if a schooner will have come in yet with any
+news.'
+
+"And that was true. He took this habitude of making a promenade
+almost every day to Petit Ingrat during that season of the year when
+the Americans are going down to the fish--là-bas--and if there was a
+schooner in the harbor, he finds the captain or one of the crew, and he
+says, 'Is it, m'sieu, for example, that you have seen a boy anywhere
+named Tommy Leblanc? It is my son--you understand?--a very pretty
+young boy, with black hair and fine white teeth and a little curly
+mustache--so--just beginning to sprout.' And he would go on to describe
+that Tommy, but of course, for one thing they could not understand his
+French very well, for the Americans, as you know, do not speak that
+language among themselves; and anyway, you may depend that none of them
+had ever heard of Tommy Leblanc; and sometimes they would have a little
+mockery of the old man; and sometimes, on the contrary, they would feel
+pity, and would say, well, God's name, it was a damage, but they could
+not tell him anything.
+
+"And then the old man would say, 'Well, if ever you should see him
+anywhere, will you please tell him that his father is wanting him
+to come home, if he will be so kind as to do it; because it is very
+lonesome without him, and the mother is dead.'
+
+"Then after he had said that, he would go back again along the road
+to the Cape, not speaking to anybody unless they spoke to him first,
+and trailing one leg after him a little, like one of these horses you
+see sometimes with a weight tied to a hind foot so that it cannot run
+away--or at least not very far. That is how I remember old Siméon from
+the time when I was a little girl--walking there along the road to or
+from Petit Ingrat. I used to hear people say: 'Ah, my God, how old he
+is grown all in these few years! He is not the same man--so quiet and
+so timid'--and others: 'But can one say how it is possible for him to
+live there all alone like that?'--and someone replied: 'You could not
+persuade him to live anywhere else, for that is where he has all his
+memories, both the good and the bad, and what else is left for him
+now--that, and the crazy idea he has that his Tommy will one day come
+home again?'
+
+"You see, as the years passed, everybody took the belief that Tommy must
+be dead, at sea or somewhere, seeing that not one word was heard of him;
+but of course they guarded themselves well from saying anything like
+that to poor old Siméon.
+
+"Well, it was about the time when your poor father, Amédée, was a boy
+of your age, or a little older, that all this sorrow came to an end;
+and this is the pleasant part of the story. I was living at Madame
+Paon's then, down near the post-office wharf, and we had the habitude
+of looking out of the window every day when the packet-boat came in
+(which was three times a week) to see if anybody would be landing at
+Port l'Évêque. Well, and one afternoon whom should we see but a fine
+m'sieu with black beard, carrying a cane, dressed like an American; and
+next, a lovely lady in clothes of the most fashionable and magnificent;
+and then, six beautiful young children, all just as handsome as dolls,
+and holding tightly one another by the hand, with an affection the most
+charming in the world. Ah, ma foi, if I shall ever forget that sight!
+
+"And Madame Paon to me: 'Rose,--La Rose,--in God's name, who can they
+be! Perhaps some millionaires from Boston--for look, the trunks that
+they have!'
+
+"And that was the truth, for the trunks and bags were piled all over the
+wharf; and opening the window a little, we hear m'sieu giving directions
+to have them taken to the Couronne d'Or--'and who,' he asks in French,
+'is the proprietor there now?'--and they say: 'Gaston Lebal'--and he
+says: 'What! Gaston Lebal! Is it possible!'
+
+"'He knows Port l'Évêque, it seems,' says Madame Paon, all excitement;
+and just then the first two trunks go by the windows, and she tells me,
+'It is an English name, or an American.' And then, spelling out the
+letters, for she reads with a marvel of ease, she says, 'W-H-I-T-E is
+what the trunks say on them; but I can make nothing out of that. I am
+going outside, me,' she says, 'and perhaps I shall learn something.'
+
+"She descends into the garden, and seems to be working a little at
+the flowers, and a minute later, here comes the fine m'sieu, and he
+looks at her for an instant--right in the face, so, and as if asking
+a question--and then: 'Ah, mon Dieu, it is Suzon Boudrot!' he cries,
+using the name she was born with. 'Can you not remember me?--That Tommy
+Leblanc who ran away twenty years ago?'
+
+"Madame Paon gives a scream of joy, and they embrace; and then he
+presents this Mees W'ite, qui est une belle Américaine, and then he
+says: 'What is there of news about my dear mother and my father?'--and
+she: 'Did you not know your poor mother was dead the year after you
+went!'--and he: 'Ma mère--she is dead?'--and the tears jump out of his
+eyes, and his voice trembles as if it had a crack in it. 'Well, she is
+with the blessed angels, then,' says he.
+
+"'But your poor old father,' goes on Madame Paon, 'he is still waiting
+for you every day. He has waited all these twenty years for you to come
+back.'
+
+"'He is still in the old place?' asks he.
+
+"'Yes, he would not leave it.'
+
+"'We shall go over there at once,' he says, opening out his two
+arms--so!--'before ever we set foot in another house. It is my duty as a
+son.'
+
+"So while André Gilet--the father of that dear Léonie who was taken in
+the chest--while he is getting the boat ready to cross the harbor, Tommy
+tells her how he has been up there in Boston all these years--at a place
+called Shee-cahgo, a big city--and has been making money; and how he
+changed his name to W'ite, which means the same as Leblanc and is more
+in the mode; and how he married this lovely Américaine, whose name was
+Finnegan, and had all these sweet little children; but always, he said,
+he had desired to make a little visit at home, only it was so far to
+come; and he was afraid that his father would still be angry at him.
+
+"'Ah,' says Madame Paon, with emotion, 'you will not know your father.
+He is so different: just as mild as a sheep. Everyone has come to love
+him.' ...
+
+"Now for the rest of the story, all I know is what that André told us,
+for he put all this family across to the other side in his boat. So when
+they reached the shore, M'sieu Tommy, he says: 'You will all wait here
+until I open the door and beckon: and then you, Maggie, will come up;
+and then, a little later, we will have the children in, all together.'
+
+"And with that he leaves them, and goes up to the old house, and
+knocks, and opens the door, and walks in--and who can say the joy and
+the comfort of the meeting that happened then? And quite a long while
+passed, André said; and that lovely lady sat there on the side of the
+boat, all as white as milk, and never saying a word; and those six
+lambs, whispering softly among themselves--and one of them said, just a
+little above its breath:
+
+"'It will be nice to have a grandpa all for ourselves, don't you
+think?'--and was not that a dear sweet little thing for it to say?...
+
+"And finally the door opens again, and see! and his hand makes a sign;
+and that lady, swift as one of these sea-gulls, leaps ashore. And up the
+hill; and through the gate; and into the house! And the door shuts again.
+
+"And another wait, while those six look at each other, and say their
+little things. And at last they are called too, and away they go, all
+together, just like one of these flocks of curlew that fly over the
+Cape, making those soft little sounds; and then into the house; and
+André said he had to wipe two tears out of his eyes to see a thing like
+that.
+
+"Well, this was the end of old Siméon's grief, as you may well believe.
+Those W'ites stay at the Couronne d'Or for as much as nine or ten days,
+and every morning they will be going across to see their dear dear
+grandfather; and finally when they went away, they had hired that widow
+Bergère to keep his house comfortable for him; and M'sieu Tommy left
+money for all needs.
+
+"And every Christmas after that, so long as old Siméon existed, there
+would come boxes of presents from that place in Boston. Oh, I assure
+you, he did not lack that good care. And always he must be talking about
+that Tommy of his, who was so rich, and was some great personage in the
+city--what they called an alderman--and yet he had not forgotten his
+poor old father, who had waited all those years to see him.
+
+"So this story shows that sometimes things turn out just as well in
+this life down here as they do in those silly stories they tell you
+about princesses and all those things that are not so; and that is a
+comfort sometimes, when you see so much that is sad and heartbreaking in
+this world...."
+
+
+[Illustration: A CALVAIRE]
+
+
+
+
+AT A BRETON CALVAIRE
+
+
+
+
+AT A BRETON CALVAIRE
+
+
+ Upon that cape that thrusts so bare
+ Its crest above the wasting sea--
+ Grey rocks amidst eternity--
+ There stands an old and frail calvaire,
+ Upraising like an unvoiced cry
+ Its great black arms against the sky.
+
+ For storm-beat years that cross has stood:
+ It slants before the winter gale;
+ And now the Christ is marred and pale;
+ The rain has washed away the blood
+ That ran once on its brow and side,
+ And in its feet the seams are wide.
+
+ But when the boats put out to sea
+ At earliest dawn before the day,
+ The fishermen, they turn and pray,
+ Their eyes upon the calvary:
+ "O Jesu, Son of Mary fair,
+ Our little boats are in thy care!"
+
+ And when the storm beats hard and shrill
+ Then toil-bent women, worn with fear,
+ Pray for the lives they hold so dear,
+ And seek the cross upon the hill:
+ "O Jesu, Son of Mary mild,
+ Be with them where the waves are wild!"
+
+ And when the dead they carry by
+ Across that melancholy land,--
+ Dead that were cast up on the strand
+ Beneath a black and whirling sky,--
+ They pause before the old calvaire;
+ They cross themselves and say a prayer.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ O Jesu, Son of Mary fair!
+ O Faith, that seeks thy cross of pain!
+ Their voices break above the rain,
+ The wind blows hard, the heart lies bare:
+ Clutching through dark, their hands find Thee,
+ O Christ, that died on Calvary!
+
+
+
+
+THE PRIVILEGE
+
+
+
+
+THE PRIVILEGE
+
+
+To-day I can think about only one thing. It is in vain I have tried
+to busy myself with my sermon for next Sunday. Last week, for another
+reason, I had recourse to an old sermon; but I dislike to make a
+practice of so doing, even though I strongly suspect that none of our
+little Salmon River congregation would know the difference. We are a
+very simple people, in this out-of-the-way Cape Breton parish, called
+mostly to be fishers, like Our Lord's apostles, and recking not a
+whit of the finer points of doctrine. Nevertheless, it is an hireling
+shepherd who is faithless only because the flock do not ask to be fed
+with the appointed manna; and I shall broach the sermon again, once I
+have set down the thing that is so heavy on my heart.
+
+For all I can think of just now is that Renny and Suse, out there on
+Halibut Head, four miles away, are alone; alone for the first time in
+well-nigh thirty years. The last of the brood has taken wing.
+
+Yet it came to me this morning, as I watched Renny on the wharf saying
+good-by to the boy, and bidding him wrap the tippet snug about his neck
+in case the wind would be raw--it came to me that there is a triumph
+about the nest when it is empty that it could never have earlier. I saw
+the look of it in Renny's face--not defeat, but exultation.
+
+"And what are you going to do now, Renny?" I asked him, as the steamer
+slipped out of sight behind the lighthouse rock.
+
+He stared at me a little contemptuously, a manner he has always had.
+
+"_Do_, Mr. Biddles?" says he, with a queer laugh. "Why, what _would_ I
+do, sor? They ain't no less fish to be catched, is they, off Halibut
+Head, just because I got quit of a son or two?"
+
+He left me, with a toss of his crisp, tawny-gray curls, jumped into his
+little two-wheeled cart, and was off. And I thought, "Ah, Renny Marks,
+outside you are still the same wild beast as when I had my first meeting
+with you, two-and-thirty years ago; but inside--yes, I knew then it must
+come; and it was not for me to order the how of it."
+
+So as I took my way homeward, alone, toward the Rectory, I found myself
+recalling, as if it were yesterday, the first words I had ever exchanged
+with that tawny giant, just then in his first flush of manhood, and
+with a face as ruddy and healthy-looking as one of these early New Rose
+potatoes. Often, to be sure, I had seen him already in church, of a
+Sunday, sitting defiant and uncomfortable on one of the rear benches,
+struggling vainly to keep his eyes open; but before the last Amen was
+fairly out of the people's mouth, he had always bolted for the door;
+and I had never come, as you may say, face to face with him until this
+afternoon when I was footing it back, by the cove road, from a visit to
+an old sick woman, Nannie Odell. And here comes Renny Marks on his way
+home from the boat; and over his shoulder was the mainsail and gaff and
+a mackerel-seine and two great oars; and by one arm he had slung the
+rudder and tackle and bait-pot; and under the other he lugged a couple
+of bundles of lath for to mend his traps; and so he was pacing along
+there as proud and careless as Samson bearing away the gates of Gaza on
+his back (_Judges_ xvi, 3).
+
+Now I had entertained the belief for some time that it was my duty,
+should the occasion offer, to have a serious word with Renny about
+matters not temporal; and this was clearly the moment. Yet even before
+we had met he gave me one of those proud, distrustful, I have said
+contemptuous, looks of his; and I seemed suddenly to perceive the figure
+I must cut in his eyes, pattering along there so trimly in my clerical
+garb, and with my book of prayers under one arm; and, do you know, I was
+right tongue-tied; and so we came within hand-reach, and still never a
+word.
+
+At last, "Good-day to ye, Mister Biddles," says he, with a scant,
+off-hand nod; and, as if he knew I must be admiring of his strength, "I
+can fetch twice this load, sor," says he, "without so mucht as knowing
+the difference."
+
+"It's a fine thing, Renny Marks," said I, gaining my tongue again, at
+his boast, "a fine thing to be the strongest man in three parishes, if
+that's what ye be, as they tell me."
+
+"It is that, sor," says he. "I never been cast yet; and I don't never
+expect for to be."
+
+"But it's still finer a thing, Renny," I went on, "to use that strength
+in the honor of your Maker. Tell me, do you remember to say your prayers
+every night before you go to bed?"
+
+Never shall I forget the horse-laugh the young fellow had at those words.
+
+"Why, sor," he exclaimed, as if I had suggested the most unconscionable
+thing in the world, "saying prayers! that's for the likes of them as
+wash their face every day. I say my prayers on Sunday; and that's enough
+for the likes of me!"
+
+And with that, not even affording me a chance to reply, he strode off up
+the beach road; and in every movement of his great limbs I seemed to see
+the pride and glory of life. Doubtless I was to blame for not pressing
+home to him more urgently at that moment the claims of religion; but as
+I stood there, watching him, it came to me that after all he was almost
+to be pardoned for being proud. For surely there is something to warm
+the heart in the sight of the young lion's strength and courage; and
+even the Creator, I thought, must have taken delight in turning out such
+a fine piece of mortal handiwork as that Renny Marks.
+
+But with that thought immediately came another: "Whom the Lord loveth he
+chasteneth, and scourgeth every son whom he receiveth" (_Hebrews_ xii,
+6). And I went home sadly, for I seemed to see that Renny had bitter
+things ahead of him before he should learn the great lesson of life.
+
+Well, and this is the way it came to him. At the age of
+four-and-twenty, he married this Suse Barlow from down the coast a
+piece,--Green Harbor was the name of the town,--and she was a sweet
+young thing, gentle and ladylike, though of plainest country stock, and
+with enough education so they'd let her keep school down there. He built
+a little house for her, the one they still live in, with his own hands,
+at Halibut Head; and I never saw anything prettier than the way that
+young giant treated his wife--like a princess! It was the first time
+in his life, I dare say, he had ever given a thought to anything but
+himself; and in a fashion, I suppose, 'twas still but a satisfaction of
+his pride, to have her so beautiful, and so well-dressed.
+
+I remember of how often they would come in late to church,--even as late
+as the Te Deum,--and I could almost suspect him of being behindhand of
+purpose, for of course every one would look around when he came creaking
+down the aisle in his big shoes, with a wide smile on his ruddy face
+that showed all his white teeth through his beard; and none could fail
+to observe how fresh and pretty Suse was, tripping along there behind
+him, and looking very demure and modest in her print frock, and oh, so
+very, very sorry to be late! And during the prayers I had to remark how
+his face would always be turned straight toward her, as if it were to
+her he was addressing his supplications; the young heathen!
+
+Now there is one thing I never could seem to understand, though I have
+often turned it over in my mind, and that is, why it should be that a
+young Samson like Renny Marks, and a fine, bouncing girl like that
+Suse of his, should have children who were too weak and frail to stay
+long on this earth; but such was the case. They saved only three out
+of six; and the oldest of those three, Michael John, when he got to be
+thirteen years of age, shipped as cabin boy on a fisherman down to the
+Grand Banks, and never came back. So that left only Bessie Lou, who was
+twelve, and little Martin, who was the baby.
+
+If ever children had a good bringing up, it was those two. I never
+saw either of them in a dirty frock or in bare feet; and that means
+something, you must allow, when you consider the hardness of the
+fisherman's life, and how often he has nothing at all to show for a
+season's toil except debts! But work--I never saw any one work like
+that Renny; and he made a lovely little farm out there; and Suse wasn't
+ashamed to raise chickens and sell them in Salmon River; and she dyed
+wool, and used to hook these rugs, with patterns of her own design,
+baskets of flowers, or handsome fruit-dishes; and almost always she
+could get a price for them. But, as you may believe, she couldn't keep
+her sweet looks with work like that. Before she was thirty she began
+to look old, as is so often true in a hard country like ours; and not
+often would she be coming in to church any more, because, she said,
+of the household duties; but my own belief is that she did not have
+anything to wear. But Bessie Lou and little Martin, when the boy was
+well enough, were there every fine Sunday, as pretty as pictures, and
+able to recite the Creed, and the Lord's Prayer, and the Collects, and
+the Commandments, quite like the children of gentlefolk.
+
+Well, when Bessie Lou got to be sixteen, she took it into her head that
+she must go off to Boston, where she would be earning her own living,
+and see something more of the world than is possible for a girl in
+Salmon River. Our girls all get that notion nowadays; they are not
+content to stay at home as girls used to do; but off they go in droves
+to the States, where wages are big, and there is excitement and variety.
+So the old people finally said yes, and off goes Bessie Lou, like the
+others; and in two years we heard she was to be married to a mechanic in
+Lynn (I think that is the name of the city) somewhere outside of Boston.
+She has been gone eight years now, and has three children; and she
+writes occasionally. She is always wishing she could come down and visit
+the old folks; but it is hard to get away, I presume, and they are plain
+working people.
+
+So after Bessie Lou's going, all they had left at home was Martin, who
+was always ailing more or less. And on my word, I never saw anything
+like the care they gave that boy. There wasn't anything too good for
+him. All these most expensive tonics and patent medicines they would
+be for trying, one after another, and telling themselves every time
+that at last they had found just the right thing, because he'd seem to
+be bracing up a bit, and getting more active. And then he would take
+another of his bad spells, and lose ground again; and they would put
+by that bottle and try something else. One day when I was out there
+his ma showed me all of twenty bottles of patent medicine, some of them
+scarcely touched, that Renny had got for him, one time or another.
+
+You see, Martin couldn't run about outdoors very much because of his
+asthma; and then, his eyes being bad, that made him unhappy in the
+house, for he couldn't be reading or studying. His father got him an
+old fiddle once, he'd picked up at an auction, and the boy took to it
+something wonderful; but not having any teacher and no music he soon
+grew tired of it. And whenever old Renny would be in the village, he
+must always be getting some little thing to take out to Martin: a couple
+of bananas, say, or a jack-knife, or one of those American magazines
+with nice pictures, especially pictures of ships and other sailing
+craft, of which the lad was very fond.
+
+Well, and so last winter came, which was a very bad winter indeed, in
+these parts; and the poor lamb had a pitiful hard time; and whenever
+Renny got in to church, it was plain to see that he was eating his heart
+out with worry. He still had his old way of always snoring during the
+sermon; but oh, if you could see once the tired, anxious, supplicating
+look in his face, as soon as his proud eyes shut, you never would have
+had the heart to wish anything but "Sleep on now, and take your rest"
+(_Mark_ xiv, 41), for you knew that perhaps, for a few minutes, he had
+stopped worrying about that little lad of his.
+
+Spring came on, at last, and Martin was out again for a while every
+day in the sun; and sometimes the old man would be taking him abroad
+for a drive or for a little sail in the boat, when he was going out to
+his traps; and it appeared that the strain was over again for the time
+being. That is why I was greatly surprised and troubled one day, about
+two months ago, to see Renny come driving up toward the Rectory like
+mad, all alone in his cart.
+
+I had just been doing a turn of work myself at the hay; for it is hard
+to get help with us when you need it most; and as I came from the barn,
+in my shirt-sleeves, Renny turned in at the gate.
+
+"Something has happened to the boy," was my thought; and I was all but
+certain of it when I saw the man's face, sharp set as a flint stone, and
+all the blood gone from his ruddy skin so that it looked right blue. He
+jumped out before the mare stopped, and came up to me.
+
+"Can I have a word with ye?" said he; and when he saw my look of
+question, he added, "It ain't nothink, sor. He's all right."
+
+I put my hand on his shoulder, and led him into my study, and we sat
+down there, just as we were, I in my shirt-sleeves, and still unwashed
+after the hayfield.
+
+"What is it, Renny, man?" says I.
+
+It seemed like he could not make his lips open for a moment, and then,
+suddenly, he began talking very fast and excitedly, pecking little dents
+in the arms of the chair with his big black fingernails.
+
+"That Bessie Lou of oors up to Boston," said he, as if he were accusing
+some one of an outrage, "we got a letter from 'er last night, we did,
+and she sayse, says she, why wouldn't we be for a-sending o' the leetle
+lad up theyr? They'd gladly look oot for him, she sayse; and the winter
+ain't severe, she sayse; and he could go to one o' them fine city
+eye-doctors and 'ave his eyes put right with glasses or somethink; and
+prob'ly he could be for going to school again and a-getting of his
+learning, which he's sadly be'indhand in, sor, becaust he's ben ailing
+so much."
+
+His eyes flashed, and the sweat poured down his forehead in streams.
+
+I don't know why I was so slow to understand; but I read his look
+wrong, there seemed so much of the old insolence and pride in it, and I
+replied, I daresay a little reproachfully,--
+
+"Well, and why wouldn't that be an excellent thing, Renny? I should
+think you would feel grateful."
+
+He stared at me for a second, as if I had struck him. Ah, we can
+forget the words people say to us, even in wrath; but can we ever free
+ourselves from the memory of such a look? Without knowing why, I had
+the feeling of being a traitor. And then, all of a sudden, there he had
+crumpled down in his chair, and put his head in his big hands, and was
+sobbing.
+
+"I cain't--I cain't let him go," he groaned. "I woon't let him go. He's
+all what we got left."
+
+I sat there for a time, helpless, looking at him. You might think that
+a priest, with the daily acquaintance he has with the bitter things
+of life, ought to know how to face them calmly; but so far as my own
+small experience goes, I seem to know nothing more about all that than
+at the beginning. It always hurts just as much; it's always just as
+bewildering, just as terrible, as if you had never seen anything like
+it before. And when I saw that giant of a Renny Marks just broken over
+there like some big tree shattered by lightning, it seemed as if I could
+not bear to face such suffering. Then I remembered that he had been
+committed into my care by God, and that I must not be only an hireling
+shepherd. So I said:--
+
+"Renny, lad, it isn't for ourselves we must be thinking. It's for him."
+
+He lifted up his head, with the shaggy, half-gray hair all rumpled on
+his wet forehead, and pulled his sleeve across his eyes.
+
+"Hark'e, Mister Biddles," he commanded harshly. "Ain't we did the best
+we could for him? Who dares say we ain't did the best we could for him?
+_You?_"
+
+I made no answer, and for a minute we faced each other, while he shook
+his clenched fists at me, and the creature in him that had never yet
+been cast challenged all the universe.
+
+"They're tryin' to tak my boy away from me," he roared, "and they cain't
+do it--I tell you they cain't. He's all what we got left, now."
+
+"And so you mean to keep him for yourself?" I asked.
+
+"Ay, that I do," he cried, jumping out of his chair, and striding up and
+down the room as if clean out of his wits. "I do! I do! Why _wouldn't_
+I mean to, hey? Ain't he mine? Who's got a better right to him?"
+
+Of a sudden he comes to a dead halt in front of me, with his arms
+crossed. "Mister Biddles," he says, very bitterly, "you may well be
+thankfu' you never wast a father yoursel'. Nobody ain't for trying to
+tak nothink away from you."
+
+"That's quite true, Renny," said I. "But remember," I said, not
+intending any irreverence, but uttering such poor words as were given
+to me in my extremity, "remember, Renny, it's to a Father you say your
+prayers in church every Sunday; and you needn't think as that Father
+doesn't know full as well as you what it is to give up an only Son for
+love's sake."
+
+"Hey?--What's that, sor?" cries Renny, with a face right like a dead
+thing.
+
+"And would He be asking of you for to let yours go, if He didn't know
+there was love enough in your heart to stand the test?"
+
+Renny broke out with a terrible groan, like the roar of anguish of a
+wild beast that has got a mortal wound; and the same instant the savage
+look died in his eyes, and the bigger love in him had triumphed over the
+smaller love. I could see it, I knew it, even before he spoke. He caught
+at my hand, blunderingly, and gave it a twist like a winch.
+
+"He shall go, sor. He shall go for all of I. And Mr. Biddles, while I'm
+for telling the old woman and the boy, would ye be so condescending as
+to say over some of them there prayers, so I could have the feeling, as
+you might say, that some one was keeping an eye on me? It'll all be done
+in less nor a half-hour."
+
+And with that, off he goes, and jumps into his cart, and whips up the
+mare, tearing down the road like a whirlwind, just as he had come,
+without so much as saying good-by. And the next day I heard them saying
+in the village that Renny Marks's boy was to go up to the States to be
+raised with his sister's family.
+
+Ah, well, that's only a common sort of a story, I know. The same kind of
+things happen near us every day. I can't even quite tell why I wanted to
+set it down on paper like this, only that, some way, it makes me believe
+in God more; even when I have to remember, and it seems to me just now
+like I could never stop remembering it, that Renny and Suse are all
+alone to-day out there on Halibut Head. Renny is at the fish, of course;
+and Suse, I daresay, is working in her little potato patch; and Martin
+is out there on the sea, being borne to a world far away, and from
+which, I suppose, he will not be very anxious to return; for few of them
+do come back, nowadays, to the home country.
+
+
+[Illustration: FOUGÈRE'S COVE]
+
+
+
+
+THEIR TRUE LOVE
+
+
+
+
+THEIR TRUE LOVE
+
+
+Even Zabette, with her thousand wrinkles, was young once. They say her
+lips were red as wild strawberries and her hair as sleek as the wing
+of a blackbird in spring. All the old people of St. Esprit remember
+how she used to swing along the street on her way to mass of a Sunday,
+straight, proud, agile as a goat, with her dark head flung back, and
+a disdainful smile on her lips that kept young men from being unduly
+forward. The country people, who must have their own name for everything
+and everybody, used to call her "la belle orgueilleuse," and sometimes,
+"the highstepper"; and though they had to laugh at her a little for her
+lofty ways, they found it quite natural to address her as mademoiselle.
+
+But all these things one only knows by hearsay. Zabette does not talk
+much herself. So far as she is concerned, you might never guess that
+she had a story at all. She lives there in the little dormer-windowed
+cottage beyond the post-office with Suzanne Benoît. For thirty-three
+years now the two women have lived together; and it is the earnest
+prayer of both of them that when the time for going arrives, they may go
+together.
+
+These two good souls have the reputation, all over the country, of
+immense industry and thrift. Suzanne keeps three cows, and her butter
+is famous. Zabette--she was a Fuseau, from the Grande Anse--takes in
+washing of the better class. Nobody in St. Esprit can do one of those
+stiff white linen collars so well as she. Positively, it shines in the
+sun like a looking-glass. If you notice the men going to church, you can
+always pick out those who have their shirts and collars done by Zabette
+Fuseau. By comparison, the others appear dull and very commonplace.
+
+"But why must Zabette do collars for her living?" you are asking. "Why
+has she not a man of her own to look out for her, and half a dozen grown
+up children? Did she never marry, then--this belle orgueilleuse?"
+
+No. Never. But not on account of that pride of hers; at least not
+directly. If you go into the pretty little living-room of the second
+cottage beyond the post-office--the one with such a show of geraniums
+in the front windows--you will guess half the secret, for just above
+the mantelpiece, between two vases of artificial asters, hangs the
+daguerreotype portrait of a young man in mariner's slops. The lineaments
+have so faded with the years that it is difficult to make them out with
+any assurance. It is as if the portrait itself were seeking to escape
+from life, retreating little by little, imperceptibly, into the dull
+shadows of the ground, so that only as you look at it from a certain
+angle can you still clearly distinguish the small dark eyes, the full
+moustache, the round chin, the square stocky shoulders of the subject.
+Only the two rosy spots added by the daguerreotypist to the cheeks defy
+time and change, indestructible token of youth and ardor.
+
+A little frame of immortelles encloses the portrait. And directly in
+front of it, on the mantelpiece, stands a pretty shell box, with the
+three words on the mother-of-pearl lid: "À ma chérie." What is in the
+box--if anything--no one can tell you for a certainty, though there are
+plenty of theories. "Love letters," say some; and others, with a pitying
+laugh, "Old maid's tears."
+
+Zabette and Suzanne hold their tongues. I think I know what the treasure
+of the box is; for I had the story directly from a very aged woman who
+knew both the "girls" when they were young; and she vouched for the
+truth of it by all the beads of her rosary. This is how it went.
+
+Zabette Fuseau was eighteen, and she lived at the Grand Anse, two miles
+out of St. Esprit; and the procession of young fellows, going there
+to woo, was like a pilgrimage, exactly. Among them came one from far
+down the coast, a place called Rivière Bourgeoise. He was a deep sea
+fisherman, from off a vessel which had put in at St. Esprit for repairs,
+mid-course to the Grand Banks; and on his first shore leave Maxence
+had caught sight of la belle orgueilleuse, who had come into town with
+a basket of eggs; and he had followed her home, at a little distance,
+sighing, but without the courage to address her so long as they were
+in the village. He was a very handsome young fellow, with a brown,
+ruddy skin, and the most beautiful dark curly hair and crisp moustache
+imaginable.
+
+Zabette knew he was behind her; but she would not turn; not she; only
+walked a little more proudly and gracefully, with that swinging movement
+of hers, like a vessel sailing in a head wind. At last, when they had
+reached the Calvaire at the end of the village, he managed to get out
+his first word.
+
+"Oh!" he cried, haltingly. "Mademoiselle!"
+
+She turned half about and fixed her dark proud eyes upon him, while her
+cheeks crimsoned.
+
+"Well, m'sieur?"
+
+He could not speak, and the two stared at each other for a long time in
+silence, while the thought came to her that this was the man for whom
+she was destined.
+
+"Had you something to say to me?" she repeated, finally, in a tone that
+tried to be severe, but was really very soft.
+
+He nodded his curly head, and licked his lips hard to moisten them.
+
+"I cannot wait any longer," she protested, after a while. "They need me
+at home."
+
+She turned quickly again, as if to go; but her feet were glued to the
+ground, and she did not take a step.
+
+"Oh, s'il vous plaît, mam'selle!" he cried, to hold her. "You think I am
+rude. But I did not mean to follow you like this. I could not help it.
+You are so beautiful."
+
+The look he gave her with those words sank deep into her heart and
+rooted itself there forever. In vain, for the rest of her life, she
+might try to tear it out; there was a fatality about it. Zabette, fine
+highstepper that she was, had been caught at last. She knew that she
+ought to send the handsome young sailor away; but her tongue would not
+obey her. Instead, it uttered some very childish words of confusion and
+pleasure; and before she knew it, there was her man walking along at
+her side, with one hand on his heart, declaring that she was the most
+angelic creature in the world, that he was desperately in love with
+her, that he could not live without her, and that she must promise then
+and there to be his, or he would instantly kill himself. The burning,
+impassioned look in his eyes struck her with dismay.
+
+"But I cannot decide all in a moment like this," she protested, in a
+weak voice. "It would be indecent. I must think."
+
+"Think!" he retorted, bitterly. "Oh, very well. Then you do not love me!"
+
+"Ah, but I do!" she cried, all trembling.
+
+With that he took her in his arms and kissed her, and nothing more was
+heard about suicide or any such subject.
+
+"But we must not tell any one yet," she pleaded. "They would not
+understand."
+
+He agreed, with the utmost readiness. "We will not tell a soul. It shall
+be exactly as you wish. But I may come and see you?"
+
+"Oh, certainly," she responded. "Often,--that is, every day or two,--at
+Grande Anse; and perhaps we may happen to meet sometimes in the
+village, as well."
+
+"The _Soleil_ will be delaying at St. Esprit for two weeks," he
+explained, as they walked along, hand in hand. "She put in for some
+repairs. By the end of that time, perhaps"--
+
+"Oh, no, not so soon as that," she interrupted. "We must let a longer
+while pass first."
+
+She gazed at him yearningly. "You will be returning by here in the
+autumn, at the end of the season on the Banks?"
+
+"We are taking on three men from St. Esprit," he answered. "We shall
+stop here on the return to set them ashore. That will be in October,
+near the end of the month, if the season is good."
+
+She sighed, as if dreading some disaster; and they looked at each other
+again, and the look ended in a kiss. It is not by words, that new love
+feeds and grows.
+
+Before they reached the Grande Anse he quitted her; but he gave her
+his promise to come again that evening. He did--that evening, and two
+evenings later, and so on, every other evening for those two weeks.
+Zabette's old mother took a great fancy to him, and gave him every
+encouragement; but the old père Fuseau, who had sailed many a voyage, in
+younger days, round the Horn, would never speak a good word for him--and
+perhaps his hostility only increased the girl's attachment.
+
+"A little grease is all very well for the hair of a young man," he would
+say. "But this scented pomade they use nowadays--pah!"
+
+"You object then to a sailor's being a gentleman?" demanded the girl
+haughtily.
+
+"Yes, I do," roared the old père Fuseau. "Have a care, Zabette."
+
+Nevertheless, the two lovers found plenty of chances to be alone
+together; and they would talk, in low voices, of their happiness and
+of the future, which looked very bright to Zabette, despite all the
+uncertainties of the sea.
+
+"When we put in on the return from the Banks," said Maxence, "you will
+be at the wharf to meet me; and that very day we will announce our
+fiancailles. What an astonishment for everybody!"
+
+"And then," she asked--"after that?"
+
+"After that, I will stay ashore for a while. They can do without me on
+the _Soleil_. And at the end of a month"--he told her the rest with a
+kiss; and surely Zabette had never been so happy in her life.
+
+But for the time being the affair was kept very, very secret, so that
+people might not get to gossiping. Even those frequent expeditions of
+Maxence to the Grande Anse were not remarked, for he always came after
+dusk: and when the fortnight was over and the _Soleil_ once more was
+ready for sea, the two sweethearts exchanged keepsakes, and he left her.
+
+"I will send you a letter from St. Pierre Miquelon," he said, to cheer
+her, while he wiped away her tears with a silk handkerchief.
+
+"Do you promise?" she asked.
+
+He promised. Three weeks later the letter arrived; and it told her that
+his heart was breaking for his dear little Zabette. "Sois fidèle--be
+true," were the last words. The letter had a perfume of pomade about it,
+and she carried it all summer in her bodice, taking it out many times a
+day to scan the loving words again.
+
+In St. Esprit, when the fishing fleet begins to return from the Banks,
+they keep an old man on the lookout in the church tower; and as soon as
+he sights a vessel in the offing, he rings the bell.
+
+It was the fourth week in October that year before the bell was heard;
+and then rapidly, two or three at a time, the schooners came in. First
+the _Dame Blanche_, which was always in the lead; then the _Êtoile_, the
+_Deux Frères_, the _Lottie B._, and the _Milo_. Every day, morning or
+afternoon, the bell would ring, and poor Zabette must find some excuse
+or other to be in town. Down at the wharf there was always gathered an
+anxious throng, watching for the appearance of the vessel round the
+Cape. And when she was visible at last, there would be cries of joy from
+some, and silence on the part of others. Zabette was among the silent.
+When she saw the happiness about her, tears would swim unbidden in her
+eyes; but of course she did not lose heart, for still there were several
+vessels to arrive, and no disasters had been reported by the earlier
+comers. People noticed her, standing there with expectant mien, and they
+wondered what it could be that brought her; but it was not their habit
+to ask questions of the fine highstepper.
+
+There was another young girl on the wharf, too, who had the air of
+looking for some one--a certain Suzanne Benoît, from l'Étang, three
+miles inshore, a very pretty girl, with a mild, appealing look in her
+brown eyes. Zabette had seen her often here and there; but she had no
+acquaintance with her. At the present moment, strangely enough, she
+felt herself powerfully drawn to this Suzanne. It came to her, somehow,
+that the girl had come thither on a mission similar to her own, she
+was so silent, and had not the look of those who had waited on the
+wharf in previous years. And so, one afternoon, when two vessels had
+rounded the Cape and were entering the harbor, amid a great hubbub of
+expectancy,--and neither of them was the _Soleil_,--Zabette surprised
+a look of woe in the face of the other which she could not resist. She
+went over to her, with some diffidence, and offered a few words of
+sympathy.
+
+"You are waiting for some one, too?" she asked her.
+
+The eyes of the other filled quickly to overflowing. "Yes," she
+answered. "He has not come yet."
+
+"You must not worry," said Zabette, stoutly. "There are always delays,
+you know. Some are ahead; others behind; it is so every year."
+
+The girl gave her a grateful look, and squeezed her hand. "It is a
+secret," she murmured.
+
+Zabette smiled. "I have a secret too."
+
+"Then we are waiting together," said Suzanne. "That makes it so much
+easier!"
+
+They walked back to the street, arm in arm, as if they had always been
+bosom friends. And the next day they were both at the wharf again. The
+afternoon was bleak; but as usual they were in their best clothes.
+
+"Oh, it does not seem as if I could wait any longer," whispered Suzanne,
+confidingly. "I do hope it will be the _Soleil_ this time."
+
+"The _Soleil_!" exclaimed Zabette, joyfully. "You are waiting for the
+_Soleil_?"
+
+And at the other's nod, she went on. "How lovely that we are expecting
+the same vessel. Oh, I am sure it will come to-day--or certainly
+to-morrow."
+
+The two girls felt themselves very close together, now that they had
+shared so much of their secret; and it made the waiting less hard to
+bear.
+
+"Is he handsome, your man?" asked Suzanne, timidly.
+
+"Ravishing," replied Zabette, eagerly. "And yours?"
+
+Suzanne sighed with adoration. "Beyond words," was her reply--and the
+girls exchanged another of those pressures of the hand which mean so
+much where love is concerned. "He has the most beautiful moustache in
+the world."
+
+"Oh, no," protested Zabette, smilingly. "Mine has a more beautiful one
+yet, and such crisp curly hair, and dark eyes."
+
+Her companion suddenly looked at her. "Large eyes or small?" she asked
+in a strange voice.
+
+"Oh," replied Zabette, doubtfully. "Not too large. I would not fancy ox
+eyes in a man."
+
+Suzanne freed herself and stood facing her with a flash of hatred in her
+mild face which Zabette could not understand.
+
+"And his name!" she demanded, harshly. "His name, then!"
+
+Zabette smiled a little proudly. "That is my secret," she replied. "But,
+Suzanne, what is the matter?"
+
+"It is not your secret," laughed the other, bitterly. "It is not your
+secret. It is my secret."
+
+"What do you mean?" cried Zabette, with a sudden feeling of terror at
+the girl's drawn face.
+
+"His name is Maxence!" Suzanne's laugh was like bones rattling in a
+coffin.
+
+It seemed to Zabette as if a flash of lightning had cleft her soul in
+two. That was the way the truth came to her. She drew back like a viper
+ready to strike.
+
+"Oh, I hate you!" she cried, and turned on her heel, white to the eyes
+with anger and shame.
+
+But Suzanne would not leave her. She followed to the other side of
+the wharf, and as soon as she could speak again without attracting
+attention, she said, more kindly:
+
+"I am very sorry for you, Zabette. It is too bad you were so mistaken.
+Why, he was engaged to me the very second day he came ashore."
+
+Zabette stifled back a cry, and retorted, icily, "He was engaged to me
+the first day. He followed me all the way to the Grande Anse."
+
+Suzanne's eyes glittered, this time. "He followed me all the way to
+l'Étang. He is mine."
+
+Zabette brought out, through white lips, "Leave me alone. He was mine
+first."
+
+"He was mine last," retaliated the other, undauntedly. "The very morning
+he went away, he came to see me. Did he come to you that day? Did he?
+Did he?"
+
+Zabette ignored her question. "He wrote me a letter from St. Pierre
+Miquelon," she announced, crisply. "So that settles it, first and last."
+
+The hand of Suzanne suddenly lifted to her bosom, as if feeling for
+something. "My letter was written at St. Pierre, too."
+
+For an instant they glared at each other like wild animals fighting over
+prey. Neither said a word. Neither yielded a hair. Each felt that her
+life's happiness was at stake. Zabette had thought that this chit of a
+girl from l'Étang was mild and timid; but now she realized that she had
+met her match for courage. And the thought came to her: "When he sees
+us, let him choose."
+
+She was not conscious of having uttered the words. Perhaps her glance,
+swiftly directed toward the Cape, conveyed the thought to her rival. At
+all events the answer came promptly and with complete self-assurance:
+
+"Yes, let Maxence choose."
+
+Just at that moment the first vessel appeared at the harbor entrance,
+while the bell redoubled its jubilation in the church tower on the hill.
+
+"The _Mercure_!" cried an old woman. "Thank God!"
+
+And a few minutes later, there was the _Anne-Marie_, all sail set over
+her green hull; and then a vessel which at first no one seemed to
+recognize.
+
+"Which is that?" they asked. "Oh, it must be--yes, it is the _Soleil_,
+from Rivière Bourgeoise. She has several men from here aboard."
+
+With eyes that seemed to be starting from her head, Zabette watched the
+_Soleil_ entering the harbor. She could distinguish forms on deck. She
+saw handkerchiefs waving. At last she could begin to make out the faces
+a little. But she did not discover the one she sought. Holding tight to
+a mooring post, unable to think, unable to do anything but watch, it
+seemed to her that hours passed before the schooner cast anchor and a
+boat was put over. There were four persons in it: the mate and the three
+men from St. Esprit. They rowed rapidly to the wharf; and the three men
+threw up their gunny sacks and climbed the ladder, one after the other.
+
+The mate was just about to put off again when Zabette spoke to him. She
+leaned over the edge of the wharf, reaching out a detaining hand.
+
+"M'sieur!"
+
+At the same instant the word was uttered by another voice close by. She
+looked up and saw Suzanne, very white, in the same attitude.
+
+"What is it, mesdemoiselles?" asked the mate, touching his vizor.
+
+As if by concerted arrangement came the question from both sides.
+
+"And Maxence?"
+
+The man answered them seriously and directly, perceiving from their
+manner that his reply was of great import to these two, whatever the
+reason for it might be.
+
+"Maxence?--But we do not know where he is. There was a fog. He was out
+in a dory, alone. We picked up the dory the next day. Perhaps"--he
+shrugged his shoulders incredulously--"perhaps he might have been picked
+up by another vessel. Who can say?"
+
+The girls gave him no answer. They reeled, and would have fallen, save
+that each found support in the other's arms. Sinking to the string
+piece of the wharf, they buried their faces on each other's shoulders
+and sobbed. Happy fathers and mothers and sweethearts, gathered on the
+wharf, looked at them in wonder, and left them alone, ignorant of the
+cause of their grief. So a long time passed, and still they crouched
+there, tight clasped, with buried heads.
+
+"He was so good, so brave!" sobbed Suzanne.
+
+"I loved him so much," repeated Zabette, over and over.
+
+"I shall die without him," moaned Suzanne.
+
+"So shall I," responded the other. "I cannot bear to live any longer."
+
+"If only I had a picture of him, that would be some comfort," said the
+poor girl from l'Étang.
+
+"I have one," said Zabette, sitting up straight and putting some orderly
+touches to her disarranged _mouchoir_. "He gave it to me the very last
+night."
+
+Suzanne looked at her enviously, and mopped her red eyes. "All I have,"
+she sighed, "is a little shell box he brought me, with the motto, _À
+ma chérie_. He gave me that the very last morning of all. It is very
+beautiful, but no one but me has seen it yet."
+
+"You must show it to me sometime," said Zabette. "I have a right to see
+it."
+
+"If you will let me look at the picture," consented the other, guardedly.
+
+"Yes, you may look at it," said Zabette, "so long as you do not forget
+that it belongs to me."
+
+"To you!" retorted the other. "And have you a better right to it than I,
+seeing that he would have been my husband in a month's time? You are a
+bad, cruel girl; you have no heart. It is a mercy he escaped the traps
+you set for him--my poor Maxence!"
+
+A thousand taunting words came to Zabette's lips, but she controlled
+herself, rose to her feet with a show of dignity, and quitted the wharf.
+She resolved that she would never speak to that Benoît girl again. To do
+so was only to be insulted.
+
+She went back to her home on the Grande Anse and endeavored to take up
+her everyday life again as though nothing had happened. She hid her
+grief from the neighbors, even from her own parents, who had never
+suspected the strength of her attachment for Maxence. By day she could
+keep herself busy about the house, and the secret would only be a dull
+pain; but at night, especially when the wind blew, it would gnaw and
+gnaw at her heart like a hungry beast.
+
+At last she could keep it to herself no longer. She must share her
+misery. But there was only one person in the world who could understand.
+She declared to herself that nothing would induce her to go to l'Étang;
+and yet, as if under a spell, she made ready for the journey.
+
+"Where are you going, my Zabette?" asked her old mother.
+
+"To l'Étang," she answered. "I hear there is a girl there who makes a
+special brown dye for wool."
+
+"Well, the walk will do you good, ma fille. You have been indoors too
+much lately. You are growing right pale and ill-looking."
+
+"Oh, it is nothing, maman. I never feel very brisk, you know, in
+November. 'Tis such a dreary month."
+
+She took a back road across the barrens to l'Étang. Scarcely any one
+traveled it except in winter to fetch kindling wood from the scrub fir
+that grew there. Consequently Zabette was much surprised, after walking
+about a mile and a half, to discover that some one was approaching from
+the opposite direction--a woman, with a red shawl across her shoulders.
+Gradually the distance between them lessened; and then she saw, with
+a start, that it was Suzanne Benoît. Her knees began to tremble under
+her. When they met, at last, no words would come to her lips: they only
+looked at each other with questioning, hunted eyes, then embraced,
+weeping, and sat down silently on a moss-hummock beside the road.
+Zabette had not felt so comforted since the disaster of October. For the
+first time she could let the tears flow without any fear of detection.
+At last she said, very calmly:
+
+"I have brought the picture."
+
+She drew it out from under her coat, and held it on her knees, where
+Suzanne could see it.
+
+"And here is the shell box," rejoined her companion. "I do not
+know how to read, me; but there are the words--_À ma chérie_. It's
+pretty--_hein_?"
+
+Each gazed at the other's treasure.
+
+"Ah," sighed Suzanne, mournfully. "How handsome he was to look at--and
+so true and brave!"
+
+"I shall never love another," said Zabette, with sad conviction--"never.
+Love is over for me."
+
+"And for me," said Suzanne. "But we have our memories."
+
+"Mine," corrected Zabette. "You are forgetting."
+
+"Did he ever give you a present that said _À ma chérie_?" demanded
+Suzanne, pointedly.
+
+The other explained blandly: "You cannot say anything, my dear, on the
+back of a tintype.--But I have my letter from St. Pierre."
+
+She showed it.
+
+"Even if I cannot read mine," declared the girl from l'Étang, hotly, "I
+know it is fully as nice as yours. Nicer!"
+
+"Oh, can I never see you but you must insult me!" cried Zabette. "Keep
+your old box and your precious letter from St. Pierre Miquelon. What can
+they matter to me?"
+
+Without a word of good-by she sprang to her feet and set out for the
+Grande Anse. She did not see the Benoît girl again that winter; but she
+could not help thinking about her, sometimes with sympathy, sometimes
+with bitter hatred. The young men came flocking to her home, as usual,
+vying with one another in attentions to her, for not only was Zabette
+known as the handsomest girl in three parishes, but also as an excellent
+housekeeper--"good saver, rare spender."
+
+She would not encourage any of them, however.
+
+"If I marry," she said to herself, "it is giving Maxence over to that
+l'Étang girl. She will crow about it. She will say, 'At last he is mine
+altogether. She has surrendered.' No, I could not stand that."
+
+So that winter passed, and the next summer, and other winters and
+summers. Zabette did not marry; and after a time she began hearing
+herself spoken of as an old maid. The young men flocked to other houses,
+not hers. At the end of twelve years both her father and mother were
+dead, and she was alone in the world, thirty, and unprovided for.
+
+It was, of course, fated, that these two women whose lives had been so
+strangely entangled should drift together again, sooner or later. So
+long as both were young and could claim love for themselves, jealousy
+was bound to separate them; but when they found themselves quite alone
+in the world, no longer beautiful, no longer arousing thoughts of love
+in the breast of another, the memory of all that was most precious in
+their lives drew them together as surely as a magnet draws two bits of
+metal.
+
+It was after mass, one Sunday, that Zabette sought out her rival finally
+and found the courage to propose a singular plan.
+
+"You are alone, Suzanne," she said. "So am I. We are both poor. Come and
+live with me."
+
+"And you will give me Maxence?" asked Suzanne, a little hardly.
+
+"No. But I will give you half of him. See, why should we quarrel any
+more? He is dead. Let us be reasonable. After this he shall belong to
+both of us."
+
+Still the _vieille fille_ from l'Étang held back, though her eyes
+softened.
+
+"All these years," she said, with a remnant of defiance--"all these
+years he has been mine. I did not get married, me, because that would
+have let him belong to you."
+
+Zabette sighed wearily. "And all these years I have been saying the same
+thing. And yet I could never forget the shell box and your letter from
+St. Pierre Miquelon. Come, don't you see how much easier it will be--how
+much more natural--if we put our treasures together: all we have of
+Maxence, and call him _ours_?"
+
+Suzanne was beginning to yield, but doubtfully. "If it would be proper,"
+she said.
+
+"Not if he were living, of course," replied the other, with assurance.
+"The laws of the church forbid that. But in the course of a lifetime a
+husband may have more than one wife. I do not see why, when a husband is
+dead, two wives should not have him. Do you?"
+
+"I will come," said Suzanne, softly and gratefully. "I am so lonely."
+
+Three years later the two women moved from the Grande Anse into the
+village, renting the little cottage with the dormer windows in which
+they have lived ever since. You must look far to find so devoted a pair.
+They are more than sisters to each other. If their lives have not been
+happy, as the world judges happiness, they have at least been illumined
+by two great and abiding loves,--which does not happen often,--that for
+the dead, and that for each other.
+
+
+
+
+GARLANDS FOR PETTIPAW
+
+
+
+
+GARLANDS FOR PETTIPAW
+
+
+Towns, like persons, I suppose, wake up now and then to find themselves
+famous; but I doubt if any town having this experience could be more
+amazed by it, more dazed by it, than was Three Rivers, one day last
+March, when we opened our newspapers from Boston and Montreal and lo,
+there was our own name staring at us from the front page! Three Rivers
+is in the Province of Quebec, on the shore of the Bay de Chaleurs; but
+we receive our metropolitan papers every day, only thirty-six hours off
+the presses; and this makes us feel closely in touch with the outside
+world. Until the railroad from Matapedia came through, four years ago,
+mail was brought by stage, every second day. The coming of the railroad
+had seemed an important event then; but it had never put Three Rivers on
+the front page of the Boston _Herald_.
+
+The news-item in question was to the effect that the S. S. _Maid
+of the North_, Captain Pettipaw of Three Rivers, P. Q., had been
+torpedoed, forty miles off Fastnet, while en route from Sydney, N. S.,
+to Liverpool, with a cargo of pig-iron. The captain and crew (said the
+item) had been allowed to take to the boats; but only one of the two
+boats had been heard from. That one was in command of the mate, and had
+been rescued by a trawler.
+
+Captain Pettipaw of Three Rivers! _Our_ Captain Pettipaw! How well we
+knew him; and who among us had ever thought of him as one likely to
+make Three Rivers figure on the front page of the world's news! Yet
+this had come to pass; and even amid the anxiety we felt as to the fate
+of Captain Joe, we could but be agreeably conscious of the distinction
+that had come to our little community. All that afternoon poor Mrs.
+Pettipaw's house was thronged with neighbors who hurried over there,
+newspaper in hand, ready to congratulate or to condole as might seem
+most called for.
+
+"Poor Mrs. Pettipaw" or "poor Melina" was the way we always spoke
+of her, partly, I suppose, because of her nine children, and partly
+because--I hesitate to say it--she was Captain Joe's wife. But now that
+it seemed so very likely she might be his widow, our hearts went out
+to her the more. You see Captain Joe was, in our local phrase, "one
+of those Pettipaws." Pettipaws never seemed to get anywhere or to do
+anything that mattered. Pettipaws were always behindhand. Pettipaws were
+always in trouble, one way or another. It was a family characteristic.
+
+Only five or six years ago Captain Joe's new schooner, the _Melina
+P._, had broken from her harbor moorings under a sudden gale from the
+northwest and driven square on the Fiddle Reef, where she foundered
+before our eyes. Other vessels were anchored close by the _Melina P._;
+but not one of them broke loose. All the Captain's savings for years and
+years had gone into the new schooner, not to speak of several hundreds
+borrowed from his fellow-townsmen.
+
+And the very next winter his house had burned to the ground; and the
+seven children--there were only seven then--had been parceled out
+amongst the neighbors for six or seven months until, about midsummer,
+the new house was roofed over and the windows set; and then the family
+moved in, and there they lived for several more months, "sort of
+camping-out fashion," as poor Melina cheerfully put it, while Captain
+Joe was occasionally seen putting on a row of shingles or sawing a
+board. At last, after the snow had begun to fly, the neighbors came
+once more to the rescue. A collection was made for the stricken family;
+carpenters finished the house; a mason built the chimney and plastered
+the downstairs partitions; curtains were donated for the windows; and
+the Pettipaws spent the winter in comfort.
+
+The following spring Captain Joe got a position as second officer on
+a coastwise ship out of Boston, and the affairs of the family began
+to look up. From that he was promoted to the captaincy of a little
+freighter plying between Montreal and the Labrador; and the next we
+knew, he was in command of a large collier sailing out of Sydney, Nova
+Scotia. Poor Melina appeared in a really handsome new traveling suit,
+ordered from the big mail order house in Montreal; and the young ones
+could all go to church the same Sunday, and often did.
+
+For the last year or two we had ceased to make frequent inquiries after
+Captain Joe; he had dropped pretty completely out of our life; and the
+thought that he might be holding a commission of special dangerousness
+had never so much as entered our minds. But poor Melina's calmness in
+the face of the news-item surprised everyone. It was like a reproach to
+her neighbors for not having acknowledged before the worth of the man
+she had married. It had not required a German torpedo to teach her that.
+And as for his safety, that apparently caused her no anxiety whatever.
+
+"You couldn't kill the Captain," she repeated, with a quiet, untroubled
+smile, which was as much as to say that anything else might happen to a
+Pettipaw, but not that.
+
+The rest of us admired her faith without being able to share it. Poor
+Melina rarely had leisure to read a newspaper, and she did not know much
+about the disasters of the war zone. And so, instinctively, everyone
+began to say the eulogistic things about Captain Joe that had never been
+said--though now we realized they ought to have been said--while he was
+with us.
+
+"He was such a good man," said Mrs. Thibault, the barrister's wife.
+"So devoted to his home. I remember of how he would sit there on the
+doorstep for hours, watching his little ones at their play. Poor babies!
+Poor little babies!"
+
+"Such a brave man, too; and so witty!" said John Boutin, our tailor.
+"The stories he would tell, my! my! Many a day in the shop he'd be
+telling stories from dinner till dark, without once stopping for breath
+as you might say. It passed the time so nice!"
+
+"And devout!" added Mrs. Fougère, the postmistress. "A Christian. He
+loved to listen to the church-bells. I remember like it was yesterday
+his saying to me, 'The man,' he said, 'who can hear a church-bell
+without thinking of religion, is as good as lost, to my thinking.'"
+
+"Not that he went to church very often," said Boutin.
+
+"His knee troubled him," explained Mrs. Fougère.
+
+Early in the evening came the cable message that justified poor Melina's
+confidence. Eugénie White--the Whites used to be Le Blancs, but since
+Eugénie came back from Boston, they have taken the more up-to-date
+name--Eugénie came flying up the street from the railroad station,
+waving the yellow envelope and spreading the news as she flew. The
+message consisted of only one word: "Safe"; but it was dated Queenstown,
+and it bore the signature we were henceforth to be so proud of: Joseph
+Pettipaw.
+
+Two days later the _Herald_ contained a notice of the rescue by a
+Norwegian freighter of the Captain of the _Maid of the North_; but we
+had to wait ten days for the full story, which occupied two columns in
+one of the Queenstown journals and almost as much in the Dublin _Post_,
+with a very lifelike photograph of Captain Joe. It was a wonderful
+story, as you may very likely remember, for the American papers gave it
+plenty of attention a little later.
+
+It had been a calm, warm day, but with an immense sea running. Before
+entering the war zone Captain Joe had made due preparation for
+emergencies. The ship's boats were ready to be swung, and in each was a
+barrel of water and a supply of biscuit and other rations. The submarine
+was not sighted until it was too late to think of escaping; the engines
+were reversed; and when the German commander called out through his
+megaphone that ten minutes would be allowed for the escape of the crew,
+all hands hurried to the lee side and began piling into the boats. The
+mate's was lowered away first and cleared safely.
+
+The Captain was about to give the order for the lowering of his own
+boat, when the only woman in the party cried out that her husband was
+being left behind. It was the cook, who was indulging in an untimely
+nap, his noonday labors in the galley being over. In her first
+excitement Martha Figman had failed to notice his absence, but had made
+for the boat as fast as she could, carrying her three-year-old child.
+
+"Be quick!" called out the commander of the submarine. "Your time is up!"
+
+"Oh, Captain, Captain, don't leave him," implored the desperate woman.
+"He's all I have!"
+
+Then Captain Joe did the thing that will go down in history. He seized
+the little girl and held her aloft in his arms and called out to the
+Germans:
+
+"In the name of this little child, grant me three more minutes."
+
+"Two!" replied the commander.
+
+Captain Joe leaped to the deck and rushed aft, burst open the cook's
+cabin, and hauled Danny Figman, quite sound asleep, out of his berth.
+The poor rascal was only partly dressed, but there was no time to make
+him presentable. A blanket and a sou'wester had to suffice. Still
+bewildered, he was dragged on deck and ordered to run for his life.
+
+A few seconds later the boat lowered away with its full quota of
+passengers; the men took the oars, cleared a hundred yards safely; and
+then there was a snort, a white furrow through the waves, an explosion;
+the _Maid of the North_ listed, settled, and disappeared. The submarine
+steamed quickly out of sight; and the two boats were all that was left
+as witness of what had happened.
+
+On account of the terrible seas that were running, the boats soon became
+separated; and for sixty-two hours Captain Joe bent his every energy
+to keeping his boat afloat, for she was in momentary danger of being
+swamped, until on the third morning the Norwegian was sighted, came to
+the rescue, and carried the exhausted occupants into Queenstown.
+
+Three Rivers, you may depend, had this story by heart, and backward
+and forward, long before Captain Joe returned to us; for not only did
+it appear in those Irish journals, but also on the occasion of the
+Captain's arrival in New York in several metropolitan papers, written
+up with great detail, and with a picture of little Tina Figman in the
+Captain's arms.
+
+"This is the Captain," ran the print under the picture, "who risked his
+life that a baby might not be fatherless."
+
+You can imagine how anxious we were by this time in Three Rivers to
+welcome that Captain home again; not one of us but wanted to make ample
+amends for the injustice we had done him in the past. But we had to
+wait several weeks, for even after the owners had brought Captain Joe
+and his crew back to New York on the St. Louis, still he had to go to
+Montreal for a ten days' stay, to depose his evidence officially and to
+wind up the affairs of the torpedoed ship. But at last he was positively
+returning to us; and extensive preparations were undertaken for his
+reception.
+
+As he was coming by the St. Lawrence steamer, _Lady of Gaspé_, the
+principal decorations were massed in the vicinity of the government
+wharf. If I tell you that well nigh three hundred dollars had been
+collected for this purpose from the good people of Three Rivers, you
+can form some idea of the magnitude of the effort. A double row of
+saplings had been set up along the wharf and led thence to the Palace
+of Justice; and the full distance, an eighth of a mile, was hung with
+red and tricolor bunting. Then there were three triumphal arches, one
+at the head of the wharf, one at the turn into the street, and one in
+front of the post-office. These arches were very cleverly built, with
+little turrets at the corners, the timber-work completely covered with
+spruce-branches; and each arch displayed a motto. Mrs. Fougère and
+Eugénie White had devised the mottoes, little John Boutin had traced
+the letters on cotton, and Mrs. Boutin had painted them. The first
+read: "Honor to Our Hero." The second was in French, for the reason that
+half our population still use that language by preference, and it read:
+"Honneur à notre Héro"; and the third arch bore the one word, ornately
+inscribed: "Welcome."
+
+All the houses along the way were decorated with geraniums and flags;
+and as the grass was already very green (it was June) and the willows
+and silver-oaks beginning to leave out, it may fairly be said that Three
+Rivers was a beauty spot.
+
+Seeing that no one can tell beforehand when a steamer is going to
+arrive, the whole town was in its best clothes and ready at an early
+hour of the morning. The neighbors trooped in at poor Melina's, offering
+their services in case any of the children still needed combing,
+curling, or buttoning; and all through the forenoon the young people
+were climbing to the top of St. Anne's hill to see if there was any sign
+of the _Lady of Gaspé_; but it was not till three in the afternoon that
+the church-bell, madly ringing, announced that the long-expected moment
+was about to arrive.
+
+I wish I could quote for you in full the account of that day's doings
+which appeared in our local sheet, the Bonaventure _Record_, for it
+was beautifully written and described every feature as it deserved,
+reproducing _verbatim_ the Mayor's address of welcome, Father Quinnan's
+speech in the Palace, and the Resolutions drawn up by ten representative
+citizens and presented to Captain Pettipaw on a handsomely illuminated
+scroll, which you may see to-day hanging in the place of honor in his
+parlor.
+
+But let my readers imagine for themselves the arrival of the steamer,
+the cheer upon cheer as Captain Joe came gravely down the gang-plank;
+the affecting meeting between him and poor Melina and the nine little
+Pettipaws, the littlest of whom he had never seen, and several of whom
+had grown so in these last four years that he had the names wrong, which
+caused happy laughter and happy tears on all sides. Then the procession
+to the Palace! There was an orchestra of four pieces from Cape Cove; and
+a troop of little girls, in white, scattered tissue-paper flowers along
+the line of march.
+
+The Mayor began his speech by saying that an honor had come to our
+little town which would be rehearsed from father to son for generations.
+Father Quinnan took for his theme the three words: "Father, Husband,
+Hero"; and he showed us how each of those words, in its highest and best
+sense, necessarily comprised the other two. And the exercises closed
+with a very enjoyable piano duet which you doubtless know: "Wandering
+Dreams," by some foreign composer.
+
+People watched Captain Joe very closely. It would have been only natural
+if, returning to us in this way, he should have remembered a time,
+not so long before, when the attitude of his fellow-citizens had been
+extremely cool. But if he remembered it, he gave no sign; and he smiled
+at everyone in a grave, thoughtful manner that made one's heart beat
+high.
+
+"He has aged," whispered Mrs. Fougère. "But his face is noble. It
+reminds me of Napoleon, somehow."
+
+"To me he looks more like that American we see so often in the
+papers--Bryan. So much dignity!" This from Mrs. Boutin.
+
+We appreciated the Captain's freedom from condescension the more when
+we heard from his own lips, that same evening, a recital of the honors
+that had been showered upon him during the past weeks. The Mayor of
+Queenstown had had him to dinner; Lady Derntwood, known as the most
+beautiful woman in Ireland, had entertained him for three days at
+Derntwood Park, and sent an Indian shawl as a present to his wife. On
+the _St. Louis_ he had sat at the Captain's right hand; in New York he
+had been interviewed and royally fêted by the newspaper-men; and at
+Montreal the owners had presented him with a gold watch and a purse of
+$250. Also, they had offered him another ship immediately.
+
+"Oh, you're going again!" we exclaimed; and the words were repeated from
+one to another in admiration--"He's going again!" But Captain Joe smiled
+thoughtfully.
+
+"I told them I didn't mind being torpedoed," he said ('Oh, no! Certainly
+not! Mind being torpedoed; you! Captain Joe!') "but--"
+
+"But what, Captain?"
+
+"But I said as I couldn't bear for to see a little child exposed again
+in an open boat for sixty-four hours."
+
+"But Captain, wouldn't they give you a ship without a child?"
+
+"They _said_ they would," he replied, doubtfully, shaking his head.
+
+"Then what will you be doing next?" we asked, mentally reviewing the
+various fields in which he might add laurels to laurels.
+
+He meditated a little while and then replied: "Home'll suit me pretty
+good for a spell."
+
+Well, that could be understood, certainly. Indeed, it was to his credit.
+We remembered Father Quinnan's speech. The husband, the father, had
+their claim. A little stay at home, in the bosom of loved ones, yes, to
+be sure, it seemed fitting and right, after the perils of the sea.
+
+And yet, why was it, as we took down the one-eighth-mile of bunting that
+night, there was a faint but perceptible dampening of our enthusiasm.
+Perhaps it was the reaction from the strain and excitement of the day,
+for it had been, there was no denying it, a day of days for Three
+Rivers; a day, which, as Father Quinnan had said, would be writ in
+letters of gold in Memory's fair album. This day was ended now, and
+night came down upon a very proud and very tired little community.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+If this were a fancy story instead of a record of things that came to
+pass last year on the Gaspé Coast, my pen should stop here; but as it
+is, I feel under a plain obligation to pursue the narrative.
+
+I've no doubt that many other towns in the history of the world have
+faced precisely the same problem that Three Rivers faced in the months
+following: namely, what to do with a hero when you have one. Oh, if
+you could only set them up on a pedestal in front of the Town Hall or
+the post-office and _keep_ them there! A statue is so practicable.
+Once in so often, say on anniversaries, you can freshen it up, hang
+it with garlands and bunting, and polish the inscription; and then
+the school-children can come, and somebody can explain to them about
+the statue, and why we should venerate it, and what were the splendid
+qualities of the hero which we are to try to imitate in our own lives. I
+hope that all cities with statues realize their happy condition.
+
+For two or three weeks after the Great Day Three Rivers still kept its
+air of festivity. The triumphal arches could be appreciated even from
+the train, and many travelers, we heard, passing through, leaned out of
+the windows and asked questions of the station agent.
+
+Wherever Captain Joe went, there followed a little knot of children,
+listening open-mouthed for any word that might fall from his lips; and
+you could hear them explaining to one another how it was that a man
+could be torpedoed and escape undamaged. At first no one of lesser
+importance than the Mayor or the Bank Manager presumed to walk with him
+on the street; and he was usually to be seen proceeding in solitary
+dignity to or from the post-office, head a little bowed, one hand
+in the opening of his coat, his step slow and thoughtful, while the
+children pattered along behind.
+
+But the barrier between the Captain and his fellow-townsmen was
+entirely of their own creation, it transpired, for he was naturally a
+sociable man, and now more than ever he craved society, being sure of a
+deferential hearing. Once established again in Boutin's tailor-shop and
+pool-parlor, he seemed disposed never to budge from it; and as often
+as you might pass, day or night, you could hear him holding forth to
+whatever company happened to be present. It was impossible not to gather
+many scraps of his discourse, for his voice was as loud as an orator's.
+
+"And Lady Derntwood--no, it was Lady Genevieve, Lady Derntwood's dairter
+by her first husband and fully as beautiful as her mother, she said to
+me, 'Captain,' she said, 'when I read that about the little girl--For
+the sake of this little child, grant me three minutes!--the tears filled
+my eyes, and I said to my maid, who had brought me my _Times_ on the
+breakfast tray, "Lucienne," I said, "that is a man I should be proud
+to know!"'--and that's a fact sir, as true as I'm settin' here, for
+Lucienne herself told me the same thing. A little beauty, that Lucienne:
+black hair; medium height. We used to talk French together."
+
+Or another time you would hear: "And they said to me, 'Captain,' they
+says, 'and are you satisfied with the gold watch and chain and with the
+little purse we have made up for you here, not pretending, of course,
+for one minute,' they says, 'that 'tis any measure of the services you
+have rendered to us or to your country. We ask you,' they says, 'are you
+satisfied?' And I said, 'I am,' and the fact is, I was, for the watch
+I'd lost was an Ingersoll, and my clothes put together wouldn't have
+brought a hundred dollars."
+
+So the weeks went by; and the triumphal arches, on which the mottoes
+had run a good deal, were taken down and broken up for kindling; and
+still Captain Joe sat and talked all day long and all night long, too,
+if only anybody would listen to him. But listeners were growing scarce.
+His story had been heard too often; and any child in town was able to
+correct him when he slipped up, which often happened. The two hundred
+and fifty dollars was spent long since, and now the local merchants were
+forced to insist once more on strictly cash purchases, and many a day
+the Pettipaw family must have "done meagre," as the French say. Unless
+all signs failed, they would be soon living again at the charge of the
+community. Close your eyes if you like, sooner or later certain grim
+truths will be borne home to you. A leopard cannot change his spots, nor
+a Pettipaw his skin. Before our very eyes the honor and glory of Three
+Rivers, the thing that was to be passed from generation to generation,
+was vanishing: worse than that, we were becoming ridiculous in our own
+eyes, which is harder to bear, even, than being ridiculous in the eyes
+of others.
+
+There was one remedy and only one. It was plain to anybody who
+considered the situation thoughtfully. Captain Joe must be got away. So
+long as your hero is alive, he can only be viewed advantageously at a
+distance. At all events, if he is a Pettipaw.
+
+It was proposed that we should elect him our local member to the
+provincial Parliament. It might be managed. We suggested it to him,
+dwelling upon the opportunities it would afford for the exercise of his
+special talents which, we said, were being thrown away in a little town
+like Three Rivers. He conceded that we spoke the truth; "but," he said,
+after a moment of thoughtful silence, "I am a sailor born and bred, and
+my health would never stand the confinement. Never!"
+
+Next it was found that we could secure for him the position of purser
+on the S. S. _Lady of the Gaspé_. But this offer he refused even more
+emphatically.
+
+"Purser!--Me!" There was evidently nothing more to be said.
+
+Writing to Montreal, Father Quinnan learned that if he so wished Captain
+Pettipaw might have again the command of the little freighter that ran
+to the Labrador; and the proposition was laid before him with sanguine
+expectations. Again he declined.
+
+"The Labrador! Thank you! They wouldn't even know who I was!"
+
+"You could tell them, Captain."
+
+"What good would that do?"
+
+No answer being forthcoming to this demand, still another scheme had to
+be sought. It was the Mayor who finally saved the day for Three Rivers.
+He instigated a Patriotic Fund, to which every man, woman and child
+contributed what he could, and with the proceeds a three-masted schooner
+of two hundred tons burden was acquired (she had been knocked down for a
+song at a sheriff's sale at Campbellton); she was handsomely refitted,
+rechristened, and presented, late in October, to Captain Joe, as a
+tribute of esteem from his native town.
+
+It is not for me to say just how grateful the Captain was, at heart; but
+he accepted the gift with becoming dignity; and before the winter ice
+closed the Gulf (so expeditiously had our plans been carried out) the
+_Gloria_ was ready to sail with a cargo of dry fish for the Barbadoes.
+
+The evening previous to her departure there was a big farewell meeting
+in the Palace of Justice, with speeches by the Mayor and Father Quinnan,
+a piano duet, and an original poem by Eugénie White, beginning:
+
+ _Sail forth, sail far,
+ O Captain bold!_
+
+It was remarkable to see how all the enthusiasm and fervor of an earlier
+celebration in that same hall sprang to life again; yes, and with a
+solemnity added, for this time our hero was going from us. He sat
+there on the platform by the Mayor, handsome, square-shouldered, his
+head a little bowed, a thoughtful smile on his lips under the grizzled
+moustache: he was every inch the noble figure that had stood unflinching
+before the gates of death; and we realized as never before what a debt
+of gratitude we owed him. At last our hero was our hero again.
+
+There is but little more to tell. The next morning, bright and early,
+everybody was at the wharf to watch the _Gloria_ hoist her sails, weigh
+anchor, and tack out into the bay. There were tears in many, many eyes
+besides those of poor Mrs. Pettipaw. The sea had a dark look, off there,
+and one thought of the dangers that awaited any man who sailed out on it
+at this time of the year.
+
+"Heaven send him good passage!" said Mrs. Thibault, wiping her eyes
+vigorously.
+
+"Yes, yes, and bring him safe home again, the brave man!" added Mrs.
+Boutin, earnestly; and all those who heard her breathed a sincere amen
+to that prayer.
+
+It was sincere. We had wanted Captain Joe to go away; we had actually
+forced him to go away; yet no sooner was he gone than we prayed he might
+be brought safe home again. Yes, for when all is said and done, a town
+that has a hero must love him and cherish him and wish him well. Because
+we have ours, Three Rivers will always be a better place to live in and
+to bring up children in: a more inspiring place.
+
+Only, perhaps, if Mrs. Boutin had spoken less impulsively, she would
+have added one or two qualifying clauses to her petition. For instance,
+she might have added: "Only not too soon, and not for too long at once!"
+But for my part, I believe that will be understood by the good angel who
+puts these matters on record, up there.
+
+
+[Illustration: A FISHERMAN'S HOUSE]
+
+
+
+
+FLY, MY HEART!
+
+
+
+
+FLY, MY HEART!
+
+
+They called her Sabine Bob--"S'been Bob"--because her real name was
+Sabine Anne Boudrot; and being a Boudrot in Petit Espoir is like being
+a Smith or a Brown in our part of the world, only ten times more so,
+for in that little fishing-port of Cape Breton, down in the Maritime
+Provinces, practically everybody belongs to the abounding tribe.
+Boudrot, therefore, having ceased to possess more than a modicum of
+specificity (to borrow a term from the logicians), the custom has arisen
+of tagging the various generations and households of Boudrots with the
+familiar name of the father that begat them.
+
+And thus Sabine Anne Boudrot, "old girl" of fifty, was known only as
+Sabine Bob, and Mary Boudrot, her friend, to whom she was dictating
+a love-letter on a certain August evening, was known only as Mary
+Willee--with the accent so strongly on the final syllable that it
+sounded like Marywil-Lee. Sabine Bob was in service; always had
+been. Mary kept house for an invalid father. But there was no social
+distinction between the two.
+
+Mary Willee bent close over the sheet of ruled note-paper and
+laboriously traced out the words, dipping her pen every few seconds with
+professional punctiliousness and screwing up her homely face into all
+sorts of homely expressions: tongue now tight-bitten between her teeth,
+now working restlessly in one cheek, now hard pressed against bulging
+lips. There was agony for both of them in this business of producing a
+love-letter: agony for Mary Willee because she had never fully mastered
+the art of writing, and the shaping just-so of the letters and above
+all the spelling brought out beads of sweat on her forehead; agony for
+Sabine Bob because her heart was so burstingly full and words were so
+powerless to ease that bursting.
+
+Besides, how could she be sure, really, positively _sure_, that Mary
+Willee was recording there on that paper the very words, just those
+very words and none others, which she was confiding to her! Writing was
+a tricky affair. Tricky, like the English language which Sabine Bob
+was using, against her will, for the reason that Mary Willee had never
+learned to write French. French was natural. In French one could say
+what one thought: it felt homelike. In English one had to be stiff.
+
+"Read me what I have said so far," directed Sabine Bob, and she held to
+the seat of her chair with her bony hands and listened.
+
+Mary Willee began, compliantly. "'My dearling Thomas'"--
+
+Sabine Bob interrupted. "The number of the day comes first. Always! I
+brought you the calendar with the day marked on it."
+
+"I wrote it here," said Mary Willee. "You need not be so anxious. I have
+done letters before this."
+
+"Oh, but everything is so important!" ejaculated Sabine, with tragedy in
+her voice. "Now begin again."
+
+"'My dearling Thomas. It is bad times here. So much fogg all ways. i was
+houghing potatoes since 2 days and they looks fine and i am nitting yous
+some socks for when yous come back. i hope you is getting lots of them
+poggiz.'"
+
+Mary Willee hesitated. "I ain't just sure how to spell that word," she
+confessed.
+
+"Pogeys?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"You ought to be. What for did they send you to the convent all those
+four years?"
+
+"It was only three. And the nuns never taught us no such things as
+about pogey-fishing. But no matter. Thomas Ned will know what you mean,
+because that's what he's gone fishing after."
+
+And she continued: "'I miss yous awful some days. when you comes back in
+octobre we's git married sure.'"
+
+She looked up. "That's all you told me so far."
+
+Sabine's face was drawn into furrows of intense thought. "How many more
+lines is there to fill?"
+
+"Seven."
+
+"Well, then, tell him I was looking at the little house what his auntie
+Sophie John left him and thinking how nice it would be when there was
+some front steps and the shimney was fix' and there were curtains to the
+windows in front and some geraniums and I t'ink I will raise some hens
+because they are such good company running in and out all day when he
+will be away pogey-fishing but perhaps when we're married he won't have
+to go off any more because his healt' is put to danger by it and how
+would it do, say, if he got a little horse and truck with the hundred
+and fifty dollars I got saved up and did work by the day for people
+ashore and then"--she paused for breath.
+
+"Is that too much to write?" she remarked with sudden anxiety.
+
+"It is," replied Mary Willee, firmly. "You can say two things, and then
+good-by."
+
+Two things! Sabine Bob stared at the little yellow circle of light
+on the smoky ceiling over the lamp; then out of the window into the
+darkness. Two things more; and there were so many thousand things to
+say! Her mind was a blank.
+
+"I am waiting," Mary reminded her, poising her pen pitilessly.
+
+"Tell him," gasped out Sabine, "tell him--I t'ink I raise some hens."
+
+Letter by letter the pregnant sentence was inscribed, while Sabine
+stared at the pen with paralyzed attention, as if her doom were being
+written in the Book of Judgment; and now the time had come for the
+second thing! Tears of helplessness stood in her eyes.
+
+"Ask him," she blurted out, "would the hundred and fifty dollars what I
+got buy a nice little horse and truck."
+
+Mary Willee paused. She seemed embarrassed.
+
+"Write it," commanded the other.
+
+Mary Willee looked almost frightened. "Must you say that about the
+money?" she asked, weakly.
+
+"Write the words I told you," insisted Sabine. "This is my letter, not
+yours."
+
+Reluctantly the younger woman set down the sentence; then added the
+requisite and necessary "Good-by, from Sabine."
+
+"Is there room for a few kisses?" asked the fiancée.
+
+"One row."
+
+Sabine seized the pen greedily and holding it between clenched fingers
+added a line of significant little lop-sided symbols. Then while her
+secretary prepared the letter for mailing, she wiped her forehead
+with a large blue handkerchief which she refolded and returned to the
+skirt-pocket that contained her rosary and her purse. She put on her
+little old yellow-black hat again and made ready to go.
+
+"Now to the post-office," she said. "How glad Thomas Ned will be when he
+gets it!"
+
+"I am sure he will," said Mary; and if there was any doubt in her tone,
+it was not perceived by her friend, who suddenly flung her arms about
+her in a gush of happy emotion.
+
+"Dieu, que c'est beau, l'amour!" she exclaimed.
+
+The sentiment was not a new one in the world; but it was still a new
+one, and very wonderful, to Sabine Bob: Sabine Bob who had never been
+pretty, even in youthful days, who had never had any nice clothes or
+gone to parties, but had just scrubbed and washed and swept, saved what
+she could, gone to church on Sundays, bought a new pair of shoes every
+other year.
+
+Not that she had ever thought of pitying herself. She was too practical
+for that; and besides, there had always been plenty to be happy about.
+The music in church, for instance, which thrilled and dissolved and
+comforted her; and the pictures there, which she loved to gaze at,
+especially the one of Our Lady above the altar.
+
+And then there were children! No one need be very unhappy, it seemed
+to Sabine Bob, in a world where there were children. She never went
+out without first putting a few little hard, colored candies in her
+pocket to dispense along the street, over gates and on front steps.
+The tinier the children were the more she loved them. Every spring in
+Petit Espoir there was a fresh crop of the very tiniest of all; and
+towards these--little pink bundles of softness and helplessness--she
+felt something of the adoration which those old Wise Men felt who had
+followed the star. If she had had spices and frankincense, Sabine Bob
+would have offered it, on her knees. But in lieu of that, she brought
+little knitted sacques and blankets and hoods.
+
+Such had been Sabine Bob's past; and that a day was to come in her
+life when a handsome young man should say sweet, loving things to
+her, present her with perfumery, bottle on bottle, ask her to be his
+wife, bless you, she would have been the first to scout the ridiculous
+idea--till six months ago! Thomas Ned was a small man, about forty,
+squarely built, with pink cheeks, long lashes, luxuriant moustache; a
+pretty man; a man who cut quite a figure amongst the girls and (many
+declared) could have had his pick of them. Why, why, had he chosen
+Sabine Bob? When she considered the question thoughtfully, she found
+answers enough, for she was not a girl who underestimated her own worth.
+
+"Thomas is sensible," she explained to Mary Willee. "He knows better
+than to take up with one of those weak, sickly young things that have
+nothing but a pretty face and stylish clothes to recommend them. I can
+work; I can save; I can make his life easy. He knows he will be well
+looked out for."
+
+If Mary Willee could have revised this explanation, she refrained from
+doing so. It would have taken courage to do so at that moment, for
+Sabine Bob was so happy! It was almost comical for any one to be so
+happy as that! Sabine realized it and laughed at herself and was happier
+still. Morning, noon, and night, during those first mad, marvelous days
+after she had promised to become Madame Thomas Ned, she was singing a
+bit of gay nonsense she had known from childhood:
+
+ _Vive la Canadienne,
+ Vole, vole, vole, mon coeur!_
+
+"Fly, fly, oh fly, my heart," trolled Sabine Bob; and every evening,
+until the time came when he must depart for the pogey-fishing, in May,
+he had come and sat with her in the kitchen; he would smoke; she would
+knit away at a pair of mittens for him (oh, such small hands as that
+Thomas had!), and about ten o'clock she would fetch a glass of blueberry
+wine and some currant cookies. How nice it was to be doing such things
+for some one--of one's own!
+
+She hovered over him like a ministering spirit, beaming and tender. This
+was what she had starved for all her life without knowing it: to serve
+some one of her own! Not for wages now; for love! She flung herself on
+the altar of Thomas and burned there with a clear ecstatic flame.
+
+And now that he had been away four months, pogey-fishing, she would
+sometimes console herself by getting out the five picture-postcards he
+had sent her and muse upon the scenes of affection depicted there and
+pick out, word by word, the brief messages he had written. With Mary
+Willee's assistance she had memorized them; and they were words of
+sempiternal devotion; and there were little round love-knows-what's in
+plenty; and on one card he called her his little wife; and that was the
+one she prized the most. Wife! Sabine Bob!
+
+That no card arrived in answer to her August letter did not surprise
+her, for the pogeymen often did not put into port for weeks at a time;
+and anyhow the day was not far away, now, when the season would be over
+and those who had gone up from Petit Espoir would come down again.
+
+So the weeks slipped by. October came. The pogey-fishermen returned.
+
+She waited for Thomas Ned in the kitchen that first evening, palpitating
+with expectancy; and he did not come. During the sleepless night that
+followed she conjured up excuses for him. He had had one of his attacks
+of rheumatism. His mother had been ill and had required his presence
+at home. The next evening he would come, oh certainly, and explain
+everything. Attired in her best, she sat and waited a second evening;
+then a third. There was no sign of him.
+
+From Mary Willie she learned that Thomas had arrived with the others;
+that he appeared in perfect health, never handsomer; also that his
+mother was well.
+
+"Oh, it cannot be that anything has happened," cried Sabine, with
+choking tears. "Surely it will all be explained soon!" But there was a
+tightening about her heart, a black premonition of ill to come.
+
+She continued to wait. She was on the watch for him day and night. At
+least he would pass on the street, and she could waylay him! Every time
+she heard footsteps or voices she flew to the kitchen door. When her
+work was done, she would hurry out to the barn, where there was a little
+window commanding a good view of the harbor-front; and there she would
+sit, muffled in a shawl, for hours, hunger gnawing at her heart, her
+eyes dry and staring, until her teeth began to chatter with cold and
+nervousness.
+
+He never passed. Some one met him taking the back road into the village.
+He was purposely avoiding her.
+
+When Sabine Bob realized that she was deserted by the man she loved,
+thrown aside without a word, she suffered unspeakably; but her native
+good sense saved her from making any exhibition of her grief. She
+knew better than to make a fool of herself. If there was one thing
+she dreaded worse than death it was being laughed at. She was a
+self-respecting girl; she had her pride. And no one witnessed the
+spasms, the cyclones, which sometimes seized her in the seclusion of
+her little attic bedroom. These were not the picturesque, grandiose
+sufferings of high tragedy; there was small resemblance between Sabine
+Bob and Carthaginian Dido; Sabine's agonies were stark and cruel and
+ugly, unsoftened by poetry. But she kept them to herself.
+
+She did her work as before. But she did not sing; and perhaps she nicked
+more dishes than usual, for her hands trembled a good deal. But she kept
+her lips tight shut. And she never went out on the street if she could
+help it.
+
+So a month passed. Two months. And then one evening Mary Willee came
+running in breathless with news for her: news that made her skin prickle
+and her blood, after one dizzy, faint moment, drum hotly in her temples.
+
+Thomas Ned was paying attentions to Tina Lejeune, that blonde young girl
+from the Ponds. He had taken her to a dance. He had bought a scarf for
+her and a bottle of perfumery. He had taken her to drive. They had been
+seen walking together several times in the dark on the upper street.
+
+"Does he say he is going to marry her?" asked Sabine Bob, with dry lips.
+
+"I do not know that. _She_ says so. She says they are to be married
+soon."
+
+"Does she know about--about me?"
+
+"Yes, but she says--" Mary Willee stopped short in embarrassment.
+
+"Says what! Tell me! Tell me at once!" commanded Sabine, fiercely. "What
+does she say!"
+
+"She says Thomas thought you had a lot of money. He was deceived, he
+said."
+
+Sabine broke out in a passion of indignation. "I never deceived him:
+never, never! I never once said anything about money. He never asked me
+anything. It's a lie. I tell you, it's a lie!"
+
+Mary quailed visibly, unable to disguise a tell-tale look of guilt.
+
+"What is the matter with you, Mary Willee!" cried Sabine. "You are
+hiding something. You know something you have not told me!"
+
+Mary replied, in a very frightened voice: "Once he asked me if you had
+any money. I did not think he was really in earnest, so I told him you
+had saved a thousand dollars. Oh, I didn't mean any harm. I only said it
+to be agreeable. And later I was afraid to tell the truth, for it was
+only two or three days later he asked you to marry him, and you were so
+happy."
+
+Mary Willee hid her face in her hands and waited for the storm to break
+upon her; but it did not break. The room was very quiet. At last she
+heard Sabine moving about, and she looked up again. Sabine was putting
+on her hat and coat.
+
+"Sabine! Sabine!" she gasped. "What are you doing!"
+
+Sabine Bob turned quietly and stood for a moment gazing at her without a
+word. Then she said:
+
+"Mary Willee, you are a bad girl and I can never forgive you; but if
+Tina Lejeune thinks she is going to marry Thomas Ned, she will find out
+that she is mistaken. That is a thing that will not happen."
+
+Mary recoiled, terrified, at the pitiless, menacing smile on the other
+woman's face; but before she could say anything Sabine Bob had stalked
+out of the house into the darkness.
+
+She climbed the hill to the back road, stumbling often, blinded more by
+her own fierce emotions than by the winter night; she fought her way
+westward against the bitter wind that was rising; then turned off by the
+Old French Road, as it was called, toward the Ponds.
+
+It was ten o'clock at night; stars, but no moon. She saw a shadow
+approaching in the darkness from the opposite direction: it was a man,
+short and squarely-built. With a sickening weakness she sank down
+against the wattle fence at the side of the road. He passed her, so
+close that she could have reached out and touched him. But he had not
+seen. She got up and hurried on.
+
+By and by she saw ahead of her the little black bulk of a house from the
+tiny window of which issued a yellow glow. The house stood directly on
+the road. She went quietly to the window and looked in. A young girl
+was sitting by a bare table, her head supported by the palms of her
+hands. Sabine knew the weak white face and hated it. She made her way to
+the door and knocked. There was a smothered, startled exclamation; then
+the rustle of some one moving.
+
+"Who is it?" inquired a timid voice.
+
+"Let me in and I will tell you," responded the woman outside, in a voice
+the more menacing because of its control.
+
+"My mother is not at home to-night. She is over at the widow Babinot's.
+If you go over there you will find her."
+
+"It is you I wish to see. Open the door!"
+
+There was no answer. Sabine turned the knob and entered. At the sight of
+her the blonde girl gave a cry of dismay and retreated behind the table,
+trembling.
+
+"What do you want?" she gasped.
+
+"We have an account to settle together, you and me," said Sabine, with
+something like a laugh.
+
+"Account?" said the other, bracing herself, but scarcely able to
+articulate. "What account? I have not done you any harm. Before God I
+have not done you any harm."
+
+Sabine laughed mockingly. "So you think there is no harm in taking away
+from me the man I was going to marry?"
+
+"I did not take him away," said Tina, faintly.
+
+"You did! You did take him away!" cried Sabine, fiercely. "He was mine;
+it was last March he promised to marry me; any one can tell you that. I
+have witnesses. I have letters. Everything I tell you can be proved. He
+belongs to me just as much as if we had been before a priest already;
+and if you think you can take him away from me, you will find out you
+are wrong!"
+
+For a few seconds the paralyzed girl before her could not utter a word;
+then she stammered out:
+
+"He told me you had deceived him about money."
+
+Sabine gave an inarticulate cry of rage, like a wild beast at bay. "It's
+a lie! A lie! I never deceived him. It's he who deceived me; but let me
+tell you this: when a woman like me promises to marry a man, she keeps
+her word. Do you understand? She keeps her word! I am going to marry
+Thomas Ned. He cannot escape me. I will go to the priest. I will go to
+the lawyer. There are plenty of ways."
+
+The blonde girl sank trembling into a chair.
+
+"He cannot marry you," she gasped. "He cannot. He cannot."
+
+"No?" cried Sabine, with ringing mockery. "And why not?"
+
+Tina's lips moved inaudibly. She moistened them with her tongue and made
+a second attempt.
+
+"Because--" she breathed.
+
+"Yes? Yes?"
+
+"Because--he must marry me." She buried her head in her hands and sobbed.
+
+Sabine Bob strode to the cringing girl, seized her by the shoulders,
+forcing her up roughly against the back of the chair, and broke out with
+a ruthless laugh:
+
+"Must! Must! You don't say so! And why, tell me, must he marry you?"
+
+The white girl raised her eyes for one instant to the other's face; and
+there was a look in them of mute pleading and confession, a look that
+was like a death-cry for pity. The look shot through Sabine's turgid
+consciousness like a white-hot dagger. She staggered back as if mortally
+stricken, supporting herself against a tall cupboard, staring at the
+girl, whose head had now sunk to the table again and whose body was
+shaking with spasmodic sobs. It was one of the moments when destinies
+are written.
+
+At such moments we act from something deeper, more elemental, than will.
+The best or the worst in us leaps out--or perhaps neither one nor the
+other but merely that thing in us that is most essentially ourselves.
+
+Sabine stared at the poor girl whose terrifying, wonderful secret had
+just been revealed to her, and she felt through all her being a sense of
+shattering and disintegration; and suddenly she was there, beside Tina,
+on the arm of her chair; and she brought the girl's head over against
+her bosom and held her very tight in her eager old arms, patting her
+shoulders and stroking her soft hair, while the tears rained down her
+cheeks and she murmured, soothingly:
+
+"Pauvre petite!" and again and again, "Pauvre petite! Ma pauvre petite!"
+
+Tina abandoned herself utterly to the other's impassioned tenderness;
+and for a long time the two sat there, tightly clasped, silent,
+understanding.
+
+Sabine Bob had no word of blame for the unhappy girl. Vaguely she knew
+that she ought to blame her; very vaguely she remembered that girls
+like this were bad girls; but that did not seem to make any difference.
+Instead of indignation she felt something very like humility and
+reverence.
+
+"Yes, he must marry you," she said at last, very simply and gently.
+
+"Oh, if he only would!" sobbed Tina.
+
+"What!" cried Sabine, in amazement.
+
+"He says such cruel things to me," confessed the girl. "He knows, oh, he
+does know I never loved any man but himself; never, never any other man,
+nor ever will!"
+
+Sabine's eyes opened upon new vistas of man's perfidiousness. And yet,
+in spite of everything, how one could love them! She felt an immense
+compassion toward this poor girl who had loved not wisely but so
+all-givingly.
+
+"I will go to him," she said, resolutely. "I will tell him he must marry
+you; and I will say that if he does not, I will tell every person in
+Petit Espoir what a wicked thing he has done."
+
+Tina leaped to her feet in terror. "Oh, no, no!" she pleaded. "No one
+must know."
+
+Sabine understood. Not the present only, but the future must be thought
+of.
+
+"And if he was forced like that to marry me, he would hate me," pursued
+the girl, who saw things with the pitiless clear foresight that
+desperation gives. "He must marry me from his own choice. Oh, if I could
+only make him choose; but to-night he said NO! and went away, very
+angry. I'm afraid he will never come back again."
+
+"Yes, he will," said Sabine Bob. There was a grim smile on her lips; and
+she squared her shoulders as if to give herself courage for some dreaded
+ordeal. "There is a way."
+
+But to the startled, eager question in the other's eyes, she vouchsafed
+no answer. She came to her and put her hands firmly on her shoulders.
+
+"Tina, will you promise not to believe anything you hear them say about
+me? Will you promise to keep on loving me just the same?"
+
+The girl clung to her. "Oh, yes, yes," she promised. "Always!" and then,
+in a shy whisper, she added: "And some day--I will not be the only one
+to love you."
+
+Sabine Bob gave her a quick, almost violent kiss, and went out, not
+stopping for even a word of good-night. And the next day she put her
+plan into execution. There was a perfectly relentless logic about Sabine
+Bob. She saw a thing to do; and she went and did it.
+
+As soon as her dinner dishes were washed and put away, she donned
+her old brown coat and the little yellow-black hat that had served
+her winter and summer from time immemorial, and proceeded to make
+a dozen calls on her friends, up and down the street. Wherever she
+went she talked, volubly, feverishly. She railed; she threatened; she
+vociferated; and the object of her vociferations was Thomas Ned. He had
+promised to marry her; and he had deserted her; and she would have the
+law on him! Marry her he must, now, whether he would or no.
+
+"See that word?" she demanded, displaying her sheaf of compromising
+post-cards. "That word is _wife_; and the man who calls me wife must
+stick to it. I am not a woman to be made a fool of!"
+
+So she stormed away, from house to house. Her friends tried to pacify
+her; but the more they tried, the more venom she put into her threats.
+And soon the news spread through the whole town. Nothing else was talked
+of.
+
+"She's crazy," people said. "But she can make trouble for him, if she
+wants to, no doubt about it."
+
+Sabine laughed grimly to herself. She was going to succeed. The scheme
+would work. She knew the kind of man Thomas Ned was: full of shifts. He
+had proved that already. He would never face a thing squarely. He would
+look for a way out.
+
+She was right. It was only ten days later, at high mass, that the
+success of her strategy was tangibly proved. At the usual point in
+the service for such announcements, just before the sermon, Father
+Beauclerc, standing in the pulpit, called the banns for Thomas Boudrot,
+of Petit Espoir, North, and Tina Mélanie Brigitte Lejeune, of the Ponds.
+
+The announcement caused a sensation. An audible murmur of amazement, not
+to say consternation, went up from all quarters of the edifice, floor
+and galleries; even the altar boys exchanged whispers with one another;
+and there was a great stretching of necks in the direction of Sabine
+Bob, who sat there in her uncushioned pew, very straight and very red,
+with set lips, while her rough old fingers played nervously with the
+rosary in her lap.
+
+This was her victory! She had never felt the ugliness of her fifty years
+so cruelly before. A bony, ridiculous old maid, making a fool of herself
+in public! That was the sum of it! And all her life she had been so
+careful, so jealously careful, not to do anything that might cause her
+to be laughed at!
+
+She could hear some of the whispers that were being exchanged in
+neighboring pews. "Poor old thing!" people were saying. "But how could
+she expect anybody would want to marry her at her age!"
+
+A trembling like ague seized her, and she felt suddenly very cold and
+very very weak. She shut her eyes, for things were beginning to flicker
+and whirl; and when she opened them again, they were caught and held by
+the picture above the high altar.
+
+It was the Mother. The Mother and the Little One. He lay in her arms and
+smiled.
+
+The tears gushed up in Sabine Bob's eyes, and a smile of wonderful
+tenderness and peace broke over the harsh lines of her face and
+transfigured it, just for one instant. It was a victory; it _was_ a
+victory; though nobody knew it but herself; just herself, and one
+other, and--perhaps--
+
+Sabine still gazed at the picture, poor old Sabine Bob in her brown
+coat and faded little yellow-black hat: and the Eternal Mother returned
+the gaze of the Eternal Mother, smiling; and it didn't matter very much
+after that--how could it?--what people might think or say in Petit
+Espoir.
+
+Once more, that afternoon, as she slashed the suds over the dishes,
+Sabine Bob was singing. You could hear her way down there on the street,
+so buoyant and so merry was her voice:
+
+ _Long live the Canadian maid;
+ Fly, fly, oh fly, my heart!_
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Cape Breton Tales, by Harry James Smith
+
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Cape Breton Tales, by Harry James Smith
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Cape Breton Tales
+
+Author: Harry James Smith
+
+Contributor: Edith Smith
+
+Illustrator: Oliver M. Wiard
+
+Release Date: November 22, 2013 [EBook #44257]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CAPE BRETON TALES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Daniel Meade, sp1nd and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<img src="images/front_cover.jpg" width="400" height="600" alt="" />
+</div>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h1>CAPE BRETON TALES</h1>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 411px;">
+<a name="INNER_HARBOR" id="INNER_HARBOR"></a>
+<img src="images/inner_harbor.jpg" width="411" height="600" alt="" />
+<div class="caption center">THE INNER HARBOR</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p class="tptitle center">CAPE BRETON TALES</p>
+
+<p class="center">BY</p>
+
+<p class="tptitle2 center">HARRY JAMES SMITH</p>
+
+<p class="tptitle3 center">AUTHOR OF</p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Amédée's Son, Enchanted Ground, Mrs. Bumpstead Leigh,
+Tailor Made Man, etc.</i></p>
+
+<p class="tptitle4 center">WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY</p>
+
+<p class="center">OLIVER M. WIARD</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter vspace" style="width: 106px;">
+<img src="images/title_page.png" width="106" height="80" alt="" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="tptitle5 center"><i>The</i> ATLANTIC MONTHLY PRESS</p>
+
+<p class="center">BOSTON</p>
+<hr class="tb" />
+<p class="center">Copyright 1920</p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Printed in the United States of America</i>
+</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS</a></h2>
+
+<table summary="Contents">
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">On the French Shore of Cape Breton (1908)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><span><a href="#ON_THE_FRENCH_SHORE_OF">1</a></span></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">La Rose Witnesseth (1908)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#LA_ROSE_WITNESSETH">17</a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcapall">&emsp;Of the Bucherons</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#BUCHERONS">19</a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcapall">&emsp;Of La Belle Mélanie</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#MELANIE">32</a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcapall">&emsp;Of Siméon's Son</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#SIMEON">44</a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">At a Breton Calvaire (1903)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#AT_A_BRETON_CALVAIRE">57</a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Privilege (1910)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#THE_PRIVILEGE">61</a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Their True Love (1910)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#THEIR_TRUE_LOVE">77</a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Garlands for Pettipaw (1915)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#GARLANDS_FOR_PETTIPAW">99</a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fly, My Heart (1915)</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#FLY_MY_HEART">119</a></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="ILLUSTRATIONS" id="ILLUSTRATIONS">ILLUSTRATIONS</a></h2>
+
+<p class="center">By OLIVER M. WIARD</p>
+
+<table summary="Illustrations">
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Inner Harbor</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#INNER_HARBOR">Frontispiece</a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Arichat</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#ARICHAT">17</a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Calvaire</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#CALVAIRE">56</a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fougère's Cove</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#FOUGERE">76</a></td></tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Fisherman's House</span></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#HOUSE">118</a></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+
+<p><i>"On the French Shore of Cape Breton" and "The
+Privilege" were first published in The Atlantic Monthly,
+while "La Rose Witnesseth of La Belle Mélanie"
+is reprinted from "Amédée's Son" (Chapters VIII and
+IX) with the kind permission of the publishers, Houghton
+Mifflin Company.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>"At a Breton Calvaire" was first published in The
+Williams Literary Monthly during undergraduate
+days, and was rewritten several times during the next
+few years. The final form is the one used here, except
+for the last stanza, which is a combination of the two
+versions now extant.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>The illustrations are from sketches made during Oliver
+Wiard's visits in Arichat. It is an especial pleasure
+to include them, not only because of their fidelity and
+beauty, but also because of my brother's enthusiastic
+interest and delight in them.</i></p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<span class="smcap">Edith Smith.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="ON_THE_FRENCH_SHORE_OF" id="ON_THE_FRENCH_SHORE_OF">ON THE FRENCH SHORE OF
+CAPE BRETON</a></h2>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="ph3">ON THE FRENCH SHORE OF
+CAPE BRETON</p>
+
+
+<div class="figleft dropcap" style="width: 79px;">
+<img src="images/i_015.png" width="79" height="81" alt="" />
+<div class="caption"></div>
+</div>
+<p><span class="dropcap">S</span>ummer comes late along the Cape Breton
+shore; and even while it stays there is something
+a little diffident and ticklish about it,
+as if each clear warm day might perhaps be
+the last. Though by early June the fields are in their
+first emerald, there are no flowers yet. The little convent
+girls who carry the banners at the head of the
+Corpus Christi procession at Arichat wear wreaths of
+artificial lilies of the valley and marguerites over their
+white veils, and often enough their teeth chatter with
+cold before the completion of the long march&mdash;out
+from the church portals westward by the populous
+street, then up through the steep open fields to the old
+Calvary on top of the hill, then back to the church along
+the grass-grown upper road, far above the roofs, in
+full view of the wide bay.</p>
+
+<p>Despite some discomforts, the procession is a very
+great event; every house along the route is decked out
+with bunting or flags or a bright home-made carpet,
+hung from a window. Pots of tall geraniums in scarlet
+bloom have been set out on the steps; and numbers
+of little evergreen trees, or birches newly in leaf, have
+been brought in from the country and bound to the
+fences. Along the roadside are gathered all the Acadians
+from the neighboring parishes, devoutly gay,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span>
+enchanted with the pious spectacle. The choir, following
+after the richly canopied Sacrament and swinging
+censers, are chanting psalms of benediction and thanksgiving;
+banners and flags and veils flutter in the wind;
+the harbor, ice-bound so many months, is flecked with
+dancing white-caps and purple shadows: surely summer
+cannot be far off.</p>
+
+<p>"When once the ice has done passing <i>down there</i>,"
+they say&mdash;"which may happen any time now&mdash;you
+will see! Perhaps all in a day the change will come.
+The fog that creeps in so cold at night&mdash;it will all be
+sucked up; the sky will be clear as glass down to the
+very edge of the water. Ah, the fine season it will
+be!"</p>
+
+<p>That is the way summer arrives on the Acadian
+shore: everything bursting pell-mell into bloom; daisies
+and buttercups and August flowers rioting in the
+fields, lilacs and roses shedding their fragrance in sheltered
+gardens; and over all the world a drench of
+unspeakable sunlight.</p>
+
+<p>You could never forget your first sight of Arichat if
+you entered its narrow harbor at this divine moment.
+Steep, low hills, destitute of trees, set a singularly definite
+sky-line just behind; and the town runs&mdash;dawdles,
+rather&mdash;in a thin, wavering band for some miles sheer
+on the edge of the water. Eight or ten wharves, some
+of them fallen into dilapidation, jut out at intervals
+from clumps of weatherbeaten storehouses; and a few
+small vessels, it may be, are lying up alongside or
+anchored idly off shore. Only the occasional sound of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>
+a creaking block or of a wagon rattling by on the hard
+roadway breaks the silence.</p>
+
+<p>Along the street the houses elbow one another in
+neighborly groups, or straggle out in single file, separated
+by bits of declivitous white-fenced yard; and to
+the westward, a little distance up the hill, sits the
+square church, far outvying every other edifice in size
+and dignity, glistening white, with a tall bronze Virgin
+on the peak of the roof&mdash;Our Lady of the Assumption,
+the special patron of the Acadians.</p>
+
+<p>But what impresses you above all is the incredible
+vividness of color in this landscape: the dazzling gold-green
+of the fields, heightened here and there by luminous
+patches of foam-white where the daisies are in
+full carnival, or subdued to duller tones where, on uncultivated
+ground, moss-hummocks and patches of rock
+break through the investiture of grass. The sky has
+so much room here too: the whole world seems to be
+adrift in azure; the thin strip of land hangs poised
+between, claimed equally by firmament and the waters
+under it.</p>
+
+<p>In the old days, they tell us, Arichat was a very different
+place from now. Famous among the seaports
+of the Dominion, it saw a continual coming and going
+of brigs and ships and barquentines in the South American
+fish trade.</p>
+
+<p>"But if you had known it then!" they say. "The
+wharves were as thick all the length of the harbor as
+the teeth of a comb; and in winter, when the vessels
+were laid up&mdash;eh, mon Dieu! you would have called it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>
+a forest, for all the masts and spars you saw there.
+No indeed, it was not dreamed of in those days that
+Arichat would ever come to this!"</p>
+
+<p>So passes the world's glory! An air of tender,
+almost jealous reminiscence hangs about the town; and
+in its gentle decline into obscurity it has kept a sort of
+dignity, a self-possession, a certain look of wisdom and
+experience, which in a sense make it proof against all
+arrows of outrageous Fortune.</p>
+
+<p>Back from the other shore of the harbor, jutting out
+for some miles into Chedabucto Bay, lies the Cape.
+You get a view of it if you climb to the crest of the
+hill&mdash;a broad reach of barrens, fretted all day by the
+sea. Out there it is what the Acadians call a bad
+country. About the sluice-like coves that have been
+eaten into its rocky shore are scrambling groups of
+fishermen's houses; but aside from these and the lighthouse
+on the spit of rocks to southward, the region is
+uninhabited&mdash;a waste of rock and swamp-alder and
+scrub-balsam, across which a single thread of a road
+takes its circuitous way, dipping over steep low hills,
+turning out for gnarls of rock and patches of gleaming
+marsh, losing itself amid dense thickets of alder, then
+emerging upon some bare hilltop, where the whole
+measureless sweep of sea and sky fills the vision.</p>
+
+<p>When the dusk begins to fall of an autumn afternoon&mdash;between
+dog and wolf, as the saying goes&mdash;you
+could almost believe in the strange noises&mdash;the
+rumblings, clankings, shrill voices&mdash;that are to be
+heard above the dull roar of the sea by belated passers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>
+on the barrens. Some people have seen death-fires
+too, and a headless creature, much like a horse, galloping
+through the darkness; and over there at Fougère's
+Cove, the most remote settlement of the Cape, there
+were knockings at doors through all one winter from
+hands not human. The Fougères&mdash;they were mostly
+of one tribe there&mdash;were driven to desperation; they
+consulted a priest; they protected themselves with
+blessed images, with prayers and holy water; and no
+harm came to them, though poor Marcelle, who was a
+<i>jeune fille</i> of marriageable age, was prostrated for a
+year with the fright of it.</p>
+
+<p>This barren territory, where nothing grows above
+the height of a man's shoulder, still goes by the name
+of "the woods"&mdash;<i>les bois</i>&mdash;among the Acadians.
+"Once the forest was magnificent here," they tell you&mdash;"trees
+as tall as the church tower; but the great fire
+swept it all away; and never has there been a good
+growth since. For one thing, you see, we must get our
+firewood from it somehow."</p>
+
+<p>This fact accounts for a curious look in the ubiquitous
+stubby evergreens: their lower branches spread
+flat and wide close on the ground,&mdash;that is where the
+snow in winter protects them,&mdash;and above reaches a
+thin, spire-like stem, trimmed close, except for new
+growth at the top, of all its branches. It gives suggestion
+of a harsh, misshapen, all but defeated existence;
+the adverse forces are so tyrannical out here on
+the Cape, the material of life so sparse.</p>
+
+<p>I remember once meeting a little funeral train<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
+crossing the barrens. They were bearing the body of
+a young girl, Anna Béjean, to its last rest, five miles
+away by the road, in the yard of the parish church
+amongst the wooden crosses. The long box of pine
+lay on the bottom of a country wagon, and a wreath
+of artificial flowers and another of home-dyed immortelles
+were fastened to the cover. A young fisherman,
+sunburned and muscular, was leading the horse along
+the rough road, and behind followed three or four
+carts, carrying persons in black, all of middle age or
+beyond, and silent.</p>
+
+<p>Yet in the full tide of summer the barrens have a
+beauty in which this characteristic melancholy is only
+a persistent undertone. Then the marshes flush rose-pink
+with lovely multitudes of calopogons that cluster
+like poising butterflies amongst the dark grasses; here
+too the canary-yellow bladderwort flecks the black
+pools, and the red, leathery pitcher-plant springs in
+sturdy clumps from the moss-hummocks. And the
+wealth of color over all the country!&mdash;gray rock
+touched into life with sky-reflections; rusty green of
+alder thickets, glistening silver-green of balsam and
+juniper; and to the sky-line, wherever it can keep its
+hold, the thin, variegated carpet of close-cropped
+grass, where creeping berries of many kinds grow in
+profusion. Flocks of sheep scamper untended over the
+barrens all day, and groups of horses, turned out to
+shift for themselves while the fishing season keeps their
+owners occupied, look for a moment, nose in the air,
+at the passer, kick up their heels, and race off.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>As you turn back again toward Arichat you catch a
+glimpse of its glistening white church, miles distant in
+reality, but looking curiously near, across a landscape
+where none of the familiar standards of measure
+exist. You lose it on the next decline; then it flashes
+in sight again, and the blue, sun-burnished expanse of
+water between. It occurs to you that the whole life of
+of the country finds its focus there: christenings and
+first communions, marriages and burials&mdash;how wonderfully
+the church holds them all in her keeping; how
+she sends out her comfort and her exhortation, her
+reproach and her eternal hope across even this bad
+country, where the circumstances of human life are so
+ungracious.</p>
+
+<p>But it is on a Sunday morning, when, in response to
+the quavering summons of the chapel bell, the whole
+countryside gives up its population, that you get the
+clearest notion of what religion means in the life of
+the Acadians. From the doorway of our house, which
+was close to the road at the upper end of the harbor,
+we could see the whole church-going procession from
+the outlying districts. The passing would be almost
+unbroken from eight o'clock on for more than an hour
+and a half: a varied, vivacious, friendly human stream.
+They came in hundreds from the scattered villages and
+hamlets of the parish&mdash;from Petit de Grat and Little
+Anse and Pig Cove and Gros Nez and Point Rouge
+and Cap au Guet, eight or nine miles often enough.</p>
+
+<p>First, those who went afoot and must allow plenty
+of time on account of age: bent old fishermen, whose<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>
+yellowed and shiny coats had been made for more
+robust shoulders; old women, invariably in short black
+capes, and black bonnets tied tight under the chin, and
+in their hands a rosary and perhaps a thumb-worn missal.
+Then troops of children, much <i>endimanché</i>,&mdash;one
+would like to say "Sundayfied,"&mdash;trotting along
+noisily, stopping to examine every object of interest by
+the way, extracting all the excitement possible out of
+the weekly pilgrimage.</p>
+
+<p>A little later the procession became more general:
+young and old and middle-aged together. In Sunday
+boots that creaked loudly passed numbers of men and
+boys, sometimes five or six abreast, reaching from side
+to side of the street, sometimes singly attendant upon
+a conscious young person of the other sex. The wagons
+are beginning to appear now, scattering the pedestrians
+right and left as they rattle by, bearing whole
+families packed in little space; and away across the
+harbor, you see a small fleet of brown sails putting off
+from the Cape for the nearer shore.</p>
+
+<p>Outside the church, in the open space before the
+steps, is gathered a constantly growing multitude, a
+dense, restless swarm of humanity, full of gossip and
+prognostic, until suddenly the bell stops its clangor
+overhead; then there is a surging up the steps and
+through the wide doors of the sanctuary; and outside
+all is quiet once more.</p>
+
+<p>The Acadians do not appear greatly to relish the
+more solemn things of religion. They like better a
+religion demurely gay, pervaded by light and color.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Elle est très chic, notre petite église, n'est-ce pas?"
+was a comment made by a pious soul of my acquaintance,
+eager to uphold the honor of her parish.</p>
+
+<p>Proper, mild-featured saints and smiling Virgins in
+painted robes and gilt haloes abound in the Acadian
+churches; on the altars are lavish decorations of artificial
+flowers&mdash;silver lilies, paper roses, red and purple
+immortelles; and the ceilings and pillars and wall-spaces
+are often done in blue and pink, with gold stars;
+such a style, one imagines, as might appeal to our modern
+St. Valentine. The piety that expresses itself in
+this inoffensive gayety of embellishment is more akin
+to that which moves universal humanity to don its
+finery o' Sundays,&mdash;to the greater glory of God,&mdash;than
+to the sombre, death-remembering zeal of some
+other communities. A kind religion this, one not without
+its coquetries, gracious, tactful, irresistible, interweaving
+itself throughout the very texture of the common
+life.</p>
+
+<p>Last summer, out at Petit de Grat, three miles from
+Arichat, where the people have just built a little church
+of their own, they held a "Grand Picnic and Ball" for
+the raising of funds with which to erect a glebe house.
+The priest authorized the affair, but stipulated that
+sunset should end each day's festivities, so that all
+decencies might be respected. This parish picnic started
+on a Monday and continued daily for the rest of the
+week&mdash;that is to say, until all that there was to sell
+was sold, and until all the youth of the vicinity had
+danced their legs to exhaustion.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>An unoccupied shop was given over to the sale of
+cakes, tartines, doughnuts, imported fruits, syrup
+drinks (unauthorized beverages being obtainable elsewhere),
+to the vending of chances on wheels of fortune,
+target-shooting, dice-throwing, hooked rugs,
+shawls, couvertures, knitted hoods, and the like; and
+above all the hubbub and excitement twanged the ceaseless,
+inevitable voice of a graphophone, reviving long-forgotten
+rag-time.</p>
+
+<p>Outside, most conspicuous on the treeless slope of
+hill, was a "pavilion" of boards, bunting-decked, on
+which, from morn till eve, rained the incessant clump-clump
+of happy feet. For music there was a succession
+of performers and of instruments: a mouth-organ,
+a fiddle, a concertina, each lending its particular quality
+of gayety to the dance; the mouth-organ, shrill,
+extravagant, whimsical, failing in richness; the concertina,
+rich, noisy, impetuous, failing in fine shades; the
+fiddle, wheedling, provocative, but a little thin. And
+besides&mdash;the fiddle is not what it used to be in the
+hands of old Fortune.</p>
+
+<p>Fortune died a year ago, and he was never appreciated
+till death snatched him from us: the skinniest,
+most ramshackle of mankind, tall, loose-jointed, shuffling
+in gait; at all other times than those that called
+his art into play, a shiftless, hang-dog sort of personage,
+who would always be begging a coat of you, or
+asking the gift of ten cents to buy him some tobacco.
+But at a dance he was a despot unchallenged. Only to
+hear him jig off the Irish Washerwoman was to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>
+acknowledge his preëminence. His bleary eyes and
+tobacco-stained lips took on a radiance, his body rocked
+to and fro, vibrated to the devil-may-care rhythm of
+the thing, while his left foot emphatically rapped out
+the measure.</p>
+
+<p>Until another genius shall be raised up amongst us,
+Fortune's name will be held in cherished memory. For
+that matter, it is not likely to die out, since, on the day
+of his death, the old reprobate was married to the
+mother of his seven children&mdash;baptized, married,
+administered, and shuffled off in a day.</p>
+
+<p>It had never occurred to any of us, somehow, that
+Fortune might be as transitory and impermanent as
+his patron goddess herself. We had always accepted
+him as a sort of ageless thing, a living symbol, a peripatetic
+mortal, coming out of Petit de Grat, and going
+about, tobacco in cheek, fiddle under arm, as irresponsible
+as mirth itself among the sons of men. God rest
+him! Another landmark gone.</p>
+
+<p>And old Maximen Forêt, too, from whom one used
+to take weather-wisdom every day&mdash;his bench out
+there in the sun is empty. Maximen's shop was just
+across the street from our house&mdash;a long, darkish,
+tunnel-like place under a steep roof. Tinware of all
+descriptions hung in dully shining array from the ceiling;
+barrels and a rusty stove and two broad low
+counters occupied most of the floor space, and the
+atmosphere was charged with a curious sharp odor in
+which you could distinguish oil and tobacco and
+molasses. The floor was all dented full of little holes,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>
+like a honeycomb, where Maximen had walked over it
+with his iron-pointed crutch; for he was something of
+a cripple. But you rarely had any occasion to enter
+the smelly little shop, for no one ever bought much of
+anything there nowadays.</p>
+
+<p>Instead, you sat down on the sunny bench beside the
+old man&mdash;Acadian of the Acadians&mdash;and listened to
+his tireless, genial babble&mdash;now French, now English,
+as the humor struck him.</p>
+
+<p>"It go mak' a leetle weat'er, m'sieu," he would
+say. "I t'ink you better not go fur in the p'tit caneau
+t'is day. Dere is squall&mdash;là-bas&mdash;see, dark&mdash;may
+be t'unner. Dat is not so unlike, dis mont'. Oh, w'at
+a hell time for de hays!"</p>
+
+<p>For everybody who passed he had a greeting, even
+for those who had hastened his business troubles
+through never paying their accounts. To the last he
+never lost his faith in their good intentions.</p>
+
+<p>"Dose poor devil fishermen," he would say, "however
+dey mak' leeve, God know. You t'ink I mak'
+'em go wid notting? It ain't lak dat wit' me here yet,
+m'sieu. Dey pay some day, when le bon Dieu, he
+send dem some feesh; dat's sure sure."</p>
+
+<p>If it happened that anybody stopped on business, old
+Maximen would hobble to the door and tug violently
+at a bell-rope.</p>
+
+<p>"Cr-r-r-line! Cr-r-r-line!" he would call.</p>
+
+<p>"Tout d' suite!" answered a shrill voice from some
+remoter portion of the edifice; and a moment later an
+old woman with straggling white hair, toothless gums,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
+and penetrating, humorous eyes, deepset under a forehead
+of infinite wrinkles, would come shuffling up the
+pebble walk from the basement.</p>
+
+<p>"Me voila!" she would ejaculate, panting. "Me
+ol' man, he always know how to git me in a leetle minute,
+hé?"</p>
+
+<p>On Sundays Caroline and Maximen would drive to
+chapel in a queer, heavy, antiquated road-cart that had
+been built especially for his use, hung almost as low
+between the axles as a chariot.</p>
+
+<p>"We go mak' our respec' to the bon Dieu," he
+would laugh, as he took the reins in hand and waited
+for Célestine, the chunky little mare, to start&mdash;which
+she did when the mood took her.</p>
+
+<p>The small shop is closed and beginning to fall to
+pieces. Maximen has been making his respects amid
+other surroundings for some four or five years, and
+Caroline, at the end of a twelvemonth of lonely waiting,
+followed after.</p>
+
+<p>"It seem lak I need t'e ol' man to look out for," she
+used to say. "All t'e day I listen to hear t'at bell
+again. 'Tout d' suite! I used to call, no matter what
+I do&mdash;maybe over the stove or pounding my bread;
+and den, 'Me voila, mon homme!' I would be at t'e
+shop, ready to help."</p>
+
+<p>I suppose that wherever a man looks in the world,
+if he but have the eyes to see, he finds as much of gayety
+and pathos, of failure and courage, as in any particular
+section of it; yet so much at least is true: that
+in a little community like this, so removed from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
+larger, more spectacular conflicts of life, so face to
+face, all the year, with the inveterate and domineering
+forces of nature, one seems to discover a more poignant
+relief in all the homely, familiar, universal episodes
+of the human comedy.</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<a name="ARICHAT" id="ARICHAT"></a>
+<img src="images/arichat.jpg" width="600" height="418" alt="" />
+<div class="caption"><p class="center">ARICHAT</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="LA_ROSE_WITNESSETH" id="LA_ROSE_WITNESSETH">LA ROSE WITNESSETH</a></h2>
+
+<p class="center">
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">OF THE BUCHERONS</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">OF LA BELLE MÉLANIE</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">OF SIMÉON'S SON</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h3 title="OF THE BUCHERONS"><a name="BUCHERONS" id="BUCHERONS">LA ROSE WITNESSETH</a></h3>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Of How the Bucherons Were Punished for Their
+Hard Hearts</i></p>
+
+<div class="figleft dropcap" style="width: 79px;">
+<img src="images/i_033.png" width="79" height="80" alt="" />
+<div class="caption"></div>
+</div>
+<p><span class="dropcap">I</span>t was a boy of ten who listened to La Rose,
+and while he listened, the sun stood still in
+the sky, there was an enchantment on all
+the world. Whatever La Rose said you had
+to believe, somehow. Oh, I assure you, no one could
+be more exacting than she in the matter of proofs.
+For persons who would give an ear to any absurd story
+tattled abroad she had nothing but contempt.</p>
+
+<p>"Before you believe a thing," said La Rose, sagely,
+"you must know whether it is true or not. That is
+the most important part of a story."</p>
+
+<p>She would give a decisive nod to her small head and
+shut her lips together almost defiantly. Yet always,
+somewhere in the corner of her alert gray eye, there
+seemed to be lurking the ghost of a twinkle. La Rose
+had no age. She was both very young and very old.
+For all she had never traveled more than ten miles
+from the little Cape Breton town of Port l'Évêque,
+you had the feeling that she had seen a good deal of
+the world, and it is certain that her life had not been
+easy; yet she would laugh as quickly and abundantly
+as a young girl just home from the convent.</p>
+
+<p>These two were the best of comrades. La Rose had
+been the boy's nurse when he was little, and as he had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
+no mother she had kept a feeling of special affection
+and responsibility for him. Thus it happened that
+whenever she was making some little expedition out
+across the harbor&mdash;say for blueberries on the barrens,
+or white moorberries, or ginseng&mdash;she would get permission
+from the captain for Michel to go with her;
+and this was the happiest privilege in the boy's life.
+Most of all because of the stories La Rose would tell
+him.</p>
+
+<p>La Rose had a story to tell about every spot they visited,
+about every person they passed. She had been
+brought up, herself, out here on the Cape; and not an
+inch of its territory but was familiar to her.</p>
+
+<p>"Now that is where those Bucherons lived," she observed
+one day, as they were walking homeward from
+Pig Cove by the Calvaire road. "They are all gone
+now, and the house is almost fallen to pieces; but once
+things were lively enough there&mdash;mon Dieu, oui!&mdash;quite
+lively enough for comfort."</p>
+
+<p>She gave a sagacious nod to her head, with the look
+of one who could say more, and would, if you urged
+her a little.</p>
+
+<p>"Was it at the Bucherons' that all the chairs stood
+on one leg?" asked Michel, thrilling mysteriously.</p>
+
+<p>"Oui, c'est ça," answered La Rose, in a voice of the
+most sepulchral, "right there in that house, the chairs
+stood on one leg and went rap&mdash;rap&mdash;against the
+floor. And more than once a table with dishes and
+other things on it fell over, and there were strange
+sounds in the cupboard. Oh, it is certain those Bucherons<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
+were tormented; but for that matter they had
+brought it on themselves because of their greediness
+and their hard hearts. It came for a punishment; and
+when they repented themselves, it went away."</p>
+
+<p>"I haven't ever heard all the story about the Bucherons,"
+said Michel&mdash;"or at least, not since I was
+big. I am almost sure I would like it."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I daresay," agreed La Rose. "It is an interesting
+story in some ways; and the best of it is, it is not
+one of those stories that are only to make you laugh,
+and then you go right away and forget them. And
+another thing: this story about the Bucherons really
+happened. It was when my poor stepmother was a girl.
+She lived at Pig Cove then, and that is only two miles
+from Gros Nez. And one of those Bucherons was
+once wanting to marry her; but do you think she would
+have anything to do with a man like that?</p>
+
+<p>"'No,' she said. 'I will have nothing to do with
+you. I would sooner not ever be married, me, than to
+have you for my man.'</p>
+
+<p>"And the reason she spoke that way was because of
+the cruelty they had shown toward that poor widow of
+a Noémi, which everybody on the Cape knew about,
+and it was a great scandal. And if you want me to tell
+you about it, that is what I am going to do now."</p>
+
+<p>La Rose seated herself on a flat rock by the road,
+and Michel found another for himself close by. Below
+them lay a deep rocky cove, with shores as steep
+as a sluice, and close above its inner margin stood the
+shell of a small house. The chimney had fallen in, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
+windows were all gone&mdash;only vacant holes now,
+through which you saw the daylight from the other
+side, and the roof had begun to sag.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said La Rose, "it will soon be gone to pieces
+entirely, and then there will be nothing to remind anyone
+of those Bucherons and what torments they had.
+You see there were four of them, an old woman and
+two sons, and one of the sons was married, but there
+were not any children; and all those four must have
+had stones instead of hearts. They were only thinking
+how they could get the better of other people, and so
+become rich.</p>
+
+<p>"And before that there had been three sons at home;
+but one of them&mdash;Benoît his name was&mdash;had married
+a certain Noémi Boudrot; and she was as sweet and
+beautiful as a lily, and he too was different from the
+others; and so they had not lived here, but had got a
+little house at Pig Cove, where they were very happy;
+and the good God sent them two children, of a beauty
+and gentleness indescribable; and they called them
+Évangéline and little Benoît, but you do not need to
+remember that, because it is not a part of the story.</p>
+
+<p>"So things went on that way for quite a while; and
+all the time those four Bucherons were growing more
+and more hard-hearted, like four serpents in a pile
+together.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, one day in October that Benoît Bucheron
+who lived in Pig Cove was going alone in a small cart
+to Port l'Évêque to buy some provisions for winter&mdash;flour,
+I suppose, and meal, and perhaps some clothes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
+and some tobacco; and instead of going direct by the
+Gros Nez road, he came around this way by the Calvaire
+so as to stop in and speak to his relatives; and to
+see them welcoming him, you would never have suspected
+their stone hearts. But Benoît was solemn for
+all that, as if troubled by some idea. Then that sly
+old mother, she said:</p>
+
+<p>"'Dear Benoît,' she said, 'what troubles you? Can
+you not put trust in your own mother, who loves you
+better than her eyes and nose?'&mdash;and she smiled at
+him just like a fat wicked old spider that is waiting for
+a fly to come and get tangled up in her net.</p>
+
+<p>"But Benoît only remembered then that she was his
+mother; so he said:</p>
+
+<p>"'I have a fear, me, that I shall not be long for this
+world, my mother. Last week I saw a little blue fire
+on the barrens one night, and again one night I heard
+hoofs going <i>claquin-claquant</i> down there on the beach,
+much like the horse without head. And that is why I
+am getting my provisions so early, and making everything
+ready for the winter. See,' he said, 'here is the
+thirteen dollars I have saved this year. I am going to
+buy things with it in Port l'Évêque.'</p>
+
+<p>"Now you may depend that when he showed them
+all that money, their eyes stuck out like the eyes of
+crabs; but of course they did not say anything only
+some words of the most comforting. And finally he
+said, getting ready to go:</p>
+
+<p>"'If anything should happen,' he said, 'will you
+promise me to be good to that poor Noémi and those<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
+two poor little innocent lambs?'&mdash;and those serpents
+said, certainly, they would do all that was possible;
+and with that Benoît gets into his cart, and starts down
+the hill; and suddenly the horse takes a fright of something
+and runs away, and the cart tips over, and Benoît
+is thrown out; and when his brothers get to him he is
+quite quite dead&mdash;and that shows what it means to
+see one of those little blue fires at night in the woods.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you can believe that Noémi was not very
+happy when they brought back that poor Benoît to Pig
+Cove. Her eyes were like two brooks, and for a long
+time she could not say anything, and then finally, summoning
+a little voice of courage:</p>
+
+<p>"'I am glad of one thing,' she said, 'which is that
+he had saved all that money, for without it I would
+never know how to live through the winter.'</p>
+
+<p>"And one of those brothers said, with an innocent
+voice of a dove, 'what money then?'&mdash;and she said,
+'He had it with him.' And so they look for it; but no,
+there is not any.</p>
+
+<p>"'You must have deceived yourself,' said that
+brother. 'I am sure he would have spoken of it if he
+had had any money with him; but he said never a word
+of such a thing.'</p>
+
+<p>"Now was not that a wicked lie for him to tell? It
+is hard to understand how abominable can be some of
+those men! But you may be sure they will be punished
+for it in the end; and that is what happened to those
+four serpents, the Bucherons.</p>
+
+<p>"For listen. The old mother had taken the money<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
+and had put it inside a sort of covered bowl, like a
+sugar bowl, but there was no sugar in it; and then she
+had set this bowl away on a shelf in the cupboard
+where they kept the dishes and such things; and the
+Bucherons thought it would be safe until the time when
+they had something to spend it for in Port l'Évêque;
+and they were telling themselves how no one would
+ever know what they had done; and they were glad
+that the promise they had made to Benoît had not been
+heard by anyone but themselves. And so that poor
+Noémi was left all alone without man or money; but
+sometimes the neighbors would give her a little food;
+but for all that those two lambs were often hungry,
+and their mother too, when it came bedtime.</p>
+
+<p>"But do you think the Bucherons cared&mdash;those four
+hearts of stone? They would not even give her so
+much as a crust of dry, mouldy bread; and Noémi was
+too proud to go and beg; and beside something seemed
+to tell her that there had been a wickedness somewhere,
+and that the Bucherons perhaps knew more than they
+had told her about that money. So she waited to see
+if anything would happen.</p>
+
+<p>"Now one night in December, when all those four
+were in the house alone, the beginning of their punishment
+arrived, and surely nothing more strange was
+ever heard of in this world.</p>
+
+<p>"'Ah, mon Dieu!' cries out the married woman all
+of a sudden&mdash;'mon Dieu, what is that!'</p>
+
+<p>"They all looked where she was looking, and what
+do you think they saw? There was a chair standing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
+with three legs in the air, and only the little point of
+one on the floor.</p>
+
+<p>"The old woman pushed a scream and jumped to
+her feet and went over to it, and with much force set it
+back on the floor, the way a chair is meant to stand;
+but immediately when she let go of it, there it was
+again, as before, all on one leg.</p>
+
+<p>"And then, there cries out the younger woman again,
+with a voice shrill as a frightened horse that throws up
+its head and then runs away&mdash;'Oh, mère Bucheron,
+mère Bucheron,' cries she, 'the chair you were just sitting
+in is three legs in air too!'</p>
+
+<p>"And so it was! With that all the family got up in
+terror; but no sooner had they done that than at once
+all the chairs behaved just like the first, which made
+five chairs. These chairs did not seem to move at all,
+but stood there on one leg just as if they were always
+like that. Those Bucherons were almost dead with
+fright, and all four of them fled out of the house as fast
+as ever their legs could carry them&mdash;you would have
+said sheep chased by a mad dog&mdash;and never stopped
+for breath till they reached Gros Nez.</p>
+
+<p>"And pell-mell into old Pierre Leblanc's house all
+together, and shaking like ague. Hardly able to talk,
+they tell what has happened; and he will not believe
+them but says, well, he will go back with them and see.
+So he does, and they re-enter the house together, and
+look! the chairs are all just as usual.</p>
+
+<p>"'You have been making some crazy dreams,' says
+Pierre, rather angry, 'or else,' he says, 'you have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
+something bad in your hearts.' And with that he goes
+home again; and there is nothing more to be told about
+that night, though I daresay none of those wicked persons
+slept very well.</p>
+
+<p>"But that was only the beginning of what happened
+to them during that winter. Sometimes it would be
+these knockings about the roof, as of someone with a
+great hammer; and again it was as if they had seen a
+face at the window&mdash;just an instant, all white, in the
+dark&mdash;and then it would be gone. And often, often,
+the chairs would be standing as before on one leg. The
+table likewise, which once let fall a great crowd of
+dishes, and not a few were broken. But worst of all
+were these strange sounds that made themselves heard
+in the cupboard, like the hand of a corpse going rap&mdash;rap,
+rap&mdash;rap&mdash;rap, rap,&mdash;against the lid of its
+coffin. You may well believe it was a dreadful fright
+for those four infamous ones; but still they would do
+nothing, because of their desire to keep all that money
+and buy things with it.</p>
+
+<p>"Everybody on the Cape soon knew about what was
+happening at the Bucherons', but some pretended it
+was to laugh at, saying that such things did not happen
+nowadays; and others said the Bucherons must have
+gone crazy, and had better be left alone&mdash;and their
+arms and legs would sometimes keep jerking a little
+when they talked to anyone, as my stepmother told me
+a thousand times; and they had a way of looking
+behind them&mdash;so!&mdash;as if they were afraid of being
+pursued. So however that might be, nobody would go
+and see them.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Well, things went on like that for quite a while,
+and finally, one day in February, through all the snow
+that it made on the ground then, that poor Noémi
+marched on her feet from Pig Cove to her mother-in-law's,
+having left her two infants at a neighbor's; for
+she had resolved herself to ask for some help, seeing
+that she had had nothing but a little bite since three
+days. And when they saw her coming they were taken
+with a fright, and at first they were not going to let
+her in; but that old snake of a mother, she said:</p>
+
+<p>"'If we refuse to let her in, my children, she will go
+and suspect something.'</p>
+
+<p>"So they let her in, and when she was in, they let
+her make all her story, or as much as she had breath
+for, and then:</p>
+
+<p>"'I am sorry,' said this old snake of a mother, 'that
+we cannot possibly do anything for you. Alas, my dear
+little daughter, it is barely even if we can manage to
+hold soul and body together ourselves, with the terrible
+winter it makes these days.'</p>
+
+<p>"And just as she said that, what do you think happened?
+A chair got on one leg and went rap&mdash;rap,
+rap&mdash;against the floor.</p>
+
+<p>"That Noémi would often be telling about it afterwards
+to my stepmother, and she said never of her life
+had she seen anything so terrifying. But she did not
+scream or do anything like that, because something,
+she said, inside her seemed to bid her keep quiet just
+then. And she used to tell how that old Bucheron
+woman's face turned exactly the color of an oyster on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>
+a white plate, and a trembling took her, and finally she
+said, scarcely able to make the sound of the words:</p>
+
+<p>"'Though perhaps&mdash;I might find&mdash;a crust of
+bread somewhere that&mdash;that we could spare.'</p>
+
+<p>"That was how she spoke, and at the same instant,
+<i>rap</i> went the chair, still on its one leg; and there was a
+sound of a hammering on the roof.</p>
+
+<p>"'Or perhaps&mdash;a little loaf of bread and some
+potatoes,' said that old Bucheron, while the other
+Bucherons sat there without one word, in their chairs,
+as if paralyzed, except that their hands kept up a little
+shaking motion all the time, like this scour-grass you
+get in the marsh, which trembles always even if there
+is not any wind. 'Or perhaps a loaf of bread and some
+potatoes'&mdash;that is what she was saying, when listen,
+there is a knock as of the hand of corpse just inside the
+cupboard; and suddenly the two doors fly open&mdash;you
+would have said <i>pushed</i> from the inside!</p>
+
+<p>"Noémi crosses herself, but does not say anything,
+for she knows it is a time to keep still.</p>
+
+<p>"'And perhaps,' says the old woman then, in a voice
+of the most piteous, as if someone were giving her a
+pinch, 'and perhaps, if only I had it, a dollar or two to
+help buy some medicine and a pair of shoes for that
+Évangéline.... But no, I do not think we have so
+much as that anywhere in the house.'</p>
+
+<p>"Now was not that like the old serpent, to be telling
+a lie even at the last; and surely if God had struck her
+dead by a ball of lightning at that moment it would
+have been none too good for her. But no, he was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+going to give her a chance to repent and not to have to
+go to Hell for a punishment. So what do you think
+He made happen then?</p>
+
+<p>"Hardly had those abominable words jumped out
+of her when with a great crash, down off the top shelf
+comes that sugar bowl (if it was a sugar bowl), and
+as it hits the floor, it breaks into a thousand pieces;
+and there, in a little pile, are those thirteen dollars,
+just as on the day when that poor Benoît had been carrying
+them with him to Port l'Évêque.</p>
+
+<p>"Now just as if they are not doing it at all of their
+own wish, but something makes them act that way, all
+of a sudden those four Bucherons are kneeling on the
+floor, saying their prayers in a strange voice like the
+prayers you might hear in a tomb; and with that, the
+chair goes back quietly to its four legs, and the noise
+ceases on the roof, and those two cupboard doors draw
+shut without human hands. As for Noémi, she grabs
+up the money, and out she goes, swift as a bird that is
+carrying a worm to its children, leaving her parents by
+marriage still there on their knees, like so many
+images; but as she opens the door she says:</p>
+
+<p>"'May the good God have pity on all the four of
+you!'&mdash;which was a Christian thing to say, seeing
+how much she had suffered at their hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, there is not much more to tell. Noémi got
+through the rest of that winter without any more
+trouble; and the next year she married a fisherman
+from Little Anse, and went away from the Cape. As
+for the Bucherons, they were not like the same people<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
+any more. You would not have known them&mdash;so
+pious they were and charitable, though always, perhaps,
+a little strange in their ways. But when the old
+woman died, two years later, or three, all the people
+of Pig Cove and Gros Nez followed the corpse in to
+Port l'Évêque; and her grave is there in the cemetery.</p>
+
+<p>"The rest of the family are gone now too, as you
+see; and soon, I suppose, there will not be many left,
+even out here on the Cape, who know all about what
+happened to the Bucherons, because of their hard
+hearts; which is a pity, seeing that the story has such a
+good lesson to it...."</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h3 title="OF LA BELLE MÉLANIE"><a name="MELANIE" id="MELANIE">LA ROSE WITNESSETH</a></h3>
+
+<p class="center"><a name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a><i>Of the Headless Horse and of La Belle Mélanie's
+Narrow Escape from the Feu Follet</i></p>
+
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_A_1" id="Footnote_A_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_1"><span class="label">[A]</span></a> Included with permission of and by arrangements with Houghton Mifflin Company
+authorized publishers.</p></div>
+
+<div class="figleft dropcap" style="width: 80px;">
+<img src="images/i_046.png" width="80" height="79" alt="" />
+<div class="caption"></div>
+</div>
+<p><span class="dropcap">O</span>ne of the privileges Michel esteemed most
+highly was that of accompanying La Rose
+occasionally when she went blueberrying
+over on the barrens&mdash;<i>dans les bois</i>, as the
+phrase still goes in Port l'Évêque, though it is all of
+sixty years since there were any woods there. The
+best barrens for blueberrying lay across the harbor.
+They reached back to the bay four or five miles to
+southward. Along the edges of several rocky coves,
+narrow and steep as a sluice, clung a few weatherbeaten
+fishermen's houses; but there was no other sign
+of human habitation.</p>
+
+<p>It is what they call a bad country over there. Alder
+and scrub balsam grow sparsely over the low rocky
+hills, where little flocks of sheep nibble all day at the
+thin herbage; and from the marshes that lie, green and
+mossy, at the foot of every slope, a solitary loon may
+occasionally be seen rising into the air with a great
+spread of slow wings. A single thread of a road
+makes its way somehow across the region, twisting in
+and out among the small hills, now climbing suddenly
+to a bare elevation, from which the whole sweep of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>
+sea bursts upon the view, now shelving off along the
+side of a knoll of rocks, quickly dipping into some
+close hollow, where the world seems to reach no
+farther than to the strange sky-line, wheeling sharply
+against infinite space.</p>
+
+<p>Two miles back from the inner shore, the road
+forks at the base of a little hill more conspicuously
+bare than the rest, and close to the naked summit of it,
+overlooking all the Cape, stands a Calvary. Nobody
+knows how long it has stood there, or why it was first
+erected; though tradition has it that long, long ago, a
+certain man by the name of Toussaint was there set
+upon by wild beasts and torn to pieces. However that
+may be, the tall wooden cross, painted black, and bearing
+on its center, beneath a rude penthouse, a small
+iron crucifix, has been there longer than any present
+memory records&mdash;an encouragement, as they say, for
+those who have to cross the bad country after dark.</p>
+
+<p>"That makes courage for you," they say. "It is
+good to know it is there on the windy nights."</p>
+
+<p>By daylight, however, and especially in the sunshine,
+the barrens are quite without other terrors than those
+of loneliness; and upon Michel this remoteness and
+silence always exercised a kind of spell. He was glad
+that La Rose was with him, partly because he would
+have been a little afraid to be there quite by himself,
+but chiefly because of the imaginative sympathy that at
+this time existed so strongly between them. La Rose
+could tell him all about the strange things that had
+been seen here of winter nights; she herself once, ten<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>ding
+a poor old sick woman at Gros Nez, out at the end
+of the Cape, had heard the hoofs of the white horse
+that gallops across the barrens <i>claquin-claquant</i> in the
+darkness.</p>
+
+<p>"It was just there outside the house, pawing the
+ground. Almost paralyzed for terror, I ran to the
+window and looked out. It was as tall as the church
+door,&mdash;that animal,&mdash;all white, and there was no
+head to it.</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh, mère Babinot,' I whispered, scarcely able to
+make the sound of the words. 'It is as tall as the
+church door and all white.'</p>
+
+<p>"She sits up in bed and stares at me like a corpse.
+'La Rose,' she says,&mdash;just like that, shrill as a whistle
+of wind,&mdash;'La Rose, do you see a head to it?'</p>
+
+<p>"'No, not any!'</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh, mon Dieu, mon Dieu! Then it's sure! It is
+the very one, the horse without head!'</p>
+
+<p>"And the next day she took only a little spoonful of
+tea, and in two weeks she was dead, poor mère Babinot;
+and that's as true as that I made my communion
+last Easter. Oh, it's often seen hereabouts, that horse.
+It's a sign that something will happen, and never has
+it failed yet."</p>
+
+<p>They made their way, La Rose and Michel, slowly
+over the low hills, picking the blueberries that grew
+thickly in clumps of green close to the ground. La
+Rose always wore a faded yellow-black dress, the skirt
+caught up, to save it, over a red petticoat; and on her
+small brown head she carried the old Acadian <i>mou<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>choir</i>,
+black, brought up to a peak in front, and knotted
+at the side.</p>
+
+<p>She picked rapidly, with her alert, spry movements,
+her head always cocked a little to one side, almost
+humorously, as she peered about among the bushes for
+the best spots. And wherever he was, Michel heard
+her chattering softly to herself, in an inconsequential
+undertone, now humming a scrap of some pious song,
+now commenting on the quality of the berry crop&mdash;never
+had she seen so few and so small as these last
+years. Surely there must be something to account for
+it. Perhaps the birds had learned the habitude of devouring
+them&mdash;now addressing some strayed sheep
+that had ventured with timid bleats within range:
+"Te voilà, petit méchant! Little rogue! What are
+you looking about for? Did the others go off and
+leave you? Eh bien, that's how it happens, mon
+petit. They'll leave you. The world's like that. Eh,
+là, là!"</p>
+
+<p>He liked to go to the other side of the hill, out of
+sight of her, where he could imagine that he was lost
+<i>dans les bois</i>. Then he would listen for her continual
+soft garrulity; and if he could not hear it he would
+wait quietly for a minute in the silence, feeling a
+strange exhilaration, which was almost pain, in the
+presence of the great sombre spaces, the immense
+emptiness of the overhanging sky, until he could endure
+it no longer.</p>
+
+<p>"La Rose!" he would call. "Êtes-vous toujours
+là?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Mais oui, mon enfant. What do you want?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing. It is only that I was thinking."</p>
+
+<p>"The strange child that you are!" she would exclaim.
+"You are not like the others."</p>
+
+<p>"La Rose," he would ask, "was it by here that La
+Belle Mélanie passed on the night she saw the death
+fire?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, by this very spot. She was on her way to Pig
+Cove, over beyond the Calvary to the east. It is a
+desolate little rat-hole, Pig Cove, nowadays; but then
+it was different&mdash;as many as two dozen houses. My
+stepmother lived in one of them. Now there are
+scarcely six, and falling to pieces at that. La Belle
+Mélanie, she was a Boudrot, sister of the Pierre Boudrot
+whose son, Théobald, was brother-in-law of stepmother.
+That was many years ago. They are all dead
+now, or gone away from here&mdash;to Boston, I daresay."</p>
+
+<p>"Will you tell me about that again,&mdash;the <i>feu follet</i>
+and Mélanie?"</p>
+
+<p>It was the story Michel liked the best, most of all
+when he could sit beside La Rose, on a moss-hummock
+of some rough hill on the barrens. Perhaps there
+would be cloud shadows flitting like dream presences
+across the shining face of the moor. In the distance,
+over the backs of the hills that crouched so thickly
+about them, he saw the stretch of the ocean, a motionless
+floor of azure and purple, flecked, it might be, by
+a leaning sail far away; and now and then a gull or
+two would fly close over their heads, wheeling and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+screaming for a few seconds, and then off again
+through the blue.</p>
+
+<p>"S'il vous plaît, tante La Rose, see how many berries
+I have picked already!"</p>
+
+<p>The little woman was not difficult of persuasion.</p>
+
+<p>"It was in November," she began. "There had not
+been any snow yet; but the nights were cold and terribly
+dark under a sky of clouds. That autumn, as my
+stepmother often told me, many people had seen the
+horse without head as it galloped <i>claquin-claquant</i>
+across the barrens. At Gros Nez it was so bad that
+no one dared go out after dark, unless it was to run
+with all one's force to the neighbors&mdash;but not across
+the woods to save their souls. Especially because of
+the <i>feu follet</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Now you must know that the <i>feu follet</i> is of all
+objects whatever in the world the most mysterious. No
+one knows what it is or when it will come. You might
+walk across the barrens every night of your life and
+never encounter it; and again it might come upon you
+all unawares, not more than ten yards from your own
+threshold. It is more like a ball of fire than any other
+mortal thing, now large, now small, and always moving.
+Usually it is seen first hovering over one of the
+marshes, feeding on the poison vapors that rise from
+them at night: it floats there, all low, and like a little
+luminous cloud, so faint as scarcely to be seen by the
+eye. And sometimes people can travel straight by it,
+giving no attention, as if they did not know it was
+there, but keeping the regard altogether ahead of them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
+on the road, and the <i>feu follet</i> will let them pass without
+harm.</p>
+
+<p>"But that does not happen often, for there are not
+many who can keep their wits clear enough to manage
+it. It brings a sort of dizziness, and one's legs grow
+weak. And then the <i>feu follet</i> draws itself together
+into a ball of fire and begins to pursue. It glides over
+the hills and flies across the marshes, sometimes in
+circles, sometimes bounding from rock to rock, but all
+the while stealing a little closer and a little closer, no
+matter how fast you run away. And finally&mdash;bff! like
+that&mdash;it's upon you&mdash;and that's the end. Death for
+a certainty. Not all the medicine in the four parishes
+can help you.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, there are only two things in all the world
+that can save you from the <i>feu follet</i> once it gets after
+you. One is, if you are in a state of grace, all your
+sins confessed; which does not happen often to the
+inhabitants of Pig Cove, for even at this day Père Galland
+reproaches them for their neglect. And the other
+is, if you have a needle with you. So little a thing as a
+needle is enough, incredible as it may seem; for if you
+stick the needle upright&mdash;like that&mdash;in an old stump,
+the <i>feu follet</i> gets all tangled up in the eye of it. Try
+as it will, it cannot free itself; and meanwhile you run
+away, and are safe before it reappears. That is why
+all the inhabitants of the Cape used to carry a needle
+stuck somewhere in their garments, to use on such an
+occasion.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I must tell you about La Belle Mélanie.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
+That is the name she was known by in all parts, for
+she was beautiful as a lily flower, and no lily was ever
+more pure and sweet than she. Mélanie lived with her
+mother, who was aged almost to helplessness, and she
+cared for her with all the tenderness imaginable. You
+may believe that she was much sought after by the
+young fellows of the Cape&mdash;yes, and of Port l'Évêque
+as well, which used to hold its head in the air in those
+days; but her mother would hear nothing of her
+marrying.</p>
+
+<p>"'You are only seventeen,' she said, 'ma Mélanie.
+I will hear nothing of your marrying, no, not for five
+years at the least. By that time we shall see.'</p>
+
+<p>"And Mélanie tried to be obedient to all her
+mother's commands, difficult as they often were for a
+young girl, who naturally desires a little to amuse herself
+sometimes. For even had her mother forbidden
+her to speak alone to the young men of the neighborhood,
+so fearful was she lest her daughter should think
+of marriage.</p>
+
+<p>"Eh bien, and so that was how things went for quite
+a while, and every day Mélanie grew more beautiful.
+And one Saturday afternoon in November she had
+been in to Port l'Évêque to make her confession, for
+she was a pious girl. And when she went to meet her
+companions in order to return to Pig Cove with them,
+they said they were not going back that night, for there
+was to be a dance at the courthouse, and they were
+going to spend the night with some parents by marriage
+of theirs. Poor Mélanie! she would have been glad<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>
+to stay, but alas, her poor mother, aged and helpless,
+was expecting her, and she dared not disappoint the
+poor soul.</p>
+
+<p>"So finally one of the young men said he would put
+her across the harbor, if she did not mind traversing
+the woods alone; and she said, no, why should she
+mind? It was still plain daylight. And so he put her
+across. And she said good-night to him and set off
+along the solitary road to the Cape, little imagining
+what an adventure was ahead of her.</p>
+
+<p>"For scarcely had she gone so much as a mile when
+it had grown almost night, so suddenly at that time of
+the year does the daylight extinguish itself. The sky
+had grown dark, dark, and there was a look of storm
+in it. La Belle Mélanie began to grow uneasy of mind.
+And she thought then of the <i>feu follet</i>, and put her
+hand to her bodice to assure herself of her needle.
+What then! Alas! it was gone, by some accident,
+whether or not she had lost it on the road or in the
+church.</p>
+
+<p>"With that Mélanie began to feel a terror creep
+over her; and this was not lessened, as you may well
+believe, when, a few minutes later, she perceived a
+floating thing like a luminous cloud in a marsh some
+long distance from the road. The night was now all
+black; scarcely could she perceive the road ahead,
+always winding there among the hills.</p>
+
+<p>"She had the idea of running; but alas, her legs
+were like lead; she could not make them march in
+front of her. She saw herself already dead. The <i>feu<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>
+follet</i> was beginning to move, first very slowly and all
+uncertain, but then drawing itself together into a ball
+of fire, and leaping as if in play from one hummock of
+moss to another, just as a cat will leave a poor little
+mouse half dead on the floor while it amuses itself in
+another way.</p>
+
+<p>"What the end would have been, who would have
+the courage to say, if just at this moment, all ready to
+fall to the ground for terror, poor Mélanie had not
+bethought herself of her rosary. It was in her pocket.
+She grasped it. She crossed herself. She saluted the
+crucifix. And then she commenced to say her prayers;
+and with that, wonderful to say, her strength came
+back to her, and she began to run. She had never ran
+like that before&mdash;swift as a horse, not feeling her legs
+under her, and praying with high voice all the time.</p>
+
+<p>"But for all that, the death fire followed, always
+faster and faster, now creeping, now flying, now leaping
+from rock to rock, and always drawing nearer, and
+nearer, with a strange sound of a hissing not of this
+world. Mélanie began to feel her forces departing.
+She was almost exhausted. She would not be able to
+run much more.</p>
+
+<p>"And suddenly, just ahead, on a bare height, there
+was the tall Calvaire, and a new hope came to her. If
+she could only reach it! She summoned all her strength
+and struggled up. She climbs the ascent. Alas,
+once more it seems she will fail! There is a fence, as
+you know, built of white pales, about the cross. She
+had not the power to climb it. She sinks to the ground.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
+And it was at that last minute, all flat on the ground in
+fear of death, that an idea came to her, as I will
+tell you.</p>
+
+<p>"She raises herself to her feet by clinging to the
+white palings; she faces the <i>feu follet</i>, already not
+more than ten yards away; she holds out the rosary,
+making the holy sign in the air.</p>
+
+<p>"'I did not make a full confession!' she cries. 'I
+omitted one thing. My mother had forbidden me to
+have anything to do with a young man; and one day
+when I was looking for Fanchette, our cow, who had
+wandered in the woods, I met André Babinot, and he
+kissed me.'</p>
+
+<p>"That was what saved her. The <i>feu follet</i> rushed
+at her with a roar of defeat, and in the same instant it
+burst apart into a thousand flames and disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>"As for Mélanie, she fell to the ground again, and
+lay there for a while, quite unconscious. At last the
+rain came on, and she revived, and set out for home,
+but not very vigorously. Ah, mon Dieu! if her poor
+mother was glad to see her alive again! She embraced
+her most tenderly, and with encouraging voice inquired
+what had happened, for Mélanie was still as white as
+milk, and there was a strange smell of fire in her garments,
+and still she held in her hands the little rosary;
+and so finally Mélanie told her everything, not even
+concealing the last confession about André, and with
+that her mother burst into tears, and said:</p>
+
+<p>"'Mélanie,' she said, 'I have been wrong, me. A
+young girl will be a young girl despite all the contrary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>
+intentions of her mother. To show how grateful to
+God I am that you are returned to me safe and sound,
+you shall marry André as soon as you like.'</p>
+
+<p>"So they were married the next year. And there is
+a lesson to this story, too, which is that one should
+always tell the truth; because if La Belle Mélanie had
+told all the truth at the beginning she would not have
+had all that fright.</p>
+
+<p>"And to show that the story is true, there were
+found the marks of flames on the white fence of the
+Calvaire the next day; and as often as they painted it
+over with whitewash, still the darkness of the scorched
+wood would show through, as I often saw for myself;
+but now there is a new fence there...."</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h3 title="OF SIMÉON'S SON"><a name="SIMEON" id="SIMEON">LA ROSE WITNESSETH</a></h3>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Of How Old Siméon's Son Came Home Again</i></p>
+
+
+<div class="figleft dropcap" style="width: 80px;">
+<img src="images/i_058.png" width="80" height="80" alt="" />
+<div class="caption"></div>
+</div>
+<p><span class="dropcap">I</span>n the old cemetery above the church some
+men were at work setting up a rather ornate
+monument at the head of two long-neglected
+and overgrown graves. La Rose had noticed
+what was going on, as she came out from early
+mass, and had informed herself about it; and since
+then, she said, all through the day, her thoughts had
+been traveling back to things that happened many
+years ago.</p>
+
+<p>"Is it not strange," she observed musingly, sitting
+about dusk with Michel on the doorsill of the kitchen,
+while Céleste finished the putting-away of the supper
+dishes&mdash;"is it not strange how things go in this
+world? So often they turn out sorrowfully, and you
+cannot understand why that should be so. Think of
+that poor Léonie Gilet, who was taken so suddenly in
+the chest last winter and died all in a month, and she
+one of the purest and sweetest lilies that ever existed,
+and the next year she was to be married to a good man
+that loved her better than both his two eyes. Ah,
+mon Dieu, sometimes I think the sadness comes much
+more often than the joy down here."</p>
+
+<p>She looked out broodingly, and with eyes that did
+not see anything, across the captain's garden and the
+hayfield below, dipping gently to the margin of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>
+harbor. Michel was silent. La Rose's fits of melancholy
+interested him even when he only dimly sensed
+the burden of them.</p>
+
+<p>"And then," she resumed, after a moment, "sometimes
+the ending to things is happy. For a while all
+looks dark, dark, and there is grief, perhaps, and some
+tears; and then, just at the worst moment&mdash;tiens!&mdash;there
+is a change, and the happiness comes again, very
+likely even greater than it was at first. It is as if this
+good God up there, he could not bear any longer to see
+it so heartbreaking, and so he must take things into his
+own hands and set them right. And so, sometimes,
+when I find myself feeling sad about things, I like to
+remember what arrived to that poor Siméon Leblanc,
+whose son is just having them place a fine tombstone
+for him up there in the cimetière; for if ever happiness
+came to any man, it came to him, and that after a
+long time of griefs. Did you ever hear about this old
+Siméon Leblanc?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never, tante La Rose," answered the boy, gravely.
+"But if it has a pleasant ending, I wish you would tell
+me about it, and I don't mind if it makes me cry a little
+in the middle."</p>
+
+<p>By this, Céleste, the stout domestic, had finished her
+kitchen work, and throwing an apron over her stocky
+head and shoulders, she clumped out into the yard.</p>
+
+<p>"I am running over to Alec Samson's," she explained,
+"to get a mackerel for breakfast, if he caught
+any to-day."</p>
+
+<p>The gate clicked after her, and there was a silence.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
+At last La Rose began, a little absently and as if, for
+the moment at least, unaware of her auditor....</p>
+
+<p>"This Siméon Leblanc, he lived over there on the
+other side of the harbor, just beyond the place where
+the road turns off to go to the Cape. My poor stepmother
+when coming in to Port l'Évêque to sell some
+eggs or berries&mdash;three gallons, say, of blueberries, or
+perhaps some of those large strawberries from Pig
+Cove&mdash;she would often be running in there for a little
+rest and a talk with his wife, Célie&mdash;who always was
+glad to see any one, for that matter, the poor soul, for
+this Siméon was not too gentle, and often he made her
+unhappy with his harsh talk.</p>
+
+<p>"'Ah, mon amie,' she would say to my stepmother,
+at the same time wetting her eyes with tears&mdash;'Ah, I
+have such a fear, me, that he will do himself a harm,
+one day, with the temper he has. He frightens me to
+death sometimes&mdash;especially about that Tommy.'</p>
+
+<p>"Now you must understand that this Tommy was
+the son they had, and in some ways he resembled to
+his father, and in some ways to his mother. For it is
+certain he had a pride of the most incredible, which I
+daresay made him a little hard to manage; and yet in
+his heart there was a softness.</p>
+
+<p>"'That Tommy,' said his mother, 'he wants to be
+loved. That is the way to get him to do anything.
+There is no use in always punishing him and treating
+him hardly.'</p>
+
+<p>"But for all that, old Siméon must have his will,
+and so he does not cease to be scolding the boy. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>
+commands him now to do this thing, now that&mdash;here,
+there. He forbids him to be from home at night. He
+tells him he is a disgrace of a son to be so little
+laborious. Oh, it was a horror the way that poor lamb
+of a Tommy was treated; and finally, one day, when
+he was seventeen or eighteen, there was a great quarrel,
+and that Siméon called him by some cruel name,
+and white as a corpse cries out Tommy:</p>
+
+<p>"'My father, that is not true. You shall not say
+it!'&mdash;and the other, furious as an animal: 'I shall say
+what I choose!' And he says the same thing again.
+And Tommy: 'After that, I will not endure to stay
+here another day. I am tired of being treated so.
+You will not have another chance.'</p>
+
+<p>"And with that he places a kiss on the forehead of
+his poor mother, who was letting drop some tears, and
+walks out of the house without so much as turning his
+head again; and he marches over to Petit Ingrat,
+where there was an American fisherman which had
+put in for some bait, and he says to the captain: 'Will
+you give me a place?' and the captain says, 'We are
+just needing another man. Yes, we will give you a
+place.' So this Tommy, he got aboard, and a little
+later they put out and went off to the Banks for the
+fish.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it was not very long before that Siméon got
+over his bad wicked rage; and then he was sorry
+enough for what he had done, especially because there
+was no longer any son in the house, and that poor
+Célie must always be grieving herself after him. And<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
+you may believe that Siméon got little pity from the
+neighbors.</p>
+
+<p>"'It is good enough for him,' they would say&mdash;'a
+man like that, who is not decent to his own son.'</p>
+
+<p>"But they were sorry for Célie, most of all when
+she began to grow thinner and thinner and had a
+strange look in her eyes that was not entirely of this
+world. The old man said, 'She will be all right again
+when that schooner comes back,' and he was always
+going over to Petit Ingrat to find out if it had returned
+yet; but you see, of course there would not be any need
+of bait when the season was finished, and so the
+schooner did not put in at all; and the autumn came,
+and went by, and then followed the winter, and still no
+news, but only waiting and waiting, and a little before
+Easter that poor Célie went away among the angels. I
+think her heart was quite broken in two, and it did not
+seem to her that she needed to stay any longer in this
+hustling world. And so they buried her in the old
+cimetière&mdash;I saw her grave to-day, next to Siméon's,
+and this fine new monument is to be for the two of
+them; but for all these years there has been just a
+wooden cross there, like the other graves.</p>
+
+<p>"But still no word came of Tommy, and the old
+Siméon was all alone in the house. Oh, I can remember
+him well, well, although I was only a young tiny
+girl then and had not had any sorrow myself. We
+would see him walking along the Petit Ingrat road, all
+bent over and trailing one leg a little.</p>
+
+<p>"'Hst!' one of my companions would whisper,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
+'that is old Siméon, who drove his son from home;
+and his poor wife is dead with grief. He is going
+across there to see if a schooner will have come in yet
+with any news.'</p>
+
+<p>"And that was true. He took this habitude of making
+a promenade almost every day to Petit Ingrat during
+that season of the year when the Americans are
+going down to the fish&mdash;là-bas&mdash;and if there was a
+schooner in the harbor, he finds the captain or one of
+the crew, and he says, 'Is it, m'sieu, for example, that
+you have seen a boy anywhere named Tommy Leblanc?
+It is my son&mdash;you understand?&mdash;a very
+pretty young boy, with black hair and fine white teeth
+and a little curly mustache&mdash;so&mdash;just beginning to
+sprout.' And he would go on to describe that Tommy,
+but of course, for one thing they could not understand
+his French very well, for the Americans, as you know,
+do not speak that language among themselves; and
+anyway, you may depend that none of them had ever
+heard of Tommy Leblanc; and sometimes they would
+have a little mockery of the old man; and sometimes,
+on the contrary, they would feel pity, and would say,
+well, God's name, it was a damage, but they could not
+tell him anything.</p>
+
+<p>"And then the old man would say, 'Well, if ever you
+should see him anywhere, will you please tell him that
+his father is wanting him to come home, if he will be
+so kind as to do it; because it is very lonesome without
+him, and the mother is dead.'</p>
+
+<p>"Then after he had said that, he would go back<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>
+again along the road to the Cape, not speaking to anybody
+unless they spoke to him first, and trailing one
+leg after him a little, like one of these horses you see
+sometimes with a weight tied to a hind foot so that it
+cannot run away&mdash;or at least not very far. That is
+how I remember old Siméon from the time when I was
+a little girl&mdash;walking there along the road to or from
+Petit Ingrat. I used to hear people say: 'Ah, my God,
+how old he is grown all in these few years! He is not
+the same man&mdash;so quiet and so timid'&mdash;and others:
+'But can one say how it is possible for him to live there
+all alone like that?'&mdash;and someone replied: 'You
+could not persuade him to live anywhere else, for that
+is where he has all his memories, both the good and
+the bad, and what else is left for him now&mdash;that, and
+the crazy idea he has that his Tommy will one day
+come home again?'</p>
+
+<p>"You see, as the years passed, everybody took the
+belief that Tommy must be dead, at sea or somewhere,
+seeing that not one word was heard of him; but of
+course they guarded themselves well from saying anything
+like that to poor old Siméon.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it was about the time when your poor father,
+Amédée, was a boy of your age, or a little older, that
+all this sorrow came to an end; and this is the pleasant
+part of the story. I was living at Madame
+Paon's then, down near the post-office wharf, and we
+had the habitude of looking out of the window every
+day when the packet-boat came in (which was three
+times a week) to see if anybody would be landing at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
+Port l'Évêque. Well, and one afternoon whom should
+we see but a fine m'sieu with black beard, carrying a
+cane, dressed like an American; and next, a lovely lady
+in clothes of the most fashionable and magnificent;
+and then, six beautiful young children, all just as handsome
+as dolls, and holding tightly one another by the
+hand, with an affection the most charming in the world.
+Ah, ma foi, if I shall ever forget that sight!</p>
+
+<p>"And Madame Paon to me: 'Rose,&mdash;La Rose,&mdash;in
+God's name, who can they be! Perhaps some millionaires
+from Boston&mdash;for look, the trunks that they
+have!'</p>
+
+<p>"And that was the truth, for the trunks and bags
+were piled all over the wharf; and opening the window
+a little, we hear m'sieu giving directions to have them
+taken to the Couronne d'Or&mdash;'and who,' he asks in
+French, 'is the proprietor there now?'&mdash;and they
+say: 'Gaston Lebal'&mdash;and he says: 'What! Gaston
+Lebal! Is it possible!'</p>
+
+<p>"'He knows Port l'Évêque, it seems,' says Madame
+Paon, all excitement; and just then the first two trunks
+go by the windows, and she tells me, 'It is an English
+name, or an American.' And then, spelling out the
+letters, for she reads with a marvel of ease, she says,
+'W-H-I-T-E is what the trunks say on them; but I can
+make nothing out of that. I am going outside, me,'
+she says, 'and perhaps I shall learn something.'</p>
+
+<p>"She descends into the garden, and seems to be
+working a little at the flowers, and a minute later, here
+comes the fine m'sieu, and he looks at her for an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>
+instant&mdash;right in the face, so, and as if asking a question&mdash;and
+then: 'Ah, mon Dieu, it is Suzon Boudrot!'
+he cries, using the name she was born with. 'Can you
+not remember me?&mdash;That Tommy Leblanc who ran
+away twenty years ago?'</p>
+
+<p>"Madame Paon gives a scream of joy, and they
+embrace; and then he presents this Mees W'ite, qui est
+une belle Américaine, and then he says: 'What is there
+of news about my dear mother and my father?'&mdash;and
+she: 'Did you not know your poor mother was dead
+the year after you went!'&mdash;and he: 'Ma mère&mdash;she
+is dead?'&mdash;and the tears jump out of his eyes, and his
+voice trembles as if it had a crack in it. 'Well, she is
+with the blessed angels, then,' says he.</p>
+
+<p>"'But your poor old father,' goes on Madame
+Paon, 'he is still waiting for you every day. He has
+waited all these twenty years for you to come back.'</p>
+
+<p>"'He is still in the old place?' asks he.</p>
+
+<p>"'Yes, he would not leave it.'</p>
+
+<p>"'We shall go over there at once,' he says, opening
+out his two arms&mdash;so!&mdash;'before ever we set foot in
+another house. It is my duty as a son.'</p>
+
+<p>"So while André Gilet&mdash;the father of that dear
+Léonie who was taken in the chest&mdash;while he is getting
+the boat ready to cross the harbor, Tommy tells
+her how he has been up there in Boston all these years&mdash;at
+a place called Shee-cahgo, a big city&mdash;and has
+been making money; and how he changed his name to
+W'ite, which means the same as Leblanc and is more in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>
+the mode; and how he married this lovely Américaine,
+whose name was Finnegan, and had all these sweet
+little children; but always, he said, he had desired to
+make a little visit at home, only it was so far to come;
+and he was afraid that his father would still be angry
+at him.</p>
+
+<p>"'Ah,' says Madame Paon, with emotion, 'you will
+not know your father. He is so different: just as mild
+as a sheep. Everyone has come to love him.' ...</p>
+
+<p>"Now for the rest of the story, all I know is what
+that André told us, for he put all this family across
+to the other side in his boat. So when they reached
+the shore, M'sieu Tommy, he says: 'You will all wait
+here until I open the door and beckon: and then you,
+Maggie, will come up; and then, a little later, we will
+have the children in, all together.'</p>
+
+<p>"And with that he leaves them, and goes up to the
+old house, and knocks, and opens the door, and walks
+in&mdash;and who can say the joy and the comfort of the
+meeting that happened then? And quite a long while
+passed, André said; and that lovely lady sat there on
+the side of the boat, all as white as milk, and never
+saying a word; and those six lambs, whispering softly
+among themselves&mdash;and one of them said, just a
+little above its breath:</p>
+
+<p>"'It will be nice to have a grandpa all for ourselves,
+don't you think?'&mdash;and was not that a dear sweet
+little thing for it to say?...</p>
+
+<p>"And finally the door opens again, and see! and his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
+hand makes a sign; and that lady, swift as one of these
+sea-gulls, leaps ashore. And up the hill; and through
+the gate; and into the house! And the door shuts
+again.</p>
+
+<p>"And another wait, while those six look at each
+other, and say their little things. And at last they are
+called too, and away they go, all together, just like one
+of these flocks of curlew that fly over the Cape, making
+those soft little sounds; and then into the house;
+and André said he had to wipe two tears out of his
+eyes to see a thing like that.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, this was the end of old Siméon's grief, as
+you may well believe. Those W'ites stay at the Couronne
+d'Or for as much as nine or ten days, and every
+morning they will be going across to see their dear
+dear grandfather; and finally when they went away,
+they had hired that widow Bergère to keep his house
+comfortable for him; and M'sieu Tommy left money
+for all needs.</p>
+
+<p>"And every Christmas after that, so long as old
+Siméon existed, there would come boxes of presents
+from that place in Boston. Oh, I assure you, he did
+not lack that good care. And always he must be talking
+about that Tommy of his, who was so rich, and
+was some great personage in the city&mdash;what they
+called an alderman&mdash;and yet he had not forgotten his
+poor old father, who had waited all those years to see
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"So this story shows that sometimes things turn out<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
+just as well in this life down here as they do in those
+silly stories they tell you about princesses and all those
+things that are not so; and that is a comfort sometimes,
+when you see so much that is sad and heartbreaking
+in this world...."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56"></a>[Pg 56]</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 416px;">
+<a name="CALVAIRE" id="CALVAIRE"></a>
+<img src="images/calvaire.jpg" width="416" height="600" alt="" />
+<div class="caption center">A CALVAIRE</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57"></a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="AT_A_BRETON_CALVAIRE" id="AT_A_BRETON_CALVAIRE">AT A BRETON CALVAIRE</a></h2>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="ph3">AT A BRETON CALVAIRE</p>
+
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Upon that cape that thrusts so bare<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Its crest above the wasting sea&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Grey rocks amidst eternity&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">There stands an old and frail calvaire,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Upraising like an unvoiced cry<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Its great black arms against the sky.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">For storm-beat years that cross has stood:<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">It slants before the winter gale;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And now the Christ is marred and pale;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The rain has washed away the blood<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">That ran once on its brow and side,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And in its feet the seams are wide.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">But when the boats put out to sea<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">At earliest dawn before the day,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">The fishermen, they turn and pray,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Their eyes upon the calvary:<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">"O Jesu, Son of Mary fair,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Our little boats are in thy care!"<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">And when the storm beats hard and shrill<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Then toil-bent women, worn with fear,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Pray for the lives they hold so dear,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And seek the cross upon the hill:<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">"O Jesu, Son of Mary mild,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Be with them where the waves are wild!"<br /></span><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">And when the dead they carry by<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Across that melancholy land,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Dead that were cast up on the strand<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Beneath a black and whirling sky,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">They pause before the old calvaire;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">They cross themselves and say a prayer.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">O Jesu, Son of Mary fair!<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">O Faith, that seeks thy cross of pain!<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Their voices break above the rain,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The wind blows hard, the heart lies bare:<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Clutching through dark, their hands find Thee,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">O Christ, that died on Calvary!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61"></a></span></p>
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="THE_PRIVILEGE" id="THE_PRIVILEGE">THE PRIVILEGE</a></h2>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="ph3">THE PRIVILEGE</p>
+
+
+<div class="figleft dropcap" style="width: 80px;">
+<img src="images/i_079.png" width="80" height="78" alt="" />
+</div>
+<p><span class="dropcap">T</span>o-day I can think about only one thing. It
+is in vain I have tried to busy myself with
+my sermon for next Sunday. Last week, for
+another reason, I had recourse to an old sermon;
+but I dislike to make a practice of so doing, even
+though I strongly suspect that none of our little Salmon
+River congregation would know the difference. We
+are a very simple people, in this out-of-the-way Cape
+Breton parish, called mostly to be fishers, like Our
+Lord's apostles, and recking not a whit of the finer
+points of doctrine. Nevertheless, it is an hireling
+shepherd who is faithless only because the flock do not
+ask to be fed with the appointed manna; and I shall
+broach the sermon again, once I have set down the
+thing that is so heavy on my heart.</p>
+
+<p>For all I can think of just now is that Renny and
+Suse, out there on Halibut Head, four miles away, are
+alone; alone for the first time in well-nigh thirty years.
+The last of the brood has taken wing.</p>
+
+<p>Yet it came to me this morning, as I watched Renny
+on the wharf saying good-by to the boy, and bidding
+him wrap the tippet snug about his neck in case the
+wind would be raw&mdash;it came to me that there is a
+triumph about the nest when it is empty that it could
+never have earlier. I saw the look of it in Renny's
+face&mdash;not defeat, but exultation.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"And what are you going to do now, Renny?" I
+asked him, as the steamer slipped out of sight behind
+the lighthouse rock.</p>
+
+<p>He stared at me a little contemptuously, a manner
+he has always had.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Do</i>, Mr. Biddles?" says he, with a queer laugh.
+"Why, what <i>would</i> I do, sor? They ain't no less fish
+to be catched, is they, off Halibut Head, just because I
+got quit of a son or two?"</p>
+
+<p>He left me, with a toss of his crisp, tawny-gray curls,
+jumped into his little two-wheeled cart, and was off.
+And I thought, "Ah, Renny Marks, outside you are
+still the same wild beast as when I had my first meeting
+with you, two-and-thirty years ago; but inside&mdash;yes,
+I knew then it must come; and it was not for me to
+order the how of it."</p>
+
+<p>So as I took my way homeward, alone, toward the
+Rectory, I found myself recalling, as if it were yesterday,
+the first words I had ever exchanged with that
+tawny giant, just then in his first flush of manhood,
+and with a face as ruddy and healthy-looking as one of
+these early New Rose potatoes. Often, to be sure, I
+had seen him already in church, of a Sunday, sitting
+defiant and uncomfortable on one of the rear benches,
+struggling vainly to keep his eyes open; but before the
+last Amen was fairly out of the people's mouth, he had
+always bolted for the door; and I had never come, as
+you may say, face to face with him until this afternoon
+when I was footing it back, by the cove road,
+from a visit to an old sick woman, Nannie Odell. And<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>
+here comes Renny Marks on his way home from the
+boat; and over his shoulder was the mainsail and gaff
+and a mackerel-seine and two great oars; and by one
+arm he had slung the rudder and tackle and bait-pot;
+and under the other he lugged a couple of bundles of
+lath for to mend his traps; and so he was pacing along
+there as proud and careless as Samson bearing away
+the gates of Gaza on his back (<i>Judges</i> xvi, 3).</p>
+
+<p>Now I had entertained the belief for some time that
+it was my duty, should the occasion offer, to have a
+serious word with Renny about matters not temporal;
+and this was clearly the moment. Yet even before we
+had met he gave me one of those proud, distrustful, I
+have said contemptuous, looks of his; and I seemed
+suddenly to perceive the figure I must cut in his eyes,
+pattering along there so trimly in my clerical garb, and
+with my book of prayers under one arm; and, do you
+know, I was right tongue-tied; and so we came within
+hand-reach, and still never a word.</p>
+
+<p>At last, "Good-day to ye, Mister Biddles," says he,
+with a scant, off-hand nod; and, as if he knew I must
+be admiring of his strength, "I can fetch twice this
+load, sor," says he, "without so mucht as knowing the
+difference."</p>
+
+<p>"It's a fine thing, Renny Marks," said I, gaining my
+tongue again, at his boast, "a fine thing to be the
+strongest man in three parishes, if that's what ye be, as
+they tell me."</p>
+
+<p>"It is that, sor," says he. "I never been cast yet;
+and I don't never expect for to be."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"But it's still finer a thing, Renny," I went on, "to
+use that strength in the honor of your Maker. Tell
+me, do you remember to say your prayers every night
+before you go to bed?"</p>
+
+<p>Never shall I forget the horse-laugh the young fellow
+had at those words.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, sor," he exclaimed, as if I had suggested the
+most unconscionable thing in the world, "saying prayers!
+that's for the likes of them as wash their face
+every day. I say my prayers on Sunday; and that's
+enough for the likes of me!"</p>
+
+<p>And with that, not even affording me a chance to
+reply, he strode off up the beach road; and in every
+movement of his great limbs I seemed to see the pride
+and glory of life. Doubtless I was to blame for not
+pressing home to him more urgently at that moment
+the claims of religion; but as I stood there, watching
+him, it came to me that after all he was almost to be
+pardoned for being proud. For surely there is something
+to warm the heart in the sight of the young lion's
+strength and courage; and even the Creator, I thought,
+must have taken delight in turning out such a fine piece
+of mortal handiwork as that Renny Marks.</p>
+
+<p>But with that thought immediately came another:
+"Whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth, and scourgeth
+every son whom he receiveth" (<i>Hebrews</i> xii, 6). And
+I went home sadly, for I seemed to see that Renny had
+bitter things ahead of him before he should learn the
+great lesson of life.</p>
+
+<p>Well, and this is the way it came to him. At the age<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
+of four-and-twenty, he married this Suse Barlow from
+down the coast a piece,&mdash;Green Harbor was the name
+of the town,&mdash;and she was a sweet young thing, gentle
+and ladylike, though of plainest country stock, and
+with enough education so they'd let her keep school
+down there. He built a little house for her, the one
+they still live in, with his own hands, at Halibut Head;
+and I never saw anything prettier than the way that
+young giant treated his wife&mdash;like a princess! It was
+the first time in his life, I dare say, he had ever given
+a thought to anything but himself; and in a fashion, I
+suppose, 'twas still but a satisfaction of his pride, to
+have her so beautiful, and so well-dressed.</p>
+
+<p>I remember of how often they would come in late to
+church,&mdash;even as late as the Te Deum,&mdash;and I could
+almost suspect him of being behindhand of purpose,
+for of course every one would look around when he
+came creaking down the aisle in his big shoes, with a
+wide smile on his ruddy face that showed all his white
+teeth through his beard; and none could fail to observe
+how fresh and pretty Suse was, tripping along there
+behind him, and looking very demure and modest in
+her print frock, and oh, so very, very sorry to be late!
+And during the prayers I had to remark how his face
+would always be turned straight toward her, as if it
+were to her he was addressing his supplications; the
+young heathen!</p>
+
+<p>Now there is one thing I never could seem to understand,
+though I have often turned it over in my mind,
+and that is, why it should be that a young Samson like<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
+Renny Marks, and a fine, bouncing girl like that Suse
+of his, should have children who were too weak and
+frail to stay long on this earth; but such was the case.
+They saved only three out of six; and the oldest of
+those three, Michael John, when he got to be thirteen
+years of age, shipped as cabin boy on a fisherman down
+to the Grand Banks, and never came back. So that
+left only Bessie Lou, who was twelve, and little Martin,
+who was the baby.</p>
+
+<p>If ever children had a good bringing up, it was those
+two. I never saw either of them in a dirty frock or in
+bare feet; and that means something, you must allow,
+when you consider the hardness of the fisherman's life,
+and how often he has nothing at all to show for a season's
+toil except debts! But work&mdash;I never saw any
+one work like that Renny; and he made a lovely little
+farm out there; and Suse wasn't ashamed to raise
+chickens and sell them in Salmon River; and she dyed
+wool, and used to hook these rugs, with patterns of her
+own design, baskets of flowers, or handsome fruit-dishes;
+and almost always she could get a price for
+them. But, as you may believe, she couldn't keep her
+sweet looks with work like that. Before she was
+thirty she began to look old, as is so often true in a
+hard country like ours; and not often would she be
+coming in to church any more, because, she said, of the
+household duties; but my own belief is that she did not
+have anything to wear. But Bessie Lou and little
+Martin, when the boy was well enough, were there
+every fine Sunday, as pretty as pictures, and able to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
+recite the Creed, and the Lord's Prayer, and the Collects,
+and the Commandments, quite like the children
+of gentlefolk.</p>
+
+<p>Well, when Bessie Lou got to be sixteen, she took it
+into her head that she must go off to Boston, where she
+would be earning her own living, and see something
+more of the world than is possible for a girl in Salmon
+River. Our girls all get that notion nowadays; they
+are not content to stay at home as girls used to do; but
+off they go in droves to the States, where wages are
+big, and there is excitement and variety. So the old
+people finally said yes, and off goes Bessie Lou, like the
+others; and in two years we heard she was to be married
+to a mechanic in Lynn (I think that is the name of
+the city) somewhere outside of Boston. She has been
+gone eight years now, and has three children; and she
+writes occasionally. She is always wishing she could
+come down and visit the old folks; but it is hard to get
+away, I presume, and they are plain working people.</p>
+
+<p>So after Bessie Lou's going, all they had left at
+home was Martin, who was always ailing more or less.
+And on my word, I never saw anything like the care
+they gave that boy. There wasn't anything too good
+for him. All these most expensive tonics and patent
+medicines they would be for trying, one after another,
+and telling themselves every time that at last they had
+found just the right thing, because he'd seem to be
+bracing up a bit, and getting more active. And then
+he would take another of his bad spells, and lose
+ground again; and they would put by that bottle and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
+try something else. One day when I was out there his
+ma showed me all of twenty bottles of patent medicine,
+some of them scarcely touched, that Renny had got for
+him, one time or another.</p>
+
+<p>You see, Martin couldn't run about outdoors very
+much because of his asthma; and then, his eyes being
+bad, that made him unhappy in the house, for he
+couldn't be reading or studying. His father got him
+an old fiddle once, he'd picked up at an auction, and
+the boy took to it something wonderful; but not having
+any teacher and no music he soon grew tired of it. And
+whenever old Renny would be in the village, he must
+always be getting some little thing to take out to Martin:
+a couple of bananas, say, or a jack-knife, or one of
+those American magazines with nice pictures, especially
+pictures of ships and other sailing craft, of which the
+lad was very fond.</p>
+
+<p>Well, and so last winter came, which was a very bad
+winter indeed, in these parts; and the poor lamb had a
+pitiful hard time; and whenever Renny got in to
+church, it was plain to see that he was eating his heart
+out with worry. He still had his old way of always
+snoring during the sermon; but oh, if you could see
+once the tired, anxious, supplicating look in his face,
+as soon as his proud eyes shut, you never would have
+had the heart to wish anything but "Sleep on now, and
+take your rest" (<i>Mark</i> xiv, 41), for you knew that
+perhaps, for a few minutes, he had stopped worrying
+about that little lad of his.</p>
+
+<p>Spring came on, at last, and Martin was out again<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>
+for a while every day in the sun; and sometimes
+the old man would be taking him abroad for a drive
+or for a little sail in the boat, when he was going out
+to his traps; and it appeared that the strain was over
+again for the time being. That is why I was greatly
+surprised and troubled one day, about two months ago,
+to see Renny come driving up toward the Rectory like
+mad, all alone in his cart.</p>
+
+<p>I had just been doing a turn of work myself at the
+hay; for it is hard to get help with us when you need it
+most; and as I came from the barn, in my shirt-sleeves,
+Renny turned in at the gate.</p>
+
+<p>"Something has happened to the boy," was my
+thought; and I was all but certain of it when I saw the
+man's face, sharp set as a flint stone, and all the blood
+gone from his ruddy skin so that it looked right blue.
+He jumped out before the mare stopped, and came up
+to me.</p>
+
+<p>"Can I have a word with ye?" said he; and when
+he saw my look of question, he added, "It ain't nothink,
+sor. He's all right."</p>
+
+<p>I put my hand on his shoulder, and led him into my
+study, and we sat down there, just as we were, I in my
+shirt-sleeves, and still unwashed after the hayfield.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it, Renny, man?" says I.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed like he could not make his lips open for a
+moment, and then, suddenly, he began talking very fast
+and excitedly, pecking little dents in the arms of the
+chair with his big black fingernails.</p>
+
+<p>"That Bessie Lou of oors up to Boston," said he, as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
+if he were accusing some one of an outrage, "we got a
+letter from 'er last night, we did, and she sayse, says
+she, why wouldn't we be for a-sending o' the leetle lad
+up theyr? They'd gladly look oot for him, she sayse;
+and the winter ain't severe, she sayse; and he could go
+to one o' them fine city eye-doctors and 'ave his eyes
+put right with glasses or somethink; and prob'ly he
+could be for going to school again and a-getting of his
+learning, which he's sadly be'indhand in, sor, becaust
+he's ben ailing so much."</p>
+
+<p>His eyes flashed, and the sweat poured down his
+forehead in streams.</p>
+
+<p>I don't know why I was so slow to understand; but
+I read his look wrong, there seemed so much of the old
+insolence and pride in it, and I replied, I daresay a
+little reproachfully,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Well, and why wouldn't that be an excellent thing,
+Renny? I should think you would feel grateful."</p>
+
+<p>He stared at me for a second, as if I had struck him.
+Ah, we can forget the words people say to us, even in
+wrath; but can we ever free ourselves from the memory
+of such a look? Without knowing why, I had the
+feeling of being a traitor. And then, all of a sudden,
+there he had crumpled down in his chair, and put his
+head in his big hands, and was sobbing.</p>
+
+<p>"I cain't&mdash;I cain't let him go," he groaned. "I
+woon't let him go. He's all what we got left."</p>
+
+<p>I sat there for a time, helpless, looking at him. You
+might think that a priest, with the daily acquaintance
+he has with the bitter things of life, ought to know how<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>
+to face them calmly; but so far as my own small experience
+goes, I seem to know nothing more about all
+that than at the beginning. It always hurts just as
+much; it's always just as bewildering, just as terrible,
+as if you had never seen anything like it before. And
+when I saw that giant of a Renny Marks just broken
+over there like some big tree shattered by lightning, it
+seemed as if I could not bear to face such suffering.
+Then I remembered that he had been committed into
+my care by God, and that I must not be only an hireling
+shepherd. So I said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Renny, lad, it isn't for ourselves we must be thinking.
+It's for him."</p>
+
+<p>He lifted up his head, with the shaggy, half-gray
+hair all rumpled on his wet forehead, and pulled his
+sleeve across his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Hark'e, Mister Biddles," he commanded harshly.
+"Ain't we did the best we could for him? Who dares
+say we ain't did the best we could for him? <i>You?</i>"</p>
+
+<p>I made no answer, and for a minute we faced each
+other, while he shook his clenched fists at me, and the
+creature in him that had never yet been cast challenged
+all the universe.</p>
+
+<p>"They're tryin' to tak my boy away from me," he
+roared, "and they cain't do it&mdash;I tell you they cain't.
+He's all what we got left, now."</p>
+
+<p>"And so you mean to keep him for yourself?" I
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, that I do," he cried, jumping out of his chair,
+and striding up and down the room as if clean out of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
+his wits. "I do! I do! Why <i>wouldn't</i> I mean to, hey?
+Ain't he mine? Who's got a better right to him?"</p>
+
+<p>Of a sudden he comes to a dead halt in front of me,
+with his arms crossed. "Mister Biddles," he says,
+very bitterly, "you may well be thankfu' you never
+wast a father yoursel'. Nobody ain't for trying to tak
+nothink away from you."</p>
+
+<p>"That's quite true, Renny," said I. "But remember,"
+I said, not intending any irreverence, but uttering
+such poor words as were given to me in my extremity,
+"remember, Renny, it's to a Father you say your prayers
+in church every Sunday; and you needn't think as
+that Father doesn't know full as well as you what it is
+to give up an only Son for love's sake."</p>
+
+<p>"Hey?&mdash;What's that, sor?" cries Renny, with a
+face right like a dead thing.</p>
+
+<p>"And would He be asking of you for to let yours go,
+if He didn't know there was love enough in your heart
+to stand the test?"</p>
+
+<p>Renny broke out with a terrible groan, like the roar
+of anguish of a wild beast that has got a mortal
+wound; and the same instant the savage look died in
+his eyes, and the bigger love in him had triumphed
+over the smaller love. I could see it, I knew it, even
+before he spoke. He caught at my hand, blunderingly,
+and gave it a twist like a winch.</p>
+
+<p>"He shall go, sor. He shall go for all of I. And
+Mr. Biddles, while I'm for telling the old woman and
+the boy, would ye be so condescending as to say over
+some of them there prayers, so I could have the feel<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>ing,
+as you might say, that some one was keeping an
+eye on me? It'll all be done in less nor a half-hour."</p>
+
+<p>And with that, off he goes, and jumps into his cart,
+and whips up the mare, tearing down the road like a
+whirlwind, just as he had come, without so much as
+saying good-by. And the next day I heard them saying
+in the village that Renny Marks's boy was to go up to
+the States to be raised with his sister's family.</p>
+
+<p>Ah, well, that's only a common sort of a story, I
+know. The same kind of things happen near us every
+day. I can't even quite tell why I wanted to set it down
+on paper like this, only that, some way, it makes me
+believe in God more; even when I have to remember,
+and it seems to me just now like I could never stop
+remembering it, that Renny and Suse are all alone to-day
+out there on Halibut Head. Renny is at the fish,
+of course; and Suse, I daresay, is working in her little
+potato patch; and Martin is out there on the sea, being
+borne to a world far away, and from which, I suppose,
+he will not be very anxious to return; for few of them
+do come back, nowadays, to the home country.</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<a name="FOUGERE" id="FOUGERE"></a>
+<img src="images/fougere.jpg" width="600" height="410" alt="" />
+<div class="caption center">FOUGÈRE'S COVE</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77"></a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="THEIR_TRUE_LOVE" id="THEIR_TRUE_LOVE">THEIR TRUE LOVE</a></h2>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="ph3">THEIR TRUE LOVE</p>
+
+
+<div class="figleft dropcap" style="width: 79px;">
+<img src="images/i_097.png" width="79" height="80" alt="" />
+</div>
+<p><span class="dropcap">E</span>ven Zabette, with her thousand wrinkles,
+was young once. They say her lips were
+red as wild strawberries and her hair as
+sleek as the wing of a blackbird in spring.
+All the old people of St. Esprit remember how she
+used to swing along the street on her way to mass of a
+Sunday, straight, proud, agile as a goat, with her dark
+head flung back, and a disdainful smile on her lips that
+kept young men from being unduly forward. The
+country people, who must have their own name for
+everything and everybody, used to call her "la belle
+orgueilleuse," and sometimes, "the highstepper"; and
+though they had to laugh at her a little for her lofty
+ways, they found it quite natural to address her as
+mademoiselle.</p>
+
+<p>But all these things one only knows by hearsay. Zabette
+does not talk much herself. So far as she is concerned,
+you might never guess that she had a story at
+all. She lives there in the little dormer-windowed cottage
+beyond the post-office with Suzanne Benoît. For
+thirty-three years now the two women have lived together;
+and it is the earnest prayer of both of them
+that when the time for going arrives, they may go
+together.</p>
+
+<p>These two good souls have the reputation, all over
+the country, of immense industry and thrift. Suzanne<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>
+keeps three cows, and her butter is famous. Zabette&mdash;she
+was a Fuseau, from the Grande Anse&mdash;takes
+in washing of the better class. Nobody in St. Esprit can
+do one of those stiff white linen collars so well as she.
+Positively, it shines in the sun like a looking-glass. If
+you notice the men going to church, you can always
+pick out those who have their shirts and collars done
+by Zabette Fuseau. By comparison, the others appear
+dull and very commonplace.</p>
+
+<p>"But why must Zabette do collars for her living?"
+you are asking. "Why has she not a man of her own
+to look out for her, and half a dozen grown up children?
+Did she never marry, then&mdash;this belle orgueilleuse?"</p>
+
+<p>No. Never. But not on account of that pride of
+hers; at least not directly. If you go into the pretty
+little living-room of the second cottage beyond the
+post-office&mdash;the one with such a show of geraniums in
+the front windows&mdash;you will guess half the secret, for
+just above the mantelpiece, between two vases of artificial
+asters, hangs the daguerreotype portrait of a
+young man in mariner's slops. The lineaments have
+so faded with the years that it is difficult to make them
+out with any assurance. It is as if the portrait itself
+were seeking to escape from life, retreating little by
+little, imperceptibly, into the dull shadows of the
+ground, so that only as you look at it from a certain
+angle can you still clearly distinguish the small dark
+eyes, the full moustache, the round chin, the square
+stocky shoulders of the subject. Only the two rosy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>
+spots added by the daguerreotypist to the cheeks defy
+time and change, indestructible token of youth and
+ardor.</p>
+
+<p>A little frame of immortelles encloses the portrait.
+And directly in front of it, on the mantelpiece, stands
+a pretty shell box, with the three words on the mother-of-pearl
+lid: "À ma chérie." What is in the box&mdash;if
+anything&mdash;no one can tell you for a certainty, though
+there are plenty of theories. "Love letters," say
+some; and others, with a pitying laugh, "Old maid's
+tears."</p>
+
+<p>Zabette and Suzanne hold their tongues. I think I
+know what the treasure of the box is; for I had the
+story directly from a very aged woman who knew both
+the "girls" when they were young; and she vouched
+for the truth of it by all the beads of her rosary. This
+is how it went.</p>
+
+<p>Zabette Fuseau was eighteen, and she lived at the
+Grand Anse, two miles out of St. Esprit; and the procession
+of young fellows, going there to woo, was like
+a pilgrimage, exactly. Among them came one from
+far down the coast, a place called Rivière Bourgeoise.
+He was a deep sea fisherman, from off a vessel which
+had put in at St. Esprit for repairs, mid-course to the
+Grand Banks; and on his first shore leave Maxence
+had caught sight of la belle orgueilleuse, who had come
+into town with a basket of eggs; and he had followed
+her home, at a little distance, sighing, but without the
+courage to address her so long as they were in the village.
+He was a very handsome young fellow, with a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>
+brown, ruddy skin, and the most beautiful dark curly
+hair and crisp moustache imaginable.</p>
+
+<p>Zabette knew he was behind her; but she would not
+turn; not she; only walked a little more proudly and
+gracefully, with that swinging movement of hers, like
+a vessel sailing in a head wind. At last, when they had
+reached the Calvaire at the end of the village, he managed
+to get out his first word.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" he cried, haltingly. "Mademoiselle!"</p>
+
+<p>She turned half about and fixed her dark proud eyes
+upon him, while her cheeks crimsoned.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, m'sieur?"</p>
+
+<p>He could not speak, and the two stared at each other
+for a long time in silence, while the thought came to
+her that this was the man for whom she was destined.</p>
+
+<p>"Had you something to say to me?" she repeated,
+finally, in a tone that tried to be severe, but was really
+very soft.</p>
+
+<p>He nodded his curly head, and licked his lips hard
+to moisten them.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot wait any longer," she protested, after a
+while. "They need me at home."</p>
+
+<p>She turned quickly again, as if to go; but her feet
+were glued to the ground, and she did not take a step.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, s'il vous plaît, mam'selle!" he cried, to hold
+her. "You think I am rude. But I did not mean to
+follow you like this. I could not help it. You are so
+beautiful."</p>
+
+<p>The look he gave her with those words sank deep
+into her heart and rooted itself there forever. In vain,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
+for the rest of her life, she might try to tear it out;
+there was a fatality about it. Zabette, fine highstepper
+that she was, had been caught at last. She knew that
+she ought to send the handsome young sailor away;
+but her tongue would not obey her. Instead, it uttered
+some very childish words of confusion and pleasure;
+and before she knew it, there was her man walking
+along at her side, with one hand on his heart, declaring
+that she was the most angelic creature in the world,
+that he was desperately in love with her, that he could
+not live without her, and that she must promise then
+and there to be his, or he would instantly kill himself.
+The burning, impassioned look in his eyes struck her
+with dismay.</p>
+
+<p>"But I cannot decide all in a moment like this," she
+protested, in a weak voice. "It would be indecent. I
+must think."</p>
+
+<p>"Think!" he retorted, bitterly. "Oh, very well.
+Then you do not love me!"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but I do!" she cried, all trembling.</p>
+
+<p>With that he took her in his arms and kissed her,
+and nothing more was heard about suicide or any such
+subject.</p>
+
+<p>"But we must not tell any one yet," she pleaded.
+"They would not understand."</p>
+
+<p>He agreed, with the utmost readiness. "We will
+not tell a soul. It shall be exactly as you wish. But
+I may come and see you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, certainly," she responded. "Often,&mdash;that is,
+every day or two,&mdash;at Grande Anse; and perhaps we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>
+may happen to meet sometimes in the village, as well."</p>
+
+<p>"The <i>Soleil</i> will be delaying at St. Esprit for two
+weeks," he explained, as they walked along, hand in
+hand. "She put in for some repairs. By the end of
+that time, perhaps"&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no, not so soon as that," she interrupted.
+"We must let a longer while pass first."</p>
+
+<p>She gazed at him yearningly. "You will be returning
+by here in the autumn, at the end of the season on
+the Banks?"</p>
+
+<p>"We are taking on three men from St. Esprit," he
+answered. "We shall stop here on the return to set
+them ashore. That will be in October, near the end of
+the month, if the season is good."</p>
+
+<p>She sighed, as if dreading some disaster; and they
+looked at each other again, and the look ended in a
+kiss. It is not by words, that new love feeds and
+grows.</p>
+
+<p>Before they reached the Grande Anse he quitted
+her; but he gave her his promise to come again that
+evening. He did&mdash;that evening, and two evenings
+later, and so on, every other evening for those two
+weeks. Zabette's old mother took a great fancy to
+him, and gave him every encouragement; but the old
+père Fuseau, who had sailed many a voyage, in
+younger days, round the Horn, would never speak a
+good word for him&mdash;and perhaps his hostility only
+increased the girl's attachment.</p>
+
+<p>"A little grease is all very well for the hair of a
+young man," he would say. "But this scented
+pomade they use nowadays&mdash;pah!"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"You object then to a sailor's being a gentleman?"
+demanded the girl haughtily.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I do," roared the old père Fuseau. "Have a
+care, Zabette."</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, the two lovers found plenty of chances
+to be alone together; and they would talk, in low
+voices, of their happiness and of the future, which
+looked very bright to Zabette, despite all the uncertainties
+of the sea.</p>
+
+<p>"When we put in on the return from the Banks,"
+said Maxence, "you will be at the wharf to meet me;
+and that very day we will announce our fiancailles.
+What an astonishment for everybody!"</p>
+
+<p>"And then," she asked&mdash;"after that?"</p>
+
+<p>"After that, I will stay ashore for a while. They
+can do without me on the <i>Soleil</i>. And at the end of a
+month"&mdash;he told her the rest with a kiss; and surely
+Zabette had never been so happy in her life.</p>
+
+<p>But for the time being the affair was kept very, very
+secret, so that people might not get to gossiping. Even
+those frequent expeditions of Maxence to the Grande
+Anse were not remarked, for he always came after
+dusk: and when the fortnight was over and the <i>Soleil</i>
+once more was ready for sea, the two sweethearts
+exchanged keepsakes, and he left her.</p>
+
+<p>"I will send you a letter from St. Pierre Miquelon,"
+he said, to cheer her, while he wiped away her tears
+with a silk handkerchief.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you promise?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>He promised. Three weeks later the letter arrived;
+and it told her that his heart was breaking for his dear<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>
+little Zabette. "Sois fidèle&mdash;be true," were the last
+words. The letter had a perfume of pomade about
+it, and she carried it all summer in her bodice, taking
+it out many times a day to scan the loving words again.</p>
+
+<p>In St. Esprit, when the fishing fleet begins to return
+from the Banks, they keep an old man on the lookout
+in the church tower; and as soon as he sights a vessel
+in the offing, he rings the bell.</p>
+
+<p>It was the fourth week in October that year before
+the bell was heard; and then rapidly, two or three at a
+time, the schooners came in. First the <i>Dame Blanche</i>,
+which was always in the lead; then the <i>Êtoile</i>, the <i>Deux
+Frères</i>, the <i>Lottie B.</i>, and the <i>Milo</i>. Every day, morning
+or afternoon, the bell would ring, and poor Zabette
+must find some excuse or other to be in town.
+Down at the wharf there was always gathered an anxious
+throng, watching for the appearance of the vessel
+round the Cape. And when she was visible at last,
+there would be cries of joy from some, and silence on
+the part of others. Zabette was among the silent.
+When she saw the happiness about her, tears would
+swim unbidden in her eyes; but of course she did not
+lose heart, for still there were several vessels to
+arrive, and no disasters had been reported by the
+earlier comers. People noticed her, standing there with
+expectant mien, and they wondered what it could be
+that brought her; but it was not their habit to ask questions
+of the fine highstepper.</p>
+
+<p>There was another young girl on the wharf, too,
+who had the air of looking for some one&mdash;a certain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>
+Suzanne Benoît, from l'Étang, three miles inshore, a
+very pretty girl, with a mild, appealing look in her
+brown eyes. Zabette had seen her often here and
+there; but she had no acquaintance with her. At the
+present moment, strangely enough, she felt herself
+powerfully drawn to this Suzanne. It came to her,
+somehow, that the girl had come thither on a mission
+similar to her own, she was so silent, and had not the
+look of those who had waited on the wharf in previous
+years. And so, one afternoon, when two vessels
+had rounded the Cape and were entering the harbor,
+amid a great hubbub of expectancy,&mdash;and neither of
+them was the <i>Soleil</i>,&mdash;Zabette surprised a look of woe
+in the face of the other which she could not resist. She
+went over to her, with some diffidence, and offered a
+few words of sympathy.</p>
+
+<p>"You are waiting for some one, too?" she asked
+her.</p>
+
+<p>The eyes of the other filled quickly to overflowing.
+"Yes," she answered. "He has not come yet."</p>
+
+<p>"You must not worry," said Zabette, stoutly.
+"There are always delays, you know. Some are
+ahead; others behind; it is so every year."</p>
+
+<p>The girl gave her a grateful look, and squeezed her
+hand. "It is a secret," she murmured.</p>
+
+<p>Zabette smiled. "I have a secret too."</p>
+
+<p>"Then we are waiting together," said Suzanne.
+"That makes it so much easier!"</p>
+
+<p>They walked back to the street, arm in arm, as if
+they had always been bosom friends. And the next<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>
+day they were both at the wharf again. The afternoon
+was bleak; but as usual they were in their best
+clothes.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, it does not seem as if I could wait any longer,"
+whispered Suzanne, confidingly. "I do hope it will
+be the <i>Soleil</i> this time."</p>
+
+<p>"The <i>Soleil</i>!" exclaimed Zabette, joyfully. "You
+are waiting for the <i>Soleil</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>And at the other's nod, she went on. "How lovely
+that we are expecting the same vessel. Oh, I am sure
+it will come to-day&mdash;or certainly to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>The two girls felt themselves very close together,
+now that they had shared so much of their secret; and
+it made the waiting less hard to bear.</p>
+
+<p>"Is he handsome, your man?" asked Suzanne,
+timidly.</p>
+
+<p>"Ravishing," replied Zabette, eagerly. "And
+yours?"</p>
+
+<p>Suzanne sighed with adoration. "Beyond words,"
+was her reply&mdash;and the girls exchanged another of
+those pressures of the hand which mean so much where
+love is concerned. "He has the most beautiful moustache
+in the world."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no," protested Zabette, smilingly. "Mine has
+a more beautiful one yet, and such crisp curly hair, and
+dark eyes."</p>
+
+<p>Her companion suddenly looked at her. "Large
+eyes or small?" she asked in a strange voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh," replied Zabette, doubtfully. "Not too large.
+I would not fancy ox eyes in a man."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Suzanne freed herself and stood facing her with a
+flash of hatred in her mild face which Zabette could
+not understand.</p>
+
+<p>"And his name!" she demanded, harshly. "His
+name, then!"</p>
+
+<p>Zabette smiled a little proudly. "That is my secret,"
+she replied. "But, Suzanne, what is the matter?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is not your secret," laughed the other, bitterly.
+"It is not your secret. It is my secret."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean?" cried Zabette, with a sudden
+feeling of terror at the girl's drawn face.</p>
+
+<p>"His name is Maxence!" Suzanne's laugh was like
+bones rattling in a coffin.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to Zabette as if a flash of lightning had
+cleft her soul in two. That was the way the truth came
+to her. She drew back like a viper ready to strike.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I hate you!" she cried, and turned on her heel,
+white to the eyes with anger and shame.</p>
+
+<p>But Suzanne would not leave her. She followed to
+the other side of the wharf, and as soon as she could
+speak again without attracting attention, she said,
+more kindly:</p>
+
+<p>"I am very sorry for you, Zabette. It is too bad
+you were so mistaken. Why, he was engaged to me
+the very second day he came ashore."</p>
+
+<p>Zabette stifled back a cry, and retorted, icily, "He
+was engaged to me the first day. He followed me all
+the way to the Grande Anse."</p>
+
+<p>Suzanne's eyes glittered, this time. "He followed
+me all the way to l'Étang. He is mine."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Zabette brought out, through white lips, "Leave me
+alone. He was mine first."</p>
+
+<p>"He was mine last," retaliated the other, undauntedly.
+"The very morning he went away, he came to see
+me. Did he come to you that day? Did he? Did he?"</p>
+
+<p>Zabette ignored her question. "He wrote me a letter
+from St. Pierre Miquelon," she announced, crisply.
+"So that settles it, first and last."</p>
+
+<p>The hand of Suzanne suddenly lifted to her bosom,
+as if feeling for something. "My letter was written
+at St. Pierre, too."</p>
+
+<p>For an instant they glared at each other like wild
+animals fighting over prey. Neither said a word.
+Neither yielded a hair. Each felt that her life's happiness
+was at stake. Zabette had thought that this
+chit of a girl from l'Étang was mild and timid; but
+now she realized that she had met her match for courage.
+And the thought came to her: "When he sees
+us, let him choose."</p>
+
+<p>She was not conscious of having uttered the words.
+Perhaps her glance, swiftly directed toward the Cape,
+conveyed the thought to her rival. At all events the
+answer came promptly and with complete self-assurance:</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, let Maxence choose."</p>
+
+<p>Just at that moment the first vessel appeared at
+the harbor entrance, while the bell redoubled its jubilation
+in the church tower on the hill.</p>
+
+<p>"The <i>Mercure</i>!" cried an old woman. "Thank
+God!"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And a few minutes later, there was the <i>Anne-Marie</i>,
+all sail set over her green hull; and then a vessel which
+at first no one seemed to recognize.</p>
+
+<p>"Which is that?" they asked. "Oh, it must be&mdash;yes,
+it is the <i>Soleil</i>, from Rivière Bourgeoise. She has
+several men from here aboard."</p>
+
+<p>With eyes that seemed to be starting from her head,
+Zabette watched the <i>Soleil</i> entering the harbor. She
+could distinguish forms on deck. She saw handkerchiefs
+waving. At last she could begin to make out
+the faces a little. But she did not discover the one she
+sought. Holding tight to a mooring post, unable to
+think, unable to do anything but watch, it seemed to
+her that hours passed before the schooner cast anchor
+and a boat was put over. There were four persons in
+it: the mate and the three men from St. Esprit. They
+rowed rapidly to the wharf; and the three men threw
+up their gunny sacks and climbed the ladder, one after
+the other.</p>
+
+<p>The mate was just about to put off again when
+Zabette spoke to him. She leaned over the edge of the
+wharf, reaching out a detaining hand.</p>
+
+<p>"M'sieur!"</p>
+
+<p>At the same instant the word was uttered by another
+voice close by. She looked up and saw Suzanne, very
+white, in the same attitude.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it, mesdemoiselles?" asked the mate,
+touching his vizor.</p>
+
+<p>As if by concerted arrangement came the question
+from both sides.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"And Maxence?"</p>
+
+<p>The man answered them seriously and directly, perceiving
+from their manner that his reply was of great
+import to these two, whatever the reason for it might be.</p>
+
+<p>"Maxence?&mdash;But we do not know where he is.
+There was a fog. He was out in a dory, alone. We
+picked up the dory the next day. Perhaps"&mdash;he
+shrugged his shoulders incredulously&mdash;"perhaps he
+might have been picked up by another vessel. Who
+can say?"</p>
+
+<p>The girls gave him no answer. They reeled, and
+would have fallen, save that each found support in the
+other's arms. Sinking to the string piece of the
+wharf, they buried their faces on each other's shoulders
+and sobbed. Happy fathers and mothers and
+sweethearts, gathered on the wharf, looked at them in
+wonder, and left them alone, ignorant of the cause of
+their grief. So a long time passed, and still they
+crouched there, tight clasped, with buried heads.</p>
+
+<p>"He was so good, so brave!" sobbed Suzanne.</p>
+
+<p>"I loved him so much," repeated Zabette, over and
+over.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall die without him," moaned Suzanne.</p>
+
+<p>"So shall I," responded the other. "I cannot bear
+to live any longer."</p>
+
+<p>"If only I had a picture of him, that would be some
+comfort," said the poor girl from l'Étang.</p>
+
+<p>"I have one," said Zabette, sitting up straight and
+putting some orderly touches to her disarranged <i>mouchoir</i>.
+"He gave it to me the very last night."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Suzanne looked at her enviously, and mopped her
+red eyes. "All I have," she sighed, "is a little shell
+box he brought me, with the motto, <i>À ma chérie</i>. He
+gave me that the very last morning of all. It is very
+beautiful, but no one but me has seen it yet."</p>
+
+<p>"You must show it to me sometime," said Zabette.
+"I have a right to see it."</p>
+
+<p>"If you will let me look at the picture," consented
+the other, guardedly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, you may look at it," said Zabette, "so long as
+you do not forget that it belongs to me."</p>
+
+<p>"To you!" retorted the other. "And have you a
+better right to it than I, seeing that he would have been
+my husband in a month's time? You are a bad, cruel
+girl; you have no heart. It is a mercy he escaped the
+traps you set for him&mdash;my poor Maxence!"</p>
+
+<p>A thousand taunting words came to Zabette's lips,
+but she controlled herself, rose to her feet with a show
+of dignity, and quitted the wharf. She resolved that
+she would never speak to that Benoît girl again. To
+do so was only to be insulted.</p>
+
+<p>She went back to her home on the Grande Anse and
+endeavored to take up her everyday life again as
+though nothing had happened. She hid her grief from
+the neighbors, even from her own parents, who had
+never suspected the strength of her attachment for
+Maxence. By day she could keep herself busy about
+the house, and the secret would only be a dull pain;
+but at night, especially when the wind blew, it would
+gnaw and gnaw at her heart like a hungry beast.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>At last she could keep it to herself no longer. She
+must share her misery. But there was only one person
+in the world who could understand. She declared to
+herself that nothing would induce her to go to
+l'Étang; and yet, as if under a spell, she made ready
+for the journey.</p>
+
+<p>"Where are you going, my Zabette?" asked her old
+mother.</p>
+
+<p>"To l'Étang," she answered. "I hear there is a
+girl there who makes a special brown dye for wool."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, the walk will do you good, ma fille. You
+have been indoors too much lately. You are growing
+right pale and ill-looking."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, it is nothing, maman. I never feel very brisk,
+you know, in November. 'Tis such a dreary month."</p>
+
+<p>She took a back road across the barrens to l'Étang.
+Scarcely any one traveled it except in winter to fetch
+kindling wood from the scrub fir that grew there. Consequently
+Zabette was much surprised, after walking
+about a mile and a half, to discover that some one was
+approaching from the opposite direction&mdash;a woman,
+with a red shawl across her shoulders. Gradually the
+distance between them lessened; and then she saw, with
+a start, that it was Suzanne Benoît. Her knees began
+to tremble under her. When they met, at last, no
+words would come to her lips: they only looked at each
+other with questioning, hunted eyes, then embraced,
+weeping, and sat down silently on a moss-hummock beside
+the road. Zabette had not felt so comforted since
+the disaster of October. For the first time she could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
+let the tears flow without any fear of detection. At
+last she said, very calmly:</p>
+
+<p>"I have brought the picture."</p>
+
+<p>She drew it out from under her coat, and held it on
+her knees, where Suzanne could see it.</p>
+
+<p>"And here is the shell box," rejoined her companion.
+"I do not know how to read, me; but there are
+the words&mdash;<i>À ma chérie</i>. It's pretty&mdash;<i>hein</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>Each gazed at the other's treasure.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah," sighed Suzanne, mournfully. "How handsome
+he was to look at&mdash;and so true and brave!"</p>
+
+<p>"I shall never love another," said Zabette, with sad
+conviction&mdash;"never. Love is over for me."</p>
+
+<p>"And for me," said Suzanne. "But we have our
+memories."</p>
+
+<p>"Mine," corrected Zabette. "You are forgetting."</p>
+
+<p>"Did he ever give you a present that said <i>À ma
+chérie</i>?" demanded Suzanne, pointedly.</p>
+
+<p>The other explained blandly: "You cannot say anything,
+my dear, on the back of a tintype.&mdash;But I have
+my letter from St. Pierre."</p>
+
+<p>She showed it.</p>
+
+<p>"Even if I cannot read mine," declared the girl from
+l'Étang, hotly, "I know it is fully as nice as yours.
+Nicer!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, can I never see you but you must insult me!"
+cried Zabette. "Keep your old box and your precious
+letter from St. Pierre Miquelon. What can they matter
+to me?"</p>
+
+<p>Without a word of good-by she sprang to her feet<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
+and set out for the Grande Anse. She did not see the
+Benoît girl again that winter; but she could not help
+thinking about her, sometimes with sympathy, sometimes
+with bitter hatred. The young men came flocking
+to her home, as usual, vying with one another in
+attentions to her, for not only was Zabette known as
+the handsomest girl in three parishes, but also as an
+excellent housekeeper&mdash;"good saver, rare spender."</p>
+
+<p>She would not encourage any of them, however.</p>
+
+<p>"If I marry," she said to herself, "it is giving Maxence
+over to that l'Étang girl. She will crow about it.
+She will say, 'At last he is mine altogether. She has
+surrendered.' No, I could not stand that."</p>
+
+<p>So that winter passed, and the next summer, and
+other winters and summers. Zabette did not marry;
+and after a time she began hearing herself spoken of
+as an old maid. The young men flocked to other
+houses, not hers. At the end of twelve years both her
+father and mother were dead, and she was alone in the
+world, thirty, and unprovided for.</p>
+
+<p>It was, of course, fated, that these two women whose
+lives had been so strangely entangled should drift
+together again, sooner or later. So long as both were
+young and could claim love for themselves, jealousy
+was bound to separate them; but when they found
+themselves quite alone in the world, no longer beautiful,
+no longer arousing thoughts of love in the breast
+of another, the memory of all that was most precious
+in their lives drew them together as surely as a magnet
+draws two bits of metal.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It was after mass, one Sunday, that Zabette sought
+out her rival finally and found the courage to propose
+a singular plan.</p>
+
+<p>"You are alone, Suzanne," she said. "So am I.
+We are both poor. Come and live with me."</p>
+
+<p>"And you will give me Maxence?" asked Suzanne,
+a little hardly.</p>
+
+<p>"No. But I will give you half of him. See, why
+should we quarrel any more? He is dead. Let us be
+reasonable. After this he shall belong to both of us."</p>
+
+<p>Still the <i>vieille fille</i> from l'Étang held back, though
+her eyes softened.</p>
+
+<p>"All these years," she said, with a remnant of defiance&mdash;"all
+these years he has been mine. I did not
+get married, me, because that would have let him
+belong to you."</p>
+
+<p>Zabette sighed wearily. "And all these years I have
+been saying the same thing. And yet I could never forget
+the shell box and your letter from St. Pierre Miquelon.
+Come, don't you see how much easier it will be&mdash;how
+much more natural&mdash;if we put our treasures
+together: all we have of Maxence, and call him <i>ours</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>Suzanne was beginning to yield, but doubtfully. "If
+it would be proper," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Not if he were living, of course," replied the other,
+with assurance. "The laws of the church forbid that.
+But in the course of a lifetime a husband may have
+more than one wife. I do not see why, when a husband
+is dead, two wives should not have him. Do
+you?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I will come," said Suzanne, softly and gratefully.
+"I am so lonely."</p>
+
+<p>Three years later the two women moved from the
+Grande Anse into the village, renting the little cottage
+with the dormer windows in which they have lived ever
+since. You must look far to find so devoted a pair.
+They are more than sisters to each other. If their
+lives have not been happy, as the world judges happiness,
+they have at least been illumined by two great
+and abiding loves,&mdash;which does not happen often,&mdash;that
+for the dead, and that for each other.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99"></a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="GARLANDS_FOR_PETTIPAW" id="GARLANDS_FOR_PETTIPAW">GARLANDS FOR PETTIPAW</a></h2>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="ph3">GARLANDS FOR
+PETTIPAW</p>
+
+
+<div class="figleft dropcap" style="width: 80px;">
+<img src="images/i_119.png" width="80" height="80" alt="" />
+</div>
+<p><span class="dropcap">T</span>owns, like persons, I suppose, wake up
+now and then to find themselves famous;
+but I doubt if any town having this experience
+could be more amazed by it, more
+dazed by it, than was Three Rivers, one day last
+March, when we opened our newspapers from Boston
+and Montreal and lo, there was our own name staring
+at us from the front page! Three Rivers is in the
+Province of Quebec, on the shore of the Bay de Chaleurs;
+but we receive our metropolitan papers every
+day, only thirty-six hours off the presses; and this
+makes us feel closely in touch with the outside world.
+Until the railroad from Matapedia came through, four
+years ago, mail was brought by stage, every second
+day. The coming of the railroad had seemed an important
+event then; but it had never put Three Rivers
+on the front page of the Boston <i>Herald</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The news-item in question was to the effect that the
+S. S. <i>Maid of the North</i>, Captain Pettipaw of Three
+Rivers, P. Q., had been torpedoed, forty miles off Fastnet,
+while en route from Sydney, N. S., to Liverpool,
+with a cargo of pig-iron. The captain and crew (said
+the item) had been allowed to take to the boats; but
+only one of the two boats had been heard from. That<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
+one was in command of the mate, and had been rescued
+by a trawler.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Pettipaw of Three Rivers! <i>Our</i> Captain
+Pettipaw! How well we knew him; and who among
+us had ever thought of him as one likely to make Three
+Rivers figure on the front page of the world's news!
+Yet this had come to pass; and even amid the anxiety
+we felt as to the fate of Captain Joe, we could but be
+agreeably conscious of the distinction that had come to
+our little community. All that afternoon poor Mrs.
+Pettipaw's house was thronged with neighbors who
+hurried over there, newspaper in hand, ready to congratulate
+or to condole as might seem most called for.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor Mrs. Pettipaw" or "poor Melina" was the
+way we always spoke of her, partly, I suppose, because
+of her nine children, and partly because&mdash;I hesitate to
+say it&mdash;she was Captain Joe's wife. But now that it
+seemed so very likely she might be his widow, our
+hearts went out to her the more. You see Captain Joe
+was, in our local phrase, "one of those Pettipaws."
+Pettipaws never seemed to get anywhere or to do anything
+that mattered. Pettipaws were always behindhand.
+Pettipaws were always in trouble, one way or
+another. It was a family characteristic.</p>
+
+<p>Only five or six years ago Captain Joe's new
+schooner, the <i>Melina P.</i>, had broken from her harbor
+moorings under a sudden gale from the northwest and
+driven square on the Fiddle Reef, where she foundered
+before our eyes. Other vessels were anchored close by
+the <i>Melina P.</i>; but not one of them broke loose. All
+the Captain's savings for years and years had gone<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
+into the new schooner, not to speak of several hundreds
+borrowed from his fellow-townsmen.</p>
+
+<p>And the very next winter his house had burned to
+the ground; and the seven children&mdash;there were only
+seven then&mdash;had been parceled out amongst the neighbors
+for six or seven months until, about midsummer,
+the new house was roofed over and the windows set;
+and then the family moved in, and there they lived for
+several more months, "sort of camping-out fashion,"
+as poor Melina cheerfully put it, while Captain Joe
+was occasionally seen putting on a row of shingles or
+sawing a board. At last, after the snow had begun to
+fly, the neighbors came once more to the rescue. A collection
+was made for the stricken family; carpenters
+finished the house; a mason built the chimney and plastered
+the downstairs partitions; curtains were donated
+for the windows; and the Pettipaws spent the winter in
+comfort.</p>
+
+<p>The following spring Captain Joe got a position as
+second officer on a coastwise ship out of Boston, and
+the affairs of the family began to look up. From that
+he was promoted to the captaincy of a little freighter
+plying between Montreal and the Labrador; and the
+next we knew, he was in command of a large collier
+sailing out of Sydney, Nova Scotia. Poor Melina
+appeared in a really handsome new traveling suit,
+ordered from the big mail order house in Montreal;
+and the young ones could all go to church the same
+Sunday, and often did.</p>
+
+<p>For the last year or two we had ceased to make frequent
+inquiries after Captain Joe; he had dropped<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
+pretty completely out of our life; and the thought that
+he might be holding a commission of special dangerousness
+had never so much as entered our minds. But
+poor Melina's calmness in the face of the news-item
+surprised everyone. It was like a reproach to her
+neighbors for not having acknowledged before the
+worth of the man she had married. It had not
+required a German torpedo to teach her that. And as
+for his safety, that apparently caused her no anxiety
+whatever.</p>
+
+<p>"You couldn't kill the Captain," she repeated, with
+a quiet, untroubled smile, which was as much as to say
+that anything else might happen to a Pettipaw, but not
+that.</p>
+
+<p>The rest of us admired her faith without being able
+to share it. Poor Melina rarely had leisure to read a
+newspaper, and she did not know much about the disasters
+of the war zone. And so, instinctively, everyone
+began to say the eulogistic things about Captain
+Joe that had never been said&mdash;though now we realized
+they ought to have been said&mdash;while he was
+with us.</p>
+
+<p>"He was such a good man," said Mrs. Thibault, the
+barrister's wife. "So devoted to his home. I remember
+of how he would sit there on the doorstep for
+hours, watching his little ones at their play. Poor
+babies! Poor little babies!"</p>
+
+<p>"Such a brave man, too; and so witty!" said John
+Boutin, our tailor. "The stories he would tell, my!
+my! Many a day in the shop he'd be telling stories<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>
+from dinner till dark, without once stopping for breath
+as you might say. It passed the time so nice!"</p>
+
+<p>"And devout!" added Mrs. Fougère, the postmistress.
+"A Christian. He loved to listen to the church-bells.
+I remember like it was yesterday his saying to
+me, 'The man,' he said, 'who can hear a church-bell
+without thinking of religion, is as good as lost, to my
+thinking.'"</p>
+
+<p>"Not that he went to church very often," said
+Boutin.</p>
+
+<p>"His knee troubled him," explained Mrs. Fougère.</p>
+
+<p>Early in the evening came the cable message that
+justified poor Melina's confidence. Eugénie White&mdash;the
+Whites used to be Le Blancs, but since Eugénie
+came back from Boston, they have taken the more up-to-date
+name&mdash;Eugénie came flying up the street from
+the railroad station, waving the yellow envelope and
+spreading the news as she flew. The message consisted
+of only one word: "Safe"; but it was dated Queenstown,
+and it bore the signature we were henceforth to
+be so proud of: Joseph Pettipaw.</p>
+
+<p>Two days later the <i>Herald</i> contained a notice of the
+rescue by a Norwegian freighter of the Captain of the
+<i>Maid of the North</i>; but we had to wait ten days for
+the full story, which occupied two columns in one of
+the Queenstown journals and almost as much in the
+Dublin <i>Post</i>, with a very lifelike photograph of Captain
+Joe. It was a wonderful story, as you may very
+likely remember, for the American papers gave it
+plenty of attention a little later.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It had been a calm, warm day, but with an immense
+sea running. Before entering the war zone Captain
+Joe had made due preparation for emergencies. The
+ship's boats were ready to be swung, and in each was
+a barrel of water and a supply of biscuit and other
+rations. The submarine was not sighted until it was
+too late to think of escaping; the engines were reversed;
+and when the German commander called out through
+his megaphone that ten minutes would be allowed for
+the escape of the crew, all hands hurried to the lee side
+and began piling into the boats. The mate's was lowered
+away first and cleared safely.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain was about to give the order for the
+lowering of his own boat, when the only woman in the
+party cried out that her husband was being left behind.
+It was the cook, who was indulging in an untimely nap,
+his noonday labors in the galley being over. In her
+first excitement Martha Figman had failed to notice
+his absence, but had made for the boat as fast as she
+could, carrying her three-year-old child.</p>
+
+<p>"Be quick!" called out the commander of the submarine.
+"Your time is up!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Captain, Captain, don't leave him," implored
+the desperate woman. "He's all I have!"</p>
+
+<p>Then Captain Joe did the thing that will go down
+in history. He seized the little girl and held her aloft
+in his arms and called out to the Germans:</p>
+
+<p>"In the name of this little child, grant me three
+more minutes."</p>
+
+<p>"Two!" replied the commander.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Captain Joe leaped to the deck and rushed aft, burst
+open the cook's cabin, and hauled Danny Figman, quite
+sound asleep, out of his berth. The poor rascal was
+only partly dressed, but there was no time to make him
+presentable. A blanket and a sou'wester had to suffice.
+Still bewildered, he was dragged on deck and ordered
+to run for his life.</p>
+
+<p>A few seconds later the boat lowered away with its
+full quota of passengers; the men took the oars,
+cleared a hundred yards safely; and then there was a
+snort, a white furrow through the waves, an explosion;
+the <i>Maid of the North</i> listed, settled, and disappeared.
+The submarine steamed quickly out of sight; and the
+two boats were all that was left as witness of what had
+happened.</p>
+
+<p>On account of the terrible seas that were running,
+the boats soon became separated; and for sixty-two
+hours Captain Joe bent his every energy to keeping his
+boat afloat, for she was in momentary danger of being
+swamped, until on the third morning the Norwegian
+was sighted, came to the rescue, and carried the
+exhausted occupants into Queenstown.</p>
+
+<p>Three Rivers, you may depend, had this story by
+heart, and backward and forward, long before Captain
+Joe returned to us; for not only did it appear in
+those Irish journals, but also on the occasion of the
+Captain's arrival in New York in several metropolitan
+papers, written up with great detail, and with a picture
+of little Tina Figman in the Captain's arms.</p>
+
+<p>"This is the Captain," ran the print under the picture,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
+"who risked his life that a baby might not be
+fatherless."</p>
+
+<p>You can imagine how anxious we were by this time
+in Three Rivers to welcome that Captain home again;
+not one of us but wanted to make ample amends for
+the injustice we had done him in the past. But we had
+to wait several weeks, for even after the owners had
+brought Captain Joe and his crew back to New York
+on the St. Louis, still he had to go to Montreal for a
+ten days' stay, to depose his evidence officially and to
+wind up the affairs of the torpedoed ship. But at last
+he was positively returning to us; and extensive preparations
+were undertaken for his reception.</p>
+
+<p>As he was coming by the St. Lawrence steamer,
+<i>Lady of Gaspé</i>, the principal decorations were massed
+in the vicinity of the government wharf. If I tell you
+that well nigh three hundred dollars had been collected
+for this purpose from the good people of Three
+Rivers, you can form some idea of the magnitude of
+the effort. A double row of saplings had been set up
+along the wharf and led thence to the Palace of Justice;
+and the full distance, an eighth of a mile, was
+hung with red and tricolor bunting. Then there were
+three triumphal arches, one at the head of the wharf,
+one at the turn into the street, and one in front of the
+post-office. These arches were very cleverly built, with
+little turrets at the corners, the timber-work completely
+covered with spruce-branches; and each arch displayed
+a motto. Mrs. Fougère and Eugénie White had devised
+the mottoes, little John Boutin had traced the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
+letters on cotton, and Mrs. Boutin had painted them.
+The first read: "Honor to Our Hero." The second
+was in French, for the reason that half our population
+still use that language by preference, and it read:
+"Honneur à notre Héro"; and the third arch bore the
+one word, ornately inscribed: "Welcome."</p>
+
+<p>All the houses along the way were decorated with
+geraniums and flags; and as the grass was already very
+green (it was June) and the willows and silver-oaks
+beginning to leave out, it may fairly be said that Three
+Rivers was a beauty spot.</p>
+
+<p>Seeing that no one can tell beforehand when a
+steamer is going to arrive, the whole town was in its
+best clothes and ready at an early hour of the morning.
+The neighbors trooped in at poor Melina's, offering
+their services in case any of the children still needed
+combing, curling, or buttoning; and all through the
+forenoon the young people were climbing to the top of
+St. Anne's hill to see if there was any sign of the <i>Lady
+of Gaspé</i>; but it was not till three in the afternoon that
+the church-bell, madly ringing, announced that the
+long-expected moment was about to arrive.</p>
+
+<p>I wish I could quote for you in full the account of
+that day's doings which appeared in our local sheet,
+the Bonaventure <i>Record</i>, for it was beautifully written
+and described every feature as it deserved, reproducing
+<i>verbatim</i> the Mayor's address of welcome, Father
+Quinnan's speech in the Palace, and the Resolutions
+drawn up by ten representative citizens and presented
+to Captain Pettipaw on a handsomely illuminated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
+scroll, which you may see to-day hanging in the place
+of honor in his parlor.</p>
+
+<p>But let my readers imagine for themselves the
+arrival of the steamer, the cheer upon cheer as Captain
+Joe came gravely down the gang-plank; the affecting
+meeting between him and poor Melina and the nine
+little Pettipaws, the littlest of whom he had never seen,
+and several of whom had grown so in these last four
+years that he had the names wrong, which caused
+happy laughter and happy tears on all sides. Then the
+procession to the Palace! There was an orchestra of
+four pieces from Cape Cove; and a troop of little
+girls, in white, scattered tissue-paper flowers along the
+line of march.</p>
+
+<p>The Mayor began his speech by saying that an
+honor had come to our little town which would be
+rehearsed from father to son for generations. Father
+Quinnan took for his theme the three words: "Father,
+Husband, Hero"; and he showed us how each of those
+words, in its highest and best sense, necessarily comprised
+the other two. And the exercises closed with a
+very enjoyable piano duet which you doubtless know:
+"Wandering Dreams," by some foreign composer.</p>
+
+<p>People watched Captain Joe very closely. It would
+have been only natural if, returning to us in this way,
+he should have remembered a time, not so long before,
+when the attitude of his fellow-citizens had been extremely
+cool. But if he remembered it, he gave no
+sign; and he smiled at everyone in a grave, thoughtful
+manner that made one's heart beat high.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"He has aged," whispered Mrs. Fougère. "But
+his face is noble. It reminds me of Napoleon,
+somehow."</p>
+
+<p>"To me he looks more like that American we see so
+often in the papers&mdash;Bryan. So much dignity!" This
+from Mrs. Boutin.</p>
+
+<p>We appreciated the Captain's freedom from condescension
+the more when we heard from his own lips,
+that same evening, a recital of the honors that had
+been showered upon him during the past weeks. The
+Mayor of Queenstown had had him to dinner; Lady
+Derntwood, known as the most beautiful woman in
+Ireland, had entertained him for three days at Derntwood
+Park, and sent an Indian shawl as a present to
+his wife. On the <i>St. Louis</i> he had sat at the Captain's
+right hand; in New York he had been interviewed and
+royally fêted by the newspaper-men; and at Montreal
+the owners had presented him with a gold watch and a
+purse of $250. Also, they had offered him another
+ship immediately.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you're going again!" we exclaimed; and the
+words were repeated from one to another in admiration&mdash;"He's
+going again!" But Captain Joe smiled
+thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>"I told them I didn't mind being torpedoed," he
+said ('Oh, no! Certainly not! Mind being torpedoed;
+you! Captain Joe!') "but&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But what, Captain?"</p>
+
+<p>"But I said as I couldn't bear for to see a little child
+exposed again in an open boat for sixty-four hours."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"But Captain, wouldn't they give you a ship without
+a child?"</p>
+
+<p>"They <i>said</i> they would," he replied, doubtfully,
+shaking his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Then what will you be doing next?" we asked,
+mentally reviewing the various fields in which he might
+add laurels to laurels.</p>
+
+<p>He meditated a little while and then replied:
+"Home'll suit me pretty good for a spell."</p>
+
+<p>Well, that could be understood, certainly. Indeed,
+it was to his credit. We remembered Father Quinnan's
+speech. The husband, the father, had their claim.
+A little stay at home, in the bosom of loved ones, yes,
+to be sure, it seemed fitting and right, after the perils
+of the sea.</p>
+
+<p>And yet, why was it, as we took down the one-eighth-mile
+of bunting that night, there was a faint but perceptible
+dampening of our enthusiasm. Perhaps it was
+the reaction from the strain and excitement of the day,
+for it had been, there was no denying it, a day of days
+for Three Rivers; a day, which, as Father Quinnan
+had said, would be writ in letters of gold in Memory's
+fair album. This day was ended now, and night came
+down upon a very proud and very tired little
+community.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>If this were a fancy story instead of a record of
+things that came to pass last year on the Gaspé Coast,
+my pen should stop here; but as it is, I feel under a
+plain obligation to pursue the narrative.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I've no doubt that many other towns in the history
+of the world have faced precisely the same problem
+that Three Rivers faced in the months following:
+namely, what to do with a hero when you have one.
+Oh, if you could only set them up on a pedestal in
+front of the Town Hall or the post-office and <i>keep</i>
+them there! A statue is so practicable. Once in so
+often, say on anniversaries, you can freshen it up, hang
+it with garlands and bunting, and polish the inscription;
+and then the school-children can come, and somebody
+can explain to them about the statue, and why we
+should venerate it, and what were the splendid qualities
+of the hero which we are to try to imitate in our
+own lives. I hope that all cities with statues realize
+their happy condition.</p>
+
+<p>For two or three weeks after the Great Day Three
+Rivers still kept its air of festivity. The triumphal
+arches could be appreciated even from the train, and
+many travelers, we heard, passing through, leaned out
+of the windows and asked questions of the station
+agent.</p>
+
+<p>Wherever Captain Joe went, there followed a little
+knot of children, listening open-mouthed for any
+word that might fall from his lips; and you could
+hear them explaining to one another how it was that a
+man could be torpedoed and escape undamaged. At
+first no one of lesser importance than the Mayor or
+the Bank Manager presumed to walk with him on the
+street; and he was usually to be seen proceeding in
+solitary dignity to or from the post-office, head a little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
+bowed, one hand in the opening of his coat, his step
+slow and thoughtful, while the children pattered along
+behind.</p>
+
+<p>But the barrier between the Captain and his fellow-townsmen
+was entirely of their own creation, it transpired,
+for he was naturally a sociable man, and now
+more than ever he craved society, being sure of a deferential
+hearing. Once established again in Boutin's
+tailor-shop and pool-parlor, he seemed disposed never
+to budge from it; and as often as you might pass, day
+or night, you could hear him holding forth to whatever
+company happened to be present. It was impossible
+not to gather many scraps of his discourse, for
+his voice was as loud as an orator's.</p>
+
+<p>"And Lady Derntwood&mdash;no, it was Lady Genevieve,
+Lady Derntwood's dairter by her first husband
+and fully as beautiful as her mother, she said to me,
+'Captain,' she said, 'when I read that about the little
+girl&mdash;For the sake of this little child, grant me three
+minutes!&mdash;the tears filled my eyes, and I said to my
+maid, who had brought me my <i>Times</i> on the breakfast
+tray, "Lucienne," I said, "that is a man I should be
+proud to know!"'&mdash;and that's a fact sir, as true as
+I'm settin' here, for Lucienne herself told me the same
+thing. A little beauty, that Lucienne: black hair;
+medium height. We used to talk French together."</p>
+
+<p>Or another time you would hear: "And they said to
+me, 'Captain,' they says, 'and are you satisfied with
+the gold watch and chain and with the little purse we
+have made up for you here, not pretending, of course,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
+for one minute,' they says, 'that 'tis any measure of
+the services you have rendered to us or to your country.
+We ask you,' they says, 'are you satisfied?' And
+I said, 'I am,' and the fact is, I was, for the watch I'd
+lost was an Ingersoll, and my clothes put together
+wouldn't have brought a hundred dollars."</p>
+
+<p>So the weeks went by; and the triumphal arches, on
+which the mottoes had run a good deal, were taken
+down and broken up for kindling; and still Captain Joe
+sat and talked all day long and all night long, too, if
+only anybody would listen to him. But listeners were
+growing scarce. His story had been heard too often;
+and any child in town was able to correct him when he
+slipped up, which often happened. The two hundred
+and fifty dollars was spent long since, and now the
+local merchants were forced to insist once more on
+strictly cash purchases, and many a day the Pettipaw
+family must have "done meagre," as the French say.
+Unless all signs failed, they would be soon living again
+at the charge of the community. Close your eyes if
+you like, sooner or later certain grim truths will be
+borne home to you. A leopard cannot change his
+spots, nor a Pettipaw his skin. Before our very eyes
+the honor and glory of Three Rivers, the thing that
+was to be passed from generation to generation, was
+vanishing: worse than that, we were becoming ridiculous
+in our own eyes, which is harder to bear, even,
+than being ridiculous in the eyes of others.</p>
+
+<p>There was one remedy and only one. It was plain
+to anybody who considered the situation thoughtfully.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
+Captain Joe must be got away. So long as your hero
+is alive, he can only be viewed advantageously at a distance.
+At all events, if he is a Pettipaw.</p>
+
+<p>It was proposed that we should elect him our local
+member to the provincial Parliament. It might be
+managed. We suggested it to him, dwelling upon the
+opportunities it would afford for the exercise of his
+special talents which, we said, were being thrown away
+in a little town like Three Rivers. He conceded that
+we spoke the truth; "but," he said, after a moment of
+thoughtful silence, "I am a sailor born and bred, and
+my health would never stand the confinement. Never!"</p>
+
+<p>Next it was found that we could secure for him the
+position of purser on the S. S. <i>Lady of the Gaspé</i>. But
+this offer he refused even more emphatically.</p>
+
+<p>"Purser!&mdash;Me!" There was evidently nothing
+more to be said.</p>
+
+<p>Writing to Montreal, Father Quinnan learned that
+if he so wished Captain Pettipaw might have again the
+command of the little freighter that ran to the Labrador;
+and the proposition was laid before him with sanguine
+expectations. Again he declined.</p>
+
+<p>"The Labrador! Thank you! They wouldn't even
+know who I was!"</p>
+
+<p>"You could tell them, Captain."</p>
+
+<p>"What good would that do?"</p>
+
+<p>No answer being forthcoming to this demand, still
+another scheme had to be sought. It was the Mayor
+who finally saved the day for Three Rivers. He instigated
+a Patriotic Fund, to which every man, woman<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
+and child contributed what he could, and with the proceeds
+a three-masted schooner of two hundred tons
+burden was acquired (she had been knocked down for
+a song at a sheriff's sale at Campbellton); she was
+handsomely refitted, rechristened, and presented, late
+in October, to Captain Joe, as a tribute of esteem from
+his native town.</p>
+
+<p>It is not for me to say just how grateful the Captain
+was, at heart; but he accepted the gift with becoming
+dignity; and before the winter ice closed the Gulf (so
+expeditiously had our plans been carried out) the
+<i>Gloria</i> was ready to sail with a cargo of dry fish for
+the Barbadoes.</p>
+
+<p>The evening previous to her departure there was a
+big farewell meeting in the Palace of Justice, with
+speeches by the Mayor and Father Quinnan, a piano
+duet, and an original poem by Eugénie White,
+beginning:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><i>Sail forth, sail far,</i><br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><i>O Captain bold!</i><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>It was remarkable to see how all the enthusiasm and
+fervor of an earlier celebration in that same hall
+sprang to life again; yes, and with a solemnity added,
+for this time our hero was going from us. He sat
+there on the platform by the Mayor, handsome,
+square-shouldered, his head a little bowed, a thoughtful
+smile on his lips under the grizzled moustache: he
+was every inch the noble figure that had stood unflinching
+before the gates of death; and we realized as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
+never before what a debt of gratitude we owed him.
+At last our hero was our hero again.</p>
+
+<p>There is but little more to tell. The next morning,
+bright and early, everybody was at the wharf to watch
+the <i>Gloria</i> hoist her sails, weigh anchor, and tack out
+into the bay. There were tears in many, many eyes
+besides those of poor Mrs. Pettipaw. The sea had a
+dark look, off there, and one thought of the dangers
+that awaited any man who sailed out on it at this time
+of the year.</p>
+
+<p>"Heaven send him good passage!" said Mrs. Thibault,
+wiping her eyes vigorously.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes, and bring him safe home again, the brave
+man!" added Mrs. Boutin, earnestly; and all those
+who heard her breathed a sincere amen to that prayer.</p>
+
+<p>It was sincere. We had wanted Captain Joe to go
+away; we had actually forced him to go away; yet no
+sooner was he gone than we prayed he might be
+brought safe home again. Yes, for when all is said
+and done, a town that has a hero must love him and
+cherish him and wish him well. Because we have ours,
+Three Rivers will always be a better place to live in
+and to bring up children in: a more inspiring place.</p>
+
+<p>Only, perhaps, if Mrs. Boutin had spoken less impulsively,
+she would have added one or two qualifying
+clauses to her petition. For instance, she might have
+added: "Only not too soon, and not for too long at
+once!" But for my part, I believe that will be understood
+by the good angel who puts these matters on
+record, up there.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<a name="HOUSE" id="HOUSE"></a>
+<img src="images/house.jpg" width="600" height="430" alt="" />
+<div class="caption center">A FISHERMAN'S HOUSE</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="FLY_MY_HEART" id="FLY_MY_HEART">FLY, MY HEART!</a></h2>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="ph3">FLY, MY HEART!</p>
+
+
+<div class="figleft dropcap" style="width: 80px;">
+<img src="images/i_141.png" width="80" height="78" alt="" />
+</div>
+<p><span class="dropcap">T</span>hey called her Sabine Bob&mdash;"S'been Bob"&mdash;because
+her real name was Sabine Anne
+Boudrot; and being a Boudrot in Petit Espoir
+is like being a Smith or a Brown in our
+part of the world, only ten times more so, for in that
+little fishing-port of Cape Breton, down in the Maritime
+Provinces, practically everybody belongs to the
+abounding tribe. Boudrot, therefore, having ceased to
+possess more than a modicum of specificity (to borrow
+a term from the logicians), the custom has arisen
+of tagging the various generations and households of
+Boudrots with the familiar name of the father that
+begat them.</p>
+
+<p>And thus Sabine Anne Boudrot, "old girl" of fifty,
+was known only as Sabine Bob, and Mary Boudrot,
+her friend, to whom she was dictating a love-letter on
+a certain August evening, was known only as Mary
+Willee&mdash;with the accent so strongly on the final syllable
+that it sounded like Marywil-Lee. Sabine Bob
+was in service; always had been. Mary kept house
+for an invalid father. But there was no social distinction
+between the two.</p>
+
+<p>Mary Willee bent close over the sheet of ruled note-paper
+and laboriously traced out the words, dipping
+her pen every few seconds with professional punctiliousness
+and screwing up her homely face into all sorts<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>
+of homely expressions: tongue now tight-bitten between
+her teeth, now working restlessly in one cheek,
+now hard pressed against bulging lips. There was
+agony for both of them in this business of producing a
+love-letter: agony for Mary Willee because she had
+never fully mastered the art of writing, and the shaping
+just-so of the letters and above all the spelling
+brought out beads of sweat on her forehead; agony
+for Sabine Bob because her heart was so burstingly
+full and words were so powerless to ease that bursting.</p>
+
+<p>Besides, how could she be sure, really, positively
+<i>sure</i>, that Mary Willee was recording there on that
+paper the very words, just those very words and none
+others, which she was confiding to her! Writing was
+a tricky affair. Tricky, like the English language
+which Sabine Bob was using, against her will, for the
+reason that Mary Willee had never learned to write
+French. French was natural. In French one could
+say what one thought: it felt homelike. In English
+one had to be stiff.</p>
+
+<p>"Read me what I have said so far," directed Sabine
+Bob, and she held to the seat of her chair with her
+bony hands and listened.</p>
+
+<p>Mary Willee began, compliantly. "'My dearling
+Thomas'"&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Sabine Bob interrupted. "The number of the day
+comes first. Always! I brought you the calendar with
+the day marked on it."</p>
+
+<p>"I wrote it here," said Mary Willee. "You need
+not be so anxious. I have done letters before this."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but everything is so important!" ejaculated
+Sabine, with tragedy in her voice. "Now begin again."</p>
+
+<p>"'My dearling Thomas. It is bad times here. So
+much fogg all ways. i was houghing potatoes since 2
+days and they looks fine and i am nitting yous some
+socks for when yous come back. i hope you is getting
+lots of them poggiz.'"</p>
+
+<p>Mary Willee hesitated. "I ain't just sure how to
+spell that word," she confessed.</p>
+
+<p>"Pogeys?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"You ought to be. What for did they send you to
+the convent all those four years?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was only three. And the nuns never taught us
+no such things as about pogey-fishing. But no matter.
+Thomas Ned will know what you mean, because that's
+what he's gone fishing after."</p>
+
+<p>And she continued: "'I miss yous awful some days.
+when you comes back in octobre we's git married
+sure.'"</p>
+
+<p>She looked up. "That's all you told me so far."</p>
+
+<p>Sabine's face was drawn into furrows of intense
+thought. "How many more lines is there to fill?"</p>
+
+<p>"Seven."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, tell him I was looking at the little
+house what his auntie Sophie John left him and thinking
+how nice it would be when there was some front
+steps and the shimney was fix' and there were curtains
+to the windows in front and some geraniums and I t'ink
+I will raise some hens because they are such good com<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>pany
+running in and out all day when he will be away
+pogey-fishing but perhaps when we're married he won't
+have to go off any more because his healt' is put to
+danger by it and how would it do, say, if he got a little
+horse and truck with the hundred and fifty dollars I
+got saved up and did work by the day for people
+ashore and then"&mdash;she paused for breath.</p>
+
+<p>"Is that too much to write?" she remarked with
+sudden anxiety.</p>
+
+<p>"It is," replied Mary Willee, firmly. "You can
+say two things, and then good-by."</p>
+
+<p>Two things! Sabine Bob stared at the little yellow
+circle of light on the smoky ceiling over the lamp; then
+out of the window into the darkness. Two things
+more; and there were so many thousand things to say!
+Her mind was a blank.</p>
+
+<p>"I am waiting," Mary reminded her, poising her
+pen pitilessly.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell him," gasped out Sabine, "tell him&mdash;I t'ink
+I raise some hens."</p>
+
+<p>Letter by letter the pregnant sentence was inscribed,
+while Sabine stared at the pen with paralyzed attention,
+as if her doom were being written in the Book
+of Judgment; and now the time had come for the second
+thing! Tears of helplessness stood in her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Ask him," she blurted out, "would the hundred
+and fifty dollars what I got buy a nice little horse and
+truck."</p>
+
+<p>Mary Willee paused. She seemed embarrassed.</p>
+
+<p>"Write it," commanded the other.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Mary Willee looked almost frightened. "Must you
+say that about the money?" she asked, weakly.</p>
+
+<p>"Write the words I told you," insisted Sabine.
+"This is my letter, not yours."</p>
+
+<p>Reluctantly the younger woman set down the sentence;
+then added the requisite and necessary "Good-by,
+from Sabine."</p>
+
+<p>"Is there room for a few kisses?" asked the fiancée.</p>
+
+<p>"One row."</p>
+
+<p>Sabine seized the pen greedily and holding it between
+clenched fingers added a line of significant little
+lop-sided symbols. Then while her secretary prepared
+the letter for mailing, she wiped her forehead with a
+large blue handkerchief which she refolded and returned
+to the skirt-pocket that contained her rosary
+and her purse. She put on her little old yellow-black
+hat again and made ready to go.</p>
+
+<p>"Now to the post-office," she said. "How glad
+Thomas Ned will be when he gets it!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am sure he will," said Mary; and if there was
+any doubt in her tone, it was not perceived by her
+friend, who suddenly flung her arms about her in a
+gush of happy emotion.</p>
+
+<p>"Dieu, que c'est beau, l'amour!" she exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>The sentiment was not a new one in the world; but
+it was still a new one, and very wonderful, to Sabine
+Bob: Sabine Bob who had never been pretty, even in
+youthful days, who had never had any nice clothes
+or gone to parties, but had just scrubbed and washed
+and swept, saved what she could, gone to church on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
+Sundays, bought a new pair of shoes every other year.</p>
+
+<p>Not that she had ever thought of pitying herself.
+She was too practical for that; and besides, there had
+always been plenty to be happy about. The music in
+church, for instance, which thrilled and dissolved and
+comforted her; and the pictures there, which she loved
+to gaze at, especially the one of Our Lady above the
+altar.</p>
+
+<p>And then there were children! No one need be very
+unhappy, it seemed to Sabine Bob, in a world where
+there were children. She never went out without first
+putting a few little hard, colored candies in her pocket
+to dispense along the street, over gates and on front
+steps. The tinier the children were the more she loved
+them. Every spring in Petit Espoir there was a fresh
+crop of the very tiniest of all; and towards these&mdash;little
+pink bundles of softness and helplessness&mdash;she felt
+something of the adoration which those old Wise Men
+felt who had followed the star. If she had had spices
+and frankincense, Sabine Bob would have offered it, on
+her knees. But in lieu of that, she brought little knitted
+sacques and blankets and hoods.</p>
+
+<p>Such had been Sabine Bob's past; and that a day
+was to come in her life when a handsome young man
+should say sweet, loving things to her, present her with
+perfumery, bottle on bottle, ask her to be his wife,
+bless you, she would have been the first to scout the
+ridiculous idea&mdash;till six months ago! Thomas Ned
+was a small man, about forty, squarely built, with pink
+cheeks, long lashes, luxuriant moustache; a pretty man;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
+a man who cut quite a figure amongst the girls and
+(many declared) could have had his pick of them.
+Why, why, had he chosen Sabine Bob? When she
+considered the question thoughtfully, she found
+answers enough, for she was not a girl who underestimated
+her own worth.</p>
+
+<p>"Thomas is sensible," she explained to Mary Willee.
+"He knows better than to take up with one of
+those weak, sickly young things that have nothing but
+a pretty face and stylish clothes to recommend them.
+I can work; I can save; I can make his life easy. He
+knows he will be well looked out for."</p>
+
+<p>If Mary Willee could have revised this explanation,
+she refrained from doing so. It would have taken
+courage to do so at that moment, for Sabine Bob was
+so happy! It was almost comical for any one to be so
+happy as that! Sabine realized it and laughed at herself
+and was happier still. Morning, noon, and night,
+during those first mad, marvelous days after she had
+promised to become Madame Thomas Ned, she was
+singing a bit of gay nonsense she had known from
+childhood:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><i>Vive la Canadienne,</i><br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><i>Vole, vole, vole, mon coeur!</i><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"Fly, fly, oh fly, my heart," trolled Sabine Bob; and
+every evening, until the time came when he must depart
+for the pogey-fishing, in May, he had come and
+sat with her in the kitchen; he would smoke; she would
+knit away at a pair of mittens for him (oh, such small<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
+hands as that Thomas had!), and about ten o'clock
+she would fetch a glass of blueberry wine and some
+currant cookies. How nice it was to be doing such
+things for some one&mdash;of one's own!</p>
+
+<p>She hovered over him like a ministering spirit,
+beaming and tender. This was what she had starved
+for all her life without knowing it: to serve some one
+of her own! Not for wages now; for love! She flung
+herself on the altar of Thomas and burned there with
+a clear ecstatic flame.</p>
+
+<p>And now that he had been away four months, pogey-fishing,
+she would sometimes console herself by getting
+out the five picture-postcards he had sent her and muse
+upon the scenes of affection depicted there and pick out,
+word by word, the brief messages he had written. With
+Mary Willee's assistance she had memorized them;
+and they were words of sempiternal devotion; and
+there were little round love-knows-what's in plenty;
+and on one card he called her his little wife; and that
+was the one she prized the most. Wife! Sabine Bob!</p>
+
+<p>That no card arrived in answer to her August letter
+did not surprise her, for the pogeymen often did not
+put into port for weeks at a time; and anyhow the day
+was not far away, now, when the season would be over
+and those who had gone up from Petit Espoir would
+come down again.</p>
+
+<p>So the weeks slipped by. October came. The
+pogey-fishermen returned.</p>
+
+<p>She waited for Thomas Ned in the kitchen that first
+evening, palpitating with expectancy; and he did not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>
+come. During the sleepless night that followed she
+conjured up excuses for him. He had had one of his
+attacks of rheumatism. His mother had been ill and
+had required his presence at home. The next evening
+he would come, oh certainly, and explain everything.
+Attired in her best, she sat and waited a second evening;
+then a third. There was no sign of him.</p>
+
+<p>From Mary Willie she learned that Thomas had
+arrived with the others; that he appeared in perfect
+health, never handsomer; also that his mother was well.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, it cannot be that anything has happened,"
+cried Sabine, with choking tears. "Surely it will all be
+explained soon!" But there was a tightening about
+her heart, a black premonition of ill to come.</p>
+
+<p>She continued to wait. She was on the watch for
+him day and night. At least he would pass on the
+street, and she could waylay him! Every time she
+heard footsteps or voices she flew to the kitchen door.
+When her work was done, she would hurry out to the
+barn, where there was a little window commanding a
+good view of the harbor-front; and there she would
+sit, muffled in a shawl, for hours, hunger gnawing at
+her heart, her eyes dry and staring, until her teeth
+began to chatter with cold and nervousness.</p>
+
+<p>He never passed. Some one met him taking the
+back road into the village. He was purposely avoiding
+her.</p>
+
+<p>When Sabine Bob realized that she was deserted by
+the man she loved, thrown aside without a word, she
+suffered unspeakably; but her native good sense saved<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>
+her from making any exhibition of her grief. She knew
+better than to make a fool of herself. If there was
+one thing she dreaded worse than death it was being
+laughed at. She was a self-respecting girl; she had
+her pride. And no one witnessed the spasms, the
+cyclones, which sometimes seized her in the seclusion
+of her little attic bedroom. These were not the picturesque,
+grandiose sufferings of high tragedy; there was
+small resemblance between Sabine Bob and Carthaginian
+Dido; Sabine's agonies were stark and cruel and
+ugly, unsoftened by poetry. But she kept them to
+herself.</p>
+
+<p>She did her work as before. But she did not sing;
+and perhaps she nicked more dishes than usual, for her
+hands trembled a good deal. But she kept her lips
+tight shut. And she never went out on the street if
+she could help it.</p>
+
+<p>So a month passed. Two months. And then one
+evening Mary Willee came running in breathless with
+news for her: news that made her skin prickle and her
+blood, after one dizzy, faint moment, drum hotly in
+her temples.</p>
+
+<p>Thomas Ned was paying attentions to Tina Lejeune,
+that blonde young girl from the Ponds. He had
+taken her to a dance. He had bought a scarf for her
+and a bottle of perfumery. He had taken her to drive.
+They had been seen walking together several times in
+the dark on the upper street.</p>
+
+<p>"Does he say he is going to marry her?" asked
+Sabine Bob, with dry lips.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I do not know that. <i>She</i> says so. She says they
+are to be married soon."</p>
+
+<p>"Does she know about&mdash;about me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but she says&mdash;" Mary Willee stopped short
+in embarrassment.</p>
+
+<p>"Says what! Tell me! Tell me at once!" commanded
+Sabine, fiercely. "What does she say!"</p>
+
+<p>"She says Thomas thought you had a lot of money.
+He was deceived, he said."</p>
+
+<p>Sabine broke out in a passion of indignation. "I
+never deceived him: never, never! I never once said
+anything about money. He never asked me anything.
+It's a lie. I tell you, it's a lie!"</p>
+
+<p>Mary quailed visibly, unable to disguise a tell-tale
+look of guilt.</p>
+
+<p>"What is the matter with you, Mary Willee!" cried
+Sabine. "You are hiding something. You know something
+you have not told me!"</p>
+
+<p>Mary replied, in a very frightened voice: "Once he
+asked me if you had any money. I did not think he
+was really in earnest, so I told him you had saved a
+thousand dollars. Oh, I didn't mean any harm. I only
+said it to be agreeable. And later I was afraid to tell
+the truth, for it was only two or three days later he
+asked you to marry him, and you were so happy."</p>
+
+<p>Mary Willee hid her face in her hands and waited
+for the storm to break upon her; but it did not break.
+The room was very quiet. At last she heard Sabine
+moving about, and she looked up again. Sabine was
+putting on her hat and coat.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Sabine! Sabine!" she gasped. "What are you
+doing!"</p>
+
+<p>Sabine Bob turned quietly and stood for a moment
+gazing at her without a word. Then she said:</p>
+
+<p>"Mary Willee, you are a bad girl and I can never
+forgive you; but if Tina Lejeune thinks she is going to
+marry Thomas Ned, she will find out that she is mistaken.
+That is a thing that will not happen."</p>
+
+<p>Mary recoiled, terrified, at the pitiless, menacing
+smile on the other woman's face; but before she could
+say anything Sabine Bob had stalked out of the house
+into the darkness.</p>
+
+<p>She climbed the hill to the back road, stumbling
+often, blinded more by her own fierce emotions than by
+the winter night; she fought her way westward against
+the bitter wind that was rising; then turned off by the
+Old French Road, as it was called, toward the Ponds.</p>
+
+<p>It was ten o'clock at night; stars, but no moon. She
+saw a shadow approaching in the darkness from the
+opposite direction: it was a man, short and squarely-built.
+With a sickening weakness she sank down
+against the wattle fence at the side of the road. He
+passed her, so close that she could have reached out
+and touched him. But he had not seen. She got up
+and hurried on.</p>
+
+<p>By and by she saw ahead of her the little black bulk
+of a house from the tiny window of which issued a yellow
+glow. The house stood directly on the road. She
+went quietly to the window and looked in. A young<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
+girl was sitting by a bare table, her head supported by
+the palms of her hands. Sabine knew the weak white
+face and hated it. She made her way to the door and
+knocked. There was a smothered, startled exclamation;
+then the rustle of some one moving.</p>
+
+<p>"Who is it?" inquired a timid voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me in and I will tell you," responded the
+woman outside, in a voice the more menacing because
+of its control.</p>
+
+<p>"My mother is not at home to-night. She is over
+at the widow Babinot's. If you go over there you will
+find her."</p>
+
+<p>"It is you I wish to see. Open the door!"</p>
+
+<p>There was no answer. Sabine turned the knob and
+entered. At the sight of her the blonde girl gave a
+cry of dismay and retreated behind the table,
+trembling.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you want?" she gasped.</p>
+
+<p>"We have an account to settle together, you and
+me," said Sabine, with something like a laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"Account?" said the other, bracing herself, but
+scarcely able to articulate. "What account? I have
+not done you any harm. Before God I have not done
+you any harm."</p>
+
+<p>Sabine laughed mockingly. "So you think there is
+no harm in taking away from me the man I was going
+to marry?"</p>
+
+<p>"I did not take him away," said Tina, faintly.</p>
+
+<p>"You did! You did take him away!" cried Sabine,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>
+fiercely. "He was mine; it was last March he promised
+to marry me; any one can tell you that. I have
+witnesses. I have letters. Everything I tell you can
+be proved. He belongs to me just as much as if we
+had been before a priest already; and if you think you
+can take him away from me, you will find out you are
+wrong!"</p>
+
+<p>For a few seconds the paralyzed girl before her
+could not utter a word; then she stammered out:</p>
+
+<p>"He told me you had deceived him about money."</p>
+
+<p>Sabine gave an inarticulate cry of rage, like a wild
+beast at bay. "It's a lie! A lie! I never deceived
+him. It's he who deceived me; but let me tell you this:
+when a woman like me promises to marry a man, she
+keeps her word. Do you understand? She keeps her
+word! I am going to marry Thomas Ned. He cannot
+escape me. I will go to the priest. I will go to the
+lawyer. There are plenty of ways."</p>
+
+<p>The blonde girl sank trembling into a chair.</p>
+
+<p>"He cannot marry you," she gasped. "He cannot.
+He cannot."</p>
+
+<p>"No?" cried Sabine, with ringing mockery. "And
+why not?"</p>
+
+<p>Tina's lips moved inaudibly. She moistened them
+with her tongue and made a second attempt.</p>
+
+<p>"Because&mdash;" she breathed.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes? Yes?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because&mdash;he must marry me." She buried her
+head in her hands and sobbed.</p>
+
+<p>Sabine Bob strode to the cringing girl, seized her by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>
+the shoulders, forcing her up roughly against the back
+of the chair, and broke out with a ruthless laugh:</p>
+
+<p>"Must! Must! You don't say so! And why, tell
+me, must he marry you?"</p>
+
+<p>The white girl raised her eyes for one instant to the
+other's face; and there was a look in them of mute
+pleading and confession, a look that was like a death-cry
+for pity. The look shot through Sabine's turgid
+consciousness like a white-hot dagger. She staggered
+back as if mortally stricken, supporting herself against
+a tall cupboard, staring at the girl, whose head had
+now sunk to the table again and whose body was shaking
+with spasmodic sobs. It was one of the moments
+when destinies are written.</p>
+
+<p>At such moments we act from something deeper,
+more elemental, than will. The best or the worst in
+us leaps out&mdash;or perhaps neither one nor the other
+but merely that thing in us that is most essentially
+ourselves.</p>
+
+<p>Sabine stared at the poor girl whose terrifying, wonderful
+secret had just been revealed to her, and she felt
+through all her being a sense of shattering and disintegration;
+and suddenly she was there, beside Tina, on
+the arm of her chair; and she brought the girl's head
+over against her bosom and held her very tight in her
+eager old arms, patting her shoulders and stroking her
+soft hair, while the tears rained down her cheeks and
+she murmured, soothingly:</p>
+
+<p>"Pauvre petite!" and again and again, "Pauvre
+petite! Ma pauvre petite!"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Tina abandoned herself utterly to the other's impassioned
+tenderness; and for a long time the two sat
+there, tightly clasped, silent, understanding.</p>
+
+<p>Sabine Bob had no word of blame for the unhappy
+girl. Vaguely she knew that she ought to blame her;
+very vaguely she remembered that girls like this were
+bad girls; but that did not seem to make any difference.
+Instead of indignation she felt something very like
+humility and reverence.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, he must marry you," she said at last, very
+simply and gently.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, if he only would!" sobbed Tina.</p>
+
+<p>"What!" cried Sabine, in amazement.</p>
+
+<p>"He says such cruel things to me," confessed the
+girl. "He knows, oh, he does know I never loved any
+man but himself; never, never any other man, nor ever
+will!"</p>
+
+<p>Sabine's eyes opened upon new vistas of man's perfidiousness.
+And yet, in spite of everything, how one
+could love them! She felt an immense compassion
+toward this poor girl who had loved not wisely but so
+all-givingly.</p>
+
+<p>"I will go to him," she said, resolutely. "I will tell
+him he must marry you; and I will say that if he does
+not, I will tell every person in Petit Espoir what a
+wicked thing he has done."</p>
+
+<p>Tina leaped to her feet in terror. "Oh, no, no!"
+she pleaded. "No one must know."</p>
+
+<p>Sabine understood. Not the present only, but the
+future must be thought of.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"And if he was forced like that to marry me, he
+would hate me," pursued the girl, who saw things with
+the pitiless clear foresight that desperation gives. "He
+must marry me from his own choice. Oh, if I could
+only make him choose; but to-night he said NO! and
+went away, very angry. I'm afraid he will never come
+back again."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, he will," said Sabine Bob. There was a grim
+smile on her lips; and she squared her shoulders as if
+to give herself courage for some dreaded ordeal.
+"There is a way."</p>
+
+<p>But to the startled, eager question in the other's eyes,
+she vouchsafed no answer. She came to her and put
+her hands firmly on her shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"Tina, will you promise not to believe anything you
+hear them say about me? Will you promise to keep
+on loving me just the same?"</p>
+
+<p>The girl clung to her. "Oh, yes, yes," she promised.
+"Always!" and then, in a shy whisper, she
+added: "And some day&mdash;I will not be the only one
+to love you."</p>
+
+<p>Sabine Bob gave her a quick, almost violent kiss, and
+went out, not stopping for even a word of good-night.
+And the next day she put her plan into execution.
+There was a perfectly relentless logic about Sabine
+Bob. She saw a thing to do; and she went and did it.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as her dinner dishes were washed and put
+away, she donned her old brown coat and the little
+yellow-black hat that had served her winter and summer
+from time immemorial, and proceeded to make a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>
+dozen calls on her friends, up and down the street.
+Wherever she went she talked, volubly, feverishly. She
+railed; she threatened; she vociferated; and the object
+of her vociferations was Thomas Ned. He had promised
+to marry her; and he had deserted her; and she
+would have the law on him! Marry her he must, now,
+whether he would or no.</p>
+
+<p>"See that word?" she demanded, displaying her
+sheaf of compromising post-cards. "That word is
+<i>wife</i>; and the man who calls me wife must stick to it.
+I am not a woman to be made a fool of!"</p>
+
+<p>So she stormed away, from house to house. Her
+friends tried to pacify her; but the more they tried, the
+more venom she put into her threats. And soon the
+news spread through the whole town. Nothing else
+was talked of.</p>
+
+<p>"She's crazy," people said. "But she can make
+trouble for him, if she wants to, no doubt about it."</p>
+
+<p>Sabine laughed grimly to herself. She was going to
+succeed. The scheme would work. She knew the kind
+of man Thomas Ned was: full of shifts. He had
+proved that already. He would never face a thing
+squarely. He would look for a way out.</p>
+
+<p>She was right. It was only ten days later, at high
+mass, that the success of her strategy was tangibly
+proved. At the usual point in the service for such announcements,
+just before the sermon, Father Beauclerc,
+standing in the pulpit, called the banns for
+Thomas Boudrot, of Petit Espoir, North, and Tina
+Mélanie Brigitte Lejeune, of the Ponds.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The announcement caused a sensation. An audible
+murmur of amazement, not to say consternation, went
+up from all quarters of the edifice, floor and galleries;
+even the altar boys exchanged whispers with one another;
+and there was a great stretching of necks in the
+direction of Sabine Bob, who sat there in her uncushioned
+pew, very straight and very red, with set lips,
+while her rough old fingers played nervously with the
+rosary in her lap.</p>
+
+<p>This was her victory! She had never felt the ugliness
+of her fifty years so cruelly before. A bony, ridiculous
+old maid, making a fool of herself in public!
+That was the sum of it! And all her life she had been
+so careful, so jealously careful, not to do anything
+that might cause her to be laughed at!</p>
+
+<p>She could hear some of the whispers that were being
+exchanged in neighboring pews. "Poor old thing!"
+people were saying. "But how could she expect anybody
+would want to marry her at her age!"</p>
+
+<p>A trembling like ague seized her, and she felt suddenly
+very cold and very very weak. She shut her eyes,
+for things were beginning to flicker and whirl; and
+when she opened them again, they were caught and
+held by the picture above the high altar.</p>
+
+<p>It was the Mother. The Mother and the Little
+One. He lay in her arms and smiled.</p>
+
+<p>The tears gushed up in Sabine Bob's eyes, and a
+smile of wonderful tenderness and peace broke over
+the harsh lines of her face and transfigured it, just for
+one instant. It was a victory; it <i>was</i> a victory;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>
+though nobody knew it but herself; just herself, and
+one other, and&mdash;perhaps&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Sabine still gazed at the picture, poor old Sabine
+Bob in her brown coat and faded little yellow-black
+hat: and the Eternal Mother returned the gaze of the
+Eternal Mother, smiling; and it didn't matter very
+much after that&mdash;how could it?&mdash;what people might
+think or say in Petit Espoir.</p>
+
+<p>Once more, that afternoon, as she slashed the suds
+over the dishes, Sabine Bob was singing. You could
+hear her way down there on the street, so buoyant and
+so merry was her voice:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0"><i>Long live the Canadian maid;</i><br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><i>Fly, fly, oh fly, my heart!</i><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter vspace" style="width: 125px;">
+<img src="images/end.png" width="125" height="125" alt="" />
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Cape Breton Tales, by Harry James Smith
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CAPE BRETON TALES ***
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+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
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@@ -0,0 +1,3932 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Cape Breton Tales, by Harry James Smith
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Cape Breton Tales
+
+Author: Harry James Smith
+
+Contributor: Edith Smith
+
+Illustrator: Oliver M. Wiard
+
+Release Date: November 22, 2013 [EBook #44257]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CAPE BRETON TALES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Daniel Meade, sp1nd and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CAPE BRETON TALES
+
+
+[Illustration: THE INNER HARBOR]
+
+
+
+
+CAPE BRETON TALES
+
+BY
+
+HARRY JAMES SMITH
+
+AUTHOR OF
+
+_Amedee's Son, Enchanted Ground, Mrs. Bumpstead Leigh,
+Tailor Made Man, etc._
+
+WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY
+
+OLIVER M. WIARD
+
+[Illustration]
+
+_The_ ATLANTIC MONTHLY PRESS
+
+BOSTON
+Copyright 1920
+
+_Printed in the United States of America_
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ ON THE FRENCH SHORE OF CAPE BRETON (1908) 1
+
+ LA ROSE WITNESSETH (1908) 17
+
+ OF THE BUCHERONS 19
+
+ OF LA BELLE MELANIE 32
+
+ OF SIMEON'S SON 44
+
+ AT A BRETON CALVAIRE (1903) 57
+
+ THE PRIVILEGE (1910) 61
+
+ THEIR TRUE LOVE (1910) 77
+
+ GARLANDS FOR PETTIPAW (1915) 99
+
+ FLY, MY HEART (1915) 119
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+By OLIVER M. WIARD
+
+
+ THE INNER HARBOR _Frontispiece_
+
+ ARICHAT 17
+
+ A CALVAIRE 56
+
+ FOUGERE'S COVE 76
+
+ A FISHERMAN'S HOUSE 118
+
+
+_"On the French Shore of Cape Breton" and "The Privilege" were first
+published in The Atlantic Monthly, while "La Rose Witnesseth of La Belle
+Melanie" is reprinted from "Amedee's Son" (Chapters VIII and IX) with
+the kind permission of the publishers, Houghton Mifflin Company._
+
+_"At a Breton Calvaire" was first published in The Williams Literary
+Monthly during undergraduate days, and was rewritten several times
+during the next few years. The final form is the one used here, except
+for the last stanza, which is a combination of the two versions now
+extant._
+
+_The illustrations are from sketches made during Oliver Wiard's visits
+in Arichat. It is an especial pleasure to include them, not only
+because of their fidelity and beauty, but also because of my brother's
+enthusiastic interest and delight in them._
+
+EDITH SMITH.
+
+
+
+
+ON THE FRENCH SHORE OF CAPE BRETON
+
+
+
+
+ON THE FRENCH SHORE OF CAPE BRETON
+
+
+Summer comes late along the Cape Breton shore; and even while it stays
+there is something a little diffident and ticklish about it, as if each
+clear warm day might perhaps be the last. Though by early June the
+fields are in their first emerald, there are no flowers yet. The little
+convent girls who carry the banners at the head of the Corpus Christi
+procession at Arichat wear wreaths of artificial lilies of the valley
+and marguerites over their white veils, and often enough their teeth
+chatter with cold before the completion of the long march--out from the
+church portals westward by the populous street, then up through the
+steep open fields to the old Calvary on top of the hill, then back to
+the church along the grass-grown upper road, far above the roofs, in
+full view of the wide bay.
+
+Despite some discomforts, the procession is a very great event; every
+house along the route is decked out with bunting or flags or a bright
+home-made carpet, hung from a window. Pots of tall geraniums in scarlet
+bloom have been set out on the steps; and numbers of little evergreen
+trees, or birches newly in leaf, have been brought in from the country
+and bound to the fences. Along the roadside are gathered all the
+Acadians from the neighboring parishes, devoutly gay, enchanted with
+the pious spectacle. The choir, following after the richly canopied
+Sacrament and swinging censers, are chanting psalms of benediction and
+thanksgiving; banners and flags and veils flutter in the wind; the
+harbor, ice-bound so many months, is flecked with dancing white-caps and
+purple shadows: surely summer cannot be far off.
+
+"When once the ice has done passing _down there_," they say--"which may
+happen any time now--you will see! Perhaps all in a day the change will
+come. The fog that creeps in so cold at night--it will all be sucked up;
+the sky will be clear as glass down to the very edge of the water. Ah,
+the fine season it will be!"
+
+That is the way summer arrives on the Acadian shore: everything bursting
+pell-mell into bloom; daisies and buttercups and August flowers rioting
+in the fields, lilacs and roses shedding their fragrance in sheltered
+gardens; and over all the world a drench of unspeakable sunlight.
+
+You could never forget your first sight of Arichat if you entered its
+narrow harbor at this divine moment. Steep, low hills, destitute of
+trees, set a singularly definite sky-line just behind; and the town
+runs--dawdles, rather--in a thin, wavering band for some miles sheer
+on the edge of the water. Eight or ten wharves, some of them fallen
+into dilapidation, jut out at intervals from clumps of weatherbeaten
+storehouses; and a few small vessels, it may be, are lying up alongside
+or anchored idly off shore. Only the occasional sound of a creaking
+block or of a wagon rattling by on the hard roadway breaks the silence.
+
+Along the street the houses elbow one another in neighborly groups,
+or straggle out in single file, separated by bits of declivitous
+white-fenced yard; and to the westward, a little distance up the hill,
+sits the square church, far outvying every other edifice in size and
+dignity, glistening white, with a tall bronze Virgin on the peak of the
+roof--Our Lady of the Assumption, the special patron of the Acadians.
+
+But what impresses you above all is the incredible vividness of color
+in this landscape: the dazzling gold-green of the fields, heightened
+here and there by luminous patches of foam-white where the daisies are
+in full carnival, or subdued to duller tones where, on uncultivated
+ground, moss-hummocks and patches of rock break through the investiture
+of grass. The sky has so much room here too: the whole world seems to be
+adrift in azure; the thin strip of land hangs poised between, claimed
+equally by firmament and the waters under it.
+
+In the old days, they tell us, Arichat was a very different place from
+now. Famous among the seaports of the Dominion, it saw a continual
+coming and going of brigs and ships and barquentines in the South
+American fish trade.
+
+"But if you had known it then!" they say. "The wharves were as thick all
+the length of the harbor as the teeth of a comb; and in winter, when the
+vessels were laid up--eh, mon Dieu! you would have called it a forest,
+for all the masts and spars you saw there. No indeed, it was not dreamed
+of in those days that Arichat would ever come to this!"
+
+So passes the world's glory! An air of tender, almost jealous
+reminiscence hangs about the town; and in its gentle decline into
+obscurity it has kept a sort of dignity, a self-possession, a certain
+look of wisdom and experience, which in a sense make it proof against
+all arrows of outrageous Fortune.
+
+Back from the other shore of the harbor, jutting out for some miles
+into Chedabucto Bay, lies the Cape. You get a view of it if you climb
+to the crest of the hill--a broad reach of barrens, fretted all day
+by the sea. Out there it is what the Acadians call a bad country.
+About the sluice-like coves that have been eaten into its rocky shore
+are scrambling groups of fishermen's houses; but aside from these
+and the lighthouse on the spit of rocks to southward, the region is
+uninhabited--a waste of rock and swamp-alder and scrub-balsam, across
+which a single thread of a road takes its circuitous way, dipping over
+steep low hills, turning out for gnarls of rock and patches of gleaming
+marsh, losing itself amid dense thickets of alder, then emerging upon
+some bare hilltop, where the whole measureless sweep of sea and sky
+fills the vision.
+
+When the dusk begins to fall of an autumn afternoon--between dog and
+wolf, as the saying goes--you could almost believe in the strange
+noises--the rumblings, clankings, shrill voices--that are to be heard
+above the dull roar of the sea by belated passers on the barrens. Some
+people have seen death-fires too, and a headless creature, much like a
+horse, galloping through the darkness; and over there at Fougere's Cove,
+the most remote settlement of the Cape, there were knockings at doors
+through all one winter from hands not human. The Fougeres--they were
+mostly of one tribe there--were driven to desperation; they consulted a
+priest; they protected themselves with blessed images, with prayers and
+holy water; and no harm came to them, though poor Marcelle, who was a
+_jeune fille_ of marriageable age, was prostrated for a year with the
+fright of it.
+
+This barren territory, where nothing grows above the height of a man's
+shoulder, still goes by the name of "the woods"--_les bois_--among the
+Acadians. "Once the forest was magnificent here," they tell you--"trees
+as tall as the church tower; but the great fire swept it all away; and
+never has there been a good growth since. For one thing, you see, we
+must get our firewood from it somehow."
+
+This fact accounts for a curious look in the ubiquitous stubby
+evergreens: their lower branches spread flat and wide close on the
+ground,--that is where the snow in winter protects them,--and above
+reaches a thin, spire-like stem, trimmed close, except for new growth at
+the top, of all its branches. It gives suggestion of a harsh, misshapen,
+all but defeated existence; the adverse forces are so tyrannical out
+here on the Cape, the material of life so sparse.
+
+I remember once meeting a little funeral train crossing the barrens.
+They were bearing the body of a young girl, Anna Bejean, to its last
+rest, five miles away by the road, in the yard of the parish church
+amongst the wooden crosses. The long box of pine lay on the bottom of
+a country wagon, and a wreath of artificial flowers and another of
+home-dyed immortelles were fastened to the cover. A young fisherman,
+sunburned and muscular, was leading the horse along the rough road, and
+behind followed three or four carts, carrying persons in black, all of
+middle age or beyond, and silent.
+
+Yet in the full tide of summer the barrens have a beauty in which
+this characteristic melancholy is only a persistent undertone. Then
+the marshes flush rose-pink with lovely multitudes of calopogons that
+cluster like poising butterflies amongst the dark grasses; here too
+the canary-yellow bladderwort flecks the black pools, and the red,
+leathery pitcher-plant springs in sturdy clumps from the moss-hummocks.
+And the wealth of color over all the country!--gray rock touched into
+life with sky-reflections; rusty green of alder thickets, glistening
+silver-green of balsam and juniper; and to the sky-line, wherever it
+can keep its hold, the thin, variegated carpet of close-cropped grass,
+where creeping berries of many kinds grow in profusion. Flocks of sheep
+scamper untended over the barrens all day, and groups of horses, turned
+out to shift for themselves while the fishing season keeps their owners
+occupied, look for a moment, nose in the air, at the passer, kick up
+their heels, and race off.
+
+As you turn back again toward Arichat you catch a glimpse of its
+glistening white church, miles distant in reality, but looking curiously
+near, across a landscape where none of the familiar standards of
+measure exist. You lose it on the next decline; then it flashes in
+sight again, and the blue, sun-burnished expanse of water between. It
+occurs to you that the whole life of the country finds its focus
+there: christenings and first communions, marriages and burials--how
+wonderfully the church holds them all in her keeping; how she sends
+out her comfort and her exhortation, her reproach and her eternal hope
+across even this bad country, where the circumstances of human life are
+so ungracious.
+
+But it is on a Sunday morning, when, in response to the quavering
+summons of the chapel bell, the whole countryside gives up its
+population, that you get the clearest notion of what religion means
+in the life of the Acadians. From the doorway of our house, which was
+close to the road at the upper end of the harbor, we could see the whole
+church-going procession from the outlying districts. The passing would
+be almost unbroken from eight o'clock on for more than an hour and a
+half: a varied, vivacious, friendly human stream. They came in hundreds
+from the scattered villages and hamlets of the parish--from Petit de
+Grat and Little Anse and Pig Cove and Gros Nez and Point Rouge and Cap
+au Guet, eight or nine miles often enough.
+
+First, those who went afoot and must allow plenty of time on account
+of age: bent old fishermen, whose yellowed and shiny coats had been
+made for more robust shoulders; old women, invariably in short black
+capes, and black bonnets tied tight under the chin, and in their hands
+a rosary and perhaps a thumb-worn missal. Then troops of children, much
+_endimanche_,--one would like to say "Sundayfied,"--trotting along
+noisily, stopping to examine every object of interest by the way,
+extracting all the excitement possible out of the weekly pilgrimage.
+
+A little later the procession became more general: young and old and
+middle-aged together. In Sunday boots that creaked loudly passed numbers
+of men and boys, sometimes five or six abreast, reaching from side
+to side of the street, sometimes singly attendant upon a conscious
+young person of the other sex. The wagons are beginning to appear now,
+scattering the pedestrians right and left as they rattle by, bearing
+whole families packed in little space; and away across the harbor, you
+see a small fleet of brown sails putting off from the Cape for the
+nearer shore.
+
+Outside the church, in the open space before the steps, is gathered a
+constantly growing multitude, a dense, restless swarm of humanity, full
+of gossip and prognostic, until suddenly the bell stops its clangor
+overhead; then there is a surging up the steps and through the wide
+doors of the sanctuary; and outside all is quiet once more.
+
+The Acadians do not appear greatly to relish the more solemn things of
+religion. They like better a religion demurely gay, pervaded by light
+and color.
+
+"Elle est tres chic, notre petite eglise, n'est-ce pas?" was a comment
+made by a pious soul of my acquaintance, eager to uphold the honor of
+her parish.
+
+Proper, mild-featured saints and smiling Virgins in painted robes and
+gilt haloes abound in the Acadian churches; on the altars are lavish
+decorations of artificial flowers--silver lilies, paper roses, red
+and purple immortelles; and the ceilings and pillars and wall-spaces
+are often done in blue and pink, with gold stars; such a style, one
+imagines, as might appeal to our modern St. Valentine. The piety
+that expresses itself in this inoffensive gayety of embellishment is
+more akin to that which moves universal humanity to don its finery
+o' Sundays,--to the greater glory of God,--than to the sombre,
+death-remembering zeal of some other communities. A kind religion
+this, one not without its coquetries, gracious, tactful, irresistible,
+interweaving itself throughout the very texture of the common life.
+
+Last summer, out at Petit de Grat, three miles from Arichat, where
+the people have just built a little church of their own, they held a
+"Grand Picnic and Ball" for the raising of funds with which to erect
+a glebe house. The priest authorized the affair, but stipulated that
+sunset should end each day's festivities, so that all decencies might be
+respected. This parish picnic started on a Monday and continued daily
+for the rest of the week--that is to say, until all that there was to
+sell was sold, and until all the youth of the vicinity had danced their
+legs to exhaustion.
+
+An unoccupied shop was given over to the sale of cakes, tartines,
+doughnuts, imported fruits, syrup drinks (unauthorized beverages being
+obtainable elsewhere), to the vending of chances on wheels of fortune,
+target-shooting, dice-throwing, hooked rugs, shawls, couvertures,
+knitted hoods, and the like; and above all the hubbub and excitement
+twanged the ceaseless, inevitable voice of a graphophone, reviving
+long-forgotten rag-time.
+
+Outside, most conspicuous on the treeless slope of hill, was a
+"pavilion" of boards, bunting-decked, on which, from morn till eve,
+rained the incessant clump-clump of happy feet. For music there was a
+succession of performers and of instruments: a mouth-organ, a fiddle, a
+concertina, each lending its particular quality of gayety to the dance;
+the mouth-organ, shrill, extravagant, whimsical, failing in richness;
+the concertina, rich, noisy, impetuous, failing in fine shades; the
+fiddle, wheedling, provocative, but a little thin. And besides--the
+fiddle is not what it used to be in the hands of old Fortune.
+
+Fortune died a year ago, and he was never appreciated till death
+snatched him from us: the skinniest, most ramshackle of mankind, tall,
+loose-jointed, shuffling in gait; at all other times than those that
+called his art into play, a shiftless, hang-dog sort of personage, who
+would always be begging a coat of you, or asking the gift of ten cents
+to buy him some tobacco. But at a dance he was a despot unchallenged.
+Only to hear him jig off the Irish Washerwoman was to acknowledge
+his preeminence. His bleary eyes and tobacco-stained lips took on a
+radiance, his body rocked to and fro, vibrated to the devil-may-care
+rhythm of the thing, while his left foot emphatically rapped out the
+measure.
+
+Until another genius shall be raised up amongst us, Fortune's name will
+be held in cherished memory. For that matter, it is not likely to die
+out, since, on the day of his death, the old reprobate was married to
+the mother of his seven children--baptized, married, administered, and
+shuffled off in a day.
+
+It had never occurred to any of us, somehow, that Fortune might be as
+transitory and impermanent as his patron goddess herself. We had always
+accepted him as a sort of ageless thing, a living symbol, a peripatetic
+mortal, coming out of Petit de Grat, and going about, tobacco in cheek,
+fiddle under arm, as irresponsible as mirth itself among the sons of
+men. God rest him! Another landmark gone.
+
+And old Maximen Foret, too, from whom one used to take weather-wisdom
+every day--his bench out there in the sun is empty. Maximen's shop was
+just across the street from our house--a long, darkish, tunnel-like
+place under a steep roof. Tinware of all descriptions hung in dully
+shining array from the ceiling; barrels and a rusty stove and two broad
+low counters occupied most of the floor space, and the atmosphere was
+charged with a curious sharp odor in which you could distinguish oil and
+tobacco and molasses. The floor was all dented full of little holes,
+like a honeycomb, where Maximen had walked over it with his iron-pointed
+crutch; for he was something of a cripple. But you rarely had any
+occasion to enter the smelly little shop, for no one ever bought much of
+anything there nowadays.
+
+Instead, you sat down on the sunny bench beside the old man--Acadian of
+the Acadians--and listened to his tireless, genial babble--now French,
+now English, as the humor struck him.
+
+"It go mak' a leetle weat'er, m'sieu," he would say. "I t'ink you better
+not go fur in the p'tit caneau t'is day. Dere is squall--la-bas--see,
+dark--may be t'unner. Dat is not so unlike, dis mont'. Oh, w'at a hell
+time for de hays!"
+
+For everybody who passed he had a greeting, even for those who had
+hastened his business troubles through never paying their accounts. To
+the last he never lost his faith in their good intentions.
+
+"Dose poor devil fishermen," he would say, "however dey mak' leeve, God
+know. You t'ink I mak' 'em go wid notting? It ain't lak dat wit' me here
+yet, m'sieu. Dey pay some day, when le bon Dieu, he send dem some feesh;
+dat's sure sure."
+
+If it happened that anybody stopped on business, old Maximen would
+hobble to the door and tug violently at a bell-rope.
+
+"Cr-r-r-line! Cr-r-r-line!" he would call.
+
+"Tout d' suite!" answered a shrill voice from some remoter portion of
+the edifice; and a moment later an old woman with straggling white
+hair, toothless gums, and penetrating, humorous eyes, deepset under a
+forehead of infinite wrinkles, would come shuffling up the pebble walk
+from the basement.
+
+"Me voila!" she would ejaculate, panting. "Me ol' man, he always know
+how to git me in a leetle minute, he?"
+
+On Sundays Caroline and Maximen would drive to chapel in a queer, heavy,
+antiquated road-cart that had been built especially for his use, hung
+almost as low between the axles as a chariot.
+
+"We go mak' our respec' to the bon Dieu," he would laugh, as he took
+the reins in hand and waited for Celestine, the chunky little mare, to
+start--which she did when the mood took her.
+
+The small shop is closed and beginning to fall to pieces. Maximen has
+been making his respects amid other surroundings for some four or five
+years, and Caroline, at the end of a twelvemonth of lonely waiting,
+followed after.
+
+"It seem lak I need t'e ol' man to look out for," she used to say. "All
+t'e day I listen to hear t'at bell again. 'Tout d' suite! I used to
+call, no matter what I do--maybe over the stove or pounding my bread;
+and den, 'Me voila, mon homme!' I would be at t'e shop, ready to help."
+
+I suppose that wherever a man looks in the world, if he but have the
+eyes to see, he finds as much of gayety and pathos, of failure and
+courage, as in any particular section of it; yet so much at least is
+true: that in a little community like this, so removed from the larger,
+more spectacular conflicts of life, so face to face, all the year, with
+the inveterate and domineering forces of nature, one seems to discover a
+more poignant relief in all the homely, familiar, universal episodes of
+the human comedy.
+
+
+[Illustration: ARICHAT]
+
+
+
+
+LA ROSE WITNESSETH
+
+ OF THE BUCHERONS
+ OF LA BELLE MELANIE
+ OF SIMEON'S SON
+
+
+
+
+LA ROSE WITNESSETH
+
+_Of How the Bucherons Were Punished for Their Hard Hearts_
+
+
+It was a boy of ten who listened to La Rose, and while he listened, the
+sun stood still in the sky, there was an enchantment on all the world.
+Whatever La Rose said you had to believe, somehow. Oh, I assure you, no
+one could be more exacting than she in the matter of proofs. For persons
+who would give an ear to any absurd story tattled abroad she had nothing
+but contempt.
+
+"Before you believe a thing," said La Rose, sagely, "you must know
+whether it is true or not. That is the most important part of a story."
+
+She would give a decisive nod to her small head and shut her lips
+together almost defiantly. Yet always, somewhere in the corner of her
+alert gray eye, there seemed to be lurking the ghost of a twinkle. La
+Rose had no age. She was both very young and very old. For all she had
+never traveled more than ten miles from the little Cape Breton town of
+Port l'Eveque, you had the feeling that she had seen a good deal of
+the world, and it is certain that her life had not been easy; yet she
+would laugh as quickly and abundantly as a young girl just home from the
+convent.
+
+These two were the best of comrades. La Rose had been the boy's nurse
+when he was little, and as he had no mother she had kept a feeling
+of special affection and responsibility for him. Thus it happened
+that whenever she was making some little expedition out across the
+harbor--say for blueberries on the barrens, or white moorberries, or
+ginseng--she would get permission from the captain for Michel to go with
+her; and this was the happiest privilege in the boy's life. Most of all
+because of the stories La Rose would tell him.
+
+La Rose had a story to tell about every spot they visited, about every
+person they passed. She had been brought up, herself, out here on the
+Cape; and not an inch of its territory but was familiar to her.
+
+"Now that is where those Bucherons lived," she observed one day, as they
+were walking homeward from Pig Cove by the Calvaire road. "They are all
+gone now, and the house is almost fallen to pieces; but once things were
+lively enough there--mon Dieu, oui!--quite lively enough for comfort."
+
+She gave a sagacious nod to her head, with the look of one who could say
+more, and would, if you urged her a little.
+
+"Was it at the Bucherons' that all the chairs stood on one leg?" asked
+Michel, thrilling mysteriously.
+
+"Oui, c'est ca," answered La Rose, in a voice of the most sepulchral,
+"right there in that house, the chairs stood on one leg and went
+rap--rap--against the floor. And more than once a table with dishes
+and other things on it fell over, and there were strange sounds in
+the cupboard. Oh, it is certain those Bucherons were tormented; but
+for that matter they had brought it on themselves because of their
+greediness and their hard hearts. It came for a punishment; and when
+they repented themselves, it went away."
+
+"I haven't ever heard all the story about the Bucherons," said
+Michel--"or at least, not since I was big. I am almost sure I would like
+it."
+
+"Well, I daresay," agreed La Rose. "It is an interesting story in some
+ways; and the best of it is, it is not one of those stories that are
+only to make you laugh, and then you go right away and forget them. And
+another thing: this story about the Bucherons really happened. It was
+when my poor stepmother was a girl. She lived at Pig Cove then, and that
+is only two miles from Gros Nez. And one of those Bucherons was once
+wanting to marry her; but do you think she would have anything to do
+with a man like that?
+
+"'No,' she said. 'I will have nothing to do with you. I would sooner not
+ever be married, me, than to have you for my man.'
+
+"And the reason she spoke that way was because of the cruelty they had
+shown toward that poor widow of a Noemi, which everybody on the Cape
+knew about, and it was a great scandal. And if you want me to tell you
+about it, that is what I am going to do now."
+
+La Rose seated herself on a flat rock by the road, and Michel found
+another for himself close by. Below them lay a deep rocky cove, with
+shores as steep as a sluice, and close above its inner margin stood the
+shell of a small house. The chimney had fallen in, the windows were all
+gone--only vacant holes now, through which you saw the daylight from the
+other side, and the roof had begun to sag.
+
+"Yes," said La Rose, "it will soon be gone to pieces entirely, and then
+there will be nothing to remind anyone of those Bucherons and what
+torments they had. You see there were four of them, an old woman and two
+sons, and one of the sons was married, but there were not any children;
+and all those four must have had stones instead of hearts. They were
+only thinking how they could get the better of other people, and so
+become rich.
+
+"And before that there had been three sons at home; but one of
+them--Benoit his name was--had married a certain Noemi Boudrot; and she
+was as sweet and beautiful as a lily, and he too was different from the
+others; and so they had not lived here, but had got a little house at
+Pig Cove, where they were very happy; and the good God sent them two
+children, of a beauty and gentleness indescribable; and they called them
+Evangeline and little Benoit, but you do not need to remember that,
+because it is not a part of the story.
+
+"So things went on that way for quite a while; and all the time those
+four Bucherons were growing more and more hard-hearted, like four
+serpents in a pile together.
+
+"Well, one day in October that Benoit Bucheron who lived in Pig Cove
+was going alone in a small cart to Port l'Eveque to buy some provisions
+for winter--flour, I suppose, and meal, and perhaps some clothes and
+some tobacco; and instead of going direct by the Gros Nez road, he
+came around this way by the Calvaire so as to stop in and speak to his
+relatives; and to see them welcoming him, you would never have suspected
+their stone hearts. But Benoit was solemn for all that, as if troubled
+by some idea. Then that sly old mother, she said:
+
+"'Dear Benoit,' she said, 'what troubles you? Can you not put trust in
+your own mother, who loves you better than her eyes and nose?'--and she
+smiled at him just like a fat wicked old spider that is waiting for a
+fly to come and get tangled up in her net.
+
+"But Benoit only remembered then that she was his mother; so he said:
+
+"'I have a fear, me, that I shall not be long for this world, my mother.
+Last week I saw a little blue fire on the barrens one night, and again
+one night I heard hoofs going _claquin-claquant_ down there on the
+beach, much like the horse without head. And that is why I am getting my
+provisions so early, and making everything ready for the winter. See,'
+he said, 'here is the thirteen dollars I have saved this year. I am
+going to buy things with it in Port l'Eveque.'
+
+"Now you may depend that when he showed them all that money, their
+eyes stuck out like the eyes of crabs; but of course they did not say
+anything only some words of the most comforting. And finally he said,
+getting ready to go:
+
+"'If anything should happen,' he said, 'will you promise me to be good
+to that poor Noemi and those two poor little innocent lambs?'--and
+those serpents said, certainly, they would do all that was possible;
+and with that Benoit gets into his cart, and starts down the hill; and
+suddenly the horse takes a fright of something and runs away, and the
+cart tips over, and Benoit is thrown out; and when his brothers get to
+him he is quite quite dead--and that shows what it means to see one of
+those little blue fires at night in the woods.
+
+"Well, you can believe that Noemi was not very happy when they brought
+back that poor Benoit to Pig Cove. Her eyes were like two brooks, and
+for a long time she could not say anything, and then finally, summoning
+a little voice of courage:
+
+"'I am glad of one thing,' she said, 'which is that he had saved all
+that money, for without it I would never know how to live through the
+winter.'
+
+"And one of those brothers said, with an innocent voice of a dove, 'what
+money then?'--and she said, 'He had it with him.' And so they look for
+it; but no, there is not any.
+
+"'You must have deceived yourself,' said that brother. 'I am sure he
+would have spoken of it if he had had any money with him; but he said
+never a word of such a thing.'
+
+"Now was not that a wicked lie for him to tell? It is hard to understand
+how abominable can be some of those men! But you may be sure they will
+be punished for it in the end; and that is what happened to those four
+serpents, the Bucherons.
+
+"For listen. The old mother had taken the money and had put it inside a
+sort of covered bowl, like a sugar bowl, but there was no sugar in it;
+and then she had set this bowl away on a shelf in the cupboard where
+they kept the dishes and such things; and the Bucherons thought it
+would be safe until the time when they had something to spend it for in
+Port l'Eveque; and they were telling themselves how no one would ever
+know what they had done; and they were glad that the promise they had
+made to Benoit had not been heard by anyone but themselves. And so that
+poor Noemi was left all alone without man or money; but sometimes the
+neighbors would give her a little food; but for all that those two lambs
+were often hungry, and their mother too, when it came bedtime.
+
+"But do you think the Bucherons cared--those four hearts of stone? They
+would not even give her so much as a crust of dry, mouldy bread; and
+Noemi was too proud to go and beg; and beside something seemed to tell
+her that there had been a wickedness somewhere, and that the Bucherons
+perhaps knew more than they had told her about that money. So she waited
+to see if anything would happen.
+
+"Now one night in December, when all those four were in the house alone,
+the beginning of their punishment arrived, and surely nothing more
+strange was ever heard of in this world.
+
+"'Ah, mon Dieu!' cries out the married woman all of a sudden--'mon Dieu,
+what is that!'
+
+"They all looked where she was looking, and what do you think they saw?
+There was a chair standing with three legs in the air, and only the
+little point of one on the floor.
+
+"The old woman pushed a scream and jumped to her feet and went over to
+it, and with much force set it back on the floor, the way a chair is
+meant to stand; but immediately when she let go of it, there it was
+again, as before, all on one leg.
+
+"And then, there cries out the younger woman again, with a voice shrill
+as a frightened horse that throws up its head and then runs away--'Oh,
+mere Bucheron, mere Bucheron,' cries she, 'the chair you were just
+sitting in is three legs in air too!'
+
+"And so it was! With that all the family got up in terror; but no sooner
+had they done that than at once all the chairs behaved just like the
+first, which made five chairs. These chairs did not seem to move at all,
+but stood there on one leg just as if they were always like that. Those
+Bucherons were almost dead with fright, and all four of them fled out of
+the house as fast as ever their legs could carry them--you would have
+said sheep chased by a mad dog--and never stopped for breath till they
+reached Gros Nez.
+
+"And pell-mell into old Pierre Leblanc's house all together, and shaking
+like ague. Hardly able to talk, they tell what has happened; and he will
+not believe them but says, well, he will go back with them and see. So
+he does, and they re-enter the house together, and look! the chairs are
+all just as usual.
+
+"'You have been making some crazy dreams,' says Pierre, rather angry,
+'or else,' he says, 'you have something bad in your hearts.' And with
+that he goes home again; and there is nothing more to be told about that
+night, though I daresay none of those wicked persons slept very well.
+
+"But that was only the beginning of what happened to them during that
+winter. Sometimes it would be these knockings about the roof, as of
+someone with a great hammer; and again it was as if they had seen a face
+at the window--just an instant, all white, in the dark--and then it
+would be gone. And often, often, the chairs would be standing as before
+on one leg. The table likewise, which once let fall a great crowd of
+dishes, and not a few were broken. But worst of all were these strange
+sounds that made themselves heard in the cupboard, like the hand of
+a corpse going rap--rap, rap--rap--rap, rap,--against the lid of its
+coffin. You may well believe it was a dreadful fright for those four
+infamous ones; but still they would do nothing, because of their desire
+to keep all that money and buy things with it.
+
+"Everybody on the Cape soon knew about what was happening at the
+Bucherons', but some pretended it was to laugh at, saying that such
+things did not happen nowadays; and others said the Bucherons must
+have gone crazy, and had better be left alone--and their arms and legs
+would sometimes keep jerking a little when they talked to anyone, as
+my stepmother told me a thousand times; and they had a way of looking
+behind them--so!--as if they were afraid of being pursued. So however
+that might be, nobody would go and see them.
+
+"Well, things went on like that for quite a while, and finally, one day
+in February, through all the snow that it made on the ground then, that
+poor Noemi marched on her feet from Pig Cove to her mother-in-law's,
+having left her two infants at a neighbor's; for she had resolved
+herself to ask for some help, seeing that she had had nothing but a
+little bite since three days. And when they saw her coming they were
+taken with a fright, and at first they were not going to let her in; but
+that old snake of a mother, she said:
+
+"'If we refuse to let her in, my children, she will go and suspect
+something.'
+
+"So they let her in, and when she was in, they let her make all her
+story, or as much as she had breath for, and then:
+
+"'I am sorry,' said this old snake of a mother, 'that we cannot possibly
+do anything for you. Alas, my dear little daughter, it is barely even
+if we can manage to hold soul and body together ourselves, with the
+terrible winter it makes these days.'
+
+"And just as she said that, what do you think happened? A chair got on
+one leg and went rap--rap, rap--against the floor.
+
+"That Noemi would often be telling about it afterwards to my stepmother,
+and she said never of her life had she seen anything so terrifying. But
+she did not scream or do anything like that, because something, she
+said, inside her seemed to bid her keep quiet just then. And she used
+to tell how that old Bucheron woman's face turned exactly the color of
+an oyster on a white plate, and a trembling took her, and finally she
+said, scarcely able to make the sound of the words:
+
+"'Though perhaps--I might find--a crust of bread somewhere that--that we
+could spare.'
+
+"That was how she spoke, and at the same instant, _rap_ went the chair,
+still on its one leg; and there was a sound of a hammering on the roof.
+
+"'Or perhaps--a little loaf of bread and some potatoes,' said that old
+Bucheron, while the other Bucherons sat there without one word, in
+their chairs, as if paralyzed, except that their hands kept up a little
+shaking motion all the time, like this scour-grass you get in the marsh,
+which trembles always even if there is not any wind. 'Or perhaps a loaf
+of bread and some potatoes'--that is what she was saying, when listen,
+there is a knock as of the hand of corpse just inside the cupboard; and
+suddenly the two doors fly open--you would have said _pushed_ from the
+inside!
+
+"Noemi crosses herself, but does not say anything, for she knows it is a
+time to keep still.
+
+"'And perhaps,' says the old woman then, in a voice of the most piteous,
+as if someone were giving her a pinch, 'and perhaps, if only I had it,
+a dollar or two to help buy some medicine and a pair of shoes for that
+Evangeline.... But no, I do not think we have so much as that anywhere
+in the house.'
+
+"Now was not that like the old serpent, to be telling a lie even at the
+last; and surely if God had struck her dead by a ball of lightning at
+that moment it would have been none too good for her. But no, he was
+going to give her a chance to repent and not to have to go to Hell for a
+punishment. So what do you think He made happen then?
+
+"Hardly had those abominable words jumped out of her when with a great
+crash, down off the top shelf comes that sugar bowl (if it was a sugar
+bowl), and as it hits the floor, it breaks into a thousand pieces; and
+there, in a little pile, are those thirteen dollars, just as on the day
+when that poor Benoit had been carrying them with him to Port l'Eveque.
+
+"Now just as if they are not doing it at all of their own wish, but
+something makes them act that way, all of a sudden those four Bucherons
+are kneeling on the floor, saying their prayers in a strange voice like
+the prayers you might hear in a tomb; and with that, the chair goes back
+quietly to its four legs, and the noise ceases on the roof, and those
+two cupboard doors draw shut without human hands. As for Noemi, she
+grabs up the money, and out she goes, swift as a bird that is carrying
+a worm to its children, leaving her parents by marriage still there on
+their knees, like so many images; but as she opens the door she says:
+
+"'May the good God have pity on all the four of you!'--which was a
+Christian thing to say, seeing how much she had suffered at their hands.
+
+"Well, there is not much more to tell. Noemi got through the rest of
+that winter without any more trouble; and the next year she married a
+fisherman from Little Anse, and went away from the Cape. As for the
+Bucherons, they were not like the same people any more. You would not
+have known them--so pious they were and charitable, though always,
+perhaps, a little strange in their ways. But when the old woman died,
+two years later, or three, all the people of Pig Cove and Gros Nez
+followed the corpse in to Port l'Eveque; and her grave is there in the
+cemetery.
+
+"The rest of the family are gone now too, as you see; and soon, I
+suppose, there will not be many left, even out here on the Cape, who
+know all about what happened to the Bucherons, because of their hard
+hearts; which is a pity, seeing that the story has such a good lesson to
+it...."
+
+
+
+
+LA ROSE WITNESSETH
+
+[A]_Of the Headless Horse and of La Belle Melanie's Narrow Escape from
+the Feu Follet_
+
+
+[A] Included with permission of and by arrangements with Houghton
+Mifflin Company authorized publishers.
+
+One of the privileges Michel esteemed most highly was that of
+accompanying La Rose occasionally when she went blueberrying over on the
+barrens--_dans les bois_, as the phrase still goes in Port l'Eveque,
+though it is all of sixty years since there were any woods there. The
+best barrens for blueberrying lay across the harbor. They reached back
+to the bay four or five miles to southward. Along the edges of several
+rocky coves, narrow and steep as a sluice, clung a few weatherbeaten
+fishermen's houses; but there was no other sign of human habitation.
+
+It is what they call a bad country over there. Alder and scrub balsam
+grow sparsely over the low rocky hills, where little flocks of sheep
+nibble all day at the thin herbage; and from the marshes that lie, green
+and mossy, at the foot of every slope, a solitary loon may occasionally
+be seen rising into the air with a great spread of slow wings. A single
+thread of a road makes its way somehow across the region, twisting
+in and out among the small hills, now climbing suddenly to a bare
+elevation, from which the whole sweep of the sea bursts upon the view,
+now shelving off along the side of a knoll of rocks, quickly dipping
+into some close hollow, where the world seems to reach no farther than
+to the strange sky-line, wheeling sharply against infinite space.
+
+Two miles back from the inner shore, the road forks at the base of a
+little hill more conspicuously bare than the rest, and close to the
+naked summit of it, overlooking all the Cape, stands a Calvary. Nobody
+knows how long it has stood there, or why it was first erected; though
+tradition has it that long, long ago, a certain man by the name of
+Toussaint was there set upon by wild beasts and torn to pieces. However
+that may be, the tall wooden cross, painted black, and bearing on its
+center, beneath a rude penthouse, a small iron crucifix, has been there
+longer than any present memory records--an encouragement, as they say,
+for those who have to cross the bad country after dark.
+
+"That makes courage for you," they say. "It is good to know it is there
+on the windy nights."
+
+By daylight, however, and especially in the sunshine, the barrens are
+quite without other terrors than those of loneliness; and upon Michel
+this remoteness and silence always exercised a kind of spell. He was
+glad that La Rose was with him, partly because he would have been a
+little afraid to be there quite by himself, but chiefly because of the
+imaginative sympathy that at this time existed so strongly between them.
+La Rose could tell him all about the strange things that had been seen
+here of winter nights; she herself once, tending a poor old sick woman
+at Gros Nez, out at the end of the Cape, had heard the hoofs of the
+white horse that gallops across the barrens _claquin-claquant_ in the
+darkness.
+
+"It was just there outside the house, pawing the ground. Almost
+paralyzed for terror, I ran to the window and looked out. It was as tall
+as the church door,--that animal,--all white, and there was no head to
+it.
+
+"'Oh, mere Babinot,' I whispered, scarcely able to make the sound of the
+words. 'It is as tall as the church door and all white.'
+
+"She sits up in bed and stares at me like a corpse. 'La Rose,' she
+says,--just like that, shrill as a whistle of wind,--'La Rose, do you
+see a head to it?'
+
+"'No, not any!'
+
+"'Oh, mon Dieu, mon Dieu! Then it's sure! It is the very one, the horse
+without head!'
+
+"And the next day she took only a little spoonful of tea, and in two
+weeks she was dead, poor mere Babinot; and that's as true as that I made
+my communion last Easter. Oh, it's often seen hereabouts, that horse.
+It's a sign that something will happen, and never has it failed yet."
+
+They made their way, La Rose and Michel, slowly over the low hills,
+picking the blueberries that grew thickly in clumps of green close to
+the ground. La Rose always wore a faded yellow-black dress, the skirt
+caught up, to save it, over a red petticoat; and on her small brown head
+she carried the old Acadian _mouchoir_, black, brought up to a peak in
+front, and knotted at the side.
+
+She picked rapidly, with her alert, spry movements, her head always
+cocked a little to one side, almost humorously, as she peered about
+among the bushes for the best spots. And wherever he was, Michel heard
+her chattering softly to herself, in an inconsequential undertone, now
+humming a scrap of some pious song, now commenting on the quality of the
+berry crop--never had she seen so few and so small as these last years.
+Surely there must be something to account for it. Perhaps the birds had
+learned the habitude of devouring them--now addressing some strayed
+sheep that had ventured with timid bleats within range: "Te voila, petit
+mechant! Little rogue! What are you looking about for? Did the others go
+off and leave you? Eh bien, that's how it happens, mon petit. They'll
+leave you. The world's like that. Eh, la, la!"
+
+He liked to go to the other side of the hill, out of sight of her,
+where he could imagine that he was lost _dans les bois_. Then he would
+listen for her continual soft garrulity; and if he could not hear it
+he would wait quietly for a minute in the silence, feeling a strange
+exhilaration, which was almost pain, in the presence of the great sombre
+spaces, the immense emptiness of the overhanging sky, until he could
+endure it no longer.
+
+"La Rose!" he would call. "Etes-vous toujours la?"
+
+"Mais oui, mon enfant. What do you want?"
+
+"Nothing. It is only that I was thinking."
+
+"The strange child that you are!" she would exclaim. "You are not like
+the others."
+
+"La Rose," he would ask, "was it by here that La Belle Melanie passed on
+the night she saw the death fire?"
+
+"Yes, by this very spot. She was on her way to Pig Cove, over beyond
+the Calvary to the east. It is a desolate little rat-hole, Pig Cove,
+nowadays; but then it was different--as many as two dozen houses. My
+stepmother lived in one of them. Now there are scarcely six, and falling
+to pieces at that. La Belle Melanie, she was a Boudrot, sister of the
+Pierre Boudrot whose son, Theobald, was brother-in-law of stepmother.
+That was many years ago. They are all dead now, or gone away from
+here--to Boston, I daresay."
+
+"Will you tell me about that again,--the _feu follet_ and Melanie?"
+
+It was the story Michel liked the best, most of all when he could sit
+beside La Rose, on a moss-hummock of some rough hill on the barrens.
+Perhaps there would be cloud shadows flitting like dream presences
+across the shining face of the moor. In the distance, over the backs of
+the hills that crouched so thickly about them, he saw the stretch of the
+ocean, a motionless floor of azure and purple, flecked, it might be, by
+a leaning sail far away; and now and then a gull or two would fly close
+over their heads, wheeling and screaming for a few seconds, and then
+off again through the blue.
+
+"S'il vous plait, tante La Rose, see how many berries I have picked
+already!"
+
+The little woman was not difficult of persuasion.
+
+"It was in November," she began. "There had not been any snow yet; but
+the nights were cold and terribly dark under a sky of clouds. That
+autumn, as my stepmother often told me, many people had seen the horse
+without head as it galloped _claquin-claquant_ across the barrens. At
+Gros Nez it was so bad that no one dared go out after dark, unless it
+was to run with all one's force to the neighbors--but not across the
+woods to save their souls. Especially because of the _feu follet_.
+
+"Now you must know that the _feu follet_ is of all objects whatever in
+the world the most mysterious. No one knows what it is or when it will
+come. You might walk across the barrens every night of your life and
+never encounter it; and again it might come upon you all unawares, not
+more than ten yards from your own threshold. It is more like a ball
+of fire than any other mortal thing, now large, now small, and always
+moving. Usually it is seen first hovering over one of the marshes,
+feeding on the poison vapors that rise from them at night: it floats
+there, all low, and like a little luminous cloud, so faint as scarcely
+to be seen by the eye. And sometimes people can travel straight by it,
+giving no attention, as if they did not know it was there, but keeping
+the regard altogether ahead of them on the road, and the _feu follet_
+will let them pass without harm.
+
+"But that does not happen often, for there are not many who can keep
+their wits clear enough to manage it. It brings a sort of dizziness, and
+one's legs grow weak. And then the _feu follet_ draws itself together
+into a ball of fire and begins to pursue. It glides over the hills and
+flies across the marshes, sometimes in circles, sometimes bounding
+from rock to rock, but all the while stealing a little closer and a
+little closer, no matter how fast you run away. And finally--bff! like
+that--it's upon you--and that's the end. Death for a certainty. Not all
+the medicine in the four parishes can help you.
+
+"Indeed, there are only two things in all the world that can save you
+from the _feu follet_ once it gets after you. One is, if you are in a
+state of grace, all your sins confessed; which does not happen often
+to the inhabitants of Pig Cove, for even at this day Pere Galland
+reproaches them for their neglect. And the other is, if you have a
+needle with you. So little a thing as a needle is enough, incredible as
+it may seem; for if you stick the needle upright--like that--in an old
+stump, the _feu follet_ gets all tangled up in the eye of it. Try as it
+will, it cannot free itself; and meanwhile you run away, and are safe
+before it reappears. That is why all the inhabitants of the Cape used
+to carry a needle stuck somewhere in their garments, to use on such an
+occasion.
+
+"Well, I must tell you about La Belle Melanie. That is the name she
+was known by in all parts, for she was beautiful as a lily flower, and
+no lily was ever more pure and sweet than she. Melanie lived with her
+mother, who was aged almost to helplessness, and she cared for her with
+all the tenderness imaginable. You may believe that she was much sought
+after by the young fellows of the Cape--yes, and of Port l'Eveque as
+well, which used to hold its head in the air in those days; but her
+mother would hear nothing of her marrying.
+
+"'You are only seventeen,' she said, 'ma Melanie. I will hear nothing
+of your marrying, no, not for five years at the least. By that time we
+shall see.'
+
+"And Melanie tried to be obedient to all her mother's commands,
+difficult as they often were for a young girl, who naturally desires a
+little to amuse herself sometimes. For even had her mother forbidden her
+to speak alone to the young men of the neighborhood, so fearful was she
+lest her daughter should think of marriage.
+
+"Eh bien, and so that was how things went for quite a while, and every
+day Melanie grew more beautiful. And one Saturday afternoon in November
+she had been in to Port l'Eveque to make her confession, for she was a
+pious girl. And when she went to meet her companions in order to return
+to Pig Cove with them, they said they were not going back that night,
+for there was to be a dance at the courthouse, and they were going to
+spend the night with some parents by marriage of theirs. Poor Melanie!
+she would have been glad to stay, but alas, her poor mother, aged and
+helpless, was expecting her, and she dared not disappoint the poor soul.
+
+"So finally one of the young men said he would put her across the
+harbor, if she did not mind traversing the woods alone; and she said,
+no, why should she mind? It was still plain daylight. And so he put her
+across. And she said good-night to him and set off along the solitary
+road to the Cape, little imagining what an adventure was ahead of her.
+
+"For scarcely had she gone so much as a mile when it had grown almost
+night, so suddenly at that time of the year does the daylight extinguish
+itself. The sky had grown dark, dark, and there was a look of storm in
+it. La Belle Melanie began to grow uneasy of mind. And she thought then
+of the _feu follet_, and put her hand to her bodice to assure herself of
+her needle. What then! Alas! it was gone, by some accident, whether or
+not she had lost it on the road or in the church.
+
+"With that Melanie began to feel a terror creep over her; and this was
+not lessened, as you may well believe, when, a few minutes later, she
+perceived a floating thing like a luminous cloud in a marsh some long
+distance from the road. The night was now all black; scarcely could she
+perceive the road ahead, always winding there among the hills.
+
+"She had the idea of running; but alas, her legs were like lead; she
+could not make them march in front of her. She saw herself already dead.
+The _feu follet_ was beginning to move, first very slowly and all
+uncertain, but then drawing itself together into a ball of fire, and
+leaping as if in play from one hummock of moss to another, just as a cat
+will leave a poor little mouse half dead on the floor while it amuses
+itself in another way.
+
+"What the end would have been, who would have the courage to say, if
+just at this moment, all ready to fall to the ground for terror, poor
+Melanie had not bethought herself of her rosary. It was in her pocket.
+She grasped it. She crossed herself. She saluted the crucifix. And then
+she commenced to say her prayers; and with that, wonderful to say, her
+strength came back to her, and she began to run. She had never ran like
+that before--swift as a horse, not feeling her legs under her, and
+praying with high voice all the time.
+
+"But for all that, the death fire followed, always faster and faster,
+now creeping, now flying, now leaping from rock to rock, and always
+drawing nearer, and nearer, with a strange sound of a hissing not of
+this world. Melanie began to feel her forces departing. She was almost
+exhausted. She would not be able to run much more.
+
+"And suddenly, just ahead, on a bare height, there was the tall
+Calvaire, and a new hope came to her. If she could only reach it! She
+summoned all her strength and struggled up. She climbs the ascent. Alas,
+once more it seems she will fail! There is a fence, as you know, built
+of white pales, about the cross. She had not the power to climb it. She
+sinks to the ground. And it was at that last minute, all flat on the
+ground in fear of death, that an idea came to her, as I will tell you.
+
+"She raises herself to her feet by clinging to the white palings; she
+faces the _feu follet_, already not more than ten yards away; she holds
+out the rosary, making the holy sign in the air.
+
+"'I did not make a full confession!' she cries. 'I omitted one thing. My
+mother had forbidden me to have anything to do with a young man; and one
+day when I was looking for Fanchette, our cow, who had wandered in the
+woods, I met Andre Babinot, and he kissed me.'
+
+"That was what saved her. The _feu follet_ rushed at her with a roar of
+defeat, and in the same instant it burst apart into a thousand flames
+and disappeared.
+
+"As for Melanie, she fell to the ground again, and lay there for a
+while, quite unconscious. At last the rain came on, and she revived, and
+set out for home, but not very vigorously. Ah, mon Dieu! if her poor
+mother was glad to see her alive again! She embraced her most tenderly,
+and with encouraging voice inquired what had happened, for Melanie
+was still as white as milk, and there was a strange smell of fire in
+her garments, and still she held in her hands the little rosary; and
+so finally Melanie told her everything, not even concealing the last
+confession about Andre, and with that her mother burst into tears, and
+said:
+
+"'Melanie,' she said, 'I have been wrong, me. A young girl will be a
+young girl despite all the contrary intentions of her mother. To show
+how grateful to God I am that you are returned to me safe and sound, you
+shall marry Andre as soon as you like.'
+
+"So they were married the next year. And there is a lesson to this
+story, too, which is that one should always tell the truth; because if
+La Belle Melanie had told all the truth at the beginning she would not
+have had all that fright.
+
+"And to show that the story is true, there were found the marks of
+flames on the white fence of the Calvaire the next day; and as often as
+they painted it over with whitewash, still the darkness of the scorched
+wood would show through, as I often saw for myself; but now there is a
+new fence there...."
+
+
+
+
+LA ROSE WITNESSETH
+
+_Of How Old Simeon's Son Came Home Again_
+
+
+In the old cemetery above the church some men were at work setting up a
+rather ornate monument at the head of two long-neglected and overgrown
+graves. La Rose had noticed what was going on, as she came out from
+early mass, and had informed herself about it; and since then, she said,
+all through the day, her thoughts had been traveling back to things that
+happened many years ago.
+
+"Is it not strange," she observed musingly, sitting about dusk with
+Michel on the doorsill of the kitchen, while Celeste finished the
+putting-away of the supper dishes--"is it not strange how things go
+in this world? So often they turn out sorrowfully, and you cannot
+understand why that should be so. Think of that poor Leonie Gilet, who
+was taken so suddenly in the chest last winter and died all in a month,
+and she one of the purest and sweetest lilies that ever existed, and the
+next year she was to be married to a good man that loved her better than
+both his two eyes. Ah, mon Dieu, sometimes I think the sadness comes
+much more often than the joy down here."
+
+She looked out broodingly, and with eyes that did not see anything,
+across the captain's garden and the hayfield below, dipping gently
+to the margin of the harbor. Michel was silent. La Rose's fits of
+melancholy interested him even when he only dimly sensed the burden of
+them.
+
+"And then," she resumed, after a moment, "sometimes the ending to things
+is happy. For a while all looks dark, dark, and there is grief, perhaps,
+and some tears; and then, just at the worst moment--tiens!--there is a
+change, and the happiness comes again, very likely even greater than
+it was at first. It is as if this good God up there, he could not bear
+any longer to see it so heartbreaking, and so he must take things into
+his own hands and set them right. And so, sometimes, when I find myself
+feeling sad about things, I like to remember what arrived to that poor
+Simeon Leblanc, whose son is just having them place a fine tombstone for
+him up there in the cimetiere; for if ever happiness came to any man,
+it came to him, and that after a long time of griefs. Did you ever hear
+about this old Simeon Leblanc?"
+
+"Never, tante La Rose," answered the boy, gravely. "But if it has a
+pleasant ending, I wish you would tell me about it, and I don't mind if
+it makes me cry a little in the middle."
+
+By this, Celeste, the stout domestic, had finished her kitchen work, and
+throwing an apron over her stocky head and shoulders, she clumped out
+into the yard.
+
+"I am running over to Alec Samson's," she explained, "to get a mackerel
+for breakfast, if he caught any to-day."
+
+The gate clicked after her, and there was a silence. At last La Rose
+began, a little absently and as if, for the moment at least, unaware of
+her auditor....
+
+"This Simeon Leblanc, he lived over there on the other side of the
+harbor, just beyond the place where the road turns off to go to the
+Cape. My poor stepmother when coming in to Port l'Eveque to sell some
+eggs or berries--three gallons, say, of blueberries, or perhaps some of
+those large strawberries from Pig Cove--she would often be running in
+there for a little rest and a talk with his wife, Celie--who always was
+glad to see any one, for that matter, the poor soul, for this Simeon was
+not too gentle, and often he made her unhappy with his harsh talk.
+
+"'Ah, mon amie,' she would say to my stepmother, at the same time
+wetting her eyes with tears--'Ah, I have such a fear, me, that he will
+do himself a harm, one day, with the temper he has. He frightens me to
+death sometimes--especially about that Tommy.'
+
+"Now you must understand that this Tommy was the son they had, and in
+some ways he resembled to his father, and in some ways to his mother.
+For it is certain he had a pride of the most incredible, which I daresay
+made him a little hard to manage; and yet in his heart there was a
+softness.
+
+"'That Tommy,' said his mother, 'he wants to be loved. That is the way
+to get him to do anything. There is no use in always punishing him and
+treating him hardly.'
+
+"But for all that, old Simeon must have his will, and so he does not
+cease to be scolding the boy. He commands him now to do this thing, now
+that--here, there. He forbids him to be from home at night. He tells him
+he is a disgrace of a son to be so little laborious. Oh, it was a horror
+the way that poor lamb of a Tommy was treated; and finally, one day,
+when he was seventeen or eighteen, there was a great quarrel, and that
+Simeon called him by some cruel name, and white as a corpse cries out
+Tommy:
+
+"'My father, that is not true. You shall not say it!'--and the other,
+furious as an animal: 'I shall say what I choose!' And he says the same
+thing again. And Tommy: 'After that, I will not endure to stay here
+another day. I am tired of being treated so. You will not have another
+chance.'
+
+"And with that he places a kiss on the forehead of his poor mother, who
+was letting drop some tears, and walks out of the house without so much
+as turning his head again; and he marches over to Petit Ingrat, where
+there was an American fisherman which had put in for some bait, and he
+says to the captain: 'Will you give me a place?' and the captain says,
+'We are just needing another man. Yes, we will give you a place.' So
+this Tommy, he got aboard, and a little later they put out and went off
+to the Banks for the fish.
+
+"Well, it was not very long before that Simeon got over his bad wicked
+rage; and then he was sorry enough for what he had done, especially
+because there was no longer any son in the house, and that poor Celie
+must always be grieving herself after him. And you may believe that
+Simeon got little pity from the neighbors.
+
+"'It is good enough for him,' they would say--'a man like that, who is
+not decent to his own son.'
+
+"But they were sorry for Celie, most of all when she began to grow
+thinner and thinner and had a strange look in her eyes that was not
+entirely of this world. The old man said, 'She will be all right again
+when that schooner comes back,' and he was always going over to Petit
+Ingrat to find out if it had returned yet; but you see, of course there
+would not be any need of bait when the season was finished, and so
+the schooner did not put in at all; and the autumn came, and went by,
+and then followed the winter, and still no news, but only waiting and
+waiting, and a little before Easter that poor Celie went away among the
+angels. I think her heart was quite broken in two, and it did not seem
+to her that she needed to stay any longer in this hustling world. And so
+they buried her in the old cimetiere--I saw her grave to-day, next to
+Simeon's, and this fine new monument is to be for the two of them; but
+for all these years there has been just a wooden cross there, like the
+other graves.
+
+"But still no word came of Tommy, and the old Simeon was all alone in
+the house. Oh, I can remember him well, well, although I was only a
+young tiny girl then and had not had any sorrow myself. We would see him
+walking along the Petit Ingrat road, all bent over and trailing one leg
+a little.
+
+"'Hst!' one of my companions would whisper, 'that is old Simeon, who
+drove his son from home; and his poor wife is dead with grief. He is
+going across there to see if a schooner will have come in yet with any
+news.'
+
+"And that was true. He took this habitude of making a promenade
+almost every day to Petit Ingrat during that season of the year when
+the Americans are going down to the fish--la-bas--and if there was a
+schooner in the harbor, he finds the captain or one of the crew, and he
+says, 'Is it, m'sieu, for example, that you have seen a boy anywhere
+named Tommy Leblanc? It is my son--you understand?--a very pretty
+young boy, with black hair and fine white teeth and a little curly
+mustache--so--just beginning to sprout.' And he would go on to describe
+that Tommy, but of course, for one thing they could not understand his
+French very well, for the Americans, as you know, do not speak that
+language among themselves; and anyway, you may depend that none of them
+had ever heard of Tommy Leblanc; and sometimes they would have a little
+mockery of the old man; and sometimes, on the contrary, they would feel
+pity, and would say, well, God's name, it was a damage, but they could
+not tell him anything.
+
+"And then the old man would say, 'Well, if ever you should see him
+anywhere, will you please tell him that his father is wanting him
+to come home, if he will be so kind as to do it; because it is very
+lonesome without him, and the mother is dead.'
+
+"Then after he had said that, he would go back again along the road
+to the Cape, not speaking to anybody unless they spoke to him first,
+and trailing one leg after him a little, like one of these horses you
+see sometimes with a weight tied to a hind foot so that it cannot run
+away--or at least not very far. That is how I remember old Simeon from
+the time when I was a little girl--walking there along the road to or
+from Petit Ingrat. I used to hear people say: 'Ah, my God, how old he
+is grown all in these few years! He is not the same man--so quiet and
+so timid'--and others: 'But can one say how it is possible for him to
+live there all alone like that?'--and someone replied: 'You could not
+persuade him to live anywhere else, for that is where he has all his
+memories, both the good and the bad, and what else is left for him
+now--that, and the crazy idea he has that his Tommy will one day come
+home again?'
+
+"You see, as the years passed, everybody took the belief that Tommy must
+be dead, at sea or somewhere, seeing that not one word was heard of him;
+but of course they guarded themselves well from saying anything like
+that to poor old Simeon.
+
+"Well, it was about the time when your poor father, Amedee, was a boy
+of your age, or a little older, that all this sorrow came to an end;
+and this is the pleasant part of the story. I was living at Madame
+Paon's then, down near the post-office wharf, and we had the habitude
+of looking out of the window every day when the packet-boat came in
+(which was three times a week) to see if anybody would be landing at
+Port l'Eveque. Well, and one afternoon whom should we see but a fine
+m'sieu with black beard, carrying a cane, dressed like an American; and
+next, a lovely lady in clothes of the most fashionable and magnificent;
+and then, six beautiful young children, all just as handsome as dolls,
+and holding tightly one another by the hand, with an affection the most
+charming in the world. Ah, ma foi, if I shall ever forget that sight!
+
+"And Madame Paon to me: 'Rose,--La Rose,--in God's name, who can they
+be! Perhaps some millionaires from Boston--for look, the trunks that
+they have!'
+
+"And that was the truth, for the trunks and bags were piled all over the
+wharf; and opening the window a little, we hear m'sieu giving directions
+to have them taken to the Couronne d'Or--'and who,' he asks in French,
+'is the proprietor there now?'--and they say: 'Gaston Lebal'--and he
+says: 'What! Gaston Lebal! Is it possible!'
+
+"'He knows Port l'Eveque, it seems,' says Madame Paon, all excitement;
+and just then the first two trunks go by the windows, and she tells me,
+'It is an English name, or an American.' And then, spelling out the
+letters, for she reads with a marvel of ease, she says, 'W-H-I-T-E is
+what the trunks say on them; but I can make nothing out of that. I am
+going outside, me,' she says, 'and perhaps I shall learn something.'
+
+"She descends into the garden, and seems to be working a little at
+the flowers, and a minute later, here comes the fine m'sieu, and he
+looks at her for an instant--right in the face, so, and as if asking
+a question--and then: 'Ah, mon Dieu, it is Suzon Boudrot!' he cries,
+using the name she was born with. 'Can you not remember me?--That Tommy
+Leblanc who ran away twenty years ago?'
+
+"Madame Paon gives a scream of joy, and they embrace; and then he
+presents this Mees W'ite, qui est une belle Americaine, and then he
+says: 'What is there of news about my dear mother and my father?'--and
+she: 'Did you not know your poor mother was dead the year after you
+went!'--and he: 'Ma mere--she is dead?'--and the tears jump out of his
+eyes, and his voice trembles as if it had a crack in it. 'Well, she is
+with the blessed angels, then,' says he.
+
+"'But your poor old father,' goes on Madame Paon, 'he is still waiting
+for you every day. He has waited all these twenty years for you to come
+back.'
+
+"'He is still in the old place?' asks he.
+
+"'Yes, he would not leave it.'
+
+"'We shall go over there at once,' he says, opening out his two
+arms--so!--'before ever we set foot in another house. It is my duty as a
+son.'
+
+"So while Andre Gilet--the father of that dear Leonie who was taken in
+the chest--while he is getting the boat ready to cross the harbor, Tommy
+tells her how he has been up there in Boston all these years--at a place
+called Shee-cahgo, a big city--and has been making money; and how he
+changed his name to W'ite, which means the same as Leblanc and is more
+in the mode; and how he married this lovely Americaine, whose name was
+Finnegan, and had all these sweet little children; but always, he said,
+he had desired to make a little visit at home, only it was so far to
+come; and he was afraid that his father would still be angry at him.
+
+"'Ah,' says Madame Paon, with emotion, 'you will not know your father.
+He is so different: just as mild as a sheep. Everyone has come to love
+him.' ...
+
+"Now for the rest of the story, all I know is what that Andre told us,
+for he put all this family across to the other side in his boat. So when
+they reached the shore, M'sieu Tommy, he says: 'You will all wait here
+until I open the door and beckon: and then you, Maggie, will come up;
+and then, a little later, we will have the children in, all together.'
+
+"And with that he leaves them, and goes up to the old house, and
+knocks, and opens the door, and walks in--and who can say the joy and
+the comfort of the meeting that happened then? And quite a long while
+passed, Andre said; and that lovely lady sat there on the side of the
+boat, all as white as milk, and never saying a word; and those six
+lambs, whispering softly among themselves--and one of them said, just a
+little above its breath:
+
+"'It will be nice to have a grandpa all for ourselves, don't you
+think?'--and was not that a dear sweet little thing for it to say?...
+
+"And finally the door opens again, and see! and his hand makes a sign;
+and that lady, swift as one of these sea-gulls, leaps ashore. And up the
+hill; and through the gate; and into the house! And the door shuts again.
+
+"And another wait, while those six look at each other, and say their
+little things. And at last they are called too, and away they go, all
+together, just like one of these flocks of curlew that fly over the
+Cape, making those soft little sounds; and then into the house; and
+Andre said he had to wipe two tears out of his eyes to see a thing like
+that.
+
+"Well, this was the end of old Simeon's grief, as you may well believe.
+Those W'ites stay at the Couronne d'Or for as much as nine or ten days,
+and every morning they will be going across to see their dear dear
+grandfather; and finally when they went away, they had hired that widow
+Bergere to keep his house comfortable for him; and M'sieu Tommy left
+money for all needs.
+
+"And every Christmas after that, so long as old Simeon existed, there
+would come boxes of presents from that place in Boston. Oh, I assure
+you, he did not lack that good care. And always he must be talking about
+that Tommy of his, who was so rich, and was some great personage in the
+city--what they called an alderman--and yet he had not forgotten his
+poor old father, who had waited all those years to see him.
+
+"So this story shows that sometimes things turn out just as well in
+this life down here as they do in those silly stories they tell you
+about princesses and all those things that are not so; and that is a
+comfort sometimes, when you see so much that is sad and heartbreaking in
+this world...."
+
+
+[Illustration: A CALVAIRE]
+
+
+
+
+AT A BRETON CALVAIRE
+
+
+
+
+AT A BRETON CALVAIRE
+
+
+ Upon that cape that thrusts so bare
+ Its crest above the wasting sea--
+ Grey rocks amidst eternity--
+ There stands an old and frail calvaire,
+ Upraising like an unvoiced cry
+ Its great black arms against the sky.
+
+ For storm-beat years that cross has stood:
+ It slants before the winter gale;
+ And now the Christ is marred and pale;
+ The rain has washed away the blood
+ That ran once on its brow and side,
+ And in its feet the seams are wide.
+
+ But when the boats put out to sea
+ At earliest dawn before the day,
+ The fishermen, they turn and pray,
+ Their eyes upon the calvary:
+ "O Jesu, Son of Mary fair,
+ Our little boats are in thy care!"
+
+ And when the storm beats hard and shrill
+ Then toil-bent women, worn with fear,
+ Pray for the lives they hold so dear,
+ And seek the cross upon the hill:
+ "O Jesu, Son of Mary mild,
+ Be with them where the waves are wild!"
+
+ And when the dead they carry by
+ Across that melancholy land,--
+ Dead that were cast up on the strand
+ Beneath a black and whirling sky,--
+ They pause before the old calvaire;
+ They cross themselves and say a prayer.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ O Jesu, Son of Mary fair!
+ O Faith, that seeks thy cross of pain!
+ Their voices break above the rain,
+ The wind blows hard, the heart lies bare:
+ Clutching through dark, their hands find Thee,
+ O Christ, that died on Calvary!
+
+
+
+
+THE PRIVILEGE
+
+
+
+
+THE PRIVILEGE
+
+
+To-day I can think about only one thing. It is in vain I have tried
+to busy myself with my sermon for next Sunday. Last week, for another
+reason, I had recourse to an old sermon; but I dislike to make a
+practice of so doing, even though I strongly suspect that none of our
+little Salmon River congregation would know the difference. We are a
+very simple people, in this out-of-the-way Cape Breton parish, called
+mostly to be fishers, like Our Lord's apostles, and recking not a
+whit of the finer points of doctrine. Nevertheless, it is an hireling
+shepherd who is faithless only because the flock do not ask to be fed
+with the appointed manna; and I shall broach the sermon again, once I
+have set down the thing that is so heavy on my heart.
+
+For all I can think of just now is that Renny and Suse, out there on
+Halibut Head, four miles away, are alone; alone for the first time in
+well-nigh thirty years. The last of the brood has taken wing.
+
+Yet it came to me this morning, as I watched Renny on the wharf saying
+good-by to the boy, and bidding him wrap the tippet snug about his neck
+in case the wind would be raw--it came to me that there is a triumph
+about the nest when it is empty that it could never have earlier. I saw
+the look of it in Renny's face--not defeat, but exultation.
+
+"And what are you going to do now, Renny?" I asked him, as the steamer
+slipped out of sight behind the lighthouse rock.
+
+He stared at me a little contemptuously, a manner he has always had.
+
+"_Do_, Mr. Biddles?" says he, with a queer laugh. "Why, what _would_ I
+do, sor? They ain't no less fish to be catched, is they, off Halibut
+Head, just because I got quit of a son or two?"
+
+He left me, with a toss of his crisp, tawny-gray curls, jumped into his
+little two-wheeled cart, and was off. And I thought, "Ah, Renny Marks,
+outside you are still the same wild beast as when I had my first meeting
+with you, two-and-thirty years ago; but inside--yes, I knew then it must
+come; and it was not for me to order the how of it."
+
+So as I took my way homeward, alone, toward the Rectory, I found myself
+recalling, as if it were yesterday, the first words I had ever exchanged
+with that tawny giant, just then in his first flush of manhood, and
+with a face as ruddy and healthy-looking as one of these early New Rose
+potatoes. Often, to be sure, I had seen him already in church, of a
+Sunday, sitting defiant and uncomfortable on one of the rear benches,
+struggling vainly to keep his eyes open; but before the last Amen was
+fairly out of the people's mouth, he had always bolted for the door;
+and I had never come, as you may say, face to face with him until this
+afternoon when I was footing it back, by the cove road, from a visit to
+an old sick woman, Nannie Odell. And here comes Renny Marks on his way
+home from the boat; and over his shoulder was the mainsail and gaff and
+a mackerel-seine and two great oars; and by one arm he had slung the
+rudder and tackle and bait-pot; and under the other he lugged a couple
+of bundles of lath for to mend his traps; and so he was pacing along
+there as proud and careless as Samson bearing away the gates of Gaza on
+his back (_Judges_ xvi, 3).
+
+Now I had entertained the belief for some time that it was my duty,
+should the occasion offer, to have a serious word with Renny about
+matters not temporal; and this was clearly the moment. Yet even before
+we had met he gave me one of those proud, distrustful, I have said
+contemptuous, looks of his; and I seemed suddenly to perceive the figure
+I must cut in his eyes, pattering along there so trimly in my clerical
+garb, and with my book of prayers under one arm; and, do you know, I was
+right tongue-tied; and so we came within hand-reach, and still never a
+word.
+
+At last, "Good-day to ye, Mister Biddles," says he, with a scant,
+off-hand nod; and, as if he knew I must be admiring of his strength, "I
+can fetch twice this load, sor," says he, "without so mucht as knowing
+the difference."
+
+"It's a fine thing, Renny Marks," said I, gaining my tongue again, at
+his boast, "a fine thing to be the strongest man in three parishes, if
+that's what ye be, as they tell me."
+
+"It is that, sor," says he. "I never been cast yet; and I don't never
+expect for to be."
+
+"But it's still finer a thing, Renny," I went on, "to use that strength
+in the honor of your Maker. Tell me, do you remember to say your prayers
+every night before you go to bed?"
+
+Never shall I forget the horse-laugh the young fellow had at those words.
+
+"Why, sor," he exclaimed, as if I had suggested the most unconscionable
+thing in the world, "saying prayers! that's for the likes of them as
+wash their face every day. I say my prayers on Sunday; and that's enough
+for the likes of me!"
+
+And with that, not even affording me a chance to reply, he strode off up
+the beach road; and in every movement of his great limbs I seemed to see
+the pride and glory of life. Doubtless I was to blame for not pressing
+home to him more urgently at that moment the claims of religion; but as
+I stood there, watching him, it came to me that after all he was almost
+to be pardoned for being proud. For surely there is something to warm
+the heart in the sight of the young lion's strength and courage; and
+even the Creator, I thought, must have taken delight in turning out such
+a fine piece of mortal handiwork as that Renny Marks.
+
+But with that thought immediately came another: "Whom the Lord loveth he
+chasteneth, and scourgeth every son whom he receiveth" (_Hebrews_ xii,
+6). And I went home sadly, for I seemed to see that Renny had bitter
+things ahead of him before he should learn the great lesson of life.
+
+Well, and this is the way it came to him. At the age of
+four-and-twenty, he married this Suse Barlow from down the coast a
+piece,--Green Harbor was the name of the town,--and she was a sweet
+young thing, gentle and ladylike, though of plainest country stock, and
+with enough education so they'd let her keep school down there. He built
+a little house for her, the one they still live in, with his own hands,
+at Halibut Head; and I never saw anything prettier than the way that
+young giant treated his wife--like a princess! It was the first time
+in his life, I dare say, he had ever given a thought to anything but
+himself; and in a fashion, I suppose, 'twas still but a satisfaction of
+his pride, to have her so beautiful, and so well-dressed.
+
+I remember of how often they would come in late to church,--even as late
+as the Te Deum,--and I could almost suspect him of being behindhand of
+purpose, for of course every one would look around when he came creaking
+down the aisle in his big shoes, with a wide smile on his ruddy face
+that showed all his white teeth through his beard; and none could fail
+to observe how fresh and pretty Suse was, tripping along there behind
+him, and looking very demure and modest in her print frock, and oh, so
+very, very sorry to be late! And during the prayers I had to remark how
+his face would always be turned straight toward her, as if it were to
+her he was addressing his supplications; the young heathen!
+
+Now there is one thing I never could seem to understand, though I have
+often turned it over in my mind, and that is, why it should be that a
+young Samson like Renny Marks, and a fine, bouncing girl like that
+Suse of his, should have children who were too weak and frail to stay
+long on this earth; but such was the case. They saved only three out
+of six; and the oldest of those three, Michael John, when he got to be
+thirteen years of age, shipped as cabin boy on a fisherman down to the
+Grand Banks, and never came back. So that left only Bessie Lou, who was
+twelve, and little Martin, who was the baby.
+
+If ever children had a good bringing up, it was those two. I never
+saw either of them in a dirty frock or in bare feet; and that means
+something, you must allow, when you consider the hardness of the
+fisherman's life, and how often he has nothing at all to show for a
+season's toil except debts! But work--I never saw any one work like
+that Renny; and he made a lovely little farm out there; and Suse wasn't
+ashamed to raise chickens and sell them in Salmon River; and she dyed
+wool, and used to hook these rugs, with patterns of her own design,
+baskets of flowers, or handsome fruit-dishes; and almost always she
+could get a price for them. But, as you may believe, she couldn't keep
+her sweet looks with work like that. Before she was thirty she began
+to look old, as is so often true in a hard country like ours; and not
+often would she be coming in to church any more, because, she said,
+of the household duties; but my own belief is that she did not have
+anything to wear. But Bessie Lou and little Martin, when the boy was
+well enough, were there every fine Sunday, as pretty as pictures, and
+able to recite the Creed, and the Lord's Prayer, and the Collects, and
+the Commandments, quite like the children of gentlefolk.
+
+Well, when Bessie Lou got to be sixteen, she took it into her head that
+she must go off to Boston, where she would be earning her own living,
+and see something more of the world than is possible for a girl in
+Salmon River. Our girls all get that notion nowadays; they are not
+content to stay at home as girls used to do; but off they go in droves
+to the States, where wages are big, and there is excitement and variety.
+So the old people finally said yes, and off goes Bessie Lou, like the
+others; and in two years we heard she was to be married to a mechanic in
+Lynn (I think that is the name of the city) somewhere outside of Boston.
+She has been gone eight years now, and has three children; and she
+writes occasionally. She is always wishing she could come down and visit
+the old folks; but it is hard to get away, I presume, and they are plain
+working people.
+
+So after Bessie Lou's going, all they had left at home was Martin, who
+was always ailing more or less. And on my word, I never saw anything
+like the care they gave that boy. There wasn't anything too good for
+him. All these most expensive tonics and patent medicines they would
+be for trying, one after another, and telling themselves every time
+that at last they had found just the right thing, because he'd seem to
+be bracing up a bit, and getting more active. And then he would take
+another of his bad spells, and lose ground again; and they would put
+by that bottle and try something else. One day when I was out there
+his ma showed me all of twenty bottles of patent medicine, some of them
+scarcely touched, that Renny had got for him, one time or another.
+
+You see, Martin couldn't run about outdoors very much because of his
+asthma; and then, his eyes being bad, that made him unhappy in the
+house, for he couldn't be reading or studying. His father got him an
+old fiddle once, he'd picked up at an auction, and the boy took to it
+something wonderful; but not having any teacher and no music he soon
+grew tired of it. And whenever old Renny would be in the village, he
+must always be getting some little thing to take out to Martin: a couple
+of bananas, say, or a jack-knife, or one of those American magazines
+with nice pictures, especially pictures of ships and other sailing
+craft, of which the lad was very fond.
+
+Well, and so last winter came, which was a very bad winter indeed, in
+these parts; and the poor lamb had a pitiful hard time; and whenever
+Renny got in to church, it was plain to see that he was eating his heart
+out with worry. He still had his old way of always snoring during the
+sermon; but oh, if you could see once the tired, anxious, supplicating
+look in his face, as soon as his proud eyes shut, you never would have
+had the heart to wish anything but "Sleep on now, and take your rest"
+(_Mark_ xiv, 41), for you knew that perhaps, for a few minutes, he had
+stopped worrying about that little lad of his.
+
+Spring came on, at last, and Martin was out again for a while every
+day in the sun; and sometimes the old man would be taking him abroad
+for a drive or for a little sail in the boat, when he was going out to
+his traps; and it appeared that the strain was over again for the time
+being. That is why I was greatly surprised and troubled one day, about
+two months ago, to see Renny come driving up toward the Rectory like
+mad, all alone in his cart.
+
+I had just been doing a turn of work myself at the hay; for it is hard
+to get help with us when you need it most; and as I came from the barn,
+in my shirt-sleeves, Renny turned in at the gate.
+
+"Something has happened to the boy," was my thought; and I was all but
+certain of it when I saw the man's face, sharp set as a flint stone, and
+all the blood gone from his ruddy skin so that it looked right blue. He
+jumped out before the mare stopped, and came up to me.
+
+"Can I have a word with ye?" said he; and when he saw my look of
+question, he added, "It ain't nothink, sor. He's all right."
+
+I put my hand on his shoulder, and led him into my study, and we sat
+down there, just as we were, I in my shirt-sleeves, and still unwashed
+after the hayfield.
+
+"What is it, Renny, man?" says I.
+
+It seemed like he could not make his lips open for a moment, and then,
+suddenly, he began talking very fast and excitedly, pecking little dents
+in the arms of the chair with his big black fingernails.
+
+"That Bessie Lou of oors up to Boston," said he, as if he were accusing
+some one of an outrage, "we got a letter from 'er last night, we did,
+and she sayse, says she, why wouldn't we be for a-sending o' the leetle
+lad up theyr? They'd gladly look oot for him, she sayse; and the winter
+ain't severe, she sayse; and he could go to one o' them fine city
+eye-doctors and 'ave his eyes put right with glasses or somethink; and
+prob'ly he could be for going to school again and a-getting of his
+learning, which he's sadly be'indhand in, sor, becaust he's ben ailing
+so much."
+
+His eyes flashed, and the sweat poured down his forehead in streams.
+
+I don't know why I was so slow to understand; but I read his look
+wrong, there seemed so much of the old insolence and pride in it, and I
+replied, I daresay a little reproachfully,--
+
+"Well, and why wouldn't that be an excellent thing, Renny? I should
+think you would feel grateful."
+
+He stared at me for a second, as if I had struck him. Ah, we can
+forget the words people say to us, even in wrath; but can we ever free
+ourselves from the memory of such a look? Without knowing why, I had
+the feeling of being a traitor. And then, all of a sudden, there he had
+crumpled down in his chair, and put his head in his big hands, and was
+sobbing.
+
+"I cain't--I cain't let him go," he groaned. "I woon't let him go. He's
+all what we got left."
+
+I sat there for a time, helpless, looking at him. You might think that
+a priest, with the daily acquaintance he has with the bitter things
+of life, ought to know how to face them calmly; but so far as my own
+small experience goes, I seem to know nothing more about all that than
+at the beginning. It always hurts just as much; it's always just as
+bewildering, just as terrible, as if you had never seen anything like
+it before. And when I saw that giant of a Renny Marks just broken over
+there like some big tree shattered by lightning, it seemed as if I could
+not bear to face such suffering. Then I remembered that he had been
+committed into my care by God, and that I must not be only an hireling
+shepherd. So I said:--
+
+"Renny, lad, it isn't for ourselves we must be thinking. It's for him."
+
+He lifted up his head, with the shaggy, half-gray hair all rumpled on
+his wet forehead, and pulled his sleeve across his eyes.
+
+"Hark'e, Mister Biddles," he commanded harshly. "Ain't we did the best
+we could for him? Who dares say we ain't did the best we could for him?
+_You?_"
+
+I made no answer, and for a minute we faced each other, while he shook
+his clenched fists at me, and the creature in him that had never yet
+been cast challenged all the universe.
+
+"They're tryin' to tak my boy away from me," he roared, "and they cain't
+do it--I tell you they cain't. He's all what we got left, now."
+
+"And so you mean to keep him for yourself?" I asked.
+
+"Ay, that I do," he cried, jumping out of his chair, and striding up and
+down the room as if clean out of his wits. "I do! I do! Why _wouldn't_
+I mean to, hey? Ain't he mine? Who's got a better right to him?"
+
+Of a sudden he comes to a dead halt in front of me, with his arms
+crossed. "Mister Biddles," he says, very bitterly, "you may well be
+thankfu' you never wast a father yoursel'. Nobody ain't for trying to
+tak nothink away from you."
+
+"That's quite true, Renny," said I. "But remember," I said, not
+intending any irreverence, but uttering such poor words as were given
+to me in my extremity, "remember, Renny, it's to a Father you say your
+prayers in church every Sunday; and you needn't think as that Father
+doesn't know full as well as you what it is to give up an only Son for
+love's sake."
+
+"Hey?--What's that, sor?" cries Renny, with a face right like a dead
+thing.
+
+"And would He be asking of you for to let yours go, if He didn't know
+there was love enough in your heart to stand the test?"
+
+Renny broke out with a terrible groan, like the roar of anguish of a
+wild beast that has got a mortal wound; and the same instant the savage
+look died in his eyes, and the bigger love in him had triumphed over the
+smaller love. I could see it, I knew it, even before he spoke. He caught
+at my hand, blunderingly, and gave it a twist like a winch.
+
+"He shall go, sor. He shall go for all of I. And Mr. Biddles, while I'm
+for telling the old woman and the boy, would ye be so condescending as
+to say over some of them there prayers, so I could have the feeling, as
+you might say, that some one was keeping an eye on me? It'll all be done
+in less nor a half-hour."
+
+And with that, off he goes, and jumps into his cart, and whips up the
+mare, tearing down the road like a whirlwind, just as he had come,
+without so much as saying good-by. And the next day I heard them saying
+in the village that Renny Marks's boy was to go up to the States to be
+raised with his sister's family.
+
+Ah, well, that's only a common sort of a story, I know. The same kind of
+things happen near us every day. I can't even quite tell why I wanted to
+set it down on paper like this, only that, some way, it makes me believe
+in God more; even when I have to remember, and it seems to me just now
+like I could never stop remembering it, that Renny and Suse are all
+alone to-day out there on Halibut Head. Renny is at the fish, of course;
+and Suse, I daresay, is working in her little potato patch; and Martin
+is out there on the sea, being borne to a world far away, and from
+which, I suppose, he will not be very anxious to return; for few of them
+do come back, nowadays, to the home country.
+
+
+[Illustration: FOUGERE'S COVE]
+
+
+
+
+THEIR TRUE LOVE
+
+
+
+
+THEIR TRUE LOVE
+
+
+Even Zabette, with her thousand wrinkles, was young once. They say her
+lips were red as wild strawberries and her hair as sleek as the wing
+of a blackbird in spring. All the old people of St. Esprit remember
+how she used to swing along the street on her way to mass of a Sunday,
+straight, proud, agile as a goat, with her dark head flung back, and
+a disdainful smile on her lips that kept young men from being unduly
+forward. The country people, who must have their own name for everything
+and everybody, used to call her "la belle orgueilleuse," and sometimes,
+"the highstepper"; and though they had to laugh at her a little for her
+lofty ways, they found it quite natural to address her as mademoiselle.
+
+But all these things one only knows by hearsay. Zabette does not talk
+much herself. So far as she is concerned, you might never guess that
+she had a story at all. She lives there in the little dormer-windowed
+cottage beyond the post-office with Suzanne Benoit. For thirty-three
+years now the two women have lived together; and it is the earnest
+prayer of both of them that when the time for going arrives, they may go
+together.
+
+These two good souls have the reputation, all over the country, of
+immense industry and thrift. Suzanne keeps three cows, and her butter
+is famous. Zabette--she was a Fuseau, from the Grande Anse--takes in
+washing of the better class. Nobody in St. Esprit can do one of those
+stiff white linen collars so well as she. Positively, it shines in the
+sun like a looking-glass. If you notice the men going to church, you can
+always pick out those who have their shirts and collars done by Zabette
+Fuseau. By comparison, the others appear dull and very commonplace.
+
+"But why must Zabette do collars for her living?" you are asking. "Why
+has she not a man of her own to look out for her, and half a dozen grown
+up children? Did she never marry, then--this belle orgueilleuse?"
+
+No. Never. But not on account of that pride of hers; at least not
+directly. If you go into the pretty little living-room of the second
+cottage beyond the post-office--the one with such a show of geraniums
+in the front windows--you will guess half the secret, for just above
+the mantelpiece, between two vases of artificial asters, hangs the
+daguerreotype portrait of a young man in mariner's slops. The lineaments
+have so faded with the years that it is difficult to make them out with
+any assurance. It is as if the portrait itself were seeking to escape
+from life, retreating little by little, imperceptibly, into the dull
+shadows of the ground, so that only as you look at it from a certain
+angle can you still clearly distinguish the small dark eyes, the full
+moustache, the round chin, the square stocky shoulders of the subject.
+Only the two rosy spots added by the daguerreotypist to the cheeks defy
+time and change, indestructible token of youth and ardor.
+
+A little frame of immortelles encloses the portrait. And directly in
+front of it, on the mantelpiece, stands a pretty shell box, with the
+three words on the mother-of-pearl lid: "A ma cherie." What is in the
+box--if anything--no one can tell you for a certainty, though there are
+plenty of theories. "Love letters," say some; and others, with a pitying
+laugh, "Old maid's tears."
+
+Zabette and Suzanne hold their tongues. I think I know what the treasure
+of the box is; for I had the story directly from a very aged woman who
+knew both the "girls" when they were young; and she vouched for the
+truth of it by all the beads of her rosary. This is how it went.
+
+Zabette Fuseau was eighteen, and she lived at the Grand Anse, two miles
+out of St. Esprit; and the procession of young fellows, going there
+to woo, was like a pilgrimage, exactly. Among them came one from far
+down the coast, a place called Riviere Bourgeoise. He was a deep sea
+fisherman, from off a vessel which had put in at St. Esprit for repairs,
+mid-course to the Grand Banks; and on his first shore leave Maxence
+had caught sight of la belle orgueilleuse, who had come into town with
+a basket of eggs; and he had followed her home, at a little distance,
+sighing, but without the courage to address her so long as they were
+in the village. He was a very handsome young fellow, with a brown,
+ruddy skin, and the most beautiful dark curly hair and crisp moustache
+imaginable.
+
+Zabette knew he was behind her; but she would not turn; not she; only
+walked a little more proudly and gracefully, with that swinging movement
+of hers, like a vessel sailing in a head wind. At last, when they had
+reached the Calvaire at the end of the village, he managed to get out
+his first word.
+
+"Oh!" he cried, haltingly. "Mademoiselle!"
+
+She turned half about and fixed her dark proud eyes upon him, while her
+cheeks crimsoned.
+
+"Well, m'sieur?"
+
+He could not speak, and the two stared at each other for a long time in
+silence, while the thought came to her that this was the man for whom
+she was destined.
+
+"Had you something to say to me?" she repeated, finally, in a tone that
+tried to be severe, but was really very soft.
+
+He nodded his curly head, and licked his lips hard to moisten them.
+
+"I cannot wait any longer," she protested, after a while. "They need me
+at home."
+
+She turned quickly again, as if to go; but her feet were glued to the
+ground, and she did not take a step.
+
+"Oh, s'il vous plait, mam'selle!" he cried, to hold her. "You think I am
+rude. But I did not mean to follow you like this. I could not help it.
+You are so beautiful."
+
+The look he gave her with those words sank deep into her heart and
+rooted itself there forever. In vain, for the rest of her life, she
+might try to tear it out; there was a fatality about it. Zabette, fine
+highstepper that she was, had been caught at last. She knew that she
+ought to send the handsome young sailor away; but her tongue would not
+obey her. Instead, it uttered some very childish words of confusion and
+pleasure; and before she knew it, there was her man walking along at
+her side, with one hand on his heart, declaring that she was the most
+angelic creature in the world, that he was desperately in love with
+her, that he could not live without her, and that she must promise then
+and there to be his, or he would instantly kill himself. The burning,
+impassioned look in his eyes struck her with dismay.
+
+"But I cannot decide all in a moment like this," she protested, in a
+weak voice. "It would be indecent. I must think."
+
+"Think!" he retorted, bitterly. "Oh, very well. Then you do not love me!"
+
+"Ah, but I do!" she cried, all trembling.
+
+With that he took her in his arms and kissed her, and nothing more was
+heard about suicide or any such subject.
+
+"But we must not tell any one yet," she pleaded. "They would not
+understand."
+
+He agreed, with the utmost readiness. "We will not tell a soul. It shall
+be exactly as you wish. But I may come and see you?"
+
+"Oh, certainly," she responded. "Often,--that is, every day or two,--at
+Grande Anse; and perhaps we may happen to meet sometimes in the
+village, as well."
+
+"The _Soleil_ will be delaying at St. Esprit for two weeks," he
+explained, as they walked along, hand in hand. "She put in for some
+repairs. By the end of that time, perhaps"--
+
+"Oh, no, not so soon as that," she interrupted. "We must let a longer
+while pass first."
+
+She gazed at him yearningly. "You will be returning by here in the
+autumn, at the end of the season on the Banks?"
+
+"We are taking on three men from St. Esprit," he answered. "We shall
+stop here on the return to set them ashore. That will be in October,
+near the end of the month, if the season is good."
+
+She sighed, as if dreading some disaster; and they looked at each other
+again, and the look ended in a kiss. It is not by words, that new love
+feeds and grows.
+
+Before they reached the Grande Anse he quitted her; but he gave her
+his promise to come again that evening. He did--that evening, and two
+evenings later, and so on, every other evening for those two weeks.
+Zabette's old mother took a great fancy to him, and gave him every
+encouragement; but the old pere Fuseau, who had sailed many a voyage, in
+younger days, round the Horn, would never speak a good word for him--and
+perhaps his hostility only increased the girl's attachment.
+
+"A little grease is all very well for the hair of a young man," he would
+say. "But this scented pomade they use nowadays--pah!"
+
+"You object then to a sailor's being a gentleman?" demanded the girl
+haughtily.
+
+"Yes, I do," roared the old pere Fuseau. "Have a care, Zabette."
+
+Nevertheless, the two lovers found plenty of chances to be alone
+together; and they would talk, in low voices, of their happiness and
+of the future, which looked very bright to Zabette, despite all the
+uncertainties of the sea.
+
+"When we put in on the return from the Banks," said Maxence, "you will
+be at the wharf to meet me; and that very day we will announce our
+fiancailles. What an astonishment for everybody!"
+
+"And then," she asked--"after that?"
+
+"After that, I will stay ashore for a while. They can do without me on
+the _Soleil_. And at the end of a month"--he told her the rest with a
+kiss; and surely Zabette had never been so happy in her life.
+
+But for the time being the affair was kept very, very secret, so that
+people might not get to gossiping. Even those frequent expeditions of
+Maxence to the Grande Anse were not remarked, for he always came after
+dusk: and when the fortnight was over and the _Soleil_ once more was
+ready for sea, the two sweethearts exchanged keepsakes, and he left her.
+
+"I will send you a letter from St. Pierre Miquelon," he said, to cheer
+her, while he wiped away her tears with a silk handkerchief.
+
+"Do you promise?" she asked.
+
+He promised. Three weeks later the letter arrived; and it told her that
+his heart was breaking for his dear little Zabette. "Sois fidele--be
+true," were the last words. The letter had a perfume of pomade about it,
+and she carried it all summer in her bodice, taking it out many times a
+day to scan the loving words again.
+
+In St. Esprit, when the fishing fleet begins to return from the Banks,
+they keep an old man on the lookout in the church tower; and as soon as
+he sights a vessel in the offing, he rings the bell.
+
+It was the fourth week in October that year before the bell was heard;
+and then rapidly, two or three at a time, the schooners came in. First
+the _Dame Blanche_, which was always in the lead; then the _Etoile_, the
+_Deux Freres_, the _Lottie B._, and the _Milo_. Every day, morning or
+afternoon, the bell would ring, and poor Zabette must find some excuse
+or other to be in town. Down at the wharf there was always gathered an
+anxious throng, watching for the appearance of the vessel round the
+Cape. And when she was visible at last, there would be cries of joy from
+some, and silence on the part of others. Zabette was among the silent.
+When she saw the happiness about her, tears would swim unbidden in her
+eyes; but of course she did not lose heart, for still there were several
+vessels to arrive, and no disasters had been reported by the earlier
+comers. People noticed her, standing there with expectant mien, and they
+wondered what it could be that brought her; but it was not their habit
+to ask questions of the fine highstepper.
+
+There was another young girl on the wharf, too, who had the air of
+looking for some one--a certain Suzanne Benoit, from l'Etang, three
+miles inshore, a very pretty girl, with a mild, appealing look in her
+brown eyes. Zabette had seen her often here and there; but she had no
+acquaintance with her. At the present moment, strangely enough, she
+felt herself powerfully drawn to this Suzanne. It came to her, somehow,
+that the girl had come thither on a mission similar to her own, she
+was so silent, and had not the look of those who had waited on the
+wharf in previous years. And so, one afternoon, when two vessels had
+rounded the Cape and were entering the harbor, amid a great hubbub of
+expectancy,--and neither of them was the _Soleil_,--Zabette surprised
+a look of woe in the face of the other which she could not resist. She
+went over to her, with some diffidence, and offered a few words of
+sympathy.
+
+"You are waiting for some one, too?" she asked her.
+
+The eyes of the other filled quickly to overflowing. "Yes," she
+answered. "He has not come yet."
+
+"You must not worry," said Zabette, stoutly. "There are always delays,
+you know. Some are ahead; others behind; it is so every year."
+
+The girl gave her a grateful look, and squeezed her hand. "It is a
+secret," she murmured.
+
+Zabette smiled. "I have a secret too."
+
+"Then we are waiting together," said Suzanne. "That makes it so much
+easier!"
+
+They walked back to the street, arm in arm, as if they had always been
+bosom friends. And the next day they were both at the wharf again. The
+afternoon was bleak; but as usual they were in their best clothes.
+
+"Oh, it does not seem as if I could wait any longer," whispered Suzanne,
+confidingly. "I do hope it will be the _Soleil_ this time."
+
+"The _Soleil_!" exclaimed Zabette, joyfully. "You are waiting for the
+_Soleil_?"
+
+And at the other's nod, she went on. "How lovely that we are expecting
+the same vessel. Oh, I am sure it will come to-day--or certainly
+to-morrow."
+
+The two girls felt themselves very close together, now that they had
+shared so much of their secret; and it made the waiting less hard to
+bear.
+
+"Is he handsome, your man?" asked Suzanne, timidly.
+
+"Ravishing," replied Zabette, eagerly. "And yours?"
+
+Suzanne sighed with adoration. "Beyond words," was her reply--and the
+girls exchanged another of those pressures of the hand which mean so
+much where love is concerned. "He has the most beautiful moustache in
+the world."
+
+"Oh, no," protested Zabette, smilingly. "Mine has a more beautiful one
+yet, and such crisp curly hair, and dark eyes."
+
+Her companion suddenly looked at her. "Large eyes or small?" she asked
+in a strange voice.
+
+"Oh," replied Zabette, doubtfully. "Not too large. I would not fancy ox
+eyes in a man."
+
+Suzanne freed herself and stood facing her with a flash of hatred in her
+mild face which Zabette could not understand.
+
+"And his name!" she demanded, harshly. "His name, then!"
+
+Zabette smiled a little proudly. "That is my secret," she replied. "But,
+Suzanne, what is the matter?"
+
+"It is not your secret," laughed the other, bitterly. "It is not your
+secret. It is my secret."
+
+"What do you mean?" cried Zabette, with a sudden feeling of terror at
+the girl's drawn face.
+
+"His name is Maxence!" Suzanne's laugh was like bones rattling in a
+coffin.
+
+It seemed to Zabette as if a flash of lightning had cleft her soul in
+two. That was the way the truth came to her. She drew back like a viper
+ready to strike.
+
+"Oh, I hate you!" she cried, and turned on her heel, white to the eyes
+with anger and shame.
+
+But Suzanne would not leave her. She followed to the other side of
+the wharf, and as soon as she could speak again without attracting
+attention, she said, more kindly:
+
+"I am very sorry for you, Zabette. It is too bad you were so mistaken.
+Why, he was engaged to me the very second day he came ashore."
+
+Zabette stifled back a cry, and retorted, icily, "He was engaged to me
+the first day. He followed me all the way to the Grande Anse."
+
+Suzanne's eyes glittered, this time. "He followed me all the way to
+l'Etang. He is mine."
+
+Zabette brought out, through white lips, "Leave me alone. He was mine
+first."
+
+"He was mine last," retaliated the other, undauntedly. "The very morning
+he went away, he came to see me. Did he come to you that day? Did he?
+Did he?"
+
+Zabette ignored her question. "He wrote me a letter from St. Pierre
+Miquelon," she announced, crisply. "So that settles it, first and last."
+
+The hand of Suzanne suddenly lifted to her bosom, as if feeling for
+something. "My letter was written at St. Pierre, too."
+
+For an instant they glared at each other like wild animals fighting over
+prey. Neither said a word. Neither yielded a hair. Each felt that her
+life's happiness was at stake. Zabette had thought that this chit of a
+girl from l'Etang was mild and timid; but now she realized that she had
+met her match for courage. And the thought came to her: "When he sees
+us, let him choose."
+
+She was not conscious of having uttered the words. Perhaps her glance,
+swiftly directed toward the Cape, conveyed the thought to her rival. At
+all events the answer came promptly and with complete self-assurance:
+
+"Yes, let Maxence choose."
+
+Just at that moment the first vessel appeared at the harbor entrance,
+while the bell redoubled its jubilation in the church tower on the hill.
+
+"The _Mercure_!" cried an old woman. "Thank God!"
+
+And a few minutes later, there was the _Anne-Marie_, all sail set over
+her green hull; and then a vessel which at first no one seemed to
+recognize.
+
+"Which is that?" they asked. "Oh, it must be--yes, it is the _Soleil_,
+from Riviere Bourgeoise. She has several men from here aboard."
+
+With eyes that seemed to be starting from her head, Zabette watched the
+_Soleil_ entering the harbor. She could distinguish forms on deck. She
+saw handkerchiefs waving. At last she could begin to make out the faces
+a little. But she did not discover the one she sought. Holding tight to
+a mooring post, unable to think, unable to do anything but watch, it
+seemed to her that hours passed before the schooner cast anchor and a
+boat was put over. There were four persons in it: the mate and the three
+men from St. Esprit. They rowed rapidly to the wharf; and the three men
+threw up their gunny sacks and climbed the ladder, one after the other.
+
+The mate was just about to put off again when Zabette spoke to him. She
+leaned over the edge of the wharf, reaching out a detaining hand.
+
+"M'sieur!"
+
+At the same instant the word was uttered by another voice close by. She
+looked up and saw Suzanne, very white, in the same attitude.
+
+"What is it, mesdemoiselles?" asked the mate, touching his vizor.
+
+As if by concerted arrangement came the question from both sides.
+
+"And Maxence?"
+
+The man answered them seriously and directly, perceiving from their
+manner that his reply was of great import to these two, whatever the
+reason for it might be.
+
+"Maxence?--But we do not know where he is. There was a fog. He was out
+in a dory, alone. We picked up the dory the next day. Perhaps"--he
+shrugged his shoulders incredulously--"perhaps he might have been picked
+up by another vessel. Who can say?"
+
+The girls gave him no answer. They reeled, and would have fallen, save
+that each found support in the other's arms. Sinking to the string
+piece of the wharf, they buried their faces on each other's shoulders
+and sobbed. Happy fathers and mothers and sweethearts, gathered on the
+wharf, looked at them in wonder, and left them alone, ignorant of the
+cause of their grief. So a long time passed, and still they crouched
+there, tight clasped, with buried heads.
+
+"He was so good, so brave!" sobbed Suzanne.
+
+"I loved him so much," repeated Zabette, over and over.
+
+"I shall die without him," moaned Suzanne.
+
+"So shall I," responded the other. "I cannot bear to live any longer."
+
+"If only I had a picture of him, that would be some comfort," said the
+poor girl from l'Etang.
+
+"I have one," said Zabette, sitting up straight and putting some orderly
+touches to her disarranged _mouchoir_. "He gave it to me the very last
+night."
+
+Suzanne looked at her enviously, and mopped her red eyes. "All I have,"
+she sighed, "is a little shell box he brought me, with the motto, _A
+ma cherie_. He gave me that the very last morning of all. It is very
+beautiful, but no one but me has seen it yet."
+
+"You must show it to me sometime," said Zabette. "I have a right to see
+it."
+
+"If you will let me look at the picture," consented the other, guardedly.
+
+"Yes, you may look at it," said Zabette, "so long as you do not forget
+that it belongs to me."
+
+"To you!" retorted the other. "And have you a better right to it than I,
+seeing that he would have been my husband in a month's time? You are a
+bad, cruel girl; you have no heart. It is a mercy he escaped the traps
+you set for him--my poor Maxence!"
+
+A thousand taunting words came to Zabette's lips, but she controlled
+herself, rose to her feet with a show of dignity, and quitted the wharf.
+She resolved that she would never speak to that Benoit girl again. To do
+so was only to be insulted.
+
+She went back to her home on the Grande Anse and endeavored to take up
+her everyday life again as though nothing had happened. She hid her
+grief from the neighbors, even from her own parents, who had never
+suspected the strength of her attachment for Maxence. By day she could
+keep herself busy about the house, and the secret would only be a dull
+pain; but at night, especially when the wind blew, it would gnaw and
+gnaw at her heart like a hungry beast.
+
+At last she could keep it to herself no longer. She must share her
+misery. But there was only one person in the world who could understand.
+She declared to herself that nothing would induce her to go to l'Etang;
+and yet, as if under a spell, she made ready for the journey.
+
+"Where are you going, my Zabette?" asked her old mother.
+
+"To l'Etang," she answered. "I hear there is a girl there who makes a
+special brown dye for wool."
+
+"Well, the walk will do you good, ma fille. You have been indoors too
+much lately. You are growing right pale and ill-looking."
+
+"Oh, it is nothing, maman. I never feel very brisk, you know, in
+November. 'Tis such a dreary month."
+
+She took a back road across the barrens to l'Etang. Scarcely any one
+traveled it except in winter to fetch kindling wood from the scrub fir
+that grew there. Consequently Zabette was much surprised, after walking
+about a mile and a half, to discover that some one was approaching from
+the opposite direction--a woman, with a red shawl across her shoulders.
+Gradually the distance between them lessened; and then she saw, with
+a start, that it was Suzanne Benoit. Her knees began to tremble under
+her. When they met, at last, no words would come to her lips: they only
+looked at each other with questioning, hunted eyes, then embraced,
+weeping, and sat down silently on a moss-hummock beside the road.
+Zabette had not felt so comforted since the disaster of October. For the
+first time she could let the tears flow without any fear of detection.
+At last she said, very calmly:
+
+"I have brought the picture."
+
+She drew it out from under her coat, and held it on her knees, where
+Suzanne could see it.
+
+"And here is the shell box," rejoined her companion. "I do not
+know how to read, me; but there are the words--_A ma cherie_. It's
+pretty--_hein_?"
+
+Each gazed at the other's treasure.
+
+"Ah," sighed Suzanne, mournfully. "How handsome he was to look at--and
+so true and brave!"
+
+"I shall never love another," said Zabette, with sad conviction--"never.
+Love is over for me."
+
+"And for me," said Suzanne. "But we have our memories."
+
+"Mine," corrected Zabette. "You are forgetting."
+
+"Did he ever give you a present that said _A ma cherie_?" demanded
+Suzanne, pointedly.
+
+The other explained blandly: "You cannot say anything, my dear, on the
+back of a tintype.--But I have my letter from St. Pierre."
+
+She showed it.
+
+"Even if I cannot read mine," declared the girl from l'Etang, hotly, "I
+know it is fully as nice as yours. Nicer!"
+
+"Oh, can I never see you but you must insult me!" cried Zabette. "Keep
+your old box and your precious letter from St. Pierre Miquelon. What can
+they matter to me?"
+
+Without a word of good-by she sprang to her feet and set out for the
+Grande Anse. She did not see the Benoit girl again that winter; but she
+could not help thinking about her, sometimes with sympathy, sometimes
+with bitter hatred. The young men came flocking to her home, as usual,
+vying with one another in attentions to her, for not only was Zabette
+known as the handsomest girl in three parishes, but also as an excellent
+housekeeper--"good saver, rare spender."
+
+She would not encourage any of them, however.
+
+"If I marry," she said to herself, "it is giving Maxence over to that
+l'Etang girl. She will crow about it. She will say, 'At last he is mine
+altogether. She has surrendered.' No, I could not stand that."
+
+So that winter passed, and the next summer, and other winters and
+summers. Zabette did not marry; and after a time she began hearing
+herself spoken of as an old maid. The young men flocked to other houses,
+not hers. At the end of twelve years both her father and mother were
+dead, and she was alone in the world, thirty, and unprovided for.
+
+It was, of course, fated, that these two women whose lives had been so
+strangely entangled should drift together again, sooner or later. So
+long as both were young and could claim love for themselves, jealousy
+was bound to separate them; but when they found themselves quite alone
+in the world, no longer beautiful, no longer arousing thoughts of love
+in the breast of another, the memory of all that was most precious in
+their lives drew them together as surely as a magnet draws two bits of
+metal.
+
+It was after mass, one Sunday, that Zabette sought out her rival finally
+and found the courage to propose a singular plan.
+
+"You are alone, Suzanne," she said. "So am I. We are both poor. Come and
+live with me."
+
+"And you will give me Maxence?" asked Suzanne, a little hardly.
+
+"No. But I will give you half of him. See, why should we quarrel any
+more? He is dead. Let us be reasonable. After this he shall belong to
+both of us."
+
+Still the _vieille fille_ from l'Etang held back, though her eyes
+softened.
+
+"All these years," she said, with a remnant of defiance--"all these
+years he has been mine. I did not get married, me, because that would
+have let him belong to you."
+
+Zabette sighed wearily. "And all these years I have been saying the same
+thing. And yet I could never forget the shell box and your letter from
+St. Pierre Miquelon. Come, don't you see how much easier it will be--how
+much more natural--if we put our treasures together: all we have of
+Maxence, and call him _ours_?"
+
+Suzanne was beginning to yield, but doubtfully. "If it would be proper,"
+she said.
+
+"Not if he were living, of course," replied the other, with assurance.
+"The laws of the church forbid that. But in the course of a lifetime a
+husband may have more than one wife. I do not see why, when a husband is
+dead, two wives should not have him. Do you?"
+
+"I will come," said Suzanne, softly and gratefully. "I am so lonely."
+
+Three years later the two women moved from the Grande Anse into the
+village, renting the little cottage with the dormer windows in which
+they have lived ever since. You must look far to find so devoted a pair.
+They are more than sisters to each other. If their lives have not been
+happy, as the world judges happiness, they have at least been illumined
+by two great and abiding loves,--which does not happen often,--that for
+the dead, and that for each other.
+
+
+
+
+GARLANDS FOR PETTIPAW
+
+
+
+
+GARLANDS FOR PETTIPAW
+
+
+Towns, like persons, I suppose, wake up now and then to find themselves
+famous; but I doubt if any town having this experience could be more
+amazed by it, more dazed by it, than was Three Rivers, one day last
+March, when we opened our newspapers from Boston and Montreal and lo,
+there was our own name staring at us from the front page! Three Rivers
+is in the Province of Quebec, on the shore of the Bay de Chaleurs; but
+we receive our metropolitan papers every day, only thirty-six hours off
+the presses; and this makes us feel closely in touch with the outside
+world. Until the railroad from Matapedia came through, four years ago,
+mail was brought by stage, every second day. The coming of the railroad
+had seemed an important event then; but it had never put Three Rivers on
+the front page of the Boston _Herald_.
+
+The news-item in question was to the effect that the S. S. _Maid
+of the North_, Captain Pettipaw of Three Rivers, P. Q., had been
+torpedoed, forty miles off Fastnet, while en route from Sydney, N. S.,
+to Liverpool, with a cargo of pig-iron. The captain and crew (said the
+item) had been allowed to take to the boats; but only one of the two
+boats had been heard from. That one was in command of the mate, and had
+been rescued by a trawler.
+
+Captain Pettipaw of Three Rivers! _Our_ Captain Pettipaw! How well we
+knew him; and who among us had ever thought of him as one likely to
+make Three Rivers figure on the front page of the world's news! Yet
+this had come to pass; and even amid the anxiety we felt as to the fate
+of Captain Joe, we could but be agreeably conscious of the distinction
+that had come to our little community. All that afternoon poor Mrs.
+Pettipaw's house was thronged with neighbors who hurried over there,
+newspaper in hand, ready to congratulate or to condole as might seem
+most called for.
+
+"Poor Mrs. Pettipaw" or "poor Melina" was the way we always spoke
+of her, partly, I suppose, because of her nine children, and partly
+because--I hesitate to say it--she was Captain Joe's wife. But now that
+it seemed so very likely she might be his widow, our hearts went out
+to her the more. You see Captain Joe was, in our local phrase, "one
+of those Pettipaws." Pettipaws never seemed to get anywhere or to do
+anything that mattered. Pettipaws were always behindhand. Pettipaws were
+always in trouble, one way or another. It was a family characteristic.
+
+Only five or six years ago Captain Joe's new schooner, the _Melina
+P._, had broken from her harbor moorings under a sudden gale from the
+northwest and driven square on the Fiddle Reef, where she foundered
+before our eyes. Other vessels were anchored close by the _Melina P._;
+but not one of them broke loose. All the Captain's savings for years and
+years had gone into the new schooner, not to speak of several hundreds
+borrowed from his fellow-townsmen.
+
+And the very next winter his house had burned to the ground; and the
+seven children--there were only seven then--had been parceled out
+amongst the neighbors for six or seven months until, about midsummer,
+the new house was roofed over and the windows set; and then the family
+moved in, and there they lived for several more months, "sort of
+camping-out fashion," as poor Melina cheerfully put it, while Captain
+Joe was occasionally seen putting on a row of shingles or sawing a
+board. At last, after the snow had begun to fly, the neighbors came
+once more to the rescue. A collection was made for the stricken family;
+carpenters finished the house; a mason built the chimney and plastered
+the downstairs partitions; curtains were donated for the windows; and
+the Pettipaws spent the winter in comfort.
+
+The following spring Captain Joe got a position as second officer on
+a coastwise ship out of Boston, and the affairs of the family began
+to look up. From that he was promoted to the captaincy of a little
+freighter plying between Montreal and the Labrador; and the next we
+knew, he was in command of a large collier sailing out of Sydney, Nova
+Scotia. Poor Melina appeared in a really handsome new traveling suit,
+ordered from the big mail order house in Montreal; and the young ones
+could all go to church the same Sunday, and often did.
+
+For the last year or two we had ceased to make frequent inquiries after
+Captain Joe; he had dropped pretty completely out of our life; and the
+thought that he might be holding a commission of special dangerousness
+had never so much as entered our minds. But poor Melina's calmness in
+the face of the news-item surprised everyone. It was like a reproach to
+her neighbors for not having acknowledged before the worth of the man
+she had married. It had not required a German torpedo to teach her that.
+And as for his safety, that apparently caused her no anxiety whatever.
+
+"You couldn't kill the Captain," she repeated, with a quiet, untroubled
+smile, which was as much as to say that anything else might happen to a
+Pettipaw, but not that.
+
+The rest of us admired her faith without being able to share it. Poor
+Melina rarely had leisure to read a newspaper, and she did not know much
+about the disasters of the war zone. And so, instinctively, everyone
+began to say the eulogistic things about Captain Joe that had never been
+said--though now we realized they ought to have been said--while he was
+with us.
+
+"He was such a good man," said Mrs. Thibault, the barrister's wife.
+"So devoted to his home. I remember of how he would sit there on the
+doorstep for hours, watching his little ones at their play. Poor babies!
+Poor little babies!"
+
+"Such a brave man, too; and so witty!" said John Boutin, our tailor.
+"The stories he would tell, my! my! Many a day in the shop he'd be
+telling stories from dinner till dark, without once stopping for breath
+as you might say. It passed the time so nice!"
+
+"And devout!" added Mrs. Fougere, the postmistress. "A Christian. He
+loved to listen to the church-bells. I remember like it was yesterday
+his saying to me, 'The man,' he said, 'who can hear a church-bell
+without thinking of religion, is as good as lost, to my thinking.'"
+
+"Not that he went to church very often," said Boutin.
+
+"His knee troubled him," explained Mrs. Fougere.
+
+Early in the evening came the cable message that justified poor Melina's
+confidence. Eugenie White--the Whites used to be Le Blancs, but since
+Eugenie came back from Boston, they have taken the more up-to-date
+name--Eugenie came flying up the street from the railroad station,
+waving the yellow envelope and spreading the news as she flew. The
+message consisted of only one word: "Safe"; but it was dated Queenstown,
+and it bore the signature we were henceforth to be so proud of: Joseph
+Pettipaw.
+
+Two days later the _Herald_ contained a notice of the rescue by a
+Norwegian freighter of the Captain of the _Maid of the North_; but we
+had to wait ten days for the full story, which occupied two columns in
+one of the Queenstown journals and almost as much in the Dublin _Post_,
+with a very lifelike photograph of Captain Joe. It was a wonderful
+story, as you may very likely remember, for the American papers gave it
+plenty of attention a little later.
+
+It had been a calm, warm day, but with an immense sea running. Before
+entering the war zone Captain Joe had made due preparation for
+emergencies. The ship's boats were ready to be swung, and in each was a
+barrel of water and a supply of biscuit and other rations. The submarine
+was not sighted until it was too late to think of escaping; the engines
+were reversed; and when the German commander called out through his
+megaphone that ten minutes would be allowed for the escape of the crew,
+all hands hurried to the lee side and began piling into the boats. The
+mate's was lowered away first and cleared safely.
+
+The Captain was about to give the order for the lowering of his own
+boat, when the only woman in the party cried out that her husband was
+being left behind. It was the cook, who was indulging in an untimely
+nap, his noonday labors in the galley being over. In her first
+excitement Martha Figman had failed to notice his absence, but had made
+for the boat as fast as she could, carrying her three-year-old child.
+
+"Be quick!" called out the commander of the submarine. "Your time is up!"
+
+"Oh, Captain, Captain, don't leave him," implored the desperate woman.
+"He's all I have!"
+
+Then Captain Joe did the thing that will go down in history. He seized
+the little girl and held her aloft in his arms and called out to the
+Germans:
+
+"In the name of this little child, grant me three more minutes."
+
+"Two!" replied the commander.
+
+Captain Joe leaped to the deck and rushed aft, burst open the cook's
+cabin, and hauled Danny Figman, quite sound asleep, out of his berth.
+The poor rascal was only partly dressed, but there was no time to make
+him presentable. A blanket and a sou'wester had to suffice. Still
+bewildered, he was dragged on deck and ordered to run for his life.
+
+A few seconds later the boat lowered away with its full quota of
+passengers; the men took the oars, cleared a hundred yards safely; and
+then there was a snort, a white furrow through the waves, an explosion;
+the _Maid of the North_ listed, settled, and disappeared. The submarine
+steamed quickly out of sight; and the two boats were all that was left
+as witness of what had happened.
+
+On account of the terrible seas that were running, the boats soon became
+separated; and for sixty-two hours Captain Joe bent his every energy
+to keeping his boat afloat, for she was in momentary danger of being
+swamped, until on the third morning the Norwegian was sighted, came to
+the rescue, and carried the exhausted occupants into Queenstown.
+
+Three Rivers, you may depend, had this story by heart, and backward
+and forward, long before Captain Joe returned to us; for not only did
+it appear in those Irish journals, but also on the occasion of the
+Captain's arrival in New York in several metropolitan papers, written
+up with great detail, and with a picture of little Tina Figman in the
+Captain's arms.
+
+"This is the Captain," ran the print under the picture, "who risked his
+life that a baby might not be fatherless."
+
+You can imagine how anxious we were by this time in Three Rivers to
+welcome that Captain home again; not one of us but wanted to make ample
+amends for the injustice we had done him in the past. But we had to
+wait several weeks, for even after the owners had brought Captain Joe
+and his crew back to New York on the St. Louis, still he had to go to
+Montreal for a ten days' stay, to depose his evidence officially and to
+wind up the affairs of the torpedoed ship. But at last he was positively
+returning to us; and extensive preparations were undertaken for his
+reception.
+
+As he was coming by the St. Lawrence steamer, _Lady of Gaspe_, the
+principal decorations were massed in the vicinity of the government
+wharf. If I tell you that well nigh three hundred dollars had been
+collected for this purpose from the good people of Three Rivers, you
+can form some idea of the magnitude of the effort. A double row of
+saplings had been set up along the wharf and led thence to the Palace
+of Justice; and the full distance, an eighth of a mile, was hung with
+red and tricolor bunting. Then there were three triumphal arches, one
+at the head of the wharf, one at the turn into the street, and one in
+front of the post-office. These arches were very cleverly built, with
+little turrets at the corners, the timber-work completely covered with
+spruce-branches; and each arch displayed a motto. Mrs. Fougere and
+Eugenie White had devised the mottoes, little John Boutin had traced
+the letters on cotton, and Mrs. Boutin had painted them. The first
+read: "Honor to Our Hero." The second was in French, for the reason that
+half our population still use that language by preference, and it read:
+"Honneur a notre Hero"; and the third arch bore the one word, ornately
+inscribed: "Welcome."
+
+All the houses along the way were decorated with geraniums and flags;
+and as the grass was already very green (it was June) and the willows
+and silver-oaks beginning to leave out, it may fairly be said that Three
+Rivers was a beauty spot.
+
+Seeing that no one can tell beforehand when a steamer is going to
+arrive, the whole town was in its best clothes and ready at an early
+hour of the morning. The neighbors trooped in at poor Melina's, offering
+their services in case any of the children still needed combing,
+curling, or buttoning; and all through the forenoon the young people
+were climbing to the top of St. Anne's hill to see if there was any sign
+of the _Lady of Gaspe_; but it was not till three in the afternoon that
+the church-bell, madly ringing, announced that the long-expected moment
+was about to arrive.
+
+I wish I could quote for you in full the account of that day's doings
+which appeared in our local sheet, the Bonaventure _Record_, for it
+was beautifully written and described every feature as it deserved,
+reproducing _verbatim_ the Mayor's address of welcome, Father Quinnan's
+speech in the Palace, and the Resolutions drawn up by ten representative
+citizens and presented to Captain Pettipaw on a handsomely illuminated
+scroll, which you may see to-day hanging in the place of honor in his
+parlor.
+
+But let my readers imagine for themselves the arrival of the steamer,
+the cheer upon cheer as Captain Joe came gravely down the gang-plank;
+the affecting meeting between him and poor Melina and the nine little
+Pettipaws, the littlest of whom he had never seen, and several of whom
+had grown so in these last four years that he had the names wrong, which
+caused happy laughter and happy tears on all sides. Then the procession
+to the Palace! There was an orchestra of four pieces from Cape Cove; and
+a troop of little girls, in white, scattered tissue-paper flowers along
+the line of march.
+
+The Mayor began his speech by saying that an honor had come to our
+little town which would be rehearsed from father to son for generations.
+Father Quinnan took for his theme the three words: "Father, Husband,
+Hero"; and he showed us how each of those words, in its highest and best
+sense, necessarily comprised the other two. And the exercises closed
+with a very enjoyable piano duet which you doubtless know: "Wandering
+Dreams," by some foreign composer.
+
+People watched Captain Joe very closely. It would have been only natural
+if, returning to us in this way, he should have remembered a time,
+not so long before, when the attitude of his fellow-citizens had been
+extremely cool. But if he remembered it, he gave no sign; and he smiled
+at everyone in a grave, thoughtful manner that made one's heart beat
+high.
+
+"He has aged," whispered Mrs. Fougere. "But his face is noble. It
+reminds me of Napoleon, somehow."
+
+"To me he looks more like that American we see so often in the
+papers--Bryan. So much dignity!" This from Mrs. Boutin.
+
+We appreciated the Captain's freedom from condescension the more when
+we heard from his own lips, that same evening, a recital of the honors
+that had been showered upon him during the past weeks. The Mayor of
+Queenstown had had him to dinner; Lady Derntwood, known as the most
+beautiful woman in Ireland, had entertained him for three days at
+Derntwood Park, and sent an Indian shawl as a present to his wife. On
+the _St. Louis_ he had sat at the Captain's right hand; in New York he
+had been interviewed and royally feted by the newspaper-men; and at
+Montreal the owners had presented him with a gold watch and a purse of
+$250. Also, they had offered him another ship immediately.
+
+"Oh, you're going again!" we exclaimed; and the words were repeated from
+one to another in admiration--"He's going again!" But Captain Joe smiled
+thoughtfully.
+
+"I told them I didn't mind being torpedoed," he said ('Oh, no! Certainly
+not! Mind being torpedoed; you! Captain Joe!') "but--"
+
+"But what, Captain?"
+
+"But I said as I couldn't bear for to see a little child exposed again
+in an open boat for sixty-four hours."
+
+"But Captain, wouldn't they give you a ship without a child?"
+
+"They _said_ they would," he replied, doubtfully, shaking his head.
+
+"Then what will you be doing next?" we asked, mentally reviewing the
+various fields in which he might add laurels to laurels.
+
+He meditated a little while and then replied: "Home'll suit me pretty
+good for a spell."
+
+Well, that could be understood, certainly. Indeed, it was to his credit.
+We remembered Father Quinnan's speech. The husband, the father, had
+their claim. A little stay at home, in the bosom of loved ones, yes, to
+be sure, it seemed fitting and right, after the perils of the sea.
+
+And yet, why was it, as we took down the one-eighth-mile of bunting that
+night, there was a faint but perceptible dampening of our enthusiasm.
+Perhaps it was the reaction from the strain and excitement of the day,
+for it had been, there was no denying it, a day of days for Three
+Rivers; a day, which, as Father Quinnan had said, would be writ in
+letters of gold in Memory's fair album. This day was ended now, and
+night came down upon a very proud and very tired little community.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+If this were a fancy story instead of a record of things that came to
+pass last year on the Gaspe Coast, my pen should stop here; but as it
+is, I feel under a plain obligation to pursue the narrative.
+
+I've no doubt that many other towns in the history of the world have
+faced precisely the same problem that Three Rivers faced in the months
+following: namely, what to do with a hero when you have one. Oh, if
+you could only set them up on a pedestal in front of the Town Hall or
+the post-office and _keep_ them there! A statue is so practicable.
+Once in so often, say on anniversaries, you can freshen it up, hang
+it with garlands and bunting, and polish the inscription; and then
+the school-children can come, and somebody can explain to them about
+the statue, and why we should venerate it, and what were the splendid
+qualities of the hero which we are to try to imitate in our own lives. I
+hope that all cities with statues realize their happy condition.
+
+For two or three weeks after the Great Day Three Rivers still kept its
+air of festivity. The triumphal arches could be appreciated even from
+the train, and many travelers, we heard, passing through, leaned out of
+the windows and asked questions of the station agent.
+
+Wherever Captain Joe went, there followed a little knot of children,
+listening open-mouthed for any word that might fall from his lips; and
+you could hear them explaining to one another how it was that a man
+could be torpedoed and escape undamaged. At first no one of lesser
+importance than the Mayor or the Bank Manager presumed to walk with him
+on the street; and he was usually to be seen proceeding in solitary
+dignity to or from the post-office, head a little bowed, one hand
+in the opening of his coat, his step slow and thoughtful, while the
+children pattered along behind.
+
+But the barrier between the Captain and his fellow-townsmen was
+entirely of their own creation, it transpired, for he was naturally a
+sociable man, and now more than ever he craved society, being sure of a
+deferential hearing. Once established again in Boutin's tailor-shop and
+pool-parlor, he seemed disposed never to budge from it; and as often
+as you might pass, day or night, you could hear him holding forth to
+whatever company happened to be present. It was impossible not to gather
+many scraps of his discourse, for his voice was as loud as an orator's.
+
+"And Lady Derntwood--no, it was Lady Genevieve, Lady Derntwood's dairter
+by her first husband and fully as beautiful as her mother, she said to
+me, 'Captain,' she said, 'when I read that about the little girl--For
+the sake of this little child, grant me three minutes!--the tears filled
+my eyes, and I said to my maid, who had brought me my _Times_ on the
+breakfast tray, "Lucienne," I said, "that is a man I should be proud
+to know!"'--and that's a fact sir, as true as I'm settin' here, for
+Lucienne herself told me the same thing. A little beauty, that Lucienne:
+black hair; medium height. We used to talk French together."
+
+Or another time you would hear: "And they said to me, 'Captain,' they
+says, 'and are you satisfied with the gold watch and chain and with the
+little purse we have made up for you here, not pretending, of course,
+for one minute,' they says, 'that 'tis any measure of the services you
+have rendered to us or to your country. We ask you,' they says, 'are you
+satisfied?' And I said, 'I am,' and the fact is, I was, for the watch
+I'd lost was an Ingersoll, and my clothes put together wouldn't have
+brought a hundred dollars."
+
+So the weeks went by; and the triumphal arches, on which the mottoes
+had run a good deal, were taken down and broken up for kindling; and
+still Captain Joe sat and talked all day long and all night long, too,
+if only anybody would listen to him. But listeners were growing scarce.
+His story had been heard too often; and any child in town was able to
+correct him when he slipped up, which often happened. The two hundred
+and fifty dollars was spent long since, and now the local merchants were
+forced to insist once more on strictly cash purchases, and many a day
+the Pettipaw family must have "done meagre," as the French say. Unless
+all signs failed, they would be soon living again at the charge of the
+community. Close your eyes if you like, sooner or later certain grim
+truths will be borne home to you. A leopard cannot change his spots, nor
+a Pettipaw his skin. Before our very eyes the honor and glory of Three
+Rivers, the thing that was to be passed from generation to generation,
+was vanishing: worse than that, we were becoming ridiculous in our own
+eyes, which is harder to bear, even, than being ridiculous in the eyes
+of others.
+
+There was one remedy and only one. It was plain to anybody who
+considered the situation thoughtfully. Captain Joe must be got away. So
+long as your hero is alive, he can only be viewed advantageously at a
+distance. At all events, if he is a Pettipaw.
+
+It was proposed that we should elect him our local member to the
+provincial Parliament. It might be managed. We suggested it to him,
+dwelling upon the opportunities it would afford for the exercise of his
+special talents which, we said, were being thrown away in a little town
+like Three Rivers. He conceded that we spoke the truth; "but," he said,
+after a moment of thoughtful silence, "I am a sailor born and bred, and
+my health would never stand the confinement. Never!"
+
+Next it was found that we could secure for him the position of purser
+on the S. S. _Lady of the Gaspe_. But this offer he refused even more
+emphatically.
+
+"Purser!--Me!" There was evidently nothing more to be said.
+
+Writing to Montreal, Father Quinnan learned that if he so wished Captain
+Pettipaw might have again the command of the little freighter that ran
+to the Labrador; and the proposition was laid before him with sanguine
+expectations. Again he declined.
+
+"The Labrador! Thank you! They wouldn't even know who I was!"
+
+"You could tell them, Captain."
+
+"What good would that do?"
+
+No answer being forthcoming to this demand, still another scheme had to
+be sought. It was the Mayor who finally saved the day for Three Rivers.
+He instigated a Patriotic Fund, to which every man, woman and child
+contributed what he could, and with the proceeds a three-masted schooner
+of two hundred tons burden was acquired (she had been knocked down for a
+song at a sheriff's sale at Campbellton); she was handsomely refitted,
+rechristened, and presented, late in October, to Captain Joe, as a
+tribute of esteem from his native town.
+
+It is not for me to say just how grateful the Captain was, at heart; but
+he accepted the gift with becoming dignity; and before the winter ice
+closed the Gulf (so expeditiously had our plans been carried out) the
+_Gloria_ was ready to sail with a cargo of dry fish for the Barbadoes.
+
+The evening previous to her departure there was a big farewell meeting
+in the Palace of Justice, with speeches by the Mayor and Father Quinnan,
+a piano duet, and an original poem by Eugenie White, beginning:
+
+ _Sail forth, sail far,
+ O Captain bold!_
+
+It was remarkable to see how all the enthusiasm and fervor of an earlier
+celebration in that same hall sprang to life again; yes, and with a
+solemnity added, for this time our hero was going from us. He sat
+there on the platform by the Mayor, handsome, square-shouldered, his
+head a little bowed, a thoughtful smile on his lips under the grizzled
+moustache: he was every inch the noble figure that had stood unflinching
+before the gates of death; and we realized as never before what a debt
+of gratitude we owed him. At last our hero was our hero again.
+
+There is but little more to tell. The next morning, bright and early,
+everybody was at the wharf to watch the _Gloria_ hoist her sails, weigh
+anchor, and tack out into the bay. There were tears in many, many eyes
+besides those of poor Mrs. Pettipaw. The sea had a dark look, off there,
+and one thought of the dangers that awaited any man who sailed out on it
+at this time of the year.
+
+"Heaven send him good passage!" said Mrs. Thibault, wiping her eyes
+vigorously.
+
+"Yes, yes, and bring him safe home again, the brave man!" added Mrs.
+Boutin, earnestly; and all those who heard her breathed a sincere amen
+to that prayer.
+
+It was sincere. We had wanted Captain Joe to go away; we had actually
+forced him to go away; yet no sooner was he gone than we prayed he might
+be brought safe home again. Yes, for when all is said and done, a town
+that has a hero must love him and cherish him and wish him well. Because
+we have ours, Three Rivers will always be a better place to live in and
+to bring up children in: a more inspiring place.
+
+Only, perhaps, if Mrs. Boutin had spoken less impulsively, she would
+have added one or two qualifying clauses to her petition. For instance,
+she might have added: "Only not too soon, and not for too long at once!"
+But for my part, I believe that will be understood by the good angel who
+puts these matters on record, up there.
+
+
+[Illustration: A FISHERMAN'S HOUSE]
+
+
+
+
+FLY, MY HEART!
+
+
+
+
+FLY, MY HEART!
+
+
+They called her Sabine Bob--"S'been Bob"--because her real name was
+Sabine Anne Boudrot; and being a Boudrot in Petit Espoir is like being
+a Smith or a Brown in our part of the world, only ten times more so,
+for in that little fishing-port of Cape Breton, down in the Maritime
+Provinces, practically everybody belongs to the abounding tribe.
+Boudrot, therefore, having ceased to possess more than a modicum of
+specificity (to borrow a term from the logicians), the custom has arisen
+of tagging the various generations and households of Boudrots with the
+familiar name of the father that begat them.
+
+And thus Sabine Anne Boudrot, "old girl" of fifty, was known only as
+Sabine Bob, and Mary Boudrot, her friend, to whom she was dictating
+a love-letter on a certain August evening, was known only as Mary
+Willee--with the accent so strongly on the final syllable that it
+sounded like Marywil-Lee. Sabine Bob was in service; always had
+been. Mary kept house for an invalid father. But there was no social
+distinction between the two.
+
+Mary Willee bent close over the sheet of ruled note-paper and
+laboriously traced out the words, dipping her pen every few seconds with
+professional punctiliousness and screwing up her homely face into all
+sorts of homely expressions: tongue now tight-bitten between her teeth,
+now working restlessly in one cheek, now hard pressed against bulging
+lips. There was agony for both of them in this business of producing a
+love-letter: agony for Mary Willee because she had never fully mastered
+the art of writing, and the shaping just-so of the letters and above
+all the spelling brought out beads of sweat on her forehead; agony for
+Sabine Bob because her heart was so burstingly full and words were so
+powerless to ease that bursting.
+
+Besides, how could she be sure, really, positively _sure_, that Mary
+Willee was recording there on that paper the very words, just those
+very words and none others, which she was confiding to her! Writing was
+a tricky affair. Tricky, like the English language which Sabine Bob
+was using, against her will, for the reason that Mary Willee had never
+learned to write French. French was natural. In French one could say
+what one thought: it felt homelike. In English one had to be stiff.
+
+"Read me what I have said so far," directed Sabine Bob, and she held to
+the seat of her chair with her bony hands and listened.
+
+Mary Willee began, compliantly. "'My dearling Thomas'"--
+
+Sabine Bob interrupted. "The number of the day comes first. Always! I
+brought you the calendar with the day marked on it."
+
+"I wrote it here," said Mary Willee. "You need not be so anxious. I have
+done letters before this."
+
+"Oh, but everything is so important!" ejaculated Sabine, with tragedy in
+her voice. "Now begin again."
+
+"'My dearling Thomas. It is bad times here. So much fogg all ways. i was
+houghing potatoes since 2 days and they looks fine and i am nitting yous
+some socks for when yous come back. i hope you is getting lots of them
+poggiz.'"
+
+Mary Willee hesitated. "I ain't just sure how to spell that word," she
+confessed.
+
+"Pogeys?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"You ought to be. What for did they send you to the convent all those
+four years?"
+
+"It was only three. And the nuns never taught us no such things as
+about pogey-fishing. But no matter. Thomas Ned will know what you mean,
+because that's what he's gone fishing after."
+
+And she continued: "'I miss yous awful some days. when you comes back in
+octobre we's git married sure.'"
+
+She looked up. "That's all you told me so far."
+
+Sabine's face was drawn into furrows of intense thought. "How many more
+lines is there to fill?"
+
+"Seven."
+
+"Well, then, tell him I was looking at the little house what his auntie
+Sophie John left him and thinking how nice it would be when there was
+some front steps and the shimney was fix' and there were curtains to the
+windows in front and some geraniums and I t'ink I will raise some hens
+because they are such good company running in and out all day when he
+will be away pogey-fishing but perhaps when we're married he won't have
+to go off any more because his healt' is put to danger by it and how
+would it do, say, if he got a little horse and truck with the hundred
+and fifty dollars I got saved up and did work by the day for people
+ashore and then"--she paused for breath.
+
+"Is that too much to write?" she remarked with sudden anxiety.
+
+"It is," replied Mary Willee, firmly. "You can say two things, and then
+good-by."
+
+Two things! Sabine Bob stared at the little yellow circle of light
+on the smoky ceiling over the lamp; then out of the window into the
+darkness. Two things more; and there were so many thousand things to
+say! Her mind was a blank.
+
+"I am waiting," Mary reminded her, poising her pen pitilessly.
+
+"Tell him," gasped out Sabine, "tell him--I t'ink I raise some hens."
+
+Letter by letter the pregnant sentence was inscribed, while Sabine
+stared at the pen with paralyzed attention, as if her doom were being
+written in the Book of Judgment; and now the time had come for the
+second thing! Tears of helplessness stood in her eyes.
+
+"Ask him," she blurted out, "would the hundred and fifty dollars what I
+got buy a nice little horse and truck."
+
+Mary Willee paused. She seemed embarrassed.
+
+"Write it," commanded the other.
+
+Mary Willee looked almost frightened. "Must you say that about the
+money?" she asked, weakly.
+
+"Write the words I told you," insisted Sabine. "This is my letter, not
+yours."
+
+Reluctantly the younger woman set down the sentence; then added the
+requisite and necessary "Good-by, from Sabine."
+
+"Is there room for a few kisses?" asked the fiancee.
+
+"One row."
+
+Sabine seized the pen greedily and holding it between clenched fingers
+added a line of significant little lop-sided symbols. Then while her
+secretary prepared the letter for mailing, she wiped her forehead
+with a large blue handkerchief which she refolded and returned to the
+skirt-pocket that contained her rosary and her purse. She put on her
+little old yellow-black hat again and made ready to go.
+
+"Now to the post-office," she said. "How glad Thomas Ned will be when he
+gets it!"
+
+"I am sure he will," said Mary; and if there was any doubt in her tone,
+it was not perceived by her friend, who suddenly flung her arms about
+her in a gush of happy emotion.
+
+"Dieu, que c'est beau, l'amour!" she exclaimed.
+
+The sentiment was not a new one in the world; but it was still a new
+one, and very wonderful, to Sabine Bob: Sabine Bob who had never been
+pretty, even in youthful days, who had never had any nice clothes or
+gone to parties, but had just scrubbed and washed and swept, saved what
+she could, gone to church on Sundays, bought a new pair of shoes every
+other year.
+
+Not that she had ever thought of pitying herself. She was too practical
+for that; and besides, there had always been plenty to be happy about.
+The music in church, for instance, which thrilled and dissolved and
+comforted her; and the pictures there, which she loved to gaze at,
+especially the one of Our Lady above the altar.
+
+And then there were children! No one need be very unhappy, it seemed
+to Sabine Bob, in a world where there were children. She never went
+out without first putting a few little hard, colored candies in her
+pocket to dispense along the street, over gates and on front steps.
+The tinier the children were the more she loved them. Every spring in
+Petit Espoir there was a fresh crop of the very tiniest of all; and
+towards these--little pink bundles of softness and helplessness--she
+felt something of the adoration which those old Wise Men felt who had
+followed the star. If she had had spices and frankincense, Sabine Bob
+would have offered it, on her knees. But in lieu of that, she brought
+little knitted sacques and blankets and hoods.
+
+Such had been Sabine Bob's past; and that a day was to come in her
+life when a handsome young man should say sweet, loving things to
+her, present her with perfumery, bottle on bottle, ask her to be his
+wife, bless you, she would have been the first to scout the ridiculous
+idea--till six months ago! Thomas Ned was a small man, about forty,
+squarely built, with pink cheeks, long lashes, luxuriant moustache; a
+pretty man; a man who cut quite a figure amongst the girls and (many
+declared) could have had his pick of them. Why, why, had he chosen
+Sabine Bob? When she considered the question thoughtfully, she found
+answers enough, for she was not a girl who underestimated her own worth.
+
+"Thomas is sensible," she explained to Mary Willee. "He knows better
+than to take up with one of those weak, sickly young things that have
+nothing but a pretty face and stylish clothes to recommend them. I can
+work; I can save; I can make his life easy. He knows he will be well
+looked out for."
+
+If Mary Willee could have revised this explanation, she refrained from
+doing so. It would have taken courage to do so at that moment, for
+Sabine Bob was so happy! It was almost comical for any one to be so
+happy as that! Sabine realized it and laughed at herself and was happier
+still. Morning, noon, and night, during those first mad, marvelous days
+after she had promised to become Madame Thomas Ned, she was singing a
+bit of gay nonsense she had known from childhood:
+
+ _Vive la Canadienne,
+ Vole, vole, vole, mon coeur!_
+
+"Fly, fly, oh fly, my heart," trolled Sabine Bob; and every evening,
+until the time came when he must depart for the pogey-fishing, in May,
+he had come and sat with her in the kitchen; he would smoke; she would
+knit away at a pair of mittens for him (oh, such small hands as that
+Thomas had!), and about ten o'clock she would fetch a glass of blueberry
+wine and some currant cookies. How nice it was to be doing such things
+for some one--of one's own!
+
+She hovered over him like a ministering spirit, beaming and tender. This
+was what she had starved for all her life without knowing it: to serve
+some one of her own! Not for wages now; for love! She flung herself on
+the altar of Thomas and burned there with a clear ecstatic flame.
+
+And now that he had been away four months, pogey-fishing, she would
+sometimes console herself by getting out the five picture-postcards he
+had sent her and muse upon the scenes of affection depicted there and
+pick out, word by word, the brief messages he had written. With Mary
+Willee's assistance she had memorized them; and they were words of
+sempiternal devotion; and there were little round love-knows-what's in
+plenty; and on one card he called her his little wife; and that was the
+one she prized the most. Wife! Sabine Bob!
+
+That no card arrived in answer to her August letter did not surprise
+her, for the pogeymen often did not put into port for weeks at a time;
+and anyhow the day was not far away, now, when the season would be over
+and those who had gone up from Petit Espoir would come down again.
+
+So the weeks slipped by. October came. The pogey-fishermen returned.
+
+She waited for Thomas Ned in the kitchen that first evening, palpitating
+with expectancy; and he did not come. During the sleepless night that
+followed she conjured up excuses for him. He had had one of his attacks
+of rheumatism. His mother had been ill and had required his presence
+at home. The next evening he would come, oh certainly, and explain
+everything. Attired in her best, she sat and waited a second evening;
+then a third. There was no sign of him.
+
+From Mary Willie she learned that Thomas had arrived with the others;
+that he appeared in perfect health, never handsomer; also that his
+mother was well.
+
+"Oh, it cannot be that anything has happened," cried Sabine, with
+choking tears. "Surely it will all be explained soon!" But there was a
+tightening about her heart, a black premonition of ill to come.
+
+She continued to wait. She was on the watch for him day and night. At
+least he would pass on the street, and she could waylay him! Every time
+she heard footsteps or voices she flew to the kitchen door. When her
+work was done, she would hurry out to the barn, where there was a little
+window commanding a good view of the harbor-front; and there she would
+sit, muffled in a shawl, for hours, hunger gnawing at her heart, her
+eyes dry and staring, until her teeth began to chatter with cold and
+nervousness.
+
+He never passed. Some one met him taking the back road into the village.
+He was purposely avoiding her.
+
+When Sabine Bob realized that she was deserted by the man she loved,
+thrown aside without a word, she suffered unspeakably; but her native
+good sense saved her from making any exhibition of her grief. She
+knew better than to make a fool of herself. If there was one thing
+she dreaded worse than death it was being laughed at. She was a
+self-respecting girl; she had her pride. And no one witnessed the
+spasms, the cyclones, which sometimes seized her in the seclusion of
+her little attic bedroom. These were not the picturesque, grandiose
+sufferings of high tragedy; there was small resemblance between Sabine
+Bob and Carthaginian Dido; Sabine's agonies were stark and cruel and
+ugly, unsoftened by poetry. But she kept them to herself.
+
+She did her work as before. But she did not sing; and perhaps she nicked
+more dishes than usual, for her hands trembled a good deal. But she kept
+her lips tight shut. And she never went out on the street if she could
+help it.
+
+So a month passed. Two months. And then one evening Mary Willee came
+running in breathless with news for her: news that made her skin prickle
+and her blood, after one dizzy, faint moment, drum hotly in her temples.
+
+Thomas Ned was paying attentions to Tina Lejeune, that blonde young girl
+from the Ponds. He had taken her to a dance. He had bought a scarf for
+her and a bottle of perfumery. He had taken her to drive. They had been
+seen walking together several times in the dark on the upper street.
+
+"Does he say he is going to marry her?" asked Sabine Bob, with dry lips.
+
+"I do not know that. _She_ says so. She says they are to be married
+soon."
+
+"Does she know about--about me?"
+
+"Yes, but she says--" Mary Willee stopped short in embarrassment.
+
+"Says what! Tell me! Tell me at once!" commanded Sabine, fiercely. "What
+does she say!"
+
+"She says Thomas thought you had a lot of money. He was deceived, he
+said."
+
+Sabine broke out in a passion of indignation. "I never deceived him:
+never, never! I never once said anything about money. He never asked me
+anything. It's a lie. I tell you, it's a lie!"
+
+Mary quailed visibly, unable to disguise a tell-tale look of guilt.
+
+"What is the matter with you, Mary Willee!" cried Sabine. "You are
+hiding something. You know something you have not told me!"
+
+Mary replied, in a very frightened voice: "Once he asked me if you had
+any money. I did not think he was really in earnest, so I told him you
+had saved a thousand dollars. Oh, I didn't mean any harm. I only said it
+to be agreeable. And later I was afraid to tell the truth, for it was
+only two or three days later he asked you to marry him, and you were so
+happy."
+
+Mary Willee hid her face in her hands and waited for the storm to break
+upon her; but it did not break. The room was very quiet. At last she
+heard Sabine moving about, and she looked up again. Sabine was putting
+on her hat and coat.
+
+"Sabine! Sabine!" she gasped. "What are you doing!"
+
+Sabine Bob turned quietly and stood for a moment gazing at her without a
+word. Then she said:
+
+"Mary Willee, you are a bad girl and I can never forgive you; but if
+Tina Lejeune thinks she is going to marry Thomas Ned, she will find out
+that she is mistaken. That is a thing that will not happen."
+
+Mary recoiled, terrified, at the pitiless, menacing smile on the other
+woman's face; but before she could say anything Sabine Bob had stalked
+out of the house into the darkness.
+
+She climbed the hill to the back road, stumbling often, blinded more by
+her own fierce emotions than by the winter night; she fought her way
+westward against the bitter wind that was rising; then turned off by the
+Old French Road, as it was called, toward the Ponds.
+
+It was ten o'clock at night; stars, but no moon. She saw a shadow
+approaching in the darkness from the opposite direction: it was a man,
+short and squarely-built. With a sickening weakness she sank down
+against the wattle fence at the side of the road. He passed her, so
+close that she could have reached out and touched him. But he had not
+seen. She got up and hurried on.
+
+By and by she saw ahead of her the little black bulk of a house from the
+tiny window of which issued a yellow glow. The house stood directly on
+the road. She went quietly to the window and looked in. A young girl
+was sitting by a bare table, her head supported by the palms of her
+hands. Sabine knew the weak white face and hated it. She made her way to
+the door and knocked. There was a smothered, startled exclamation; then
+the rustle of some one moving.
+
+"Who is it?" inquired a timid voice.
+
+"Let me in and I will tell you," responded the woman outside, in a voice
+the more menacing because of its control.
+
+"My mother is not at home to-night. She is over at the widow Babinot's.
+If you go over there you will find her."
+
+"It is you I wish to see. Open the door!"
+
+There was no answer. Sabine turned the knob and entered. At the sight of
+her the blonde girl gave a cry of dismay and retreated behind the table,
+trembling.
+
+"What do you want?" she gasped.
+
+"We have an account to settle together, you and me," said Sabine, with
+something like a laugh.
+
+"Account?" said the other, bracing herself, but scarcely able to
+articulate. "What account? I have not done you any harm. Before God I
+have not done you any harm."
+
+Sabine laughed mockingly. "So you think there is no harm in taking away
+from me the man I was going to marry?"
+
+"I did not take him away," said Tina, faintly.
+
+"You did! You did take him away!" cried Sabine, fiercely. "He was mine;
+it was last March he promised to marry me; any one can tell you that. I
+have witnesses. I have letters. Everything I tell you can be proved. He
+belongs to me just as much as if we had been before a priest already;
+and if you think you can take him away from me, you will find out you
+are wrong!"
+
+For a few seconds the paralyzed girl before her could not utter a word;
+then she stammered out:
+
+"He told me you had deceived him about money."
+
+Sabine gave an inarticulate cry of rage, like a wild beast at bay. "It's
+a lie! A lie! I never deceived him. It's he who deceived me; but let me
+tell you this: when a woman like me promises to marry a man, she keeps
+her word. Do you understand? She keeps her word! I am going to marry
+Thomas Ned. He cannot escape me. I will go to the priest. I will go to
+the lawyer. There are plenty of ways."
+
+The blonde girl sank trembling into a chair.
+
+"He cannot marry you," she gasped. "He cannot. He cannot."
+
+"No?" cried Sabine, with ringing mockery. "And why not?"
+
+Tina's lips moved inaudibly. She moistened them with her tongue and made
+a second attempt.
+
+"Because--" she breathed.
+
+"Yes? Yes?"
+
+"Because--he must marry me." She buried her head in her hands and sobbed.
+
+Sabine Bob strode to the cringing girl, seized her by the shoulders,
+forcing her up roughly against the back of the chair, and broke out with
+a ruthless laugh:
+
+"Must! Must! You don't say so! And why, tell me, must he marry you?"
+
+The white girl raised her eyes for one instant to the other's face; and
+there was a look in them of mute pleading and confession, a look that
+was like a death-cry for pity. The look shot through Sabine's turgid
+consciousness like a white-hot dagger. She staggered back as if mortally
+stricken, supporting herself against a tall cupboard, staring at the
+girl, whose head had now sunk to the table again and whose body was
+shaking with spasmodic sobs. It was one of the moments when destinies
+are written.
+
+At such moments we act from something deeper, more elemental, than will.
+The best or the worst in us leaps out--or perhaps neither one nor the
+other but merely that thing in us that is most essentially ourselves.
+
+Sabine stared at the poor girl whose terrifying, wonderful secret had
+just been revealed to her, and she felt through all her being a sense of
+shattering and disintegration; and suddenly she was there, beside Tina,
+on the arm of her chair; and she brought the girl's head over against
+her bosom and held her very tight in her eager old arms, patting her
+shoulders and stroking her soft hair, while the tears rained down her
+cheeks and she murmured, soothingly:
+
+"Pauvre petite!" and again and again, "Pauvre petite! Ma pauvre petite!"
+
+Tina abandoned herself utterly to the other's impassioned tenderness;
+and for a long time the two sat there, tightly clasped, silent,
+understanding.
+
+Sabine Bob had no word of blame for the unhappy girl. Vaguely she knew
+that she ought to blame her; very vaguely she remembered that girls
+like this were bad girls; but that did not seem to make any difference.
+Instead of indignation she felt something very like humility and
+reverence.
+
+"Yes, he must marry you," she said at last, very simply and gently.
+
+"Oh, if he only would!" sobbed Tina.
+
+"What!" cried Sabine, in amazement.
+
+"He says such cruel things to me," confessed the girl. "He knows, oh, he
+does know I never loved any man but himself; never, never any other man,
+nor ever will!"
+
+Sabine's eyes opened upon new vistas of man's perfidiousness. And yet,
+in spite of everything, how one could love them! She felt an immense
+compassion toward this poor girl who had loved not wisely but so
+all-givingly.
+
+"I will go to him," she said, resolutely. "I will tell him he must marry
+you; and I will say that if he does not, I will tell every person in
+Petit Espoir what a wicked thing he has done."
+
+Tina leaped to her feet in terror. "Oh, no, no!" she pleaded. "No one
+must know."
+
+Sabine understood. Not the present only, but the future must be thought
+of.
+
+"And if he was forced like that to marry me, he would hate me," pursued
+the girl, who saw things with the pitiless clear foresight that
+desperation gives. "He must marry me from his own choice. Oh, if I could
+only make him choose; but to-night he said NO! and went away, very
+angry. I'm afraid he will never come back again."
+
+"Yes, he will," said Sabine Bob. There was a grim smile on her lips; and
+she squared her shoulders as if to give herself courage for some dreaded
+ordeal. "There is a way."
+
+But to the startled, eager question in the other's eyes, she vouchsafed
+no answer. She came to her and put her hands firmly on her shoulders.
+
+"Tina, will you promise not to believe anything you hear them say about
+me? Will you promise to keep on loving me just the same?"
+
+The girl clung to her. "Oh, yes, yes," she promised. "Always!" and then,
+in a shy whisper, she added: "And some day--I will not be the only one
+to love you."
+
+Sabine Bob gave her a quick, almost violent kiss, and went out, not
+stopping for even a word of good-night. And the next day she put her
+plan into execution. There was a perfectly relentless logic about Sabine
+Bob. She saw a thing to do; and she went and did it.
+
+As soon as her dinner dishes were washed and put away, she donned
+her old brown coat and the little yellow-black hat that had served
+her winter and summer from time immemorial, and proceeded to make
+a dozen calls on her friends, up and down the street. Wherever she
+went she talked, volubly, feverishly. She railed; she threatened; she
+vociferated; and the object of her vociferations was Thomas Ned. He had
+promised to marry her; and he had deserted her; and she would have the
+law on him! Marry her he must, now, whether he would or no.
+
+"See that word?" she demanded, displaying her sheaf of compromising
+post-cards. "That word is _wife_; and the man who calls me wife must
+stick to it. I am not a woman to be made a fool of!"
+
+So she stormed away, from house to house. Her friends tried to pacify
+her; but the more they tried, the more venom she put into her threats.
+And soon the news spread through the whole town. Nothing else was talked
+of.
+
+"She's crazy," people said. "But she can make trouble for him, if she
+wants to, no doubt about it."
+
+Sabine laughed grimly to herself. She was going to succeed. The scheme
+would work. She knew the kind of man Thomas Ned was: full of shifts. He
+had proved that already. He would never face a thing squarely. He would
+look for a way out.
+
+She was right. It was only ten days later, at high mass, that the
+success of her strategy was tangibly proved. At the usual point in
+the service for such announcements, just before the sermon, Father
+Beauclerc, standing in the pulpit, called the banns for Thomas Boudrot,
+of Petit Espoir, North, and Tina Melanie Brigitte Lejeune, of the Ponds.
+
+The announcement caused a sensation. An audible murmur of amazement, not
+to say consternation, went up from all quarters of the edifice, floor
+and galleries; even the altar boys exchanged whispers with one another;
+and there was a great stretching of necks in the direction of Sabine
+Bob, who sat there in her uncushioned pew, very straight and very red,
+with set lips, while her rough old fingers played nervously with the
+rosary in her lap.
+
+This was her victory! She had never felt the ugliness of her fifty years
+so cruelly before. A bony, ridiculous old maid, making a fool of herself
+in public! That was the sum of it! And all her life she had been so
+careful, so jealously careful, not to do anything that might cause her
+to be laughed at!
+
+She could hear some of the whispers that were being exchanged in
+neighboring pews. "Poor old thing!" people were saying. "But how could
+she expect anybody would want to marry her at her age!"
+
+A trembling like ague seized her, and she felt suddenly very cold and
+very very weak. She shut her eyes, for things were beginning to flicker
+and whirl; and when she opened them again, they were caught and held by
+the picture above the high altar.
+
+It was the Mother. The Mother and the Little One. He lay in her arms and
+smiled.
+
+The tears gushed up in Sabine Bob's eyes, and a smile of wonderful
+tenderness and peace broke over the harsh lines of her face and
+transfigured it, just for one instant. It was a victory; it _was_ a
+victory; though nobody knew it but herself; just herself, and one
+other, and--perhaps--
+
+Sabine still gazed at the picture, poor old Sabine Bob in her brown
+coat and faded little yellow-black hat: and the Eternal Mother returned
+the gaze of the Eternal Mother, smiling; and it didn't matter very much
+after that--how could it?--what people might think or say in Petit
+Espoir.
+
+Once more, that afternoon, as she slashed the suds over the dishes,
+Sabine Bob was singing. You could hear her way down there on the street,
+so buoyant and so merry was her voice:
+
+ _Long live the Canadian maid;
+ Fly, fly, oh fly, my heart!_
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Cape Breton Tales, by Harry James Smith
+
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